Community Reinvestment Act Regulations, 1204-1265 [2019-27940]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 6 / Thursday, January 9, 2020 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Parts 25 and 195
[Docket ID OCC–2018–0008]
RIN 1557–AE34
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 345
RIN 3064–AF22
Community Reinvestment Act
Regulations
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Joint notice of proposed
rulemaking; request for comment.
AGENCY:
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC) and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
propose regulations that could
encourage banks to provide billions
more each year in Community
Reinvestment Act-qualified lending,
investment, and services by
modernizing the Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA) regulations to
better achieve the law’s underlying
statutory purpose of encouraging banks
to serve their communities by making
the regulatory framework more
objective, transparent, consistent, and
easy to understand. To accomplish these
goals, this proposed rule would
strengthen the CRA regulations by
clarifying which activities qualify for
CRA credit, updating where activities
count for CRA credit, creating a more
transparent and objective method for
measuring CRA performance, and
providing for more transparent,
consistent, and timely CRA-related data
collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received on
or before March 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
directed to:
OCC: Commenters are encouraged to
submit comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal or email, if possible.
Please use the title ‘‘Community
Reinvestment Act Regulations’’ to
facilitate the organization and
distribution of the comments. You may
submit comments by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta:
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Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov/. Enter ‘‘Docket ID
OCC–2018–0008’’ in the Search Box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Comment
Now’’ to submit public comments. For
help with submitting effective
comments please click on ‘‘View
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Enter ‘‘Docket ID OCC–2018–0008’’ in
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Public comments can be submitted via
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displayed document information or by
clicking on the document title and then
clicking the ‘‘Comment’’ box on the topleft side of the screen. For help with
submitting effective comments please
click on ‘‘Commenter’s Checklist.’’ For
assistance with the Regulations.gov Beta
site, please call (877) 378–5457 (toll
free) or (703) 454–9859 Monday–Friday,
9 a.m.–5 p.m. ET or email regulations@
erulemakinghelpdesk.com.
• Email: cra.reg@occ.treas.gov.
• Mail: Chief Counsel’s Office,
Attention: Comment Processing, Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400
7th Street SW, Suite 3E–218,
Washington, DC 20219.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th
Street SW, Suite 3E–218, Washington,
DC 20219.
• Fax: (571) 465–4326.
Instructions: You must include
‘‘OCC’’ as the agency name and ‘‘Docket
ID OCC–2018–0008’’ in your comment.
In general, the OCC will enter all
comments received into the docket and
publish the comments on the
Regulations.gov website without
change, including any business or
personal information provided such as
name and address information, email
addresses, or phone numbers.
Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
include any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other
related materials that pertain to this
rulemaking action by any of the
following methods:
• Viewing Comments Electronically—
Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta:
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov/. Enter ‘‘Docket ID
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OCC–2018–0008’’ in the Search box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Open Docket
Folder’’ on the right side of the screen.
Comments and supporting materials can
be viewed and filtered by clicking on
‘‘View all documents and comments in
this docket’’ and then using the filtering
tools on the left side of the screen. Click
on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the
Regulations.gov home page to get
information on using Regulations.gov.
The docket may be viewed after the
close of the comment period in the same
manner as during the comment period.
Regulations.gov Beta: Go to https://
beta.regulations.gov/ or click ‘‘Visit
New Regulations.gov Site’’ from the
Regulations.gov Classic homepage.
Enter ‘‘Docket ID OCC–2018–0008’’ in
the Search Box and click ‘‘Search.’’
Click on the ‘‘Comments’’ tab.
Comments can be viewed and filtered
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be viewed by clicking on the
‘‘Documents’’ tab and filtered by
clicking on the ‘‘Sort By’’ drop-down on
the right side of the screen or the
‘‘Refine Results’’ options on the left side
of the screen.’’ For assistance with the
Regulations.gov Beta site, please call
(877) 378–5457 (toll free) or (703) 454–
9859 Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. ET
or email regulations@
erulemakinghelpdesk.com. The docket
may be viewed after the close of the
comment period in the same manner as
during the comment period.
• Viewing Comments Personally: You
may personally inspect comments at the
OCC, 400 7th Street SW, Washington,
DC 20219. For security reasons, the OCC
requires that visitors make an
appointment to inspect comments. You
may do so by calling (202) 649–6700 or,
for persons who are deaf or hearing
impaired, TTY, (202) 649–5597. Upon
arrival, visitors will be required to
present valid government-issued photo
identification and submit to security
screening in order to inspect comments.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 3064–AF22, by any of
the following methods:
• Agency Website: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html. Follow instructions for
submitting comments on the Agency
website.
• Email: Comments@fdic.gov. Include
the RIN 3064–AF22 on the subject line
of the message.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
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• Hand Delivery: Comments may be
hand delivered to the guard station at
the rear of the 550 17th Street Building
(located on F Street) on business days
between 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
Instructions: All comments received
must include the agency name and RIN
3064–AF22 for this rulemaking. All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://www.fdic.gov/
regulations/laws/federal/propose.html,
including any personal information
provided. Paper copies of public
comments may be ordered from the
FDIC Public Information Center, 3501
North Fairfax Drive, Room E–1002,
Arlington, VA 22226 by telephone at
(877) 275–3342 or (703) 562–2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Vonda Eanes, Director for CRA
and Fair Lending Policy, Bobbie K.
Kennedy, Technical Expert for CRA and
Fair Lending, or Karen Bellesi, Director
for Community Development, Bank
Supervision Policy, (202) 649–5470; or
Allison Hester-Haddad, Counsel, Emily
R. Boyes, Counsel, or Elizabeth Small,
Senior Attorney, Chief Counsel’s Office,
(202) 649–5490, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th
Street SW, Washington, DC 20219. For
persons who are deaf or hearing
impaired, TTY users may contact (202)
649–5597.
FDIC: Patience R. Singleton, Senior
Policy Analyst, Supervisory Policy
Branch, Division of Depositor and
Consumer Protection, (202) 898–6859;
Cassandra Duhaney, Senior Policy
Analyst, Supervisory Policy Branch,
Division of Depositor and Consumer
Protection, (202) 898–6804; Pamela
Freeman, Senior Examination
Specialist, Examination Branch,
Division of Depositor and Consumer
Protection, (202) 898–3656; Jessica
Thurman, Examination Specialist,
Examination Branch, Division of
Depositor and Consumer Protection,
(202) 898–3578; Richard M. Schwartz,
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898–
7424; or Sherry Ann Betancourt,
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898–
6560, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Introduction
The Community Reinvestment Act of
1977 (CRA) encourages insured
depository institutions 1 (banks) 2 to
1 12
U.S.C. 1813(c)(2).
used throughout this notice, the term ‘‘bank’’
or ‘‘banks’’ also includes uninsured Federal
branches that result from an acquisition described
in section 5(a)(8) of the International Banking Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
2 As
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help meet the credit needs of the local
communities in which they are
chartered, consistent with banks’ safe
and sound operations, by requiring
federal banking regulatory agencies to
examine banks’ records of meeting the
credit needs of their entire community,
including low- and moderate-income
(LMI) neighborhoods.3 The CRA was
one of several laws enacted in the 1960s
and 1970s to address fairness and access
to housing and credit. During this
period, Congress passed the Fair
Housing Act in 1968,4 to prohibit
discrimination in renting or buying a
home,5 and the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act in 1974 6 (amended in
1976), to prohibit creditors from
discriminating against an applicant on
the basis of race, color, religion, national
origin, sex, marital status, or age. These
fair lending laws provide the legal basis
for prohibiting discriminatory lending
practices, such as redlining.7
Congress enacted the CRA with the
purpose of encouraging sound lending
to all areas of a bank’s community.
Specifically, in passing the CRA,
Congress found that (1) banks are
required by law to demonstrate that
their deposit facilities serve the
convenience and needs of the
communities in which they are
chartered to do business; (2) the
convenience and needs of communities
include the need for credit services as
well as deposit services; and (3) banks
have a continuing and affirmative
obligation to help meet the credit needs
of the local communities in which they
are chartered.8
The Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC) and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (together,
the agencies) 9 as well as the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board) previously issued
regulations to implement the statute.10
Since then, the agencies and the Board
have issued, revised, and sought to
3 Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, Public
Law 95–128, 91 Stat. 1147 (1977), codified at 12
U.S.C. 2901 et seq.
4 42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq.
5 42 U.S.C. 3604–3606.
6 15 U.S.C. 1691 et seq.
7 Interagency Fair Lending Examination
Procedures, p. iv (Aug. 2009), available at https://
www.ffiec.gov/pdf/fairlend.pdf.
8 12 U.S.C. 2901(a).
9 The OCC is the primary regulator for national
banks and federal savings associations. The FDIC is
the primary Federal regulator for state-chartered
non-member banks and savings associations.
10 12 CFR parts 25, 195, 228, and 345. The Office
of Thrift Supervision and its predecessor agencies
were also charged with implementing the CRA. Its
powers and duties with respect to CRA were
transferred to the OCC in Title III of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 1520 (2010).
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clarify the CRA regulations several
times. The last major revisions to the
regulations were made in 1995.11
During the past 25 years, technology
and the expansion of interstate banking
have transformed the financial services
industry, how banks deliver their
services, and how customers choose to
bank. These changes affect banks of all
sizes and are most evident in banks that
have a limited physical presence or rely
heavily on technology to deliver their
products and services. As banking has
evolved, banks’ communities have
evolved beyond those that are solely
identifiable by the delineated areas
surrounding banks’ physical locations.
At the same time, communities’ needs
for community development (CD)
lending and investment have evolved,
and the agencies have gained a greater
understanding of those needs, such as
the need for CD investments and loans
with maturities longer than the typical
CRA evaluation period and the need for
equity and capital in addition to credit.
The current CRA regulatory framework
has not kept pace with the
transformation of banking and has had
the unintended consequence of
incentivizing banks to limit some of
their CD loans and investments to
shorter terms than otherwise may be
best to meet the needs of their
communities.
Over the last decade, stakeholders
have called for comprehensive changes
to the CRA regulatory framework to
ensure that the CRA remains a relevant
and powerful tool for encouraging banks
to serve the needs of their entire
communities, including LMI
neighborhoods. In 2014, the agencies
and the Board conducted a decennial
review of their regulations, with input
from the public, to identify outdated,
unnecessary, or unduly burdensome
regulations and consider how to reduce
regulatory burden on insured depository
institutions—while, at the same time,
ensuring the safety and soundness of
these institutions and of the financial
system.12 In 2017, the agencies and the
Board issued a report to Congress that
included a summary of the public
comments and recommendations to
improve the CRA regulatory framework
gathered during the three-year review
process. Among the most frequently
raised issues were (1) the assessment
11 The agencies and the Board made additional
substantive changes in 2005; however, those
changes were not as transformative as the 1995
revisions.
12 The review is required by section 2222 of the
Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1996, Public Law 104–208, 110
Stat. 3009, 3311 (1996), codified at 12 U.S.C. 3311
(1996).
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area definition; (2) incentives for banks
to serve LMI, unbanked, underbanked,
and rural communities; (3) regulatory
burdens associated with the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements and the asset thresholds
for the various CRA examination
methods; (4) the need for clarity
regarding performance measures and
better training to ensure consistency and
rigor in CRA examinations; and (5)
refinement of the CRA ratings
methodology.13
On April 3, 2018, the U.S. Department
of the Treasury (Treasury Department)
also released recommendations based
on stakeholder input to modernize the
CRA regulations. These
recommendations included updating
the definition of assessment areas,
increasing the clarity and transparency
of CRA ratings, improving the
timeliness of evaluations, and
incorporating more effective incentives
to encourage banks to meet the credit
and deposit needs of their
communities.14
Recognizing the need for
modernization, the agencies began to
assess and update the CRA regulatory
framework in 2018 by working together
on an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPR). The OCC issued
the ANPR in August 2018, which
reflected feedback and input from the
FDIC and the Board.15 The OCC
received more than 1,500 comments
from stakeholders and shared these
comments with the FDIC and the Board.
Additionally, the OCC and the Board
separately engaged with stakeholders,
including civil rights organizations,
community groups, members of
Congress, academics, and banks to
obtain their perspectives and feedback
on all aspects of the CRA and potential
improvements that could be made to the
regulations. Many of those comments
reflected the opinion that the current
CRA regulatory framework lacks
objectivity, transparency, and fairness.
Numerous stakeholders also commented
that the framework is applied
13 See Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council, Joint Report to Congress. Economic Growth
and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act, pp. 41–
48 (March 2017), available at https://www.ffiec.gov/
pdf/2017_FFIEC_EGRPRA_Joint-Report_to_
Congress.pdf.
14 See Memorandum from the U.S. Department of
the Treasury to the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, Community Reinvestment Act—
Findings and Recommendations (April 3, 2018)
available at https://home.treasury.gov/sites/default/
files/2018-04/4-3-18%20CRA%20memo.pdf.
15 See OCC News Release 2018–87 (Aug. 28,
2018); 83 FR 45053 (Sept. 5, 2018).
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inconsistently and is hard to
understand.
The agencies’ extensive engagement
with stakeholders confirmed that the
CRA remains a powerful tool for
promoting community revitalization
and increasing financial activity in
neighborhoods across the country.
However, stakeholders observed that the
evaluation of banks’ CRA-qualifying
lending, investments, and services
(collectively, qualifying activities or
CRA activities) under the current CRA
regulations—including what type of
activities count, where they count, and
how they count—is inconsistent,
opaque, and complex.
In response to this feedback, the
agencies propose to strengthen the CRA
regulatory framework to better achieve
the underlying statutory purpose of
encouraging banks to help serve their
communities by making the framework
more objective, transparent, consistent,
and easy to understand. To accomplish
these goals, the proposal would clarify
which activities qualify for CRA credit;
update where activities count for CRA
credit; create a more objective method
for measuring CRA performance; and
provide for more transparent,
consistent, and timely CRA-related data
collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting. These changes would
encourage banks to serve their entire
communities, including LMI
neighborhoods, more effectively through
a clearer set of CRA activities and would
provide clarity for all stakeholders.
The agencies’ proposal would
establish a regulatory framework with
the goal to encourage banks to conduct
more CRA activities and to serve more
of their communities, including those
areas with the greatest need for
economic development, investment, and
financing needs, such as urban and rural
areas and opportunity zones, that may
be underserved by the current
regulations.
II. Background
Prior to drafting this proposal, the
agencies invited and considered input
from a wide range of stakeholders,
through a variety of channels. That
input included the strengths,
weaknesses, and challenges of the
current framework, as well as ideas for,
and the advantages and disadvantages
of, alternative frameworks.
In 2018, the OCC held numerous
meetings with community groups, nonprofit and civil rights organizations,
legislators, regulators, bankers, and
other stakeholders to discuss and solicit
input on how to improve the current
framework. During this same period, the
Treasury Department invited a diverse
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group of stakeholders to provide
feedback on how the CRA regulations
could more effectively encourage
economic growth in the communities
that banks serve. As discussed above, in
April 2018, the Treasury Department
released its findings and
recommendations for how to modernize
the CRA regulatory framework, which
are consistent with the four components
of modernization outlined in this
proposal.16
In August 2018, the OCC issued an
ANPR inviting public input on how best
to improve the CRA regulatory
framework to generate more local and
national CD and economic development
activities—and thus promote economic
opportunity—by encouraging banks to
engage in more lending, investments,
and services that benefit targeted
populations (such as LMI individuals,
small farms, and small businesses) and
areas in need of financial services
(including LMI communities, rural and
urban areas, and areas targeted by a
Federal, state, local, or tribal
government for development). The
ANPR sought comment on (1) clarifying,
expanding, and listing the types of
activities that qualify for CRA credit; (2)
revisiting how to delineate the areas in
which qualifying activities receive
credit; (3) establishing objective ways to
evaluate CRA performance; (4)
improving the timeliness of regulatory
decisions related to the CRA; and (5)
reducing the cost and burden, and
improving the timely completion, of
CRA evaluations.
During the summer of 2019, the OCC
engaged in nationwide outreach with
community advocates, CD professionals,
civil rights organizations, and bankers to
discuss opportunities to bring more
CRA investment, lending, and services
to underserved areas. This outreach
included visits to rural and urban areas
and Indian country. The tours provided
opportunities for the agency’s senior
leadership to hear CRA success stories
and how the agencies could help CRA
work better for everyone. While these
conversations confirmed that CRA has
been a force for good for the past 40
years, they also highlighted the need to
strengthen the regulatory framework to
encourage greater CRA activity and to
more effectively reach underserved
communities.
The most consistent feedback that the
agencies and the Treasury Department
have received in response to their
outreach efforts is that the current CRA
16 Press Release, U.S. Department of the Treasury,
Treasury Releases Community Reinvestment Act
Modernization Recommendations (April 3, 2018),
available at https://home.treasury.gov/news/pressreleases/sm0336.
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framework has not kept pace with
changes in banking or technology and
that the CRA regulations and guidance
have become cumbersome, outdated,
and complex. Moreover, stakeholders
conveyed that the lack of clarity and
transparency of the current framework
has restricted lending and investments
in communities across America. For
example, stakeholders expressed
concern and frustration that under the
current system:
• Ambiguity over what types of
activities qualify for CRA consideration
discourages certain types of CRA
activity in high-need areas;
• ‘‘CD’’ and ‘‘economic development’’
are narrowly defined, and the current
definitions provide little incentive for
banks to engage in many of the loan
products, investments, and services that
could help their communities;
• Assessment areas that are only
delineated around banks’ physical
locations result in geographies where
banks do not engage in or engage in only
limited CRA activities (CRA deserts)
and fail to incentivize CRA activity in
many rural areas;
• Assessment areas have not kept
pace with how consumers bank and
how banking services are delivered
today;
• Performance evaluations and
ratings are subjective and inconsistent;
and
• Publication of a bank’s CRA
performance evaluation, following its
CRA evaluation, is often delayed, which
can result in a significant gap between
publication of consecutive evaluations.
The feedback also provided valuable
insight from stakeholders and revealed
broad support for modernizing the CRA
regulations by clarifying what type of
activities count, updating where CRA
activities count, making performance
evaluations more objective, and
improving reporting.17 For example, of
those ANPR commenters who addressed
the issues below:
• The vast majority do not think the
current framework is objective, fair, or
transparent;
• The vast majority think the current
framework is applied inconsistently;
• The vast majority say the current
framework is hard to understand;
17 For example, comments on the ANPR came
from a variety of stakeholders, including banks and
banking industry trade associations; community,
civil rights, and advocacy groups and community
trade associations; CD funds and organizations;
academia; CRA consultants; governmental entities;
and the general public. The OCC also met with
commenters to discuss issues related to the ANPR.
Summaries of these meetings, as well as all
comments received on the ANPR, are available at
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• The vast majority support
publishing a list of eligible activities;
• The majority support objective
measurement of CRA performance,
although they oppose a single metric;
• Many support retaining
performance context; and
• The majority support expanding
assessment areas.
As discussed below, the changes
outlined in this proposal focus on many
of these stakeholders’ concerns with the
current framework. The proposed rule is
designed to achieve the following
positive outcomes desired by many
stakeholders:
• Create incentives to do more—By
establishing clear benchmarks based on
historical performance, the proposed
rule would allow regulators to set
benchmarks at levels high enough to
increase the level of qualifying lending,
investment, and services and adjust
those benchmarks on a periodic basis.
• Reduce CRA deserts—By clarifying
how banks can achieve a satisfactory or
an outstanding in their assessment areas
and expanding when banks can receive
credit beyond the immediate areas
surrounding bank branches, the new
rule would incent greater CRA activity
in areas currently in need of financial
resources, including rural areas, areas
identified for aid, distressed areas, and
Indian country.
• Limit CRA hotspots—By clarifying
and expanding when banks can receive
credit beyond the immediate areas
surrounding bank branches, the
proposed rule would relieve pressure in
overheated markets where banks are
already meeting community needs.
• Reduce activity uncertainty—By
providing clear standards and an
illustrative list of qualifying activities,
the proposed rule would reduce
uncertainty regarding what counts for
CRA credit and give banks and
stakeholders greater ability to plan
reinvestment activities without the risk
of activities not receiving credit. The
rule would also provide processes for
confirming an activity would receive
CRA credit.
• Reduce delays in Performance
Evaluation (PE) publication—By making
the evaluation of CRA performance
more objective and improving reporting,
the revised rule would reduce the time
required to conduct CRA evaluations
and produce PEs, improving
transparency and increasing regulatory
efficiency.
• Improve the quality of PEs—By
making evaluation of CRA performance
more objective and standardized, the
proposed rule would help make PEs
more useful, comparable across banks,
and meaningful for stakeholders.
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• Increase small business lending—
By increasing the loan size for small
loans to business, which was last
updated 25 years ago, and increasing the
revenue size threshold for small
businesses, the proposed rule would
encourage economic development and
job creation.
• Increase small farm lending—By
increasing the loan size for small loans
to farms, which was last updated 25
years ago, and increasing the revenue
size threshold for small farms, the
proposed rule would encourage
economic development and job creation
and help the U.S. agricultural industry
survive.
• Promote capital and investment in
Indian country—By providing credit for
retail and community development
activities in Indian country, the
proposed rule would help incent more
investment and lending in Indian
country. This would help fight
persistent poverty and support basic
infrastructure and needs such as
housing, technology, and healthcare.
• Encourage long-term commitment
to community reinvestment—By
refocusing on ongoing commitment to
lending and investment through
evaluating on-balance sheet activities,
the proposed rule would reduce the
current churn and short-term focus of
CRA activities, providing banks more
incentive to engage in long-term
investments and loans, which would, in
turn, provide community developers
and advocates greater stability and more
incentive to engage in longer term
strategic initiatives.
• Reduce displacement by refocusing
on LMI individuals and activities—By
emphasizing lending and services
provided to or benefiting LMI
individuals, the proposed rule would
avoid giving credit for activities that
may contribute to displacement.
• Preserve the importance of
branches—By requiring banks to
designate assessment areas surrounding
branches, headquarters, and deposit
taking ATMs and including a measure
of a bank’s distribution of branches
when assessing the impact of CRA
activities, the proposed rule would
maintain the importance of branches in
assessing a bank’s record of serving its
communities.
• Preserve community voices—By
retaining performance context and a
means for community stakeholders to
share comments and concerns with
examiners about assessment area needs
and opportunities, the proposed rule
would preserve community voices and
help encourage banks to meet the needs
of their entire communities, including
LMI neighborhoods.
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• Reduce inconsistent application of
the rule—By clarifying what counts and
increasing the objectivity of CRA
performance evaluations, the proposed
rule would make performance
evaluations more consistent over time
and across regions.
• Provide greater flexibility for
community banks—The proposed rule
also would provide an opt in for small
banks with assets of $500 million or less
to allow the bank to determine whether
to be evaluated under existing
performance standards or the revised
framework based on their unique
business models.
III. Overview of Proposed Rule
The proposed rule builds upon the
outreach efforts that have been
underway for several years and reflects
the agencies’ collaborative process to
find solutions to mutually recognized
problems. To improve the current CRA
regulatory framework and promote
increased lending and investment
consistent with stakeholder feedback,
the agencies propose to make changes in
four key areas: (1) Clarifying and
expanding what qualifies for CRA
credit; (2) expanding where CRA
activity counts; (3) providing an
objective method to measure CRA
activity; and (4) revising data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting. The
following sections provide a brief
overview of the proposal’s significant
changes in those areas.
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A. Clarifying and Expanding What
Qualifies for CRA Credit
The proposal would (1) establish clear
criteria for the type of activities that
qualify for CRA credit, which generally
would include activities that currently
qualify for CRA credit and other
activities that are consistent with the
purpose of CRA but may not qualify
under the current CRA framework; (2)
require the agencies to publish
periodically a non-exhaustive,
illustrative list of examples of qualifying
activities; and (3) establish a process for
banks to seek agency confirmation that
an activity is a qualifying activity.18
These changes would address current
impediments to engaging in CRA
activities and provide banks with
greater certainty and predictability
regarding whether certain activities
qualify for CRA credit. Specifically, by
18 As discussed below, the agencies are proposing
to retain for certain banks the small bank
performance standards applicable to small banks
that are not intermediate small banks in the current
regulations. 12 CFR 25.26, 195.26; 345.26. The
agencies intend for these standards to be applied
consistent with the current regulations except as
discussed in this notice of proposed rulemaking.
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providing banks with greater confidence
that activities qualify for CRA credit
before they invest time and resources in
those activities, the proposed rule
would incentivize banks to more readily
engage in innovative projects that have
a significant impact on the community.
Moreover, by allowing stakeholders to
confirm that activities qualify, the
proposal would eliminate the
uncertainty in the current regulations
that potentially limited the scope and
type of banks’ CRA activities that will
benefit banks’ communities, particularly
LMI individuals and areas.
In addition to providing transparency,
the proposed qualifying activities
criteria would expand the types of
activities that qualify for CRA credit to
recognize that some banks are currently
serving community needs in a manner
that is consistent with the statutory
purpose of CRA but are not receiving
CRA credit for those activities. This
expansion would ensure that banks help
meet the needs of their entire
communities, particularly LMI
neighborhoods and other areas and
populations of need. The expanded
qualifying activities criteria would focus
on economically disadvantaged
individuals and areas in banks’
communities. For example, the
proposed qualifying activities criteria
would expand the activities that qualify
in areas that have traditionally lacked
sufficient access to financial services,
such as (1) distressed areas; (2)
underserved areas, including areas
where there is a great need for banking
activities but few banks that engage in
activities (known as banking deserts);
and (3) Indian country. Moreover, to
maintain a focus on LMI individuals,
the proposal would, for example, no
longer permit a mortgage loan to a highincome individual living in a lowincome census tract to qualify for CRA
credit.
B. Expanding Where CRA Activity
Counts
The proposal would preserve
assessment areas surrounding banks’
facilities and expand where CRA
activity counts to help banks meet the
needs of their communities. To ensure
that CRA activity continues to have a
local community focus where banks
maintain a physical presence and
conduct a substantial portion of their
lending activity, banks would still be
required to delineate assessment areas
around their main office, branches, or
non-branch deposit-taking facilities as
well as the surrounding areas where
banks have originated or purchased a
substantial portion of their loans. These
areas would be identified as ‘‘facility-
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based’’ assessment areas. In addition, to
recognize the evolution of modern
banking (including the emergence of
internet banks), the fact that many banks
receive large portions of their deposits
from outside their facilities-based
assessment areas, and in conformity
with the CRA’s intent to ensure that
banks help meet credit needs where
they collect deposits,19 the proposed
rule would require banks to delineate
additional, non-overlapping ‘‘depositbased’’ assessment areas where they
have significant concentrations of retail
domestic deposits. Specifically, a bank
that receives 50 percent or more of its
retail domestic deposits from geographic
areas outside of its facility-based
assessment areas would be required to
delineate deposit-based assessment
areas where it receives five percent or
more of its total retail domestic
deposits, based on the physical
addresses of its depositors.
Banks would receive CRA credit for
qualifying activities conducted in their
facility-based assessment areas and
deposit-based assessment areas at the
assessment area level and at the bank
level, consistent with the applicable
performance standards discussed below.
In addition, the proposal would permit
banks to receive CRA credit for
qualifying activities conducted outside
of their assessment areas at the bank
level. Under this approach, banks would
still be encouraged to meet local
community needs where they have
branches and depositors but would be
given flexibility to serve other
communities with distinct needs as
these activities would be considered
when calculating the overall dollar
value of their qualifying activities under
the proposed rule. This flexible
framework could reduce the number of
areas where there are more banks that
want to engage in CD activities than
there is need for those activities (known
as CD hot spots) and areas where there
is a great need for CD activities but few
banks that engage in those activities
(known as CD deserts).
C. Providing an Objective Method To
Measure CRA Activity
Consistent with the current CRA
framework, the proposed rule would
include different performance standards
applicable to banks of different sizes.
Small banks, as defined under the
proposed rule, would continue to be
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards currently
applicable to small banks that are not
19 See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977)
(statement of Sen. William Proxmire, Chairman, S.
Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs).
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intermediate small banks.20 The
proposed rule also would establish new
general performance standards to
evaluate other banks’ CRA activities and
the CRA activities of small banks that
opt into these standards.
The new general performance
standards would assess two
fundamental components of a bank’s
CRA performance: (1) The distribution
(i.e., number) of qualifying retail loans
to LMI individuals, small farms, small
businesses, and LMI geographies and (2)
the impact of a bank’s qualifying
activities, measured by the value of a
bank’s qualifying activities relative to its
retail domestic deposits. Both
components would be compared to
specific benchmarks and thresholds that
would be established prior to the
beginning of a bank’s evaluation period.
Banks evaluated under the general
performance standards would also be
required to meet a minimum CD lending
and investment requirement in each
assessment area and at the bank level to
achieve a satisfactory or outstanding
rating.
The distribution component builds on
ideas shared with the agencies by the
Board that provide a quantifiable
method to assess what portion of a
bank’s major retail lending activities are
targeted to LMI individuals or in LMI
areas. The impact component responds
to stakeholder comments about the need
for more lending and investment in
areas served by CRA and provides a
transparent means of evaluating those
activities and setting benchmarks
sufficiently high enough to incent more
CRA activities.
By providing a transparent and
objective way to evaluate a bank’s CRA
performance that banks would either be
subject to or may opt into, the proposed
rule would incentivize banks to engage
in qualifying activities in their
assessment areas and other communities
with identified needs, such as distressed
and underserved areas, including rural
and urban areas and Indian country.
Moreover, greater certainty about how
engaging in specific qualifying activities
would affect bank-level ratings would
enable banks and other stakeholders to
monitor CRA performance on an
ongoing basis. It would also enable
banks to target areas of need within
their communities, potentially engage in
more qualifying activities, and provide
a positive benefit to more communities.
In addition, the proposal would
preserve and standardize consideration
of performance context, which would
20 The proposed rule would define a small bank
as a bank that had assets of $500 million or less in
each of the previous four calendar quarters.
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allow the agencies to recognize and
account for specific facts and
circumstances relating to a bank’s CRA
capacity and opportunities in a
transparent manner.
Finally, the proposed regulations
would include a strategic plan option
for all banks. This option would address
the unique needs of banks with business
models that could not be effectively
evaluated under the proposed objective
framework reflected in the general
performance standards or the small
bank performance standards, such as
banks that do not have retail domestic
deposits or small banks that do not
originate retail loans. Taken together,
these features would appropriately
differentiate banks based on their size,
location, and business model.
D. Revising Data Collection,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting
The proposal would require banks
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards to collect and
maintain, but not to report, data related
to their retail domestic deposits so that
the agencies could validate their
deposit-based assessment area
delineations, as applicable. Banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards would be
required to collect, maintain, and report
certain data related to their qualifying
activities, certain non-qualifying
activities, retail domestic deposits, and
assessment areas. Those banks would
also be required to use that information
to make the calculations necessary to
determine their ratings, based on the
application of the performance
standards in the proposal. Prior to a
CRA performance evaluation, the
evaluating agency would validate the
data used in determining a bank’s
ratings. The agencies would provide
additional guidance on the data that
banks need to collect and maintain
under the proposed rule that would
standardize the information collected
and help banks ensure that they meet
the requirements of the rule.
The agencies believe that access to the
standardized information required by
the proposed rule would help them to
better measure, assess, and understand
CRA activity across various areas and
across the industry and over time. The
proposal’s requirements also would
provide the agencies with a better, more
comprehensive understanding of an
individual bank’s CRA activity. In
addition, industry-wide reporting would
enable more effective stakeholder
dialogue regarding the distribution and
volume of CRA activity. The agencies
expect that these changes would result
in timelier and more efficient CRA
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1209
evaluations, which, among other things,
would bring greater predictability to
agency actions that consider CRA
performance. Moreover, the use of the
objective measures described above
would allow performance evaluations to
be written in standardized forms and
captured in shorter narratives, which
would contribute to more timely and
useful public reporting.
IV. Section-by-Section Discussion
A. Qualifying Activities
Overview. Under the current
regulatory framework, only certain—and
relatively few—bank activities qualify
for consideration in CRA performance
evaluations. Whether a bank’s activities
qualify for consideration generally
depends not only on the characteristics
of the activities but also on where the
activities took place. As a general
matter, the types of activities that
currently qualify for CRA consideration
fall into two categories: (1) Retail
banking activities and (2) CD activities.
Under the current framework, retail
banking activities generally include (1)
retail loans (i.e., home mortgage loans,
small business loans, small farm loans,
and consumer loans) and (2) retail
banking services (i.e., the range of retail
deposit services and credit services,
branch distributions, the record of
branch openings and closings, and the
availability and the effectiveness of
alternative delivery systems serving LMI
individuals and areas). For retail
lending, loan originations and
purchases are considered. CD activities
generally include those that finance or
support (1) affordable housing for LMI
individuals; (2) economic development
by financing small businesses or small
farms; (3) community services for LMI
individuals; and (4) the revitalization or
stabilization of LMI census tracts,
distressed nonmetropolitan middleincome census tracts, underserved
nonmetropolitan middle-income census
tracts, and designated disaster areas. For
CD activities, activities conducted or
originated during the current evaluation
period are considered. For CD
investments, prior period outstanding
investments are also considered. Banks
also have the option of receiving
consideration for retail and CD activities
conducted by an affiliate, third party, or
consortium. In evaluating a bank’s CRA
performance, the agencies assess certain
factors including (1) the level of relevant
retail lending activity and the
geographic and borrower distribution of
that retail lending activity and (2) the
level, responsiveness, innovativeness,
complexity, and flexibility of CD
activities.
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The feedback that the agencies
received on the current framework
demonstrates that banks often are
uncertain about whether a CD activity
will qualify for CRA consideration until
their supervisory agency makes a
determination in a CRA evaluation,
often years after the banks engaged in
the activities. Feedback also revealed
that many banks and other stakeholders
view the process by which the agencies
decide whether a CD activity qualifies
for CRA credit as opaque and
inconsistent from evaluation-toevaluation, agency-to-agency, and yearto-year. In addition, stakeholders
expressed that the current definition of
CD can be limiting and does not capture
many activities that respond to
community needs, including the needs
of LMI individuals and neighborhoods.
These concerns create a disincentive for
banks to undertake certain activities or
explore new and potentially beneficial
activities, even when these activities
would serve the needs of LMI
populations and other communities
with needs. The agencies propose to
address these issues in four ways.
Qualifying activities criteria. First, the
proposal would clarify the activities that
qualify for CRA credit. The clarifying
criteria would generally apply to all
banks subject to the agencies’ CRA
regulations. Consistent with the intent
of the CRA statute, the proposed rule
would define a ‘‘qualifying activity’’ as
an activity that helps meet the credit
needs of a bank’s community,
particularly those individuals, areas,
and populations with needs. The
proposal would also provide clearly
defined qualifying activities criteria that
identify the types of activities that meet
the credit needs of banks’ communities
and, thus, would be considered
qualifying activities. These criteria
would both encompass the many
activities that currently qualify for CRA
consideration and include additional
activities that meet the credit needs of
economically disadvantaged individuals
and areas in banks’ communities.
Under the proposal, the qualifying
activities criteria would include
activities conducted by a bank. The
agencies recognize that there are limited
instances where the bank is
substantively engaged in an activity, but
the activity is done in the name of
another party, such as an affiliate. In
these situations, the bank provides the
economic resources, and the agencies’
current practice is to recognize these
activities as being conducted by the
bank, at the bank’s option. Under the
proposed rule, the agency would
recognize activities substantively
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conducted by the bank. The proposed
qualify activity criteria would be:
• A retail loan (defined to include
home mortgage loans, small loans to
businesses, small loans to farms, and
consumer loans 21) provided to:
Æ An LMI individual;
Æ A small business; or
Æ A small farm;
• A retail loan provided in Indian
country.
• A retail loan that is a small loan to
a business or a small loan to a farm
located in a low- or moderate-income
census tract.
• A CD activity that provides
financing for or supports:
Æ Affordable housing that partially or
primarily benefits 22 LMI individuals or
families or middle-income individuals
or families in high-cost areas;
Æ Another bank’s CD loan, CD
investment, or CD service;
Æ Community support services that
partially or primarily serve LMI
individuals or families;
Æ Essential community facilities that
partially or primarily benefit or serve
LMI individuals or areas of identified
need;
Æ Essential infrastructure that
benefits or serves LMI individuals or
areas of identified need;
Æ Family farms;
Æ Government programs, projects, or
initiatives that partially or primarily
benefit LMI individuals (e.g., a program
that supports urban renewal), small
businesses, small farms, and areas of
identified need;
Æ Financial literacy programs or
education or homebuyer counseling;
Æ Owner-occupied and rental housing
development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country;
Æ Qualified opportunity funds that
benefit LMI opportunity zones;
Æ A Small Business Administration
Certified Development Company
(SBDC), Small Business Investment
Company (SBIC), New Markets Venture
Capital company, qualified Community
Development Entity, or U.S. Department
of Agriculture Rural Business
Investment Company (RBIC);
Æ Technical assistance and
supportive services for small businesses
or small farms; or
21 Under the proposal, a ‘‘consumer loan’’ would
be defined with reference to the Call Report and
would include credit cards, other revolving credit
plans, automobile loans, and other consumer loans.
22 Under the proposal, a bank would receive
credit for the full dollar value of certain CD
activities that primarily benefit a specified
population or area. For those CD activities that only
partially benefit a specified population or area, a
bank would receive pro-rata credit for the dollar
value of the activity equal to the portion that
benefited the specified population or area.
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Æ A capital investment, loan
participation, or other venture
undertaken by a bank in cooperation
with a minority depository institution,
women’s depository institution, CDFI,
or low-income credit union that helps to
meet the credit needs of the institution’s
or credit union’s local communities,
including through activities that
indirectly help to meet community
credit needs by promoting the
institution’s or credit union’s
sustainability and profitability.23
Regarding CD activities, the phrase
‘‘provides financing for or supports’’
would be interpreted broadly to include
all lending, investment, and service
activities that are related to the CD
qualifying activities criteria. For
example, activities that finance the
development, rehabilitation,
improvement, or maintenance of
affordable housing or essential
community facilities, such as a public
hospital that serves the entire
community including the community’s
LMI residents, would be qualifying
activities because the activities provide
financing for or support the housing or
hospital. The rehabilitation,
improvement, or construction of
affordable housing, essential community
facilities, or essential infrastructure may
include (1) renewable energy, energyefficiency, or water conservation
equipment or projects associated with
affordable housing, essential community
facilities, or essential infrastructure or
(2) the abatement or remediation of, or
other actions to correct, environmental
hazards, such as lead-based paint, lead
pipes (such as those used in antiquated
water supply systems), asbestos, mold,
or radon that is present in the housing,
facilities, or site where the housing or
facilities are located. An activity that
meets more than one of the criteria
would be treated as a single qualifying
activity.
Scope of qualifying activities. Second,
the proposed criteria would expand the
scope of the activities that qualify for
CRA credit. This expansion is intended
to recognize the many ways banks may
meet the credit needs of their
communities, particularly LMI
communities, through activities that are
consistent with the statutory purpose of
the CRA. Under the proposal,
23 For example, a cooperative venture would
include donating, selling on favorable terms, or
making available on a rent-free basis a branch of a
bank that is in a primarily minority census tract to
a minority depository institution or women’s
depository institution. A cooperative venture would
also include a bank that is not a minority depository
institution, women’s depository institution, CDFI,
or low-income credit union making a deposit at one
of these types of institutions.
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expansions to the retail lending criteria
would include:
• Home mortgage loans and consumer
loans provided in Indian country. The
agencies received feedback from
commenters on the ANPR and during
outreach that emphasized the lack of
access to cost-effective capital and
banking services in Indian country.
Providing CRA credit for home mortgage
loans and consumer loans in Indian
country helps to address these critical
needs.
• Small loans to businesses and small
loans to farms provided to (1) small
businesses or small farms in census
tracts of all income levels or (2)
businesses or farms in LMI census
tracts. The proposal would increase the
size thresholds for a small loan to a
business and a small loan to a farm to
$2 million or less. Consistent with the
current regulations’ definitions of small
business loan and small farm loan, the
proposed definitions are based on the
size of the loan to the business or farm.
Loans of $2 million or less to a business
or farm would be considered qualifying
activities if they (1) are provided to
small businesses or small farms or (2)
are located in LMI census tracts. The
increase would, in part, account for
inflation since the $1 million loan limit
for loans to small businesses and
$500,000 for loans to small farms were
established in 1995. The proposal
would include a provision for adjusting
these loan limits for inflation going
forward.
The proposal would define home
mortgage loans with reference to the
Call Report instead of the Home
Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA). As a
result of this revision, construction
loans for 1–4 family residential
properties would be included as home
mortgage loans. Consumer loans would
also be defined with reference to the
Call Report and included in all CRA
evaluations. In addition, the small
business and small farm revenue
thresholds would be increased to $2
million in part to account for inflation
since the revenue size limits were
established. As with the size thresholds
for a small loan to a business and a
small loan to a farm, the proposal would
include a provision for adjusting the
revenue limits for inflation going
forward.
Under the proposal, expansions to
qualifying CD activities would include:
• Expanding the affordable housing
criterion by clarifying that it:
Æ Encompasses ‘‘naturally occurring
affordable housing’’ (e.g., unsubsidized
rental housing with rents that are
affordable to LMI individuals and
families). The current regulations could
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be interpreted to provide consideration
these types of activities; however, the
regulations do not expressly include
these activities as qualifying CD
activities and the CRA guidance is not
sufficiently clear about whether they
receive CRA credit. The proposal would
clarify the criteria to incentivize banks
to meet the affordable housing needs of
their communities through a variety of
activities; and
Æ Includes rental housing for low-,
moderate-, and middle-income
individuals in high-cost areas. The
Interagency Questions and Answers
Regarding Community Reinvestment
(Interagency Questions & Answers) 24
explain that examiners can account for
conditions in high-cost areas in banks’
CRA evaluations. The proposal would
clarify the criteria to incentivize banks
to meet the affordable housing needs of
their communities through a variety of
activities including workforce housing
that would allow public employees,
such as teachers, police officers, and
firefighters, to live close to the
communities they serve.
• Adding a criterion for activities that
help finance or support another bank’s
CD loans, CD investments, or CD
services. Including this criterion and
expanding the definition of CD loan and
investments to include certain
commitments to lend and invest,
discussed below, would address the fact
that community banks understand
community needs best but often are
unable to provide the necessary funding
or service alone. In these cases, large
banks may finance the project,
benefitting from community banks’
efforts to identify areas of need. This
criterion would address stakeholders’
recommendations that the CRA
regulatory framework do more to
encourage inter-bank collaboration and
allow community banks to remain
involved in projects that they identified
and enabled.
• Adding a criterion for essential
community facilities, such as schools
and hospitals, that benefit or serve LMI
individuals, LMI census tracts, or other
targeted areas of need, such as
distressed areas or Indian country.
Under the current regulation, the
Interagency Questions & Answers
regarding activities that revitalize or
stabilize underserved nonmetropolitan
middle-income census tracts reference
essential community needs, which
include certain essential community
facilities or infrastructure projects;
24 The
agencies have published the Interagency
Questions and Answers Regarding Community
Reinvestment in the Federal Register. 81 FR 48506
(July 25, 2016).
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however, activities that finance or
support these projects may also meet
other CD definitions. By adding a
criterion for essential community
facilities, the proposal would also
clarify when these activities receive
credit and incentivize banks’ lending
and investment activities related to
these facilities.
• Adding a criterion for essential
infrastructure, such as roads, mass
transit, or water supply and
distribution, that benefits or serves LMI
individuals, LMI census tracts, or other
targeted areas, such as Indian country.
As discussed above, certain essential
infrastructure projects may receive
credit under the current CRA
regulations as CD activities. The
addition of the essential infrastructure
criterion would acknowledge the
importance of these types of projects to
communities by ensuring that essential
infrastructure activities receive CRA
credit if they include some benefit for
LMI individuals, LMI census tracts, or
other areas of need (e.g., an investment
in a mass transit project that serves the
public, including LMI individuals,
would be a qualifying activity).25 The
addition also would recognize that
essential infrastructure projects are
often community-wide projects for
which it is not feasible to allocate the
benefit to specific populations or areas.
• Adding a criterion for federal, state,
local, or tribal government programs,
projects, or initiatives that partially or
primarily benefit LMI individuals, small
businesses, small farms, LMI census
tracts, or other targeted areas of need,
such as distressed or underserved areas.
Although many programs, projects, or
initiatives covered by this criterion
would qualify under the current CD
definitions, this new criterion would
ensure that all activities that meet this
definition receive CRA credit. As
previously indicated, the agencies
believe that, in many circumstances,
communities are in the best position to
identify their needs and design projects,
programs, and initiatives that help to
address those needs. This criterion
would ensure that activities related to
both existing and future programs that
benefit certain populations and areas of
need will receive CRA credit, even if the
activities do not meet one of the other
CD criteria, such as affordable housing.
Including this criterion would reduce
the circumstances in which sections or
subsections of the regulations become
obsolete due to the inclusion of specific
25 In contrast, a loan supporting the infrastructure
necessary to connect an upper-income housing
development to a water main line would not meet
this criterion, if there were no LMI residents in the
development.
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programs that expire or are repealed.
For example, the CD definition in the
CRA regulations previously included
qualifying Neighborhood Stabilization
Program (NSP)-related activities that
benefit low-, moderate-, and middleincome individuals and geographies in
NSP-target areas. These references have
since been removed because, after
March 2016, NSP-eligible activities no
longer received consideration as CD
activities under the CRA.
• Adding a criterion for family farm
purchases or leases of farm land,
equipment, and other inputs or the sale
and trade of family farm products, as
well as for technical assistance and
supportive services. The agencies
believe that this criterion would benefit
communities that banks serve because a
healthy farm economy supports many
rural and regional economies.
• Adding a criterion for financial
literacy programs or education or
homebuyer counseling that benefits
individuals of all income levels. The
agencies believe that financial literacy is
an important issue irrespective of
income level. Moreover, some
stakeholders expressed support for
providing CRA credit for financial
literacy programs for all individuals.
These stakeholders cited high levels of
student and credit card debt and a lack
of retirement and other savings as
reasons for providing broader
consideration of financial literacyrelated activities.
• Adding a criterion for owneroccupied and rental housing
development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country. This
criterion would address concerns
expressed by stakeholders about the
significant housing needs in Indian
country that affect individuals of all
income levels.
• Adding a criterion for qualified
opportunity funds, as defined in 26
U.S.C. 1400Z–2(d)(1), that benefit
qualified opportunity zones in LMI
tracts, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–
1(a). This criterion would incentivize
banks to help meet the needs of LMI
individuals and tracts located in
opportunity zones, which are
communities the federal government
has identified as needing economic
development and job creation.
• Adding CDFIs to the criterion for
ventures undertaken by a bank in
cooperation with a minority depository
institution, women’s depository
institution, or low-income credit union.
The proposal would include CDFIs in
this criterion to recognize that the goal
of these institutions is to expand
economic opportunities in low-income
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communities by providing access to
financial products and services for local
residents and businesses.
In addition to these expansions, the
affordable housing criterion would
include activities that finance or
support owner-occupied housing
purchased, refinanced, or improved by
LMI individuals or families, except for
home mortgage loans provided directly
to LMI individuals or families. This
aspect of the criterion would
encompass, for example, an investment
provided to a non-profit that constructs
or rehabilitates affordable housing for
purchase by LMI individuals. In
addition, this aspect of the criterion
would capture mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) while excluding retail
home mortgage loans. Although these
activities receive credit under the
current regulation, this aspect of the
criterion would ensure that they
continue to receive credit under the
more detailed qualifying activities
criteria in the proposal.
Furthermore, the proposal would
clarify and expand the type of activities
that qualify for CRA credit through
revisions to the definitions used in the
qualifying activities criteria. The
proposal would revise the definitions of
CD loans and CD investments 26 to
include commitments to lend and
invest, respectively, that are reported on
the Call Report, Schedule RC–L, and
meet the CD activities criteria.27
Loan participations that have a
primary purpose of CD currently qualify
and would continue to qualify. To
further support collaboration between
large banks and community banks, the
proposal would provide credit for a
bank’s allowance for credit losses that
are reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC–G, if the bank commits to
provide additional funding as required
in certain contingencies. For example, a
large bank would receive credit if it
committed to financing potential cost
overruns, the threat of which could
cause the community bank to avoid the
project entirely.28 Similarly, a project
may require a bank to commit funds in
advance but because banks face
investment limitations,29 advance
commitments, though often necessary to
a project, can be restrictive, particularly
26 The proposal would replace the term ‘‘qualified
investment’’ in the current regulation with the term
‘‘CD investment.’’
27 The Call Report, Schedule RC–L, covers
contingent and legally binding commitments to
lend and invest, respectively.
28 Banks would continue to receive CRA credit for
the funded portions of lines of credit but generally
would not receive CRA credit for other legallybinding commitments to lend, such as revolving
credit lines and letters of credit.
29 See, e.g., 12 CFR part 24.
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for community banks. The proposal
would provide credit for the dollar
value of legally-binding commitments to
invest that meet the CD criteria.
The proposal also would revise the
definitions of distressed
nonmetropolitan middle-income area
and underserved nonmetropolitan
middle-income area to include
additional census tracts where there are
unmet financial needs. Specifically, the
requirement that a distressed area be a
nonmetropolitan area would be
removed to recognize that there may be
urban areas that experience high rates of
poverty, unemployment, or population
loss and need financial resources.
Although the agencies also considered
lowering the poverty threshold in the
definition of distressed area to as low as
15 percent, they decided to retain the 20
percent threshold because it is
consistent with the threshold used in
some other Federal programs that are
intended to benefit low-income
communities, such as the New Markets
Tax Credit program. The proposal also
would revise the definition of
underserved area to remove the
requirement that these census tracts be
nonmetropolitan areas; this change
would address urban banking deserts
that lack access to financial services.
Under the proposal, an underserved
area would be a census tract with:
• A population size, density, and
dispersion that indicate the area’s
population is sufficiently small, thin,
and distant from a population center
that the tract is likely to have difficulty
financing the fixed costs of meeting
essential community needs; or
• a census tract that does not have a
bank branch in the tract and does not
have a bank branch within:
Æ Two miles of the center of the
census tract if it contains only urban
census blocks;
Æ five miles of the center of the
census tract if it contains urban and
rural census blocks;
Æ ten miles of the center of the census
tract if it contains only rural census
blocks; or
Æ five miles of the center of the
census tract if it is an island area, as
defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) Census data.
Due to the lack of banking and other
services in underserved areas, the
agencies believe that the CRA
regulations should incentivize banks to
meet the retail lending and CD needs of
the residents in these geographies.
In addition, under the proposal, the
CRA regulations would no longer
require that CD services be related to the
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provision of financial services (i.e.,
banks would receive credit for all
volunteer hours, including manual
labor, provided to a CD project). This
expansion recognizes that support for a
CD project may take many forms, all of
which are required for the project to
meet the needs of a community, and
that all these forms of support should
qualify for CRA credit, consistent with
the goals of CRA. Under the proposed
general performance standards, all
activities conducted by the bank—
including those engaged in by another
party, such as an affiliate—would be
considered, as opposed to at a bank’s
option as is done under the current
framework. Banks evaluated under the
small bank performance standards
would continue to have the option of
requesting consideration for these
qualifying activities.
The proposal also would expand the
circumstances in which banks receive
pro-rata credit for qualifying activities.
Under the current regulations, banks
receive credit for the pro-rata share of
a loan or investment in mixed-income
housing that includes a set-aside
required by Federal, state, or local
government for affordable housing for
LMI individuals. Under the proposal, all
CD activities that provide some benefit
to, but do not primarily benefit,
specified populations, entities, or areas
would receive pro-rata credit equal to
the partial benefit provided. This
change recognizes that 100 percent of
the portion of an activity that benefits
LMI individuals and families, small
businesses, small farms, or identified
geographies would meet the CD criteria
in the proposal (i.e., a bank would
receive credit for 40 percent of the
dollar value of a grant that supports a
non-profit organization which provides
after care and activities to a school
where 40 percent of the students are
eligible for free or reduced price school
lunches).
Further, as stated above, the intended
effect of the proposal is to expand the
type of activities that qualify for CRA
credit. Although the agencies chose not
to include in the proposal certain
ambiguous or unclear terms used in the
current regulations, the agencies do not
intend to reduce the activities that
qualify for CRA credit. For example, the
qualifying activities criteria would no
longer use the current regulatory phrase
‘‘revitalize and stabilize’’ to describe the
activities that would qualify in targeted
areas, such as distressed or underserved
areas; instead, the proposal describes in
greater detail the criteria for activities
that would qualify in these locations.
Similarly, rather than including the
term ‘‘economic development,’’ the
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proposal employs more detailed CD
criteria to capture the type of activities
that currently qualify as economic
development activities, such as
activities that finance (1) SBDCs, SBICs,
New Markets Venture Capital
companies, qualified Community
Development Entities, or RBICs; (2)
businesses or farms that meet the sizeeligibility standards of the SBDC or
SBIC by providing technical assistance
and supportive services; or (3) Federal,
state, local, or tribal government
programs, projects, or initiatives that
partially or primarily benefit small
businesses, or small farms. The proposal
does not include the more general
aspect of economic development that
involved a bank having to demonstrate
that its activities that finance businesses
or farms that met the size test 30 support
job creation, retention, and
improvement for LMI individuals, LMI
census tracts, and other areas targeted
for redevelopment by Federal, state,
local, or tribal governments. This aspect
of the economic development
component of the current CD definition
was not retained because the agencies
could not identify an objective method
for demonstrating job creation,
retention, or improvement for LMI
individuals or census tracts or other
targeted geographies, other than by
determining if the activity would create
additional low-wage jobs.
Focus on ongoing commitment. Third,
the proposal seeks to address the
concern that the current framework
gives too much CRA credit to certain
activities, such as credit for the full
value of frequently traded MBS,
regardless of how long they remain on
a bank’s balance sheet and even when
they do not result in new qualifying
activities. The proposal would ensure
that a bank’s balance sheet reflects its
ongoing commitment to CRA. To
accomplish this goal, the proposal
would give a bank CRA credit for the
average month-end outstanding amount
on a bank’s balance sheet (on-balance
sheet) of any qualifying loan or CD
investment. The proposal would credit
the bank for the amount of CD services
and monetary and in-kind donations
made during the period. This approach
would help to eliminate the apparent
inflation of the level of a bank’s CRA
activity that results from banks
30 Under the current regulations, as interpreted in
the Interagency Questions & Answers, a business or
farm meets the size test if it finances, either
directly, or through an intermediary, businesses or
farms that either meet the size eligibility standards
of the SBDC or SBIC programs or have gross annual
revenues of $1 million or less. See Interagency
Questions and Answers, Q&A l.12(g)(3)–1, 81 FR
48506, (July 25, 2016).
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purchasing loans or investments just
prior to a CRA evaluation and then
selling those loans and investments
when the evaluation is complete.
Qualifying activities list. Finally, the
proposal provides that the agencies
would maintain a publicly available
non-exhaustive, illustrative list of
examples of qualifying activities that
meet the criteria in the rule, as well as
examples of activities that the agencies
have determined, in response to specific
inquiries, do not qualify. The proposal
would also establish a process for a
bank to submit a form through the
agency’s website to seek agency
confirmation that an activity is a
qualifying activity.31
The illustrative list generally would
be updated each time an activity is
confirmed to be or determined not to be
a qualifying activity; however,
depending on the circumstances, an
activity may not be added to the list
(e.g., if it presents circumstances unique
to the requesting bank or would be
duplicative of an activity already on the
list). If it is determined that an activity
would not be added to the list, this
determination would be made available
to the public. The agencies anticipate
that banks would use this qualifying
activities confirmation process sparingly
and that it would not replace a bank’s
ability to discuss whether an activity
qualifies with its examiners or making
its own determination, by applying the
proposed qualifying activities criteria,
that an activity qualifies for CRA credit.
Banks would not be required to obtain
confirmation from its appropriate
Federal regulatory agency for each CRA
activity, and qualifying activities would
not be limited to those on the
illustrative list.
In addition to updating the illustrative
list on an ongoing basis, the proposal
provides that the list would also be
revised at least every three years,
through a public notice and comment
process, to add activities that meet the
criteria and to remove activities that no
longer meet the criteria (e.g., if
broadband were universally available
and no longer considered to be essential
infrastructure). If it were determined
that an activity no longer meets the
criteria, a bank with that activity onbalance sheet would continue to receive
31 The agencies expect to treat the information
provided to them through this process as nonpublic
and to maintain the confidentiality of that
information subject to applicable law. Banks and
interested parties may designate information as
confidential or request confidential treatment. The
OCC will treat confidential commercial information
submitted to the agency in accordance with 12 CFR
4.16. The FDIC will treat confidential commercial
information submitted to the agency in accordance
with 12 CFR 309.6.
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credit if the obligation remains onbalance sheet; however, that activity
would not be considered a qualifying
activity for any subsequent purchasers.
The agencies would consult and
coordinate with each other on the
content of the proposed list. The initial
proposed illustrative list is available for
review on the agencies’ websites and in
section V of this proposal.
Summary of objectives. Together, the
proposed rule’s qualifying activities
provisions are intended to provide
certainty and transparency about
whether an activity qualifies for CRA
credit prior to a bank engaging in the
activity, and to ensure consistent
treatment of activities across and within
the agencies. By increasing the
specificity used to describe qualifying
activities and predictability about
whether specific activities would count,
these proposed provisions are also
intended to encourage banks to
undertake more CRA activities—
including novel, complex, and
innovative activities—that help meet
local community needs. In particular,
the qualifying activities provisions
would incentivize banks to commit
more financial resources to the
populations and areas that need them
most, such as LMI individuals,
distressed areas, underserved areas, and
Indian country. The agencies expect that
banks would only conduct qualifying
activities that are consistent with safe
and sound banking practices.
Calculating the qualifying activities
value. The current framework includes
a qualitative and quantitative
assessment of the dollar value and
number of CRA activities, but it does
not set a threshold for the total dollar
volume of CRA activities in evaluating
CRA performance nor does it provide a
uniform method for assessing banks’
performance context. Under the
proposal, banks evaluated under the
general performance standards would
determine their presumptive ratings at
the bank level and in each assessment
area by first calculating their qualifying
activities values, which are the sum of
the quantified dollar value of qualifying
activities that receive credit (after being
adjusted by multipliers, as explained
below). Qualifying activities would be
quantified as follows:
• Qualifying loans and CD
investments would be valued based on
their average month-end on-balance
sheet dollar value, except that
qualifying retail loans originated and
sold within 90 days of their origination
date would be valued at 25 percent of
their origination value.
• Legally-binding commitments to
invest that are reported on the Call
Report, Schedule RC–L, would be
valued based on their average monthend dollar value.
• Qualifying commitments to lend
would be valued based on the average
month-end dollar value of the allowance
for credit losses on those commitments
that are reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC–G.
• CD services and monetary or inkind donations would be credited at the
value of the monetary donation or inkind activity or at the hourly salary as
estimated by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics for the job category of the
service provided for the number of
hours provided.
If a CD activity partially benefits the
intended population or area, then the
quantified value would be a pro-rata
share of the full quantified dollar value
of the activity, as described above, equal
to the percentage of partial benefit.
The quantified value of qualifying
activities to CDFIs, other CD
investments (not including MBS and
municipal bonds), and other affordablehousing related CD loans would be
adjusted upward by a multiple of two to
provide an incentive for banks to engage
in these activities. In addition to these
activities, the agencies are also
considering whether to apply
multipliers to smaller CD loans, such as
two, which may be particularly
important to small non-profits with a
CD purpose.
A bank would calculate its bank-level
and assessment area qualifying activities
values by taking the sum of the
quantified values of all qualifying
activities, adjusted by any applicable
multiplier, as follows:
Although banks would still be able to
make large investments in MBS under
the proposal, concerns related to
frequent trading of MBS under the
current regulations are mitigated
because banks evaluated under the
proposed general performance standards
would only receive credit in the
calculation of their CRA evaluation
measure, described below, for the dollar
value of MBS for the period that the
investment remains on-balance sheet.
For example, if a bank purchased a
qualifying MBS on January 1, 2019 and
sold the MBS on February 1, 2019, the
bank would receive one twelfth of the
value of the MBS when it calculated its
annual qualifying activities value.
Alternatives considered. The agencies
considered additional ways to expand
credit for retail lending and CD
activities to individuals who, although
not designated as low- or moderateincome, nonetheless have objectively
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low incomes. These included providing
CRA credit for retail loans and CD
activities to middle-income individuals
in (1) distressed areas; (2) underserved
areas; (3) persistent poverty counties,
which have a poverty rate of 20 percent
or more over the last 30 years; and (4)
any census tract where the area median
income is less than the national median
income. To retain the focus on LMI
individuals, however, the proposal does
not include these revisions.
The agencies also considered limiting
the dollar value that any single
transaction could contribute to the
qualifying activities value to address
concerns that measuring performance
based on the dollar value of banks’
qualifying activities could incentivize
banks to engage in a small number of
large dollar activities that may be less
responsive to community needs than
other activities. Because the proposal
assesses the performance of banks that
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are subject to the general performance
standards by considering the
distribution of retail lending activities
and the dollar value of qualifying
activities, as discussed below, the
agencies do not believe that a single
transaction limit is necessary. Moreover,
a single transaction limit could have
unintended consequences and
discourage banks from conducting
activities that would help meet the
needs of a specific community. For
example, competition and capacity
constraints may limit the number and
type of qualifying activities available to
a bank.
The agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposal related to
establishing clear criteria for the type of
activities that would qualify for CRA
credit and determining the dollar value
of qualifying activities, including with
respect to the following questions:
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Qualifying Loans
Twenty five percent of the origination value of
+ CD Services and Monetary
Qualifying Loans sold within
on balance sheet
+
and In - kind donations
for at least 90 days and CD Investments
90 days of origination
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1. Are the proposed criteria for
determining which activities would
qualify for credit under the CRA
sufficiently clear and consistent with the
CRA’s objective of encouraging banks to
conduct CRA activities in the
communities they serve?
2. Are there other criteria for
determining which activities would
qualify for CRA credit that the agencies
should consider?
3. Under the proposal, CD activities
conducted in targeted areas, such as
Indian country or distressed areas,
would qualify for CRA credit. Should
there be any additional criteria
applicable to the types of CD activities
that qualify for CRA credit in these
areas? If so, what should those criteria
be?
4. Under the proposal, the small
business and small farm revenue
thresholds and the size thresholds for a
small loan to a business and a small
loan to a farm would increase to $2
million. Do these increases
appropriately incentivize banks to
engage in small business and small farm
lending activities, or should other
changes be made to the revenue and
loan size thresholds?
5. The agencies plan to publish the
illustrative list on their websites and to
update the list both on an ongoing basis
and through a notice and comment
process. Should the list instead be
published as an Appendix to the final
rule or be otherwise published in the
Federal Register? In addition, how
often should the list be updated?
6. The proposal includes a process for
updating the illustrative list on an
ongoing basis through submission of a
form to seek agency confirmation. The
agencies considered an alternative
process where an agency would accept
all requests from banks for confirmation
that an activity is a qualifying activity,
aggregate these requests, publish the list
of requested items in the Federal
Register for public comment and
feedback, and update the list following
this process once every six months.
What process, including any alternative
process, should the agencies adopt to
update the illustrative list of qualifying
activities?
7. Are certain types of retail loans
more valuable to LMI individuals and
geographies than other types? If so,
which types? Should the regulations
recognize those differences? If so, how?
For example, could multipliers be used
to recognize those differences and
provide incentives for banks to engage
in activities that are scarce but highly
needed?
8. The use of multipliers is intended
to incentivize banks to engage in
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activities that benefit LMI individuals
and areas and to other areas of need;
however, multipliers may cause banks
to conduct a smaller dollar value of
impactful activities because they will
receive additional credit for those
activities. Are there ways the agencies
can ensure that multipliers encourage
activities that benefit LMI individuals
and areas while limiting or preventing
the potential for decreasing the dollar
volume of activities (e.g., establishing a
minimum floor for activities before a
multiplier would be applied)?
9. The proposal quantifies the value
of CD services based on the
compensation for the type of work
engaged in by the employees providing
the services as reflected in the Bureau
of Labor Statistics calculation of the
hourly wage for that type of work.
Alternatively, CD services could be
valued based on a standardized
compensation value for the banking
industry or occupation type. For
example, the median hourly
compensation value for the banking
industry is approximately $36, when
calculated using Bureau of Labor
Statistics data. Would using
standardized compensation values
reduce the burden associated with
tracking CD services while still
appropriately valuing CD services? If so,
how should the agencies establish the
standardized compensation values?
10. Should the range of retail banking
services provided—such as checking
accounts, savings accounts, and
certificates of deposit—be considered
under this proposal? If so, how could
retail banking services be quantified?
For example, could the types of
checking and savings accounts that are
offered by a bank (e.g., no fee, fixed fee,
low interest-bearing, high interestbearing) be considered in performance
context?
B. Assessment Areas
Under the current framework, a
bank’s CRA performance is measured
within the bank’s assessment areas or
the greater statewide or regional area(s)
that includes the bank’s assessment
areas. With limited exceptions, a bank is
required to delineate assessment areas
consisting of one metropolitan statistical
area (MSA), one or more metropolitan
divisions (MD), or one or more
contiguous political subdivisions (e.g.,
counties, cities, or towns). Assessment
areas must include any census tract
where a bank has its main office and
any census tract where it has one or
more branches or deposit-taking
automated teller machines (ATMs), as
well as the surrounding census tracts in
which the bank has originated or
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1215
purchased a substantial portion of its
loans. A bank may adjust the boundaries
of an assessment area to include only
the portion of a political subdivision
that it reasonably can be expected to
serve. Finally, an assessment area must
consist only of whole census tracts and
not reflect illegal discrimination,
arbitrarily exclude LMI census tracts, or
extend substantially beyond an MSA or
state boundary unless the assessment
area is in a multistate MSA (MMSA).
Wholesale banks, which are banks
without retail customers (e.g., home
mortgage and small business
customers), and limited purpose banks,
which are banks that offer limited
products (e.g., credit cards or
automobile loans), have these same
rules for delineating assessment areas,
except that their assessment area
delineations only include the MSAs,
MDs, or whole political subdivisions
that contain these banks’ main office,
branches, and deposit-taking ATMs.
Military banks, whose business
predominately consists of serving the
needs of military personnel or their
dependents, are not required to have
geographic assessment areas and may
delineate their entire deposit customer
base as their assessment area.
The current method for delineating a
bank’s assessment areas, which is
focused on the areas surrounding brickand-mortar bank locations, is challenged
by how today’s consumers meet their
banking needs and banks provide
services. The current approach creates
disincentives for banks to meet the
needs of their entire communities or
even their own customers if their
communities or customers are located
outside of the banks’ assessment areas.
These disincentives serve to create CRA
deserts and promote CRA hotspots.
To address this, the proposed rule
would establish a modernized and
standardized process for identifying
where a bank’s qualifying activities
receive credit that would apply to banks
subject to the agencies’ CRA regulations.
Under the proposal, banks (except for
military banks) 32 would be required to
serve the communities where they have
a physical presence and would also be
required to serve the surrounding
geographies where they originated or
purchased a substantial portion of their
loans (consistent with the current rules).
In addition, to recognize changes in the
banking industry—including the
increasing number of banks that operate
primarily through the internet or
32 The proposal would retain the requirement that
a military bank be evaluated based on its entire
deposit customer base, regardless of geographic
location.
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otherwise serve customers located far
from the banks’ physical locations—and
the statutory purpose of the CRA to help
ensure that banks reinvest in the
communities where they collect
deposits,33 the proposal would also
require a bank with a significant portion
of its retail domestic deposits outside of
its facility-based assessment areas, such
as 50 percent or more, to delineate
additional assessment areas wherever it
has a concentration of retail domestic
deposits.
Regarding assessment areas based on
physical presence, a bank would
delineate a ‘‘facility-based’’ assessment
area where it has its main office, a
branch, or a deposit-taking facility, as
well as any surrounding geographies
where the bank has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its
loans. The proposal would require a
bank to delineate these facility-based
assessment areas in any of the following
areas: (1) An MSA; (2) the whole
nonmetropolitan area of a state; (3) one
or more whole, contiguous MDs in a
single MSA; or (4) one or more whole
contiguous counties or county
equivalents in a single MSA or nonMSA area. The agencies would provide
banks the option to choose the
geographic level at which to delineate
their facility-based assessment areas
because the agencies believe that banks
are in the best position to determine the
areas that their facilities serve.
Beyond their brick-and-mortar
locations, the proposal would require
banks that receive more than 50 percent
of their retail domestic deposits from
outside of their facility-based
assessment areas to delineate separate,
non-overlapping ‘‘deposit-based’’
assessment areas in the smallest
geography where they receive five
percent or more of their retail domestic
deposits. These deposit-based
assessment areas would capture banks’
evolving business models, address the
increasing competition for deposits
outside of banks’ current assessment
areas, and encourage banks to serve
their entire communities—including
where they take deposits—in harmony
with the CRA statute. These depositbased assessment areas would consist of
(1) a state; (2) a whole MSA; (3) the
whole nonmetropolitan area of a state;
(4) one or more whole, contiguous MDs
in a single MSA; (5) the remaining
geographic area of a state, MSA,
nonmetropolitan area, or MD other than
where it has a facility-based assessment
area; or (6) one or more whole,
contiguous counties or county
equivalents in a single MSA or non33 See,
e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977).
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MSA. Unlike facility-based assessment
areas where banks may choose the
geographic level where they delineate
their assessment areas, the agencies
believe that banks should be required to
delineate deposit-based assessment
areas at the smallest geographic level
where they receive five percent or more
of their retail domestic deposits to help
ensure that banks’ deposit-based
assessment area ratings reflect their
qualifying activities in the same areas as
their concentrations of deposits. For
example, if a bank receives 60 percent
of its retail domestic deposits from
outside of its facility-based assessment
area and 5 percent of these deposits
come from Cook County, Illinois, which
is not in a facility-based assessment
area, it must delineate Cook County as
a deposit-based assessment area.
In addition, the agencies recognize
that there are certain communities of
need where banks have a limited
physical or deposit-taking presence. To
help ensure that these areas are served,
the proposed rule would allow banks to
receive credit for qualifying activities
conducted outside of their assessment
areas in determining their bank-level
ratings.
The proposal would allow a bank to
change its assessment area delineation
once during each evaluation period and
would no longer permit a bank to adjust
an assessment area’s boundaries to
include only the portion of a political
subdivision that it reasonably can be
expected to serve. The proposal would,
however, retain the requirements that a
bank’s assessment areas must not reflect
illegal discrimination or arbitrarily
exclude low- or moderate-income
geographies.
Summary of objectives. Taken
together, the proposal’s assessment area
provisions would create an affirmative
obligation for banks to conduct CRA
activity in the communities where they
operate (determined by where they have
a physical presence), conduct a
substantial portion of their lending, or
collect a substantial portion of their
deposits. Through these changes, the
proposed rule would both (1) preserve
the important connection between a
bank’s physical locations and the
surrounding community by addressing
the CRA obligations of traditional banks,
which engage in most of their business
at their physical locations and (2) reflect
critical changes to how customers bank
in the 21st century by considering the
activity of nontraditional banks,
including internet banks. In addition,
allowing banks to receive credit for CRA
activities outside of their assessment
areas when determining bank-level
ratings would help to eliminate CRA hot
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spots and banking deserts and
incentivize investment and lending to
all communities served by the bank.
Alternatives Considered. In
developing this proposed rule, the
agencies considered alternative
approaches for delineating assessment
areas where banks conduct a significant
amount of business outside of their
physical locations. For example, the
agencies considered requiring banks to
delineate additional assessment areas
only where they have a concentration of
deposits. The agencies also considered
adopting a hybrid approach that would
have required delineation of assessment
areas where banks derive a significant
concentration of deposits and conduct a
significant amount of lending. Because
a deposit-based approach closely aligns
with the CRA statute—to address the
harm caused by banks taking deposits
from certain communities and investing
them elsewhere—the proposal includes
the approach based on deposits.34
However, to maintain consistency with
the current framework and recognize the
importance of evaluating a bank’s
lending in the areas surrounding its
facilities where it has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its
retail lending, the proposal also would
require a bank to delineate a facilitybased assessment area around areas
where it has a main office, a branch, or
a deposit-taking facility as well as the
surrounding areas where it has
originated or purchased a substantial
portion of its retail lending.
Regarding the assessment area
thresholds, the proposed rule requires
banks that receive 50 percent or more of
their retail domestic deposits from
outside of their facility-based
assessment areas to delineate depositbased assessment areas where they
receive five percent or more of their
retail domestic deposits. The agencies
are considering a range around those
thresholds; specifically, the agencies are
considering a range between 40 and 60
percent for the percentage of retail
domestic deposits outside of banks’
facilities-based assessment areas and
between two and eight percent for the
percentage that determines where banks
would delineate their deposit-based
assessment areas.
34 See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977)
(statement of Sen. William Proxmire, Chairman, S.
Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs) (‘‘I
am talking about the fact that banks . . . will take
their deposits from a community and instead of
reinvesting them in that community . . . they will
actually or figuratively draw a red line on a map
around the areas of their city, sometimes in the
inner city, sometimes in the older neighborhoods,
sometimes ethnic and sometimes black, but often
encompassing a great area of their neighborhood.’’)
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The agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposal related to
establishing a modernized and
standardized process for identifying a
bank’s community—i.e., assessment
area(s)—in which the bank’s qualifying
activities receive credit, including with
respect to the following questions:
11. Are the proposed methods for
delineating assessment areas clear,
simple, and transparent?
12. The proposal would allow banks
to choose how broadly to delineate their
facility-based assessment areas, but it
would require banks with a significant
portion, such as 50 percent or more, of
their retail domestic deposits outside of
their facility-based assessment areas to
delineate their deposit-based
assessment areas at the smallest
geographic area where they receive five
percent or more of their retail domestic
deposits. The requirement to designate
deposit-based assessment areas would
impact internet banks that do not rely
on branches or ATM facilities to collect
deposits as well as traditional banks
that, in addition to their branches and
ATM facilities, collect a significant
portion of their deposits online outside
of their branch and ATM footprint. Do
these approaches strike the right
balance between allowing flexibility and
ensuring that banks serve their
communities? If not 50 percent, what
threshold should be used to determine
if a bank has a significant portion of its
deposits outside of its facility-based
assessment areas and why? In addition,
is receiving at least five percent of
domestic retail deposits from a given
area the appropriate threshold for
requiring a bank to delineate a depositbased assessment in that area, or should
some other threshold be implemented?
If so, why?
13. The deposit-based assessment
area delineation requirements are
intended to ensure that banks serve the
communities in which they operate.
However, under the proposed
regulation, it is possible that few banks
would be required to delineate a
deposit-based assessment area in less
populous areas or states, despite having
a significant market share in those areas
(although banks with branches in those
areas would be required to delineate
facility-based assessment areas and
banks may receive credit for qualifying
activities outside of their assessment
areas conducted in these areas or
states). Does this framework provide
sufficient incentives for banks to
conduct qualifying activities in these
less populous areas? Alternatively,
should banks be required to delineate
separate, non-overlapping assessment
areas in each state, MSA, MD, or county
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or county equivalent in which they have
at least a certain percentage of the
deposit market share—regardless of
what percentage of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits are derived from a
given area—and, if so, what should the
percentage of the deposit market share
be?
C. Objective Method To Measure CRA
Performance
Overview. The current CRA
regulations provide different methods to
evaluate a bank’s CRA performance
depending on the bank’s asset size and
business strategy. For each type of bank,
the agencies evaluate all or a portion of
its retail and CD activities. For example,
in 2019, banks with less than $321
million in assets in either of the two
prior calendar years were evaluated
under a retail lending test, and various
types of CD activities also may be
considered. For banks evaluated in 2019
with $1.284 billion or more in assets in
2017 or 2018, all CD lending and
investments and all retail and CD
services are evaluated. Based on the
agency’s evaluation of the bank’s
relevant qualifying activities, its
performance context, and evidence of
discriminatory and other illegal credit
practices, a bank receives a rating of
outstanding, satisfactory, needs to
improve, or substantial noncompliance.
Because of the subjective nature of the
current framework, exactly how an
agency determines the appropriate
rating is at times opaque, complex, and
inconsistent. Although the current
framework describes in general terms
the parameters that an agency uses to
weigh and score a bank’s relevant
qualifying activities, important terms in
the parameters are undefined and the
processes are unspecified. For example,
the agencies are required to assess the
geographic distributions of loans. For
banks other than small banks and
intermediate small banks, as those terms
are defined under the current
regulations, an ‘‘excellent’’ geographic
distribution correlates with an
‘‘outstanding’’ rating, and a ‘‘good’’
distribution correlates with a
‘‘satisfactory’’ rating—but both
‘‘excellent’’ and ‘‘good’’ are undefined.
Similarly, under the current regulations,
the undefined term ‘‘reasonable
geographic distribution’’ equates to
satisfactory performance for small banks
and intermediate small banks.
Furthermore, there is no stated quantity
of CRA activities that correlates to a
particular rating category. With respect
to qualifying services, the current
framework does not quantify their
value, and the agencies undertake a
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qualitative analysis of the range of such
services.
To achieve the goal of providing a
method of assessing CRA performance
that would be more objective, clear, and
consistent and facilitate banks’ ability to
engage in qualifying activities in
communities that need it the most, the
proposed rule would establish new
general performance standards used to
evaluate banks that are not small banks.
The proposal would allow small banks
to opt into the general performance
standards as described below; those that
do not opt in would be evaluated under
small bank performance standards
consistent with the current regulations.
The new general performance standards
would evaluate banks’ CRA activities by
assessing two fundamental components:
(1) The appropriate distribution (i.e.,
number) of qualifying retail loans to
LMI individuals, small farms, small
businesses, and LMI geographies in a
community and (2) the impact (i.e.,
quantified value) of a bank’s qualifying
activities.
To ensure that the distribution of the
number of CRA retail loans and the total
value of qualifying activities would be
captured and assessed, the proposed
rule would provide that the ratings for
a bank evaluated under the general
performance standards would be based
on a combination of approaches.
Specifically, to receive a presumptive
rating of satisfactory or outstanding at
the assessment area level, (1) banks
would be required to meet the minimum
thresholds for performance on the
applicable retail lending distribution
tests in that assessment area for each
major retail lending product line with at
least 20 loans in that assessment area
and (2) the average of banks’ CRA
evaluation measures (described in more
detail below) for an evaluation period
would have to meet the associated
empirical benchmark. By only
evaluating a bank’s distribution of retail
loans in areas where the bank has at
least 20 loans in a major retail lending
product line, this approach would be
tailored to a bank’s business strategy
and product offerings at the bank and
assessment area level.
At the bank level, a bank’s
presumptive rating would be based on
the comparison of its average bank-level
CRA evaluation measure to the
established empirical benchmark,
except that a bank could not receive a
satisfactory or an outstanding unless it
also received that rating in a significant
portion, such as more than 50 percent,
of its assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits, such as
more than 50 percent. At both the bank
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and assessment area level, banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards would also be
required to meet minimum CD lending
and investment requirements to achieve
a satisfactory or outstanding rating. This
method of evaluation would incentivize
banks to increase the dollar volume of
their CRA activities, ensure that banks
that are retail lenders are distributing
their retail loans to LMI individuals,
small farms, small businesses, and farms
and business in LMI communities, and
recognize the importance of CD lending
and investments to LMI individuals and
communities.
The proposal would define retail
domestic deposits as total domestic
deposits of individuals, partnerships,
and corporations, as reported on
Schedule RC–E, item 1, of the Call
Report, but exclude brokered deposits.
This proposed definition would exclude
municipal deposits and deposits from
foreign governments or entities and thus
would be more reflective of a bank’s
capacity to engage in CRA-qualifying
activities. By further excluding brokered
deposits, which are not associated with
any individual or community, this
definition would refine the Call Report
definition to more accurately reflect the
deposits a bank collects from
identifiable individuals and
communities. Additionally, this
definition would leverage an existing
Call Report definition of deposits to
lessen associated data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting burdens.
Under this proposal, for a bank
evaluated under the general
performance standards to meet the
outstanding or satisfactory presumptive
rating categories in an assessment area:
(1) Its performance on the geographic
and borrower lending distribution tests
would have to meet or exceed the
established thresholds for performance
for each of its major retail lending
product lines with at least 20 loans in
that assessment area and (2) the average
of its annual assessment area CRA
evaluation measures would have to
meet or exceed the established
benchmarks.
The chart below illustrates possible
ways to achieve each presumptive
ratings category associated with the
statutory rating categories in a given
assessment area. The agencies included
specific empirical benchmarks for each
rating category in the proposed rule that
they believe would help achieve the
positive outcomes intended by this
rulemaking (i.e., an empirical
benchmark of (1) 11 percent for
outstanding, (2) six percent for
satisfactory, (3) three percent for needs
to improve, and (4) less than three
percent for substantial noncompliance).
The agencies selected the specific
empirical benchmarks from within
ranges for each rating category that
reflect the agencies’ analysis of the
available lending and investment data,
discussed below.
CRA evaluation
Retail lending distribution tests
CD minimums
The average of a bank’s annual assessment area CRA evaluation
measures meets or exceeds 11 percent (selected from a range of 10 to
15 percent).
A bank meets the established thresholds for all the retail lending distribution tests for its major retail
lending product lines in that assessment area.
The average of a bank’s annual assessment area CRA evaluation
measures meets or exceeds 6 percent (selected from a range of 5 to
10 percent).
A bank meets the established thresholds for all the retail lending distribution tests for its major retail
lending product lines in that assessment area.
The quantified value of community development loans and community development investments in the assessment area, divided by the average of the bank’s assessment area
retail domestic deposits must meet
or exceed 2 percent.
The quantified value of community development loans and community development investments in the assessment area, divided by the average of the bank’s assessment area
retail domestic deposits must meet
or exceed 2 percent.
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The average of a bank’s annual assessment area CRA evaluation
measures meets or exceeds 3 percent (selected from a range of 2 to
5 percent).
The average of a bank’s annual assessment area CRA evaluation
measures is less than 3 percent
(selected from a range of 0 to 5 percent).
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Outstanding.
Satisfactory.
Needs Improvement.
Substantial Non-compliance.
The bank-level presumptive rating
under the general performance
standards would be determined by
comparing the average of a bank’s
average bank-level annual CRA
evaluation measures to the established
empirical benchmarks for the statutory
rating categories and determining if the
bank had a satisfactory or outstanding in
a significant portion, such as more than
50 percent, of its assessment areas, and
in those assessment areas where it holds
a significant amount of deposits, such as
more than 50 percent. In addition, the
bank would be required to meet the
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Presumptive rating
category
minimum requirements for CD lending
and investment at the bank level.
As discussed below, the proposed
rule would establish empirical
benchmarks for the average of a bank’s
annual CRA evaluation measures for
each rating category and the thresholds
for the retail lending distribution tests.
A bank would use the empirical
benchmarks and thresholds in effect on
the first day of its evaluation period for
the duration of its evaluation period.
Because the proposed evaluation
method would be sufficiently flexible to
account for different bank sizes and
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business models, it would not include
different tests for different types and
sizes of banks.
The proposal identifies the rating
resulting from the comparison of the
bank’s CRA evaluation measure to the
corresponding empirical benchmarks
and geographic and borrower
distribution tests as ‘‘presumptive’’
because this rating could be adjusted
based on consideration of performance
context and discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. These possible
adjustments are discussed below.
Following any adjustments, the agency
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would determine a bank’s assigned
rating in each of its assessment areas
and at the bank level.
Twelve U.S.C. 2906(d) of the CRA
statute requires the agencies to provide
a written evaluation, including a rating,
for banks with interstate branches at the
state level, MMSA level, or both, as
applicable. The content of that written
evaluation must (1) state conclusions for
each assessment factor (i.e., the small
bank performance standards for small
banks and the borrower and geographic
distribution tests, CRA evaluation
measure comparison, and CD
minimums for banks subject to the
general performance standards); (2)
discuss the facts and data supporting
conclusions; and (3) contain the rating
and a statement describing the basis for
the rating.35 For these banks, the state or
MMSA level rating is the lowest rating
assigned to a significant number of its
assessment areas within that state or
MMSA.
Section 2906(b)(1)(B) of the CRA
statute also requires the agencies to
conclude, but not rate, at the MSA and
nonmetropolitan area level. Under this
proposal, the agencies’ conclusion at
these levels would be the lowest rating
assigned to a substantial portion of
assessment areas in that MSA or
nonmetropolitan area.
Applying the retail lending
distribution tests. The retail lending
distribution tests would apply to banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards. The retail
lending distribution tests would be
applied at the assessment area level to
a bank’s major retail lending product
lines with at least 20 originations in the
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35 The CRA statute provides:
States: For a bank that maintains domestic
branches in 2 or more states, the appropriate
Federal financial supervisory agency must
prepare—(A) a written evaluation of the entire
bank’s record of CRA performance, as required by
subsections (a), (b), and (c) of 12 U.S.C. 2906 and
(B) for each State in which the institution maintains
1 or more domestic branches, a separate written
evaluation of the bank’s record of CRA performance
within such state, as required by subsections (a),
(b), and (c) of 12 U.S.C. 2906. See 12 U.S.C.
2906(d)(1).
MMSAs: For a bank that maintains domestic
branches in 2 or more states within an MMSA, the
appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency
must prepare a separate written evaluation of the
bank’s record of CRA performance within such
MMSA, as required by subsections (a), (b), and (c)
of 12 U.S.C. 2906. See 12 U.S.C. 2906(d)(2).
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assessment area during the evaluation
period. A major retail lending product
line is defined at the bank level and is
any retail lending product line that
composes at least 15 percent of the
bank’s overall dollar volume of retail
loan originations during the evaluation
period. The agencies would require at
least 20 originations in an assessment
area before applying a retail lending
distribution test to ensure that the rule
only evaluates a bank’s retail lending
distribution in markets where it is
engaged in retail lending beyond
lending done on an accommodation
basis. Under the proposal, banks would
apply the retail lending distribution
tests, and the agencies would validate
their performance.
The retail lending distribution tests
would evaluate the bank’s originations
in each assessment area during the
review period using both a geographic
distribution test and a borrower
distribution test for small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms and
a borrower distribution test for home
mortgage and consumer lending. The
geographic distribution test assesses a
bank’s distribution of lending in LMI
areas while the borrower distribution
test assesses a bank’s distribution of
lending to LMI borrowers or small
businesses or small farms. A bank can
pass either test by meeting or exceeding
a threshold associated with the
demographic comparator, which is
based on the demographics of the given
assessment area, or a threshold
associated with the peer comparator,
which is based on peers’ performance in
the given assessment area.
Although the agencies remain
committed to encouraging banks to meet
the credit needs in LMI areas, for banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards, the proposal
would not apply a geographic
distribution test to a bank’s consumer
and home mortgage product lines.
Under the geographic distribution test
in the current CRA framework, banks
receive positive consideration for home
mortgage and consumer loans made in
LMI areas, even if they are made to
middle- or upper-income individuals or
families. Unlike small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms in
LMI areas that may result in additional
job creation or other positive effects for
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1219
the larger community, home mortgage
and consumer loans to middle- or
upper-income individuals and families
in LMI areas are generally not as
beneficial to LMI communities and may
result in displacement. Accordingly,
this proposal would not apply the
geographic distribution test to these
banks’ home mortgage and consumer
product lines. The result of this is that
under the proposal, a mortgage loan to
a high-income individual living in a
low-income census tract would no
longer qualify for CRA credit. The
agencies’ commitment to encouraging
banks to meet the credit needs in LMI
communities and neighborhoods is
reflected in the proposal’s retention of
the geographic distribution test for small
business and small farm product lines.
However, because the agencies would
apply the small bank performance
standards consistent with the current
regulations, small banks would continue
to be evaluated based on the geographic
distribution of their home mortgage
loans and consumer loans, as
applicable.
Under the proposal, a bank subject to
the retail lending distribution tests
would not be able to achieve a
presumptive rating of satisfactory or
outstanding without passing all
applicable distribution tests for all
major retail lending product lines in
that assessment area. To pass a
distribution test, a bank would have to
meet or exceed the minimum thresholds
for either the demographic comparator
or the peer comparator. For example, if
the threshold for the demographic
comparator is set at 55 percent of the
relevant demographic comparator and
the threshold for the peer comparator is
set at 65 percent of the relevant peer
comparator, a bank would be required to
meet either the 55 percent demographic
comparator threshold or the 65 percent
peer comparator threshold to pass the
distribution test. In other words, to pass
the geographic distribution test using
the demographic comparator, the
percentage of a bank’s small loans to
businesses (SLB) that are in LMI census
tracts in the assessment area (AA)
divided by the percentage of businesses
in LMI census tracts in the assessment
area would have to be greater than or
equal to 55 percent, which would be
calculated as follows:
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# of Bank SLBs in LMI census tracts in AA/# of Bank SLBs in AA
# of businesses in LMI census tracts in AA/# of businesses in AA;;:::
55 %
Alternatively, to pass the geographic distribution test using the peer comparator, the percentage
of a bank's small loans to businesses that are in LMI census tracts in the assessment area divided
by the percentage of all banks' small loans to businesses in LMI census tracts in the assessment
area would have to be greater than or equal to 65 percent, calculated as follows:
# ofBank SLBs inLMI census tracts in AA/# of Bank SLBs in AA
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > 65 %
# of all banks' SLBs in LMI census tracts in AA/# of all banks' SLBs in AA -
To pass the borrower distribution test by using the demographic comparator, the percentage of a
bank's small loans to businesses made to small businesses in the assessment area divided by the
percentage of small businesses in the assessment area would have to be greater than or equal to
55 percent, calculated as follows:
# of Bank SLBs made to SBs in AA/# of Bank SLBs in AA
---------------------->55%
# of SBs in AA/# of businesses in AA
Alternatively, to pass the borrower distribution test by using the peer comparator the percentage
of a bank's small loans to businesses made to small businesses in the assessment area divided by
the percentage of all banks' small loans to businesses made to small businesses in the assessment
area would have to be greater than or equal to 65 percent, calculated as follows:
# ofBank SLBs made to SBs in AA/# of Bank SLBs in AA
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > 65 %
The agencies would collect and provide
public data that would allow banks to
apply the borrower distribution tests for
home mortgage and consumer loans,
small loans to businesses, and small
loans to farms, and the geographic
distribution test for small loans to farms
and small loans to businesses. However,
the agencies recognize that, even if the
proposal were implemented, the
available data for the small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms
borrower distribution tests may be
insufficient and, therefore, banks may
need to rely on private datasets. Because
banks may have to purchase access to
these datasets, the agencies invite
comment on options for tailoring this
requirement by, for example, allowing
banks below a certain asset size to use
publicly available data as a proxy.
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Calculating the CRA evaluation
measure. The CRA evaluation measure
would be applicable to banks subject to
the general performance standards. The
CRA evaluation measure would be an
objective measure of a bank’s ongoing
commitment to CRA and would be
determined annually at the bank level
and for each of its delineated
assessment areas, as defined above.36 A
bank would initially calculate its CRA
evaluation measure by taking the sum of
(1) a bank’s qualifying activities value,
as described above, divided by the
average of its quarterly retail domestic
deposits and (2) a calculation that
accounts for a bank’s branch
36 A bank’s assessment area CRA evaluation
measures are used to reach a conclusion in each
MSA where the bank has deposit-taking facility or
main office, as required by the CRA statute.
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distribution. The agencies would
validate that calculation.
The first portion of the CRA
evaluation measure reflects a bank’s
ongoing commitment to CRA by
measuring the value of qualifying
activities as a proportion of total retail
domestic deposits. The second portion
of the CRA evaluation measure accounts
for the social value and economic
impact of bank branches in LMI areas,
Indian country, underserved areas, and
distressed areas by measuring a bank’s
proportion of branches in those areas.
Specifically, the number of the bank’s
branches located in LMI census tracts,
Indian country, underserved areas, and
distressed areas during the same annual
period used to calculate the qualifying
activities value would be divided by the
bank’s total number of branches in that
annual period and multiplied by .01.
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# of all banks' SLBs made to SBs in AA/# of all banks' SLBs in AA -
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 6 / Thursday, January 9, 2020 / Proposed Rules
branches in those specified areas. The
agencies believe that valuing branch
distribution at up to one percentage
point of the CRA evaluation measure
accounts for the significance of branches
+ .O l
Qualifying Activities Value
Average quarterly Retail Domestic Deposits
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Empirical benchmarks, thresholds,
and the definition of a major retail
lending product line. The proposal
would establish the thresholds for the
demographic and peer comparators for
each of the geographic distribution and
borrower distribution tests. The
proposal would also establish the
empirical benchmarks for the average
CRA evaluation measure 37 associated
with each rating category. These
empirical benchmarks and thresholds
are, and would be, based, in part, on the
agencies’ analysis of the currently
available historical data. Specifically,
the agencies reviewed the FFIEC CRA
data, HMDA data on home mortgages to
LMI borrowers, Call Report data onbalance sheet value of home mortgages,
consumer loans, small business and
small farm loans, and credit bureau data
on the outstanding balances of
consumer loans. Although these data
sources have some limitations,38 by
using all the sources together, collecting
additional information about CD
investments from historical performance
evaluations,39 and making a limited
number of assumptions (described
below), the agencies were able to
estimate what each bank’s average CRA
evaluation measure would have been
37 The ‘‘average CRA evaluation measure’’
generally refers to the average of the annual
assessment area or bank-level CRA evaluation
measures for an evaluation period.
38 For example, under the current CRA
regulations, only banks that are above the small
bank asset size threshold, which is $1.284 billion
for 2019, are required to report CRA data to the
FFIEC and not all banks are HMDA reporters. 12
CFR 25.12(u)(1), 195.12(u)(1), 345.12(u)(1).
Additionally, both the CRA FFIEC data and the
HMDA data look at originations and purchases and
not the on-balance sheet value of loans or
investments. Although the Call Report and credit
bureau data do provide the outstanding amount of
loans and investments, those data sources do not
identify which balances are related qualifying
activities. Moreover, the proposal would expand the
criteria for qualifying activities in a number of
ways, including by increasing the loan size
threshold for small loans to businesses and small
loans to farms from $1 million to $2 million.
Accordingly, the currently available data on CRA
qualifying activities would not fully capture all
activities that would be qualifying under the
proposal.
39 The agencies used a sample of performance
evaluations completed between 2011 and 2018. The
sample contained data from over 200 exams for
banks above the small bank asset size threshold,
which adjusts yearly and is $1.284 billion for 2019.
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(Branches in Specified Areas)
Total Branches
from 2011–2017 under the framework in
the proposal for all banks that filed a
Call Report.
Since the CRA evaluation measure
would generally focus on the on-balance
sheet value of qualifying loans and
investments, the agencies first identified
the categories on the Call Report that
could include qualifying loans and
investments and then used additional
data sources such as the existing FFIEC
CRA, HMDA, and credit bureau data to
estimate what portion of the activity
reported on the Call Report would be
qualifying activities under the proposal.
To estimate the dollar volume of onbalance sheet activity that would be
qualifying activity the agencies did the
following:
• For home mortgage loans, by bank
and year, the agencies identified all
HMDA reportable loans originated and
held within the calendar year to LMI
individuals,40 and then divided the sum
of the dollar volume of those loans by
the bank’s total dollar volume of loans
originated and not sold within that
calendar year. This provides an estimate
of a bank- year-specific proportion of
identified qualifying loans that was
used to calculate the bank’s proportion
of on-balance sheet qualified home
mortgage loans. For banks that are not
HMDA filers, the agencies used the
median proportion of qualifying home
mortgage loans of all HMDA filers for
that year.41 Note that the estimated
proportions are based on the proportion
of qualifying originations, not on the
proportions of qualifying on-balance
sheet loans. As such, to the extent that
these proportions differ, the estimate of
the on-balance sheet value of qualifying
mortgage loans may be an over- or
underestimate.
• For small business and small farm
loans, as defined under the current
regulations, the agencies used the FFIEC
CRA data to estimate the proportion of
the bank’s on-balance sheet small
business and small farm loans that
qualify for CRA credit because they are
originated to businesses or farms with
40 Excluded from this are home mortgage loans in
disaster areas and in Indian country.
41 This was applied to about 40 percent of the
banks.
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to these areas while placing primary
emphasis on the qualifying activities
that banks conduct in their
communities. The CRA evaluation
measure would be calculated as follows:
revenues of less than $1 million or in
LMI census tracts that are less than $1
million . Because the proposal would
increase the size of small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms that
would be qualifying from the current
small business loan threshold of $1
million and small farm loan threshold of
$500,000 to $2 million and banks do not
separately report the on-balance sheet
value of loans between the existing
thresholds and $2 million, the agencies
used, based on additional data sources,
a fraction of the dollar volume of loans
that were reported on the Call Report as
less than $500,000 or $1 million to
estimate the dollar volume of loans that
were less than $2 million.
• For credit card,42 automobile loan,
and other consumer loan 43 balances, to
estimate the proportion of a bank’s onbalance sheet consumer loans that are
qualifying, the agencies used credit
bureau data.44 The agencies combined
the credit bureau data with FFIEC’s
demographic information at the census
tract level 45 to identify whether a given
account holder resides in an LMI census
tract. Since the credit bureau data does
not include income level, the agencies
calculated the proportion of credit card
loan balances attributable to residents of
LMI tracts and used that proportion to
represent the proportion of balances
attributable to LMI borrowers.46
42 The agencies included the following credit
bureau debt categories in the credit card definition:
Credit card, bank card, flexible spending card, retail
lending card, and line of credit.
43 The credit bureau loan categories included are:
Other, personal finance, and student loan.
44 The credit bureau data contain balances by debt
category, along with census tract location of the
borrower.
45 For the period 2005–2011, FFIEC uses Census
2000 census tract definitions and demographic
information based on Census 2000. For the period
2012–2016, FFIEC uses Census 2010 census tract
definitions and American Community Survey (ACS)
2006–2010 data. For the period 2017–2018, FFIEC
uses census tract definitions and demographics
from 2011–2015 ACS. Note that this method
introduces some error due to the fact that the credit
bureau uses Census 2000 census tract definitions,
while FFIEC uses Census 2000 or Census 2010
census tract definitions depending on the year.
46 The agencies do not believe this method
significantly overestimates the proportion of LMI
borrowers or share of balances attributed to them
because while this methodology incorrectly
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This calculation would quantify a
bank’s distribution of branches and
increase a bank’s CRA evaluation
measure by up to one percentage point
based on the proportion of a bank’s
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• For CD Investments, the agencies
relied on a sample of performance
evaluations completed between 2011
and 2018. The sample contains over 200
exams for banks above the small bank
asset size threshold, which adjusts
yearly and is $1.284 billion for 2019.
The agencies approximated the value of
investments on a bank’s balance sheet
by calculating the sum of the balances
of prior investments as of the beginning
of the evaluation period plus the
average annual new investments over
the evaluation period. The agencies then
calculated the median investments-todomestic-deposits ratio by asset size
bucket (i.e., assets greater than $100
billion, $5 to $100 billion, and less than
or equal to $5 billion) for the
performance evaluation sample.47 This
median ratio was then used to impute
CD investments for all institutions
subject to CRA, by multiplying a bank’s
deposits in a given year with the ratio
corresponding to its asset size bucket. A
limitation of this approach is that the
median ratio by asset size used for
imputation is only based on banks
above the small bank asset size
threshold, and it is possible that this
ratio differs for smaller banks.
• For CD loans, the agencies relied on
the FFIEC CRA data that contains
information on the dollar amount of CD
loans originated that year.
By using these estimates, the agencies
were able to approximate what the CRA
evaluation measure under the proposed
framework would have been for all
banks from 2011–2018. In addition to
the data, to set the initial benchmarks
for the average CRA evaluation measure
and the thresholds for the retail lending
distribution tests, the agencies analyzed
banks’ past performance evaluations,
which provide qualitative information
to help inform what level of
performance should be required for each
rating category. The agencies also
considered unmet needs and
opportunities, such as those in banking
and CD deserts, market conditions, and
the overall policy goal of increasing
CRA activities. The agencies would
publish the empirical benchmarks for
the average CRA evaluation measures
that correspond with each rating
category and the thresholds for the retail
includes middle- and upper-income borrowers in
LMI census tracts, it also incorrectly excludes LMI
borrowers in middle- and upper-income census
tracts. Because the two sources of error work in
opposite directions, the agencies expect them to
cancel each other out to a significant extent.
47 Asset size buckets were determined by data
explorations of the relationship between the
investments-to-deposits ratio and asset size, in
conjunction with sample size considerations.
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lending distribution test with the final
rule.
Based on the agencies’ review of these
factors thus far, the agencies believe that
the average CRA evaluation measure
benchmarks associated with each rating
category should be set at between ten
and 15 percent for outstanding, five and
ten percent for satisfactory, and two and
five percent for needs to improve. As
discussed above, the proposal would set
11 percent as the initial benchmark for
outstanding, six percent as the initial
benchmark for satisfactory, and three
percent as the initial benchmark for
needs to improve. An average CRA
evaluation measure of less than three
percent would be associated with the
substantial noncompliance rating
category.
The agencies are aware, however, that
there are some limitations in the data
currently available including that
available data do not currently include,
for example, the dollar volume of CD
investments or a quantification of the
dollar value of CD services. In addition,
available data do not necessarily map
perfectly to the configuration of
assessment areas specified in this
proposal. Deposit data also have
limitations because the current
reporting framework records deposits by
attributing them to a branch location,
rather than the account holder’s address
and uses a different definition of
deposits than the proposed rule. The
proposed rule would remedy these
deficiencies by leveraging data that are
readily available but not currently
reported in an integrated and accessible
manner. Over time, the data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements in this proposal would
remedy the current data limitations.
Further, after the issuance of this notice
of proposed rulemaking and prior to the
issuance of any final rule, the agencies
plan to request additional data through
a public request for information from
banks and other interested parties to
supplement the currently available data.
Until the data limitations are
addressed, the agencies would consider
the historical data of reported lending
and compare it to historical levels of
total domestic deposits to determine the
specific empirical benchmarks for CRA
evaluation measures that are applicable
at the bank and assessment area levels
within the ranges set forth in the
proposal. The agencies would then
review and adjust these empirical
benchmarks and make them available
publicly to promote transparency and
predictability. The agencies expect to
adjust these empirical benchmarks
every three years, or sooner if
warranted.
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The proposal also defines major retail
lending product lines as any retail
lending product line that composes at
least 15 percent of the bank’s overall
dollar volume of retail loan originations
during the evaluation period. Regarding
this definition, the agencies reviewed
HMDA and FFIEC CRA data on the
dollar volume of retail loan originations
along with Call Report data on the onbalance sheet value of consumer loans.
Because the Call Report only includes
on-balance sheet values, the agencies
assumed that the quarterly change in the
on-balance sheet value of consumer
loans reflects new consumer loan
originations.
CD minimums. The general
performance standards would establish
minimums for a bank’s quantified value
of CD lending and investment as
compared to retail domestic deposits at
both the assessment area and bank level
to achieve a satisfactory or an
outstanding rating. The CD minimums
included in the proposal were informed
by the analysis of the currently available
historical data, described above. To
achieve a presumptive rating of
satisfactory or outstanding, the sum of
the quantified value of community
development loans and community
development investments, divided by
the average of the bank’s retail domestic
deposits would need to meet or exceed
two percent. The CD minimums would
apply at both the assessment area and
bank level. These minimums reflect the
agencies’ judgment that CD lending and
investment are critically important to
serving banks’ local communities.
Performance context. Under the
current framework, a bank’s CRA
performance is judged in the context of
information about a bank and its
assessment area(s), including (1)
relevant demographic data (e.g., median
income levels, distribution of household
income, nature of housing stock,
housing costs); (2) lending, investment,
and service opportunities; and (3) the
bank’s product offerings and business
strategy, capacity and constraints, past
performance, and performance of
similarly situated lenders. Under the
proposed framework, performance
context would remain important. The
proposal sets forth performance context
factors that the agencies would consider
in determining a bank’s assigned ratings
in each assessment area and at the bank
level. Banks subject to the general
performance standards would submit
performance context information in a
standardized format using a form on the
agency’s website that relies on the
performance context factors, discussed
below. In addition, the agencies would
establish examination procedures to
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help ensure that examiners apply
performance context consistently.
The performance context factors focus
on the capacity of the bank to engage in
qualifying activities and the demand for
and opportunity to engage in qualifying
activities in the communities that the
bank serves. In considering a bank’s
capacity, the agencies would assess its
business strategy, size, and other factors
that affect its engagement in qualifying
activities, including structural or other
constraints on a bank’s ability to engage
in the volume of CD lending and
investment required to meet the CD
minimums, if applicable. Regarding the
demand for and opportunity to engage
in qualifying activities in a bank’s
community, the agencies would
consider public comments related to
community needs and opportunities
and assess the characteristics of the
community served by the bank, such as
economic conditions and demographics,
as these factors relate to the demand for
and the opportunity to engage in
qualifying activities. The agencies
would consider how differences
between actual and expected levels in
qualifying activities were affected by a
bank’s capacity and opportunity,
including local market conditions and
events during the relevant period, or
bank characteristics, such as product
offerings and business strategy, changes
in the assessment area needs and
opportunities, and bank-specific
constraints such as financial condition
or safety and soundness considerations.
For example, consideration of
performance context could be
particularly important for a bank that
does not engage in retail lending
activities because its business model
limits the range of qualifying activities
in which the bank may engage. The
agencies could also consider
innovativeness, complexity, difficulty,
or positive impact on the bank’s
assessment areas or significant
qualifying activities, as well as
differences in banks’ business models
that affected the volume and types of
qualifying activities. Finally, the
agencies could consider a bank’s
investments in promoting and
supporting the community reinvestment
expertise of its staff and the
development of products and services
that benefit LMI communities.
Discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices. Under the proposal, an
agency’s evaluation of a bank’s CRA
performance would be adversely
affected by evidence of discriminatory
or other illegal credit practices.
Specifically, in assigning a CRA rating,
an agency would first evaluate a bank’s
performance for the applicable time
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period and then make any adjustments
to the presumptive rating that would be
warranted based on evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices, consistent with the relevant
agency’s policies and procedures.
Strategic plans. The proposal retains
the option for a bank to develop a
strategic plan for addressing its CRA
responsibilities and to be evaluated
based on its performance under the
plan. Under the proposal, a bank’s
strategic plan would be developed with
public participation and would
demonstrate how the bank would help
meet the credit needs—particularly the
needs of LMI census tracts and
individuals—of its assessment area(s)
and at the bank level through qualifying
activities. Today, although any bank
may request to be evaluated under a
strategic plan, only a limited number of
banks with unique business models or
other unique circumstances use them.
Because the proposal would not add
additional eligibility requirements for
strategic plans, the agencies expect that
strategic plans would continue to be
used in a similar manner. For example,
a de novo bank could develop goals
under a strategic plan that reflect its
projected branch footprint and deposit
growth, its planned lending activities,
and its anticipated capacity to engage in
qualifying activities. Additionally,
banks with no retail domestic deposits
and banks evaluated under the small
bank performance standards that do not
originate retail loans would be required
to submit a strategic plan.
Small bank performance standards.
The current CRA regulations include
specific performance evaluation
standards for small banks and
intermediate small banks.48
Specifically, a small bank is evaluated
pursuant to a lending test that considers
the bank’s:
• Loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for
seasonal variation, and, as appropriate,
other lending-related activities, such as
loan originations for sale to the
secondary markets, community
development loans, or qualified
investments;
• The percentage of loans and, as
appropriate, other lending-related
activity in the bank’s assessment area(s);
• The bank’s record of lending to and,
as appropriate, engaging in other
lending-related activities for borrowers
of different income levels and
businesses and farms of different sizes;
• The geographic distribution of the
bank’s loans; and
• The bank’s record of taking action,
if warranted, in response to written
48 12
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1223
complaints about its performance in
helping to meet credit needs in its
assessment area(s).49
The current regulations assign small
bank ratings based on the lending test.
A small bank is eligible for a
‘‘satisfactory’’ rating under the lending
test if it demonstrates a:
• Reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio;
• Majority of its loans in its
assessment area(s);
• Distribution of loans to businesses
and farms of different sizes that is
reasonable given the demographics of its
assessment area(s);
• Record of taking appropriate action
in response to written complaints, and
• Reasonable geographic distribution
of loans given the bank’s assessment
area(s).50
A small bank that meets all of those
standards and exceeds some or all of
them may warrant consideration for a
lending test rating of ‘‘outstanding.’’ 51
To determine whether the overall
performance of a small bank that is not
an intermediate small bank warrants a
rating of outstanding, the agency
carrying out the evaluation considers
the extent to which the bank exceeds
the performance standards for a rating of
‘‘satisfactory’’ and its performance in
making qualified investments and
providing branches and other services
and delivery systems that enhance
credit availability in its assessment
area(s).52 A small bank may receive an
overall rating of ‘‘needs to improve’’ or
‘‘substantial noncompliance’’ depending
on the degree to which its performance
has failed to meet the standards for a
‘‘satisfactory’’ rating.53
Under the proposal, small banks
would not be evaluated pursuant to the
general performance standards that
consider a bank’s CRA evaluation
measure and the retail lending
distribution tests. Instead, small banks
would continue to be evaluated
according to the small bank
performance standards applicable to
small banks that are not intermediate
small banks in the current CRA
regulations, unless they are evaluated
under an approved strategic plan or
49 12
CFR 25.26(b), 195.26(b), 345.26(b).
CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(1)(i), part 195, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(i),
part 345, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(i).
51 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(1)(ii), part 195, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(ii),
part 345, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(ii).
52 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(ii)(B), part 195, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(ii)(B), part 345, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(ii)(B).
53 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(iii), part 195, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(iii), part 345, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(3)(iii).
50 12
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elect to opt into the general performance
standards. Performance context and
discriminatory and other illegal credit
practices would continue to be
considered in evaluating a small bank’s
performance. In addition, under the
proposed framework, small banks
would continue to refer to relevant
guidance in the Interagency Questions &
Answers and existing policies and
procedures, including with respect to
state and MMSA ratings. As proposed,
a small bank may choose to exercise an
opt in to the proposed general
performance standards and must do so
at least six months before the start of its
next exam cycle. Once a small bank opts
in, it would be subject to the general
performance standards outlined in the
proposed rule for its next CRA
evaluation. A small bank that has opted
in may exercise a one-time opt out at the
end of any CRA evaluation following
the opt in and must do so six months
before the start of its next exam cycle.
Small banks that opt out would revert
to being evaluated according to the
small bank performance standards
applicable to small banks that are not
intermediate small banks in the current
CRA regulations, unless they are
evaluated under an approved strategic
plan, until such time that they cease to
be small banks based on their assets
size.
The proposal would also revise the
definition of a ‘‘small bank.’’ Under the
current regulations, in 2019, a small
bank is a bank that, as of December 31
of either of the prior two calendar years,
had assets of less than $1.284 billion,
and an intermediate small bank is a
small bank that had assets of at least
$321 million as of December 31 of both
of the prior two calendar years and
assets of less than $1.284 billion as of
December 31 of either of the prior two
calendar years.54 These thresholds are
adjusted annually based on changes in
the Consumer Price Index for Urban
Wage Earners and Clerical Workers
(CPI–W).55
Under the proposal, a small bank
would be a bank that had assets of $500
million or less in each of the previous
four calendar quarters. Like the current
asset-size thresholds, the $500 million
threshold would be adjusted annually
based on changes in the CPI–W. Unlike
the current CRA regulations, the
proposal would not include a separate
category for intermediate small banks.
Although the proposed small bank
performance standards would not
include a CD test and small banks
would not be required to engage in CD
54 12
55 12
CFR 25.12(u)(1), 195.12(u)(1), 345.12(u)(1).
CFR 25.12(u)(2), 195.12(u)(2), 345.12(u)(2).
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activities, lending-related activities,
including CD loans, and CD investments
and services may be considered as
described above. The proposal would
replace references to ‘‘qualified
investments’’ in the applicable small
bank provisions of the current CRA
regulations with references to
‘‘community development
investments.’’ The proposal’s
definitions of qualifying loans and CD
services also would apply to small
banks. Small banks that engage in
qualifying activities as described under
proposed 12 CFR 25.04 and 345.04
would receive consideration for those
activities to the extent that they were
consistent with the small bank
performance standards and appendix A.
The agencies also recognize that because
the small bank performance standards
would be applied consistent with the
current regulatory framework, certain
activities that do not meet the qualifying
activities criteria in §§ 25.04 and 345.04
would receive positive consideration. In
addition to the revised qualifying
activities criteria, small banks also
would be subject to the proposal’s
changes to the assessment area
delineation requirements and would be
required to delineate deposit-based
assessment areas to the same extent as
other banks.
The proposed small bank asset-size
threshold and the lower burdens
imposed by the small bank performance
standards recognize that complying
with the data collection, recordkeeping,
and reporting requirements under the
new general performance standards may
impose a disproportionate burden on
these banks. The agencies note,
however, that the available data
indicates that small banks may
outperform larger banks if they were
subject to the general performance
standards.
Summary of objectives. Taken
together, the proposed changes to how
a bank’s CRA activity is evaluated
would reduce the subjectivity and
inconsistencies in the current
framework. The two components of the
proposal’s CRA evaluation under the
new general performance standards—
the CRA evaluation measure and the
retail lending distribution test—would
work together to encourage banks to
engage in a variety of activities that
provide credit to LMI individuals, small
business, small farms, and in areas of
need, as well as to incentivize long-term
investments in these communities. The
retail lending distribution tests would
help ensure that banks’ retail loans are
appropriately distributed to areas and
people in need of credit in the local
areas where banks have a concentration
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of depositors or in the areas surrounding
bank branches. And the CRA evaluation
measure’s focus on the value of onbalance sheet loans and investments
would encourage stable commitments to
communities and disincentivize
churning of activities that may not
provide long-term stability.
The proposed combined objective
method for measuring CRA performance
and activity in conjunction with the
establishment of transparent
benchmarks and thresholds would
reduce inconsistency and subjectivity in
the current CRA framework and could
incentivize more CRA activity. For
example, by selecting sufficiently high
empirical benchmarks for the average
CRA evaluation measure—informed by
historical performance levels—under
the new general performance standards,
the agencies could encourage more
qualifying activities. The CD lending
and investment minimums would
recognize the importance of CD
activities to serving a community’s
needs. Similarly, the small bank
performance standards would continue
to ensure that small banks’ lending and
lending-related activities are responsive
to the needs of their communities.
Furthermore, by preserving a role for
performance context, the agencies
would continue to consider the specific
facts and circumstances that affect a
bank’s CRA capacity and opportunities
and account for them through the
consistent and transparent exercise of
judgment.
In addition, the proposal would
account for differences in bank size,
location, and business model in several
ways. As an initial matter, small banks
would continue to be evaluated
pursuant to performance standards
designed specifically for small banks
that consider their lending
opportunities and business model. For
banks that are not evaluated as small
banks, the retail lending distribution
test component of the general
performance standards would account
for bank size, location, and business
model in two ways while assessing
whether a bank is adequately serving
the LMI individuals and areas in its
assessment area. First, the retail lending
geographic distribution test and
borrower distribution test would look at
a bank’s geographic and borrower
distributions of retail lending activities
in LMI areas and to LMI individuals,
small farms, or small businesses in its
assessment areas, as applicable. For
each type of retail activity, the
distribution test would look at a bank’s
qualifying activities conducted as a
percentage of a bank’s lending in that
area and, accordingly, would be scaled
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automatically to a bank’s presence in
that market, its location, and its chosen
business model. Second, a bank’s retail
lending geographic distribution and
borrower distribution would be
evaluated based on its best performance
under either a demographic or peer
comparator, both of which would
incorporate information about a bank’s
location. This flexibility and focus on
the distribution of the number of
qualifying retail loans would help to
ensure that the retail lending
distribution test accounts for bank size,
location, and business model. The CRA
evaluation measures also would account
for differences in bank size, location,
and business model because these
differences would be reflected in the
volume of a bank’s retail domestic
deposits at the bank level and in each
assessment area.
Alternatives considered. The agencies
also considered other approaches to
evaluating CRA performance for banks
other than small banks. The agencies
first considered having a performance
test that would have been based solely
on the total dollar volume of spending
on qualifying activities. Specifically,
this approach would have relied solely
on a calculation that compares a bank’s
average CRA evaluation measure—
calculated by dividing its yearly
qualifying activities value by its average
retail domestic deposits—to empirical
benchmarks to evaluate a bank’s CRA
performance, without overlaying a retail
lending distribution test. This method
would have clarified how banks’ CRA
performance is evaluated and provided
additional consistency that would have
enabled banks to predict and track their
performance throughout the review
period. Further, this method of
evaluating CRA performance could have
directly achieved more CRA spending
and investment in communities that
need it most. However, this approach
would not have accounted for a bank’s
distribution of the number of retail
loans, which is currently an important
part of evaluating a bank’s CRA
performance. In addition, without limits
on the credit received for a single
transaction, this method of evaluating
CRA performance could have
encouraged banks to meet their CRA
obligations through a small number of
large dollar retail or CD activities.
Second, the agencies considered
retaining a separate CD and retail
lending test. For the CD test, the
agencies considered establishing
empirical benchmarks for assessing
performance related to a bank’s onbalance sheet dollar volume of CD
activities as compared to the dollar
value of its retail domestic deposits. A
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bank’s performance on the retail lending
test would have been based on its
performance on geographic and
borrower distribution tests in each
assessment area for all major retail
lending product lines. The agencies
would have developed thresholds,
corresponding to statutory rating
categories, for a bank’s performance on
the retail lending distribution tests and
the bank would have been required to
meet the thresholds for all tests for each
major retail lending product line to
achieve the corresponding rating. This
method of evaluating a bank’s CRA
performance would also have provided
certainty and clarity and enabled a bank
to monitor its performance throughout
its review period. However, this method
would not have focused on increasing
the overall dollar volume of qualifying
activities in the areas that need it most
and would not have helped address
CRA deserts and hotspots. Accordingly,
to ensure that the distribution of the
number of CRA retail loans and the total
volume of spending on qualifying
activities would be captured and
assessed, the proposed rule would
provide that the ratings for a bank
evaluated under the general
performance standards would be based
on both the distribution of retail loans
and impact, measured in dollars, of the
bank’s qualifying activities.
Further, while developing this
proposal, the agencies considered
several possible definitions of retail
domestic deposits to determine which
definition would best reflect a bank’s
capacity to engage in qualifying
activities. First, the agencies considered
using total domestic deposits, as
reported on Schedule RC, item 13.a, of
the Call Report, which is the definition
of deposits currently used in the FDIC
Summary of Deposits report. This
definition includes deposits from
individuals, partnerships, and
corporations, the U.S. government,
states and political subdivisions in the
United States, commercial banks and
other depository institutions in the
United States, banks in foreign
countries, foreign governments, and
official institutions, including foreign
central banks. After considering this
definition, the agencies determined that
it could overestimate a bank’s capacity
to engage in qualifying activities by
including municipal deposits and
deposits from foreign governments and
entities.
The agencies also considered using
the sum of total deposits intended
primarily for personal, household, or
family use, as reported on Schedule RC–
E, items 6.a, 6.b, 7.a(1), and 7.b(1). This
could more accurately reflect a bank’s
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capacity to engage in qualifying
activities for individuals, small
businesses, and small farms; however,
currently, only institutions over $1
billion in total assets that offer one or
more consumer deposit account
products are required to report that
information. Accordingly, the agencies
did not use this definition in the
proposal because using it would have
created additional reporting
requirements for banks not currently
required to report this information. In
addition, the agencies considered
scaling the empirical benchmarks for
the average CRA evaluation measure at
the assessment area level but
determined that by relying on the
volume of a bank’s retail domestic
deposits in each assessment area, the
measure already accounts for
differences in bank size, location, and
business model.
The agencies also considered
developing a method for evaluating a
bank’s use of alternative delivery
systems and mechanisms, such as
mobile banking, for meeting the needs
of LMI customers. For example, the
agencies considered adding a
performance standard that accounts for
a bank’s use of alternative delivery
systems that serve LMI individuals,
such as the number of a bank’s LMI
customers that used an alternative
delivery system divided by the number
of the bank’s LMI customers.
The agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposal related to the
proposed method and process for
objectively measuring bank CRA
performance, including with respect to
the following questions:
14. The proposed rule would define
retail domestic deposits as total
domestic deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations, as
reported on Schedule RC–E, item 1, of
the Call Report, excluding brokered
deposits. Is there another definition—
including the alternatives described
above—that would better reflect a
bank’s capacity to engage in CRA
qualifying activities?
15. The proposal focuses on
quantifying qualifying activities that
benefit LMI individuals and areas and
quantifies a bank’s distribution of
branches by increasing a bank’s
quantified value of qualifying activities
divided by retail domestic deposits (a
bank’s CRA evaluation measure),
expressed as a percentage, by up to one
percentage point based on the percent
of a bank’s branches that are in
specified areas of need. Banks with no
branches in these areas will not receive
any CRA credit for their branch
distribution under this method, even if
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there are very few specified areas of
need in the areas they serve. Does this
appropriately incentivize banks to place
or retain branches in specified areas of
need, including LMI areas? Does it
appropriately account for the value of
branches in these areas?
16. Under the retail lending
distribution tests, the proposal would
consider the borrower distribution of
any consumer loan product line that is
a major retail lending product line for
the bank. The agencies defined a major
retail lending product line as a retail
lending product line that comprises at
least 15 percent of the bank-level dollar
volume of total retail loan originations
during the evaluation period, but also
considered setting the threshold
between 10 and 30 percent. Should the
agencies consider a different threshold?
Additionally, applying the retail lending
distribution test to only major retail
lending product lines means that not all
retail lending product lines will be
evaluated for every bank. Are there any
circumstances in which applying the
retail lending distribution test to a
consumer lending product line should
be mandatory, even if it is not a major
retail lending product line (e.g., if the
consumer lending product line
constitutes the majority of a bank’s
retail lending in number of
originations)? Additionally, the
proposal would only apply the retail
lending distribution tests in assessment
areas with at least 20 loans from a major
product line. Is 20 loans the appropriate
threshold, or should a different
threshold, such as 50 loans, be used?
17. Under the proposal, a bank
evaluated under the general
performance standards could not
receive a satisfactory or an outstanding
presumptive bank-level rating unless it
also received that rating in a significant
portion of its assessment areas and in
those assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposit. Should
50 percent be the threshold used to
determine ‘‘significant portion of a
bank’s assessment area’’ and
‘‘significant amount of deposits’’ for
purposes of determining whether a bank
has received a rating in a significant
portion of its assessment areas? Or
should another threshold, such as 80
percent, be used?
18. Under the proposal, banks that
had assets of $500 million or less in
each of the previous four calendar
quarters would be considered small
banks and evaluated under the small
bank performance standards, unless
these banks opted into being evaluated
under the general performance
standards. Is $500 million the
appropriate threshold for these banks? If
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not, what is the appropriate threshold?
Should the threshold be $1 billion
instead?
19. Under the proposal, small banks
(i.e., banks with $500 million or less in
assets in each of the previous four
calendar quarters) may choose to
exercise an opt into and a one-time opt
out of the general performance
standards. Should small banks that opt
in to the general performance standards
be permitted to opt out and be
examined under the small bank
performance standards for future
evaluations and, if so, how frequently
should this be permitted?
D. Data Collection, Recordkeeping and
Reporting
The current CRA framework requires
banks to collect and report a variety of
data on loans.56 However, small banks,
as defined under the current rule,
generally are exempt from these
requirements.57 The current framework
also does not collect data on all CRA
activity. For example, the agencies do
not currently collect data on CD
investments or CD services. Deposit data
that are otherwise available also have
limitations because banks currently
record deposits in locations other than
the address of the account holder. While
CRA performance evaluations may
provide information on CRA activities
that is not otherwise collected, that
information is not reported in an
accessible manner.
The proposed framework includes
data collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements that would
apply to banks. There would be separate
data collection and reporting
requirements for banks subject to the
general performance standards and for
banks subject to the small bank
performance standards.
Banks evaluated under the general
performance standards. Banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards would be
required to collect and maintain their
retail lending distribution tests results,
CRA evaluation measures calculations,
and presumptive ratings determinations.
They would be required to collect and
maintain data for each qualifying loan
or CD investment on-balance sheet and
CD services and monetary and in-kind
donations that the bank provides until
the completion of its next evaluation.
For each qualifying activity, among
other things, a bank would collect and
maintain records of the dollar value of
the activity, the activity location, how
the activity satisfies the qualifying
56 12
CFR 25.42, 195.42, 345.42.
57 Id.
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activities criteria, and whether it serves
a particular assessment area. For each
qualifying loan and investment, a bank
would collect and maintain records of
the dollar value of the activity as of the
close of business on the last day of each
month that the loan or investment is onbalance sheet, or, in the case of a
monetary or in-kind donation, its
quantified value; a unique identification
number or symbol; and the type of loan
or investment. In addition, for
qualifying loans, a bank would need to
collect and maintain the date of
origination or purchase; the date of sale,
if sold by the bank within 90 days of
origination; an indicator of whether the
loan was originated or purchased; the
loan amount at origination or purchase;
and the income or revenue of the
borrower. For each qualifying
investment, a bank would need to
collect and maintain the date of the
investment. A bank would also collect
and maintain records of descriptions of
each qualifying CD service and the date
on which each CD service was
performed. The value of each retail
domestic deposit account and the
physical address of each depositor at the
end of each quarter also would be
collected and maintained. Banks also
would be required to collect and
maintain certification from each
relevant party in those situations where
the bank is substantively conducting
qualifying activities, but the activity is
nominally done by another party, such
as an affiliate.
To implement the retail lending
distribution tests, banks would be
required to collect and maintain records
of the number of all qualifying and nonqualifying retail loans at the census-tract
level and report at the county or county
equivalent level. Banks also would be
required to collect and maintain
information on home mortgage and
consumer loans originations that do not
qualify for CRA credit. For each of those
loans, a bank would be required to
collect and maintain a unique
identification number or symbol, the
loan type, the date of origination, the
loan amount at origination, the loan
location, and the income of the
borrower.
For each assessment area, a bank
would be required to collect and
maintain a list of each county or county
equivalent, metropolitan division,
nonmetropolitan area, metropolitan
statistical area, and state within the
assessment area. Banks would also
collect and maintain information
indicating whether each of its facilities
is a depository or non-depository
facility.
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Banks would be required to collect
and maintain records of qualifying
activities data at the bank level and for
each assessment area. The data collected
and records maintained would include
information on all qualifying activities
conducted by the bank.
The proposal describes how banks
would determine the location of an
activity. The location of retail loans
would be the address of the loan,
determined by the borrower’s physical
address for consumer loans, the address
of the property that relates to a home
mortgage loan, and the address of the
main business facility or farm or the
physical address where loan proceeds
will be applied, as indicated by the
borrower, for business and farm loans.
A CD loan, CD investment, and CD
service would be located in the census
tract that includes a particular project to
the extent a bank can document that the
services or funding it provided was
allocated to that particular project. If a
bank cannot document how the funding
it provided was allocated, the services
or funding would be allocated across all
of the bank’s assessment areas and other
metropolitan and non-metropolitan
statistical areas served by the loan or
investment according to the share of the
bank’s retail domestic deposits in those
areas. For example, if a CD investment
served an assessment area with four
percent of the bank’s deposits and three
other metropolitan statistical areas in
which the bank did not have an
assessment area but did have two
percent of its total deposits in each, 40
percent of the dollar value would be
allocated to the assessment area and the
other 60 percent would be considered in
the bank-level calculation.
The proposal would require banks to
collect and maintain all necessary data
in machine readable form. To facilitate
compliance with the data collection and
recordkeeping requirements, the
agencies would provide additional
guidance on the specific data points that
a bank would need to collect and
maintain and the way the data would be
recorded. The agencies would review a
sample of a bank’s collected data that
was used to determine the presumptive
rating as part of a bank’s CRA
evaluation. The agencies would also use
this information to measure, assess, and
understand bank CRA performance
across the industry.
Annually, banks would report their
retail lending distribution tests results,
CRA evaluation measures calculations,
and presumptive ratings determinations
to the agencies. Banks would also
provide the annual quantified value of
the following activities as of the close of
business on the last day of each month:
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(1) Qualifying retail loans; (2) CD loans;
(3) CD investments; and (4) CD services.
Banks also would be required to report
annually (1) information on the number
of home mortgage loans, consumer
loans, by product line, small loans to
businesses, and small loans to farms; (2)
the average monthly value of retail
domestic deposits; and (3) assessment
area information. For each assessment
area, a bank would be required to report
a list of each county or county
equivalent, MD, nonmetropolitan area,
MSA, and state within the assessment
area. Banks also would need to provide
a certification from each affiliate or
other third party that the qualifying
activity information collected from that
affiliate or other third party is true and
correct and report performance context
information. To reduce data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting burdens,
the proposal leverages the retail
domestic deposit figure reported
quarterly on the Call Report for use in
calculating the CRA evaluation measure,
although banks would be required to
subtract brokered deposits from that
figure. The proposed rule would also
reference a form, available on the
agencies’ websites, that banks could use
to meet the reporting requirements to
promote consistency and reduce
compliance burdens.
Summary of objectives. While the
agencies understand that the proposed
data collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements would require
upfront changes that will result in
increased costs, particularly for smaller
banks, the agencies believe that, over
time, the benefits to transparency,
simplicity, and consistency would
outweigh those one-time, upfront costs.
The agencies believe that the vast
majority of data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting costs
would decrease over time through the
development and implementation of
automated systems. The availability of
third-party service providers that
provide data-related services across
many banks could help banks meet
these new requirements and, because
third-party service providers may be
able to achieve economies of scale,
could further reduce costs for smaller
banks.
Certain data that the proposal would
require is not currently collected or
reported, but most of the information is
available currently or could be obtained
without undue cost going forward. The
agencies believe that the benefits banks
would realize from the proposal, such as
certainty regarding which activities
would qualify for CRA credit and
where, would offset some, if not most,
of the costs of the proposal. Moreover,
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banks may find that the proposed
requirements provide non-CRA business
benefits by, for example, providing
further insights into the location and
potential needs of their customers.
Banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards. Banks
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards would generally
be exempt from the data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements of this proposal. However,
these banks would be required to collect
and maintain information on retail
domestic deposits, based on the
physical address of the depositor.
Public disclosures. The agencies
would make certain information that
banks provide publicly available,
allowing stakeholders to detect trends
and monitor and compare banks’ CRA
activities. This standardized data would
allow for informed public input. In
addition, the agencies would publish
each bank’s ratings and a list of banks
rated ‘‘outstanding.’’ A bank receiving
an outstanding rating would also receive
a certificate or seal to be displayed and
to inform the public of its CRA
performance. Moreover, banks that
receive a bank-level outstanding CRA
rating would be subject to a five-year
CRA evaluation period unless the data
reported indicates that an earlier
evaluation is warranted. The agencies
invite comment on other ways to
incentivize banks to achieve an
outstanding rating.
The proposal would also retain many
of the current regulation’s provisions
related to the public file,58 planned
examination schedules,59 public notice
by banks,60 and the CRA notice.61 Banks
would still need to provide public
notice to the communities they serve
that community members are entitled to
CRA-related information. Banks would
also need to provide the requested CRArelated information to the community
members. CRA-related information
would still include information about
banks’ branches, locations, and services,
comments received from the public
related to assessment area needs and
opportunities, and responses to those
comments. However, banks would not
have to provide data reported through
HMDA in the public file because the
proposal would collect home mortgage
data directly instead of relying on
HMDA data.62 Additionally, recognizing
58 12
CFR 25.43, 195.43, 345.43.
CFR 25.45, 195.45, 345.45.
60 12 CFR 25.44, 195.44, 345.44.
61 12 CFR part 25 Appendix B, part 195 Appendix
B, part 345 Appendix B.
62 HMDA data are still available to the public and
can be accessed here: https://
59 12
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the advances in technology over the past
couple of decades, banks would no
longer be limited to providing public
notice or making available the CRA
information through physical means.
Instead, banks would have the option to
provide public notice or make available
CRA-related information on their
websites. If a community member who
has requested CRA-related information
does not have access to the internet,
banks could offer to print out the
information at that person’s expense,
instead of copying the information from
a physical file.
CRA sunshine requirements. In
addition to the proposed data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
contained in this proposal, the agencies
note that Congress required the agencies
to issue rules implementing the CRA
Sunshine Requirements as part of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999.63 The
agencies’ regulations define and address
written agreements between financial
institutions and nongovernmental
entities or persons that are made in
fulfillment of the CRA, and require that
those agreements be made available to
the public and the appropriate Federal
banking agency.64 Further, the
regulations require parties to a covered
agreement to file reports with the
appropriate Federal banking agency for
the duration of the agreement. The
agencies emphasize the continued
importance of complying with those
regulations to ensure public awareness
of the terms and conditions of covered
agreements.
Alternatives considered. Under the
proposal, small banks would be
required to collect and maintain
information on depositors necessary for
the designation of deposit-based
assessment areas. To limit the
recordkeeping burdens for small banks,
the agencies are considering alternatives
for small bank data collection, including
a full exemption from any
recordkeeping requirements. For
example, the agencies could exempt a
small bank from any recordkeeping
requirement associated with the
designation of deposit-based assessment
areas—which is designed to capture
non-traditional business models of
internet banks or other banks that have
one or a few physical locations but
operate on a national basis—if the bank
demonstrates that it has a traditional
business model to the agencies’
satisfaction.
www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/
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The agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposal related to the
proposed data collection, reporting, and
recordkeeping requirements, including
with respect to the following question:
20. As discussed above, the proposal
would require banks to collect and
report additional data to support the
proposed rule. Although most of this
data is already collected and
maintained in some form, some
additional data collection may be
required. For example, banks may need
to gather additional data to determine
whether existing on-balance sheet loans
and investments are qualifying
activities. Are there impediments to
acquiring this data? If so, what are they?
21. What burdens, if any, would be
added by the proposed data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements?
a. What system changes would be
needed to implement these
requirements?
b. What are the estimated costs of
implementing these requirements?
22. The proposal would require small
banks to collect and maintain certain
deposit-based assessment area data. Are
there other ways the agencies can limit
the recordkeeping burden associated
with the designation of deposit-based
assessment areas, including other ways
for banks to differentiate between
traditional and internet type business
models?
E. Effective Date and Compliance Dates
The agencies propose that the
effective date of the final rule would be
the first day of the first calendar quarter
that begins at least 60 days after the
issuance of the final rule. However, to
reduce the compliance burden of the
final rule, the proposed rule would
include a transition period through
varying compliance dates after the
effective date to allow banks to revise
their systems for collecting,
maintaining, and reporting data and to
establish processes for calculating their
qualifying activities values and CRA
evaluation measures and determining
their presumptive ratings. Specifically,
the proposed rule would provide a bank
other than a small bank with (1) one
year after the rule’s effective date to
comply with the rule’s assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements and (2) two years after the
rule’s effective date to comply with the
rule’s reporting requirements. The
proposed rule would provide small
63 See
64 See
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banks with one year after the rule’s
effective date to comply with the rule’s
assessment area and applicable data
collection and recordkeeping
requirements. All banks would not
comply with the applicable remaining
requirements of the rule—and thus
would not be evaluated under the new
framework—until they complete their
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in 12
CFR 25.01(c)(4)(i)(A)(2) and
345.01(c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of the proposed
rule, including any extensions approved
by their relevant agencies.
To reduce the burden on small banks,
the proposed rule would provide small
banks that opt into the general
performance standards under proposed
12 CFR 25.09(b) and 345.09(b) as of the
final rule’s effective date and banks that
no longer meet the definition of a small
bank (1) two years after the rule’s
effective date or after the bank no longer
meets the definition of a small bank to
comply with the rule’s assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements and (2) three years after
the rule’s effective date or after the bank
no longer meets the definition of a small
bank to comply with the rule’s reporting
requirements. However, small banks
that choose to opt into the general
performance standards under proposed
§§ 25.09(b) and 345.09(b) after the
effective date would receive (1) one year
after the bank opts in to comply with
the rule’s assessment area, data
collection, and recordkeeping
requirements and (2) two years after the
bank opts in to comply with the rule’s
reporting requirements.
The agencies invite comment on all
aspects of the proposal related to the
proposed compliance date provisions,
including on the proposed transition
periods and potential reduction of small
bank burden.
V. Qualifying Activities Illustrative List
This list is a non-exhaustive,
illustrative list of examples of activities
that would or would not qualify under
proposed §§ 25.04 and 345.04. The list
is intended to identify activities that
would or would not meet the criteria in
the proposed rule. The proposed rule
contemplates that the agencies will add
additional activities that meet or do not
meet the qualifying activities criteria
consistent with the process outlined in
proposed 12 CFR 25.05 and 345.05.
12 U.S.C. 1831y; 12 CFR parts 35, 207, 346.
12 CFR part 35.
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Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(b) and 345.04(b) ..................................
Retail loans. A home mortgage loan, small loan to a business, small loan to a farm, or consumer loan is a qualifying activity if it is:
Provided to a:
Low- or moderate-income individual or family;
Loan classified on the bank’s Call Report as a 1–4 family residential construction loan to an
LMI individual.
Closed-end loan or open-end line of credit classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan secured by a 1–4 family residential property to an LMI individual.
Loan classified on the bank’s Call Report as secured by a multifamily residential property to an
LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the FHA’s 203(b) Mortgage Insurance Program to an
LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the FHA’s Limited 203(k) Program to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Indian Home Loan Guarantee Program (Section 184) to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Rural Housing Service to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to an LMI individual.
Credit card to an LMI individual.
Low-cost education loan to an LMI individual, such as to fund school tuition and/or expenses.
Home equity line of credit to an LMI individual, such as for home improvement.
Non-credit card revolving credit line, such as for purchase of home appliances, to an LMI individual.
Consumer loan to an LMI individual for purposes other than purchasing an automobile, such
as to fund unexpected medical expenses.
Automobile loan to an LMI individual to purchase a car.
Installment loan to an LMI individual to purchase home appliances.
Small business; or
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a business with gross annual revenues of $2 million or less when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a commercial and industrial loan.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a business with gross annual revenues of $2 million or less when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties.
Loan of $1.5 million under the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Certified Development Company/504 Loan Program that covers 50 percent of the project’s cost and is secured by a first lien on real property.
Loan of $700 thousand to a business with gross annual revenues of $2 million or less to make
improvements to its manufacturing facility under the SBA 7(a) loan program.
Loan of $2 million to a business with gross annual revenues of $2 million or less to finance the
purchase of machinery under the USDA’s Rural Development Business and Industry Guarantee Loan Program.
Small farm;
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a farm with gross annual revenues of $2 million or
less when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan to finance agricultural production
and other loans to farmers.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a family farm with gross annual revenues of $2
million or less when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers.
Loan of $800 thousand to a family farm with gross annual revenues of $1.5 million to finance
the purchase of equipment.
Located in Indian country;
Loan or line of credit made in Indian country and classified on the bank’s Call Report as a 1–4
family residential construction loan.
Closed-end loan or open-end line of credit made in Indian country and classified on the bank’s
Call Report as a loan secured by a 1–4 family residential property.
Loan made in Indian country and classified on the bank’s Call Report as secured by a multifamily residential property.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed by the FHA.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed under the FHA’s 203(b) Mortgage Insurance Program.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed under the FHA’s Limited 203(k)
Program.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed under the HUD’s Indian Home
Loan Guarantee Program (Section 184).
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed by the USDA’s Rural Housing
Service.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country and guaranteed by the VA.
Credit card to an individual in Indian country.
Home equity line of credit extended in Indian country, such as for home improvement.
§§ 25.04(b)(1) and 345.04(b)(1) .........................
§§ 25.04(b)(1)(i) and 345(b)(1)(i) ........................
§§ 25.04(b)(1)(ii) and 345(b)(1)(ii) ......................
§§ 25.04(b)(1)(iii) and 345.04(b)(1)(iii) ................
§§ 25.04(b)(2) and 345.04(b)(2) .........................
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 6 / Thursday, January 9, 2020 / Proposed Rules
Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(b)(3) and 345.04(b)(3) .........................
§§ 25.04(b)(4) and 345.04(b)(4) .........................
§§ 25.04(c) and 345.04(c) ...................................
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§§ 25.04(c)(1) and 345.04(c)(1) ..........................
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i) and 345.04(c)(1)(i) ...................
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i)(A) and 345.04(c)(1)(i)(A) ..........
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i)(B) and 345.04(c)(1)(i)(B) ..........
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Non-credit card revolving credit line, such as for purchase of home appliances, to an individual
in Indian country.
Consumer loan made to an individual in Indian country for purposes other than purchasing an
automobile, such as to fund unexpected medical expenses.
Automobile loan to an individual in Indian country to purchase a car.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a business in Indian country with gross annual
revenues of any amount when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a commercial and industrial loan.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a business in Indian country with gross annual
revenues of any amount when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan secured by
nonfarm nonresidential properties.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million made in Indian country under the SBA Certified Development Company/504 Loan Program that covers 50 percent of the project’s cost and is secured by a first lien on real property.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million to a business in Indian country to make improvements to its
manufacturing facility under the SBA 7(a) loan program.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million to a business in Indian country to finance the purchase of
machinery under the USDA’s Rural Development Business and Industry Guarantee Loan
Program.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or less to a farm in Indian country with gross annual revenues of any amount when classified on the bank’s Call Report as a loan to finance agricultural production and other loans to farmers.
A small loan to a business located in a low- or moderate-income census tract; or
Loan of $100 thousand to a business with gross annual revenues of $1.3 million to purchase
inventory for its business located in a moderate-income census tract.
Loan of $1.5 million to a business with gross annual revenues of $10 million to expand its
manufacturing facility located in a low-income census tract.
A small loan to a farm located in a low- or moderate-income census tract.
Loan of $250 thousand to purchase farm equipment for a family farm with gross annual revenues of $1.2 million located in a low-income census tract.
Term loan of $2 million to refinance a construction loan used to expand the production facilities for a dairy farm with gross annual revenues of $15 million located in a moderate-income
census tract.
Community development loans, community development investments, and community development services. A community development loan, community development investment, or
community development service is a qualifying activity if it provides financing for or supports:
Affordable housing, which means:
Rental housing:
That is likely to partially or primarily benefit low- or moderate-income individuals or families as
demonstrated by median rents that do not and are not projected at the time of the transaction to exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income;
A loan to a non-profit organization for the purpose of providing affordable housing to LMI individuals where the median rents do not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median
income.
A loan to a for-profit business for the purpose of providing affordable housing to LMI individuals where the median rents do not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
A loan to a for-profit developer for construction of multi-family mixed-income rental housing,
that partially benefits LMI individuals because 20 percent of the units will be offered at median rents that do not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
A loan to a non-profit developer to build multi-family rental housing guaranteed under the
USDA’s Section 538 Guaranteed Loan Program with all units offered at median rents that
do not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, that will use tax credits from the Federal
Historic Tax Credit Program to finance the adaptive reuse and renovation of a hotel into
rental units with median rents that will not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
A loan for a mixed-use property in an underserved area that will be used to help seasonal
businesses provide affordable housing to seasonal LMI workers at rents that do not exceed
30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
A loan to a for-profit developer for construction of multi-family mixed-income rental housing,
with 60 percent of the units offered at median rents that do not exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, that will finance the company’s production of
cost-effective modular housing, which will be used to supply affordable housing units for rent
to LMI individuals and families.
An investment that supports the abatement of or remediation to correct lead-based paint, asbestos, mold, or radon that are present in a multi-family rental housing project with rents not
greater than 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median.
That partially or primarily benefits low- or moderate-income individuals or families as demonstrated by an affordable housing set-aside required by a federal, state, local, or tribal government;
Investment in a project where 30 percent of the housing units will be set aside as affordable to
LMI individuals through local inclusionary zoning.
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Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i)(C) and 345.04(c)(1)(i)(C) .........
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i)(D) and 345.04(c)(1)(i)(D) .........
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(i)(E) and 345.04(c)(1)(i)(E) ..........
§§ 25.04(c)(1)(ii) and 345.04(c)(1)(ii) ..................
§§ 25.04(c)(2) and 345.04(c)(2) ..........................
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§§ 25.04(c)(3) and 345(c)(3) ...............................
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Loan to purchase a multifamily dwelling that will partially benefit LMI individuals by designating
at least 40 percent of the units to renters who receive assistance under the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development’s section 8 rental subsidy program.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, that provides financing for the construction
of a 102-unit rent-to-own affordable housing complex targeted to LMI individuals and families.
That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal, state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for low- or moderate-income individuals or families;
Investment in a limited partnership to develop and operate a Federal Low-Income Housing Tax
Credit (LIHTC) multi-family housing project.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, to finance the conversion and rehabilitation
of public housing using the HUD’s Rental Assistance Demonstration Program that uses a
section 8 project-based contract to make the units affordable to LMI individuals and families.
A loan to a nursing home and assisted living facility that uses the HUD Section 232 loan guarantee and is defined by HUD as multifamily housing that primarily serves or assists LMI individuals or families.
An investment in a ‘‘green’’ retrofit initiative as part of an explicit local government program
used to maintain the affordability of rental housing for LMI individuals through energy efficient measures.
Loan to facilitate the purchase of existing multifamily housing using a guarantee provided
under the HUD Section 207/223(f) program to make the units affordable to LMI individuals
and families.
Loan to facilitate the substantial rehabilitation of multifamily rental housing for moderate-income families, elderly and the handicapped using a guarantee provided under the HUD
Section 221(d)(4) mortgage insurance program to make the units affordable to LMI individuals and families.
Loan to a Native American tribe to purchase land and construct infrastructure and affordable
rental housing, as identified in the tribe’s Indian Housing Plan, using a guarantee provided
under the HUD Title VI Tribal Housing Activities Loan Guarantee Program to make the units
affordable to LMI individuals and families.
Loan to a non-profit sponsor to rehabilitate multifamily rental housing for elderly persons (62 or
older) and/or persons with disabilities using a guarantee provided under the HUD Program
Section 231 to make the units affordable to LMI individuals.
That partially or primarily benefits middle-income individuals or families in high-cost areas as
demonstrated by an affordable housing set-aside required by a federal, state, local, or tribal
government; or
An investment in a project in a high-cost area where 30 percent of the rental units are set
aside as affordable to middle-income individuals through local inclusionary zoning.
A loan to a non-profit to develop rental housing under a state tax credit program that supports
workforce housing in high-cost areas where 40 percent of the units will be set-aside for middle-income individuals and families.
That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal, state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for middle-income individuals or families in high-cost areas; or
A loan to finance temporary rental housing for middle-income workers in a high-cost area in
response to a local workforce housing program.
Owner-occupied housing purchased, refinanced, or improved by low- or moderate-income individuals or families, except for home mortgage loans provided directly to individuals or families;
Investment in a mortgage-backed security (MBS) that is primarily secured by loans to LMI borrowers.
Bank employees help to build a single-family home for a non-profit organization with an express purpose of providing affordable housing for purchase by LMI individuals or families.
Down payment and closing cost assistance grants on home purchase loans for LMI borrowers.
Another bank’s community development loan, community development investment, or community development service;
Bank employees volunteer to provide technical assistance to another bank to establish a loan
program targeted to LMI individuals and families.
Businesses or Farms that meet the size-eligibility standards of the Small Business Administration Certified Development Company, as that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small
Business Investment Company, as described 13 CFR part 107, by providing technical assistance and supportive services, such as shared space, technology, or administrative assistance through an intermediary;
A grant to a non-profit that provides technical assistance to small businesses that meet the
stated size-eligibility standards.
Loan to a non-profit entity that provides technical assistance to small businesses that meet the
size-eligibility standards for an SBA Small Business Investment Company.
Bank employees volunteer through a local Chamber of Commerce to lead a workshop that
provides technical assistance to the chamber’s small business members that meet the stated size-eligibility standards.
Providing permanent office space rent-free at a branch for use by the local economic development organization that targets small business development, predominantly among start-up
and micro-businesses that meet the stated size-eligibility standards.
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Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(c)(4) and 345.04(c)(4) ..........................
Community support services which means activities, such as child care, education, health
services, and housing services, that partially or primarily serve or assist low- or moderate-income individuals or families;
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, in a fund that provides financing for a charter school that will primarily serve LMI children.
Donation to a non-profit organization that provides transportation to medical treatments for LMI
individuals.
Grant to a non-profit organization that provides housing assistance and counseling to LMI immigrants residing in the United States.
Providing mentoring/tutoring services to clients of a non-profit organization that serves LMI
youth.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, that supports a non-profit that provides general education degrees (GED) primarily to LMI individuals without a high school diploma.
Loan to a job training center that primarily serves unemployed, LMI individuals.
Volunteer service to serve meals at a homeless shelter.
In-kind donation to a food pantry that provides services to unemployed, LMI families.
Loan to acquire a child care facility that serves LMI residents of a low-income neighborhood.
Volunteer service with a non-profit that provides income tax assistance programs for LMI individuals.
A grant to a non-profit organization that runs a state-funded battered women’s shelter for LMI
individuals in an underserved area as part of a statewide program.
A loan, investment, or service that supports an LMI-focused alcohol and drug recovery center.
Grant to a drug rehabilitation center that primarily services low-income individuals.
Loan to a legal assistance program for LMI individuals.
Grant to an organization that provides resume writing services to LMI formerly incarcerated individuals.
Loan to an acute care hospital facility using the HUD Section 242 Hospital Mortgage Insurance Program to provide affordable child care services for LMI individuals or families.
Grant to support a program that provides eye glasses to low-income individuals.
In-kind contribution of rent-free office space to a local food bank.
Provision of technical assistance on financial matters to a non-profit organization that will apply
for loans or grants under the Federal Home Loan Banks’ (FHLBanks) Affordable Housing
Program, specifically by serving on a loan review committee, assisting in marketing financial
services, and furnishing financial services training for staff and management.
Essential community facilities that partially or primarily benefit or serve:
Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
A construction loan to improve a hospital that is located in a middle-income census tract adjacent to a low-income census tract that partially benefits LMI individuals who will utilize hospital services.
Investment in a municipal bond to fund construction of a health center that will primarily serve
residents of a moderate-income neighborhood.
Purchase of a local municipal bond, the proceeds of which will be used to construct a new
high school that will partially serve students from LMI families.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, in a fund that finances supportive housing
projects for the chronically homeless and other public funding, such as state-issued tax-exempt bonds, HUD’s Supportive Housing Program or section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance, the FHLBanks’ Affordable Housing Program, and LIHTCs.
Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas, underserved areas, disaster areas
consistent with a disaster recovery plan, or Indian country;
Loan to construct a new fire station located in Indian country.
Loan of $8 million to a company to build a health clinic in an underserved area, using the
USDA’s Community Facilities Guarantee Loan Program.
Loan to build a police station in a distressed area.
Purchase of a local municipal bond with a purpose consistent with a local disaster recovery
plan, the proceeds of which will be used to construct a new high school in a disaster area.
Loan to improve a hospital in a distressed area that serves the entire community, including
LMI individuals.
Investment in a fund that finances community facilities in Indian country.
Essential infrastructure that benefits or serves:
Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
Loan to finance construction of a road in a rural community that provides LMI residents of the
area access to employment centers outside of the area.
Investment in a local cooperative to develop broadband infrastructure and expand access to
LMI residents in the area.
Investment in a local municipal bond to improve city-wide water and waste water systems with
benefit to all residents, including LMI residents.
Loan for infrastructure improvements, including upgrading roads, water supply and sewer services, to a mobile home park that primarily rents space to LMI residents.
Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas, underserved areas, disaster areas
consistent with a disaster recovery plan, or Indian country;
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, that will finance construction of a solar energy facility that uses federal renewable energy tax credits and will provide access to reduced cost electrical utilities to LMI census tracts.
§§ 25.04(c)(5) and 345(c)(5) ...............................
§§ 25.04(c)(5)(i) and 345.04(c)(5)(i) ...................
§§ 25.04(c)(5)(ii) and 345.04(c)(5)(ii) ..................
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§§ 25.04(c)(6) and 345.04(c)(6) ..........................
§§ 25.04(c)(6)(i) and 345.04(c)(6)(i) ...................
§§ 25.04(c)(6)(ii) and 345.04(c)(6)(ii) ..................
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Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(c)(7) and 345.04(c)(7) ..........................
§§ 25.04(c)(7)(i) and 345.04(c)(7)(i) ...................
§§ 25.04(c)(7)(ii) and 345.04(c)(7)(ii) ..................
§§ 25.04(c)(7)(iii) and 345.04(c)(7)(iii) ................
§§ 25.04(c)(8) and 345.04(c)(8) ..........................
§§ 25.04(c)(8)(i) and 345.04(c)(8)(i) ...................
§§ 25.04(c)(8)(ii) and 345.04(c)(8)(ii) ..................
§§ 25.04(c)(8)(iii) and 345.04(c)(8)(iii) ................
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§§ 25.04(c)(9) and 345.04(c)(9) ..........................
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Investment in a local municipal bond to refurbish a bridge that connects a low-income neighborhood with essential services without which residents would otherwise not have access to
those services.
Investment in a state issued bond to reconstruct a tunnel in a disaster area, consistent with
the area’s disaster recovery plan.
Purchase of a local municipal bond, the proceeds of which will be used to upgrade a water
pipeline that serves an underserved area.
Loan to a company to build a new flood control system as identified in the community’s disaster recovery plan, such as a levee or storm drain that serves the disaster area.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, to finance the construction of a broadband
network to develop reliable internet access in an LMI census tract.
Investment in a Special City Taxing District Bond with the purpose of renovating city sidewalks
in a distressed area to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
A family farm’s:
Purchase or lease of farm land, equipment, and other farm-related inputs;
Loan to a family-owned corn and wheat farm with gross annual revenues of $10 million to purchase a tractor.
Loan to a family-owned peanut farm with gross annual revenues of $255 thousand to purchase additional land to increase production.
Loan to a family-owned vineyard with gross annual revenues of $4 million to purchase additional acreage.
Receipt of technical assistance and supportive services, such as shared space, technology, or
administrative assistance through an intermediary; or
Grant to a non-profit organization that provides technical assistance to family farms.
Sale and trade of family farm products;
Loan to a family-owned vegetable (misc. crop) farm with gross annual revenues of $500 thousand to construct a building from which to sell produce.
Loan to a family-owned aquaculture farm with gross annual revenues of $3 million to market
and sell their products statewide.
Federal, state, local, or tribal government programs, projects, or initiatives that:
Partially or primarily benefit low- or moderate-income individuals or families;
Grant to a non-profit organization to provide a local government sponsored dress for success
program for homeless women.
A loan to a non-profit organization to provide a state government sponsored after-school program for students from LMI families.
Partially or primarily benefit small businesses or small farms as those terms are defined in the
programs, projects or initiatives; or
Volunteer service providing guidance to small businesses on how to create financial statements under a state program to support statewide business development.
Investment in a SBA Guaranteed Loan Pool Certificate.
Loan to a small business that is a state-certified Historically Underutilized Business.
Loan to a small business to purchase real estate related to a New Markets Tax Credit project,
as provided for in 26 U.S.C. 45D.
Grant to a non-profit that provides financing for small farms under a federal program to encourage new farm development.
Loan to a small business incubator that primarily benefits small businesses by providing supportive services to business start-ups and that is funded in part under a state-wide CD initiative.
Loan of $3 million to a small business under a tribal government loan guarantee program.
Are consistent with a bona fide government revitalization, stabilization, or recovery plan for a
low- or moderate-income census tract; a distressed area; an underserved area; a disaster
area; or Indian country;
Grant to a non-profit organization that receives funds from a statewide program to revitalize
communities in Indian country.
Contribution of other real estate owned (OREO) property to a local government-owned land
bank whose primary purpose is consistent with a government revitalization plan that benefits
LMI census tracts.
Financing to support cleanup of industrial brownfields in a distressed area as part of city-sponsored revitalization program.
Investment in a Tax Increment Financing (TIF) bond to finance infrastructure improvements
consistent with a government revitalization plan in a distressed area.
Loan through a state program to a company to purchase and replace equipment as well as rebuild the manufacturing facility that was damaged by flooding in a federally designated disaster area and supported by the community’s disaster recovery plan.
Financial literacy programs or education or homebuyer counseling;
Financial counseling by bank employees to participants in a workforce development program.
Bank employees conduct first-time homebuyer counseling program for bank customers.
Bank employees teach financial education or literacy curricula at local community centers.
Bank employees delivering the FDIC’s Money Smart Program curriculum to residents at a senior living facility.
Grant to a non-profit organization that provides financial literacy courses for a foreclosure prevention program.
Activities supporting ‘‘train the trainer’’ programs that are designed to train teachers to provide
financial literacy education to their students.
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Proposed qualifying regulatory criteria
Description
§§ 25.04(c)(10) and 345.04(c)(10) ......................
§§ 25.04(c)(11) and 345.04(c)(11) ......................
§§ 25.04(c)(12) and 345.04(c)(12) ......................
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§§ 25.04(c)(13) and 345.04(c)(13) ......................
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In-kind donation of computer equipment to a non-profit that conducts personal money management courses for LMI individuals.
Bank employees provide financial education in connection with a school savings program.
Loan to a non-profit credit counseling organization that conducts personal money management
courses.
Donation to an organization that conducts elder financial abuse and identity theft prevention
programs.
An in-kind donation of computer equipment to a non-profit that provides financial literacy
courses.
Bank employees assist in the preparation of tax filings under the Internal Revenue Service’s
Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program.
Providing homebuyer education to potential buyers of single-family housing developed under a
state program for middle-income individuals and families in high-cost areas.
Volunteer service to open savings accounts offered through a school-based banking program
to students of a K–12 school that is located in and serves residents of an LMI census tract.
Owner-occupied and rental housing development, construction, rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country;
Loan to develop housing in Indian Country that is guaranteed under HUD’s Title VI Loan Guarantee Program.
Loan to construct mixed-income housing under a tribal-government sponsored program, 30%
of which will be set aside for middle-income teachers in Indian country.
Loan to a for-profit developer to construct rental housing in Indian country.
Qualified opportunity funds, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–2(d)(1), that benefit low- or moderate-income qualified opportunity zones, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–1(a);
Investment in a qualified opportunity fund, established to finance construction of a new manufacturing facility in an opportunity zone that is also an LMI census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity fund, established to finance renovation of a vacant building into a cultural arts facility, including loft space for artists and a community theater, in an
opportunity zone that is also an LMI census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity fund, established to finance the rehabilitation of an acute
care hospital facility, including the purchase of new medical equipment, in an opportunity
zone that is also an LMI census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity fund, established to finance improvements to an athletic
stadium in an opportunity zone that is also an LMI census tract.
A Small Business Administration Certified Development Company, as that term is defined in
13 CFR 120.10, a Small Business Investment Company, as described in 13 CFR part 107,
a New Markets Venture Capital company, as described in 13 CFR part 108, a qualified
Community Development Entity, as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or a U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Business Investment Company, as defined in 7 CFR 4290.50; or
An investment in a New Markets Venture Capital company that finances businesses that meet
the SBA’s size standards used to define small business concerns.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR part 24, to a qualified Community Development Entity that will provide financing for a food market to build a 180,000 square foot refrigerated
warehouse and food distribution facility.
An investment in a SBA Small Business Investment Company fund to finance businesses that
meet the SBIC size standards.
An investment in a USDA Rural Business Investment Company to fund businesses and farms
that meet the RBIC size standards.
An investment in a New Markets Tax Credit-eligible Community Development Entity to fund a
mixed-use project that will include affordable housing for LMI individuals and families and retail space for small businesses.
Ventures undertaken, including capital investments and loan participations, by a bank in cooperation with a minority depository institution, women’s depository institution, Community
Development Financial Institution, or low-income credit union, if the activity helps to meet
the credit needs of local communities in which such institutions are chartered, including activities that indirectly help to meet community credit needs by promoting the sustainability
and profitability of those institutions and credit unions.
Bank employee time spent facilitating a loan participation with a minority depository institution,
which will help the minority depository institution to meet the credit needs of its local community.
Bank employees provide training to CDFI staff on underwriting small farm loans to help the
CDFI expand its product offerings to its community.
Bank provides in-kind services in the form of free or discounted data processing systems that
aids a minority depository institution in serving its customers.
Bank donates branch space on a rent-free basis to a low-income credit union to better serve
the credit union’s customers.
Bank certificate of deposit in a minority depository institution.
Loan to enable a minority- or women-owned depository institution or low-income credit union,
or CDFI to partner with schools or universities to offer financial literacy education to members of its local communities in which such institutions are chartered.
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VI. Regulatory Analysis
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
et seq. (RFA), the agencies are
publishing an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis for the proposed
rule. The RFA requires an agency to
provide an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis with the proposed rule or to
certify that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The agencies are separately publishing
initial regulatory flexibility analyses for
the proposal as set forth in this section.
The agencies welcome comment on all
aspects of the initial regulatory
flexibility analyses. Final regulatory
flexibility analyses will be conducted
after consideration of comments
received during the public comment
period.
OCC:
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
A. Reasons Why the Proposal Is Being
Considered by the Agencies; Statement
of the Objectives of the Proposal; and
Legal Basis for Proposal
The legal basis for the proposed rule
is the CRA, 12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.,
which charges the Federal banking
agencies to encourage the institutions
they supervise to help meet the credit
needs of their local communities in a
manner that is safe and sound. As
discussed in the Supplementary
Information section above, the agencies
are proposing to revise their regulations
implementing the CRA to (1) clarify and
expand the types of activities that
qualify for CRA credit; (2) update and
expand the areas in which qualifying
activities receive credit; (3) provide a
more objective and transparent method
to measure and evaluate CRA
performance; and (4) revise data
collection, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements to improve consistency.
B. Small Entities Affected by the
Proposal
Small Business Administration
regulations define ‘‘small entities,’’ for
banking purposes, as entities with total
assets of $600 million or less.65 The
OCC currently supervises approximately
782 small entities. The proposal would
affect approximately 749 of those
entities.
C. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,
and Other Compliance Requirements of
Proposal
The proposed rule sets forth new
qualifying activities criteria, assessment
65 See
13 CFR 121.201 (Sector 52, Subsector 522).
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area delineation requirements, general
performance standards, and data
collection, recordkeeping, and recording
requirements. The proposal would
exempt banks with assets of $500
million or less in each of the prior four
quarters (small banks) from the general
performance standards. These banks
would be required to comply with the
current CRA small bank performance
standards, new qualifying activities
criteria, new assessment area
delineations, and new data collection
and recordkeeping requirements related
to deposits. The proposal would permit
these small banks to opt in to the
general performance standards, which
would require them to comply with all
of the new data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements.
To determine if the proposed rule
would have a significant economic
impact on small entities, the OCC
compared the estimated annual cost
with annual noninterest expense and
annual salaries and employee benefits
for each small entity. If the estimated
annual cost was greater than 2.5 percent
of total noninterest expense or five
percent of annual salaries and employee
benefits, the OCC classified the impact
as significant. Based on these
thresholds, the OCC concluded for
purposes of this initial regulatory
flexibility analysis that the proposed
rule would result in a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Specifically, if
all of the small banks that the proposal
would exempt operated under the small
bank performance standards, then the
proposal would have a significant
economic impact of approximately $36
million on 72 small entities, which is a
substantial number of small entities. If
all of the small banks the proposal
would exempt opted in to the general
performance standards, then the
proposal would have a significant
economic impact of approximately $375
million on 738 small entities, which is
a substantial number of small entities.
D. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
The OCC believes that no Federal
rules duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
the proposed rule.
E. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
to Proposal
The agencies have sought to
incorporate flexibility into the proposed
rule and lessen burden and complexity
for smaller banking entities wherever
possible, consistent with safety and
soundness and other applicable laws. In
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particular, as noted above, the proposal
would allow small banks to operate
under the current CRA small bank
performance standards and would
require compliance with only the new
qualifying activities criteria, assessment
area delineation requirements, and data
collection and recordkeeping
requirements related to deposits. The
new assessment area delineation
requirements may not increase the
compliance burden as banks may be
able to demonstrate that more than 50
percent of their retail domestic deposits
fall within their facility-based
assessment area(s). Also, the data
collection and recordkeeping
requirements related to deposits would
be limited to data that small banks, for
the most part, already collect and
maintain.
For the small banking entities that
have assets between $500 and $600
million and small banks that opt in to
the general performance standards, the
proposal would reduce the compliance
burden of the final rule by including a
transition period with different
compliance dates based on asset size
after the effective date. This transition
period would allow for banks to revise
their systems for data collection,
maintenance, and reporting and to set
up processes for calculating their CRA
evaluation measures and determining
their presumptive ratings.
The agencies request comment on
potential options for simplifying the
rule and reducing burden for small
banks, including whether the threshold
for the small bank exemption should be
set at $500 million and whether the
transition period is sufficient time for
establishing the necessary systems of
operation.
FDIC:
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires that, in connection
with a proposed rule, an agency prepare
and make available for public comment
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the impact of the proposal on
small entities.66 A regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required, however, if the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has defined ‘‘small entities’’ to
include banking organizations with total
assets less than or equal to $600
million.67 Generally, the FDIC considers
66 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $600 million or less in assets, where an
organization’s ‘‘assets are determined by averaging
the assets reported on its four quarterly financial
67 The
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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 noninterest expenses. The FDIC believes
that effects in excess of these thresholds
typically represent significant effects for
FDIC-insured institutions. Some
expected effects of the proposed rule are
difficult to assess or accurately quantify
with currently available information,
nevertheless the FDIC believes that the
proposed rule will have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities and has
included an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Act Analysis in this section.
Reasons Why This Action Is Being
Considered
As discussed in Section I. of the
of this
proposed rule, over the past two
decades, technology and the expansion
of interstate banking has transformed
the financial services industry and how
banking services are delivered and
consumed. These changes affect all
banks, regardless of size or location, and
are most evident in banks that have a
limited physical presence or that rely
heavily on technology to deliver their
products and services. As banking has
evolved, banks’ communities are not
solely identifiable by the areas that
surround their physical locations. The
Federal banking agencies have also
gained a greater understanding of
communities’ needs for lending and
investment, such as the need for
community development (CD)
investments and loans with maturities
longer than the typical CRA evaluation
period. The current CRA regulatory
framework has not kept pace with the
transformation of banking and has had
the unintended consequence of
incentivizing banks to limit some of
their CD loans to the length of a CRA
evaluation period. Additionally,
recognizing the need for modernization,
the Federal banking agencies began the
effort to assess and update the CRA
regulatory framework in 2018 by
working together on an Advance Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR).
Generally, commenters supported
making amendments to the CRA in
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
statements for the preceding year.’’ See 13 CFR
121.201 (as amended by 84 FR 34261, effective
August 19, 2019). In its determination, the ‘‘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.’’ See 13 CFR
121.103. 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.
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order to make it less inconsistent,
opaque, and complex.
Policy Objectives
As previously discussed in Section I.
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION of
this proposed rule, in response to this
feedback, the agencies propose to
strengthen the CRA regulatory
framework to better achieve the
underlying statutory purpose of
encouraging banks to help serve their
communities by making the framework
more objective, transparent, consistent,
and easy to understand. To accomplish
these goals, the proposal would clarify
which activities qualify for CRA credit;
update where activities count for CRA
credit; create a more transparent and
objective method for measuring CRA
performance; and provide for more
transparent, consistent, and timely CRArelated data collection, recordkeeping,
and reporting. Revisions that reflect
these objectives would provide clarity
and visibility for all stakeholders on
how a bank’s CRA performance is
evaluated and the level of CRA activities
banks conduct. These changes also
would encourage banks to serve their
entire communities, including LMI
neighborhoods, more effectively through
a broader range of CRA activities.
Legal Basis
The FDIC is issuing this proposed rule
under the authorities granted to it under
the Community Reinvestment Act of
1977. For a more extensive discussion
on the legal basis of the proposed rule,
please refer to Section I. of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION of this
proposed rule.
Description of the Rule
The proposal would (1) establish clear
criteria for the type of activities that
qualify for CRA credit, which generally
would include activities that currently
qualify for CRA credit and other
activities that are consistent with the
purpose of CRA, but may not qualify
under the current CRA framework; (2)
require the agencies to publish
periodically a non-exhaustive,
illustrative list of examples of qualifying
activities; and (3) establish a
straightforward and transparent process
for stakeholders to seek agency
confirmation that an activity is a
qualifying activity.68 In addition to
providing transparency, the proposed
68 The agencies are proposing to retain for certain
banks the small bank performance standards
applicable to small banks that are not intermediate
small banks in the current regulations. 12 CFR
25.26; 12 CFR 195.26; and 12 CFR 345.26. The
agencies intend for these standards to be applied
consistent with their treatment under the current
regulation except as discussed below.
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qualifying activities criteria would
expand the types of activities that
qualify for CRA credit to recognize that
some banks are currently serving
community needs in a manner that is
consistent with the statutory purpose of
CRA but are not receiving CRA credit
for those activities. The proposal would
expand where CRA activity counts to
help banks meet the needs of their
entire communities, including LMI
neighborhoods. To ensure that CRA
activity continues to have a local
community focus where banks maintain
a physical presence and conduct a
substantial portion of their lending
activity, banks would continue to be
required to delineate assessment areas
around their main office, branches, or
non-branch deposit-taking facilities as
well as the surrounding areas where
banks have originated or purchased a
substantial portion of their loans. These
areas would be identified as ‘‘facilitybased’’ assessment areas. In addition, to
recognize the evolution of modern
banking (including the emergence of
internet banks) and in conformity with
the CRA’s intent to ensure that banks
help meet credit needs where they
collect deposits,69 the proposed rule
would require banks to delineate
additional, non-overlapping ‘‘depositbased’’ assessment areas where they
have significant concentrations of retail
domestic deposits (regardless of
physical presence).
Consistent with the current CRA
framework, the proposed rule would
include different performance standards
applicable to banks of different sizes.
Small banks, as defined under the
proposed rule, would continue to be
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards currently
applicable to small banks that are not
intermediate small banks.70 The
proposed rule also would establish new
general performance standards to
evaluate other banks’ CRA activities and
the CRA activities of small banks that
opt into these standards. The general
performance standards would assess
two fundamental components of a
bank’s CRA performance: (1) The
appropriate distribution (i.e., number) of
qualifying retail loans to LMI
individuals, small farms, small
businesses, and LMI geographies in a
community through the application of
tests evaluating a bank’s distribution of
retail lending; and (2) the impact of a
bank’s qualifying activities, measured
69 See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977)
(statement of Sen. William Proxmire, Chairman, S.
Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs).
70 The proposed rule would define a small bank
as a bank that had assets of $500 million or less in
each of the previous four calendar quarters.
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by a bank’s CRA evaluation measure,
which includes the quantified value 71
of a bank’s qualifying activities divided
by a bank’s retail domestic deposits plus
a measure of branch distribution in
specified areas of need.
For a more extensive description of
the proposed rule, please refer to
Section II. of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION of this proposed rule.
Small Entities Affected
The FDIC supervises 3,424 depository
institutions, of which 2,665 are defined
as small institutions by the terms of the
RFA.72 The proposed rule would affect
all FDIC-supervised institutions,
therefore the FDIC estimates that the
proposed rule would affect 2,665 small,
FDIC-supervised institutions. Of the
2,665 small, FDIC-supervised
institutions, 2,526 currently report total
consolidated assets of less than $500
million. Therefore, the FDIC estimates
that 2,526 small, FDIC-supervised
institutions would be subject to the
small bank performance standards of the
proposed rule. Additionally, the FDIC
estimated that 139 small, FDICsupervised institutions would be subject
to the new general performance
standards of the proposed rule.
However, because small, FDICsupervised institutions with less than
$500 million in total consolidated assets
have the option of adopting the new
general performance standards of the
proposed rule, the number of small,
FDIC-supervised institutions who adopt
the new general performance standards
might be greater than the estimated
amount. It is difficult to estimate this
aspect of the proposed rule with the
information currently available to the
FDIC, because such estimates would
depend on the present and future
financial conditions, activities, and
management decision of affected
institutions.
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Expected Effects
The new general performance
standards for some small, FDIC-insured
institutions in the proposed rule is
likely to benefit covered institutions by
establishing a more objective, clear, and
consistent metric by which a covered
institution is evaluated. If the proposed
71 The quantified value is the dollar value of the
qualifying activity multiplied by applicable
multipliers and percentages of partial benefit to the
intended population or area. The specific quantified
value for the different types of qualifying activities
is discussed later in the preamble and explained in
the regulation.
72 Call Report, June 30, 2019. Nine insured
domestic branches of foreign banks are excluded
from the count of FDIC-insured depository
institutions. These branches of foreign banks are not
‘‘small entities’’ for purposes of the RFA.
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general performance standards are more
stringent for some institutions than the
current parameters, the proposed rule
could pose costs for covered institutions
by potentially reducing their CRA
examination rating. If the proposed
general performance standards are less
stringent for some institutions than the
current parameters, the proposed rule
could benefit covered institutions by
potentially increasing their CRA
examination rating. It is difficult to
accurately quantify these aspects of the
proposed rule with the information
currently available to the FDIC.
The publicly available list of
examples of qualifying activities should
benefit small, covered institutions and
borrowers by establishing a reference for
qualifying activities. Additionally, the
proposed establishment of the list and
an optional process through which
FDIC-insured institutions and interested
third parties can seek confirmation of a
particular activity and have it added to
the list, will create additional
compliance burden. However, the FDIC
believes that small, FDIC-insured
institutions and interested third parties
will only incur such a burden if they
believe that the benefits outweigh the
costs.
Establishing a transparent
methodology for calculating qualifying
activities values should benefit small,
covered institutions by enabling them to
more effectively manage their CRA
activities and compliance. Additionally,
to the extent that the qualifying
activities value calculation methodology
overweighs some activities relative to
others, the proposed rule is likely to
benefit certain activities and may lead to
changes in the distribution of qualifying
activities by some small, covered
institutions.
The proposed rule amends the
calculation of qualified loans and CD
investments activities from the total
balance just prior to a CRA examination,
to average month-end outstanding
amount on a bank’s balance sheet. This
aspect of the proposed rule is likely to
disincentivize the acquisition of
qualifying activities that serve only to
boost the assessed activities for small,
FDIC-supervised institutions just prior
to a CRA evaluation. This amendment to
the calculation of these qualified
activities is likely to benefit borrowers,
as covered institutions seek to develop
sustained efforts to conduct qualifying
activities.
The proposed rule augments the
current assessment area designation
methodology by adding areas where a
bank has a significant portion of its
retail domestic deposits, outside of its
facility-based assessment areas. To the
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extent that small, covered institutions
were already conducting qualifying
activities in these areas, this aspect of
the proposed rule will benefit small,
covered institutions by crediting this
activity towards their CRA assessment.
However, to the extent that small,
covered institutions were not already
conducting qualifying activities in these
areas, this aspect of the proposed rule
would pose costs for covered
institutions by compelling them to start
conducting qualifying activities in these
areas or negatively affecting their CRA
assessment. It is difficult to accurately
quantify these aspects of the proposed
rule with the information currently
available to the FDIC. Further, to the
extent that small, covered institutions
were not already conducting qualifying
activities in these areas, this aspect of
the proposed rule would benefit
borrowers by incentivizing small,
covered institutions to focus on meeting
their financial service needs.
As discussed previously, the
proposed rule maintains the small bank
performance standards, however the
rule amends the definition of ‘‘small
bank’’ from total consolidated assets less
than $1.284 billion to $500 million or
less. Therefore, this aspect of the
proposed rule may increase compliance
costs for the 139 intermediate-small
banks, FDIC-supervised institutions
with total consolidated assets less than
$1.284 billion, but greater than $500
million. Additionally, banks that will be
subject to the small bank performance
standards under the proposed rule will
utilize the revised definition of
qualifying activities and assessment
areas. The expected effects of these
aspects of the proposed rule were
previously addressed in this RFA
section.
As discussed previously, the
proposed rule may increase compliance
costs for all small, FDIC-insured
institutions. The FDIC estimates that, if
adopted, the recordkeeping, reporting,
and disclosure burden for small, FDICsupervised institutions associated with
the Community Reinvestment Act
would be 1,030 hours per year for
entities subject to the small bank
performance standards, and 7,361 hours
per year for entities subject to the new
general performance standards.
Assuming that each institution utilizes
labor from Executives and Managers,
Lawyers, Compliance Officers, IT
Specialists, Financial Analysts, and
Clerical Workers in fixed proportion,
the FDIC estimates that the complying
with the CRA would pose $93,000 in
annual costs for small, FDIC-supervised
entities subject to the small bank
performance standards, and $665,802.45
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in annual costs for small, FDICsupervised entities subject to the new
general performance standards.
Additionally, the proposed rule
redefines loans to small business as
loans with an origination balance of $2
million or less, as opposed to the
current threshold of $1 million or less.
Small, FDIC-insured institutions might
incur some regulatory costs associated
with making the necessary changes to
their systems in order to comply with
the new definition.
Other Statutes and Federal Rules
The FDIC has not identified any likely
duplication, overlap, and/or potential
conflict between this proposed rule and
any other federal rule.
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of the supporting information
provided in this section, and in
particular, whether the proposed rule
would have any significant effects on
small entities that the FDIC has not
identified.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Certain provisions of the proposed
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 the proposed
rule and determined that it revises
certain information collection
requirements previously cleared by
OMB under OMB Control Nos. 1557–
0160 and 3064–0092. The agencies have
submitted the revised information
collection to OMB for review under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)) and section 1320.11 of the
OMB’s implementing regulations (5 CFR
1320).
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Current Actions
Under the proposed rule:
• Banks may request that the agency
confirm that an activity is a qualifying
activity by submitting a complete
Qualifying Activity Confirmation
Request Form. 12 CFR __.05(c)(1).
• A bank must delineate one or more
assessment areas within which the
agency evaluates the bank’s record of
helping to meet the credit needs of its
community. 12 CFR __.08.
• Banks that are not small banks must
submit information on the Performance
Context Form. 12 CFR __.14(c).
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• A bank must submit a strategic plan
if the bank: (1) Would otherwise be
evaluated under § __.12 and does not
maintain retail domestic deposits onbalance sheet or (2) is a small bank that
does not originate retail loans. A bank
not required to submit a plan may do so.
12 CFR __.16.
• Banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in § __.12 and
banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under § __.16, unless otherwise
determined in writing by the agency,
must collect and maintain the
information required by 12 CFR __.19.
12 CFR __.19.
• Small banks must collect and
maintain data on the value of each retail
domestic deposit account and the
physical address of each depositor. 12
CFR __.20.
• Banks must keep the data collected
under § __.19 and § __.20 in machine
readable form (as prescribed by the
agency). 12 CFR __.22.
• Banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in § __.12 and
banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under § __.16, unless otherwise
determined in writing by the agency,
must report the information required by
12 CFR __.23. 12 CFR __.23.
• Banks must maintain a public file
that includes: All written comments and
responses; a copy of the public section
of the bank’s or savings association’s
most recent CRA performance
evaluation; a list of the bank’s branches,
their street addresses, and census tracts;
a list of the branches opened or closed,
their street addresses, and geographies;
a list of services offered; a map of each
assessment area; and any other
information the bank chooses. Banks
with strategic plans must include a copy
of the plan. Banks with less than
satisfactory ratings must include a
description of their current efforts to
improve their performance in helping to
meet the credit needs of their entire
community. Banks must make all of this
information available to the public. This
information must be current as of April
1 of each year. 12 CFR __.25.
OCC
Title of Information Collection:
Community Reinvestment Act.
Frequency: On Occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Estimated number of respondents:
1,069.
Total estimated annual burden:
3,401,393 hours.
FDIC
Title of Information Collection:
Community Reinvestment Act.
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Frequency: On Occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Estimated number of respondents:
3,390.
Total estimated annual burden:
8,702,163 hours.
Comments are invited on:
a. Whether the collections of
information are necessary for the proper
performance of the agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
b. The accuracy or the estimate of the
burden of the information collections,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
c. Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
d. Ways to minimize the burden of the
information collections on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and
e. Estimates of capital or startup costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments on aspects of
this notice that may affect reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates
should be sent to the addresses listed in
the ADDRESSES section of this document.
A copy of the comments may also be
submitted to the OMB desk officer by
mail to U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street NW, #10235,
Washington, DC 20503; facsimile to
(202) 395–6974; or email to oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov, Attention,
Federal Banking Agency Desk Officer.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Unfunded Mandates Act) (2 U.S.C.
1532) requires that the OCC prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes any
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
(adjusted annually for inflation,
currently $154 million) in any one year.
If a budgetary impact statement is
required, section 205 of the Unfunded
Mandates Act also requires the OCC to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule.
The OCC has determined that this
proposed rule is likely to result in the
expenditure by the private sector of
$154 million or more. Therefore, the
OCC has prepared a budgetary impact
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analysis and identified and considered
alternative approaches. The full text of
the OCC’s analyses under the Unfunded
Mandates Act is available at: https://
www.regulations.gov, Docket ID OCC–
2018–0008.
Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 25
Community development, Credit,
Investments, National banks, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 195
Banks, Banking, Community
development, Credit, Investments,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26, 27, 30, 36,
93a, 161, 215, 215a, 481, 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1814, 1816, 1828(c), 1835a, 2901 through
2908, 3101 through 3111, and 5412(b)(2)(B).
2. Revise subparts A through D to read
as follows:
■
Subpart A—General
Sec.
25.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
25.02 Effect of CRA performance on
applications.
25.03 Definitions.
Subpart B—Qualifying Activities
25.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
25.05 Qualifying activities confirmation
and illustrative list.
25.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
25.07 Qualifying activities value.
Subpart C—Assessment Area
25.08 Assessment area.
Subpart D—Performance Evaluations
25.09 Performance standards and ratings, in
general.
25.10 CRA evaluation measure.
25.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
25.12 General performance standards and
presumptive rating.
25.13 Small bank performance standards.
25.14 Consideration of performance
context.
25.15 Discriminatory and other illegal
credit practices.
25.16 Strategic plan.
25.17 Assigned ratings.
25.18 State/multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating.
§ 25.01
12 CFR Part 345
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF
THE CURRENCY
12 CFR CHAPTER I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, and under the authority of 12
U.S.C. 93a, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency proposes to amend 12
Jkt 250001
1. The authority citation for part 25
continues to read as follows:
Subpart A—General
Banks, Banking, Community
development, Credit, Investments,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
17:52 Jan 08, 2020
PART 25—COMMUNITY
REINVESTMENT ACT AND
INTERSTATE DEPOSIT PRODUCTION
REGULATIONS
■
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the
Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
(RCDRIA), 12 U.S.C. 4802(a), in
determining the effective date and
administrative compliance requirements
for new regulations that impose
additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository
institutions, the agencies 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, 12 U.S.C.
4802(b), 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. The OCC invites
comments that will inform its
consideration of RCDRIA.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
CFR part 25 and remove part 195 as
follows:
Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority. The authority for this
part is 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26, 27, 30, 36,
93a, 161, 215, 215a, 481, 1462a, 1463,
1464, 1814, 1816, 1828(c), 1835a, 2901
through 2907, and 3101 through 3111.
(b) Purposes. In enacting the
Community Reinvestment Act (CRA),
Congress required each appropriate
Federal financial supervisory agency to
assess an institution’s record of meeting
the credit needs of its entire community,
including low- and moderate-income
communities, consistent with the safe
and sound operation of such institution,
and take that record into account in its
evaluation of an application for a
deposit facility by such institution. This
part is intended to carry out the
purposes of the CRA by:
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(1) Establishing the framework and
criteria by which the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)
assesses a bank’s record of helping to
meet the credit needs of its entire
community, including low- and
moderate-income communities,
consistent with the safe and sound
operation of the bank; and
(2) Providing that the OCC takes that
record into account in considering
certain applications.
(c) Scope—(1) General. This part
applies to all banks as defined in § 25.03
except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2)
and (c)(3) of this section.
(2) Federal branches and agencies—(i)
This part applies to all insured Federal
branches and to any Federal branch that
is uninsured that results from an
acquisition described in section 5(a)(8)
of the International Banking Act of 1978
(12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph
(c)(2)(i) of this section, this part does not
apply to Federal branches that are
uninsured, limited Federal branches, or
Federal agencies, as those terms are
defined in part 28 of this chapter.
(3) Certain exempt banks. This part
does not apply to banks that do not
perform commercial or retail banking
services by granting credit or offering
credit-related products or services to the
public in the ordinary course of
business, other than as incident to their
specialized operations and done on an
accommodation basis. These banks
include banker’s banks, as defined in 12
U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and banks that
engage only in one or more of the
following activities: Providing cash
management controlled disbursement
services or serving as correspondent
banks, trust companies, or clearing
agents.
(4) Compliance Dates—(i) Banks other
than small banks—(A) Banks that are
not small banks must comply with the
following requirements of this part on
the following dates:
(1) One year after the effective date of
the final rule for the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 25.08, 25.19, and
25.22; and
(2) Two years after the effective date
of the final rule for the reporting
requirements in § 25.23.
(B) Banks that are not small banks
must comply with the applicable
requirements of the other sections of
this part after completing the evaluation
period that concludes immediately after
the reporting requirements compliance
date in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of this
section, including any extensions
approved by the OCC.
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(ii) Small banks—(A) Small banks
must comply with the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 25.08, 25.20, and
25.22 one year after the effective date of
this rule.
(B) Small banks must comply with the
applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
the OCC.
(iii) Small banks that opt into the
general performance standards in
§ 25.12 as of the effective date of this
rule and banks that no longer meet the
small bank definition—(A) Small banks
that opt into the general performance
standards in § 25.12 as of the effective
date of this rule pursuant to § 25.09(b)
and banks that no longer meet the small
bank definition must comply with the
following requirements on the following
dates:
(1) Two years after the effective date
of the final rule for the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 25.08, 25.19, and
25.22; and
(2) Three years after the effective date
of the final rule for the reporting
requirements in § 25.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with
the applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in
paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A)(2) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
the OCC.
(iv) Small banks that opt into the
general performance standards in
§ 25.12 after the effective date of the
final rule—(A) Small banks that opt into
the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 after the effective date of the
final rule pursuant to § 25.09(b) must
comply with the following requirements
on the following dates:
(1) One year after the bank opts in for
the assessment area, data collection, and
recordkeeping requirements in §§ 25.08,
25.19, and 25.22; and
(2) Two years after the bank opts in
for the reporting requirements in
§ 25.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with
the applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in
paragraph (c)(4)(iv)(A)(2) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
the OCC.
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§ 25.02 Effect of CRA performance on
applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other
factors, the OCC takes into account the
record of performance under the CRA of
each applicant bank in considering an
application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic
branch or non-branch deposit taking
facility;
(2) The relocation of the main office
or a domestic branch;
(3) Under the Bank Merger Act (12
U.S.C. 1828(c)), the merger or
consolidation with or the acquisition of
assets or assumption of liabilities of an
insured depository institution;
(4) The conversion of an insured
depository institution to a national bank
charter;
(5) A savings association charter; and
(6) Acquisitions subject to section
10(e) of the Home Owners’ Loan Act (12
U.S.C. 1467a(e)).
(b) Charter application. An applicant
(other than an insured depository
institution) for a national bank or a
Federal thrift charter must submit with
its application a description of how it
will meet its CRA objectives, if
applicable. The OCC takes the
description into account in considering
the application and may deny or
condition approval on that basis.
(c) Interested parties. The OCC takes
into account any views expressed by
interested parties that are submitted in
accordance with the OCC’s procedures
set forth in part 5 of this chapter in
considering CRA performance in an
application listed in paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of
application. A bank’s record of
performance may be the basis for
denying or conditioning approval of an
application listed in paragraph (a) of
this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For
purposes of this section, the term
‘‘insured depository institution’’ has the
same meaning as this term is given in
12 U.S.C. 1813.
§ 25.03
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply:
Activity means a loan, investment, or
service by a bank.
Affiliate has the same meaning as this
term is given in Regulation W, 12 CFR
223.2(a) and (b), as of the effective date
of this rule but applies to member and
non-member banks.
Agencies means the OCC and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC).
Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the
metropolitan statistical area, if a person
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or census tract is located in a
metropolitan statistical area, or for the
metropolitan division, if a person or
census tract is located in a metropolitan
statistical area that has been subdivided
into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan
median family income, if a person or
census tract is located outside a
metropolitan statistical area.
Assessment area means a geographic
area delineated in accordance with
§ 25.08.
Average means the statistical mean.
Bank means a national bank
(including a Federal branch as defined
in part 28 of this chapter) or a savings
association, the deposits of which are
insured by the FDIC pursuant to Chapter
16 of Title 12, as described in 12 U.S.C.
1813(c)(2), except as provided in
§ 25.01(c)(3).
Branch means a staffed banking
facility authorized as a branch, whether
shared or unshared, including, for
example, a mini-branch in a grocery
store or a branch operated in
conjunction with any other local
business or non-profit organization. The
term ‘‘branch’’ only includes a
‘‘domestic branch’’ as that term is
defined in section 3(o) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA) (12 U.S.C.
1813(o)).
Call Report means Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income as
filed under 12 U.S.C. 161.
Community Development Financial
Institution has the same meaning as this
term is given in 12 U.S.C. 4702(5).
Community development investment
means a lawful investment, membership
share, deposit, legally-binding
commitment to invest that is reported
on the Call Report, Schedule RC–L, or
monetary or in-kind donation that meets
the criteria of § 25.04(c).
Community development loan means
a loan, line of credit, or contingent
commitment to lend that meets the
criteria of § 25.04(c).
Community development services
means bank employee time spent
volunteering as a representative of the
bank on activities that meet the criteria
of § 25.04(c) or supporting activities that
meet the criteria of § 25.04(c)(2), (11). A
bank employee may receive expense
reimbursement for volunteer time
related to the community development
activity.
Compensation means the Bureau of
Labor Statistics calculation of the hourly
wage for that type of work engaged in
by a bank employee in the course of
conducting community development
services.
Consumer loan means a loan reported
on the Call Report, Schedule RC–C,
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Loans and Lease Financing Receivables,
Part 1, Item 6, Loans to individuals for
household, family, and other personal
expenditures, which include the
following product lines:
(1) Credit card, which is an extension
of credit to an individual for household,
family, and other personal expenditures
arising from credit cards;
(2) Other revolving credit plan, which
is an extension of credit to an individual
for household, family, and other
personal expenditures arising from
prearranged overdraft plans and other
revolving credit plans not accessed by
credit cards;
(3) Automobile loan, which is a
consumer loan extended for the purpose
of purchasing new and used passenger
cars and other vehicles such as
minivans, vans, sport-utility vehicles,
pickup trucks, and similar light trucks
for personal use; and
(4) Other consumer loan, which is any
other loan to an individual for
household, family, and other personal
expenditures (other than those that meet
the definition of a ‘‘loan secured by real
estate’’ and other than those for
purchasing or carrying securities),
including low-cost education loans,
which is any private education loan, as
defined in section 140(a)(8) of the Truth
in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1650(a)(8))
(including a loan under a state or local
education loan program), originated by
the bank for a student at an ‘‘institution
of higher education,’’ as that term is
generally defined in sections 101 and
102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the
implementing regulations published by
the U.S. Department of Education, with
interest rates and fees no greater than
those of comparable education loans
offered directly by the U.S. Department
of Education. Such rates and fees are
specified in section 455 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C.
1087e).
Contingent commitment to lend
means a legally-binding commitment to
extend credit in instances where
another bank initially funded, or
committed to fund, a project but cannot,
for financial or legal reasons, advance
unanticipated additional funds
necessary to complete the project.
Distressed area means a middleincome census tract identified by the
agencies that meets one or more of the
following conditions:
(1) An unemployment rate of at least
1.5 times the national average,
(2) A poverty rate of 20 percent or
more, or
(3) A population loss of 10 percent or
more between the previous and most
recent decennial census or a net
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migration loss of five percent or more
over the five-year period preceding the
most recent census.
Essential community facility means a
public facility, including but not limited
to a school, library, park, hospital and
health care facility, and public safety
facility.
Essential infrastructure means:
(1) Public infrastructure, including
but not limited to public roads, bridges,
tunnels; and
(2) Essential telecommunications
infrastructure, mass transit, water
supply and distribution, utilities supply
and distribution, sewage treatment and
collection, and industrial parks.
Family farm has the same meaning as
the term is given by the Farm Service
Agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in 7 CFR 761.2(b) as of the
effective date of this rule.
Financing means permissible equity
or debt facilities, such as loans, lines of
credit, bonds, private funds, securities,
or other permissible investments.
High-cost area means any county in
which the percentage of households
who have monthly housing costs greater
than 30 percent of their monthly income
is greater than 40 percent.
Home mortgage loan means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part I, specifically:
(1) Item 1.a.(1) 1–4 family residential
construction loans;
(2) Item 1.c Loans secured by 1–4
family residential properties (includes
closed-end and open-end loans); or
(3) Item 1.d Loans secured by
multifamily (5 or more) residential
properties.
Income levels are:
(1) Low-income, which means an
individual income that is less than 50
percent of the area median income, or
a median family income that is less than
50 percent in the case of a census tract.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an
individual income that is at least 50
percent and less than 80 percent of the
area median income, or a median family
income that is at least 50 percent and
less than 80 percent in the case of a
census tract.
(3) Middle-income, which means an
individual income that is at least 80
percent and less than 120 percent of the
area median income, or a median family
income that is at least 80 percent and
less than 120 percent in the case of a
census tract.
(4) Upper-income, which means an
individual income that is 120 percent or
more of the area median income, or a
median family income that is 120
percent or more in the case of a census
tract.
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Indian country has the same meaning
as this term is given in 18 U.S.C. 1151.
Low-income credit union has the same
meaning as this term is given in 12 CFR
701.34.
Major retail lending product line
means a bank’s retail lending product
line that composes at least 15 percent of
the bank-level dollar volume of total
retail loan originations during the
evaluation period.
Metropolitan division has the same
meaning as this term is given by the
Director of the Office of Management
and Budget.
Metropolitan statistical area has the
same meaning as this term is given by
the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget.
Military bank means a bank whose
business predominately consists of
serving the needs of military personnel
who serve or have served in the armed
forces (including the U.S. Army, Navy,
Marine Corp., Air Force, and Coast
Guard) or dependents of military
personnel. A bank whose business
predominantly consists of serving the
needs of military personnel or their
dependents means a bank whose most
important customer group is military
personnel or their dependents.
Minority depository institution means
a depository institution as defined in 12
U.S.C. 2907(b)(1).
Monetary or in-kind donation means:
(1) A grant, monetary contribution, or
monetary donation, or
(2) A contribution of goods,
commodities, or other non-monetary
resources.
Non-branch deposit-taking facility
means a banking facility other than a
branch owned or operated by, or
operated exclusively for, the bank that
is authorized to take deposits that is
located in any state or territory of the
United States of America.
Nonmetropolitan area means any area
that is not located in a metropolitan
statistical area.
Partially benefits means 50 percent or
less of the dollar value of the activity or
of the individuals or census tracts
served by the activity.
Primarily benefits means:
(1) Greater than 50 percent of the
dollar value of the activity or of the
individuals or census tracts served by
the activity; or
(2) The express, bona fide intent,
purpose, or mandate of the activity as
stated, for example, in a prospectus,
loan proposal, or community action
plan.
Qualifying activity means an activity
that helps meet the credit needs of a
bank’s entire community, including
low- and moderate-income individuals
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and communities, in accordance with
§ 25.04.
Qualifying loan means a retail loan
that meets the criteria in § 25.04(b) or a
community development loan that
meets the criteria in § 25.04(c).
Retail domestic deposit means a
‘‘deposit’’ as defined in section 3(l) of
the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(l)) and as
reported on Schedule RC–E, item 1, of
the Call Report that is held in the
United States and is provided by an
individual, partnership, or corporation
other than a deposit that is obtained,
directly or indirectly, from or through
the mediation or assistance of a deposit
broker as that term is defined in section
29 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)).
Retail loan means a home mortgage
loan, small loan to a business, small
loan to a farm, or consumer loan.
Retail lending product line means a:
(1) Home mortgage loan product line,
which includes all home mortgage
loans;
(2) Small loan to a business product
line, which includes all small loans to
businesses;
(3) Small loan to a farm product line,
which includes all small loans to farms;
or
(4) Consumer lending product line,
which includes:
(ii) An automobile loan product line;
(iii) A credit card product line;
(iv) An other revolving credit plan
product line; or
(v) An other consumer loan product
line.
Small bank—(1) Definition. Small
bank means a bank that:
(i) Had assets of $500 million or less
in each of the previous four calendar
quarters; or
(ii) Was a small bank as of the close
of the calendar quarter immediately
preceding the close of the last calendar
quarter and did not have assets of
greater than $500 million as of the close
of each of the past four calendar
quarters.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in
this definition shall be adjusted
annually and published by the OCC,
based on the year-to-year change in the
average of the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical
Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for
each twelve-month period ending in
November, with rounding to the nearest
$100,000.
Small business means a business that
has gross annual revenues of no greater
than $2 million. The OCC will annually
adjust the $2 million threshold for
inflation, and the adjustment to the
threshold will be made publicly
available.
Small farm means a farm with gross
annual revenues of no greater than $2
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million. The OCC will annually adjust
the $2 million threshold for inflation,
and the adjustment to the threshold will
be made publicly available.
Small loan to a business means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.e, Secured by
nonfarm nonresidential properties, or
Item 4, Commercial and industrial
loans, and of no greater than $2 million.
The OCC will annually adjust the $2
million threshold for inflation, and the
adjustment to the threshold will be
made publicly available.
Small loan to a farm means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.b, Secured by
farmland, or Item 3, Loans to finance
agricultural production and other loans
to farmers, and of no greater than $2
million. The OCC will annually adjust
the $2 million threshold for inflation,
and the adjustment to the threshold will
be made publicly available.
Underserved area means a middleincome census tract:
(1) Identified by the agencies as
meeting the criteria for population size,
density, and dispersion that indicate the
area’s population is sufficiently small,
thin, and distant from a population
center that the tract is likely to have
difficulty financing the fixed costs of
meeting essential community needs.
The agencies will use as the basis for
these designations the ‘‘urban influence
codes,’’ numbered ‘‘7,’’ ‘‘10,’’ ‘‘11,’’ and
‘‘12,’’ maintained by the Economic
Research Service of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture; or
(2) Identified by the agencies as:
(i) Not having a branch of any bank
within:
(A) 2 miles of the center of the census
tract if it is an urban census tract, as
defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data;
(B) 5 miles of the center of the census
tract if it is a mixed census tract, as
defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data;
(C) 10 miles of the center of the
census tract if it is a rural census tract,
as defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data; or
(D) 5 miles of the center of the census
tract if the census tract is an island area,
as defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data; and
(ii) Not having any branch within the
census tract.
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Women’s depository institution means
a depository institution as defined in 12
U.S.C. 2907(b)(2).
Subpart B—Qualifying Activities
§ 25.04
Qualifying activities criteria.
(a) General. Retail loans, community
development loans, community
development investments, and
community development services that
help meet the credit needs of a bank’s
entire community, including low- and
moderate-income communities, are
qualifying activities if they meet the
criteria in this section at the time the
activity is originated, made, or
conducted. If the activity is
subsequently purchased by another
bank, it is a qualifying activity if it
meets the criteria in this section at the
time of purchase.
(b) Retail loans. A home mortgage
loan, small loan to a business, small
loan to a farm, or consumer loan is a
qualifying activity if it is:
(1) Provided to a:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individual or family;
(ii) Small business; or
(iii) Small farm;
(2) Located in Indian country;
(3) A small loan to a business located
in a low- or moderate-income census
tract; or
(4) A small loan to a farm located in
a low- or moderate-income census tract.
(c) Community development loans,
community development investments,
and community development services.
A community development loan,
community development investment, or
community development service is a
qualifying activity if it provides
financing for or supports:
(1) Affordable housing, which means:
(i) Rental housing:
(A) That is likely to partially or
primarily benefit low- or moderateincome individuals or families as
demonstrated by median rents that do
not and are not projected at the time of
the transaction to exceed 30 percent of
80 percent of the area median income;
(B) That partially or primarily benefits
low- or moderate-income individuals or
families as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
a federal, state, local, or tribal
government;
(C) That is undertaken in conjunction
with an explicit federal, state, local, or
tribal government affordable housing
program for low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(D) That partially or primarily benefits
middle-income individuals or families
in high-cost areas as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
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a federal, state, local, or tribal
government; or
(E) That is undertaken in conjunction
with an explicit federal, state, local, or
tribal government affordable housing
program for middle-income individuals
or families in high-cost areas; or
(ii) Owner-occupied housing
purchased, refinanced, or improved by
low- or moderate-income individuals or
families, except for home mortgage
loans provided directly to individuals or
families;
(2) Another bank’s community
development loan, community
development investment, or community
development service;
(3) Businesses or Farms that meet the
size-eligibility standards of the Small
Business Administration Certified
Development Company, as that term is
defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small
Business Investment Company, as
described in 13 CFR part 107, by
providing technical assistance and
supportive services, such as shared
space, technology, or administrative
assistance through an intermediary;
(4) Community support services
which means activities, such as child
care, education, health services, and
housing services, that partially or
primarily serve or assist low- or
moderate-income individuals or
families;
(5) Essential community facilities that
partially or primarily benefit or serve:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census
tracts, distressed areas, underserved
areas, disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
(6) Essential infrastructure that
benefits or serves:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census
tracts, distressed areas, underserved
areas, disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
(7) A family farm’s:
(i) Purchase or lease of farm land,
equipment, and other farm-related
inputs;
(ii) Receipt of technical assistance and
supportive services, such as shared
space, technology, or administrative
assistance through an intermediary; or
(iii) Sale and trade of family farm
products;
(8) Federal, state, local, or tribal
government programs, projects, or
initiatives that:
(i) Partially or primarily benefit lowor moderate-income individuals or
families;
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(ii) Partially or primarily benefit small
businesses or small farms as those terms
are defined in the programs, projects or
initiatives; or
(iii) Are consistent with a bona fide
government revitalization, stabilization,
or recovery plan for a low- or moderateincome census tract; a distressed area;
an underserved area; a disaster area; or
Indian country;
(9) Financial literacy programs or
education or homebuyer counseling;
(10) Owner-occupied and rental
housing development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country;
(11) Qualified opportunity funds, as
defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–2(d)(1), that
benefit low- or moderate-income
qualified opportunity zones, as defined
in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–1(a);
(12) A Small Business Administration
Certified Development Company, as that
term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, a
Small Business Investment Company, as
described in 13 CFR part 107, a New
Markets Venture Capital company, as
described in 13 CFR part 108, a
qualified Community Development
Entity, as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or
a U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural
Business Investment Company, as
defined in 7 CFR 4290.50; or
(13) Ventures undertaken, including
capital investments and loan
participations, by a bank in cooperation
with a minority depository institution,
women’s depository institution,
Community Development Financial
Institution, or low-income credit union,
if the activity helps to meet the credit
needs of local communities in which
such institutions are chartered,
including activities that indirectly help
to meet community credit needs by
promoting the sustainability and
profitability of those institutions and
credit unions.
§ 25.05 Qualifying activities confirmation
and illustrative list.
(a) Qualifying activities list. The OCC
maintains a publicly available
illustrative list at www.occ.gov of nonexhaustive examples of qualifying
activities that meet and activities that do
not meet the criteria in § 25.04.
(b) Confirmation of a qualifying
activity. A bank may request that the
OCC confirm that an activity meets the
criteria in § 25.04 and is a qualifying
activity in accordance with paragraph
(c) of this section.
(1) When the OCC confirms that an
activity is consistent with the criteria in
§ 25.04, the OCC will notify the
requestor and may add this activity to
the list of activities that meet the
qualifying activities criteria described in
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paragraph (a) of this section,
incorporating any conditions imposed,
if applicable.
(2) When the OCC determines that an
activity is not consistent with the
criteria in § 25.04, the OCC will notify
the requestor and may add this activity
to the list of activities that do not meet
the qualifying activities criteria
described in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) Process—(1) A bank may request
that the OCC confirm that an activity is
a qualifying activity by submitting a
complete Qualifying Activity
Confirmation Request Form available on
www.occ.gov.
(2) In responding to a confirmation
request that an activity is consistent
with the criteria in § 25.04, the OCC will
consider:
(i) The information on the Qualifying
Activity Confirmation Request Form;
(ii) Whether the activity is consistent
with the safe and sound operation of the
bank; and
(iii) Any other information the OCC
deems relevant.
(3) The OCC may impose conditions
on its confirmation to ensure that an
activity is consistent with the criteria in
§ 25.04.
(4) An activity is confirmed as a
qualifying activity if the bank is not
informed of an OCC objection within 6
months of submission of a complete
Qualifying Activity Confirmation
Request Form.
(d) Modifying the qualifying activities
list. In addition to updating the list in
paragraph (a) of this section on an
ongoing basis in response to requests for
confirmation described in paragraph (b)
of this section, the OCC will publish the
qualifying activities list no less
frequently than every three years for
notice and comment to determine
whether the list should change. If the
OCC determines that a qualifying loan
or community development investment
no longer meets the criteria in § 25.04,
that loan or community development
investment will not be considered a
qualifying activity for any subsequent
purchasers.
§ 25.06
Qualifying activities quantification.
(a) Community development service
quantification. The dollar value of a
community development service is the
compensation for the community
development service multiplied by the
number of hours the employee spent
performing the service, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) In-kind donation quantification.
The dollar value of an in-kind donation
is the fair market value of the donation,
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as adjusted by paragraph (e) of this
section.
(c) Monetary donation quantification.
The dollar value of a monetary donation
is the actual dollar value of the
donation, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section.
(d) Qualifying loan and other
community development investment
quantification. The dollar value of a
qualifying loan or a community
development investment not included
in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, is:
(1) Except for qualifying loans in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the
average of the dollar value, as of the
close of business on the last day of the
month, for each month the loan or
investment is on-balance sheet, of:
(i) The outstanding balance of a loan
or investment, as adjusted by paragraph
(e) of this section;
(ii) Any legally-binding commitment
to invest, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section; and
(iii) The allowance for credit losses on
off balance sheet credit exposures for
contingent commitments to lend, as
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the Call Report, Schedule
RC–G, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section; or
(2) For qualifying retail loans sold
within 90 days of origination, 25
percent of the aggregate dollar value of
the loan at origination, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) Portion of qualifying activities that
partially benefit. The dollar value of a
qualifying activity that partially
benefits, as defined in § 25.03, is
calculated by multiplying the percentage
of the partial benefit by the full dollar
value of the qualifying activity
quantified under paragraphs (a)–(d) of
this section.
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§ 25.07
Qualifying activities value.
(a) Bank-level qualifying activities
value. A bank evaluated under § 25.12
calculates its bank-level qualifying
activities value annually based on the
dollar value of all qualifying activities
originated, made, purchased, or
performed on behalf of the bank and not
included in the bank-level qualifying
activities value of another bank subject
to this part or part 345. The qualifying
activities value equals the sum, during
a given annual period, of:
(1) The quantified dollar value of
qualifying loans and community
development investments, as adjusted
in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(2) The aggregate:
(i) Quantified dollar value of
community development services
conducted, as adjusted in paragraph (b)
of this section;
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(ii) Quantified dollar value of in-kind
donations made, as adjusted in
paragraph (b) of this section; and
(iii) Monetary donations made, as
adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Multipliers. The dollar value of the
following qualifying activities will be
adjusted by multiplying the actual or
quantified dollar value by 2.
(1) Activities provided to or that
support Community Development
Financial Institutions, except activities
related to mortgage-backed securities;
(2) Other community development
investments, except community
development investments in mortgagebacked securities and municipal bonds;
and
(3) Other affordable housing-related
community development loans.
(c) Assessment area qualifying
activities value. A bank evaluated under
§ 25.12 calculates its assessment area
qualifying activities value for each
assessment area by using the process
described in paragraph (a) of this
section for qualifying activities located
in the assessment area.
Subpart C—Assessment Area
§ 25.08
Assessment area.
(a) General. A bank must delineate
one or more assessment areas within
which the OCC evaluates the bank’s
record of helping to meet the credit
needs of its community. The OCC
reviews the delineation for compliance
with the requirements of this section.
Unless pursuant to an approved
application covered under § 25.02(a)(3)
for a merger or consolidation with an
insured depository institution, an
assessment area delineation can only
change once during an evaluation
period and must not change within the
annual period used to determine an
assessment area CRA evaluation
measure under § 25.10(c).
(b) Facility-based assessment
area(s)—(1) A bank must delineate an
assessment area encompassing each
location where the bank maintains a
main office, a branch, or a non-branch
deposit-taking facility as well as the
surrounding locations in which the
bank has originated or purchased a
substantial portion of its qualifying
retail loans. Assessment areas
delineated under this paragraph may
contain one or more of these facilities.
(2) A facility-based assessment area
must be delineated to consist of:
(i) One whole metropolitan statistical
area (using the metropolitan statistical
area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which
the delineation is made);
(ii) The whole nonmetropolitan area
of a state;
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(iii) One or more whole, contiguous
metropolitan divisions in a single
metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation
is made); or
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous
counties or county equivalents in a
single metropolitan statistical area or
nonmetropolitan area.
(3) A bank may delineate its facilitybased assessment area(s) in the smallest
geographic area where it maintains a
main office, branch, or non-branch
deposit-taking facility, but may
delineate a larger assessment area that
includes these locations, as provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) A facility-based assessment area
may not extend beyond a metropolitan
statistical area or state boundary unless
the assessment area is located in a
multistate metropolitan statistical area.
If a bank serves a geographic area that
extends beyond a state boundary, the
bank must delineate separate
assessment areas for the areas in each
state. If a bank serves a geographic area
that extends beyond a metropolitan
statistical area boundary, the bank must
delineate separate assessment areas for
the areas inside and outside the
metropolitan statistical area.
(c) Deposit-based assessment
area(s)—(1) A bank that receives 50
percent or more of its retail domestic
deposits from geographic areas outside
of its facility-based assessment areas
must delineate separate, nonoverlapping assessment areas in the
smallest geographic area where it
receives 5 percent or more of its retail
domestic deposits.
(2) A deposit-based assessment area
must be delineated to consist of:
(i) One whole state;
(ii) One whole metropolitan statistical
area (using the metropolitan statistical
area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which
the delineation is made);
(iii) The whole nonmetropolitan area
of a state;
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous
metropolitan divisions in a single
metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation
is made);
(v) The remaining geographic area of
a state, metropolitan statistical area,
nonmetropolitan area, or metropolitan
division other than where it has a
facility-based assessment area; or
(vi) One or more whole, contiguous
counties or county equivalents in a
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single metropolitan statistical area or
nonmetropolitan area.
(d) Limitations on delineation of
assessment areas. A bank’s assessment
areas must not:
(1) Reflect illegal discrimination; or
(2) Arbitrarily exclude low- or
moderate-income geographies, taking
into account the bank’s size and
financial condition.
(e) Military banks. Notwithstanding
the requirements of this section, a
military bank’s assessment area will
consist of the entire United States of
America and its territories. A military
bank will only be evaluated based on its
entire deposit customer base at the bank
level under § 25.12.
(f) Banks evaluated under strategic
plans. A bank evaluated under a
strategic plan will delineate its
assessment area(s) in accordance with
the requirements of § 25.16(g)(2).
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The
OCC uses the assessment area(s)
delineated by a bank in its evaluation of
the bank’s CRA performance unless the
OCC determines that the assessment
area(s) do not comply with the
requirements of this section.
Subpart D—Performance Evaluations
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§ 25.09 Performance standards and
ratings, in general.
(a) Performance standards. The OCC
assesses the CRA performance of a bank
in an examination as follows:
(1) General performance standards—
(i) The OCC assesses the CRA
performance of a bank other than banks
described in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3)
of this section based on the bank’s
application of the general performance
standards and determination of its
presumptive ratings under § 25.12.
(ii) The OCC determines the assigned
ratings for a bank evaluated under
§ 25.12 as provided in § 25.17.
(iii) The OCC determines the state or
multistate metropolitan statistical area
ratings for a bank evaluated under
§ 25.12 as provided in § 25.18.
(2) Small bank performance
standards—(i) The OCC applies the
small bank performance standards as
provided in § 25.13 in evaluating the
performance of a small bank, unless the
bank is evaluated under an approved
strategic plan as described under (a)(3)
of this section or elects to opt in to the
general performance standards under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) The OCC assigns a small bank
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 25.13
lending test and bank-level ratings as
provided for in Appendix A of this part.
(3) Strategic plan. The OCC evaluates
the performance of a bank under a
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strategic plan if the bank submits, and
the OCC approves, a strategic plan as
provided in § 25.16.
(b) General performance standards
opt in. A small bank may elect to opt in
to be evaluated under the general
performance standards described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section and this
election must occur at least six months
before the start of a bank’s next
evaluation period. Small banks that
elect to be evaluated under the general
performance standards must collect,
maintain, and report the data required
for other banks under §§ 25.19, 25.22,
and 25.23. Once a small bank has
elected to opt in, it must complete at
least one evaluation period under the
general performance standards and may
elect no more than once to opt out of the
general performance standards and must
do so six months before the start of its
next evaluation period. Small banks that
opt out will revert to being evaluated
according to the small bank
performance standards as provided in
§ 25.13 in evaluating the performance of
a small bank, unless the bank is
evaluated under an approved strategic
plan as described under (a)(3) of this
section.
(c) Safe and sound operations. This
part and the CRA do not require a bank
to make loans or investments or to
provide services that are inconsistent
with safe and sound operations. To the
contrary, the OCC anticipates banks can
meet the standards of this part with safe
and sound loans, investments, and
services on which the banks expect to
make a profit. Banks are permitted and
encouraged to develop and apply
flexible underwriting standards for
loans that benefit low- or moderateincome geographies or individuals, only
if consistent with safe and sound
operations.
§ 25.10
CRA evaluation measure.
(a) CRA evaluation measure. A bank
evaluated as described in § 25.12 will
determine its bank-level and assessment
area CRA evaluation measures annually
as part of its CRA performance
evaluation.
(b) Determination of the bank-level
CRA evaluation measure. A bank’s
bank-level CRA evaluation measure is
the sum of:
(1) The bank’s annual bank-level
qualifying activities values calculated
under § 25.07(a) divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
for the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank’s branches
located in low- or moderate-income
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census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, and Indian country
divided by its total number of branches
as of the close of business on the last
day of the same period used to calculate
the annual qualifying activities value
multiplied by .01.
(c) Determination of the assessment
area CRA evaluation measure. A bank’s
assessment area CRA evaluation
measure is determined in each
assessment area and is the sum of:
(1) The bank’s annual assessment area
qualifying activities value calculated
under § 25.07(c); divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s assessment
area retail domestic deposits as of the
close of business on the last day of each
quarter for the same period used to
calculate the annual assessment area
qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank’s branches
located in low- or moderate-income
census tracts in the assessment area
divided by its total number of branches
in the assessment area as of the close of
business on the last day of the same
period used to calculate the annual
assessment area qualifying activities
value multiplied by .01.
(d) Average CRA evaluation measures.
For each evaluation period, a bank will
calculate the average of its:
(1) Annual bank-level CRA evaluation
measures for each year in the evaluation
period; and
(2) Annual assessment area CRA
evaluation measures for each year in the
evaluation period, separately for each
assessment area.
§ 25.11
Retail lending distribution tests.
(a) General. In each assessment area,
a bank evaluated as described in § 25.12
will apply a:
(1) Geographic distribution test for its
small loan to a business product line or
small loan to a farm product line if
those product lines are major retail
lending product lines with 20 or more
originations in the assessment area
during the evaluation period; and
(2) Borrower distribution test for each
major retail lending product line with
20 or more originations in the
assessment area during the evaluation
period.
(b) Geographic distribution test—(1)
Small loan to a business product line.
To pass the geographic distribution test
for the small loan to a business product
line, a bank’s percentage of small loans
to businesses in low- or moderateincome census tracts originated during
the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or
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the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic
comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55
percent of the percentage of businesses
in low- and moderate-income census
tracts in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator
threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderateincome census tracts originated by all
banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 25.12 in the
assessment area.
(2) Small loan to a farm product line.
To pass the geographic distribution test
for the small loan to a farm product line,
a bank’s percentage of small loans to
farms in low- or moderate-income
census tracts originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or
the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic
comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55
percent of the percentage of farms in
low- and moderate-income census tracts
in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator
threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to farms in
low- and moderate-income census tracts
originated by all banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 in the assessment area.
(c) Borrower distribution test—(1)
Home mortgage lending product line. To
pass the borrower distribution test for
the home mortgage lending product
line, a bank’s percentage of home
mortgage loans to low- and moderateincome individuals and families
originated during the evaluation period
in the assessment area must meet or
exceed the threshold established for
either the associated borrower
demographic comparator or the
associated borrower peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of low- and moderateincome families in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of home mortgage loans
to low- or moderate-income individuals
and families originated by all banks
evaluated under the general
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performance standards in § 25.12 in the
assessment area.
(2) Consumer lending product line. To
pass the borrower distribution test for a
consumer lending product line, a bank’s
percentage of consumer loans to lowand moderate-income individuals and
families originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
demographic borrower comparator or
the associated demographic peer
comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of low- and moderateincome individuals in the assessment
area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of consumer loans to
low- or moderate-income individuals
and families originated by all banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 25.12 in the
assessment area.
(3) Small loan to a business product
line. To pass the borrower distribution
test for the small loan to a business
product line, a bank’s percentage of
small loans to businesses provided to
small businesses originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
demographic borrower comparator or
the associated demographic peer
comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of small businesses in
the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to
businesses provided to small businesses
from all banks evaluated under the
general performance standards in
§ 25.12 in the assessment area.
(4) Small loan to a farm product line.
To pass the borrower distribution test
for the small loan to a farm product line,
a bank’s percentage of small loans to
farms provided to small farms
originated during the evaluation period
in the assessment area must meet or
exceed the thresholds established for
either the associated demographic
borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
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the percentage of small farms in the
assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to farms
provided to small farms from all banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 25.12 in the
assessment area.
§ 25.12 General performance standards
and presumptive rating.
(a) General. The bank-level
presumptive rating and assessment area
presumptive rating(s) for banks assessed
under this section are determined by
evaluating whether a bank has met all
the performance standards associated
with a given rating category, at the bank
level and in each assessment area. A
bank will use the performance standards
in effect on the first day of its evaluation
period for the duration of its evaluation
period, unless the bank elects to use
performance standards published later
during the evaluation period. If the bank
elects to use a later-published
performance standard, that performance
standard will apply during the entire
evaluation period.
(b) Performance standards
adjustments. The agencies will
periodically adjust the performance
standards.
(1) Factors considered. When
adjusting the performance standards,
the agencies will consider factors such
as the level of qualifying activities
conducted by all banks, market
conditions, and unmet needs and
opportunities.
(2) Public notice and comment. The
agencies will provide for a public notice
and comment period on any proposed
adjustments prior to finalizing the
adjustments.
(c) Bank-level performance
standards—(1) Outstanding. The banklevel outstanding performance
standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The
average of the bank’s bank-level CRA
evaluation measures during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 11
percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank
received an assigned rating of
outstanding in a significant portion of
its assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued
in § 25.07, divided by the average
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quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The bank-level
satisfactory performance standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The
average of the bank’s bank-level CRA
evaluation measures during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6
percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank
received at least an assigned rating of
satisfactory in a significant portion of its
assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued
in § 25.07, divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The bank-level
needs to improve performance standard
is an average bank-level CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
expressed as a percentage, that meets or
exceeds 3 percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The
bank-level substantial noncompliance
standard is an average bank-level CRA
evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that does not meet or exceed
3 percent.
(d) Assessment area performance
standards—(1) Outstanding. The
assessment area outstanding
performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests.
The bank must pass the geographic and
borrower distribution tests for its major
retail lending product lines evaluated in
§ 25.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The
assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
expressed as a percentage, must meet or
exceed 11 percent; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments in
the assessment area during the
evaluation period, as valued in § 25.07,
divided by the average quarterly value of
the bank’s assessment area retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
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(2) Satisfactory. The assessment area
satisfactory performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests.
The bank must pass both the geographic
and borrower distribution tests for all
retail lending product lines evaluated in
§ 25.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The
assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
expressed as a percentage, must meet or
exceed 6 percent; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments in
the assessment area during the
evaluation period, as valued in § 25.07,
divided by the average quarterly value of
the bank’s assessment area retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The assessment
area needs to improve performance
standard is an assessment area average
CRA evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that must meet or exceed 3
percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The
assessment area substantial
noncompliance performance standard is
an assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage that does not meet or exceed
3 percent.
§ 25.13 Small bank performance
standards.
(a) Performance lending test criteria.
The OCC evaluates the record of a small
bank of helping to meet the credit needs
of its assessment area(s) pursuant to the
following criteria:
(1) The bank’s loan-to-deposit ratio,
adjusted for seasonal variation, and, as
appropriate, other lending-related
activities, such as loan originations for
sale to the secondary markets,
community development loans, or
community development investments;
(2) The percentage of loans and, as
appropriate, other lending-related
activities located in the bank’s
assessment area(s);
(3) The bank’s record of lending to
and, as appropriate, engaging in other
lending-related activities for borrowers
of different income levels and
businesses and farms of different sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the
bank’s loans; and
(5) The bank’s record of taking action,
if warranted, in response to written
complaints about its performance in
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helping to meet credit needs in its
assessment area(s).
(b) Small bank performance rating.
The OCC assesses the performance of a
small bank evaluated under this section
as provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 25.14 Consideration of performance
context.
(a) General. Performance context is
used to assess how the factors in
paragraph (b) of this section affect a
bank’s capacity and opportunity to meet
the performance standards described in
§§ 25.12, 25.13, or 25.16. Based on that
assessment, the OCC may adjust:
(1) The assessment area and banklevel presumptive ratings in § 25.12; or
(2) The small bank lending test and
bank-level ratings as described in
appendix A.
(b) Performance context factors. In
assessing performance context, the OCC
considers and documents the effect of
the following factors when determining
the assigned rating:
(1) The bank’s explanation of how its
capacity to meet the performance
standards described in §§ 25.12, 25.13,
or 25.16 was affected by:
(i) The bank’s product offerings and
business strategy;
(ii) The bank’s unique constraints,
such as its financial condition, safety
and soundness limitations, or other
factors;
(iii) The innovativeness, complexity,
and flexibility of the bank’s qualifying
activities;
(iv) The bank’s development of
business infrastructure and staffing to
support the purpose of this part; and
(v) The responsiveness of the bank’s
qualifying activities to the needs of the
community;
(2) The bank’s explanation of how its
opportunity to engage in qualifying
activities was affected by:
(i) The demand for qualifying
activities, including credit needs and
market opportunities identified in a
Federal Home Loan Bank Targeted
Community Lending Plan provided for
in 12 CFR 1290.6(a)(5), as applicable;
(ii) The demand for retail loans in
low- or moderate-income census tracts;
and
(iii) Demographic factors (e.g.,
housing costs, unemployment rates
variation);
(3) The bank’s competitive
environment, as demonstrated by peer
performance.
(4) Any written comments about
assessment area needs and
opportunities submitted to the bank or
the OCC; and
(5) Any other information deemed
relevant by the OCC.
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(c) Form. Banks other than small
banks must submit the information in
paragraph (b) of this section on the
performance context form available on
www.occ.gov.
§ 25.15 Discriminatory and other illegal
credit practices.
(a) Evidence of discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. A bank’s CRA
performance is adversely affected by
evidence of discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. In assessing a
bank’s CRA performance, the OCC’s
evaluation will consider evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices including but not limited to:
(1) Discrimination against applicants
on a prohibited basis in violation, for
example, of the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act or the Fair Housing
Act;
(2) Violations of the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act;
(3) Violations of section 5 of the
Federal Trade Commission Act;
(4) Violations of section 8 of the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act;
(5) Violations of the Truth in Lending
Act provisions regarding a consumer’s
right of rescission;
(6) Violations of the Military Lending
Act; and
(7) Violations of the Servicemembers
Civil Relief Act.
(b) Effect of evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices. In determining the effect of
evidence of practices described in
paragraph (a) of this section on the
bank’s assigned rating, the OCC
considers the nature, extent, and
strength of the evidence of the practices;
the policies and procedures that the
bank has in place to prevent the
practices; any corrective action that the
bank has taken or has committed to
take, including voluntary corrective
action resulting from self-assessment;
and any other relevant information.
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§ 25.16
Strategic plan.
(a) General. The OCC assesses a
bank’s record of helping to meet the
credit needs of its assessment area(s)
under a strategic plan if:
(1) The bank has submitted the plan
to the OCC as provided for in this
section;
(2) The OCC has approved the plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The bank has been operating under
an approved plan for at least one year.
(b) Plan submission—(1) Required
submission. A bank must submit a
strategic plan that meets the
requirements of this section if the bank:
(i) Would otherwise be evaluated
under § 25.12 and does not maintain
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retail domestic deposits on-balance
sheet; or
(ii) Is a small bank that does not
originate retail loans.
(2) Optional submission. A bank not
covered under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section may submit a strategic plan to
the OCC for approval.
(c) Data reporting. The OCC’s
approval of a plan does not affect the
bank’s data collection, recordkeeping,
and reporting obligations, if any, in
§§ 25.19, 25.20, 25.22, and 25.23, unless
otherwise determined in writing by the
OCC. The OCC may require additional
bank-specific data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting under a
strategic plan, as appropriate.
(d) Plans in general—(1) Term. A plan
may have a term of no more than five
years, and any multi-year plan must
include annual interim measurable
goals under which the OCC evaluates
the bank’s performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank
with more than one assessment area
may prepare a single plan for all of its
assessment areas or separate plans for
one or more of its assessment areas.
(e) Public participation in plan
development. Before submitting a plan
to the OCC for approval, a bank must:
(1) Solicit public comment on the
plan for at least 30 days by submitting
the plan for publication on the OCC’s
website and by publishing notice in at
least one newspaper of general
circulation in each assessment area
covered by the plan; and
(2) During the public comment
period, make copies of the plan
available for review by the public and
provide copies of the plan upon request
for a reasonable fee to cover copying,
printing, or mailing, if applicable.
(f) Submission of plan. The bank must
submit its complete plan to the OCC at
least six months prior to the proposed
effective date of the plan. The bank
must also submit with its plan a
description of any written public
comments received, including how the
plan was revised in light of the
comments received. If the OCC
determines the plan is not complete, the
OCC will notify bank specifying the
information needed, designating a
reasonable period of time for the bank
to provide the information, and
informing the bank that failure to
provide the information requested will
result in no further consideration being
given to the plan.
(g) Plan content—(1) Performance
standards—(i) A plan must specify
measurable goals for helping to meet the
credit needs of the bank’s communities
at the bank level and in each of its
assessment areas, particularly the needs
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of low- and moderate-income census
tracts and low- and moderate-income
individuals and families, through
qualifying activities.
(ii) A plan must address the types and
volume of qualifying activities the bank
will conduct. A plan may focus on one
or more types of qualifying activities
considering the bank’s capacity and
constraints, product offerings, and
business strategy.
(2) Assessment area delineation. A
plan must include a delineation of the
bank’s assessment area(s) that meets the
requirements of § 25.08(a)–(d). In
addition, the plan may include
assessment area delineations that reflect
its target geographic market as defined
by the bank in its strategic plan. For a
de novo bank, the assessment area
delineations should include the
projected location of its facilities, retail
domestic deposit base, and lending
activities.
(3) Confidential information. A bank
may submit additional information to
the OCC on a confidential basis, to the
extent permitted by law, but the goals
stated in the plan must be sufficiently
specific to enable the public and the
OCC to judge the merits of the plan.
(4) Satisfactory and outstanding
performance standards. A plan must
specify measurable goals that constitute
satisfactory performance. A plan may
specify measurable goals that constitute
outstanding performance. If a bank
submits, and the OCC approves, both
satisfactory and outstanding
performance goals, the OCC considers
the bank eligible for an outstanding
performance rating.
(h) Plan approval—(1) Timing. The
OCC will act upon a plan within 6
months after the OCC receives the
complete plan and other material
required under paragraph (g) of this
section. If the OCC does not act within
this time period, the plan will be
deemed approved unless the OCC
extends the review period for good
cause for no more than 90 days.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating
the plan’s goals, the OCC considers any
written public comment on the plan and
any response by the bank to any written
public comment on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating a plan. The
OCC evaluates a plan’s goals by
considering the extent and breadth of
the qualifying activities including:
(i) Community development loans,
community development investments,
and community development services;
and
(ii) The use of innovative, flexible, or
complex qualifying activities.
(i) Plan amendment. During the term
of a plan, a bank may request the OCC
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to approve an amendment to the plan on
grounds that there has been a material
change in circumstances. The OCC
reserves the right to require a bank that
requests an amendment to a plan to
comply with the public participation
process described in paragraph (e) of
this section.
§ 25.17
Assigned ratings.
(a) General performance standards—
(1) Bank-level assigned rating. The OCC
determines the bank-level assigned
rating for a bank evaluated under
§ 25.12 based on its bank-level
presumptive rating under § 25.12,
adjusted for performance context under
§ 25.14, and consideration of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices under § 25.15.
(2) Assessment area assigned rating.
The OCC determines the assessment
area assigned ratings for a bank
evaluated under § 25.12 based on its
assessment area presumptive rating
under § 25.12, adjusted for performance
context under § 25.14 and consideration
of discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices under § 25.15.
(b) Strategic plans assigned rating. A
bank operating under a strategic plan
will receive, as applicable, assessment
area assigned ratings, a bank-level
assigned rating, and state-level and
multistate metropolitan statistical area
assigned ratings of satisfactory or
outstanding if it has met the measurable
goals in the plan that correspond to
those ratings after considering
performance context under § 25.14.
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§ 25.18 State/multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating.
For a bank evaluated under § 25.12
with interstate branches, the OCC will
assign a rating for each state where the
bank has a facility-based assessment
area and each multistate metropolitan
statistical area where the bank has a
main office, branch, or non-branch
deposit-taking facility in two or more
states in the multistate metropolitan
statistical area. The state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area assigned
rating for that state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area is the
lowest rating assigned to a significant
number of its assessment areas within
that state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area.
Subpart E [Redesignated]
3. Redesignate subpart E as subpart F
and redesignate §§ 25.61 through 25.65
as §§ 25.28 through 25.32, respectively.
■ 4. Add new subpart E to read as
follows:
■
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Subpart E—Data Collection,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting
Sec.
25.19 Data collection for banks evaluated
under the general performance standards
in § 25.12 or a strategic plan under
§ 25.16.
25.20 Retail domestic deposit data
collection and recordkeeping for small
banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 25.13.
25.21 Activity location.
25.22 Recordkeeping.
25.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 or a strategic plan under § 25.16.
25.24 Public disclosures.
25.25 Content and availability of public file.
25.26 Availability of planned evaluation
schedule.
25.27 Public notice by banks.
§ 25.19 Data collection for banks evaluated
under the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 or a strategic plan under § 25.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 and banks evaluated under a
strategic plan under § 25.16, unless
otherwise determined in writing by the
OCC, must collect and maintain the
information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. A
bank must collect and maintain the
results of its:
(1) Retail lending distribution tests
under § 25.11 for the borrower
distribution and geographic distribution
tests for each major retail lending
product line evaluated in the
assessment area;
(2) Bank-level and each assessmentarea level CRA evaluation measures
calculated under § 25.10; and
(3) Presumptive ratings under § 25.12.
(c) Qualifying activities and retail
domestic deposit data required to be
collected and maintained. A bank
subject to this section must collect and
maintain the following data and
supporting documentation for all
qualifying activities and certain nonqualifying activities conducted by the
bank until the completion of its next
CRA evaluation:
(1) Qualifying loan data. For each
qualifying loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric
symbol to identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) Date of:
(A) Origination for loans originated by
the bank, if applicable;
(B) Purchase for loans not originated
by the bank, if applicable; and
(C) Sale if the loan is a retail loan and
sold by the bank within 90 days of
origination;
(iv) An indicator of whether the loan
was originated or purchased;
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(v) The loan amount at origination or
purchase;
(vi) The outstanding dollar amount of
the loan, as of the close of business on
the last day of the month, for each
month that the loan is on-balance sheet;
(vii) The loan location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract;
(viii) The income or revenue of the
borrower; and
(ix) The criteria in § 25.04 that the
loan satisfies or that it is on the
illustrative list referenced in § 25.05 and
whether it serves a particular
assessment area, if applicable.
(2) Other loan data. A bank must
collect and maintain the following data
and supporting documentation for nonqualifying home mortgage loans and
consumer loans originations by the bank
until the completion of its next CRA
evaluation:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric
symbol to identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) The date of origination;
(iv) The loan amount at origination;
(v) The loan location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract; and
(vi) The income of the borrower.
(3) Number of home mortgage and
consumer loans. For the home mortgage
product line and each consumer loan
product line as defined in § 25.03, for
each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
and
(ii) The number of loans originated to
low- and moderate-income borrowers.
(4) Number of small loans to
businesses. For the small loan to a
business product line, for each county
or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in
low- and moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to
small businesses.
(5) Number of small loans to farms.
For the small loan to a farm product line
for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in
low- and moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to
small farms.
(6) Community development
investment data. For each community
development investment:
(i) A unique number, alpha-numeric
symbol, or another mechanism to
identify the investment;
(ii) Investment type;
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(iii) Date of investment by the bank;
(iv) The outstanding dollar value of
the investment, as of the close of
business on the last day of the month,
for each month that the investment is
on-balance sheet;
(v) The value of the monetary
donation, as quantified in § 25.06;
(vi) The value of the in-kind donation,
as quantified in § 25.06;
(vii) The investment location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract, if applicable; and
(viii) The criteria in § 25.04 that the
investment satisfies or that it is on the
illustrative list referenced in § 25.05 and
whether it serves a particular
assessment area, if applicable.
(7) Community development services
data. For each community development
service:
(i) The dollar value of the services, as
quantified in § 25.06;
(ii) A description of the qualifying
activity;
(iii) The date the service was
performed;
(iv) The service location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract, if applicable; and
(v) The qualifying activity criteria in
§ 25.04 that the service satisfies or that
it is on the illustrative list referenced in
§ 25.05.
(8) Retail domestic deposit data. The
value of each retail domestic deposit
account and the physical address of
each depositor as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
during the examination period.
(d) Data collection certification. A
bank must collect and maintain a
certification from each party conducting
qualifying activities on behalf of the
bank that the information that the party
provided to the bank as described in
paragraph (a) of this section is true and
correct.
(e) Assessment areas. A bank must
collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation a
list of its assessment area(s) showing
within the assessment area(s) each:
(1) County or county equivalent;
(2) Metropolitan division;
(3) Nonmetropolitan area;
(4) Metropolitan statistical area; or
(5) State.
(f) Bank facilities. A bank must collect
and maintain until the completion of its
next CRA evaluation information
indicating whether each facility
operated by the bank during the
evaluation period was a depository or
non-depository facility.
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§ 25.20 Retail domestic deposit data
collection and recordkeeping for small
banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 25.13.
Retail domestic deposit data
collection. Small banks must collect and
maintain data on the value of each retail
domestic deposit account and the
physical address of each depositor as of
the close of business on the last day of
each quarter during the examination
period until the completion of its next
CRA evaluation.
§ 25.21
Activity location.
(a) For the purpose of this part:
(1) A consumer loan is located at the
borrower’s physical address on file with
the bank;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located
at the address of the property to which
the loan relates; and
(3) A business or farm loan is located
at the physical address of the main
business facility or farm or the physical
address where the loan proceeds will be
applied, as indicated by the borrower;
and
(b) For the purpose of this part, the
location of a community development
loan, a community development
investment, or a community
development service is:
(1) The address of a particular project
to the extent a bank can document that
the services or funding it provided was
allocated to that particular project; or
(2) Determined by allocating the
activity across all of a bank’s assessment
areas and other metropolitan statistical
areas or non-metropolitan statistical
areas served by the activity according to
the share of the bank’s deposits in those
areas, treating the bank’s deposits in the
region served by the activity as if they
were all of the bank’s deposits, to the
extent the bank cannot document that
the services or funding it provided was
allocated to a particular project.
§ 25.22
Recordkeeping.
Banks must keep the data collected
under § 25.19 and § 25.20 in machine
readable form (as prescribed by the
OCC) until the completion of their next
CRA evaluation.
§ 25.23 Reporting for banks evaluated
under the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 or a strategic plan under § 25.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 25.12 and banks evaluated under a
strategic plan under § 25.16, unless
otherwise determined in writing by the
OCC, must report the information
required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. On
an annual basis, a bank subject to this
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section must report to the OCC the
information required by § 25.19(b).
(c) Qualifying activities data. On an
annual basis, a bank subject to this
section must report to the OCC the
following data for all qualifying
activities conducted during the annual
period:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying
retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of
community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of
community development investments;
and
(4) The quantified value of
community development services.
(d) Data collection certification. A
bank subject to this section must
annually provide to the OCC any
certification required by § 25.19(d).
(e) Assessment area data. For each
assessment area, a bank subject to this
section must annually report to the OCC
the information required by § 25.19(e).
(f) Retail loans. A bank subject to this
section must annually report to the OCC
the information required by
§ 25.19(c)(3)–(5) for loans originated
during the annual period.
(g) Retail domestic deposit data. A
bank subject to this section must
annually report its average quarterly
retail domestic deposits as of the close
of business on the last day of each
quarter.
(h) Performance context information.
A bank subject to this section must
report performance context information
on the form required by § 25.14(c).
(i) Form. Banks subject to this section
must use the CRA data reporting form
available at www.occ.gov to meet the
reporting requirements in this section.
§ 25.24
Public disclosures.
(a) Individual CRA Disclosure
Statement. The OCC prepares annually
a CRA Disclosure Statement for each
bank evaluated under § 25.12 that
contains at the bank level:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying
retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of
community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of
community development investments;
and
(4) The quantified value of
community development services.
(b) Aggregate CRA Disclosure
Statement. The OCC prepares annually,
for each county, an aggregate CRA
Disclosure Statement of home mortgage,
consumer, small loans to businesses,
and small loans to farms lending by all
banks subject to reporting under this
part. This disclosure statement includes
the following information, at the county
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level, from all banks evaluated under
§ 25.12, except that the OCC may adjust
the form of the disclosure if necessary,
because of special circumstances, to
protect the privacy of a borrower or
bank:
(1) The number of home mortgage
loan originations;
(2) The number of home mortgage
loan originations to low- or moderateincome individuals and families;
(3) The number of originations for
each consumer loan product line;
(4) The number of originations to lowor moderate-income individuals and
families for each consumer loan product
line;
(5) The number of small loans to
businesses;
(6) The number of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderateincome census tracts;
(7) The number of small loans to
businesses provided to small
businesses;
(8) The number of small loans to
farms;
(9) The number of small loans to
farms in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(10) The number of small loans to
farms provided to small farms;
(c) Availability of CRA disclosure
statements. The OCC will annually
make publicly available the aggregate
and individual CRA Disclosure
Statements, described in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section.
(d) Availability of ratings. The OCC
will make available the ratings of all
OCC-regulated banks and a list of all
banks that achieve an assigned rating of
outstanding. A bank that achieves an
outstanding assigned rating will receive
a certificate or seal of achievement that
may be displayed on its website and in
its main office and branches.
lotter on DSKBCFDHB2PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 25.25
file.
Content and availability of public
(a) Information available to the
public. A bank must maintain a public
file that includes the following
information:
(1) All written comments received
from the public for the current year and
each of the prior two calendar years that
specifically relate to assessment area
needs and opportunities, and any
response to the comments by the bank,
if neither the comments nor the
responses contain statements that reflect
adversely on the good name or
reputation of any persons other than the
bank or publication of which would
violate specific provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the
bank’s most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation prepared by the OCC. The
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bank must place this copy in the public
file within 30 business days after its
receipt from the OCC;
(3) A list of the bank’s branches, their
street addresses, and census tracts;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed
by the bank during the current year and
each of the prior two calendar years,
their street addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours
of operation, available loan and deposit
products, and transaction fees) generally
offered at the bank’s branches and
descriptions of material differences in
the availability or cost of services at
particular branches, if any. At its option,
a bank may include information
regarding the availability of alternative
systems for delivering retail banking
services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned
or operated by or exclusively for the
bank, banking by telephone or
computer, loan production offices, and
bank-at-work or bank-by-mail
programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area
showing the boundaries of the area and
identifying the geographies contained
within the area, either on the map or in
a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the bank
chooses.
(b) Additional information available
to the public—(1) Banks with strategic
plans. A bank that has been approved to
be assessed under a strategic plan must
include in its public file a copy of that
plan. A bank need not include
information submitted to the OCC on a
confidential basis in conjunction with
the plan.
(2) Banks with less than satisfactory
ratings. A bank that received a less than
satisfactory rating during its most recent
examination must include in its public
file a description of its current efforts to
improve its performance in helping to
meet the credit needs of its entire
community. The bank must update the
description quarterly.
(c) Availability of public information.
A bank must make available to the
public the information required in this
section.
(d) Updating. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a bank must
ensure that the information required by
this section is current as of April 1 of
each year.
§ 25.26 Availability of planned evaluation
schedule.
The OCC will make available at least
30 days in advance of the beginning of
each calendar quarter a list of banks
scheduled for CRA evaluations in that
quarter.
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§ 25.27
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Public notice by banks.
A bank must make available to the
public the notice set forth in Appendix
B of this part. Parenthetical text must be
adjusted by each bank as appropriate.
Bracketed text must be included if
applicable.
■ 5. Revise paragraph (a) of newly
designated § 25.29 to read as follows:
§ 25.29
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Bank means, unless the context
indicates otherwise, a national bank and
a foreign bank as that term is defined in
12 U.S.C. 3101(7) and 12 CFR 28.11(i).
*
*
*
*
*
§ 25.30
[Amended]
6. In newly designated § 25.30 amend
paragraph (b)(2) by removing ‘‘§ 25.64’’
and adding ‘‘§ 25.31’’ in its place.
■ 7. Revise Appendix A to read as
follows:
■
Appendix A to Part 25—Small Bank
Ratings
(a) Ratings in general—(1) In assigning a
rating, the OCC evaluates a small bank’s
performance under the applicable
performance criteria in § 25.13, adjusting for
performance context in § 25.14 and
consideration of any evidence of
discriminatory and illegal credit practices as
described in § 25.15. This includes
consideration of low-cost education loans
provided to low-income borrowers and
activities in cooperation with minority- or
women-owned financial institutions and
low-income credit unions.
(2) A bank’s performance need not fit each
aspect of a particular rating profile in order
to receive that rating, and exceptionally
strong performance with respect to some
aspects may compensate for weak
performance in others. The bank’s overall
performance, however, must be consistent
with safe and sound banking practices and
generally with the appropriate rating profile
as follows.
(b) Banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards—(1) Lending test
ratings—(i) Eligibility for a satisfactory
lending test rating. The OCC rates a small
bank’s lending performance ‘‘satisfactory’’ if,
in general, the bank demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio
(considering seasonal variations) given the
bank’s size, financial condition, the credit
needs of its assessment area(s), and taking
into account, as appropriate, other lendingrelated activities such as loan originations for
sale to the secondary markets and
community development loans and
community development investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities,
are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities
for individuals of different income levels
(including low- and moderate-income
individuals) and businesses and farms of
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different sizes that is reasonable given the
demographics of the bank’s assessment
area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action,
when warranted, in response to written
complaints, if any, about the bank’s
performance in helping to meet the credit
needs of its assessment area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of
loans given the bank’s assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an ‘‘outstanding’’ lending
test rating. A small bank that meets each of
the standards for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating
under this paragraph and exceeds some or all
of those standards may warrant consideration
for a lending test rating of ‘‘outstanding.’’
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial
noncompliance ratings. A small bank may
also receive a lending test rating of ‘‘needs to
improve’’ or ‘‘substantial noncompliance’’
depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standard
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating.
(2) Bank-level rating—(i) Eligibility for an
outstanding overall rating. A small bank that
meets each of the standards for a
‘‘satisfactory’’ rating under the lending test
and exceeds some or all of those standards
may warrant consideration for a bank-level
rating of ‘‘outstanding.’’ In assessing whether
a bank’s performance is ‘‘outstanding,’’ the
OCC considers the extent to which the bank
exceeds each of the performance standards
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating and its
performance in making community
development investments and its
performance in providing branches and other
services and delivery systems that enhance
credit availability in its assessment area(s).
(ii) Needs to improve or substantial
noncompliance overall ratings. A small bank
may also receive a rating of ‘‘needs to
improve’’ or ‘‘substantial noncompliance’’
depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standards
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating.
8. Revise Appendix B to read as
follows:
■
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Subpart B—Qualifying Activities
345.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
345.05 Qualifying activities confirmation
and illustrative list.
345.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
345.07 Qualifying activities value.
PART 195—[REMOVED]
Appendix A to Part 345—Small Bank
Ratings
Appendix B to Part 345—Community
Reinvestment Act Notice
9. Under the authority of 12 U.S.C.
93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464, and
5412(b)(2)(B), remove part 195.
■
Under the Federal Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC) evaluates our record of
helping to meet the credit needs of this
community, consistent with safe and sound
operations. The OCC also takes this record
into account when deciding on certain
applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information
about our operations and our performance
under the CRA, including, for example,
information about our branches, such as their
location and services provided at them; the
public section of our most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation, prepared by the
OCC; and comments received from the public
relating to assessment area needs and
opportunities, as well as our responses to
those comments. You may review this
information today by reviewing the public
section of our most recent CRA evaluation,
prepared by the OCC, which is available at
(web address and/or physical address at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
which the public file can be reviewed and
copied).
You may also have access to the following
additional information, which we will make
available to you after you make a request to
us: (1) A map showing the assessment area
containing a select branch, which is the area
in which the OCC evaluates our CRA
performance for that particular community;
(2) branch addresses and associated branch
facilities and hours in any assessment area;
(3) a list of services we provide at those
locations; (4) our most recent rating in the
assessment area; and (5) copies of all written
comments received by us that specifically
relate to the needs and opportunities of a
given assessment area, and any responses we
have made to those comments. If we are
operating under an approved strategic plan,
you may also have access to a copy of the
plan.
At least 30 days before the beginning of
each quarter, the OCC publishes a
nationwide list of the (entity type) that are
scheduled for CRA examination in that
quarter. This list is available from the Deputy
Comptroller (address). You may send written
comments regarding the needs and
opportunities of any of the (entity type)’s
assessment area(s) to (name, address, and
email address of official at bank) and Deputy
Comptroller (address and email address).
Your comments, together with any response
by us, will be considered by the Comptroller
in evaluating our CRA performance and may
be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments
received by the Deputy Comptroller. You
may also request from the Deputy
Comptroller an announcement of our
applications covered by the CRA filed with
the Comptroller. (We are an affiliate of (name
of holding company), a (entity type) holding
company. You may request from the (title of
responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of
__(address) an announcement of applications
covered by the CRA filed by (entity type)
holding companies.)
Subpart C—Assessment Area
345.08 Assessment area.
Subpart D—Performance Evaluations
345.09 Performance standards and ratings,
in general.
345.10 CRA evaluation measure.
345.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
345.12 General performance standards and
presumptive rating.
345.13 Small bank performance standards.
345.14 Consideration of performance
context.
345.15 Discriminatory and other illegal
credit practices.
345.16 Strategic plan.
345.17 Assigned ratings.
345.18 State/multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating.
Subpart E—Data Collection,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting
345.19 Data collection for banks evaluated
under the general performance standards
in § 345.12 or a strategic plan under
§ 34.16.
345.20 Retail domestic deposit data
collection and recordkeeping for small
banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 345.13.
345.21 Activity location.
345.22 Recordkeeping.
345.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 or a strategic plan under
§ 345.16.
345.24 Public disclosures.
345.25 Content and availability of public
file.
345.26 Availability of planned evaluation
schedule.
345.27 Public notice by banks.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1814–1817, 1819–
1820, 1828, 1831u and 2901–2908, 3103–
3104, and 3108(a).
12 CFR Chapter III
Subpart A—General
10. For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
proposes to revise part 345 of chapter III
of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations to read as follows:
§ 345.01
■
PART 345—COMMUNITY
REINVESTMENT
Subpart A—General
Sec.
345.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
345.02 Effect of CRA performance on
applications.
345.03 Definitions.
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Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority. The authority for this
part is 12 U.S.C. 1814–1817, 1819–1820,
1828, 1831u and 2901–2907, 3103–
3104, and 3108(a).
(b) Purposes. In enacting the
Community Reinvestment Act (CRA),
the Congress required each appropriate
Federal financial supervisory agency to
assess an institution’s record of helping
to meet the credit needs of the local
communities in which the institution is
chartered, consistent with the safe and
sound operation of the institution, and
to take this record into account in the
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agency’s evaluation of an application for
a deposit facility by the institution. This
part is intended to carry out the
purposes of the CRA by:
(1) Establishing the framework and
criteria by which the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) assesses a
bank’s record of helping to meet the
credit needs of its entire community,
including low- and moderate-income
neighborhoods, consistent with the safe
and sound operation of the bank; and
(2) Providing that the FDIC takes that
record into account in considering
certain applications.
(c) Scope—(1) General. This part
applies to all insured State nonmember
banks, including insured State branches
as described in paragraph (c)(2) and any
uninsured State branch that results from
an acquisition described in section
5(a)(8) of the International Banking Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
(2) Insured State branches. Insured
State branches are branches of a foreign
bank established and operating under
the laws of any State, the deposits of
which are insured in accordance with
the provisions of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDIA). In the case of
insured State branches, references in
this part to main office mean the
principal branch within the United
States and the term branch or branches
refers to any insured State branch or
branches located within the United
States. The assessment area of an
insured State branch is the community
or communities located within the
United States served by the branch as
described in § 345.08.
(3) Certain exempt banks. This part
does not apply to banks that do not
perform commercial or retail banking
services by granting credit or offering
credit-related products or services to the
public in the ordinary course of
business, other than as incident to their
specialized operations and done on an
accommodation basis. These banks
include banker’s banks, as defined in 12
U.S.C. 24(Seventh), and banks that
engage only in one or more of the
following activities: Providing cash
management controlled disbursement
services or serving as correspondent
banks, trust companies, or clearing
agents.
(4) Compliance Dates—(i) Banks other
than small banks—(A) Banks that are
not small banks must comply with the
following requirements of this part on
the following dates:
(1) One year after the effective date of
the final rule for the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 345.08, 345.19, and
345.22; and
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(2) Two years after the effective date
of the final rule for the reporting
requirements in § 345.23.
(B) Banks that are not small banks
must comply with the applicable
requirements of the other sections of
this part after completing the evaluation
period that concludes immediately after
the reporting requirements compliance
date in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of this
section, including any extensions
approved by the FDIC.
(ii) Small banks—(A) Small banks
must comply with the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 345.08, 345.20, and
345.22 one year after the effective date
of this rule.
(B) Small banks must comply with the
applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
the FDIC.
(iii) Small banks that opt into the
general performance standards in
§ 345.12 as of the effective date of this
rule and banks that no longer meet the
small bank definition—(A) Small banks
that opt into the general performance
standards in § 345.12 as of the effective
date of this rule pursuant to § 345.09(b)
and banks that no longer meet the small
bank definition must comply with the
following requirements on the following
dates:
(1) Two years after the effective date
of the final rule for the assessment area,
data collection, and recordkeeping
requirements in §§ 345.08, 345.19, and
345.22; and
(2) Three years after the effective date
of the final rule for the reporting
requirements in § 345.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with
the applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in
paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A)(2) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
the FDIC.
(iv) Small banks that opt into the
general performance standards in
§ 345.12 after the effective date of the
final rule—(A) Small banks that opt into
the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 after the effective date of the
final rule pursuant to § 345.09(b) must
comply with the following requirements
on the following dates:
(1) One year after the bank opts in for
the assessment area, data collection, and
recordkeeping requirements in
§§ 345.08, 345.19, and 345.22; and
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(2) Two years after the bank opts in
for the reporting requirements in
§ 345.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with
the applicable requirements of the other
sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in
paragraph (c)(4)(iv)(A)(2) of this section,
including any extensions approved by
FDIC.
§ 345.02 Effect of CRA performance on
applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other
factors, the FDIC takes into account the
record of performance under the CRA of
each applicant bank in considering an
application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic
branch or other facility with the ability
to accept deposits;
(2) The relocation of the bank’s main
office or a branch;
(3) The merger, consolidation,
acquisition of assets, or assumption of
liabilities; and
(4) Deposit insurance for a newly
chartered financial institution.
(b) New financial institutions. A
newly chartered financial institution
shall submit with its application for
deposit insurance a description of how
it will meet its CRA objectives. The
FDIC takes the description into account
in considering the application and may
deny or condition approval on that
basis.
(c) Interested parties. The FDIC takes
into account any views expressed by
interested parties that are submitted in
accordance with the FDIC’s procedures
set forth in part 303 of this chapter in
considering CRA performance in an
application listed in paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of
application. A bank’s record of
performance may be the basis for
denying or conditioning approval of an
application listed in paragraph (a) of
this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For
purposes of this section, the term
‘‘insured depository institution’’ has the
same meaning as this term is given in
12 U.S.C. 1813.
§ 345.03
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply:
Activity means a loan, investment, or
service by a bank.
Affiliate has the same meaning as this
term is given in Regulation W, 12 CFR
223.2(a) and (b) as of the effective date
of this rule but applies to member and
non-member banks.
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Agencies means the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency and the
FDIC.
Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the
metropolitan statistical area, if a person
or census tract is located in a
metropolitan statistical area, or for the
metropolitan division, if a person or
census tract is located in a metropolitan
statistical area that has been subdivided
into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan
median family income, if a person or
census tract is located outside a
metropolitan statistical area.
Assessment area means a geographic
area delineated in accordance with
§ 345.08.
Average means the statistical mean.
Bank means a State nonmember bank,
as that term is defined in section 3(e)(2)
of the FDIA, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1813(e)(2)), with Federally insured
deposits, except as provided in
§ 345.01(c). The term bank also includes
an insured State branch.
Branch means a staffed banking
facility authorized as a branch, whether
shared or unshared, including, for
example, a mini-branch in a grocery
store or a branch operated in
conjunction with any other local
business or non-profit organization. The
term ‘‘branch’’ only includes a
‘‘domestic branch’’ as that term is
defined in section 3(o) of the FDIA (12
U.S.C. 1813(o)).
Call Report means Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income as
filed under 12 U.S.C. 161.
Community Development Financial
Institution has the same meaning as this
term is given in 12 U.S.C. 4702(5).
Community development investment
means a lawful investment, membership
share, deposit, legally-binding
commitment to invest that is reported
on the Call Report, Schedule RC–L, or
monetary or in-kind donation that meets
the criteria of § 345.04(c).
Community development loan means
a loan, line of credit, or contingent
commitment to lend that meets the
criteria of § 345.04(c).
Community development services
means bank employee time spent
volunteering as a representative of the
bank on activities that meet the criteria
of § 345.04(c) or supporting activities
that meet the criteria of § 345.04(c)(2),
(11). A bank employee may receive
expense reimbursement for volunteer
time related to the community
development activity.
Compensation means the Bureau of
Labor Statistics calculation of the hourly
wage for that type of work engaged in
by a bank employee in the course of
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conducting community development
services.
Consumer loan means a loan reported
on the Call Report, Schedule RC–C,
Loans and Lease Financing Receivables,
Part 1, Item 6, Loans to individuals for
household, family, and other personal
expenditures, which include the
following product lines:
(1) Credit card, which is an extension
of credit to an individual for household,
family, and other personal expenditures
arising from credit cards;
(2) Other revolving credit plan, which
is an extension of credit to an individual
for household, family, and other
personal expenditures arising from
prearranged overdraft plans and other
revolving credit plans not accessed by
credit cards;
(3) Automobile loan, which is a
consumer loan extended for the purpose
of purchasing new and used passenger
cars and other vehicles such as
minivans, vans, sport-utility vehicles,
pickup trucks, and similar light trucks
for personal use; and
(4) Other consumer loan, which is any
other loan to an individual for
household, family, and other personal
expenditures (other than those that meet
the definition of a ‘‘loan secured by real
estate’’ and other than those for
purchasing or carrying securities),
including low-cost education loans,
which is any private education loan, as
defined in section 140(a)(8) of the Truth
in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1650(a)(8))
(including a loan under a state or local
education loan program), originated by
the bank for a student at an ‘‘institution
of higher education,’’ as that term is
generally defined in sections 101 and
102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the
implementing regulations published by
the U.S. Department of Education, with
interest rates and fees no greater than
those of comparable education loans
offered directly by the U.S. Department
of Education. Such rates and fees are
specified in section 455 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C.
1087e).
Contingent commitment to lend
means a legally-binding commitment to
extend credit in instances where
another bank initially funded, or
committed to fund, a project but cannot,
for financial or legal reasons, advance
unanticipated additional funds
necessary to complete the project.
Distressed area means a middleincome census tract identified by the
agencies that meets one or more of the
following conditions:
(1) An unemployment rate of at least
1.5 times the national average,
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(2) A poverty rate of 20 percent or
more, or
(3) A population loss of 10 percent or
more between the previous and most
recent decennial census or a net
migration loss of five percent or more
over the five-year period preceding the
most recent census.
Essential community facility means a
public facility, including but not limited
to a school, library, park, hospital and
health care facility, and public safety
facility.
Essential infrastructure means:
(1) Public infrastructure, including
but not limited to public roads, bridges,
tunnels; and
(2) Essential telecommunications
infrastructure, mass transit, water
supply and distribution, utilities supply
and distribution, sewage treatment and
collection, and industrial parks.
Family farm has the same meaning as
the term is given by the Farm Service
Agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in 7 CFR 761.2(b) as of the
effective date of this rule.
Financing means permissible equity
or debt facilities, such as loans, lines of
credit, bonds, private funds, securities,
or other permissible investments.
High-cost area means any county in
which the percentage of households
who have monthly housing costs greater
than 30 percent of their monthly income
is greater than 40 percent.
Home mortgage loan means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part I, specifically:
(1) Item 1.a.(1) 1–4 family residential
construction loans;
(2) Item 1.c Loans secured by 1–4
family residential properties (includes
closed-end and open-end loans); or
(3) Item 1.d Loans secured by
multifamily (5 or more) residential
properties.
Income levels are:
(1) Low-income, which means an
individual income that is less than 50
percent of the area median income, or
a median family income that is less than
50 percent in the case of a census tract.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an
individual income that is at least 50
percent and less than 80 percent of the
area median income, or a median family
income that is at least 50 percent and
less than 80 percent in the case of a
census tract.
(3) Middle-income, which means an
individual income that is at least 80
percent and less than 120 percent of the
area median income, or a median family
income that is at least 80 percent and
less than 120 percent in the case of a
census tract.
(4) Upper-income, which means an
individual income that is 120 percent or
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more of the area median income, or a
median family income that is 120
percent or more in the case of a census
tract.
Indian country has the same meaning
as this term is given in 18 U.S.C. 1151.
Insured State branches mean the
branches of a foreign bank established
and operating under the laws of any
State, the deposits of which are insured
in accordance with the provisions of the
FDIA. In the case of insured State
branches, references in this part to main
office mean the principal branch within
the United States and the term branch
or branches refers to any insured State
branch or branches located within the
United States.
Low-income credit union has the same
meaning as this term is given in 12 CFR
701.34.
Major retail lending product line
means a bank’s retail lending product
line that composes at least 15 percent of
the bank-level dollar volume of total
retail loan originations during the
evaluation period.
Metropolitan division has the same
meaning as this term is given by the
Director of the Office of Management
and Budget.
Metropolitan statistical area has the
same meaning as this term is given by
the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget.
Military bank means a bank whose
business predominately consists of
serving the needs of military personnel
who serve or have served in the armed
forces (including the U.S. Army, Navy,
Marine Corp., Air Force, and Coast
Guard) or dependents of military
personnel. A bank whose business
predominantly consists of serving the
needs of military personnel or their
dependents means a bank whose most
important customer group is military
personnel or their dependents.
Minority depository institution means
a depository institution as defined in 12
U.S.C. 2907(b)(1).
Monetary or in-kind donation means:
(1) A grant, monetary contribution, or
monetary donation, or
(2) A contribution of goods,
commodities, or other non-monetary
resources.
Non-branch deposit-taking facility
means a banking facility other than a
branch owned or operated by, or
operated exclusively for, the bank that
is authorized to take deposits that is
located in any state or territory of the
United States of America.
Nonmetropolitan area means any area
that is not located in a metropolitan
statistical area.
Partially benefits means 50 percent or
less of the dollar value of the activity or
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of the individuals or census tracts
served by the activity.
Primarily benefits means:
(1) Greater than 50 percent of the
dollar value of the activity or of the
individuals or census tracts served by
the activity; or
(2) The express, bona fide intent,
purpose, or mandate of the activity as
stated, for example, in a prospectus,
loan proposal, or community action
plan.
Qualifying activity means an activity
that helps meet the credit needs of a
bank’s entire community, including
low- and moderate-income individuals
and communities, in accordance with
§ 345.04.
Qualifying loan means a retail loan
that meets the criteria in § 345.04(b) or
a community development loan that
meets the criteria in § 345.04(c).
Retail domestic deposit means a
‘‘deposit’’ as defined in section 3(l) of
the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(l)) and as
reported on Schedule RC–E, item 1, of
the Call Report that is held in the
United States and is provided by an
individual, partnership, or corporation
other than a deposit that is obtained,
directly or indirectly, from or through
the mediation or assistance of a deposit
broker as that term is defined in section
29 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)).
Retail loan means a home mortgage
loan, small loan to a business, small
loan to a farm, or consumer loan.
Retail lending product line means a:
(1) Home mortgage loan product line,
which includes all home mortgage
loans;
(2) Small loan to a business product
line, which includes all small loans to
businesses;
(3) Small loan to a farm product line,
which includes all small loans to farms;
or
(4) Consumer lending product line,
which includes:
(ii) An automobile loan product line;
(iii) A credit card product line;
(iv) An other revolving credit plan
product line; or
(v) An other consumer loan product
line.
Small bank—(1) Definition. Small
bank means a bank that:
(i) Had assets of $500 million or less
in each of the previous four calendar
quarters; or
(ii) Was a small bank as of the close
of the calendar quarter immediately
preceding the close of the last calendar
quarter and did not have assets of
greater than $500 million as of the close
of each of the past four calendar
quarters.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in
this definition shall be adjusted
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annually and published by the FDIC,
based on the year-to-year change in the
average of the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical
Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for
each twelve-month period ending in
November, with rounding to the nearest
$100,000.
Small business means a business that
has gross annual revenues of no greater
than $2 million. The FDIC will annually
adjust the $2 million threshold for
inflation, and the adjustment to the
threshold will be made publicly
available.
Small farm means a farm with gross
annual revenues of no greater than $2
million. The FDIC will annually adjust
the $2 million threshold for inflation,
and the adjustment to the threshold will
be made publicly available.
Small loan to a business means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.e, Secured by
nonfarm nonresidential properties, or
Item 4, Commercial and industrial
loans, and of no greater than $2 million.
The FDIC will annually adjust the $2
million threshold for inflation, and the
adjustment to the threshold will be
made publicly available.
Small loan to a farm means a loan
reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC–C, Loans and Lease Financing
Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.b, Secured by
farmland, or Item 3, Loans to finance
agricultural production and other loans
to farmers, and of no greater than $2
million. The FDIC will annually adjust
the $2 million threshold for inflation,
and the adjustment to the threshold will
be made publicly available.
Underserved area means a middleincome census tract:
(1) Identified by the agencies as
meeting the criteria for population size,
density, and dispersion that indicate the
area’s population is sufficiently small,
thin, and distant from a population
center that the tract is likely to have
difficulty financing the fixed costs of
meeting essential community needs.
The agencies will use as the basis for
these designations the ‘‘urban influence
codes,’’ numbered ‘‘7,’’ ‘‘10,’’ ‘‘11,’’ and
‘‘12,’’ maintained by the Economic
Research Service of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture; or
(2) Identified by the agencies as:
(i) Not having a branch of any bank
within:
(A) 2 miles of the center of the census
tract if it is an urban census tract, as
defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data;
(B) 5 miles of the center of the census
tract if it is a mixed census tract, as
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defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data;
(C) 10 miles of the center of the
census tract if it is a rural census tract,
as defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data; or
(D) 5 miles of the center of the census
tract if the census tract is an island area,
as defined by the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
Census data; and
(ii) Not having any branch within the
census tract.
Women’s depository institution means
a depository institution as defined in 12
U.S.C. 2907(b)(2).
Subpart B—Qualifying Activities
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§ 345.04
Qualifying activities criteria.
(a) General. Retail loans, community
development loans, community
development investments, and
community development services that
help meet the credit needs of a bank’s
entire community, including low- and
moderate-income communities, are
qualifying activities if they meet the
criteria in this section at the time the
activity is originated, made, or
conducted. If the activity is
subsequently purchased by another
bank, it is a qualifying activity if it
meets the criteria in this section at the
time of purchase.
(b) Retail loans. A home mortgage
loan, small loan to a business, small
loan to a farm, or consumer loan is a
qualifying activity if it is:
(1) Provided to a:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individual or family;
(ii) Small business; or
(iii) Small farm;
(2) Located in Indian country;
(3) A small loan to a business located
in a low- or moderate-income census
tract; or
(4) A small loan to a farm located in
a low- or moderate-income census tract.
(c) Community development loans,
community development investments,
and community development services.
A community development loan,
community development investment, or
community development service is a
qualifying activity if it provides
financing for or supports:
(1) Affordable housing, which means:
(i) Rental housing:
(A) That is likely to partially or
primarily benefit low- or moderateincome individuals or families as
demonstrated by median rents that do
not and are not projected at the time of
the transaction to exceed 30 percent of
80 percent of the area median income;
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(B) That partially or primarily benefits
low- or moderate-income individuals or
families as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
a federal, state, local, or tribal
government;
(C) That is undertaken in conjunction
with an explicit federal, state, local, or
tribal government affordable housing
program for low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(D) That partially or primarily benefits
middle-income individuals or families
in high-cost areas as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
a federal, state, local, or tribal
government; or
(E) That is undertaken in conjunction
with an explicit federal, state, local, or
tribal government affordable housing
program for middle-income individuals
or families in high-cost areas; or
(ii) Owner-occupied housing
purchased, refinanced, or improved by
low- or moderate-income individuals or
families, except for home mortgage
loans provided directly to individuals or
families;
(2) Another bank’s community
development loan, community
development investment, or community
development service;
(3) Businesses or Farms that meet the
size-eligibility standards of the Small
Business Administration Certified
Development Company, as that term is
defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small
Business Investment Company, as
described 13 CFR part 107, by providing
technical assistance and supportive
services, such as shared space,
technology, or administrative assistance
through an intermediary;
(4) Community support services
which means activities, such as child
care, education, health services, and
housing services, that partially or
primarily serve or assist low- or
moderate-income individuals or
families;
(5) Essential community facilities that
partially or primarily benefit or serve:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census
tracts, distressed areas, underserved
areas, disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
(6) Essential infrastructure that
benefits or serves:
(i) Low- or moderate-income
individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census
tracts, distressed areas, underserved
areas, disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
(7) A family farm’s:
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(i) Purchase or lease of farm land,
equipment, and other farm-related
inputs,
(ii) Receipt of technical assistance and
supportive services, such as shared
space, technology, or administrative
assistance through an intermediary; or
(iii) Sale and trade of family farm
products;
(8) Federal, state, local, or tribal
government programs, projects, or
initiatives that:
(i) Partially or primarily benefit lowor moderate-income individuals or
families;
(ii) Partially or primarily benefit small
businesses or small farms as those terms
are defined in the programs, projects or
initiatives; or
(iii) Are consistent with a bona fide
government revitalization, stabilization,
or recovery plan for a low- or moderateincome census tract; a distressed area;
an underserved area; a disaster area; or
Indian country;
(9) Financial literacy programs or
education or homebuyer counseling;
(10) Owner-occupied and rental
housing development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country;
(11) Qualified opportunity funds, as
defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–2(d)(1), that
benefit low- or moderate-income
qualified opportunity zones, as defined
in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z–1(a);
(12) A Small Business Administration
Certified Development Company, as that
term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, a
Small Business Investment Company, as
described 13 CFR part 107, a New
Markets Venture Capital company, as
described in 13 CFR part 108, a
qualified Community Development
Entity, as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or
a U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural
Business Investment Company, as
defined in 7 CFR 4290.50; or
(13) Ventures undertaken, including
capital investments and loan
participations, by a bank in cooperation
with a minority depository institution,
women’s depository institution,
Community Development Financial
Institution, or low-income credit union,
if the activity helps to meet the credit
needs of local communities in which
such institutions are chartered,
including activities that indirectly help
to meet community credit needs by
promoting the sustainability and
profitability of those institutions and
credit unions.
§ 345.05 Qualifying activities confirmation
and illustrative list.
(a) Qualifying activities list. The FDIC
maintains a publicly available
illustrative list on the FDIC’s website of
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non-exhaustive examples of qualifying
activities that meet and activities that do
not meet the criteria in § 345.04.
(b) Confirmation of a qualifying
activity. A bank may request that the
FDIC confirm that an activity meets the
criteria in § 345.04 and is a qualifying
activity in accordance with paragraph
(c) of this section.
(1) When the FDIC confirms that an
activity is consistent with the criteria in
§ 345.04, the FDIC will notify the
requestor and may add this activity to
the list of activities that meet the
qualifying activities criteria described in
paragraph (a) of this section,
incorporating any conditions imposed,
if applicable.
(2) When the FDIC determines that an
activity is not consistent with the
criteria in § 345.04, the FDIC will notify
the requestor and may add this activity
to the list of activities that do not meet
the qualifying activities criteria
described in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) Process—(1) A bank may request
that the FDIC confirm that an activity is
a qualifying activity by submitting a
complete Qualifying Activity
Confirmation Request Form available on
the FDIC’s website.
(2) In responding to a confirmation
request that an activity is consistent
with the criteria in § 345.04, the FDIC
will consider:
(i) The information on the Qualifying
Activity Confirmation Request Form;
(ii) Whether the activity is consistent
with the safe and sound operation of the
bank; and
(iii) Any other information the FDIC
deems relevant.
(3) The FDIC may impose conditions
on its confirmation to ensure that an
activity is consistent with the criteria in
§ 345.04.
(4) An activity is confirmed as a
qualifying activity if the bank is not
informed of an FDIC objection within 6
months of submission of a complete
Qualifying Activity Confirmation
Request Form.
(d) Modifying the qualifying activities
list. In addition to updating the list in
paragraph (a) of this section on an
ongoing basis in response to requests for
confirmation described in paragraph (b)
of this section, the FDIC will publish the
qualifying activities list no less
frequently than every three years for
notice and comment to determine
whether the list should change. If the
FDIC determines that a qualifying loan
or community development investment
no longer meets the criteria in § 345.04,
that loan or community development
investment will not be considered a
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qualifying activity for any subsequent
purchasers.
§ 345.06 Qualifying activities
quantification.
(a) Community development service
quantification. The dollar value of a
community development service is the
compensation of for the community
development service multiplied by the
number of hours the employee spent
performing the service, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) In-kind donation quantification.
The dollar value of an in-kind donation
is the fair market value of the donation,
as adjusted by paragraph (e) of this
section.
(c) Monetary donation quantification.
The dollar value of a monetary donation
is the actual dollar value of the
donation, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section.
(d) Qualifying loan and other
community development investment
quantification. The dollar value of a
qualifying loan or a community
development investment not included
in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, is:
(1) Except for qualifying loans in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the
average of the dollar value, as of the
close of business on the last day of the
month, for each month the loan or
investment is on-balance sheet, of:
(i) The outstanding balance of a loan
or investment, as adjusted by paragraph
(e) of this section;
(ii) Any legally-binding commitment
to invest, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section; and
(iii) The allowance for credit losses on
off balance sheet credit exposures for
contingent commitments to lend, as
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the Call Report, Schedule
RC–G, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section; or
(2) For qualifying retail loans sold
within 90 days of origination, 25
percent of the aggregate dollar value of
the loan at origination, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) Portion of qualifying activities that
partially benefit. The dollar value of a
qualifying activity that partially
benefits, as defined in § 345.03, is
calculated by multiplying the percentage
of the partial benefit by the full dollar
value of the qualifying activity
quantified under paragraphs (a)–(d) of
this section.
§ 345.07
Qualifying activities value.
(a) Bank-level qualifying activities
value. A bank evaluated under § 345.12
calculates its bank-level qualifying
activities value annually based on the
dollar value of all qualifying activities
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originated, made, purchased, or
performed on behalf of the bank and not
included in the bank-level qualifying
activities value of another bank subject
to this part or part 25. The qualifying
activities value equals the sum, during
a given annual period, of:
(1) The quantified dollar value of
qualifying loans and community
development investments, as adjusted
in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(2) The aggregate:
(i) Quantified dollar value of
community development services
conducted, as adjusted in paragraph (b)
of this section;
(ii) Quantified dollar value of in-kind
donations made, as adjusted in
paragraph (b) of this section; and
(iii) Monetary donations made, as
adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Multipliers. The dollar value of the
following qualifying activities will be
adjusted by multiplying the actual or
quantified dollar value by 2.
(1) Activities provided to or that
support Community Development
Financial Institutions, except activities
related to mortgage-backed securities;
(2) Other community development
investments, except community
development investments in mortgagebacked securities and municipal bonds;
and
(3) Other affordable housing-related
community development loans.
(c) Assessment area qualifying
activities value. A bank evaluated under
§ 345.12 calculates its assessment area
qualifying activities value for each
assessment area by using the process
described in paragraph (a) of this
section for qualifying activities located
in the assessment area.
Subpart C—Assessment Area
§ 345.08
Assessment area.
(a) General. A bank must delineate
one or more assessment areas within
which the FDIC evaluates the bank’s
record of helping to meet the credit
needs of its community. The FDIC
reviews the delineation for compliance
with the requirements of this section.
Unless pursuant to an approved
application covered under § 345.02(a)(3)
for a merger or consolidation with an
insured depository institution, an
assessment area delineation can only
change once during an evaluation
period and must not change within the
annual period used to determine an
assessment area CRA evaluation
measure under § 345.10(c).
(b) Facility-based assessment
area(s)—(1) A bank must delineate an
assessment area encompassing each
location where the bank maintains a
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main office, a branch, or a non-branch
deposit-taking facility as well as the
surrounding locations in which the
bank has originated or purchased a
substantial portion of its qualifying
retail loans. Assessment areas
delineated under this paragraph may
contain one or more of these facilities.
(2) A facility-based assessment area
must be delineated to consist of:
(i) One whole metropolitan statistical
area (using the metropolitan statistical
area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which
the delineation is made);
(ii) The whole nonmetropolitan area
of a state;
(iii) One or more whole, contiguous
metropolitan divisions in a single
metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation
is made); or
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous
counties or county equivalents in a
single metropolitan statistical area or
nonmetropolitan area.
(3) A bank may delineate its facilitybased assessment area(s) in the smallest
geographic area where it maintains a
main office, branch, or non-branch
deposit-taking facility, but may
delineate a larger assessment area that
includes these locations, as provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) A facility-based assessment area
may not extend beyond a metropolitan
statistical area or state boundary unless
the assessment area is located in a
multistate metropolitan statistical area.
If a bank serves a geographic area that
extends beyond a state boundary, the
bank must delineate separate
assessment areas for the areas in each
state. If a bank serves a geographic area
that extends beyond a metropolitan
statistical area boundary, the bank must
delineate separate assessment areas for
the areas inside and outside the
metropolitan statistical area.
(c) Deposit-based assessment
area(s)—(1) A bank that receives 50
percent or more of its retail domestic
deposits from geographic areas outside
of its facility-based assessment areas
must delineate separate, nonoverlapping assessment areas in the
smallest geographic area where it
receives 5 percent or more of its retail
domestic deposits.
(2) A deposit-based assessment area
must be delineated to consist of:
(i) One whole state;
(ii) One whole metropolitan statistical
area (using the metropolitan statistical
area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which
the delineation is made);
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(iii) The whole nonmetropolitan area
of a state;
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous
metropolitan divisions in a single
metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation
is made);
(v) The remaining geographic area of
a state, metropolitan statistical area,
nonmetropolitan area, or metropolitan
division other than where it has a
facility-based assessment area; or
(vi) One or more whole, contiguous
counties or county equivalents in a
single metropolitan statistical area or
nonmetropolitan area.
(d) Limitations on delineation of
assessment areas. A bank’s assessment
areas must not:
(1) Reflect illegal discrimination; or
(2) Arbitrarily exclude low- or
moderate-income geographies, taking
into account the bank’s size and
financial condition.
(e) Military banks. Notwithstanding
the requirements of this section, a
military bank’s assessment area will
consist of the entire United States of
America and its territories. A military
bank will only be evaluated based on its
entire deposit customer base at the bank
level under § 345.12.
(f) Banks evaluated under strategic
plans. A bank evaluated under a
strategic plan will delineate its
assessment area(s) in accordance with
the requirements of § 345.16(g)(2).
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The
FDIC uses the assessment area(s)
delineated by a bank in its evaluation of
the bank’s CRA performance unless the
FDIC determines that the assessment
area(s) do not comply with the
requirements of this section.
Subpart D—Performance Evaluations
§ 345.09 Performance standards and
ratings, in general.
(a) Performance standards. The FDIC
assesses the CRA performance of a bank
in an examination as follows:
(1) General performance standards—
(i) The FDIC assesses the CRA
performance of a bank other than banks
described in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3)
of this section based on the bank’s
application of the general performance
standards and determination of its
presumptive ratings under § 345.12.
(ii) The FDIC determines the assigned
ratings for a bank evaluated under
§ 345.12 as provided in § 345.17.
(iii) The FDIC determines the state or
multistate metropolitan statistical area
ratings for a bank evaluated under
§ 345.12 as provided in § 345.18.
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(2) Small bank performance
standards—(i) The FDIC applies the
small bank performance standards as
provided in § 345.13 in evaluating the
performance of a small bank, unless the
bank is evaluated under an approved
strategic plan as described under (a)(3)
of this section or elects to opt in to the
general performance standards under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) The FDIC assigns a small bank
evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 345.13
lending test and bank-level ratings as
provided for in Appendix A of this part.
(3) Strategic plan. The FDIC evaluates
the performance of a bank under a
strategic plan if the bank submits, and
the FDIC approves, a strategic plan as
provided in § 345.16.
(b) General performance standards
opt in. A small bank may elect to opt in
to be evaluated under the general
performance standards described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section and this
election must occur at least six months
before the start of a bank’s next
evaluation period. Small banks that
elect to be evaluated under the general
performance standards must collect,
maintain, and report the data required
for other banks under §§ 345.19, 345.22,
and 345.23. Once a small bank has
elected to opt in, it must complete at
least one evaluation period under the
general performance standards and may
elect no more than once to opt out of the
general performance standards and must
do so six months before the start of its
next evaluation period. Small banks that
opt out will revert to being evaluated
according to the small bank
performance standards as provided in
§ 345.13 in evaluating the performance
of a small bank, unless the bank is
evaluated under an approved strategic
plan as described under (a)(3) of this
section.
(c) Safe and sound operations. This
part and the CRA do not require a bank
to make loans or investments or to
provide services that are inconsistent
with safe and sound operations. To the
contrary, the FDIC anticipates banks can
meet the standards of this part with safe
and sound loans, investments, and
services on which the banks expect to
make a profit. Banks are permitted and
encouraged to develop and apply
flexible underwriting standards for
loans that benefit low- or moderateincome geographies or individuals, only
if consistent with safe and sound
operations.
§ 345.10
CRA evaluation measure.
(a) CRA evaluation measure. A bank
evaluated as described in § 345.12 will
determine its bank-level and assessment
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area CRA evaluation measures annually
as part of its CRA performance
evaluation.
(b) Determination of the bank-level
CRA evaluation measure. A bank’s
bank-level CRA evaluation measure is
the sum of:
(1) The bank’s annual bank-level
qualifying activities values calculated
under § 345.07(a) divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
for the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank’s branches
located in low- or moderate-income
census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, and Indian country
divided by its total number of branches
as of the close of business on the last
day of the same period used to calculate
the annual qualifying activities value
multiplied by .01.
(c) Determination of the assessment
area CRA evaluation measure. A bank’s
assessment area CRA evaluation
measure is determined in each
assessment area and is the sum of:
(1) The bank’s annual assessment area
qualifying activities value calculated
under § 345.07(c); divided by the
average quarterly value of the bank’s
assessment area retail domestic deposits
as of the close of business on the last
day of each quarter for the same period
used to calculate the annual assessment
area qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank’s branches
located in low- or moderate-income
census tracts in the assessment area
divided by its total number of branches
in the assessment area as of the close of
business on the last day of the same
period used to calculate the annual
assessment area qualifying activities
value multiplied by .01.
(d) Average CRA evaluation measures.
For each evaluation period, a bank will
calculate the average of its:
(1) Annual bank-level CRA evaluation
measures for each year in the evaluation
period; and
(2) Annual assessment area CRA
evaluation measures for each year in the
evaluation period, separately for each
assessment area.
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§ 345.11
Retail lending distribution tests.
(a) General. In each assessment area,
a bank evaluated as described in
§ 345.12 will apply a:
(1) Geographic distribution test for its
small loan to a business product line or
small loan to a farm product line if
those product lines are major retail
lending product lines with 20 or more
originations in the assessment area
during the evaluation period; and
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(2) Borrower distribution test for each
major retail lending product line with
20 or more originations in the
assessment area during the evaluation
period.
(b) Geographic distribution test—(1)
Small loan to a business product line.
To pass the geographic distribution test
for the small loan to a business product
line, a bank’s percentage of small loans
to businesses in low- or moderateincome census tracts originated during
the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or
the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic
comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55
percent of the percentage of businesses
in low- and moderate-income census
tracts in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator
threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderateincome census tracts originated by all
banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 345.12 in
the assessment area.
(2) Small loan to a farm product line.
To pass the geographic distribution test
for the small loan to a farm product line,
a bank’s percentage of small loans to
farms in low- or moderate-income
census tracts originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or
the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic
comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55
percent of the percentage of farms in
low- and moderate-income census tracts
in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator
threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to farms in
low- and moderate-income census tracts
originated by all banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 in the assessment area.
(c) Borrower distribution test—(1)
Home mortgage lending product line. To
pass the borrower distribution test for
the home mortgage lending product
line, a bank’s percentage of home
mortgage loans to low- and moderateincome individuals and families
originated during the evaluation period
in the assessment area must meet or
exceed the threshold established for
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either the associated borrower
demographic comparator or the
associated borrower peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of low- and moderateincome families in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of home mortgage loans
to low- or moderate-income individuals
and families originated by all banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 345.12 in
the assessment area.
(2) Consumer lending product line. To
pass the borrower distribution test for a
consumer lending product line, a bank’s
percentage of consumer loans to lowand moderate-income individuals and
families originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
demographic borrower comparator or
the associated demographic peer
comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of low- and moderateincome individuals in the assessment
area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of consumer loans to
low- or moderate-income individuals
and families originated by all banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 345.12 in
the assessment area.
(3) Small loan to a business product
line. To pass the borrower distribution
test for the small loan to a business
product line, a bank’s percentage of
small loans to businesses provided to
small businesses originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold
established for either the associated
demographic borrower comparator or
the associated demographic peer
comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of small businesses in
the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to
businesses provided to small businesses
from all banks evaluated under the
general performance standards in
§ 345.12 in the assessment area.
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(4) Small loan to a farm product line.
To pass the borrower distribution test
for the small loan to a farm product line,
a bank’s percentage of small loans to
farms provided to small farms
originated during the evaluation period
in the assessment area must meet or
exceed the thresholds established for
either the associated demographic
borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator
threshold. The borrower demographic
comparator threshold is 55 percent of
the percentage of small farms in the
assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator
threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of
the percentage of small loans to farms
provided to small farms from all banks
evaluated under the general
performance standards in § 345.12 in
the assessment area.
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§ 345.12 General performance standards
and presumptive rating.
(a) General. The bank-level
presumptive rating and assessment area
presumptive rating(s) for banks assessed
under this section are determined by
evaluating whether a bank has met all
the performance standards associated
with a given rating category, at the bank
level and in each assessment area. A
bank will use the performance standards
in effect on the first day of its evaluation
period for the duration of its evaluation
period, unless the bank elects to use
performance standards published later
during the evaluation period. If the bank
elects to use a later-published
performance standard, that performance
standard will apply during the entire
evaluation period.
(b) Performance standards
adjustments. The agencies will
periodically adjust the performance
standards.
(1) Factors considered. When
adjusting the performance standards,
the agencies will consider factors such
as the level of qualifying activities
conducted by all banks, market
conditions, and unmet needs and
opportunities.
(2) Public notice and comment. The
agencies will provide for a public notice
and comment period on any proposed
adjustments prior to finalizing the
adjustments.
(c) Bank-level performance
standards—(1) Outstanding. The banklevel outstanding performance
standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The
average of the bank’s bank-level CRA
evaluation measures during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
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percentage, must meet or exceed 11
percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank
received an assigned rating of
outstanding in a significant portion of
its assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued
in § 345.07, divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The bank-level
satisfactory performance standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The
average of the bank’s bank-level CRA
evaluation measures during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6
percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank
received at least an assigned rating of
satisfactory in a significant portion of its
assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued
in § 345.07, divided by the average
quarterly value of the bank’s retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The bank-level
needs to improve performance standard
is an average bank-level CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
expressed as a percentage, that meets or
exceeds 3 percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The
bank-level substantial noncompliance
standard is an average bank-level CRA
evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that does not meet or exceed
3 percent.
(d) Assessment area performance
standards—(1) Outstanding. The
assessment area outstanding
performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests.
The bank must pass the geographic and
borrower distribution tests for its major
retail lending product lines evaluated in
§ 345.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The
assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
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expressed as a percentage, must meet or
exceed 11 percent; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments in
the assessment area during the
evaluation period, as valued in § 345.07,
divided by the average quarterly value of
the bank’s assessment area retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The assessment area
satisfactory performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests.
The bank must pass both the geographic
and borrower distribution tests for all
retail lending product lines evaluated in
§ 345.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The
assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period,
expressed as a percentage, must meet or
exceed 6 percent; and
(iii) Community development
minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and
community development investments in
the assessment area during the
evaluation period, as valued in § 345.07,
divided by the average quarterly value of
the bank’s assessment area retail
domestic deposits as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
of the evaluation period, must meet or
exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The assessment
area needs to improve performance
standard is an assessment area average
CRA evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that must meet or exceed 3
percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The
assessment area substantial
noncompliance performance standard is
an assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that does not meet or exceed
3 percent.
§ 345.13 Small bank performance
standards.
(a) Performance lending test criteria.
The FDIC evaluates the record of a small
bank of helping to meet the credit needs
of its assessment area(s) pursuant to the
following criteria:
(1) The bank’s loan-to-deposit ratio,
adjusted for seasonal variation, and, as
appropriate, other lending-related
activities, such as loan originations for
sale to the secondary markets,
community development loans, or
community development investments;
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(2) The percentage of loans and, as
appropriate, other lending-related
activities located in the bank’s
assessment area(s);
(3) The bank’s record of lending to
and, as appropriate, engaging in other
lending-related activities for borrowers
of different income levels and
businesses and farms of different sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the
bank’s loans; and
(5) The bank’s record of taking action,
if warranted, in response to written
complaints about its performance in
helping to meet credit needs in its
assessment area(s).
(b) Small bank performance rating.
The FDIC assesses the performance of a
small bank evaluated under this section
as provided in appendix A of this part.
(ii) The demand for retail loans in
low- or moderate-income census tracts;
and
(iii) Demographic factors (e.g.,
housing costs, unemployment rates
variation);
(3) The bank’s competitive
environment, as demonstrated by peer
performance.
(4) Any written comments about
assessment area needs and
opportunities submitted to the bank or
the FDIC; and
(5) Any other information deemed
relevant by the FDIC.
(c) Form. Banks other than small
banks must submit the information in
paragraph (b) of this section on the
performance context form available on
the FDIC’s website.
§ 345.14 Consideration of performance
context.
§ 345.15 Discriminatory and other illegal
credit practices.
(a) General. Performance context is
used to assess how the factors in
paragraph (b) of this section affect a
bank’s capacity and opportunity to meet
the performance standards described in
§§ 345.12, 345.13, or 345.16. Based on
that assessment, the FDIC may adjust:
(1) The assessment area and banklevel presumptive ratings in § 345.12; or
(2) The small bank lending test and
bank-level ratings as described in
appendix A.
(b) Performance context factors. In
assessing performance context, the FDIC
considers and documents the effect of
the following factors when determining
the assigned rating:
(1) The bank’s explanation of how its
capacity to meet the performance
standards described in §§ 345.12,
345.13, or 345.16 was affected by:
(i) The bank’s product offerings and
business strategy;
(ii) The bank’s unique constraints,
such as its financial condition, safety
and soundness limitations, or other
factors;
(iii) The innovativeness, complexity,
and flexibility of the bank’s qualifying
activities;
(iv) The bank’s development of
business infrastructure and staffing to
support the purpose of this part; and
(v) The responsiveness of the bank’s
qualifying activities to the needs of the
community;
(2) The bank’s explanation of how its
opportunity to engage in qualifying
activities was affected by:
(i) The demand for qualifying
activities, including credit needs and
market opportunities identified in a
Federal Home Loan Bank Targeted
Community Lending Plan provided for
in 12 CFR 1290.6(a)(5), as applicable;
(a) Evidence of discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. A bank’s CRA
performance is adversely affected by
evidence of discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. In assessing a
bank’s CRA performance, the FDIC’s
evaluation will consider evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices including but not limited to:
(1) Discrimination against applicants
on a prohibited basis in violation, for
example, of the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act or the Fair Housing
Act;
(2) Violations of the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act;
(3) Violations of section 5 of the
Federal Trade Commission Act;
(4) Violations of section 8 of the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act;
(5) Violations of the Truth in Lending
Act provisions regarding a consumer’s
right of rescission;
(6) Violations of the Military Lending
Act; and
(7) Violations of the Servicemembers
Civil Relief Act.
(b) Effect of evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices. In determining the effect of
evidence of practices described in
paragraph (a) of this section on the
bank’s assigned rating, the FDIC
considers the nature, extent, and
strength of the evidence of the practices;
the policies and procedures that the
bank has in place to prevent the
practices; any corrective action that the
bank has taken or has committed to
take, including voluntary corrective
action resulting from self-assessment;
and any other relevant information.
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§ 345.16
Strategic plan.
(a) General. The FDIC assesses a
bank’s record of helping to meet the
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credit needs of its assessment area(s)
under a strategic plan if:
(1) The bank has submitted the plan
to the FDIC as provided for in this
section;
(2) The FDIC has approved the plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The bank has been operating under
an approved plan for at least one year.
(b) Plan submission—(1) Required
submission. A bank must submit a
strategic plan that meets the
requirements of this section if the bank:
(i) Would otherwise be evaluated
under § 345.12 and does not maintain
retail domestic deposits on-balance
sheet; or
(ii) Is a small bank that does not
originate retail loans.
(2) Optional submission. A bank not
covered under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section may submit a strategic plan to
the FDIC for approval.
(c) Data reporting. The FDIC’s
approval of a plan does not affect the
bank’s data collection, recordkeeping,
and reporting obligations, if any, in
§§ 345.19, 345.20, 345.22, and 345.23
unless otherwise determined in writing
by the FDIC. The FDIC may require
additional bank-specific data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting under a
strategic plan, as appropriate.
(d) Plans in general—(1) Term. A plan
may have a term of no more than five
years, and any multi-year plan must
include annual interim measurable
goals under which the FDIC evaluates
the bank’s performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank
with more than one assessment area
may prepare a single plan for all of its
assessment areas or separate plans for
one or more of its assessment areas.
(e) Public participation in plan
development. Before submitting a plan
to the FDIC for approval, a bank must:
(1) Solicit public comment on the
plan for at least 30 days by submitting
the plan for publication on the FDIC’s
website and by publishing notice in at
least one newspaper of general
circulation in each assessment area
covered by the plan; and
(2) During the public comment
period, make copies of the plan
available for review by the public and
provide copies of the plan upon request
for a reasonable fee to cover copying,
printing, or mailing, if applicable.
(f) Submission of plan. The bank must
submit its complete plan to the FDIC at
least six months prior to the proposed
effective date of the plan. The bank
must also submit with its plan a
description of any written public
comments received, including how the
plan was revised in light of the
comments received. If the FDIC
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determines the plan is not complete, the
FDIC will notify bank specifying the
information needed, designating a
reasonable period of time for the bank
to provide the information, and
informing the bank that failure to
provide the information requested will
result in no further consideration being
given to the plan.
(g) Plan content—(1) Performance
standards—(i) A plan must specify
measurable goals for helping to meet the
credit needs of the bank’s communities
at the bank level and in each of its
assessment areas, particularly the needs
of low- and moderate-income census
tracts and low- and moderate-income
individuals and families, through
qualifying activities.
(ii) A plan must address the types and
volume of qualifying activities the bank
will conduct. A plan may focus on one
or more types of qualifying activities
considering the bank’s capacity and
constraints, product offerings, and
business strategy.
(2) Assessment area delineation. A
plan must include a delineation of the
bank’s assessment area(s) that meets the
requirements of § 345.08(a)–(d). In
addition, the plan may include
assessment area delineations that reflect
its target geographic market as defined
by the bank in its strategic plan. For a
de novo bank, the assessment area
delineations should include the
projected location of its facilities, retail
domestic deposit base, and lending
activities.
(3) Confidential information. A bank
may submit additional information to
the FDIC on a confidential basis, to the
extent permitted by law, but the goals
stated in the plan must be sufficiently
specific to enable the public and the
FDIC to judge the merits of the plan.
(4) Satisfactory and outstanding
performance standards. A plan must
specify measurable goals that constitute
satisfactory performance. A plan may
specify measurable goals that constitute
outstanding performance. If a bank
submits, and the FDIC approves, both
satisfactory and outstanding
performance goals, the FDIC considers
the bank eligible for an outstanding
performance rating.
(h) Plan approval—(1) Timing. The
FDIC will act upon a plan within 6
months after the FDIC receives the
complete plan and other material
required under paragraph (g) of this
section. If the FDIC does not act within
this time period, the plan will be
deemed approved unless the FDIC
extends the review period for good
cause for no more than 90 days.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating
the plan’s goals, the FDIC considers any
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written public comment on the plan and
any response by the bank to any written
public comment on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating a plan. The
FDIC evaluates a plan’s goals by
considering the extent and breadth of
the qualifying activities including:
(i) Community development loans,
community development investments,
and community development services;
and
(ii) The use of innovative, flexible, or
complex qualifying activities.
(i) Plan amendment. During the term
of a plan, a bank may request the FDIC
to approve an amendment to the plan on
grounds that there has been a material
change in circumstances. The FDIC
reserves the right to require a bank that
requests an amendment to a plan to
comply with the public participation
process described in paragraph (e) of
this section.
§ 345.17
Assigned ratings.
(a) General performance standards—
(1) Bank-level assigned rating. The FDIC
determines the bank-level assigned
rating for a bank evaluated under
§ 345.12 based on its bank-level
presumptive rating under § 345.12,
adjusted for performance context under
§ 345.14, and consideration of
discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices under § 345.15.
(2) Assessment area assigned rating.
The FDIC determines the assessment
area assigned ratings for a bank
evaluated under § 345.12 based on its
assessment area presumptive rating
under § 345.12, adjusted for
performance context under § 345.14 and
consideration of discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices under § 345.15.
(b) Strategic plans assigned rating. A
bank operating under a strategic plan
will receive, as applicable, assessment
area assigned ratings, a bank-level
assigned rating, and state-level and
multistate metropolitan statistical area
assigned ratings of satisfactory or
outstanding if it has met the measurable
goals in the plan that correspond to
those ratings after considering
performance context under § 345.14.
§ 345.18 State/multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating.
For a bank evaluated under § 345.12
with interstate branches, the FDIC will
assign a rating for each state where the
bank has a facility-based assessment
area and each multistate metropolitan
statistical area where the bank has a
main office, branch, or non-branch
deposit-taking facility in two or more
states in the multistate metropolitan
statistical area. The state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area assigned
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rating for that state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area is the
lowest rating assigned to a significant
number of its assessment areas within
that state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area.
Subpart E—Data Collection,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting
§ 345.19 Data collection for banks
evaluated under the general performance
standards in § 345.12 or a strategic plan
under § 345.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 and banks evaluated under a
strategic plan under § 345.16, unless
otherwise determined in writing by the
FDIC, must collect and maintain the
information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. A
bank must collect and maintain the
results of its
(1) Retail lending distribution tests
under § 345.11 for the borrower
distribution and geographic distribution
tests for each major retail lending
product line evaluated in the
assessment area;
(2) Bank-level and each assessmentarea level CRA evaluation measures
calculated under § 345.10; and
(3) Presumptive ratings under
§ 345.12.
(c) Qualifying activities and retail
domestic deposit data required to be
collected and maintained. A bank
subject to this section must collect and
maintain the following data and
supporting documentation for all
qualifying activities and certain nonqualifying activities conducted by the
bank until the completion of its next
CRA evaluation:
(1) Qualifying loan data. For each
qualifying loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric
symbol to identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) Date of
(A) Origination for loans originated by
the bank, if applicable;
(B) Purchase for loans not originated
by the bank, if applicable; and
(C) Sale if the loan is a retail loan and
sold by the bank within 90 days of
origination;
(iv) An indicator of whether the loan
was originated or purchased;
(v) The loan amount at origination or
purchase;
(vi) The outstanding dollar amount of
the loan, as of the close of business on
the last day of the month, for each
month that the loan is on-balance sheet;
(vii) The loan location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract;
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(viii) The income or revenue of the
borrower; and
(ix) The criteria in § 345.04 that the
loan satisfies or that it is on the
illustrative list referenced in § 345.05
and whether it serves a particular
assessment area, if applicable.
(2) Other loan data. A bank must
collect and maintain the following data
and supporting documentation for nonqualifying home mortgage loans and
consumer loans originations by the bank
until the completion of its next CRA
evaluation:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric
symbol to identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) The date of origination;
(iv) The loan amount at origination;
(v) The loan location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract; and
(vi) The income of the borrower.
(3) Number of home mortgage and
consumer loans. For the home mortgage
product line and each consumer loan
product line as defined in § 345.03, for
each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
and
(ii) The number of loans originated to
low- and moderate-income borrowers.
(4) Number of small loans to
businesses. For the small loan to a
business product line, for each county
or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in
low- and moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to
small businesses.
(5) Number of small loans to farms.
For the small loan to a farm product line
for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in
low- and moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to
small farms.
(6) Community development
investment data. For each community
development investment:
(i) A unique number, alpha-numeric
symbol, or another mechanism to
identify the investment;
(ii) Investment type;
(iii) Date of investment by the bank;
(iv) The outstanding dollar value of
the investment, as of the close of
business on the last day of the month,
for each month that the investment is
on-balance sheet;
(v) The value of the monetary
donation, as quantified in § 345.06;
(vi) The value of the in-kind donation,
as quantified in § 345.06;
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(vii) The investment location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract, if applicable; and
(viii) The criteria in § 345.04 that the
investment satisfies or that it is on the
illustrative list referenced in § 345.05
and whether it serves a particular
assessment area, if applicable.
(7) Community development services
data. For each community development
service:
(i) The dollar value of the services, as
quantified in § 345.06;
(ii) A description of the qualifying
activity;
(iii) The date the service was
performed;
(iv) The service location and the
associated FIPS code for the MSA, state,
county or county equivalent, and census
tract, if applicable; and
(v) The qualifying activity criteria in
§ 345.04 that the service satisfies or that
it is on the illustrative list referenced in
§ 345.05.
(8) Retail domestic deposit data. The
value of each retail domestic deposit
account and the physical address of
each depositor as of the close of
business on the last day of each quarter
during the examination period.
(c) Data collection certification. A
bank must collect and maintain a
certification from each party conducting
qualifying activities on behalf of the
bank that the information that the party
provided to the bank as described in
paragraph (a) of this section is true and
correct.
(d) Assessment areas. A bank must
collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation a
list of its assessment area(s) showing
within the assessment area(s) each:
(1) County or county equivalent;
(2) Metropolitan division;
(3) Nonmetropolitan area;
(4) Metropolitan statistical area; or
(5) State.
(e) Bank facilities. A bank must
collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation
information indicating whether each
facility operated by the bank during the
evaluation period was a depository or
non-depository facility.
§ 345.20 Retail domestic deposit data
collection and recordkeeping for small
banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in § 345.13.
Retail domestic deposit data
collection. Small banks must collect and
maintain data on the value of each retail
domestic deposit account and the
physical address of each depositor as of
the close of business on the last day of
each quarter during the examination
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1263
period until the completion of its next
CRA evaluation.
§ 345.21
Activity location.
(a) For the purpose of this part:
(1) A consumer loan is located at the
borrower’s physical address on file with
the bank;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located
at the address of the property to which
the loan relates; and
(3) A business or farm loan is located
at the physical address of the main
business facility or farm or the physical
address where the loan proceeds will be
applied, as indicated by the borrower;
and
(b) For the purpose of this part, the
location of a community development
loan, a community development
investment, or a community
development service is:
(1) The address of a particular project
to the extent a bank can document that
the services or funding it provided was
allocated to that particular project; or
(2) Determined by allocating the
activity across all of a bank’s assessment
areas and other metropolitan statistical
areas or non-metropolitan statistical
areas served by the activity according to
the share of the bank’s deposits in those
areas, treating the bank’s deposits in the
region served by the activity as if they
were all of the bank’s deposits, to the
extent the bank cannot document that
the services or funding it provided was
allocated to a particular project.
§ 345.22
Recordkeeping.
Banks must keep the data collected
under § 345.19 and § 345.20 in machine
readable form (as prescribed by the
FDIC) until the completion of their next
CRA evaluation.
§ 345.23 Reporting for banks evaluated
under the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 or a strategic plan under § 345.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in
§ 345.12 and banks evaluated under a
strategic plan under § 345.16, unless
otherwise determined in writing by the
FDIC, must report the information
required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. On
an annual basis, a bank subject to this
section must report to the FDIC the
information required by § 345.19(b).
(c) Qualifying activities data. On an
annual basis, a bank subject to this
section must report to the FDIC the
following data for all qualifying
activities conducted during the annual
period:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying
retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of
community development loans;
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(3) The quantified value of
community development investments;
and
(4) The quantified value of
community development services.
(d) Data collection certification. A
bank subject to this section must
annually provide to the FDIC any
certification required by § 345.19(d).
(e) Assessment area data. For each
assessment area, a bank subject to this
section must annually report to the
FDIC the information required by
§ 345.19(e).
(f) Retail loans. A bank subject to this
section must annually report to the
FDIC the information required by
§ 345.19(c)(3)–(5) for loans originated
during the annual period.
(g) Retail domestic deposit data. A
bank subject to this section must
annually report its average quarterly
retail domestic deposits as of the close
of business on the last day of each
quarter.
(h) Performance context information.
A bank subject to this section must
report performance context information
on the form required by § 345.14(c).
(i) Form. Banks subject to this section
must use the CRA data reporting form
available on the FDIC’s website to meet
the reporting requirements in this
section.
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§ 345.24
Public disclosures.
(a) Individual CRA Disclosure
Statement. The FDIC prepares annually
a CRA Disclosure Statement for each
bank evaluated under § 345.12 that
contains at the bank level:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying
retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of
community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of
community development investments;
and
(4) The quantified value of
community development services.
(b) Aggregate CRA Disclosure
Statement. The FDIC prepares annually,
for each county, an aggregate CRA
Disclosure Statement of home mortgage,
consumer, small loans to businesses,
and small loans to farms lending by all
banks subject to reporting under this
part. This disclosure statement includes
the following information, at the county
level, from all banks evaluated under
§ 345.12, except that the FDIC may
adjust the form of the disclosure if
necessary, because of special
circumstances, to protect the privacy of
a borrower or bank:
(1) The number of home mortgage
loan originations;
(2) The number of home mortgage
loan originations to low- or moderateincome individuals and families;
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(3) The number of originations for
each consumer loan product line;
(4) The number of originations to lowor moderate-income individuals and
families for each consumer loan product
line;
(5) The number of small loans to
businesses;
(6) The number of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderateincome census tracts;
(7) The number of small loans to
businesses provided to small
businesses;
(8) The number of small loans to
farms;
(9) The number of small loans to
farms in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(10) The number of small loans to
farms provided to small farms;
(c) Availability of CRA disclosure
statements. The FDIC will annually
make publicly available the aggregate
and individual CRA Disclosure
Statements, described in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section.
(d) Availability of ratings. The FDIC
will make available the ratings of all
FDIC-regulated banks and a list of all
banks that achieve an assigned rating of
outstanding. A bank that achieves an
outstanding assigned rating will receive
a certificate or seal of achievement that
may be displayed on its website and in
its main office and branches.
§ 345.25
file.
Content and availability of public
(a) Information available to the
public. A bank must maintain a public
file that includes the following
information:
(1) All written comments received
from the public for the current year and
each of the prior two calendar years that
specifically relate to assessment area
needs and opportunities, and any
response to the comments by the bank,
if neither the comments nor the
responses contain statements that reflect
adversely on the good name or
reputation of any persons other than the
bank or publication of which would
violate specific provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the
bank’s most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation prepared by the FDIC. The
bank must place this copy in the public
file within 30 business days after its
receipt from the FDIC;
(3) A list of the bank’s branches, their
street addresses, and census tracts;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed
by the bank during the current year and
each of the prior two calendar years,
their street addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours
of operation, available loan and deposit
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products, and transaction fees) generally
offered at the bank’s branches and
descriptions of material differences in
the availability or cost of services at
particular branches, if any. At its option,
a bank may include information
regarding the availability of alternative
systems for delivering retail banking
services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned
or operated by or exclusively for the
bank, banking by telephone or
computer, loan production offices, and
bank-at-work or bank-by-mail
programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area
showing the boundaries of the area and
identifying the geographies contained
within the area, either on the map or in
a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the bank
chooses.
(b) Additional information available
to the public—(1) Banks with strategic
plans. A bank that has been approved to
be assessed under a strategic plan must
include in its public file a copy of that
plan. A bank need not include
information submitted to the FDIC on a
confidential basis in conjunction with
the plan.
(2) Banks with less than satisfactory
ratings. A bank that received a less than
satisfactory rating during its most recent
examination must include in its public
file a description of its current efforts to
improve its performance in helping to
meet the credit needs of its entire
community. The bank must update the
description quarterly.
(c) Availability of public information.
A bank must make available to the
public the information required in this
section.
(d) Updating. Except as otherwise
provided in this section, a bank must
ensure that the information required by
this section is current as of April 1 of
each year.
§ 345.26 Availability of planned evaluation
schedule.
The FDIC will make available at least
30 days in advance of the beginning of
each calendar quarter a list of banks
scheduled for CRA evaluations in that
quarter.
§ 345.27
Public notice by banks.
A bank must make available to the
public the notice set forth in Appendix
B of this part. Parenthetical text must be
adjusted by each bank as appropriate.
Bracketed text must be included if
applicable.
Appendix A to Part 345—Small Bank
Ratings
(a) Ratings in general—(1) In assigning a
rating, the FDIC evaluates a small bank’s
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performance under the applicable
performance criteria in § 345.13, adjusting for
performance context in § 345.14 and
consideration of any evidence of
discriminatory and illegal credit practices as
described in § 345.15. This includes
consideration of low-cost education loans
provided to low-income borrowers and
activities in cooperation with minority- or
women-owned financial institutions and
low-income credit unions.
(2) A bank’s performance need not fit each
aspect of a particular rating profile in order
to receive that rating, and exceptionally
strong performance with respect to some
aspects may compensate for weak
performance in others. The bank’s overall
performance, however, must be consistent
with safe and sound banking practices and
generally with the appropriate rating profile
as follows.
(b) Banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards—(1) Lending test
ratings—(i) Eligibility for a satisfactory
lending test rating. The FDIC rates a small
bank’s lending performance ‘‘satisfactory’’ if,
in general, the bank demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio
(considering seasonal variations) given the
bank’s size, financial condition, the credit
needs of its assessment area(s), and taking
into account, as appropriate, other lendingrelated activities such as loan originations for
sale to the secondary markets and
community development loans and
community development investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities,
are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities
for individuals of different income levels
(including low- and moderate-income
individuals) and businesses and farms of
different sizes that is reasonable given the
demographics of the bank’s assessment
area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action,
when warranted, in response to written
complaints, if any, about the bank’s
performance in helping to meet the credit
needs of its assessment area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of
loans given the bank’s assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an ‘‘outstanding’’ lending
test rating. A small bank that meets each of
the standards for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating
under this paragraph and exceeds some or all
of those standards may warrant consideration
for a lending test rating of ‘‘outstanding.’’
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(iii) Needs to improve or substantial
noncompliance ratings. A small bank may
also receive a lending test rating of ‘‘needs to
improve’’ or ‘‘substantial noncompliance’’
depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standard
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating.
(2) Bank-level rating—(i) Eligibility for an
outstanding overall rating. A small bank that
meets each of the standards for a
‘‘satisfactory’’ rating under the lending test
and exceeds some or all of those standards
may warrant consideration for a bank-level
rating of ‘‘outstanding.’’ In assessing whether
a bank’s performance is ‘‘outstanding,’’ the
FDIC considers the extent to which the bank
exceeds each of the performance standards
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating and its
performance in making community
development investments and its
performance in providing branches and other
services and delivery systems that enhance
credit availability in its assessment area(s).
(ii) Needs to improve or substantial
noncompliance overall ratings. A small bank
may also receive a rating of ‘‘needs to
improve’’ or ‘‘substantial noncompliance’’
depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standards
for a ‘‘satisfactory’’ rating.
Appendix B to Part 345—Community
Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) evaluates our
record of helping to meet the credit needs of
this community, consistent with safe and
sound operations. The FDIC also takes this
record into account when deciding on certain
applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information
about our operations and our performance
under the CRA, including, for example,
information about our branches, such as their
location and services provided at them; the
public section of our most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation, prepared by the
FDIC; and comments received from the
public relating to assessment area needs and
opportunities, as well as our responses to
those comments. You may review this
information today by reviewing the public
section of our most recent CRA evaluation,
prepared by the FDIC, which is available at
(web address and/or physical address at
which the public file can be reviewed and
copied).
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1265
You may also have access to the following
additional information, which we will make
available to you after you make a request to
us: (1) A map showing the assessment area
containing a select branch, which is the area
in which the FDIC evaluates our CRA
performance for that particular community;
(2) branch addresses and associated branch
facilities and hours in any assessment area;
(3) a list of services we provide at those
locations; (4) our most recent rating in the
assessment area; and (5) copies of all written
comments received by us that specifically
relate to the needs and opportunities of a
given assessment area, and any responses we
have made to those comments. If we are
operating under an approved strategic plan,
you may also have access to a copy of the
plan.
At least 30 days before the beginning of
each quarter, the FDIC publishes a
nationwide list of the (entity type) that are
scheduled for CRA examination in that
quarter. This list is available from the
Regional Director, FDIC (address). You may
send written comments regarding the needs
and opportunities of any of the (entity type)’s
assessment area(s) to (name, address, and
email address of official at bank) and the
FDIC Regional Director (address and email
address). Your comments, together with any
response by us, will be considered by the
FDIC in evaluating our CRA performance and
may be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments
received by the FDIC Regional Director. You
may also request from the FDIC Regional
Director an announcement of our
applications covered by the CRA filed with
the FDIC. (We are an affiliate of (name of
holding company), a (entity type) holding
company. You may request from the (title of
responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of
ll (address) an announcement of
applications covered by the CRA filed by
(entity type) holding companies.)
Dated: December 12, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on December 12,
2019.
Annmarie H. Boyd,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–27940 Filed 1–8–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6714–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 6 (Thursday, January 9, 2020)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 1204-1265]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-27940]
[[Page 1203]]
Vol. 85
Thursday,
No. 6
January 9, 2020
Part II
Department of the Treasury
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Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
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12 CFR Parts 25 and 195
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
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12 CFR Part 345
Community Reinvestment Act Regulations; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 6 / Thursday, January 9, 2020 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 1204]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Parts 25 and 195
[Docket ID OCC-2018-0008]
RIN 1557-AE34
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 345
RIN 3064-AF22
Community Reinvestment Act Regulations
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Joint notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) propose regulations that
could encourage banks to provide billions more each year in Community
Reinvestment Act-qualified lending, investment, and services by
modernizing the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) regulations to better
achieve the law's underlying statutory purpose of encouraging banks to
serve their communities by making the regulatory framework more
objective, transparent, consistent, and easy to understand. To
accomplish these goals, this proposed rule would strengthen the CRA
regulations by clarifying which activities qualify for CRA credit,
updating where activities count for CRA credit, creating a more
transparent and objective method for measuring CRA performance, and
providing for more transparent, consistent, and timely CRA-related data
collection, recordkeeping, and reporting.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to:
OCC: Commenters are encouraged to submit comments through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal or email, if possible. Please use the title
``Community Reinvestment Act Regulations'' to facilitate the
organization and distribution of the comments. You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta:
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://www.regulations.gov/. Enter
``Docket ID OCC-2018-0008'' in the Search Box and click ``Search.''
Click on ``Comment Now'' to submit public comments. For help with
submitting effective comments please click on ``View Commenter's
Checklist.'' Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page
to get information on using Regulations.gov, including instructions for
submitting public comments.
Regulations.gov Beta: Go to https://beta.regulations.gov/ or click
``Visit New Regulations.gov Site'' from the Regulations.gov Classic
homepage. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2018-0008'' in the Search Box and click
``Search.'' Public comments can be submitted via the ``Comment'' box
below the displayed document information or by clicking on the document
title and then clicking the ``Comment'' box on the top-left side of the
screen. For help with submitting effective comments please click on
``Commenter's Checklist.'' For assistance with the Regulations.gov Beta
site, please call (877) 378-5457 (toll free) or (703) 454-9859 Monday-
Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ET or email [email protected].
Email: [email protected].
Mail: Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: Comment
Processing, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street
SW, Suite 3E-218, Washington, DC 20219.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th Street SW, Suite 3E-218,
Washington, DC 20219.
Fax: (571) 465-4326.
Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and
``Docket ID OCC-2018-0008'' in your comment. In general, the OCC will
enter all comments received into the docket and publish the comments on
the Regulations.gov website without change, including any business or
personal information provided such as name and address information,
email addresses, or phone numbers. Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the public
record and subject to public disclosure. Do not include any information
in your comment or supporting materials that you consider confidential
or inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other related materials that pertain to
this rulemaking action by any of the following methods:
Viewing Comments Electronically--Regulations.gov Classic
or Regulations.gov Beta:
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://www.regulations.gov/. Enter
``Docket ID OCC-2018-0008'' in the Search box and click ``Search.''
Click on ``Open Docket Folder'' on the right side of the screen.
Comments and supporting materials can be viewed and filtered by
clicking on ``View all documents and comments in this docket'' and then
using the filtering tools on the left side of the screen. Click on the
``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page to get information on
using Regulations.gov. The docket may be viewed after the close of the
comment period in the same manner as during the comment period.
Regulations.gov Beta: Go to https://beta.regulations.gov/ or click
``Visit New Regulations.gov Site'' from the Regulations.gov Classic
homepage. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2018-0008'' in the Search Box and click
``Search.'' Click on the ``Comments'' tab. Comments can be viewed and
filtered by clicking on the ``Sort By'' drop-down on the right side of
the screen or the ``Refine Results'' options on the left side of the
screen. Supporting materials can be viewed by clicking on the
``Documents'' tab and filtered by clicking on the ``Sort By'' drop-down
on the right side of the screen or the ``Refine Results'' options on
the left side of the screen.'' For assistance with the Regulations.gov
Beta site, please call (877) 378-5457 (toll free) or (703) 454-9859
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ET or email
[email protected]. The docket may be viewed after the
close of the comment period in the same manner as during the comment
period.
Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect
comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219. For
security reasons, the OCC requires that visitors make an appointment to
inspect comments. You may do so by calling (202) 649-6700 or, for
persons who are deaf or hearing impaired, TTY, (202) 649-5597. Upon
arrival, visitors will be required to present valid government-issued
photo identification and submit to security screening in order to
inspect comments.
FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3064-AF22, by any
of the following methods:
Agency Website: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the Agency website.
Email: [email protected]. Include the RIN 3064-AF22 on the
subject line of the message.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
[[Page 1205]]
Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located on F
Street) on business days between 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
Instructions: All comments received must include the agency name
and RIN 3064-AF22 for this rulemaking. All comments received will be
posted without change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html, including any personal information provided. Paper copies
of public comments may be ordered from the FDIC Public Information
Center, 3501 North Fairfax Drive, Room E-1002, Arlington, VA 22226 by
telephone at (877) 275-3342 or (703) 562-2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Vonda Eanes, Director for CRA and Fair Lending Policy, Bobbie
K. Kennedy, Technical Expert for CRA and Fair Lending, or Karen
Bellesi, Director for Community Development, Bank Supervision Policy,
(202) 649-5470; or Allison Hester-Haddad, Counsel, Emily R. Boyes,
Counsel, or Elizabeth Small, Senior Attorney, Chief Counsel's Office,
(202) 649-5490, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th
Street SW, Washington, DC 20219. For persons who are deaf or hearing
impaired, TTY users may contact (202) 649-5597.
FDIC: Patience R. Singleton, Senior Policy Analyst, Supervisory
Policy Branch, Division of Depositor and Consumer Protection, (202)
898-6859; Cassandra Duhaney, Senior Policy Analyst, Supervisory Policy
Branch, Division of Depositor and Consumer Protection, (202) 898-6804;
Pamela Freeman, Senior Examination Specialist, Examination Branch,
Division of Depositor and Consumer Protection, (202) 898-3656; Jessica
Thurman, Examination Specialist, Examination Branch, Division of
Depositor and Consumer Protection, (202) 898-3578; Richard M. Schwartz,
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-7424; or Sherry Ann Betancourt,
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-6560, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA) encourages insured
depository institutions \1\ (banks) \2\ to help meet the credit needs
of the local communities in which they are chartered, consistent with
banks' safe and sound operations, by requiring federal banking
regulatory agencies to examine banks' records of meeting the credit
needs of their entire community, including low- and moderate-income
(LMI) neighborhoods.\3\ The CRA was one of several laws enacted in the
1960s and 1970s to address fairness and access to housing and credit.
During this period, Congress passed the Fair Housing Act in 1968,\4\ to
prohibit discrimination in renting or buying a home,\5\ and the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act in 1974 \6\ (amended in 1976), to prohibit
creditors from discriminating against an applicant on the basis of
race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, or age.
These fair lending laws provide the legal basis for prohibiting
discriminatory lending practices, such as redlining.\7\
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2).
\2\ As used throughout this notice, the term ``bank'' or
``banks'' also includes uninsured Federal branches that result from
an acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the International
Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
\3\ Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, Public Law 95-128, 91
Stat. 1147 (1977), codified at 12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.
\4\ 42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq.
\5\ 42 U.S.C. 3604-3606.
\6\ 15 U.S.C. 1691 et seq.
\7\ Interagency Fair Lending Examination Procedures, p. iv (Aug.
2009), available at https://www.ffiec.gov/pdf/fairlend.pdf.
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Congress enacted the CRA with the purpose of encouraging sound
lending to all areas of a bank's community. Specifically, in passing
the CRA, Congress found that (1) banks are required by law to
demonstrate that their deposit facilities serve the convenience and
needs of the communities in which they are chartered to do business;
(2) the convenience and needs of communities include the need for
credit services as well as deposit services; and (3) banks have a
continuing and affirmative obligation to help meet the credit needs of
the local communities in which they are chartered.\8\
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\8\ 12 U.S.C. 2901(a).
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The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (together, the agencies) \9\ as
well as the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board)
previously issued regulations to implement the statute.\10\ Since then,
the agencies and the Board have issued, revised, and sought to clarify
the CRA regulations several times. The last major revisions to the
regulations were made in 1995.\11\
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\9\ The OCC is the primary regulator for national banks and
federal savings associations. The FDIC is the primary Federal
regulator for state-chartered non-member banks and savings
associations.
\10\ 12 CFR parts 25, 195, 228, and 345. The Office of Thrift
Supervision and its predecessor agencies were also charged with
implementing the CRA. Its powers and duties with respect to CRA were
transferred to the OCC in Title III of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat.
1376, 1520 (2010).
\11\ The agencies and the Board made additional substantive
changes in 2005; however, those changes were not as transformative
as the 1995 revisions.
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During the past 25 years, technology and the expansion of
interstate banking have transformed the financial services industry,
how banks deliver their services, and how customers choose to bank.
These changes affect banks of all sizes and are most evident in banks
that have a limited physical presence or rely heavily on technology to
deliver their products and services. As banking has evolved, banks'
communities have evolved beyond those that are solely identifiable by
the delineated areas surrounding banks' physical locations.
At the same time, communities' needs for community development (CD)
lending and investment have evolved, and the agencies have gained a
greater understanding of those needs, such as the need for CD
investments and loans with maturities longer than the typical CRA
evaluation period and the need for equity and capital in addition to
credit. The current CRA regulatory framework has not kept pace with the
transformation of banking and has had the unintended consequence of
incentivizing banks to limit some of their CD loans and investments to
shorter terms than otherwise may be best to meet the needs of their
communities.
Over the last decade, stakeholders have called for comprehensive
changes to the CRA regulatory framework to ensure that the CRA remains
a relevant and powerful tool for encouraging banks to serve the needs
of their entire communities, including LMI neighborhoods. In 2014, the
agencies and the Board conducted a decennial review of their
regulations, with input from the public, to identify outdated,
unnecessary, or unduly burdensome regulations and consider how to
reduce regulatory burden on insured depository institutions--while, at
the same time, ensuring the safety and soundness of these institutions
and of the financial system.\12\ In 2017, the agencies and the Board
issued a report to Congress that included a summary of the public
comments and recommendations to improve the CRA regulatory framework
gathered during the three-year review process. Among the most
frequently raised issues were (1) the assessment
[[Page 1206]]
area definition; (2) incentives for banks to serve LMI, unbanked,
underbanked, and rural communities; (3) regulatory burdens associated
with the recordkeeping and reporting requirements and the asset
thresholds for the various CRA examination methods; (4) the need for
clarity regarding performance measures and better training to ensure
consistency and rigor in CRA examinations; and (5) refinement of the
CRA ratings methodology.\13\
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\12\ The review is required by section 2222 of the Economic
Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act of 1996, Public Law
104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, 3311 (1996), codified at 12 U.S.C. 3311
(1996).
\13\ See Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council,
Joint Report to Congress. Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act, pp. 41-48 (March 2017), available at https://www.ffiec.gov/pdf/2017_FFIEC_EGRPRA_Joint-Report_to_Congress.pdf.
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On April 3, 2018, the U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) also released recommendations based on stakeholder input to
modernize the CRA regulations. These recommendations included updating
the definition of assessment areas, increasing the clarity and
transparency of CRA ratings, improving the timeliness of evaluations,
and incorporating more effective incentives to encourage banks to meet
the credit and deposit needs of their communities.\14\
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\14\ See Memorandum from the U.S. Department of the Treasury to
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, Community Reinvestment Act--Findings and
Recommendations (April 3, 2018) available at https://home.treasury.gov/sites/default/files/2018-04/4-3-18%20CRA%20memo.pdf.
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Recognizing the need for modernization, the agencies began to
assess and update the CRA regulatory framework in 2018 by working
together on an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR). The OCC
issued the ANPR in August 2018, which reflected feedback and input from
the FDIC and the Board.\15\ The OCC received more than 1,500 comments
from stakeholders and shared these comments with the FDIC and the
Board. Additionally, the OCC and the Board separately engaged with
stakeholders, including civil rights organizations, community groups,
members of Congress, academics, and banks to obtain their perspectives
and feedback on all aspects of the CRA and potential improvements that
could be made to the regulations. Many of those comments reflected the
opinion that the current CRA regulatory framework lacks objectivity,
transparency, and fairness. Numerous stakeholders also commented that
the framework is applied inconsistently and is hard to understand.
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\15\ See OCC News Release 2018-87 (Aug. 28, 2018); 83 FR 45053
(Sept. 5, 2018).
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The agencies' extensive engagement with stakeholders confirmed that
the CRA remains a powerful tool for promoting community revitalization
and increasing financial activity in neighborhoods across the country.
However, stakeholders observed that the evaluation of banks' CRA-
qualifying lending, investments, and services (collectively, qualifying
activities or CRA activities) under the current CRA regulations--
including what type of activities count, where they count, and how they
count--is inconsistent, opaque, and complex.
In response to this feedback, the agencies propose to strengthen
the CRA regulatory framework to better achieve the underlying statutory
purpose of encouraging banks to help serve their communities by making
the framework more objective, transparent, consistent, and easy to
understand. To accomplish these goals, the proposal would clarify which
activities qualify for CRA credit; update where activities count for
CRA credit; create a more objective method for measuring CRA
performance; and provide for more transparent, consistent, and timely
CRA-related data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting. These
changes would encourage banks to serve their entire communities,
including LMI neighborhoods, more effectively through a clearer set of
CRA activities and would provide clarity for all stakeholders.
The agencies' proposal would establish a regulatory framework with
the goal to encourage banks to conduct more CRA activities and to serve
more of their communities, including those areas with the greatest need
for economic development, investment, and financing needs, such as
urban and rural areas and opportunity zones, that may be underserved by
the current regulations.
II. Background
Prior to drafting this proposal, the agencies invited and
considered input from a wide range of stakeholders, through a variety
of channels. That input included the strengths, weaknesses, and
challenges of the current framework, as well as ideas for, and the
advantages and disadvantages of, alternative frameworks.
In 2018, the OCC held numerous meetings with community groups, non-
profit and civil rights organizations, legislators, regulators,
bankers, and other stakeholders to discuss and solicit input on how to
improve the current framework. During this same period, the Treasury
Department invited a diverse group of stakeholders to provide feedback
on how the CRA regulations could more effectively encourage economic
growth in the communities that banks serve. As discussed above, in
April 2018, the Treasury Department released its findings and
recommendations for how to modernize the CRA regulatory framework,
which are consistent with the four components of modernization outlined
in this proposal.\16\
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\16\ Press Release, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Treasury
Releases Community Reinvestment Act Modernization Recommendations
(April 3, 2018), available at https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm0336.
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In August 2018, the OCC issued an ANPR inviting public input on how
best to improve the CRA regulatory framework to generate more local and
national CD and economic development activities--and thus promote
economic opportunity--by encouraging banks to engage in more lending,
investments, and services that benefit targeted populations (such as
LMI individuals, small farms, and small businesses) and areas in need
of financial services (including LMI communities, rural and urban
areas, and areas targeted by a Federal, state, local, or tribal
government for development). The ANPR sought comment on (1) clarifying,
expanding, and listing the types of activities that qualify for CRA
credit; (2) revisiting how to delineate the areas in which qualifying
activities receive credit; (3) establishing objective ways to evaluate
CRA performance; (4) improving the timeliness of regulatory decisions
related to the CRA; and (5) reducing the cost and burden, and improving
the timely completion, of CRA evaluations.
During the summer of 2019, the OCC engaged in nationwide outreach
with community advocates, CD professionals, civil rights organizations,
and bankers to discuss opportunities to bring more CRA investment,
lending, and services to underserved areas. This outreach included
visits to rural and urban areas and Indian country. The tours provided
opportunities for the agency's senior leadership to hear CRA success
stories and how the agencies could help CRA work better for everyone.
While these conversations confirmed that CRA has been a force for good
for the past 40 years, they also highlighted the need to strengthen the
regulatory framework to encourage greater CRA activity and to more
effectively reach underserved communities.
The most consistent feedback that the agencies and the Treasury
Department have received in response to their outreach efforts is that
the current CRA
[[Page 1207]]
framework has not kept pace with changes in banking or technology and
that the CRA regulations and guidance have become cumbersome, outdated,
and complex. Moreover, stakeholders conveyed that the lack of clarity
and transparency of the current framework has restricted lending and
investments in communities across America. For example, stakeholders
expressed concern and frustration that under the current system:
Ambiguity over what types of activities qualify for CRA
consideration discourages certain types of CRA activity in high-need
areas;
``CD'' and ``economic development'' are narrowly defined,
and the current definitions provide little incentive for banks to
engage in many of the loan products, investments, and services that
could help their communities;
Assessment areas that are only delineated around banks'
physical locations result in geographies where banks do not engage in
or engage in only limited CRA activities (CRA deserts) and fail to
incentivize CRA activity in many rural areas;
Assessment areas have not kept pace with how consumers
bank and how banking services are delivered today;
Performance evaluations and ratings are subjective and
inconsistent; and
Publication of a bank's CRA performance evaluation,
following its CRA evaluation, is often delayed, which can result in a
significant gap between publication of consecutive evaluations.
The feedback also provided valuable insight from stakeholders and
revealed broad support for modernizing the CRA regulations by
clarifying what type of activities count, updating where CRA activities
count, making performance evaluations more objective, and improving
reporting.\17\ For example, of those ANPR commenters who addressed the
issues below:
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\17\ For example, comments on the ANPR came from a variety of
stakeholders, including banks and banking industry trade
associations; community, civil rights, and advocacy groups and
community trade associations; CD funds and organizations; academia;
CRA consultants; governmental entities; and the general public. The
OCC also met with commenters to discuss issues related to the ANPR.
Summaries of these meetings, as well as all comments received on the
ANPR, are available at https://www.regulations.gov/docket?D=OCC-2018-0008.
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The vast majority do not think the current framework is
objective, fair, or transparent;
The vast majority think the current framework is applied
inconsistently;
The vast majority say the current framework is hard to
understand;
The vast majority support publishing a list of eligible
activities;
The majority support objective measurement of CRA
performance, although they oppose a single metric;
Many support retaining performance context; and
The majority support expanding assessment areas.
As discussed below, the changes outlined in this proposal focus on many
of these stakeholders' concerns with the current framework. The
proposed rule is designed to achieve the following positive outcomes
desired by many stakeholders:
Create incentives to do more--By establishing clear
benchmarks based on historical performance, the proposed rule would
allow regulators to set benchmarks at levels high enough to increase
the level of qualifying lending, investment, and services and adjust
those benchmarks on a periodic basis.
Reduce CRA deserts--By clarifying how banks can achieve a
satisfactory or an outstanding in their assessment areas and expanding
when banks can receive credit beyond the immediate areas surrounding
bank branches, the new rule would incent greater CRA activity in areas
currently in need of financial resources, including rural areas, areas
identified for aid, distressed areas, and Indian country.
Limit CRA hotspots--By clarifying and expanding when banks
can receive credit beyond the immediate areas surrounding bank
branches, the proposed rule would relieve pressure in overheated
markets where banks are already meeting community needs.
Reduce activity uncertainty--By providing clear standards
and an illustrative list of qualifying activities, the proposed rule
would reduce uncertainty regarding what counts for CRA credit and give
banks and stakeholders greater ability to plan reinvestment activities
without the risk of activities not receiving credit. The rule would
also provide processes for confirming an activity would receive CRA
credit.
Reduce delays in Performance Evaluation (PE) publication--
By making the evaluation of CRA performance more objective and
improving reporting, the revised rule would reduce the time required to
conduct CRA evaluations and produce PEs, improving transparency and
increasing regulatory efficiency.
Improve the quality of PEs--By making evaluation of CRA
performance more objective and standardized, the proposed rule would
help make PEs more useful, comparable across banks, and meaningful for
stakeholders.
Increase small business lending--By increasing the loan
size for small loans to business, which was last updated 25 years ago,
and increasing the revenue size threshold for small businesses, the
proposed rule would encourage economic development and job creation.
Increase small farm lending--By increasing the loan size
for small loans to farms, which was last updated 25 years ago, and
increasing the revenue size threshold for small farms, the proposed
rule would encourage economic development and job creation and help the
U.S. agricultural industry survive.
Promote capital and investment in Indian country--By
providing credit for retail and community development activities in
Indian country, the proposed rule would help incent more investment and
lending in Indian country. This would help fight persistent poverty and
support basic infrastructure and needs such as housing, technology, and
healthcare.
Encourage long-term commitment to community reinvestment--
By refocusing on ongoing commitment to lending and investment through
evaluating on-balance sheet activities, the proposed rule would reduce
the current churn and short-term focus of CRA activities, providing
banks more incentive to engage in long-term investments and loans,
which would, in turn, provide community developers and advocates
greater stability and more incentive to engage in longer term strategic
initiatives.
Reduce displacement by refocusing on LMI individuals and
activities--By emphasizing lending and services provided to or
benefiting LMI individuals, the proposed rule would avoid giving credit
for activities that may contribute to displacement.
Preserve the importance of branches--By requiring banks to
designate assessment areas surrounding branches, headquarters, and
deposit taking ATMs and including a measure of a bank's distribution of
branches when assessing the impact of CRA activities, the proposed rule
would maintain the importance of branches in assessing a bank's record
of serving its communities.
Preserve community voices--By retaining performance
context and a means for community stakeholders to share comments and
concerns with examiners about assessment area needs and opportunities,
the proposed rule would preserve community voices and help encourage
banks to meet the needs of their entire communities, including LMI
neighborhoods.
[[Page 1208]]
Reduce inconsistent application of the rule--By clarifying
what counts and increasing the objectivity of CRA performance
evaluations, the proposed rule would make performance evaluations more
consistent over time and across regions.
Provide greater flexibility for community banks--The
proposed rule also would provide an opt in for small banks with assets
of $500 million or less to allow the bank to determine whether to be
evaluated under existing performance standards or the revised framework
based on their unique business models.
III. Overview of Proposed Rule
The proposed rule builds upon the outreach efforts that have been
underway for several years and reflects the agencies' collaborative
process to find solutions to mutually recognized problems. To improve
the current CRA regulatory framework and promote increased lending and
investment consistent with stakeholder feedback, the agencies propose
to make changes in four key areas: (1) Clarifying and expanding what
qualifies for CRA credit; (2) expanding where CRA activity counts; (3)
providing an objective method to measure CRA activity; and (4) revising
data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting. The following sections
provide a brief overview of the proposal's significant changes in those
areas.
A. Clarifying and Expanding What Qualifies for CRA Credit
The proposal would (1) establish clear criteria for the type of
activities that qualify for CRA credit, which generally would include
activities that currently qualify for CRA credit and other activities
that are consistent with the purpose of CRA but may not qualify under
the current CRA framework; (2) require the agencies to publish
periodically a non-exhaustive, illustrative list of examples of
qualifying activities; and (3) establish a process for banks to seek
agency confirmation that an activity is a qualifying activity.\18\
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\18\ As discussed below, the agencies are proposing to retain
for certain banks the small bank performance standards applicable to
small banks that are not intermediate small banks in the current
regulations. 12 CFR 25.26, 195.26; 345.26. The agencies intend for
these standards to be applied consistent with the current
regulations except as discussed in this notice of proposed
rulemaking.
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These changes would address current impediments to engaging in CRA
activities and provide banks with greater certainty and predictability
regarding whether certain activities qualify for CRA credit.
Specifically, by providing banks with greater confidence that
activities qualify for CRA credit before they invest time and resources
in those activities, the proposed rule would incentivize banks to more
readily engage in innovative projects that have a significant impact on
the community. Moreover, by allowing stakeholders to confirm that
activities qualify, the proposal would eliminate the uncertainty in the
current regulations that potentially limited the scope and type of
banks' CRA activities that will benefit banks' communities,
particularly LMI individuals and areas.
In addition to providing transparency, the proposed qualifying
activities criteria would expand the types of activities that qualify
for CRA credit to recognize that some banks are currently serving
community needs in a manner that is consistent with the statutory
purpose of CRA but are not receiving CRA credit for those activities.
This expansion would ensure that banks help meet the needs of their
entire communities, particularly LMI neighborhoods and other areas and
populations of need. The expanded qualifying activities criteria would
focus on economically disadvantaged individuals and areas in banks'
communities. For example, the proposed qualifying activities criteria
would expand the activities that qualify in areas that have
traditionally lacked sufficient access to financial services, such as
(1) distressed areas; (2) underserved areas, including areas where
there is a great need for banking activities but few banks that engage
in activities (known as banking deserts); and (3) Indian country.
Moreover, to maintain a focus on LMI individuals, the proposal would,
for example, no longer permit a mortgage loan to a high-income
individual living in a low-income census tract to qualify for CRA
credit.
B. Expanding Where CRA Activity Counts
The proposal would preserve assessment areas surrounding banks'
facilities and expand where CRA activity counts to help banks meet the
needs of their communities. To ensure that CRA activity continues to
have a local community focus where banks maintain a physical presence
and conduct a substantial portion of their lending activity, banks
would still be required to delineate assessment areas around their main
office, branches, or non-branch deposit-taking facilities as well as
the surrounding areas where banks have originated or purchased a
substantial portion of their loans. These areas would be identified as
``facility-based'' assessment areas. In addition, to recognize the
evolution of modern banking (including the emergence of internet
banks), the fact that many banks receive large portions of their
deposits from outside their facilities-based assessment areas, and in
conformity with the CRA's intent to ensure that banks help meet credit
needs where they collect deposits,\19\ the proposed rule would require
banks to delineate additional, non-overlapping ``deposit-based''
assessment areas where they have significant concentrations of retail
domestic deposits. Specifically, a bank that receives 50 percent or
more of its retail domestic deposits from geographic areas outside of
its facility-based assessment areas would be required to delineate
deposit-based assessment areas where it receives five percent or more
of its total retail domestic deposits, based on the physical addresses
of its depositors.
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\19\ See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977) (statement of Sen.
William Proxmire, Chairman, S. Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs).
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Banks would receive CRA credit for qualifying activities conducted
in their facility-based assessment areas and deposit-based assessment
areas at the assessment area level and at the bank level, consistent
with the applicable performance standards discussed below. In addition,
the proposal would permit banks to receive CRA credit for qualifying
activities conducted outside of their assessment areas at the bank
level. Under this approach, banks would still be encouraged to meet
local community needs where they have branches and depositors but would
be given flexibility to serve other communities with distinct needs as
these activities would be considered when calculating the overall
dollar value of their qualifying activities under the proposed rule.
This flexible framework could reduce the number of areas where there
are more banks that want to engage in CD activities than there is need
for those activities (known as CD hot spots) and areas where there is a
great need for CD activities but few banks that engage in those
activities (known as CD deserts).
C. Providing an Objective Method To Measure CRA Activity
Consistent with the current CRA framework, the proposed rule would
include different performance standards applicable to banks of
different sizes. Small banks, as defined under the proposed rule, would
continue to be evaluated under the small bank performance standards
currently applicable to small banks that are not
[[Page 1209]]
intermediate small banks.\20\ The proposed rule also would establish
new general performance standards to evaluate other banks' CRA
activities and the CRA activities of small banks that opt into these
standards.
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\20\ The proposed rule would define a small bank as a bank that
had assets of $500 million or less in each of the previous four
calendar quarters.
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The new general performance standards would assess two fundamental
components of a bank's CRA performance: (1) The distribution (i.e.,
number) of qualifying retail loans to LMI individuals, small farms,
small businesses, and LMI geographies and (2) the impact of a bank's
qualifying activities, measured by the value of a bank's qualifying
activities relative to its retail domestic deposits. Both components
would be compared to specific benchmarks and thresholds that would be
established prior to the beginning of a bank's evaluation period. Banks
evaluated under the general performance standards would also be
required to meet a minimum CD lending and investment requirement in
each assessment area and at the bank level to achieve a satisfactory or
outstanding rating.
The distribution component builds on ideas shared with the agencies
by the Board that provide a quantifiable method to assess what portion
of a bank's major retail lending activities are targeted to LMI
individuals or in LMI areas. The impact component responds to
stakeholder comments about the need for more lending and investment in
areas served by CRA and provides a transparent means of evaluating
those activities and setting benchmarks sufficiently high enough to
incent more CRA activities.
By providing a transparent and objective way to evaluate a bank's
CRA performance that banks would either be subject to or may opt into,
the proposed rule would incentivize banks to engage in qualifying
activities in their assessment areas and other communities with
identified needs, such as distressed and underserved areas, including
rural and urban areas and Indian country. Moreover, greater certainty
about how engaging in specific qualifying activities would affect bank-
level ratings would enable banks and other stakeholders to monitor CRA
performance on an ongoing basis. It would also enable banks to target
areas of need within their communities, potentially engage in more
qualifying activities, and provide a positive benefit to more
communities.
In addition, the proposal would preserve and standardize
consideration of performance context, which would allow the agencies to
recognize and account for specific facts and circumstances relating to
a bank's CRA capacity and opportunities in a transparent manner.
Finally, the proposed regulations would include a strategic plan
option for all banks. This option would address the unique needs of
banks with business models that could not be effectively evaluated
under the proposed objective framework reflected in the general
performance standards or the small bank performance standards, such as
banks that do not have retail domestic deposits or small banks that do
not originate retail loans. Taken together, these features would
appropriately differentiate banks based on their size, location, and
business model.
D. Revising Data Collection, Recordkeeping, and Reporting
The proposal would require banks evaluated under the small bank
performance standards to collect and maintain, but not to report, data
related to their retail domestic deposits so that the agencies could
validate their deposit-based assessment area delineations, as
applicable. Banks evaluated under the general performance standards
would be required to collect, maintain, and report certain data related
to their qualifying activities, certain non-qualifying activities,
retail domestic deposits, and assessment areas. Those banks would also
be required to use that information to make the calculations necessary
to determine their ratings, based on the application of the performance
standards in the proposal. Prior to a CRA performance evaluation, the
evaluating agency would validate the data used in determining a bank's
ratings. The agencies would provide additional guidance on the data
that banks need to collect and maintain under the proposed rule that
would standardize the information collected and help banks ensure that
they meet the requirements of the rule.
The agencies believe that access to the standardized information
required by the proposed rule would help them to better measure,
assess, and understand CRA activity across various areas and across the
industry and over time. The proposal's requirements also would provide
the agencies with a better, more comprehensive understanding of an
individual bank's CRA activity. In addition, industry-wide reporting
would enable more effective stakeholder dialogue regarding the
distribution and volume of CRA activity. The agencies expect that these
changes would result in timelier and more efficient CRA evaluations,
which, among other things, would bring greater predictability to agency
actions that consider CRA performance. Moreover, the use of the
objective measures described above would allow performance evaluations
to be written in standardized forms and captured in shorter narratives,
which would contribute to more timely and useful public reporting.
IV. Section-by-Section Discussion
A. Qualifying Activities
Overview. Under the current regulatory framework, only certain--and
relatively few--bank activities qualify for consideration in CRA
performance evaluations. Whether a bank's activities qualify for
consideration generally depends not only on the characteristics of the
activities but also on where the activities took place. As a general
matter, the types of activities that currently qualify for CRA
consideration fall into two categories: (1) Retail banking activities
and (2) CD activities.
Under the current framework, retail banking activities generally
include (1) retail loans (i.e., home mortgage loans, small business
loans, small farm loans, and consumer loans) and (2) retail banking
services (i.e., the range of retail deposit services and credit
services, branch distributions, the record of branch openings and
closings, and the availability and the effectiveness of alternative
delivery systems serving LMI individuals and areas). For retail
lending, loan originations and purchases are considered. CD activities
generally include those that finance or support (1) affordable housing
for LMI individuals; (2) economic development by financing small
businesses or small farms; (3) community services for LMI individuals;
and (4) the revitalization or stabilization of LMI census tracts,
distressed nonmetropolitan middle-income census tracts, underserved
nonmetropolitan middle-income census tracts, and designated disaster
areas. For CD activities, activities conducted or originated during the
current evaluation period are considered. For CD investments, prior
period outstanding investments are also considered. Banks also have the
option of receiving consideration for retail and CD activities
conducted by an affiliate, third party, or consortium. In evaluating a
bank's CRA performance, the agencies assess certain factors including
(1) the level of relevant retail lending activity and the geographic
and borrower distribution of that retail lending activity and (2) the
level, responsiveness, innovativeness, complexity, and flexibility of
CD activities.
[[Page 1210]]
The feedback that the agencies received on the current framework
demonstrates that banks often are uncertain about whether a CD activity
will qualify for CRA consideration until their supervisory agency makes
a determination in a CRA evaluation, often years after the banks
engaged in the activities. Feedback also revealed that many banks and
other stakeholders view the process by which the agencies decide
whether a CD activity qualifies for CRA credit as opaque and
inconsistent from evaluation-to-evaluation, agency-to-agency, and year-
to-year. In addition, stakeholders expressed that the current
definition of CD can be limiting and does not capture many activities
that respond to community needs, including the needs of LMI individuals
and neighborhoods. These concerns create a disincentive for banks to
undertake certain activities or explore new and potentially beneficial
activities, even when these activities would serve the needs of LMI
populations and other communities with needs. The agencies propose to
address these issues in four ways.
Qualifying activities criteria. First, the proposal would clarify
the activities that qualify for CRA credit. The clarifying criteria
would generally apply to all banks subject to the agencies' CRA
regulations. Consistent with the intent of the CRA statute, the
proposed rule would define a ``qualifying activity'' as an activity
that helps meet the credit needs of a bank's community, particularly
those individuals, areas, and populations with needs. The proposal
would also provide clearly defined qualifying activities criteria that
identify the types of activities that meet the credit needs of banks'
communities and, thus, would be considered qualifying activities. These
criteria would both encompass the many activities that currently
qualify for CRA consideration and include additional activities that
meet the credit needs of economically disadvantaged individuals and
areas in banks' communities.
Under the proposal, the qualifying activities criteria would
include activities conducted by a bank. The agencies recognize that
there are limited instances where the bank is substantively engaged in
an activity, but the activity is done in the name of another party,
such as an affiliate. In these situations, the bank provides the
economic resources, and the agencies' current practice is to recognize
these activities as being conducted by the bank, at the bank's option.
Under the proposed rule, the agency would recognize activities
substantively conducted by the bank. The proposed qualify activity
criteria would be:
A retail loan (defined to include home mortgage loans,
small loans to businesses, small loans to farms, and consumer loans
\21\) provided to:
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\21\ Under the proposal, a ``consumer loan'' would be defined
with reference to the Call Report and would include credit cards,
other revolving credit plans, automobile loans, and other consumer
loans.
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[cir] An LMI individual;
[cir] A small business; or
[cir] A small farm;
A retail loan provided in Indian country.
A retail loan that is a small loan to a business or a
small loan to a farm located in a low- or moderate-income census tract.
A CD activity that provides financing for or supports:
[cir] Affordable housing that partially or primarily benefits \22\
LMI individuals or families or middle-income individuals or families in
high-cost areas;
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\22\ Under the proposal, a bank would receive credit for the
full dollar value of certain CD activities that primarily benefit a
specified population or area. For those CD activities that only
partially benefit a specified population or area, a bank would
receive pro-rata credit for the dollar value of the activity equal
to the portion that benefited the specified population or area.
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[cir] Another bank's CD loan, CD investment, or CD service;
[cir] Community support services that partially or primarily serve
LMI individuals or families;
[cir] Essential community facilities that partially or primarily
benefit or serve LMI individuals or areas of identified need;
[cir] Essential infrastructure that benefits or serves LMI
individuals or areas of identified need;
[cir] Family farms;
[cir] Government programs, projects, or initiatives that partially
or primarily benefit LMI individuals (e.g., a program that supports
urban renewal), small businesses, small farms, and areas of identified
need;
[cir] Financial literacy programs or education or homebuyer
counseling;
[cir] Owner-occupied and rental housing development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or maintenance in Indian country;
[cir] Qualified opportunity funds that benefit LMI opportunity
zones;
[cir] A Small Business Administration Certified Development Company
(SBDC), Small Business Investment Company (SBIC), New Markets Venture
Capital company, qualified Community Development Entity, or U.S.
Department of Agriculture Rural Business Investment Company (RBIC);
[cir] Technical assistance and supportive services for small
businesses or small farms; or
[cir] A capital investment, loan participation, or other venture
undertaken by a bank in cooperation with a minority depository
institution, women's depository institution, CDFI, or low-income credit
union that helps to meet the credit needs of the institution's or
credit union's local communities, including through activities that
indirectly help to meet community credit needs by promoting the
institution's or credit union's sustainability and profitability.\23\
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\23\ For example, a cooperative venture would include donating,
selling on favorable terms, or making available on a rent-free basis
a branch of a bank that is in a primarily minority census tract to a
minority depository institution or women's depository institution. A
cooperative venture would also include a bank that is not a minority
depository institution, women's depository institution, CDFI, or
low-income credit union making a deposit at one of these types of
institutions.
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Regarding CD activities, the phrase ``provides financing for or
supports'' would be interpreted broadly to include all lending,
investment, and service activities that are related to the CD
qualifying activities criteria. For example, activities that finance
the development, rehabilitation, improvement, or maintenance of
affordable housing or essential community facilities, such as a public
hospital that serves the entire community including the community's LMI
residents, would be qualifying activities because the activities
provide financing for or support the housing or hospital. The
rehabilitation, improvement, or construction of affordable housing,
essential community facilities, or essential infrastructure may include
(1) renewable energy, energy-efficiency, or water conservation
equipment or projects associated with affordable housing, essential
community facilities, or essential infrastructure or (2) the abatement
or remediation of, or other actions to correct, environmental hazards,
such as lead-based paint, lead pipes (such as those used in antiquated
water supply systems), asbestos, mold, or radon that is present in the
housing, facilities, or site where the housing or facilities are
located. An activity that meets more than one of the criteria would be
treated as a single qualifying activity.
Scope of qualifying activities. Second, the proposed criteria would
expand the scope of the activities that qualify for CRA credit. This
expansion is intended to recognize the many ways banks may meet the
credit needs of their communities, particularly LMI communities,
through activities that are consistent with the statutory purpose of
the CRA. Under the proposal,
[[Page 1211]]
expansions to the retail lending criteria would include:
Home mortgage loans and consumer loans provided in Indian
country. The agencies received feedback from commenters on the ANPR and
during outreach that emphasized the lack of access to cost-effective
capital and banking services in Indian country. Providing CRA credit
for home mortgage loans and consumer loans in Indian country helps to
address these critical needs.
Small loans to businesses and small loans to farms
provided to (1) small businesses or small farms in census tracts of all
income levels or (2) businesses or farms in LMI census tracts. The
proposal would increase the size thresholds for a small loan to a
business and a small loan to a farm to $2 million or less. Consistent
with the current regulations' definitions of small business loan and
small farm loan, the proposed definitions are based on the size of the
loan to the business or farm. Loans of $2 million or less to a business
or farm would be considered qualifying activities if they (1) are
provided to small businesses or small farms or (2) are located in LMI
census tracts. The increase would, in part, account for inflation since
the $1 million loan limit for loans to small businesses and $500,000
for loans to small farms were established in 1995. The proposal would
include a provision for adjusting these loan limits for inflation going
forward.
The proposal would define home mortgage loans with reference to the
Call Report instead of the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA). As a
result of this revision, construction loans for 1-4 family residential
properties would be included as home mortgage loans. Consumer loans
would also be defined with reference to the Call Report and included in
all CRA evaluations. In addition, the small business and small farm
revenue thresholds would be increased to $2 million in part to account
for inflation since the revenue size limits were established. As with
the size thresholds for a small loan to a business and a small loan to
a farm, the proposal would include a provision for adjusting the
revenue limits for inflation going forward.
Under the proposal, expansions to qualifying CD activities would
include:
Expanding the affordable housing criterion by clarifying
that it:
[cir] Encompasses ``naturally occurring affordable housing'' (e.g.,
unsubsidized rental housing with rents that are affordable to LMI
individuals and families). The current regulations could be interpreted
to provide consideration these types of activities; however, the
regulations do not expressly include these activities as qualifying CD
activities and the CRA guidance is not sufficiently clear about whether
they receive CRA credit. The proposal would clarify the criteria to
incentivize banks to meet the affordable housing needs of their
communities through a variety of activities; and
[cir] Includes rental housing for low-, moderate-, and middle-
income individuals in high-cost areas. The Interagency Questions and
Answers Regarding Community Reinvestment (Interagency Questions &
Answers) \24\ explain that examiners can account for conditions in
high-cost areas in banks' CRA evaluations. The proposal would clarify
the criteria to incentivize banks to meet the affordable housing needs
of their communities through a variety of activities including
workforce housing that would allow public employees, such as teachers,
police officers, and firefighters, to live close to the communities
they serve.
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\24\ The agencies have published the Interagency Questions and
Answers Regarding Community Reinvestment in the Federal Register. 81
FR 48506 (July 25, 2016).
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Adding a criterion for activities that help finance or
support another bank's CD loans, CD investments, or CD services.
Including this criterion and expanding the definition of CD loan and
investments to include certain commitments to lend and invest,
discussed below, would address the fact that community banks understand
community needs best but often are unable to provide the necessary
funding or service alone. In these cases, large banks may finance the
project, benefitting from community banks' efforts to identify areas of
need. This criterion would address stakeholders' recommendations that
the CRA regulatory framework do more to encourage inter-bank
collaboration and allow community banks to remain involved in projects
that they identified and enabled.
Adding a criterion for essential community facilities,
such as schools and hospitals, that benefit or serve LMI individuals,
LMI census tracts, or other targeted areas of need, such as distressed
areas or Indian country. Under the current regulation, the Interagency
Questions & Answers regarding activities that revitalize or stabilize
underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income census tracts reference
essential community needs, which include certain essential community
facilities or infrastructure projects; however, activities that finance
or support these projects may also meet other CD definitions. By adding
a criterion for essential community facilities, the proposal would also
clarify when these activities receive credit and incentivize banks'
lending and investment activities related to these facilities.
Adding a criterion for essential infrastructure, such as
roads, mass transit, or water supply and distribution, that benefits or
serves LMI individuals, LMI census tracts, or other targeted areas,
such as Indian country. As discussed above, certain essential
infrastructure projects may receive credit under the current CRA
regulations as CD activities. The addition of the essential
infrastructure criterion would acknowledge the importance of these
types of projects to communities by ensuring that essential
infrastructure activities receive CRA credit if they include some
benefit for LMI individuals, LMI census tracts, or other areas of need
(e.g., an investment in a mass transit project that serves the public,
including LMI individuals, would be a qualifying activity).\25\ The
addition also would recognize that essential infrastructure projects
are often community-wide projects for which it is not feasible to
allocate the benefit to specific populations or areas.
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\25\ In contrast, a loan supporting the infrastructure necessary
to connect an upper-income housing development to a water main line
would not meet this criterion, if there were no LMI residents in the
development.
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Adding a criterion for federal, state, local, or tribal
government programs, projects, or initiatives that partially or
primarily benefit LMI individuals, small businesses, small farms, LMI
census tracts, or other targeted areas of need, such as distressed or
underserved areas. Although many programs, projects, or initiatives
covered by this criterion would qualify under the current CD
definitions, this new criterion would ensure that all activities that
meet this definition receive CRA credit. As previously indicated, the
agencies believe that, in many circumstances, communities are in the
best position to identify their needs and design projects, programs,
and initiatives that help to address those needs. This criterion would
ensure that activities related to both existing and future programs
that benefit certain populations and areas of need will receive CRA
credit, even if the activities do not meet one of the other CD
criteria, such as affordable housing. Including this criterion would
reduce the circumstances in which sections or subsections of the
regulations become obsolete due to the inclusion of specific
[[Page 1212]]
programs that expire or are repealed. For example, the CD definition in
the CRA regulations previously included qualifying Neighborhood
Stabilization Program (NSP)-related activities that benefit low-,
moderate-, and middle-income individuals and geographies in NSP-target
areas. These references have since been removed because, after March
2016, NSP-eligible activities no longer received consideration as CD
activities under the CRA.
Adding a criterion for family farm purchases or leases of
farm land, equipment, and other inputs or the sale and trade of family
farm products, as well as for technical assistance and supportive
services. The agencies believe that this criterion would benefit
communities that banks serve because a healthy farm economy supports
many rural and regional economies.
Adding a criterion for financial literacy programs or
education or homebuyer counseling that benefits individuals of all
income levels. The agencies believe that financial literacy is an
important issue irrespective of income level. Moreover, some
stakeholders expressed support for providing CRA credit for financial
literacy programs for all individuals. These stakeholders cited high
levels of student and credit card debt and a lack of retirement and
other savings as reasons for providing broader consideration of
financial literacy-related activities.
Adding a criterion for owner-occupied and rental housing
development, construction, rehabilitation, improvement, or maintenance
in Indian country. This criterion would address concerns expressed by
stakeholders about the significant housing needs in Indian country that
affect individuals of all income levels.
Adding a criterion for qualified opportunity funds, as
defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-2(d)(1), that benefit qualified opportunity
zones in LMI tracts, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-1(a). This criterion
would incentivize banks to help meet the needs of LMI individuals and
tracts located in opportunity zones, which are communities the federal
government has identified as needing economic development and job
creation.
Adding CDFIs to the criterion for ventures undertaken by a
bank in cooperation with a minority depository institution, women's
depository institution, or low-income credit union. The proposal would
include CDFIs in this criterion to recognize that the goal of these
institutions is to expand economic opportunities in low-income
communities by providing access to financial products and services for
local residents and businesses.
In addition to these expansions, the affordable housing criterion
would include activities that finance or support owner-occupied housing
purchased, refinanced, or improved by LMI individuals or families,
except for home mortgage loans provided directly to LMI individuals or
families. This aspect of the criterion would encompass, for example, an
investment provided to a non-profit that constructs or rehabilitates
affordable housing for purchase by LMI individuals. In addition, this
aspect of the criterion would capture mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
while excluding retail home mortgage loans. Although these activities
receive credit under the current regulation, this aspect of the
criterion would ensure that they continue to receive credit under the
more detailed qualifying activities criteria in the proposal.
Furthermore, the proposal would clarify and expand the type of
activities that qualify for CRA credit through revisions to the
definitions used in the qualifying activities criteria. The proposal
would revise the definitions of CD loans and CD investments \26\ to
include commitments to lend and invest, respectively, that are reported
on the Call Report, Schedule RC-L, and meet the CD activities
criteria.\27\
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\26\ The proposal would replace the term ``qualified
investment'' in the current regulation with the term ``CD
investment.''
\27\ The Call Report, Schedule RC-L, covers contingent and
legally binding commitments to lend and invest, respectively.
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Loan participations that have a primary purpose of CD currently
qualify and would continue to qualify. To further support collaboration
between large banks and community banks, the proposal would provide
credit for a bank's allowance for credit losses that are reported on
the Call Report, Schedule RC-G, if the bank commits to provide
additional funding as required in certain contingencies. For example, a
large bank would receive credit if it committed to financing potential
cost overruns, the threat of which could cause the community bank to
avoid the project entirely.\28\ Similarly, a project may require a bank
to commit funds in advance but because banks face investment
limitations,\29\ advance commitments, though often necessary to a
project, can be restrictive, particularly for community banks. The
proposal would provide credit for the dollar value of legally-binding
commitments to invest that meet the CD criteria.
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\28\ Banks would continue to receive CRA credit for the funded
portions of lines of credit but generally would not receive CRA
credit for other legally-binding commitments to lend, such as
revolving credit lines and letters of credit.
\29\ See, e.g., 12 CFR part 24.
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The proposal also would revise the definitions of distressed
nonmetropolitan middle-income area and underserved nonmetropolitan
middle-income area to include additional census tracts where there are
unmet financial needs. Specifically, the requirement that a distressed
area be a nonmetropolitan area would be removed to recognize that there
may be urban areas that experience high rates of poverty, unemployment,
or population loss and need financial resources. Although the agencies
also considered lowering the poverty threshold in the definition of
distressed area to as low as 15 percent, they decided to retain the 20
percent threshold because it is consistent with the threshold used in
some other Federal programs that are intended to benefit low-income
communities, such as the New Markets Tax Credit program. The proposal
also would revise the definition of underserved area to remove the
requirement that these census tracts be nonmetropolitan areas; this
change would address urban banking deserts that lack access to
financial services. Under the proposal, an underserved area would be a
census tract with:
A population size, density, and dispersion that indicate
the area's population is sufficiently small, thin, and distant from a
population center that the tract is likely to have difficulty financing
the fixed costs of meeting essential community needs; or
a census tract that does not have a bank branch in the
tract and does not have a bank branch within:
[cir] Two miles of the center of the census tract if it contains
only urban census blocks;
[cir] five miles of the center of the census tract if it contains
urban and rural census blocks;
[cir] ten miles of the center of the census tract if it contains
only rural census blocks; or
[cir] five miles of the center of the census tract if it is an
island area, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (FFIEC) Census data.
Due to the lack of banking and other services in underserved areas, the
agencies believe that the CRA regulations should incentivize banks to
meet the retail lending and CD needs of the residents in these
geographies.
In addition, under the proposal, the CRA regulations would no
longer require that CD services be related to the
[[Page 1213]]
provision of financial services (i.e., banks would receive credit for
all volunteer hours, including manual labor, provided to a CD project).
This expansion recognizes that support for a CD project may take many
forms, all of which are required for the project to meet the needs of a
community, and that all these forms of support should qualify for CRA
credit, consistent with the goals of CRA. Under the proposed general
performance standards, all activities conducted by the bank--including
those engaged in by another party, such as an affiliate--would be
considered, as opposed to at a bank's option as is done under the
current framework. Banks evaluated under the small bank performance
standards would continue to have the option of requesting consideration
for these qualifying activities.
The proposal also would expand the circumstances in which banks
receive pro-rata credit for qualifying activities. Under the current
regulations, banks receive credit for the pro-rata share of a loan or
investment in mixed-income housing that includes a set-aside required
by Federal, state, or local government for affordable housing for LMI
individuals. Under the proposal, all CD activities that provide some
benefit to, but do not primarily benefit, specified populations,
entities, or areas would receive pro-rata credit equal to the partial
benefit provided. This change recognizes that 100 percent of the
portion of an activity that benefits LMI individuals and families,
small businesses, small farms, or identified geographies would meet the
CD criteria in the proposal (i.e., a bank would receive credit for 40
percent of the dollar value of a grant that supports a non-profit
organization which provides after care and activities to a school where
40 percent of the students are eligible for free or reduced price
school lunches).
Further, as stated above, the intended effect of the proposal is to
expand the type of activities that qualify for CRA credit. Although the
agencies chose not to include in the proposal certain ambiguous or
unclear terms used in the current regulations, the agencies do not
intend to reduce the activities that qualify for CRA credit. For
example, the qualifying activities criteria would no longer use the
current regulatory phrase ``revitalize and stabilize'' to describe the
activities that would qualify in targeted areas, such as distressed or
underserved areas; instead, the proposal describes in greater detail
the criteria for activities that would qualify in these locations.
Similarly, rather than including the term ``economic development,'' the
proposal employs more detailed CD criteria to capture the type of
activities that currently qualify as economic development activities,
such as activities that finance (1) SBDCs, SBICs, New Markets Venture
Capital companies, qualified Community Development Entities, or RBICs;
(2) businesses or farms that meet the size-eligibility standards of the
SBDC or SBIC by providing technical assistance and supportive services;
or (3) Federal, state, local, or tribal government programs, projects,
or initiatives that partially or primarily benefit small businesses, or
small farms. The proposal does not include the more general aspect of
economic development that involved a bank having to demonstrate that
its activities that finance businesses or farms that met the size test
\30\ support job creation, retention, and improvement for LMI
individuals, LMI census tracts, and other areas targeted for
redevelopment by Federal, state, local, or tribal governments. This
aspect of the economic development component of the current CD
definition was not retained because the agencies could not identify an
objective method for demonstrating job creation, retention, or
improvement for LMI individuals or census tracts or other targeted
geographies, other than by determining if the activity would create
additional low-wage jobs.
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\30\ Under the current regulations, as interpreted in the
Interagency Questions & Answers, a business or farm meets the size
test if it finances, either directly, or through an intermediary,
businesses or farms that either meet the size eligibility standards
of the SBDC or SBIC programs or have gross annual revenues of $1
million or less. See Interagency Questions and Answers, Q&A
_.12(g)(3)-1, 81 FR 48506, (July 25, 2016).
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Focus on ongoing commitment. Third, the proposal seeks to address
the concern that the current framework gives too much CRA credit to
certain activities, such as credit for the full value of frequently
traded MBS, regardless of how long they remain on a bank's balance
sheet and even when they do not result in new qualifying activities.
The proposal would ensure that a bank's balance sheet reflects its
ongoing commitment to CRA. To accomplish this goal, the proposal would
give a bank CRA credit for the average month-end outstanding amount on
a bank's balance sheet (on-balance sheet) of any qualifying loan or CD
investment. The proposal would credit the bank for the amount of CD
services and monetary and in-kind donations made during the period.
This approach would help to eliminate the apparent inflation of the
level of a bank's CRA activity that results from banks purchasing loans
or investments just prior to a CRA evaluation and then selling those
loans and investments when the evaluation is complete.
Qualifying activities list. Finally, the proposal provides that the
agencies would maintain a publicly available non-exhaustive,
illustrative list of examples of qualifying activities that meet the
criteria in the rule, as well as examples of activities that the
agencies have determined, in response to specific inquiries, do not
qualify. The proposal would also establish a process for a bank to
submit a form through the agency's website to seek agency confirmation
that an activity is a qualifying activity.\31\
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\31\ The agencies expect to treat the information provided to
them through this process as nonpublic and to maintain the
confidentiality of that information subject to applicable law. Banks
and interested parties may designate information as confidential or
request confidential treatment. The OCC will treat confidential
commercial information submitted to the agency in accordance with 12
CFR 4.16. The FDIC will treat confidential commercial information
submitted to the agency in accordance with 12 CFR 309.6.
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The illustrative list generally would be updated each time an
activity is confirmed to be or determined not to be a qualifying
activity; however, depending on the circumstances, an activity may not
be added to the list (e.g., if it presents circumstances unique to the
requesting bank or would be duplicative of an activity already on the
list). If it is determined that an activity would not be added to the
list, this determination would be made available to the public. The
agencies anticipate that banks would use this qualifying activities
confirmation process sparingly and that it would not replace a bank's
ability to discuss whether an activity qualifies with its examiners or
making its own determination, by applying the proposed qualifying
activities criteria, that an activity qualifies for CRA credit. Banks
would not be required to obtain confirmation from its appropriate
Federal regulatory agency for each CRA activity, and qualifying
activities would not be limited to those on the illustrative list.
In addition to updating the illustrative list on an ongoing basis,
the proposal provides that the list would also be revised at least
every three years, through a public notice and comment process, to add
activities that meet the criteria and to remove activities that no
longer meet the criteria (e.g., if broadband were universally available
and no longer considered to be essential infrastructure). If it were
determined that an activity no longer meets the criteria, a bank with
that activity on-balance sheet would continue to receive
[[Page 1214]]
credit if the obligation remains on-balance sheet; however, that
activity would not be considered a qualifying activity for any
subsequent purchasers. The agencies would consult and coordinate with
each other on the content of the proposed list. The initial proposed
illustrative list is available for review on the agencies' websites and
in section V of this proposal.
Summary of objectives. Together, the proposed rule's qualifying
activities provisions are intended to provide certainty and
transparency about whether an activity qualifies for CRA credit prior
to a bank engaging in the activity, and to ensure consistent treatment
of activities across and within the agencies. By increasing the
specificity used to describe qualifying activities and predictability
about whether specific activities would count, these proposed
provisions are also intended to encourage banks to undertake more CRA
activities--including novel, complex, and innovative activities--that
help meet local community needs. In particular, the qualifying
activities provisions would incentivize banks to commit more financial
resources to the populations and areas that need them most, such as LMI
individuals, distressed areas, underserved areas, and Indian country.
The agencies expect that banks would only conduct qualifying activities
that are consistent with safe and sound banking practices.
Calculating the qualifying activities value. The current framework
includes a qualitative and quantitative assessment of the dollar value
and number of CRA activities, but it does not set a threshold for the
total dollar volume of CRA activities in evaluating CRA performance nor
does it provide a uniform method for assessing banks' performance
context. Under the proposal, banks evaluated under the general
performance standards would determine their presumptive ratings at the
bank level and in each assessment area by first calculating their
qualifying activities values, which are the sum of the quantified
dollar value of qualifying activities that receive credit (after being
adjusted by multipliers, as explained below). Qualifying activities
would be quantified as follows:
Qualifying loans and CD investments would be valued based
on their average month-end on-balance sheet dollar value, except that
qualifying retail loans originated and sold within 90 days of their
origination date would be valued at 25 percent of their origination
value.
Legally-binding commitments to invest that are reported on
the Call Report, Schedule RC-L, would be valued based on their average
month-end dollar value.
Qualifying commitments to lend would be valued based on
the average month-end dollar value of the allowance for credit losses
on those commitments that are reported on the Call Report, Schedule RC-
G.
CD services and monetary or in-kind donations would be
credited at the value of the monetary donation or in-kind activity or
at the hourly salary as estimated by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for
the job category of the service provided for the number of hours
provided.
If a CD activity partially benefits the intended population or area,
then the quantified value would be a pro-rata share of the full
quantified dollar value of the activity, as described above, equal to
the percentage of partial benefit.
The quantified value of qualifying activities to CDFIs, other CD
investments (not including MBS and municipal bonds), and other
affordable-housing related CD loans would be adjusted upward by a
multiple of two to provide an incentive for banks to engage in these
activities. In addition to these activities, the agencies are also
considering whether to apply multipliers to smaller CD loans, such as
two, which may be particularly important to small non-profits with a CD
purpose.
A bank would calculate its bank-level and assessment area
qualifying activities values by taking the sum of the quantified values
of all qualifying activities, adjusted by any applicable multiplier, as
follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP09JA20.002
Although banks would still be able to make large investments in MBS
under the proposal, concerns related to frequent trading of MBS under
the current regulations are mitigated because banks evaluated under the
proposed general performance standards would only receive credit in the
calculation of their CRA evaluation measure, described below, for the
dollar value of MBS for the period that the investment remains on-
balance sheet. For example, if a bank purchased a qualifying MBS on
January 1, 2019 and sold the MBS on February 1, 2019, the bank would
receive one twelfth of the value of the MBS when it calculated its
annual qualifying activities value.
Alternatives considered. The agencies considered additional ways to
expand credit for retail lending and CD activities to individuals who,
although not designated as low- or moderate-income, nonetheless have
objectively low incomes. These included providing CRA credit for retail
loans and CD activities to middle-income individuals in (1) distressed
areas; (2) underserved areas; (3) persistent poverty counties, which
have a poverty rate of 20 percent or more over the last 30 years; and
(4) any census tract where the area median income is less than the
national median income. To retain the focus on LMI individuals,
however, the proposal does not include these revisions.
The agencies also considered limiting the dollar value that any
single transaction could contribute to the qualifying activities value
to address concerns that measuring performance based on the dollar
value of banks' qualifying activities could incentivize banks to engage
in a small number of large dollar activities that may be less
responsive to community needs than other activities. Because the
proposal assesses the performance of banks that are subject to the
general performance standards by considering the distribution of retail
lending activities and the dollar value of qualifying activities, as
discussed below, the agencies do not believe that a single transaction
limit is necessary. Moreover, a single transaction limit could have
unintended consequences and discourage banks from conducting activities
that would help meet the needs of a specific community. For example,
competition and capacity constraints may limit the number and type of
qualifying activities available to a bank.
The agencies invite comment on all aspects of the proposal related
to establishing clear criteria for the type of activities that would
qualify for CRA credit and determining the dollar value of qualifying
activities, including with respect to the following questions:
[[Page 1215]]
1. Are the proposed criteria for determining which activities would
qualify for credit under the CRA sufficiently clear and consistent with
the CRA's objective of encouraging banks to conduct CRA activities in
the communities they serve?
2. Are there other criteria for determining which activities would
qualify for CRA credit that the agencies should consider?
3. Under the proposal, CD activities conducted in targeted areas,
such as Indian country or distressed areas, would qualify for CRA
credit. Should there be any additional criteria applicable to the types
of CD activities that qualify for CRA credit in these areas? If so,
what should those criteria be?
4. Under the proposal, the small business and small farm revenue
thresholds and the size thresholds for a small loan to a business and a
small loan to a farm would increase to $2 million. Do these increases
appropriately incentivize banks to engage in small business and small
farm lending activities, or should other changes be made to the revenue
and loan size thresholds?
5. The agencies plan to publish the illustrative list on their
websites and to update the list both on an ongoing basis and through a
notice and comment process. Should the list instead be published as an
Appendix to the final rule or be otherwise published in the Federal
Register? In addition, how often should the list be updated?
6. The proposal includes a process for updating the illustrative
list on an ongoing basis through submission of a form to seek agency
confirmation. The agencies considered an alternative process where an
agency would accept all requests from banks for confirmation that an
activity is a qualifying activity, aggregate these requests, publish
the list of requested items in the Federal Register for public comment
and feedback, and update the list following this process once every six
months. What process, including any alternative process, should the
agencies adopt to update the illustrative list of qualifying
activities?
7. Are certain types of retail loans more valuable to LMI
individuals and geographies than other types? If so, which types?
Should the regulations recognize those differences? If so, how? For
example, could multipliers be used to recognize those differences and
provide incentives for banks to engage in activities that are scarce
but highly needed?
8. The use of multipliers is intended to incentivize banks to
engage in activities that benefit LMI individuals and areas and to
other areas of need; however, multipliers may cause banks to conduct a
smaller dollar value of impactful activities because they will receive
additional credit for those activities. Are there ways the agencies can
ensure that multipliers encourage activities that benefit LMI
individuals and areas while limiting or preventing the potential for
decreasing the dollar volume of activities (e.g., establishing a
minimum floor for activities before a multiplier would be applied)?
9. The proposal quantifies the value of CD services based on the
compensation for the type of work engaged in by the employees providing
the services as reflected in the Bureau of Labor Statistics calculation
of the hourly wage for that type of work. Alternatively, CD services
could be valued based on a standardized compensation value for the
banking industry or occupation type. For example, the median hourly
compensation value for the banking industry is approximately $36, when
calculated using Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Would using
standardized compensation values reduce the burden associated with
tracking CD services while still appropriately valuing CD services? If
so, how should the agencies establish the standardized compensation
values?
10. Should the range of retail banking services provided--such as
checking accounts, savings accounts, and certificates of deposit--be
considered under this proposal? If so, how could retail banking
services be quantified? For example, could the types of checking and
savings accounts that are offered by a bank (e.g., no fee, fixed fee,
low interest-bearing, high interest-bearing) be considered in
performance context?
B. Assessment Areas
Under the current framework, a bank's CRA performance is measured
within the bank's assessment areas or the greater statewide or regional
area(s) that includes the bank's assessment areas. With limited
exceptions, a bank is required to delineate assessment areas consisting
of one metropolitan statistical area (MSA), one or more metropolitan
divisions (MD), or one or more contiguous political subdivisions (e.g.,
counties, cities, or towns). Assessment areas must include any census
tract where a bank has its main office and any census tract where it
has one or more branches or deposit-taking automated teller machines
(ATMs), as well as the surrounding census tracts in which the bank has
originated or purchased a substantial portion of its loans. A bank may
adjust the boundaries of an assessment area to include only the portion
of a political subdivision that it reasonably can be expected to serve.
Finally, an assessment area must consist only of whole census tracts
and not reflect illegal discrimination, arbitrarily exclude LMI census
tracts, or extend substantially beyond an MSA or state boundary unless
the assessment area is in a multistate MSA (MMSA).
Wholesale banks, which are banks without retail customers (e.g.,
home mortgage and small business customers), and limited purpose banks,
which are banks that offer limited products (e.g., credit cards or
automobile loans), have these same rules for delineating assessment
areas, except that their assessment area delineations only include the
MSAs, MDs, or whole political subdivisions that contain these banks'
main office, branches, and deposit-taking ATMs. Military banks, whose
business predominately consists of serving the needs of military
personnel or their dependents, are not required to have geographic
assessment areas and may delineate their entire deposit customer base
as their assessment area.
The current method for delineating a bank's assessment areas, which
is focused on the areas surrounding brick-and-mortar bank locations, is
challenged by how today's consumers meet their banking needs and banks
provide services. The current approach creates disincentives for banks
to meet the needs of their entire communities or even their own
customers if their communities or customers are located outside of the
banks' assessment areas. These disincentives serve to create CRA
deserts and promote CRA hotspots.
To address this, the proposed rule would establish a modernized and
standardized process for identifying where a bank's qualifying
activities receive credit that would apply to banks subject to the
agencies' CRA regulations. Under the proposal, banks (except for
military banks) \32\ would be required to serve the communities where
they have a physical presence and would also be required to serve the
surrounding geographies where they originated or purchased a
substantial portion of their loans (consistent with the current rules).
In addition, to recognize changes in the banking industry--including
the increasing number of banks that operate primarily through the
internet or
[[Page 1216]]
otherwise serve customers located far from the banks' physical
locations--and the statutory purpose of the CRA to help ensure that
banks reinvest in the communities where they collect deposits,\33\ the
proposal would also require a bank with a significant portion of its
retail domestic deposits outside of its facility-based assessment
areas, such as 50 percent or more, to delineate additional assessment
areas wherever it has a concentration of retail domestic deposits.
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\32\ The proposal would retain the requirement that a military
bank be evaluated based on its entire deposit customer base,
regardless of geographic location.
\33\ See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977).
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Regarding assessment areas based on physical presence, a bank would
delineate a ``facility-based'' assessment area where it has its main
office, a branch, or a deposit-taking facility, as well as any
surrounding geographies where the bank has originated or purchased a
substantial portion of its loans. The proposal would require a bank to
delineate these facility-based assessment areas in any of the following
areas: (1) An MSA; (2) the whole nonmetropolitan area of a state; (3)
one or more whole, contiguous MDs in a single MSA; or (4) one or more
whole contiguous counties or county equivalents in a single MSA or non-
MSA area. The agencies would provide banks the option to choose the
geographic level at which to delineate their facility-based assessment
areas because the agencies believe that banks are in the best position
to determine the areas that their facilities serve.
Beyond their brick-and-mortar locations, the proposal would require
banks that receive more than 50 percent of their retail domestic
deposits from outside of their facility-based assessment areas to
delineate separate, non-overlapping ``deposit-based'' assessment areas
in the smallest geography where they receive five percent or more of
their retail domestic deposits. These deposit-based assessment areas
would capture banks' evolving business models, address the increasing
competition for deposits outside of banks' current assessment areas,
and encourage banks to serve their entire communities--including where
they take deposits--in harmony with the CRA statute. These deposit-
based assessment areas would consist of (1) a state; (2) a whole MSA;
(3) the whole nonmetropolitan area of a state; (4) one or more whole,
contiguous MDs in a single MSA; (5) the remaining geographic area of a
state, MSA, nonmetropolitan area, or MD other than where it has a
facility-based assessment area; or (6) one or more whole, contiguous
counties or county equivalents in a single MSA or non-MSA. Unlike
facility-based assessment areas where banks may choose the geographic
level where they delineate their assessment areas, the agencies believe
that banks should be required to delineate deposit-based assessment
areas at the smallest geographic level where they receive five percent
or more of their retail domestic deposits to help ensure that banks'
deposit-based assessment area ratings reflect their qualifying
activities in the same areas as their concentrations of deposits. For
example, if a bank receives 60 percent of its retail domestic deposits
from outside of its facility-based assessment area and 5 percent of
these deposits come from Cook County, Illinois, which is not in a
facility-based assessment area, it must delineate Cook County as a
deposit-based assessment area.
In addition, the agencies recognize that there are certain
communities of need where banks have a limited physical or deposit-
taking presence. To help ensure that these areas are served, the
proposed rule would allow banks to receive credit for qualifying
activities conducted outside of their assessment areas in determining
their bank-level ratings.
The proposal would allow a bank to change its assessment area
delineation once during each evaluation period and would no longer
permit a bank to adjust an assessment area's boundaries to include only
the portion of a political subdivision that it reasonably can be
expected to serve. The proposal would, however, retain the requirements
that a bank's assessment areas must not reflect illegal discrimination
or arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income geographies.
Summary of objectives. Taken together, the proposal's assessment
area provisions would create an affirmative obligation for banks to
conduct CRA activity in the communities where they operate (determined
by where they have a physical presence), conduct a substantial portion
of their lending, or collect a substantial portion of their deposits.
Through these changes, the proposed rule would both (1) preserve the
important connection between a bank's physical locations and the
surrounding community by addressing the CRA obligations of traditional
banks, which engage in most of their business at their physical
locations and (2) reflect critical changes to how customers bank in the
21st century by considering the activity of nontraditional banks,
including internet banks. In addition, allowing banks to receive credit
for CRA activities outside of their assessment areas when determining
bank-level ratings would help to eliminate CRA hot spots and banking
deserts and incentivize investment and lending to all communities
served by the bank.
Alternatives Considered. In developing this proposed rule, the
agencies considered alternative approaches for delineating assessment
areas where banks conduct a significant amount of business outside of
their physical locations. For example, the agencies considered
requiring banks to delineate additional assessment areas only where
they have a concentration of deposits. The agencies also considered
adopting a hybrid approach that would have required delineation of
assessment areas where banks derive a significant concentration of
deposits and conduct a significant amount of lending. Because a
deposit-based approach closely aligns with the CRA statute--to address
the harm caused by banks taking deposits from certain communities and
investing them elsewhere--the proposal includes the approach based on
deposits.\34\ However, to maintain consistency with the current
framework and recognize the importance of evaluating a bank's lending
in the areas surrounding its facilities where it has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its retail lending, the proposal
also would require a bank to delineate a facility-based assessment area
around areas where it has a main office, a branch, or a deposit-taking
facility as well as the surrounding areas where it has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its retail lending.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977) (statement of Sen.
William Proxmire, Chairman, S. Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs) (``I am talking about the fact that banks . . . will take
their deposits from a community and instead of reinvesting them in
that community . . . they will actually or figuratively draw a red
line on a map around the areas of their city, sometimes in the inner
city, sometimes in the older neighborhoods, sometimes ethnic and
sometimes black, but often encompassing a great area of their
neighborhood.'')
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding the assessment area thresholds, the proposed rule
requires banks that receive 50 percent or more of their retail domestic
deposits from outside of their facility-based assessment areas to
delineate deposit-based assessment areas where they receive five
percent or more of their retail domestic deposits. The agencies are
considering a range around those thresholds; specifically, the agencies
are considering a range between 40 and 60 percent for the percentage of
retail domestic deposits outside of banks' facilities-based assessment
areas and between two and eight percent for the percentage that
determines where banks would delineate their deposit-based assessment
areas.
[[Page 1217]]
The agencies invite comment on all aspects of the proposal related
to establishing a modernized and standardized process for identifying a
bank's community--i.e., assessment area(s)--in which the bank's
qualifying activities receive credit, including with respect to the
following questions:
11. Are the proposed methods for delineating assessment areas
clear, simple, and transparent?
12. The proposal would allow banks to choose how broadly to
delineate their facility-based assessment areas, but it would require
banks with a significant portion, such as 50 percent or more, of their
retail domestic deposits outside of their facility-based assessment
areas to delineate their deposit-based assessment areas at the smallest
geographic area where they receive five percent or more of their retail
domestic deposits. The requirement to designate deposit-based
assessment areas would impact internet banks that do not rely on
branches or ATM facilities to collect deposits as well as traditional
banks that, in addition to their branches and ATM facilities, collect a
significant portion of their deposits online outside of their branch
and ATM footprint. Do these approaches strike the right balance between
allowing flexibility and ensuring that banks serve their communities?
If not 50 percent, what threshold should be used to determine if a bank
has a significant portion of its deposits outside of its facility-based
assessment areas and why? In addition, is receiving at least five
percent of domestic retail deposits from a given area the appropriate
threshold for requiring a bank to delineate a deposit-based assessment
in that area, or should some other threshold be implemented? If so,
why?
13. The deposit-based assessment area delineation requirements are
intended to ensure that banks serve the communities in which they
operate. However, under the proposed regulation, it is possible that
few banks would be required to delineate a deposit-based assessment
area in less populous areas or states, despite having a significant
market share in those areas (although banks with branches in those
areas would be required to delineate facility-based assessment areas
and banks may receive credit for qualifying activities outside of their
assessment areas conducted in these areas or states). Does this
framework provide sufficient incentives for banks to conduct qualifying
activities in these less populous areas? Alternatively, should banks be
required to delineate separate, non-overlapping assessment areas in
each state, MSA, MD, or county or county equivalent in which they have
at least a certain percentage of the deposit market share--regardless
of what percentage of the bank's retail domestic deposits are derived
from a given area--and, if so, what should the percentage of the
deposit market share be?
C. Objective Method To Measure CRA Performance
Overview. The current CRA regulations provide different methods to
evaluate a bank's CRA performance depending on the bank's asset size
and business strategy. For each type of bank, the agencies evaluate all
or a portion of its retail and CD activities. For example, in 2019,
banks with less than $321 million in assets in either of the two prior
calendar years were evaluated under a retail lending test, and various
types of CD activities also may be considered. For banks evaluated in
2019 with $1.284 billion or more in assets in 2017 or 2018, all CD
lending and investments and all retail and CD services are evaluated.
Based on the agency's evaluation of the bank's relevant qualifying
activities, its performance context, and evidence of discriminatory and
other illegal credit practices, a bank receives a rating of
outstanding, satisfactory, needs to improve, or substantial
noncompliance.
Because of the subjective nature of the current framework, exactly
how an agency determines the appropriate rating is at times opaque,
complex, and inconsistent. Although the current framework describes in
general terms the parameters that an agency uses to weigh and score a
bank's relevant qualifying activities, important terms in the
parameters are undefined and the processes are unspecified. For
example, the agencies are required to assess the geographic
distributions of loans. For banks other than small banks and
intermediate small banks, as those terms are defined under the current
regulations, an ``excellent'' geographic distribution correlates with
an ``outstanding'' rating, and a ``good'' distribution correlates with
a ``satisfactory'' rating--but both ``excellent'' and ``good'' are
undefined. Similarly, under the current regulations, the undefined term
``reasonable geographic distribution'' equates to satisfactory
performance for small banks and intermediate small banks. Furthermore,
there is no stated quantity of CRA activities that correlates to a
particular rating category. With respect to qualifying services, the
current framework does not quantify their value, and the agencies
undertake a qualitative analysis of the range of such services.
To achieve the goal of providing a method of assessing CRA
performance that would be more objective, clear, and consistent and
facilitate banks' ability to engage in qualifying activities in
communities that need it the most, the proposed rule would establish
new general performance standards used to evaluate banks that are not
small banks. The proposal would allow small banks to opt into the
general performance standards as described below; those that do not opt
in would be evaluated under small bank performance standards consistent
with the current regulations. The new general performance standards
would evaluate banks' CRA activities by assessing two fundamental
components: (1) The appropriate distribution (i.e., number) of
qualifying retail loans to LMI individuals, small farms, small
businesses, and LMI geographies in a community and (2) the impact
(i.e., quantified value) of a bank's qualifying activities.
To ensure that the distribution of the number of CRA retail loans
and the total value of qualifying activities would be captured and
assessed, the proposed rule would provide that the ratings for a bank
evaluated under the general performance standards would be based on a
combination of approaches. Specifically, to receive a presumptive
rating of satisfactory or outstanding at the assessment area level, (1)
banks would be required to meet the minimum thresholds for performance
on the applicable retail lending distribution tests in that assessment
area for each major retail lending product line with at least 20 loans
in that assessment area and (2) the average of banks' CRA evaluation
measures (described in more detail below) for an evaluation period
would have to meet the associated empirical benchmark. By only
evaluating a bank's distribution of retail loans in areas where the
bank has at least 20 loans in a major retail lending product line, this
approach would be tailored to a bank's business strategy and product
offerings at the bank and assessment area level.
At the bank level, a bank's presumptive rating would be based on
the comparison of its average bank-level CRA evaluation measure to the
established empirical benchmark, except that a bank could not receive a
satisfactory or an outstanding unless it also received that rating in a
significant portion, such as more than 50 percent, of its assessment
areas and in those assessment areas where it holds a significant amount
of deposits, such as more than 50 percent. At both the bank
[[Page 1218]]
and assessment area level, banks evaluated under the general
performance standards would also be required to meet minimum CD lending
and investment requirements to achieve a satisfactory or outstanding
rating. This method of evaluation would incentivize banks to increase
the dollar volume of their CRA activities, ensure that banks that are
retail lenders are distributing their retail loans to LMI individuals,
small farms, small businesses, and farms and business in LMI
communities, and recognize the importance of CD lending and investments
to LMI individuals and communities.
The proposal would define retail domestic deposits as total
domestic deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations, as
reported on Schedule RC-E, item 1, of the Call Report, but exclude
brokered deposits. This proposed definition would exclude municipal
deposits and deposits from foreign governments or entities and thus
would be more reflective of a bank's capacity to engage in CRA-
qualifying activities. By further excluding brokered deposits, which
are not associated with any individual or community, this definition
would refine the Call Report definition to more accurately reflect the
deposits a bank collects from identifiable individuals and communities.
Additionally, this definition would leverage an existing Call Report
definition of deposits to lessen associated data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting burdens.
Under this proposal, for a bank evaluated under the general
performance standards to meet the outstanding or satisfactory
presumptive rating categories in an assessment area: (1) Its
performance on the geographic and borrower lending distribution tests
would have to meet or exceed the established thresholds for performance
for each of its major retail lending product lines with at least 20
loans in that assessment area and (2) the average of its annual
assessment area CRA evaluation measures would have to meet or exceed
the established benchmarks.
The chart below illustrates possible ways to achieve each
presumptive ratings category associated with the statutory rating
categories in a given assessment area. The agencies included specific
empirical benchmarks for each rating category in the proposed rule that
they believe would help achieve the positive outcomes intended by this
rulemaking (i.e., an empirical benchmark of (1) 11 percent for
outstanding, (2) six percent for satisfactory, (3) three percent for
needs to improve, and (4) less than three percent for substantial
noncompliance). The agencies selected the specific empirical benchmarks
from within ranges for each rating category that reflect the agencies'
analysis of the available lending and investment data, discussed below.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Retail lending
CRA evaluation distribution tests CD minimums Presumptive rating category
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The average of a bank's annual A bank meets the The quantified value Outstanding.
assessment area CRA evaluation established of community
measures meets or exceeds 11 thresholds for all development loans
percent (selected from a range of the retail lending and community
10 to 15 percent). distribution tests development
for its major retail investments in the
lending product assessment area,
lines in that divided by the
assessment area. average of the
bank's assessment
area retail
domestic deposits
must meet or exceed
2 percent.
The average of a bank's annual A bank meets the The quantified value Satisfactory.
assessment area CRA evaluation established of community
measures meets or exceeds 6 thresholds for all development loans
percent (selected from a range of the retail lending and community
5 to 10 percent). distribution tests development
for its major retail investments in the
lending product assessment area,
lines in that divided by the
assessment area. average of the
bank's assessment
area retail
domestic deposits
must meet or exceed
2 percent.
The average of a bank's annual Needs Improvement.
assessment area CRA evaluation
measures meets or exceeds 3
percent (selected from a range of
2 to 5 percent).
The average of a bank's annual Substantial Non-compliance.
assessment area CRA evaluation
measures is less than 3 percent
(selected from a range of 0 to 5
percent).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The bank-level presumptive rating under the general performance
standards would be determined by comparing the average of a bank's
average bank-level annual CRA evaluation measures to the established
empirical benchmarks for the statutory rating categories and
determining if the bank had a satisfactory or outstanding in a
significant portion, such as more than 50 percent, of its assessment
areas, and in those assessment areas where it holds a significant
amount of deposits, such as more than 50 percent. In addition, the bank
would be required to meet the minimum requirements for CD lending and
investment at the bank level.
As discussed below, the proposed rule would establish empirical
benchmarks for the average of a bank's annual CRA evaluation measures
for each rating category and the thresholds for the retail lending
distribution tests. A bank would use the empirical benchmarks and
thresholds in effect on the first day of its evaluation period for the
duration of its evaluation period. Because the proposed evaluation
method would be sufficiently flexible to account for different bank
sizes and business models, it would not include different tests for
different types and sizes of banks.
The proposal identifies the rating resulting from the comparison of
the bank's CRA evaluation measure to the corresponding empirical
benchmarks and geographic and borrower distribution tests as
``presumptive'' because this rating could be adjusted based on
consideration of performance context and discriminatory or other
illegal credit practices. These possible adjustments are discussed
below. Following any adjustments, the agency
[[Page 1219]]
would determine a bank's assigned rating in each of its assessment
areas and at the bank level.
Twelve U.S.C. 2906(d) of the CRA statute requires the agencies to
provide a written evaluation, including a rating, for banks with
interstate branches at the state level, MMSA level, or both, as
applicable. The content of that written evaluation must (1) state
conclusions for each assessment factor (i.e., the small bank
performance standards for small banks and the borrower and geographic
distribution tests, CRA evaluation measure comparison, and CD minimums
for banks subject to the general performance standards); (2) discuss
the facts and data supporting conclusions; and (3) contain the rating
and a statement describing the basis for the rating.\35\ For these
banks, the state or MMSA level rating is the lowest rating assigned to
a significant number of its assessment areas within that state or MMSA.
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\35\ The CRA statute provides:
States: For a bank that maintains domestic branches in 2 or more
states, the appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency must
prepare--(A) a written evaluation of the entire bank's record of CRA
performance, as required by subsections (a), (b), and (c) of 12
U.S.C. 2906 and (B) for each State in which the institution
maintains 1 or more domestic branches, a separate written evaluation
of the bank's record of CRA performance within such state, as
required by subsections (a), (b), and (c) of 12 U.S.C. 2906. See 12
U.S.C. 2906(d)(1).
MMSAs: For a bank that maintains domestic branches in 2 or more
states within an MMSA, the appropriate Federal financial supervisory
agency must prepare a separate written evaluation of the bank's
record of CRA performance within such MMSA, as required by
subsections (a), (b), and (c) of 12 U.S.C. 2906. See 12 U.S.C.
2906(d)(2).
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Section 2906(b)(1)(B) of the CRA statute also requires the agencies
to conclude, but not rate, at the MSA and nonmetropolitan area level.
Under this proposal, the agencies' conclusion at these levels would be
the lowest rating assigned to a substantial portion of assessment areas
in that MSA or nonmetropolitan area.
Applying the retail lending distribution tests. The retail lending
distribution tests would apply to banks evaluated under the general
performance standards. The retail lending distribution tests would be
applied at the assessment area level to a bank's major retail lending
product lines with at least 20 originations in the assessment area
during the evaluation period. A major retail lending product line is
defined at the bank level and is any retail lending product line that
composes at least 15 percent of the bank's overall dollar volume of
retail loan originations during the evaluation period. The agencies
would require at least 20 originations in an assessment area before
applying a retail lending distribution test to ensure that the rule
only evaluates a bank's retail lending distribution in markets where it
is engaged in retail lending beyond lending done on an accommodation
basis. Under the proposal, banks would apply the retail lending
distribution tests, and the agencies would validate their performance.
The retail lending distribution tests would evaluate the bank's
originations in each assessment area during the review period using
both a geographic distribution test and a borrower distribution test
for small loans to businesses and small loans to farms and a borrower
distribution test for home mortgage and consumer lending. The
geographic distribution test assesses a bank's distribution of lending
in LMI areas while the borrower distribution test assesses a bank's
distribution of lending to LMI borrowers or small businesses or small
farms. A bank can pass either test by meeting or exceeding a threshold
associated with the demographic comparator, which is based on the
demographics of the given assessment area, or a threshold associated
with the peer comparator, which is based on peers' performance in the
given assessment area.
Although the agencies remain committed to encouraging banks to meet
the credit needs in LMI areas, for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards, the proposal would not apply a geographic
distribution test to a bank's consumer and home mortgage product lines.
Under the geographic distribution test in the current CRA framework,
banks receive positive consideration for home mortgage and consumer
loans made in LMI areas, even if they are made to middle- or upper-
income individuals or families. Unlike small loans to businesses and
small loans to farms in LMI areas that may result in additional job
creation or other positive effects for the larger community, home
mortgage and consumer loans to middle- or upper-income individuals and
families in LMI areas are generally not as beneficial to LMI
communities and may result in displacement. Accordingly, this proposal
would not apply the geographic distribution test to these banks' home
mortgage and consumer product lines. The result of this is that under
the proposal, a mortgage loan to a high-income individual living in a
low-income census tract would no longer qualify for CRA credit. The
agencies' commitment to encouraging banks to meet the credit needs in
LMI communities and neighborhoods is reflected in the proposal's
retention of the geographic distribution test for small business and
small farm product lines. However, because the agencies would apply the
small bank performance standards consistent with the current
regulations, small banks would continue to be evaluated based on the
geographic distribution of their home mortgage loans and consumer
loans, as applicable.
Under the proposal, a bank subject to the retail lending
distribution tests would not be able to achieve a presumptive rating of
satisfactory or outstanding without passing all applicable distribution
tests for all major retail lending product lines in that assessment
area. To pass a distribution test, a bank would have to meet or exceed
the minimum thresholds for either the demographic comparator or the
peer comparator. For example, if the threshold for the demographic
comparator is set at 55 percent of the relevant demographic comparator
and the threshold for the peer comparator is set at 65 percent of the
relevant peer comparator, a bank would be required to meet either the
55 percent demographic comparator threshold or the 65 percent peer
comparator threshold to pass the distribution test. In other words, to
pass the geographic distribution test using the demographic comparator,
the percentage of a bank's small loans to businesses (SLB) that are in
LMI census tracts in the assessment area (AA) divided by the percentage
of businesses in LMI census tracts in the assessment area would have to
be greater than or equal to 55 percent, which would be calculated as
follows:
[[Page 1220]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP09JA20.000
The agencies would collect and provide public data that would allow
banks to apply the borrower distribution tests for home mortgage and
consumer loans, small loans to businesses, and small loans to farms,
and the geographic distribution test for small loans to farms and small
loans to businesses. However, the agencies recognize that, even if the
proposal were implemented, the available data for the small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms borrower distribution tests may be
insufficient and, therefore, banks may need to rely on private
datasets. Because banks may have to purchase access to these datasets,
the agencies invite comment on options for tailoring this requirement
by, for example, allowing banks below a certain asset size to use
publicly available data as a proxy.
Calculating the CRA evaluation measure. The CRA evaluation measure
would be applicable to banks subject to the general performance
standards. The CRA evaluation measure would be an objective measure of
a bank's ongoing commitment to CRA and would be determined annually at
the bank level and for each of its delineated assessment areas, as
defined above.\36\ A bank would initially calculate its CRA evaluation
measure by taking the sum of (1) a bank's qualifying activities value,
as described above, divided by the average of its quarterly retail
domestic deposits and (2) a calculation that accounts for a bank's
branch distribution. The agencies would validate that calculation.
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\36\ A bank's assessment area CRA evaluation measures are used
to reach a conclusion in each MSA where the bank has deposit-taking
facility or main office, as required by the CRA statute.
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The first portion of the CRA evaluation measure reflects a bank's
ongoing commitment to CRA by measuring the value of qualifying
activities as a proportion of total retail domestic deposits. The
second portion of the CRA evaluation measure accounts for the social
value and economic impact of bank branches in LMI areas, Indian
country, underserved areas, and distressed areas by measuring a bank's
proportion of branches in those areas. Specifically, the number of the
bank's branches located in LMI census tracts, Indian country,
underserved areas, and distressed areas during the same annual period
used to calculate the qualifying activities value would be divided by
the bank's total number of branches in that annual period and
multiplied by .01.
[[Page 1221]]
This calculation would quantify a bank's distribution of branches and
increase a bank's CRA evaluation measure by up to one percentage point
based on the proportion of a bank's branches in those specified areas.
The agencies believe that valuing branch distribution at up to one
percentage point of the CRA evaluation measure accounts for the
significance of branches to these areas while placing primary emphasis
on the qualifying activities that banks conduct in their communities.
The CRA evaluation measure would be calculated as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP09JA20.001
Empirical benchmarks, thresholds, and the definition of a major
retail lending product line. The proposal would establish the
thresholds for the demographic and peer comparators for each of the
geographic distribution and borrower distribution tests. The proposal
would also establish the empirical benchmarks for the average CRA
evaluation measure \37\ associated with each rating category. These
empirical benchmarks and thresholds are, and would be, based, in part,
on the agencies' analysis of the currently available historical data.
Specifically, the agencies reviewed the FFIEC CRA data, HMDA data on
home mortgages to LMI borrowers, Call Report data on-balance sheet
value of home mortgages, consumer loans, small business and small farm
loans, and credit bureau data on the outstanding balances of consumer
loans. Although these data sources have some limitations,\38\ by using
all the sources together, collecting additional information about CD
investments from historical performance evaluations,\39\ and making a
limited number of assumptions (described below), the agencies were able
to estimate what each bank's average CRA evaluation measure would have
been from 2011-2017 under the framework in the proposal for all banks
that filed a Call Report.
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\37\ The ``average CRA evaluation measure'' generally refers to
the average of the annual assessment area or bank-level CRA
evaluation measures for an evaluation period.
\38\ For example, under the current CRA regulations, only banks
that are above the small bank asset size threshold, which is $1.284
billion for 2019, are required to report CRA data to the FFIEC and
not all banks are HMDA reporters. 12 CFR 25.12(u)(1), 195.12(u)(1),
345.12(u)(1). Additionally, both the CRA FFIEC data and the HMDA
data look at originations and purchases and not the on-balance sheet
value of loans or investments. Although the Call Report and credit
bureau data do provide the outstanding amount of loans and
investments, those data sources do not identify which balances are
related qualifying activities. Moreover, the proposal would expand
the criteria for qualifying activities in a number of ways,
including by increasing the loan size threshold for small loans to
businesses and small loans to farms from $1 million to $2 million.
Accordingly, the currently available data on CRA qualifying
activities would not fully capture all activities that would be
qualifying under the proposal.
\39\ The agencies used a sample of performance evaluations
completed between 2011 and 2018. The sample contained data from over
200 exams for banks above the small bank asset size threshold, which
adjusts yearly and is $1.284 billion for 2019.
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Since the CRA evaluation measure would generally focus on the on-
balance sheet value of qualifying loans and investments, the agencies
first identified the categories on the Call Report that could include
qualifying loans and investments and then used additional data sources
such as the existing FFIEC CRA, HMDA, and credit bureau data to
estimate what portion of the activity reported on the Call Report would
be qualifying activities under the proposal. To estimate the dollar
volume of on-balance sheet activity that would be qualifying activity
the agencies did the following:
For home mortgage loans, by bank and year, the agencies
identified all HMDA reportable loans originated and held within the
calendar year to LMI individuals,\40\ and then divided the sum of the
dollar volume of those loans by the bank's total dollar volume of loans
originated and not sold within that calendar year. This provides an
estimate of a bank- year-specific proportion of identified qualifying
loans that was used to calculate the bank's proportion of on-balance
sheet qualified home mortgage loans. For banks that are not HMDA
filers, the agencies used the median proportion of qualifying home
mortgage loans of all HMDA filers for that year.\41\ Note that the
estimated proportions are based on the proportion of qualifying
originations, not on the proportions of qualifying on-balance sheet
loans. As such, to the extent that these proportions differ, the
estimate of the on-balance sheet value of qualifying mortgage loans may
be an over- or underestimate.
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\40\ Excluded from this are home mortgage loans in disaster
areas and in Indian country.
\41\ This was applied to about 40 percent of the banks.
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For small business and small farm loans, as defined under
the current regulations, the agencies used the FFIEC CRA data to
estimate the proportion of the bank's on-balance sheet small business
and small farm loans that qualify for CRA credit because they are
originated to businesses or farms with revenues of less than $1 million
or in LMI census tracts that are less than $1 million . Because the
proposal would increase the size of small loans to businesses and small
loans to farms that would be qualifying from the current small business
loan threshold of $1 million and small farm loan threshold of $500,000
to $2 million and banks do not separately report the on-balance sheet
value of loans between the existing thresholds and $2 million, the
agencies used, based on additional data sources, a fraction of the
dollar volume of loans that were reported on the Call Report as less
than $500,000 or $1 million to estimate the dollar volume of loans that
were less than $2 million.
For credit card,\42\ automobile loan, and other consumer
loan \43\ balances, to estimate the proportion of a bank's on-balance
sheet consumer loans that are qualifying, the agencies used credit
bureau data.\44\ The agencies combined the credit bureau data with
FFIEC's demographic information at the census tract level \45\ to
identify whether a given account holder resides in an LMI census tract.
Since the credit bureau data does not include income level, the
agencies calculated the proportion of credit card loan balances
attributable to residents of LMI tracts and used that proportion to
represent the proportion of balances attributable to LMI borrowers.\46\
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\42\ The agencies included the following credit bureau debt
categories in the credit card definition: Credit card, bank card,
flexible spending card, retail lending card, and line of credit.
\43\ The credit bureau loan categories included are: Other,
personal finance, and student loan.
\44\ The credit bureau data contain balances by debt category,
along with census tract location of the borrower.
\45\ For the period 2005-2011, FFIEC uses Census 2000 census
tract definitions and demographic information based on Census 2000.
For the period 2012-2016, FFIEC uses Census 2010 census tract
definitions and American Community Survey (ACS) 2006-2010 data. For
the period 2017-2018, FFIEC uses census tract definitions and
demographics from 2011-2015 ACS. Note that this method introduces
some error due to the fact that the credit bureau uses Census 2000
census tract definitions, while FFIEC uses Census 2000 or Census
2010 census tract definitions depending on the year.
\46\ The agencies do not believe this method significantly
overestimates the proportion of LMI borrowers or share of balances
attributed to them because while this methodology incorrectly
includes middle- and upper-income borrowers in LMI census tracts, it
also incorrectly excludes LMI borrowers in middle- and upper-income
census tracts. Because the two sources of error work in opposite
directions, the agencies expect them to cancel each other out to a
significant extent.
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[[Page 1222]]
For CD Investments, the agencies relied on a sample of
performance evaluations completed between 2011 and 2018. The sample
contains over 200 exams for banks above the small bank asset size
threshold, which adjusts yearly and is $1.284 billion for 2019. The
agencies approximated the value of investments on a bank's balance
sheet by calculating the sum of the balances of prior investments as of
the beginning of the evaluation period plus the average annual new
investments over the evaluation period. The agencies then calculated
the median investments-to-domestic-deposits ratio by asset size bucket
(i.e., assets greater than $100 billion, $5 to $100 billion, and less
than or equal to $5 billion) for the performance evaluation sample.\47\
This median ratio was then used to impute CD investments for all
institutions subject to CRA, by multiplying a bank's deposits in a
given year with the ratio corresponding to its asset size bucket. A
limitation of this approach is that the median ratio by asset size used
for imputation is only based on banks above the small bank asset size
threshold, and it is possible that this ratio differs for smaller
banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ Asset size buckets were determined by data explorations of
the relationship between the investments-to-deposits ratio and asset
size, in conjunction with sample size considerations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For CD loans, the agencies relied on the FFIEC CRA data
that contains information on the dollar amount of CD loans originated
that year.
By using these estimates, the agencies were able to approximate
what the CRA evaluation measure under the proposed framework would have
been for all banks from 2011-2018. In addition to the data, to set the
initial benchmarks for the average CRA evaluation measure and the
thresholds for the retail lending distribution tests, the agencies
analyzed banks' past performance evaluations, which provide qualitative
information to help inform what level of performance should be required
for each rating category. The agencies also considered unmet needs and
opportunities, such as those in banking and CD deserts, market
conditions, and the overall policy goal of increasing CRA activities.
The agencies would publish the empirical benchmarks for the average CRA
evaluation measures that correspond with each rating category and the
thresholds for the retail lending distribution test with the final
rule.
Based on the agencies' review of these factors thus far, the
agencies believe that the average CRA evaluation measure benchmarks
associated with each rating category should be set at between ten and
15 percent for outstanding, five and ten percent for satisfactory, and
two and five percent for needs to improve. As discussed above, the
proposal would set 11 percent as the initial benchmark for outstanding,
six percent as the initial benchmark for satisfactory, and three
percent as the initial benchmark for needs to improve. An average CRA
evaluation measure of less than three percent would be associated with
the substantial noncompliance rating category.
The agencies are aware, however, that there are some limitations in
the data currently available including that available data do not
currently include, for example, the dollar volume of CD investments or
a quantification of the dollar value of CD services. In addition,
available data do not necessarily map perfectly to the configuration of
assessment areas specified in this proposal. Deposit data also have
limitations because the current reporting framework records deposits by
attributing them to a branch location, rather than the account holder's
address and uses a different definition of deposits than the proposed
rule. The proposed rule would remedy these deficiencies by leveraging
data that are readily available but not currently reported in an
integrated and accessible manner. Over time, the data collection,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements in this proposal would remedy
the current data limitations. Further, after the issuance of this
notice of proposed rulemaking and prior to the issuance of any final
rule, the agencies plan to request additional data through a public
request for information from banks and other interested parties to
supplement the currently available data.
Until the data limitations are addressed, the agencies would
consider the historical data of reported lending and compare it to
historical levels of total domestic deposits to determine the specific
empirical benchmarks for CRA evaluation measures that are applicable at
the bank and assessment area levels within the ranges set forth in the
proposal. The agencies would then review and adjust these empirical
benchmarks and make them available publicly to promote transparency and
predictability. The agencies expect to adjust these empirical
benchmarks every three years, or sooner if warranted.
The proposal also defines major retail lending product lines as any
retail lending product line that composes at least 15 percent of the
bank's overall dollar volume of retail loan originations during the
evaluation period. Regarding this definition, the agencies reviewed
HMDA and FFIEC CRA data on the dollar volume of retail loan
originations along with Call Report data on the on-balance sheet value
of consumer loans. Because the Call Report only includes on-balance
sheet values, the agencies assumed that the quarterly change in the on-
balance sheet value of consumer loans reflects new consumer loan
originations.
CD minimums. The general performance standards would establish
minimums for a bank's quantified value of CD lending and investment as
compared to retail domestic deposits at both the assessment area and
bank level to achieve a satisfactory or an outstanding rating. The CD
minimums included in the proposal were informed by the analysis of the
currently available historical data, described above. To achieve a
presumptive rating of satisfactory or outstanding, the sum of the
quantified value of community development loans and community
development investments, divided by the average of the bank's retail
domestic deposits would need to meet or exceed two percent. The CD
minimums would apply at both the assessment area and bank level. These
minimums reflect the agencies' judgment that CD lending and investment
are critically important to serving banks' local communities.
Performance context. Under the current framework, a bank's CRA
performance is judged in the context of information about a bank and
its assessment area(s), including (1) relevant demographic data (e.g.,
median income levels, distribution of household income, nature of
housing stock, housing costs); (2) lending, investment, and service
opportunities; and (3) the bank's product offerings and business
strategy, capacity and constraints, past performance, and performance
of similarly situated lenders. Under the proposed framework,
performance context would remain important. The proposal sets forth
performance context factors that the agencies would consider in
determining a bank's assigned ratings in each assessment area and at
the bank level. Banks subject to the general performance standards
would submit performance context information in a standardized format
using a form on the agency's website that relies on the performance
context factors, discussed below. In addition, the agencies would
establish examination procedures to
[[Page 1223]]
help ensure that examiners apply performance context consistently.
The performance context factors focus on the capacity of the bank
to engage in qualifying activities and the demand for and opportunity
to engage in qualifying activities in the communities that the bank
serves. In considering a bank's capacity, the agencies would assess its
business strategy, size, and other factors that affect its engagement
in qualifying activities, including structural or other constraints on
a bank's ability to engage in the volume of CD lending and investment
required to meet the CD minimums, if applicable. Regarding the demand
for and opportunity to engage in qualifying activities in a bank's
community, the agencies would consider public comments related to
community needs and opportunities and assess the characteristics of the
community served by the bank, such as economic conditions and
demographics, as these factors relate to the demand for and the
opportunity to engage in qualifying activities. The agencies would
consider how differences between actual and expected levels in
qualifying activities were affected by a bank's capacity and
opportunity, including local market conditions and events during the
relevant period, or bank characteristics, such as product offerings and
business strategy, changes in the assessment area needs and
opportunities, and bank-specific constraints such as financial
condition or safety and soundness considerations. For example,
consideration of performance context could be particularly important
for a bank that does not engage in retail lending activities because
its business model limits the range of qualifying activities in which
the bank may engage. The agencies could also consider innovativeness,
complexity, difficulty, or positive impact on the bank's assessment
areas or significant qualifying activities, as well as differences in
banks' business models that affected the volume and types of qualifying
activities. Finally, the agencies could consider a bank's investments
in promoting and supporting the community reinvestment expertise of its
staff and the development of products and services that benefit LMI
communities.
Discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. Under the
proposal, an agency's evaluation of a bank's CRA performance would be
adversely affected by evidence of discriminatory or other illegal
credit practices. Specifically, in assigning a CRA rating, an agency
would first evaluate a bank's performance for the applicable time
period and then make any adjustments to the presumptive rating that
would be warranted based on evidence of discriminatory or other illegal
credit practices, consistent with the relevant agency's policies and
procedures.
Strategic plans. The proposal retains the option for a bank to
develop a strategic plan for addressing its CRA responsibilities and to
be evaluated based on its performance under the plan. Under the
proposal, a bank's strategic plan would be developed with public
participation and would demonstrate how the bank would help meet the
credit needs--particularly the needs of LMI census tracts and
individuals--of its assessment area(s) and at the bank level through
qualifying activities. Today, although any bank may request to be
evaluated under a strategic plan, only a limited number of banks with
unique business models or other unique circumstances use them. Because
the proposal would not add additional eligibility requirements for
strategic plans, the agencies expect that strategic plans would
continue to be used in a similar manner. For example, a de novo bank
could develop goals under a strategic plan that reflect its projected
branch footprint and deposit growth, its planned lending activities,
and its anticipated capacity to engage in qualifying activities.
Additionally, banks with no retail domestic deposits and banks
evaluated under the small bank performance standards that do not
originate retail loans would be required to submit a strategic plan.
Small bank performance standards. The current CRA regulations
include specific performance evaluation standards for small banks and
intermediate small banks.\48\ Specifically, a small bank is evaluated
pursuant to a lending test that considers the bank's:
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\48\ 12 CFR 25.26, 195.26, 345.26.
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Loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal variation,
and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such as loan
originations for sale to the secondary markets, community development
loans, or qualified investments;
The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activity in the bank's assessment area(s);
The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate,
engaging in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different
income levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in
response to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet
credit needs in its assessment area(s).\49\
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\49\ 12 CFR 25.26(b), 195.26(b), 345.26(b).
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The current regulations assign small bank ratings based on the
lending test. A small bank is eligible for a ``satisfactory'' rating
under the lending test if it demonstrates a:
Reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio;
Majority of its loans in its assessment area(s);
Distribution of loans to businesses and farms of different
sizes that is reasonable given the demographics of its assessment
area(s);
Record of taking appropriate action in response to written
complaints, and
Reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the
bank's assessment area(s).\50\
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\50\ 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(i), part 195,
Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(i), part 345, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(1)(i).
A small bank that meets all of those standards and exceeds some or all
of them may warrant consideration for a lending test rating of
``outstanding.'' \51\ To determine whether the overall performance of a
small bank that is not an intermediate small bank warrants a rating of
outstanding, the agency carrying out the evaluation considers the
extent to which the bank exceeds the performance standards for a rating
of ``satisfactory'' and its performance in making qualified investments
and providing branches and other services and delivery systems that
enhance credit availability in its assessment area(s).\52\ A small bank
may receive an overall rating of ``needs to improve'' or ``substantial
noncompliance'' depending on the degree to which its performance has
failed to meet the standards for a ``satisfactory'' rating.\53\
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\51\ 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(ii), part 195,
Appendix A, paragraph (d)(1)(ii), part 345, Appendix A, paragraph
(d)(1)(ii).
\52\ 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(3)(ii)(B), part
195, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(3)(ii)(B), part 345, Appendix A,
paragraph (d)(3)(ii)(B).
\53\ 12 CFR part 25, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(3)(iii), part
195, Appendix A, paragraph (d)(3)(iii), part 345, Appendix A,
paragraph (d)(3)(iii).
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Under the proposal, small banks would not be evaluated pursuant to
the general performance standards that consider a bank's CRA evaluation
measure and the retail lending distribution tests. Instead, small banks
would continue to be evaluated according to the small bank performance
standards applicable to small banks that are not intermediate small
banks in the current CRA regulations, unless they are evaluated under
an approved strategic plan or
[[Page 1224]]
elect to opt into the general performance standards. Performance
context and discriminatory and other illegal credit practices would
continue to be considered in evaluating a small bank's performance. In
addition, under the proposed framework, small banks would continue to
refer to relevant guidance in the Interagency Questions & Answers and
existing policies and procedures, including with respect to state and
MMSA ratings. As proposed, a small bank may choose to exercise an opt
in to the proposed general performance standards and must do so at
least six months before the start of its next exam cycle. Once a small
bank opts in, it would be subject to the general performance standards
outlined in the proposed rule for its next CRA evaluation. A small bank
that has opted in may exercise a one-time opt out at the end of any CRA
evaluation following the opt in and must do so six months before the
start of its next exam cycle. Small banks that opt out would revert to
being evaluated according to the small bank performance standards
applicable to small banks that are not intermediate small banks in the
current CRA regulations, unless they are evaluated under an approved
strategic plan, until such time that they cease to be small banks based
on their assets size.
The proposal would also revise the definition of a ``small bank.''
Under the current regulations, in 2019, a small bank is a bank that, as
of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had assets of
less than $1.284 billion, and an intermediate small bank is a small
bank that had assets of at least $321 million as of December 31 of both
of the prior two calendar years and assets of less than $1.284 billion
as of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years.\54\ These
thresholds are adjusted annually based on changes in the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W).\55\
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\54\ 12 CFR 25.12(u)(1), 195.12(u)(1), 345.12(u)(1).
\55\ 12 CFR 25.12(u)(2), 195.12(u)(2), 345.12(u)(2).
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Under the proposal, a small bank would be a bank that had assets of
$500 million or less in each of the previous four calendar quarters.
Like the current asset-size thresholds, the $500 million threshold
would be adjusted annually based on changes in the CPI-W. Unlike the
current CRA regulations, the proposal would not include a separate
category for intermediate small banks.
Although the proposed small bank performance standards would not
include a CD test and small banks would not be required to engage in CD
activities, lending-related activities, including CD loans, and CD
investments and services may be considered as described above. The
proposal would replace references to ``qualified investments'' in the
applicable small bank provisions of the current CRA regulations with
references to ``community development investments.'' The proposal's
definitions of qualifying loans and CD services also would apply to
small banks. Small banks that engage in qualifying activities as
described under proposed 12 CFR 25.04 and 345.04 would receive
consideration for those activities to the extent that they were
consistent with the small bank performance standards and appendix A.
The agencies also recognize that because the small bank performance
standards would be applied consistent with the current regulatory
framework, certain activities that do not meet the qualifying
activities criteria in Sec. Sec. 25.04 and 345.04 would receive
positive consideration. In addition to the revised qualifying
activities criteria, small banks also would be subject to the
proposal's changes to the assessment area delineation requirements and
would be required to delineate deposit-based assessment areas to the
same extent as other banks.
The proposed small bank asset-size threshold and the lower burdens
imposed by the small bank performance standards recognize that
complying with the data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements under the new general performance standards may impose a
disproportionate burden on these banks. The agencies note, however,
that the available data indicates that small banks may outperform
larger banks if they were subject to the general performance standards.
Summary of objectives. Taken together, the proposed changes to how
a bank's CRA activity is evaluated would reduce the subjectivity and
inconsistencies in the current framework. The two components of the
proposal's CRA evaluation under the new general performance standards--
the CRA evaluation measure and the retail lending distribution test--
would work together to encourage banks to engage in a variety of
activities that provide credit to LMI individuals, small business,
small farms, and in areas of need, as well as to incentivize long-term
investments in these communities. The retail lending distribution tests
would help ensure that banks' retail loans are appropriately
distributed to areas and people in need of credit in the local areas
where banks have a concentration of depositors or in the areas
surrounding bank branches. And the CRA evaluation measure's focus on
the value of on-balance sheet loans and investments would encourage
stable commitments to communities and disincentivize churning of
activities that may not provide long-term stability.
The proposed combined objective method for measuring CRA
performance and activity in conjunction with the establishment of
transparent benchmarks and thresholds would reduce inconsistency and
subjectivity in the current CRA framework and could incentivize more
CRA activity. For example, by selecting sufficiently high empirical
benchmarks for the average CRA evaluation measure--informed by
historical performance levels--under the new general performance
standards, the agencies could encourage more qualifying activities. The
CD lending and investment minimums would recognize the importance of CD
activities to serving a community's needs. Similarly, the small bank
performance standards would continue to ensure that small banks'
lending and lending-related activities are responsive to the needs of
their communities. Furthermore, by preserving a role for performance
context, the agencies would continue to consider the specific facts and
circumstances that affect a bank's CRA capacity and opportunities and
account for them through the consistent and transparent exercise of
judgment.
In addition, the proposal would account for differences in bank
size, location, and business model in several ways. As an initial
matter, small banks would continue to be evaluated pursuant to
performance standards designed specifically for small banks that
consider their lending opportunities and business model. For banks that
are not evaluated as small banks, the retail lending distribution test
component of the general performance standards would account for bank
size, location, and business model in two ways while assessing whether
a bank is adequately serving the LMI individuals and areas in its
assessment area. First, the retail lending geographic distribution test
and borrower distribution test would look at a bank's geographic and
borrower distributions of retail lending activities in LMI areas and to
LMI individuals, small farms, or small businesses in its assessment
areas, as applicable. For each type of retail activity, the
distribution test would look at a bank's qualifying activities
conducted as a percentage of a bank's lending in that area and,
accordingly, would be scaled
[[Page 1225]]
automatically to a bank's presence in that market, its location, and
its chosen business model. Second, a bank's retail lending geographic
distribution and borrower distribution would be evaluated based on its
best performance under either a demographic or peer comparator, both of
which would incorporate information about a bank's location. This
flexibility and focus on the distribution of the number of qualifying
retail loans would help to ensure that the retail lending distribution
test accounts for bank size, location, and business model. The CRA
evaluation measures also would account for differences in bank size,
location, and business model because these differences would be
reflected in the volume of a bank's retail domestic deposits at the
bank level and in each assessment area.
Alternatives considered. The agencies also considered other
approaches to evaluating CRA performance for banks other than small
banks. The agencies first considered having a performance test that
would have been based solely on the total dollar volume of spending on
qualifying activities. Specifically, this approach would have relied
solely on a calculation that compares a bank's average CRA evaluation
measure--calculated by dividing its yearly qualifying activities value
by its average retail domestic deposits--to empirical benchmarks to
evaluate a bank's CRA performance, without overlaying a retail lending
distribution test. This method would have clarified how banks' CRA
performance is evaluated and provided additional consistency that would
have enabled banks to predict and track their performance throughout
the review period. Further, this method of evaluating CRA performance
could have directly achieved more CRA spending and investment in
communities that need it most. However, this approach would not have
accounted for a bank's distribution of the number of retail loans,
which is currently an important part of evaluating a bank's CRA
performance. In addition, without limits on the credit received for a
single transaction, this method of evaluating CRA performance could
have encouraged banks to meet their CRA obligations through a small
number of large dollar retail or CD activities.
Second, the agencies considered retaining a separate CD and retail
lending test. For the CD test, the agencies considered establishing
empirical benchmarks for assessing performance related to a bank's on-
balance sheet dollar volume of CD activities as compared to the dollar
value of its retail domestic deposits. A bank's performance on the
retail lending test would have been based on its performance on
geographic and borrower distribution tests in each assessment area for
all major retail lending product lines. The agencies would have
developed thresholds, corresponding to statutory rating categories, for
a bank's performance on the retail lending distribution tests and the
bank would have been required to meet the thresholds for all tests for
each major retail lending product line to achieve the corresponding
rating. This method of evaluating a bank's CRA performance would also
have provided certainty and clarity and enabled a bank to monitor its
performance throughout its review period. However, this method would
not have focused on increasing the overall dollar volume of qualifying
activities in the areas that need it most and would not have helped
address CRA deserts and hotspots. Accordingly, to ensure that the
distribution of the number of CRA retail loans and the total volume of
spending on qualifying activities would be captured and assessed, the
proposed rule would provide that the ratings for a bank evaluated under
the general performance standards would be based on both the
distribution of retail loans and impact, measured in dollars, of the
bank's qualifying activities.
Further, while developing this proposal, the agencies considered
several possible definitions of retail domestic deposits to determine
which definition would best reflect a bank's capacity to engage in
qualifying activities. First, the agencies considered using total
domestic deposits, as reported on Schedule RC, item 13.a, of the Call
Report, which is the definition of deposits currently used in the FDIC
Summary of Deposits report. This definition includes deposits from
individuals, partnerships, and corporations, the U.S. government,
states and political subdivisions in the United States, commercial
banks and other depository institutions in the United States, banks in
foreign countries, foreign governments, and official institutions,
including foreign central banks. After considering this definition, the
agencies determined that it could overestimate a bank's capacity to
engage in qualifying activities by including municipal deposits and
deposits from foreign governments and entities.
The agencies also considered using the sum of total deposits
intended primarily for personal, household, or family use, as reported
on Schedule RC-E, items 6.a, 6.b, 7.a(1), and 7.b(1). This could more
accurately reflect a bank's capacity to engage in qualifying activities
for individuals, small businesses, and small farms; however, currently,
only institutions over $1 billion in total assets that offer one or
more consumer deposit account products are required to report that
information. Accordingly, the agencies did not use this definition in
the proposal because using it would have created additional reporting
requirements for banks not currently required to report this
information. In addition, the agencies considered scaling the empirical
benchmarks for the average CRA evaluation measure at the assessment
area level but determined that by relying on the volume of a bank's
retail domestic deposits in each assessment area, the measure already
accounts for differences in bank size, location, and business model.
The agencies also considered developing a method for evaluating a
bank's use of alternative delivery systems and mechanisms, such as
mobile banking, for meeting the needs of LMI customers. For example,
the agencies considered adding a performance standard that accounts for
a bank's use of alternative delivery systems that serve LMI
individuals, such as the number of a bank's LMI customers that used an
alternative delivery system divided by the number of the bank's LMI
customers.
The agencies invite comment on all aspects of the proposal related
to the proposed method and process for objectively measuring bank CRA
performance, including with respect to the following questions:
14. The proposed rule would define retail domestic deposits as
total domestic deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations,
as reported on Schedule RC-E, item 1, of the Call Report, excluding
brokered deposits. Is there another definition--including the
alternatives described above--that would better reflect a bank's
capacity to engage in CRA qualifying activities?
15. The proposal focuses on quantifying qualifying activities that
benefit LMI individuals and areas and quantifies a bank's distribution
of branches by increasing a bank's quantified value of qualifying
activities divided by retail domestic deposits (a bank's CRA evaluation
measure), expressed as a percentage, by up to one percentage point
based on the percent of a bank's branches that are in specified areas
of need. Banks with no branches in these areas will not receive any CRA
credit for their branch distribution under this method, even if
[[Page 1226]]
there are very few specified areas of need in the areas they serve.
Does this appropriately incentivize banks to place or retain branches
in specified areas of need, including LMI areas? Does it appropriately
account for the value of branches in these areas?
16. Under the retail lending distribution tests, the proposal would
consider the borrower distribution of any consumer loan product line
that is a major retail lending product line for the bank. The agencies
defined a major retail lending product line as a retail lending product
line that comprises at least 15 percent of the bank-level dollar volume
of total retail loan originations during the evaluation period, but
also considered setting the threshold between 10 and 30 percent. Should
the agencies consider a different threshold? Additionally, applying the
retail lending distribution test to only major retail lending product
lines means that not all retail lending product lines will be evaluated
for every bank. Are there any circumstances in which applying the
retail lending distribution test to a consumer lending product line
should be mandatory, even if it is not a major retail lending product
line (e.g., if the consumer lending product line constitutes the
majority of a bank's retail lending in number of originations)?
Additionally, the proposal would only apply the retail lending
distribution tests in assessment areas with at least 20 loans from a
major product line. Is 20 loans the appropriate threshold, or should a
different threshold, such as 50 loans, be used?
17. Under the proposal, a bank evaluated under the general
performance standards could not receive a satisfactory or an
outstanding presumptive bank-level rating unless it also received that
rating in a significant portion of its assessment areas and in those
assessment areas where it holds a significant amount of deposit. Should
50 percent be the threshold used to determine ``significant portion of
a bank's assessment area'' and ``significant amount of deposits'' for
purposes of determining whether a bank has received a rating in a
significant portion of its assessment areas? Or should another
threshold, such as 80 percent, be used?
18. Under the proposal, banks that had assets of $500 million or
less in each of the previous four calendar quarters would be considered
small banks and evaluated under the small bank performance standards,
unless these banks opted into being evaluated under the general
performance standards. Is $500 million the appropriate threshold for
these banks? If not, what is the appropriate threshold? Should the
threshold be $1 billion instead?
19. Under the proposal, small banks (i.e., banks with $500 million
or less in assets in each of the previous four calendar quarters) may
choose to exercise an opt into and a one-time opt out of the general
performance standards. Should small banks that opt in to the general
performance standards be permitted to opt out and be examined under the
small bank performance standards for future evaluations and, if so, how
frequently should this be permitted?
D. Data Collection, Recordkeeping and Reporting
The current CRA framework requires banks to collect and report a
variety of data on loans.\56\ However, small banks, as defined under
the current rule, generally are exempt from these requirements.\57\ The
current framework also does not collect data on all CRA activity. For
example, the agencies do not currently collect data on CD investments
or CD services. Deposit data that are otherwise available also have
limitations because banks currently record deposits in locations other
than the address of the account holder. While CRA performance
evaluations may provide information on CRA activities that is not
otherwise collected, that information is not reported in an accessible
manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\56\ 12 CFR 25.42, 195.42, 345.42.
\57\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed framework includes data collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements that would apply to banks. There would be
separate data collection and reporting requirements for banks subject
to the general performance standards and for banks subject to the small
bank performance standards.
Banks evaluated under the general performance standards. Banks
evaluated under the general performance standards would be required to
collect and maintain their retail lending distribution tests results,
CRA evaluation measures calculations, and presumptive ratings
determinations. They would be required to collect and maintain data for
each qualifying loan or CD investment on-balance sheet and CD services
and monetary and in-kind donations that the bank provides until the
completion of its next evaluation. For each qualifying activity, among
other things, a bank would collect and maintain records of the dollar
value of the activity, the activity location, how the activity
satisfies the qualifying activities criteria, and whether it serves a
particular assessment area. For each qualifying loan and investment, a
bank would collect and maintain records of the dollar value of the
activity as of the close of business on the last day of each month that
the loan or investment is on-balance sheet, or, in the case of a
monetary or in-kind donation, its quantified value; a unique
identification number or symbol; and the type of loan or investment. In
addition, for qualifying loans, a bank would need to collect and
maintain the date of origination or purchase; the date of sale, if sold
by the bank within 90 days of origination; an indicator of whether the
loan was originated or purchased; the loan amount at origination or
purchase; and the income or revenue of the borrower. For each
qualifying investment, a bank would need to collect and maintain the
date of the investment. A bank would also collect and maintain records
of descriptions of each qualifying CD service and the date on which
each CD service was performed. The value of each retail domestic
deposit account and the physical address of each depositor at the end
of each quarter also would be collected and maintained. Banks also
would be required to collect and maintain certification from each
relevant party in those situations where the bank is substantively
conducting qualifying activities, but the activity is nominally done by
another party, such as an affiliate.
To implement the retail lending distribution tests, banks would be
required to collect and maintain records of the number of all
qualifying and non-qualifying retail loans at the census-tract level
and report at the county or county equivalent level. Banks also would
be required to collect and maintain information on home mortgage and
consumer loans originations that do not qualify for CRA credit. For
each of those loans, a bank would be required to collect and maintain a
unique identification number or symbol, the loan type, the date of
origination, the loan amount at origination, the loan location, and the
income of the borrower.
For each assessment area, a bank would be required to collect and
maintain a list of each county or county equivalent, metropolitan
division, nonmetropolitan area, metropolitan statistical area, and
state within the assessment area. Banks would also collect and maintain
information indicating whether each of its facilities is a depository
or non-depository facility.
[[Page 1227]]
Banks would be required to collect and maintain records of
qualifying activities data at the bank level and for each assessment
area. The data collected and records maintained would include
information on all qualifying activities conducted by the bank.
The proposal describes how banks would determine the location of an
activity. The location of retail loans would be the address of the
loan, determined by the borrower's physical address for consumer loans,
the address of the property that relates to a home mortgage loan, and
the address of the main business facility or farm or the physical
address where loan proceeds will be applied, as indicated by the
borrower, for business and farm loans. A CD loan, CD investment, and CD
service would be located in the census tract that includes a particular
project to the extent a bank can document that the services or funding
it provided was allocated to that particular project. If a bank cannot
document how the funding it provided was allocated, the services or
funding would be allocated across all of the bank's assessment areas
and other metropolitan and non-metropolitan statistical areas served by
the loan or investment according to the share of the bank's retail
domestic deposits in those areas. For example, if a CD investment
served an assessment area with four percent of the bank's deposits and
three other metropolitan statistical areas in which the bank did not
have an assessment area but did have two percent of its total deposits
in each, 40 percent of the dollar value would be allocated to the
assessment area and the other 60 percent would be considered in the
bank-level calculation.
The proposal would require banks to collect and maintain all
necessary data in machine readable form. To facilitate compliance with
the data collection and recordkeeping requirements, the agencies would
provide additional guidance on the specific data points that a bank
would need to collect and maintain and the way the data would be
recorded. The agencies would review a sample of a bank's collected data
that was used to determine the presumptive rating as part of a bank's
CRA evaluation. The agencies would also use this information to
measure, assess, and understand bank CRA performance across the
industry.
Annually, banks would report their retail lending distribution
tests results, CRA evaluation measures calculations, and presumptive
ratings determinations to the agencies. Banks would also provide the
annual quantified value of the following activities as of the close of
business on the last day of each month: (1) Qualifying retail loans;
(2) CD loans; (3) CD investments; and (4) CD services. Banks also would
be required to report annually (1) information on the number of home
mortgage loans, consumer loans, by product line, small loans to
businesses, and small loans to farms; (2) the average monthly value of
retail domestic deposits; and (3) assessment area information. For each
assessment area, a bank would be required to report a list of each
county or county equivalent, MD, nonmetropolitan area, MSA, and state
within the assessment area. Banks also would need to provide a
certification from each affiliate or other third party that the
qualifying activity information collected from that affiliate or other
third party is true and correct and report performance context
information. To reduce data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting
burdens, the proposal leverages the retail domestic deposit figure
reported quarterly on the Call Report for use in calculating the CRA
evaluation measure, although banks would be required to subtract
brokered deposits from that figure. The proposed rule would also
reference a form, available on the agencies' websites, that banks could
use to meet the reporting requirements to promote consistency and
reduce compliance burdens.
Summary of objectives. While the agencies understand that the
proposed data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements
would require upfront changes that will result in increased costs,
particularly for smaller banks, the agencies believe that, over time,
the benefits to transparency, simplicity, and consistency would
outweigh those one-time, upfront costs. The agencies believe that the
vast majority of data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting costs
would decrease over time through the development and implementation of
automated systems. The availability of third-party service providers
that provide data-related services across many banks could help banks
meet these new requirements and, because third-party service providers
may be able to achieve economies of scale, could further reduce costs
for smaller banks.
Certain data that the proposal would require is not currently
collected or reported, but most of the information is available
currently or could be obtained without undue cost going forward. The
agencies believe that the benefits banks would realize from the
proposal, such as certainty regarding which activities would qualify
for CRA credit and where, would offset some, if not most, of the costs
of the proposal. Moreover, banks may find that the proposed
requirements provide non-CRA business benefits by, for example,
providing further insights into the location and potential needs of
their customers.
Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards. Banks
evaluated under the small bank performance standards would generally be
exempt from the data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements of this proposal. However, these banks would be required
to collect and maintain information on retail domestic deposits, based
on the physical address of the depositor.
Public disclosures. The agencies would make certain information
that banks provide publicly available, allowing stakeholders to detect
trends and monitor and compare banks' CRA activities. This standardized
data would allow for informed public input. In addition, the agencies
would publish each bank's ratings and a list of banks rated
``outstanding.'' A bank receiving an outstanding rating would also
receive a certificate or seal to be displayed and to inform the public
of its CRA performance. Moreover, banks that receive a bank-level
outstanding CRA rating would be subject to a five-year CRA evaluation
period unless the data reported indicates that an earlier evaluation is
warranted. The agencies invite comment on other ways to incentivize
banks to achieve an outstanding rating.
The proposal would also retain many of the current regulation's
provisions related to the public file,\58\ planned examination
schedules,\59\ public notice by banks,\60\ and the CRA notice.\61\
Banks would still need to provide public notice to the communities they
serve that community members are entitled to CRA-related information.
Banks would also need to provide the requested CRA-related information
to the community members. CRA-related information would still include
information about banks' branches, locations, and services, comments
received from the public related to assessment area needs and
opportunities, and responses to those comments. However, banks would
not have to provide data reported through HMDA in the public file
because the proposal would collect home mortgage data directly instead
of relying on HMDA data.\62\ Additionally, recognizing
[[Page 1228]]
the advances in technology over the past couple of decades, banks would
no longer be limited to providing public notice or making available the
CRA information through physical means. Instead, banks would have the
option to provide public notice or make available CRA-related
information on their websites. If a community member who has requested
CRA-related information does not have access to the internet, banks
could offer to print out the information at that person's expense,
instead of copying the information from a physical file.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ 12 CFR 25.43, 195.43, 345.43.
\59\ 12 CFR 25.45, 195.45, 345.45.
\60\ 12 CFR 25.44, 195.44, 345.44.
\61\ 12 CFR part 25 Appendix B, part 195 Appendix B, part 345
Appendix B.
\62\ HMDA data are still available to the public and can be
accessed here: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/hmda/historic-data/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CRA sunshine requirements. In addition to the proposed data
collection, recordkeeping, and reporting provisions contained in this
proposal, the agencies note that Congress required the agencies to
issue rules implementing the CRA Sunshine Requirements as part of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999.\63\ The agencies' regulations define
and address written agreements between financial institutions and
nongovernmental entities or persons that are made in fulfillment of the
CRA, and require that those agreements be made available to the public
and the appropriate Federal banking agency.\64\ Further, the
regulations require parties to a covered agreement to file reports with
the appropriate Federal banking agency for the duration of the
agreement. The agencies emphasize the continued importance of complying
with those regulations to ensure public awareness of the terms and
conditions of covered agreements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831y; 12 CFR parts 35, 207, 346.
\64\ See 12 CFR part 35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alternatives considered. Under the proposal, small banks would be
required to collect and maintain information on depositors necessary
for the designation of deposit-based assessment areas. To limit the
recordkeeping burdens for small banks, the agencies are considering
alternatives for small bank data collection, including a full exemption
from any recordkeeping requirements. For example, the agencies could
exempt a small bank from any recordkeeping requirement associated with
the designation of deposit-based assessment areas--which is designed to
capture non-traditional business models of internet banks or other
banks that have one or a few physical locations but operate on a
national basis--if the bank demonstrates that it has a traditional
business model to the agencies' satisfaction.
The agencies invite comment on all aspects of the proposal related
to the proposed data collection, reporting, and recordkeeping
requirements, including with respect to the following question:
20. As discussed above, the proposal would require banks to collect
and report additional data to support the proposed rule. Although most
of this data is already collected and maintained in some form, some
additional data collection may be required. For example, banks may need
to gather additional data to determine whether existing on-balance
sheet loans and investments are qualifying activities. Are there
impediments to acquiring this data? If so, what are they?
21. What burdens, if any, would be added by the proposed data
collection, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements?
a. What system changes would be needed to implement these
requirements?
b. What are the estimated costs of implementing these requirements?
22. The proposal would require small banks to collect and maintain
certain deposit-based assessment area data. Are there other ways the
agencies can limit the recordkeeping burden associated with the
designation of deposit-based assessment areas, including other ways for
banks to differentiate between traditional and internet type business
models?
E. Effective Date and Compliance Dates
The agencies propose that the effective date of the final rule
would be the first day of the first calendar quarter that begins at
least 60 days after the issuance of the final rule. However, to reduce
the compliance burden of the final rule, the proposed rule would
include a transition period through varying compliance dates after the
effective date to allow banks to revise their systems for collecting,
maintaining, and reporting data and to establish processes for
calculating their qualifying activities values and CRA evaluation
measures and determining their presumptive ratings. Specifically, the
proposed rule would provide a bank other than a small bank with (1) one
year after the rule's effective date to comply with the rule's
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements and
(2) two years after the rule's effective date to comply with the rule's
reporting requirements. The proposed rule would provide small banks
with one year after the rule's effective date to comply with the rule's
assessment area and applicable data collection and recordkeeping
requirements. All banks would not comply with the applicable remaining
requirements of the rule--and thus would not be evaluated under the new
framework--until they complete their evaluation period that concludes
immediately after the reporting requirements compliance date in 12 CFR
25.01(c)(4)(i)(A)(2) and 345.01(c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of the proposed rule,
including any extensions approved by their relevant agencies.
To reduce the burden on small banks, the proposed rule would
provide small banks that opt into the general performance standards
under proposed 12 CFR 25.09(b) and 345.09(b) as of the final rule's
effective date and banks that no longer meet the definition of a small
bank (1) two years after the rule's effective date or after the bank no
longer meets the definition of a small bank to comply with the rule's
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements and
(2) three years after the rule's effective date or after the bank no
longer meets the definition of a small bank to comply with the rule's
reporting requirements. However, small banks that choose to opt into
the general performance standards under proposed Sec. Sec. 25.09(b)
and 345.09(b) after the effective date would receive (1) one year after
the bank opts in to comply with the rule's assessment area, data
collection, and recordkeeping requirements and (2) two years after the
bank opts in to comply with the rule's reporting requirements.
The agencies invite comment on all aspects of the proposal related
to the proposed compliance date provisions, including on the proposed
transition periods and potential reduction of small bank burden.
V. Qualifying Activities Illustrative List
This list is a non-exhaustive, illustrative list of examples of
activities that would or would not qualify under proposed Sec. Sec.
25.04 and 345.04. The list is intended to identify activities that
would or would not meet the criteria in the proposed rule. The proposed
rule contemplates that the agencies will add additional activities that
meet or do not meet the qualifying activities criteria consistent with
the process outlined in proposed 12 CFR 25.05 and 345.05.
[[Page 1229]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed qualifying
regulatory criteria Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b) and Retail loans. A home mortgage loan, small
345.04(b). loan to a business, small loan to a
farm, or consumer loan is a qualifying
activity if it is:
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(1) and Provided to a:
345.04(b)(1).
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(1)(i) Low- or moderate-income individual or
and 345(b)(1)(i). family;
Loan classified on the bank's Call Report
as a 1-4 family residential construction
loan to an LMI individual.
Closed-end loan or open-end line of
credit classified on the bank's Call
Report as a loan secured by a 1-4 family
residential property to an LMI
individual.
Loan classified on the bank's Call Report
as secured by a multifamily residential
property to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed by the
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) to
an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the
FHA's 203(b) Mortgage Insurance Program
to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the
FHA's Limited 203(k) Program to an LMI
individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed under the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development's (HUD) Indian Home Loan
Guarantee Program (Section 184) to an
LMI individual.
Home mortgage loan guaranteed by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Rural
Housing Service to an LMI individual.
Home mortgage guaranteed by the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to
an LMI individual.
Credit card to an LMI individual.
Low-cost education loan to an LMI
individual, such as to fund school
tuition and/or expenses.
Home equity line of credit to an LMI
individual, such as for home
improvement.
Non-credit card revolving credit line,
such as for purchase of home appliances,
to an LMI individual.
Consumer loan to an LMI individual for
purposes other than purchasing an
automobile, such as to fund unexpected
medical expenses.
Automobile loan to an LMI individual to
purchase a car.
Installment loan to an LMI individual to
purchase home appliances.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(1)(ii) Small business; or
and 345(b)(1)(ii).
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a business with gross annual
revenues of $2 million or less when
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a commercial and industrial loan.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a business with gross annual
revenues of $2 million or less when
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a loan secured by nonfarm nonresidential
properties.
Loan of $1.5 million under the U.S. Small
Business Administration (SBA) Certified
Development Company/504 Loan Program
that covers 50 percent of the project's
cost and is secured by a first lien on
real property.
Loan of $700 thousand to a business with
gross annual revenues of $2 million or
less to make improvements to its
manufacturing facility under the SBA
7(a) loan program.
Loan of $2 million to a business with
gross annual revenues of $2 million or
less to finance the purchase of
machinery under the USDA's Rural
Development Business and Industry
Guarantee Loan Program.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(1)(iii) Small farm;
and 345.04(b)(1)(iii).
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a farm with gross annual
revenues of $2 million or less when
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a loan to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a family farm with gross annual
revenues of $2 million or less when
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a loan to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers.
Loan of $800 thousand to a family farm
with gross annual revenues of $1.5
million to finance the purchase of
equipment.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(2) and Located in Indian country;
345.04(b)(2).
Loan or line of credit made in Indian
country and classified on the bank's
Call Report as a 1-4 family residential
construction loan.
Closed-end loan or open-end line of
credit made in Indian country and
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a loan secured by a 1-4 family
residential property.
Loan made in Indian country and
classified on the bank's Call Report as
secured by a multifamily residential
property.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed by the FHA.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed under the FHA's 203(b)
Mortgage Insurance Program.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed under the FHA's Limited
203(k) Program.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed under the HUD's Indian
Home Loan Guarantee Program (Section
184).
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed by the USDA's Rural
Housing Service.
Home mortgage loan made in Indian country
and guaranteed by the VA.
Credit card to an individual in Indian
country.
Home equity line of credit extended in
Indian country, such as for home
improvement.
[[Page 1230]]
Non-credit card revolving credit line,
such as for purchase of home appliances,
to an individual in Indian country.
Consumer loan made to an individual in
Indian country for purposes other than
purchasing an automobile, such as to
fund unexpected medical expenses.
Automobile loan to an individual in
Indian country to purchase a car.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a business in Indian country
with gross annual revenues of any amount
when classified on the bank's Call
Report as a commercial and industrial
loan.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a business in Indian country
with gross annual revenues of any amount
when classified on the bank's Call
Report as a loan secured by nonfarm
nonresidential properties.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million made
in Indian country under the SBA
Certified Development Company/504 Loan
Program that covers 50 percent of the
project's cost and is secured by a first
lien on real property.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million to a
business in Indian country to make
improvements to its manufacturing
facility under the SBA 7(a) loan
program.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million to a
business in Indian country to finance
the purchase of machinery under the
USDA's Rural Development Business and
Industry Guarantee Loan Program.
Loan or line of credit of $2 million or
less to a farm in Indian country with
gross annual revenues of any amount when
classified on the bank's Call Report as
a loan to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(3) and A small loan to a business located in a
345.04(b)(3). low- or moderate-income census tract; or
Loan of $100 thousand to a business with
gross annual revenues of $1.3 million to
purchase inventory for its business
located in a moderate-income census
tract.
Loan of $1.5 million to a business with
gross annual revenues of $10 million to
expand its manufacturing facility
located in a low-income census tract.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(b)(4) and A small loan to a farm located in a low-
345.04(b)(4). or moderate-income census tract.
Loan of $250 thousand to purchase farm
equipment for a family farm with gross
annual revenues of $1.2 million located
in a low-income census tract.
Term loan of $2 million to refinance a
construction loan used to expand the
production facilities for a dairy farm
with gross annual revenues of $15
million located in a moderate-income
census tract.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c) and Community development loans, community
345.04(c). development investments, and community
development services. A community
development loan, community development
investment, or community development
service is a qualifying activity if it
provides financing for or supports:
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(1) and Affordable housing, which means:
345.04(c)(1).
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(1)(i) Rental housing:
and 345.04(c)(1)(i).
Sec. Sec. That is likely to partially or primarily
25.04(c)(1)(i)(A) and benefit low- or moderate-income
345.04(c)(1)(i)(A). individuals or families as demonstrated
by median rents that do not and are not
projected at the time of the transaction
to exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of
the area median income;
A loan to a non-profit organization for
the purpose of providing affordable
housing to LMI individuals where the
median rents do not exceed 30 percent of
80 percent of the area median income.
A loan to a for-profit business for the
purpose of providing affordable housing
to LMI individuals where the median
rents do not exceed 30 percent of 80
percent of the area median income.
A loan to a for-profit developer for
construction of multi-family mixed-
income rental housing, that partially
benefits LMI individuals because 20
percent of the units will be offered at
median rents that do not exceed 30
percent of 80 percent of the area median
income.
A loan to a non-profit developer to build
multi-family rental housing guaranteed
under the USDA's Section 538 Guaranteed
Loan Program with all units offered at
median rents that do not exceed 30
percent of 80 percent of the area median
income.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, that will use tax credits from
the Federal Historic Tax Credit Program
to finance the adaptive reuse and
renovation of a hotel into rental units
with median rents that will not exceed
30 percent of 80 percent of the area
median income.
A loan for a mixed-use property in an
underserved area that will be used to
help seasonal businesses provide
affordable housing to seasonal LMI
workers at rents that do not exceed 30
percent of 80 percent of the area median
income.
A loan to a for-profit developer for
construction of multi-family mixed-
income rental housing, with 60 percent
of the units offered at median rents
that do not exceed 30 percent of 80
percent of the area median income.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, that will finance the company's
production of cost-effective modular
housing, which will be used to supply
affordable housing units for rent to LMI
individuals and families.
An investment that supports the abatement
of or remediation to correct lead-based
paint, asbestos, mold, or radon that are
present in a multi-family rental housing
project with rents not greater than 30
percent of 80 percent of the area
median.
Sec. Sec. That partially or primarily benefits low-
25.04(c)(1)(i)(B) and or moderate-income individuals or
345.04(c)(1)(i)(B). families as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
a federal, state, local, or tribal
government;
Investment in a project where 30 percent
of the housing units will be set aside
as affordable to LMI individuals through
local inclusionary zoning.
[[Page 1231]]
Loan to purchase a multifamily dwelling
that will partially benefit LMI
individuals by designating at least 40
percent of the units to renters who
receive assistance under the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development's section 8 rental subsidy
program.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, that provides financing for the
construction of a 102-unit rent-to-own
affordable housing complex targeted to
LMI individuals and families.
Sec. Sec. That is undertaken in conjunction with an
25.04(c)(1)(i)(C) and explicit federal, state, local, or
345.04(c)(1)(i)(C). tribal government affordable housing
program for low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
Investment in a limited partnership to
develop and operate a Federal Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) multi-family
housing project.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, to finance the conversion and
rehabilitation of public housing using
the HUD's Rental Assistance
Demonstration Program that uses a
section 8 project-based contract to make
the units affordable to LMI individuals
and families.
A loan to a nursing home and assisted
living facility that uses the HUD
Section 232 loan guarantee and is
defined by HUD as multifamily housing
that primarily serves or assists LMI
individuals or families.
An investment in a ``green'' retrofit
initiative as part of an explicit local
government program used to maintain the
affordability of rental housing for LMI
individuals through energy efficient
measures.
Loan to facilitate the purchase of
existing multifamily housing using a
guarantee provided under the HUD Section
207/223(f) program to make the units
affordable to LMI individuals and
families.
Loan to facilitate the substantial
rehabilitation of multifamily rental
housing for moderate-income families,
elderly and the handicapped using a
guarantee provided under the HUD Section
221(d)(4) mortgage insurance program to
make the units affordable to LMI
individuals and families.
Loan to a Native American tribe to
purchase land and construct
infrastructure and affordable rental
housing, as identified in the tribe's
Indian Housing Plan, using a guarantee
provided under the HUD Title VI Tribal
Housing Activities Loan Guarantee
Program to make the units affordable to
LMI individuals and families.
Loan to a non-profit sponsor to
rehabilitate multifamily rental housing
for elderly persons (62 or older) and/or
persons with disabilities using a
guarantee provided under the HUD Program
Section 231 to make the units affordable
to LMI individuals.
Sec. Sec. That partially or primarily benefits
25.04(c)(1)(i)(D) and middle-income individuals or families in
345.04(c)(1)(i)(D). high-cost areas as demonstrated by an
affordable housing set-aside required by
a federal, state, local, or tribal
government; or
An investment in a project in a high-cost
area where 30 percent of the rental
units are set aside as affordable to
middle-income individuals through local
inclusionary zoning.
A loan to a non-profit to develop rental
housing under a state tax credit program
that supports workforce housing in high-
cost areas where 40 percent of the units
will be set-aside for middle-income
individuals and families.
Sec. Sec. That is undertaken in conjunction with an
25.04(c)(1)(i)(E) and explicit federal, state, local, or
345.04(c)(1)(i)(E). tribal government affordable housing
program for middle-income individuals or
families in high-cost areas; or
A loan to finance temporary rental
housing for middle-income workers in a
high-cost area in response to a local
workforce housing program.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(1)(ii) Owner-occupied housing purchased,
and 345.04(c)(1)(ii). refinanced, or improved by low- or
moderate-income individuals or families,
except for home mortgage loans provided
directly to individuals or families;
Investment in a mortgage-backed security
(MBS) that is primarily secured by loans
to LMI borrowers.
Bank employees help to build a single-
family home for a non-profit
organization with an express purpose of
providing affordable housing for
purchase by LMI individuals or families.
Down payment and closing cost assistance
grants on home purchase loans for LMI
borrowers.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(2) and Another bank's community development
345.04(c)(2). loan, community development investment,
or community development service;
Bank employees volunteer to provide
technical assistance to another bank to
establish a loan program targeted to LMI
individuals and families.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(3) and Businesses or Farms that meet the size-
345(c)(3). eligibility standards of the Small
Business Administration Certified
Development Company, as that term is
defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small
Business Investment Company, as
described 13 CFR part 107, by providing
technical assistance and supportive
services, such as shared space,
technology, or administrative assistance
through an intermediary;
A grant to a non-profit that provides
technical assistance to small businesses
that meet the stated size-eligibility
standards.
Loan to a non-profit entity that provides
technical assistance to small businesses
that meet the size-eligibility standards
for an SBA Small Business Investment
Company.
Bank employees volunteer through a local
Chamber of Commerce to lead a workshop
that provides technical assistance to
the chamber's small business members
that meet the stated size-eligibility
standards.
Providing permanent office space rent-
free at a branch for use by the local
economic development organization that
targets small business development,
predominantly among start-up and micro-
businesses that meet the stated size-
eligibility standards.
[[Page 1232]]
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(4) and Community support services which means
345.04(c)(4). activities, such as child care,
education, health services, and housing
services, that partially or primarily
serve or assist low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, in a fund that provides
financing for a charter school that will
primarily serve LMI children.
Donation to a non-profit organization
that provides transportation to medical
treatments for LMI individuals.
Grant to a non-profit organization that
provides housing assistance and
counseling to LMI immigrants residing in
the United States.
Providing mentoring/tutoring services to
clients of a non-profit organization
that serves LMI youth.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, that supports a non-profit that
provides general education degrees (GED)
primarily to LMI individuals without a
high school diploma.
Loan to a job training center that
primarily serves unemployed, LMI
individuals.
Volunteer service to serve meals at a
homeless shelter.
In-kind donation to a food pantry that
provides services to unemployed, LMI
families.
Loan to acquire a child care facility
that serves LMI residents of a low-
income neighborhood.
Volunteer service with a non-profit that
provides income tax assistance programs
for LMI individuals.
A grant to a non-profit organization that
runs a state-funded battered women's
shelter for LMI individuals in an
underserved area as part of a statewide
program.
A loan, investment, or service that
supports an LMI-focused alcohol and drug
recovery center.
Grant to a drug rehabilitation center
that primarily services low-income
individuals.
Loan to a legal assistance program for
LMI individuals.
Grant to an organization that provides
resume writing services to LMI formerly
incarcerated individuals.
Loan to an acute care hospital facility
using the HUD Section 242 Hospital
Mortgage Insurance Program to provide
affordable child care services for LMI
individuals or families.
Grant to support a program that provides
eye glasses to low-income individuals.
In-kind contribution of rent-free office
space to a local food bank.
Provision of technical assistance on
financial matters to a non-profit
organization that will apply for loans
or grants under the Federal Home Loan
Banks' (FHLBanks) Affordable Housing
Program, specifically by serving on a
loan review committee, assisting in
marketing financial services, and
furnishing financial services training
for staff and management.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(5) and Essential community facilities that
345(c)(5). partially or primarily benefit or serve:
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(5)(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or
and 345.04(c)(5)(i). families; or
A construction loan to improve a hospital
that is located in a middle-income
census tract adjacent to a low-income
census tract that partially benefits LMI
individuals who will utilize hospital
services.
Investment in a municipal bond to fund
construction of a health center that
will primarily serve residents of a
moderate-income neighborhood.
Purchase of a local municipal bond, the
proceeds of which will be used to
construct a new high school that will
partially serve students from LMI
families.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, in a fund that finances
supportive housing projects for the
chronically homeless and other public
funding, such as state-issued tax-exempt
bonds, HUD's Supportive Housing Program
or section 8 Project-Based Rental
Assistance, the FHLBanks' Affordable
Housing Program, and LIHTCs.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(5)(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts,
and 345.04(c)(5)(ii). distressed areas, underserved areas,
disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
Loan to construct a new fire station
located in Indian country.
Loan of $8 million to a company to build
a health clinic in an underserved area,
using the USDA's Community Facilities
Guarantee Loan Program.
Loan to build a police station in a
distressed area.
Purchase of a local municipal bond with a
purpose consistent with a local disaster
recovery plan, the proceeds of which
will be used to construct a new high
school in a disaster area.
Loan to improve a hospital in a
distressed area that serves the entire
community, including LMI individuals.
Investment in a fund that finances
community facilities in Indian country.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(6) and Essential infrastructure that benefits or
345.04(c)(6). serves:
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(6)(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or
and 345.04(c)(6)(i). families; or
Loan to finance construction of a road in
a rural community that provides LMI
residents of the area access to
employment centers outside of the area.
Investment in a local cooperative to
develop broadband infrastructure and
expand access to LMI residents in the
area.
Investment in a local municipal bond to
improve city-wide water and waste water
systems with benefit to all residents,
including LMI residents.
Loan for infrastructure improvements,
including upgrading roads, water supply
and sewer services, to a mobile home
park that primarily rents space to LMI
residents.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(6)(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts,
and 345.04(c)(6)(ii). distressed areas, underserved areas,
disaster areas consistent with a
disaster recovery plan, or Indian
country;
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, that will finance construction
of a solar energy facility that uses
federal renewable energy tax credits and
will provide access to reduced cost
electrical utilities to LMI census
tracts.
[[Page 1233]]
Investment in a local municipal bond to
refurbish a bridge that connects a low-
income neighborhood with essential
services without which residents would
otherwise not have access to those
services.
Investment in a state issued bond to
reconstruct a tunnel in a disaster area,
consistent with the area's disaster
recovery plan.
Purchase of a local municipal bond, the
proceeds of which will be used to
upgrade a water pipeline that serves an
underserved area.
Loan to a company to build a new flood
control system as identified in the
community's disaster recovery plan, such
as a levee or storm drain that serves
the disaster area.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, to finance the construction of
a broadband network to develop reliable
internet access in an LMI census tract.
Investment in a Special City Taxing
District Bond with the purpose of
renovating city sidewalks in a
distressed area to comply with the
Americans with Disabilities Act.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(7) and A family farm's:
345.04(c)(7).
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(7)(i) Purchase or lease of farm land,
and 345.04(c)(7)(i). equipment, and other farm-related
inputs;
Loan to a family-owned corn and wheat
farm with gross annual revenues of $10
million to purchase a tractor.
Loan to a family-owned peanut farm with
gross annual revenues of $255 thousand
to purchase additional land to increase
production.
Loan to a family-owned vineyard with
gross annual revenues of $4 million to
purchase additional acreage.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(7)(ii) Receipt of technical assistance and
and 345.04(c)(7)(ii). supportive services, such as shared
space, technology, or administrative
assistance through an intermediary; or
Grant to a non-profit organization that
provides technical assistance to family
farms.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(7)(iii) Sale and trade of family farm products;
and 345.04(c)(7)(iii).
Loan to a family-owned vegetable (misc.
crop) farm with gross annual revenues of
$500 thousand to construct a building
from which to sell produce.
Loan to a family-owned aquaculture farm
with gross annual revenues of $3 million
to market and sell their products
statewide.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(8) and Federal, state, local, or tribal
345.04(c)(8). government programs, projects, or
initiatives that:
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(8)(i) Partially or primarily benefit low- or
and 345.04(c)(8)(i). moderate-income individuals or families;
Grant to a non-profit organization to
provide a local government sponsored
dress for success program for homeless
women.
A loan to a non-profit organization to
provide a state government sponsored
after-school program for students from
LMI families.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(8)(ii) Partially or primarily benefit small
and 345.04(c)(8)(ii). businesses or small farms as those terms
are defined in the programs, projects or
initiatives; or
Volunteer service providing guidance to
small businesses on how to create
financial statements under a state
program to support statewide business
development.
Investment in a SBA Guaranteed Loan Pool
Certificate.
Loan to a small business that is a state-
certified Historically Underutilized
Business.
Loan to a small business to purchase real
estate related to a New Markets Tax
Credit project, as provided for in 26
U.S.C. 45D.
Grant to a non-profit that provides
financing for small farms under a
federal program to encourage new farm
development.
Loan to a small business incubator that
primarily benefits small businesses by
providing supportive services to
business start-ups and that is funded in
part under a state-wide CD initiative.
Loan of $3 million to a small business
under a tribal government loan guarantee
program.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(8)(iii) Are consistent with a bona fide
and 345.04(c)(8)(iii). government revitalization,
stabilization, or recovery plan for a
low- or moderate-income census tract; a
distressed area; an underserved area; a
disaster area; or Indian country;
Grant to a non-profit organization that
receives funds from a statewide program
to revitalize communities in Indian
country.
Contribution of other real estate owned
(OREO) property to a local government-
owned land bank whose primary purpose is
consistent with a government
revitalization plan that benefits LMI
census tracts.
Financing to support cleanup of
industrial brownfields in a distressed
area as part of city-sponsored
revitalization program.
Investment in a Tax Increment Financing
(TIF) bond to finance infrastructure
improvements consistent with a
government revitalization plan in a
distressed area.
Loan through a state program to a company
to purchase and replace equipment as
well as rebuild the manufacturing
facility that was damaged by flooding in
a federally designated disaster area and
supported by the community's disaster
recovery plan.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(9) and Financial literacy programs or education
345.04(c)(9). or homebuyer counseling;
Financial counseling by bank employees to
participants in a workforce development
program.
Bank employees conduct first-time
homebuyer counseling program for bank
customers.
Bank employees teach financial education
or literacy curricula at local community
centers.
Bank employees delivering the FDIC's
Money Smart Program curriculum to
residents at a senior living facility.
Grant to a non-profit organization that
provides financial literacy courses for
a foreclosure prevention program.
Activities supporting ``train the
trainer'' programs that are designed to
train teachers to provide financial
literacy education to their students.
[[Page 1234]]
In-kind donation of computer equipment to
a non-profit that conducts personal
money management courses for LMI
individuals.
Bank employees provide financial
education in connection with a school
savings program.
Loan to a non-profit credit counseling
organization that conducts personal
money management courses.
Donation to an organization that conducts
elder financial abuse and identity theft
prevention programs.
An in-kind donation of computer equipment
to a non-profit that provides financial
literacy courses.
Bank employees assist in the preparation
of tax filings under the Internal
Revenue Service's Volunteer Income Tax
Assistance Program.
Providing homebuyer education to
potential buyers of single-family
housing developed under a state program
for middle-income individuals and
families in high-cost areas.
Volunteer service to open savings
accounts offered through a school-based
banking program to students of a K-12
school that is located in and serves
residents of an LMI census tract.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(10) and Owner-occupied and rental housing
345.04(c)(10). development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or
maintenance in Indian country;
Loan to develop housing in Indian Country
that is guaranteed under HUD's Title VI
Loan Guarantee Program.
Loan to construct mixed-income housing
under a tribal-government sponsored
program, 30% of which will be set aside
for middle-income teachers in Indian
country.
Loan to a for-profit developer to
construct rental housing in Indian
country.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(11) and Qualified opportunity funds, as defined
345.04(c)(11). in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-2(d)(1), that benefit
low- or moderate-income qualified
opportunity zones, as defined in 26
U.S.C. 1400Z-1(a);
Investment in a qualified opportunity
fund, established to finance
construction of a new manufacturing
facility in an opportunity zone that is
also an LMI census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity
fund, established to finance renovation
of a vacant building into a cultural
arts facility, including loft space for
artists and a community theater, in an
opportunity zone that is also an LMI
census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity
fund, established to finance the
rehabilitation of an acute care hospital
facility, including the purchase of new
medical equipment, in an opportunity
zone that is also an LMI census tract.
Investment in a qualified opportunity
fund, established to finance
improvements to an athletic stadium in
an opportunity zone that is also an LMI
census tract.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(12) and A Small Business Administration Certified
345.04(c)(12). Development Company, as that term is
defined in 13 CFR 120.10, a Small
Business Investment Company, as
described in 13 CFR part 107, a New
Markets Venture Capital company, as
described in 13 CFR part 108, a
qualified Community Development Entity,
as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or a U.S.
Department of Agriculture Rural Business
Investment Company, as defined in 7 CFR
4290.50; or
An investment in a New Markets Venture
Capital company that finances businesses
that meet the SBA's size standards used
to define small business concerns.
Public welfare investment, under 12 CFR
part 24, to a qualified Community
Development Entity that will provide
financing for a food market to build a
180,000 square foot refrigerated
warehouse and food distribution
facility.
An investment in a SBA Small Business
Investment Company fund to finance
businesses that meet the SBIC size
standards.
An investment in a USDA Rural Business
Investment Company to fund businesses
and farms that meet the RBIC size
standards.
An investment in a New Markets Tax Credit-
eligible Community Development Entity to
fund a mixed-use project that will
include affordable housing for LMI
individuals and families and retail
space for small businesses.
Sec. Sec. 25.04(c)(13) and Ventures undertaken, including capital
345.04(c)(13). investments and loan participations, by
a bank in cooperation with a minority
depository institution, women's
depository institution, Community
Development Financial Institution, or
low-income credit union, if the activity
helps to meet the credit needs of local
communities in which such institutions
are chartered, including activities that
indirectly help to meet community credit
needs by promoting the sustainability
and profitability of those institutions
and credit unions.
Bank employee time spent facilitating a
loan participation with a minority
depository institution, which will help
the minority depository institution to
meet the credit needs of its local
community.
Bank employees provide training to CDFI
staff on underwriting small farm loans
to help the CDFI expand its product
offerings to its community.
Bank provides in-kind services in the
form of free or discounted data
processing systems that aids a minority
depository institution in serving its
customers.
Bank donates branch space on a rent-free
basis to a low-income credit union to
better serve the credit union's
customers.
Bank certificate of deposit in a minority
depository institution.
Loan to enable a minority- or women-owned
depository institution or low-income
credit union, or CDFI to partner with
schools or universities to offer
financial literacy education to members
of its local communities in which such
institutions are chartered.
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[[Page 1235]]
VI. Regulatory Analysis
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In accordance with section 3(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (RFA), the agencies are publishing an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis for the proposed rule. The RFA requires
an agency to provide an initial regulatory flexibility analysis with
the proposed rule or to certify that the proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The agencies are separately publishing initial regulatory flexibility
analyses for the proposal as set forth in this section. The agencies
welcome comment on all aspects of the initial regulatory flexibility
analyses. Final regulatory flexibility analyses will be conducted after
consideration of comments received during the public comment period.
OCC:
A. Reasons Why the Proposal Is Being Considered by the Agencies;
Statement of the Objectives of the Proposal; and Legal Basis for
Proposal
The legal basis for the proposed rule is the CRA, 12 U.S.C. 2901 et
seq., which charges the Federal banking agencies to encourage the
institutions they supervise to help meet the credit needs of their
local communities in a manner that is safe and sound. As discussed in
the Supplementary Information section above, the agencies are proposing
to revise their regulations implementing the CRA to (1) clarify and
expand the types of activities that qualify for CRA credit; (2) update
and expand the areas in which qualifying activities receive credit; (3)
provide a more objective and transparent method to measure and evaluate
CRA performance; and (4) revise data collection, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements to improve consistency.
B. Small Entities Affected by the Proposal
Small Business Administration regulations define ``small
entities,'' for banking purposes, as entities with total assets of $600
million or less.\65\ The OCC currently supervises approximately 782
small entities. The proposal would affect approximately 749 of those
entities.
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\65\ See 13 CFR 121.201 (Sector 52, Subsector 522).
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C. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements of Proposal
The proposed rule sets forth new qualifying activities criteria,
assessment area delineation requirements, general performance
standards, and data collection, recordkeeping, and recording
requirements. The proposal would exempt banks with assets of $500
million or less in each of the prior four quarters (small banks) from
the general performance standards. These banks would be required to
comply with the current CRA small bank performance standards, new
qualifying activities criteria, new assessment area delineations, and
new data collection and recordkeeping requirements related to deposits.
The proposal would permit these small banks to opt in to the general
performance standards, which would require them to comply with all of
the new data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements.
To determine if the proposed rule would have a significant economic
impact on small entities, the OCC compared the estimated annual cost
with annual noninterest expense and annual salaries and employee
benefits for each small entity. If the estimated annual cost was
greater than 2.5 percent of total noninterest expense or five percent
of annual salaries and employee benefits, the OCC classified the impact
as significant. Based on these thresholds, the OCC concluded for
purposes of this initial regulatory flexibility analysis that the
proposed rule would result in a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Specifically, if all of the small
banks that the proposal would exempt operated under the small bank
performance standards, then the proposal would have a significant
economic impact of approximately $36 million on 72 small entities,
which is a substantial number of small entities. If all of the small
banks the proposal would exempt opted in to the general performance
standards, then the proposal would have a significant economic impact
of approximately $375 million on 738 small entities, which is a
substantial number of small entities.
D. Identification of Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
The OCC believes that no Federal rules duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with the proposed rule.
E. Discussion of Significant Alternatives to Proposal
The agencies have sought to incorporate flexibility into the
proposed rule and lessen burden and complexity for smaller banking
entities wherever possible, consistent with safety and soundness and
other applicable laws. In particular, as noted above, the proposal
would allow small banks to operate under the current CRA small bank
performance standards and would require compliance with only the new
qualifying activities criteria, assessment area delineation
requirements, and data collection and recordkeeping requirements
related to deposits. The new assessment area delineation requirements
may not increase the compliance burden as banks may be able to
demonstrate that more than 50 percent of their retail domestic deposits
fall within their facility-based assessment area(s). Also, the data
collection and recordkeeping requirements related to deposits would be
limited to data that small banks, for the most part, already collect
and maintain.
For the small banking entities that have assets between $500 and
$600 million and small banks that opt in to the general performance
standards, the proposal would reduce the compliance burden of the final
rule by including a transition period with different compliance dates
based on asset size after the effective date. This transition period
would allow for banks to revise their systems for data collection,
maintenance, and reporting and to set up processes for calculating
their CRA evaluation measures and determining their presumptive
ratings.
The agencies request comment on potential options for simplifying
the rule and reducing burden for small banks, including whether the
threshold for the small bank exemption should be set at $500 million
and whether the transition period is sufficient time for establishing
the necessary systems of operation.
FDIC:
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires that, in
connection with a proposed rule, an agency prepare and make available
for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the impact of the proposal on small entities.\66\ A
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required, however, if the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) has defined ``small entities'' to include banking
organizations with total assets less than or equal to $600 million.\67\
Generally, the FDIC considers
[[Page 1236]]
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-insured institutions. Some expected effects of the proposed rule
are difficult to assess or accurately quantify with currently available
information, nevertheless the FDIC believes that the proposed rule will
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities and has included an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis in this section.
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\66\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\67\ The SBA defines a small banking organization as having $600
million or less in assets, where an organization's ``assets are
determined by averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.'' See 13 CFR 121.201
(as amended by 84 FR 34261, effective August 19, 2019). In its
determination, the ``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.'' See 13 CFR 121.103. 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.
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Reasons Why This Action Is Being Considered
As discussed in Section I. of the Supplementary Information of this
proposed rule, over the past two decades, technology and the expansion
of interstate banking has transformed the financial services industry
and how banking services are delivered and consumed. These changes
affect all banks, regardless of size or location, and are most evident
in banks that have a limited physical presence or that rely heavily on
technology to deliver their products and services. As banking has
evolved, banks' communities are not solely identifiable by the areas
that surround their physical locations. The Federal banking agencies
have also gained a greater understanding of communities' needs for
lending and investment, such as the need for community development (CD)
investments and loans with maturities longer than the typical CRA
evaluation period. The current CRA regulatory framework has not kept
pace with the transformation of banking and has had the unintended
consequence of incentivizing banks to limit some of their CD loans to
the length of a CRA evaluation period. Additionally, recognizing the
need for modernization, the Federal banking agencies began the effort
to assess and update the CRA regulatory framework in 2018 by working
together on an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR). Generally,
commenters supported making amendments to the CRA in order to make it
less inconsistent, opaque, and complex.
Policy Objectives
As previously discussed in Section I. of the Supplementary
Information of this proposed rule, in response to this feedback, the
agencies propose to strengthen the CRA regulatory framework to better
achieve the underlying statutory purpose of encouraging banks to help
serve their communities by making the framework more objective,
transparent, consistent, and easy to understand. To accomplish these
goals, the proposal would clarify which activities qualify for CRA
credit; update where activities count for CRA credit; create a more
transparent and objective method for measuring CRA performance; and
provide for more transparent, consistent, and timely CRA-related data
collection, recordkeeping, and reporting. Revisions that reflect these
objectives would provide clarity and visibility for all stakeholders on
how a bank's CRA performance is evaluated and the level of CRA
activities banks conduct. These changes also would encourage banks to
serve their entire communities, including LMI neighborhoods, more
effectively through a broader range of CRA activities.
Legal Basis
The FDIC is issuing this proposed rule under the authorities
granted to it under the Community Reinvestment Act of 1977. For a more
extensive discussion on the legal basis of the proposed rule, please
refer to Section I. of the Supplementary Information of this proposed
rule.
Description of the Rule
The proposal would (1) establish clear criteria for the type of
activities that qualify for CRA credit, which generally would include
activities that currently qualify for CRA credit and other activities
that are consistent with the purpose of CRA, but may not qualify under
the current CRA framework; (2) require the agencies to publish
periodically a non-exhaustive, illustrative list of examples of
qualifying activities; and (3) establish a straightforward and
transparent process for stakeholders to seek agency confirmation that
an activity is a qualifying activity.\68\ In addition to providing
transparency, the proposed qualifying activities criteria would expand
the types of activities that qualify for CRA credit to recognize that
some banks are currently serving community needs in a manner that is
consistent with the statutory purpose of CRA but are not receiving CRA
credit for those activities. The proposal would expand where CRA
activity counts to help banks meet the needs of their entire
communities, including LMI neighborhoods. To ensure that CRA activity
continues to have a local community focus where banks maintain a
physical presence and conduct a substantial portion of their lending
activity, banks would continue to be required to delineate assessment
areas around their main office, branches, or non-branch deposit-taking
facilities as well as the surrounding areas where banks have originated
or purchased a substantial portion of their loans. These areas would be
identified as ``facility-based'' assessment areas. In addition, to
recognize the evolution of modern banking (including the emergence of
internet banks) and in conformity with the CRA's intent to ensure that
banks help meet credit needs where they collect deposits,\69\ the
proposed rule would require banks to delineate additional, non-
overlapping ``deposit-based'' assessment areas where they have
significant concentrations of retail domestic deposits (regardless of
physical presence).
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\68\ The agencies are proposing to retain for certain banks the
small bank performance standards applicable to small banks that are
not intermediate small banks in the current regulations. 12 CFR
25.26; 12 CFR 195.26; and 12 CFR 345.26. The agencies intend for
these standards to be applied consistent with their treatment under
the current regulation except as discussed below.
\69\ See, e.g., 123 Cong. Rec. 17630 (1977) (statement of Sen.
William Proxmire, Chairman, S. Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs).
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Consistent with the current CRA framework, the proposed rule would
include different performance standards applicable to banks of
different sizes. Small banks, as defined under the proposed rule, would
continue to be evaluated under the small bank performance standards
currently applicable to small banks that are not intermediate small
banks.\70\ The proposed rule also would establish new general
performance standards to evaluate other banks' CRA activities and the
CRA activities of small banks that opt into these standards. The
general performance standards would assess two fundamental components
of a bank's CRA performance: (1) The appropriate distribution (i.e.,
number) of qualifying retail loans to LMI individuals, small farms,
small businesses, and LMI geographies in a community through the
application of tests evaluating a bank's distribution of retail
lending; and (2) the impact of a bank's qualifying activities, measured
[[Page 1237]]
by a bank's CRA evaluation measure, which includes the quantified value
\71\ of a bank's qualifying activities divided by a bank's retail
domestic deposits plus a measure of branch distribution in specified
areas of need.
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\70\ The proposed rule would define a small bank as a bank that
had assets of $500 million or less in each of the previous four
calendar quarters.
\71\ The quantified value is the dollar value of the qualifying
activity multiplied by applicable multipliers and percentages of
partial benefit to the intended population or area. The specific
quantified value for the different types of qualifying activities is
discussed later in the preamble and explained in the regulation.
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For a more extensive description of the proposed rule, please refer
to Section II. of the Supplementary Information of this proposed rule.
Small Entities Affected
The FDIC supervises 3,424 depository institutions, of which 2,665
are defined as small institutions by the terms of the RFA.\72\ The
proposed rule would affect all FDIC-supervised institutions, therefore
the FDIC estimates that the proposed rule would affect 2,665 small,
FDIC-supervised institutions. Of the 2,665 small, FDIC-supervised
institutions, 2,526 currently report total consolidated assets of less
than $500 million. Therefore, the FDIC estimates that 2,526 small,
FDIC-supervised institutions would be subject to the small bank
performance standards of the proposed rule. Additionally, the FDIC
estimated that 139 small, FDIC-supervised institutions would be subject
to the new general performance standards of the proposed rule. However,
because small, FDIC-supervised institutions with less than $500 million
in total consolidated assets have the option of adopting the new
general performance standards of the proposed rule, the number of
small, FDIC-supervised institutions who adopt the new general
performance standards might be greater than the estimated amount. It is
difficult to estimate this aspect of the proposed rule with the
information currently available to the FDIC, because such estimates
would depend on the present and future financial conditions,
activities, and management decision of affected institutions.
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\72\ Call Report, June 30, 2019. Nine insured domestic branches
of foreign banks are excluded from the count of FDIC-insured
depository institutions. These branches of foreign banks are not
``small entities'' for purposes of the RFA.
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Expected Effects
The new general performance standards for some small, FDIC-insured
institutions in the proposed rule is likely to benefit covered
institutions by establishing a more objective, clear, and consistent
metric by which a covered institution is evaluated. If the proposed
general performance standards are more stringent for some institutions
than the current parameters, the proposed rule could pose costs for
covered institutions by potentially reducing their CRA examination
rating. If the proposed general performance standards are less
stringent for some institutions than the current parameters, the
proposed rule could benefit covered institutions by potentially
increasing their CRA examination rating. It is difficult to accurately
quantify these aspects of the proposed rule with the information
currently available to the FDIC.
The publicly available list of examples of qualifying activities
should benefit small, covered institutions and borrowers by
establishing a reference for qualifying activities. Additionally, the
proposed establishment of the list and an optional process through
which FDIC-insured institutions and interested third parties can seek
confirmation of a particular activity and have it added to the list,
will create additional compliance burden. However, the FDIC believes
that small, FDIC-insured institutions and interested third parties will
only incur such a burden if they believe that the benefits outweigh the
costs.
Establishing a transparent methodology for calculating qualifying
activities values should benefit small, covered institutions by
enabling them to more effectively manage their CRA activities and
compliance. Additionally, to the extent that the qualifying activities
value calculation methodology overweighs some activities relative to
others, the proposed rule is likely to benefit certain activities and
may lead to changes in the distribution of qualifying activities by
some small, covered institutions.
The proposed rule amends the calculation of qualified loans and CD
investments activities from the total balance just prior to a CRA
examination, to average month-end outstanding amount on a bank's
balance sheet. This aspect of the proposed rule is likely to
disincentivize the acquisition of qualifying activities that serve only
to boost the assessed activities for small, FDIC-supervised
institutions just prior to a CRA evaluation. This amendment to the
calculation of these qualified activities is likely to benefit
borrowers, as covered institutions seek to develop sustained efforts to
conduct qualifying activities.
The proposed rule augments the current assessment area designation
methodology by adding areas where a bank has a significant portion of
its retail domestic deposits, outside of its facility-based assessment
areas. To the extent that small, covered institutions were already
conducting qualifying activities in these areas, this aspect of the
proposed rule will benefit small, covered institutions by crediting
this activity towards their CRA assessment. However, to the extent that
small, covered institutions were not already conducting qualifying
activities in these areas, this aspect of the proposed rule would pose
costs for covered institutions by compelling them to start conducting
qualifying activities in these areas or negatively affecting their CRA
assessment. It is difficult to accurately quantify these aspects of the
proposed rule with the information currently available to the FDIC.
Further, to the extent that small, covered institutions were not
already conducting qualifying activities in these areas, this aspect of
the proposed rule would benefit borrowers by incentivizing small,
covered institutions to focus on meeting their financial service needs.
As discussed previously, the proposed rule maintains the small bank
performance standards, however the rule amends the definition of
``small bank'' from total consolidated assets less than $1.284 billion
to $500 million or less. Therefore, this aspect of the proposed rule
may increase compliance costs for the 139 intermediate-small banks,
FDIC-supervised institutions with total consolidated assets less than
$1.284 billion, but greater than $500 million. Additionally, banks that
will be subject to the small bank performance standards under the
proposed rule will utilize the revised definition of qualifying
activities and assessment areas. The expected effects of these aspects
of the proposed rule were previously addressed in this RFA section.
As discussed previously, the proposed rule may increase compliance
costs for all small, FDIC-insured institutions. The FDIC estimates
that, if adopted, the recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure burden
for small, FDIC-supervised institutions associated with the Community
Reinvestment Act would be 1,030 hours per year for entities subject to
the small bank performance standards, and 7,361 hours per year for
entities subject to the new general performance standards. Assuming
that each institution utilizes labor from Executives and Managers,
Lawyers, Compliance Officers, IT Specialists, Financial Analysts, and
Clerical Workers in fixed proportion, the FDIC estimates that the
complying with the CRA would pose $93,000 in annual costs for small,
FDIC-supervised entities subject to the small bank performance
standards, and $665,802.45
[[Page 1238]]
in annual costs for small, FDIC-supervised entities subject to the new
general performance standards. Additionally, the proposed rule
redefines loans to small business as loans with an origination balance
of $2 million or less, as opposed to the current threshold of $1
million or less. Small, FDIC-insured institutions might incur some
regulatory costs associated with making the necessary changes to their
systems in order to comply with the new definition.
Other Statutes and Federal Rules
The FDIC has not identified any likely duplication, overlap, and/or
potential conflict between this proposed rule and any other federal
rule.
The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of the supporting
information provided in this section, and in particular, whether the
proposed rule would have any significant effects on small entities that
the FDIC has not identified.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Certain provisions of the proposed 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 the proposed rule and determined that it
revises certain information collection requirements previously cleared
by OMB under OMB Control Nos. 1557-0160 and 3064-0092. The agencies
have submitted the revised information collection to OMB for review
under section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) and section
1320.11 of the OMB's implementing regulations (5 CFR 1320).
Current Actions
Under the proposed rule:
Banks may request that the agency confirm that an activity
is a qualifying activity by submitting a complete Qualifying Activity
Confirmation Request Form. 12 CFR __.05(c)(1).
A bank must delineate one or more assessment areas within
which the agency evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet the
credit needs of its community. 12 CFR __.08.
Banks that are not small banks must submit information on
the Performance Context Form. 12 CFR __.14(c).
A bank must submit a strategic plan if the bank: (1) Would
otherwise be evaluated under Sec. __.12 and does not maintain retail
domestic deposits on-balance sheet or (2) is a small bank that does not
originate retail loans. A bank not required to submit a plan may do so.
12 CFR __.16.
Banks evaluated under the general performance standards in
Sec. __.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan under Sec.
__.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the agency, must
collect and maintain the information required by 12 CFR __.19. 12 CFR
__.19.
Small banks must collect and maintain data on the value of
each retail domestic deposit account and the physical address of each
depositor. 12 CFR __.20.
Banks must keep the data collected under Sec. __.19 and
Sec. __.20 in machine readable form (as prescribed by the agency). 12
CFR __.22.
Banks evaluated under the general performance standards in
Sec. __.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan under Sec.
__.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the agency, must
report the information required by 12 CFR __.23. 12 CFR __.23.
Banks must maintain a public file that includes: All
written comments and responses; a copy of the public section of the
bank's or savings association's most recent CRA performance evaluation;
a list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and census
tracts; a list of the branches opened or closed, their street
addresses, and geographies; a list of services offered; a map of each
assessment area; and any other information the bank chooses. Banks with
strategic plans must include a copy of the plan. Banks with less than
satisfactory ratings must include a description of their current
efforts to improve their performance in helping to meet the credit
needs of their entire community. Banks must make all of this
information available to the public. This information must be current
as of April 1 of each year. 12 CFR __.25.
OCC
Title of Information Collection: Community Reinvestment Act.
Frequency: On Occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Estimated number of respondents: 1,069.
Total estimated annual burden: 3,401,393 hours.
FDIC
Title of Information Collection: Community Reinvestment Act.
Frequency: On Occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Estimated number of respondents: 3,390.
Total estimated annual burden: 8,702,163 hours.
Comments are invited on:
a. Whether the collections of information are necessary for the
proper performance of the agencies' functions, including whether the
information has practical utility;
b. The accuracy or the estimate of the burden of the information
collections, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions
used;
c. Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected;
d. Ways to minimize the burden of the information collections on
respondents, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology; and
e. Estimates of capital or startup costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
All comments will become a matter of public record. Comments on aspects
of this notice that may affect reporting, recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates should be sent to the addresses
listed in the ADDRESSES section of this document. A copy of the
comments may also be submitted to the OMB desk officer by mail to U.S.
Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street NW, #10235,
Washington, DC 20503; facsimile to (202) 395-6974; or email to
[email protected], Attention, Federal Banking Agency Desk
Officer.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Unfunded
Mandates Act) (2 U.S.C. 1532) requires that the OCC prepare a budgetary
impact statement before promulgating a rule that includes any 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 (adjusted annually for inflation, currently $154
million) in any one year. If a budgetary impact statement is required,
section 205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also requires the OCC to
identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives
before promulgating a rule.
The OCC has determined that this proposed rule is likely to result
in the expenditure by the private sector of $154 million or more.
Therefore, the OCC has prepared a budgetary impact
[[Page 1239]]
analysis and identified and considered alternative approaches. The full
text of the OCC's analyses under the Unfunded Mandates Act is available
at: https://www.regulations.gov, Docket ID OCC-2018-0008.
Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (RCDRIA), 12 U.S.C. 4802(a), in
determining the effective date and administrative compliance
requirements for new regulations that impose additional reporting,
disclosure, or other requirements on insured depository institutions,
the agencies 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, 12 U.S.C. 4802(b), 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. The OCC
invites comments that will inform its consideration of RCDRIA.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 25
Community development, Credit, Investments, National banks,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 195
Banks, Banking, Community development, Credit, Investments,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 345
Banks, Banking, Community development, Credit, Investments,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
12 CFR CHAPTER I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, and under the authority
of 12 U.S.C. 93a, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
proposes to amend 12 CFR part 25 and remove part 195 as follows:
PART 25--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT AND INTERSTATE DEPOSIT
PRODUCTION REGULATIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 25 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26, 27, 30, 36, 93a, 161, 215,
215a, 481, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1814, 1816, 1828(c), 1835a, 2901
through 2908, 3101 through 3111, and 5412(b)(2)(B).
0
2. Revise subparts A through D to read as follows:
Subpart A--General
Sec.
25.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
25.02 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
25.03 Definitions.
Subpart B--Qualifying Activities
25.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
25.05 Qualifying activities confirmation and illustrative list.
25.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
25.07 Qualifying activities value.
Subpart C--Assessment Area
25.08 Assessment area.
Subpart D--Performance Evaluations
25.09 Performance standards and ratings, in general.
25.10 CRA evaluation measure.
25.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
25.12 General performance standards and presumptive rating.
25.13 Small bank performance standards.
25.14 Consideration of performance context.
25.15 Discriminatory and other illegal credit practices.
25.16 Strategic plan.
25.17 Assigned ratings.
25.18 State/multistate metropolitan statistical area assigned
rating.
Subpart A--General
Sec. 25.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority. The authority for this part is 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26,
27, 30, 36, 93a, 161, 215, 215a, 481, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1814, 1816,
1828(c), 1835a, 2901 through 2907, and 3101 through 3111.
(b) Purposes. In enacting the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA),
Congress required each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency
to assess an institution's record of meeting the credit needs of its
entire community, including low- and moderate-income communities,
consistent with the safe and sound operation of such institution, and
take that record into account in its evaluation of an application for a
deposit facility by such institution. This part is intended to carry
out the purposes of the CRA by:
(1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) assesses a bank's record of
helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, including
low- and moderate-income communities, consistent with the safe and
sound operation of the bank; and
(2) Providing that the OCC takes that record into account in
considering certain applications.
(c) Scope--(1) General. This part applies to all banks as defined
in Sec. 25.03 except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of
this section.
(2) Federal branches and agencies--(i) This part applies to all
insured Federal branches and to any Federal branch that is uninsured
that results from an acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section,
this part does not apply to Federal branches that are uninsured,
limited Federal branches, or Federal agencies, as those terms are
defined in part 28 of this chapter.
(3) Certain exempt banks. This part does not apply to banks that do
not perform commercial or retail banking services by granting credit or
offering credit-related products or services to the public in the
ordinary course of business, other than as incident to their
specialized operations and done on an accommodation basis. These banks
include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and banks
that engage only in one or more of the following activities: Providing
cash management controlled disbursement services or serving as
correspondent banks, trust companies, or clearing agents.
(4) Compliance Dates--(i) Banks other than small banks--(A) Banks
that are not small banks must comply with the following requirements of
this part on the following dates:
(1) One year after the effective date of the final rule for the
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in
Sec. Sec. 25.08, 25.19, and 25.22; and
(2) Two years after the effective date of the final rule for the
reporting requirements in Sec. 25.23.
(B) Banks that are not small banks must comply with the applicable
requirements of the other sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of this
section, including any extensions approved by the OCC.
[[Page 1240]]
(ii) Small banks--(A) Small banks must comply with the assessment
area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in Sec. Sec.
25.08, 25.20, and 25.22 one year after the effective date of this rule.
(B) Small banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the compliance date in paragraph
(c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section, including any extensions approved by the
OCC.
(iii) Small banks that opt into the general performance standards
in Sec. 25.12 as of the effective date of this rule and banks that no
longer meet the small bank definition--(A) Small banks that opt into
the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12 as of the effective
date of this rule pursuant to Sec. 25.09(b) and banks that no longer
meet the small bank definition must comply with the following
requirements on the following dates:
(1) Two years after the effective date of the final rule for the
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in
Sec. Sec. 25.08, 25.19, and 25.22; and
(2) Three years after the effective date of the final rule for the
reporting requirements in Sec. 25.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the reporting requirements compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A)(2) of this section, including any
extensions approved by the OCC.
(iv) Small banks that opt into the general performance standards in
Sec. 25.12 after the effective date of the final rule--(A) Small banks
that opt into the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12 after
the effective date of the final rule pursuant to Sec. 25.09(b) must
comply with the following requirements on the following dates:
(1) One year after the bank opts in for the assessment area, data
collection, and recordkeeping requirements in Sec. Sec. 25.08, 25.19,
and 25.22; and
(2) Two years after the bank opts in for the reporting requirements
in Sec. 25.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the reporting requirements compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(iv)(A)(2) of this section, including any extensions
approved by the OCC.
Sec. 25.02 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the OCC takes into
account the record of performance under the CRA of each applicant bank
in considering an application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic branch or non-branch deposit
taking facility;
(2) The relocation of the main office or a domestic branch;
(3) Under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 1828(c)), the merger or
consolidation with or the acquisition of assets or assumption of
liabilities of an insured depository institution;
(4) The conversion of an insured depository institution to a
national bank charter;
(5) A savings association charter; and
(6) Acquisitions subject to section 10(e) of the Home Owners' Loan
Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(e)).
(b) Charter application. An applicant (other than an insured
depository institution) for a national bank or a Federal thrift charter
must submit with its application a description of how it will meet its
CRA objectives, if applicable. The OCC takes the description into
account in considering the application and may deny or condition
approval on that basis.
(c) Interested parties. The OCC takes into account any views
expressed by interested parties that are submitted in accordance with
the OCC's procedures set forth in part 5 of this chapter in considering
CRA performance in an application listed in paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A bank's record
of performance may be the basis for denying or conditioning approval of
an application listed in paragraph (a) of this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this section,
the term ``insured depository institution'' has the same meaning as
this term is given in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
Sec. 25.03 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
Activity means a loan, investment, or service by a bank.
Affiliate has the same meaning as this term is given in Regulation
W, 12 CFR 223.2(a) and (b), as of the effective date of this rule but
applies to member and non-member banks.
Agencies means the OCC and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC).
Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the metropolitan statistical area,
if a person or census tract is located in a metropolitan statistical
area, or for the metropolitan division, if a person or census tract is
located in a metropolitan statistical area that has been subdivided
into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person
or census tract is located outside a metropolitan statistical area.
Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in accordance
with Sec. 25.08.
Average means the statistical mean.
Bank means a national bank (including a Federal branch as defined
in part 28 of this chapter) or a savings association, the deposits of
which are insured by the FDIC pursuant to Chapter 16 of Title 12, as
described in 12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2), except as provided in Sec.
25.01(c)(3).
Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as a branch,
whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a
grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local
business or non-profit organization. The term ``branch'' only includes
a ``domestic branch'' as that term is defined in section 3(o) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA) (12 U.S.C. 1813(o)).
Call Report means Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income as
filed under 12 U.S.C. 161.
Community Development Financial Institution has the same meaning as
this term is given in 12 U.S.C. 4702(5).
Community development investment means a lawful investment,
membership share, deposit, legally-binding commitment to invest that is
reported on the Call Report, Schedule RC-L, or monetary or in-kind
donation that meets the criteria of Sec. 25.04(c).
Community development loan means a loan, line of credit, or
contingent commitment to lend that meets the criteria of Sec.
25.04(c).
Community development services means bank employee time spent
volunteering as a representative of the bank on activities that meet
the criteria of Sec. 25.04(c) or supporting activities that meet the
criteria of Sec. 25.04(c)(2), (11). A bank employee may receive
expense reimbursement for volunteer time related to the community
development activity.
Compensation means the Bureau of Labor Statistics calculation of
the hourly wage for that type of work engaged in by a bank employee in
the course of conducting community development services.
Consumer loan means a loan reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC-C,
[[Page 1241]]
Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 6, Loans to
individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures,
which include the following product lines:
(1) Credit card, which is an extension of credit to an individual
for household, family, and other personal expenditures arising from
credit cards;
(2) Other revolving credit plan, which is an extension of credit to
an individual for household, family, and other personal expenditures
arising from prearranged overdraft plans and other revolving credit
plans not accessed by credit cards;
(3) Automobile loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the
purpose of purchasing new and used passenger cars and other vehicles
such as minivans, vans, sport-utility vehicles, pickup trucks, and
similar light trucks for personal use; and
(4) Other consumer loan, which is any other loan to an individual
for household, family, and other personal expenditures (other than
those that meet the definition of a ``loan secured by real estate'' and
other than those for purchasing or carrying securities), including low-
cost education loans, which is any private education loan, as defined
in section 140(a)(8) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1650(a)(8))
(including a loan under a state or local education loan program),
originated by the bank for a student at an ``institution of higher
education,'' as that term is generally defined in sections 101 and 102
of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the
implementing regulations published by the U.S. Department of Education,
with interest rates and fees no greater than those of comparable
education loans offered directly by the U.S. Department of Education.
Such rates and fees are specified in section 455 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087e).
Contingent commitment to lend means a legally-binding commitment to
extend credit in instances where another bank initially funded, or
committed to fund, a project but cannot, for financial or legal
reasons, advance unanticipated additional funds necessary to complete
the project.
Distressed area means a middle-income census tract identified by
the agencies that meets one or more of the following conditions:
(1) An unemployment rate of at least 1.5 times the national
average,
(2) A poverty rate of 20 percent or more, or
(3) A population loss of 10 percent or more between the previous
and most recent decennial census or a net migration loss of five
percent or more over the five-year period preceding the most recent
census.
Essential community facility means a public facility, including but
not limited to a school, library, park, hospital and health care
facility, and public safety facility.
Essential infrastructure means:
(1) Public infrastructure, including but not limited to public
roads, bridges, tunnels; and
(2) Essential telecommunications infrastructure, mass transit,
water supply and distribution, utilities supply and distribution,
sewage treatment and collection, and industrial parks.
Family farm has the same meaning as the term is given by the Farm
Service Agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 7 CFR 761.2(b)
as of the effective date of this rule.
Financing means permissible equity or debt facilities, such as
loans, lines of credit, bonds, private funds, securities, or other
permissible investments.
High-cost area means any county in which the percentage of
households who have monthly housing costs greater than 30 percent of
their monthly income is greater than 40 percent.
Home mortgage loan means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part I,
specifically:
(1) Item 1.a.(1) 1-4 family residential construction loans;
(2) Item 1.c Loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties
(includes closed-end and open-end loans); or
(3) Item 1.d Loans secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential
properties.
Income levels are:
(1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than
50 percent of the area median income, or a median family income that is
less than 50 percent in the case of a census tract.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income, or
a median family income that is at least 50 percent and less than 80
percent in the case of a census tract.
(3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income,
or a median family income that is at least 80 percent and less than 120
percent in the case of a census tract.
(4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120
percent or more of the area median income, or a median family income
that is 120 percent or more in the case of a census tract.
Indian country has the same meaning as this term is given in 18
U.S.C. 1151.
Low-income credit union has the same meaning as this term is given
in 12 CFR 701.34.
Major retail lending product line means a bank's retail lending
product line that composes at least 15 percent of the bank-level dollar
volume of total retail loan originations during the evaluation period.
Metropolitan division has the same meaning as this term is given by
the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Metropolitan statistical area has the same meaning as this term is
given by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Military bank means a bank whose business predominately consists of
serving the needs of military personnel who serve or have served in the
armed forces (including the U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corp., Air Force,
and Coast Guard) or dependents of military personnel. A bank whose
business predominantly consists of serving the needs of military
personnel or their dependents means a bank whose most important
customer group is military personnel or their dependents.
Minority depository institution means a depository institution as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)(1).
Monetary or in-kind donation means:
(1) A grant, monetary contribution, or monetary donation, or
(2) A contribution of goods, commodities, or other non-monetary
resources.
Non-branch deposit-taking facility means a banking facility other
than a branch owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the
bank that is authorized to take deposits that is located in any state
or territory of the United States of America.
Nonmetropolitan area means any area that is not located in a
metropolitan statistical area.
Partially benefits means 50 percent or less of the dollar value of
the activity or of the individuals or census tracts served by the
activity.
Primarily benefits means:
(1) Greater than 50 percent of the dollar value of the activity or
of the individuals or census tracts served by the activity; or
(2) The express, bona fide intent, purpose, or mandate of the
activity as stated, for example, in a prospectus, loan proposal, or
community action plan.
Qualifying activity means an activity that helps meet the credit
needs of a bank's entire community, including low- and moderate-income
individuals
[[Page 1242]]
and communities, in accordance with Sec. 25.04.
Qualifying loan means a retail loan that meets the criteria in
Sec. 25.04(b) or a community development loan that meets the criteria
in Sec. 25.04(c).
Retail domestic deposit means a ``deposit'' as defined in section
3(l) of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(l)) and as reported on Schedule RC-E,
item 1, of the Call Report that is held in the United States and is
provided by an individual, partnership, or corporation other than a
deposit that is obtained, directly or indirectly, from or through the
mediation or assistance of a deposit broker as that term is defined in
section 29 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)).
Retail loan means a home mortgage loan, small loan to a business,
small loan to a farm, or consumer loan.
Retail lending product line means a:
(1) Home mortgage loan product line, which includes all home
mortgage loans;
(2) Small loan to a business product line, which includes all small
loans to businesses;
(3) Small loan to a farm product line, which includes all small
loans to farms; or
(4) Consumer lending product line, which includes:
(ii) An automobile loan product line;
(iii) A credit card product line;
(iv) An other revolving credit plan product line; or
(v) An other consumer loan product line.
Small bank--(1) Definition. Small bank means a bank that:
(i) Had assets of $500 million or less in each of the previous four
calendar quarters; or
(ii) Was a small bank as of the close of the calendar quarter
immediately preceding the close of the last calendar quarter and did
not have assets of greater than $500 million as of the close of each of
the past four calendar quarters.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in this definition shall be
adjusted annually and published by the OCC, based on the year-to-year
change in the average of the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for each twelve-
month period ending in November, with rounding to the nearest $100,000.
Small business means a business that has gross annual revenues of
no greater than $2 million. The OCC will annually adjust the $2 million
threshold for inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold will be
made publicly available.
Small farm means a farm with gross annual revenues of no greater
than $2 million. The OCC will annually adjust the $2 million threshold
for inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold will be made
publicly available.
Small loan to a business means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.e,
Secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties, or Item 4, Commercial and
industrial loans, and of no greater than $2 million. The OCC will
annually adjust the $2 million threshold for inflation, and the
adjustment to the threshold will be made publicly available.
Small loan to a farm means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.b,
Secured by farmland, or Item 3, Loans to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers, and of no greater than $2
million. The OCC will annually adjust the $2 million threshold for
inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold will be made publicly
available.
Underserved area means a middle-income census tract:
(1) Identified by the agencies as meeting the criteria for
population size, density, and dispersion that indicate the area's
population is sufficiently small, thin, and distant from a population
center that the tract is likely to have difficulty financing the fixed
costs of meeting essential community needs. The agencies will use as
the basis for these designations the ``urban influence codes,''
numbered ``7,'' ``10,'' ``11,'' and ``12,'' maintained by the Economic
Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture; or
(2) Identified by the agencies as:
(i) Not having a branch of any bank within:
(A) 2 miles of the center of the census tract if it is an urban
census tract, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data;
(B) 5 miles of the center of the census tract if it is a mixed
census tract, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data;
(C) 10 miles of the center of the census tract if it is a rural
census tract, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data; or
(D) 5 miles of the center of the census tract if the census tract
is an island area, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data; and
(ii) Not having any branch within the census tract.
Women's depository institution means a depository institution as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)(2).
Subpart B--Qualifying Activities
Sec. 25.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
(a) General. Retail loans, community development loans, community
development investments, and community development services that help
meet the credit needs of a bank's entire community, including low- and
moderate-income communities, are qualifying activities if they meet the
criteria in this section at the time the activity is originated, made,
or conducted. If the activity is subsequently purchased by another
bank, it is a qualifying activity if it meets the criteria in this
section at the time of purchase.
(b) Retail loans. A home mortgage loan, small loan to a business,
small loan to a farm, or consumer loan is a qualifying activity if it
is:
(1) Provided to a:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individual or family;
(ii) Small business; or
(iii) Small farm;
(2) Located in Indian country;
(3) A small loan to a business located in a low- or moderate-income
census tract; or
(4) A small loan to a farm located in a low- or moderate-income
census tract.
(c) Community development loans, community development investments,
and community development services. A community development loan,
community development investment, or community development service is a
qualifying activity if it provides financing for or supports:
(1) Affordable housing, which means:
(i) Rental housing:
(A) That is likely to partially or primarily benefit low- or
moderate-income individuals or families as demonstrated by median rents
that do not and are not projected at the time of the transaction to
exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income;
(B) That partially or primarily benefits low- or moderate-income
individuals or families as demonstrated by an affordable housing set-
aside required by a federal, state, local, or tribal government;
(C) That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal,
state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for low-
or moderate-income individuals or families;
(D) That partially or primarily benefits middle-income individuals
or families in high-cost areas as demonstrated by an affordable housing
set-aside required by
[[Page 1243]]
a federal, state, local, or tribal government; or
(E) That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal,
state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for
middle-income individuals or families in high-cost areas; or
(ii) Owner-occupied housing purchased, refinanced, or improved by
low- or moderate-income individuals or families, except for home
mortgage loans provided directly to individuals or families;
(2) Another bank's community development loan, community
development investment, or community development service;
(3) Businesses or Farms that meet the size-eligibility standards of
the Small Business Administration Certified Development Company, as
that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small Business Investment
Company, as described in 13 CFR part 107, by providing technical
assistance and supportive services, such as shared space, technology,
or administrative assistance through an intermediary;
(4) Community support services which means activities, such as
child care, education, health services, and housing services, that
partially or primarily serve or assist low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(5) Essential community facilities that partially or primarily
benefit or serve:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, disaster areas consistent with a disaster recovery
plan, or Indian country;
(6) Essential infrastructure that benefits or serves:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, disaster areas consistent with a disaster recovery
plan, or Indian country;
(7) A family farm's:
(i) Purchase or lease of farm land, equipment, and other farm-
related inputs;
(ii) Receipt of technical assistance and supportive services, such
as shared space, technology, or administrative assistance through an
intermediary; or
(iii) Sale and trade of family farm products;
(8) Federal, state, local, or tribal government programs, projects,
or initiatives that:
(i) Partially or primarily benefit low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(ii) Partially or primarily benefit small businesses or small farms
as those terms are defined in the programs, projects or initiatives; or
(iii) Are consistent with a bona fide government revitalization,
stabilization, or recovery plan for a low- or moderate-income census
tract; a distressed area; an underserved area; a disaster area; or
Indian country;
(9) Financial literacy programs or education or homebuyer
counseling;
(10) Owner-occupied and rental housing development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or maintenance in Indian country;
(11) Qualified opportunity funds, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-
2(d)(1), that benefit low- or moderate-income qualified opportunity
zones, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-1(a);
(12) A Small Business Administration Certified Development Company,
as that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, a Small Business Investment
Company, as described in 13 CFR part 107, a New Markets Venture Capital
company, as described in 13 CFR part 108, a qualified Community
Development Entity, as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or a U.S. Department
of Agriculture Rural Business Investment Company, as defined in 7 CFR
4290.50; or
(13) Ventures undertaken, including capital investments and loan
participations, by a bank in cooperation with a minority depository
institution, women's depository institution, Community Development
Financial Institution, or low-income credit union, if the activity
helps to meet the credit needs of local communities in which such
institutions are chartered, including activities that indirectly help
to meet community credit needs by promoting the sustainability and
profitability of those institutions and credit unions.
Sec. 25.05 Qualifying activities confirmation and illustrative list.
(a) Qualifying activities list. The OCC maintains a publicly
available illustrative list at www.occ.gov of non-exhaustive examples
of qualifying activities that meet and activities that do not meet the
criteria in Sec. 25.04.
(b) Confirmation of a qualifying activity. A bank may request that
the OCC confirm that an activity meets the criteria in Sec. 25.04 and
is a qualifying activity in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(1) When the OCC confirms that an activity is consistent with the
criteria in Sec. 25.04, the OCC will notify the requestor and may add
this activity to the list of activities that meet the qualifying
activities criteria described in paragraph (a) of this section,
incorporating any conditions imposed, if applicable.
(2) When the OCC determines that an activity is not consistent with
the criteria in Sec. 25.04, the OCC will notify the requestor and may
add this activity to the list of activities that do not meet the
qualifying activities criteria described in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) Process--(1) A bank may request that the OCC confirm that an
activity is a qualifying activity by submitting a complete Qualifying
Activity Confirmation Request Form available on www.occ.gov.
(2) In responding to a confirmation request that an activity is
consistent with the criteria in Sec. 25.04, the OCC will consider:
(i) The information on the Qualifying Activity Confirmation Request
Form;
(ii) Whether the activity is consistent with the safe and sound
operation of the bank; and
(iii) Any other information the OCC deems relevant.
(3) The OCC may impose conditions on its confirmation to ensure
that an activity is consistent with the criteria in Sec. 25.04.
(4) An activity is confirmed as a qualifying activity if the bank
is not informed of an OCC objection within 6 months of submission of a
complete Qualifying Activity Confirmation Request Form.
(d) Modifying the qualifying activities list. In addition to
updating the list in paragraph (a) of this section on an ongoing basis
in response to requests for confirmation described in paragraph (b) of
this section, the OCC will publish the qualifying activities list no
less frequently than every three years for notice and comment to
determine whether the list should change. If the OCC determines that a
qualifying loan or community development investment no longer meets the
criteria in Sec. 25.04, that loan or community development investment
will not be considered a qualifying activity for any subsequent
purchasers.
Sec. 25.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
(a) Community development service quantification. The dollar value
of a community development service is the compensation for the
community development service multiplied by the number of hours the
employee spent performing the service, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section.
(b) In-kind donation quantification. The dollar value of an in-kind
donation is the fair market value of the donation,
[[Page 1244]]
as adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section.
(c) Monetary donation quantification. The dollar value of a
monetary donation is the actual dollar value of the donation, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section.
(d) Qualifying loan and other community development investment
quantification. The dollar value of a qualifying loan or a community
development investment not included in paragraph (b) or (c) of this
section, is:
(1) Except for qualifying loans in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, the average of the dollar value, as of the close of business
on the last day of the month, for each month the loan or investment is
on-balance sheet, of:
(i) The outstanding balance of a loan or investment, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section;
(ii) Any legally-binding commitment to invest, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section; and
(iii) The allowance for credit losses on off balance sheet credit
exposures for contingent commitments to lend, as calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the Call Report, Schedule RC-G, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section; or
(2) For qualifying retail loans sold within 90 days of origination,
25 percent of the aggregate dollar value of the loan at origination, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) Portion of qualifying activities that partially benefit. The
dollar value of a qualifying activity that partially benefits, as
defined in Sec. 25.03, is calculated by multiplying the percentage of
the partial benefit by the full dollar value of the qualifying activity
quantified under paragraphs (a)-(d) of this section.
Sec. 25.07 Qualifying activities value.
(a) Bank-level qualifying activities value. A bank evaluated under
Sec. 25.12 calculates its bank-level qualifying activities value
annually based on the dollar value of all qualifying activities
originated, made, purchased, or performed on behalf of the bank and not
included in the bank-level qualifying activities value of another bank
subject to this part or part 345. The qualifying activities value
equals the sum, during a given annual period, of:
(1) The quantified dollar value of qualifying loans and community
development investments, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section;
and
(2) The aggregate:
(i) Quantified dollar value of community development services
conducted, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section;
(ii) Quantified dollar value of in-kind donations made, as adjusted
in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(iii) Monetary donations made, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(b) Multipliers. The dollar value of the following qualifying
activities will be adjusted by multiplying the actual or quantified
dollar value by 2.
(1) Activities provided to or that support Community Development
Financial Institutions, except activities related to mortgage-backed
securities;
(2) Other community development investments, except community
development investments in mortgage-backed securities and municipal
bonds; and
(3) Other affordable housing-related community development loans.
(c) Assessment area qualifying activities value. A bank evaluated
under Sec. 25.12 calculates its assessment area qualifying activities
value for each assessment area by using the process described in
paragraph (a) of this section for qualifying activities located in the
assessment area.
Subpart C--Assessment Area
Sec. 25.08 Assessment area.
(a) General. A bank must delineate one or more assessment areas
within which the OCC evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet the
credit needs of its community. The OCC reviews the delineation for
compliance with the requirements of this section. Unless pursuant to an
approved application covered under Sec. 25.02(a)(3) for a merger or
consolidation with an insured depository institution, an assessment
area delineation can only change once during an evaluation period and
must not change within the annual period used to determine an
assessment area CRA evaluation measure under Sec. 25.10(c).
(b) Facility-based assessment area(s)--(1) A bank must delineate an
assessment area encompassing each location where the bank maintains a
main office, a branch, or a non-branch deposit-taking facility as well
as the surrounding locations in which the bank has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its qualifying retail loans.
Assessment areas delineated under this paragraph may contain one or
more of these facilities.
(2) A facility-based assessment area must be delineated to consist
of:
(i) One whole metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan
statistical area boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation is made);
(ii) The whole nonmetropolitan area of a state;
(iii) One or more whole, contiguous metropolitan divisions in a
single metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan division
boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in
which the delineation is made); or
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous counties or county equivalents
in a single metropolitan statistical area or nonmetropolitan area.
(3) A bank may delineate its facility-based assessment area(s) in
the smallest geographic area where it maintains a main office, branch,
or non-branch deposit-taking facility, but may delineate a larger
assessment area that includes these locations, as provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(4) A facility-based assessment area may not extend beyond a
metropolitan statistical area or state boundary unless the assessment
area is located in a multistate metropolitan statistical area. If a
bank serves a geographic area that extends beyond a state boundary, the
bank must delineate separate assessment areas for the areas in each
state. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends beyond a
metropolitan statistical area boundary, the bank must delineate
separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside the
metropolitan statistical area.
(c) Deposit-based assessment area(s)--(1) A bank that receives 50
percent or more of its retail domestic deposits from geographic areas
outside of its facility-based assessment areas must delineate separate,
non-overlapping assessment areas in the smallest geographic area where
it receives 5 percent or more of its retail domestic deposits.
(2) A deposit-based assessment area must be delineated to consist
of:
(i) One whole state;
(ii) One whole metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan statistical area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is made);
(iii) The whole nonmetropolitan area of a state;
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous metropolitan divisions in a
single metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan division
boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in
which the delineation is made);
(v) The remaining geographic area of a state, metropolitan
statistical area, nonmetropolitan area, or metropolitan division other
than where it has a facility-based assessment area; or
(vi) One or more whole, contiguous counties or county equivalents
in a
[[Page 1245]]
single metropolitan statistical area or nonmetropolitan area.
(d) Limitations on delineation of assessment areas. A bank's
assessment areas must not:
(1) Reflect illegal discrimination; or
(2) Arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income geographies, taking
into account the bank's size and financial condition.
(e) Military banks. Notwithstanding the requirements of this
section, a military bank's assessment area will consist of the entire
United States of America and its territories. A military bank will only
be evaluated based on its entire deposit customer base at the bank
level under Sec. 25.12.
(f) Banks evaluated under strategic plans. A bank evaluated under a
strategic plan will delineate its assessment area(s) in accordance with
the requirements of Sec. 25.16(g)(2).
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The OCC uses the assessment area(s)
delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the bank's CRA performance
unless the OCC determines that the assessment area(s) do not comply
with the requirements of this section.
Subpart D--Performance Evaluations
Sec. 25.09 Performance standards and ratings, in general.
(a) Performance standards. The OCC assesses the CRA performance of
a bank in an examination as follows:
(1) General performance standards--(i) The OCC assesses the CRA
performance of a bank other than banks described in paragraphs (a)(2)
and (a)(3) of this section based on the bank's application of the
general performance standards and determination of its presumptive
ratings under Sec. 25.12.
(ii) The OCC determines the assigned ratings for a bank evaluated
under Sec. 25.12 as provided in Sec. 25.17.
(iii) The OCC determines the state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area ratings for a bank evaluated under Sec. 25.12 as
provided in Sec. 25.18.
(2) Small bank performance standards--(i) The OCC applies the small
bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 25.13 in evaluating the
performance of a small bank, unless the bank is evaluated under an
approved strategic plan as described under (a)(3) of this section or
elects to opt in to the general performance standards under paragraph
(b) of this section.
(ii) The OCC assigns a small bank evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in Sec. 25.13 lending test and bank-level
ratings as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
(3) Strategic plan. The OCC evaluates the performance of a bank
under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the OCC approves, a
strategic plan as provided in Sec. 25.16.
(b) General performance standards opt in. A small bank may elect to
opt in to be evaluated under the general performance standards
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section and this election must
occur at least six months before the start of a bank's next evaluation
period. Small banks that elect to be evaluated under the general
performance standards must collect, maintain, and report the data
required for other banks under Sec. Sec. 25.19, 25.22, and 25.23. Once
a small bank has elected to opt in, it must complete at least one
evaluation period under the general performance standards and may elect
no more than once to opt out of the general performance standards and
must do so six months before the start of its next evaluation period.
Small banks that opt out will revert to being evaluated according to
the small bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 25.13 in
evaluating the performance of a small bank, unless the bank is
evaluated under an approved strategic plan as described under (a)(3) of
this section.
(c) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require
a bank to make loans or investments or to provide services that are
inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the contrary, the OCC
anticipates banks can meet the standards of this part with safe and
sound loans, investments, and services on which the banks expect to
make a profit. Banks are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply
flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or
moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with
safe and sound operations.
Sec. 25.10 CRA evaluation measure.
(a) CRA evaluation measure. A bank evaluated as described in Sec.
25.12 will determine its bank-level and assessment area CRA evaluation
measures annually as part of its CRA performance evaluation.
(b) Determination of the bank-level CRA evaluation measure. A
bank's bank-level CRA evaluation measure is the sum of:
(1) The bank's annual bank-level qualifying activities values
calculated under Sec. 25.07(a) divided by the average quarterly value
of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on
the last day of each quarter for the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank's branches located in low- or moderate-
income census tracts, distressed areas, underserved areas, and Indian
country divided by its total number of branches as of the close of
business on the last day of the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value multiplied by .01.
(c) Determination of the assessment area CRA evaluation measure. A
bank's assessment area CRA evaluation measure is determined in each
assessment area and is the sum of:
(1) The bank's annual assessment area qualifying activities value
calculated under Sec. 25.07(c); divided by the average quarterly value
of the bank's assessment area retail domestic deposits as of the close
of business on the last day of each quarter for the same period used to
calculate the annual assessment area qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank's branches located in low- or moderate-
income census tracts in the assessment area divided by its total number
of branches in the assessment area as of the close of business on the
last day of the same period used to calculate the annual assessment
area qualifying activities value multiplied by .01.
(d) Average CRA evaluation measures. For each evaluation period, a
bank will calculate the average of its:
(1) Annual bank-level CRA evaluation measures for each year in the
evaluation period; and
(2) Annual assessment area CRA evaluation measures for each year in
the evaluation period, separately for each assessment area.
Sec. 25.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
(a) General. In each assessment area, a bank evaluated as described
in Sec. 25.12 will apply a:
(1) Geographic distribution test for its small loan to a business
product line or small loan to a farm product line if those product
lines are major retail lending product lines with 20 or more
originations in the assessment area during the evaluation period; and
(2) Borrower distribution test for each major retail lending
product line with 20 or more originations in the assessment area during
the evaluation period.
(b) Geographic distribution test--(1) Small loan to a business
product line. To pass the geographic distribution test for the small
loan to a business product line, a bank's percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- or moderate-income census tracts originated during
the evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed the
threshold established for either the associated geographic demographic
comparator or
[[Page 1246]]
the associated geographic peer comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
businesses in low- and moderate-income census tracts in the assessment
area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderate-income census tracts originated by all
banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12
in the assessment area.
(2) Small loan to a farm product line. To pass the geographic
distribution test for the small loan to a farm product line, a bank's
percentage of small loans to farms in low- or moderate-income census
tracts originated during the evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
farms in low- and moderate-income census tracts in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
farms in low- and moderate-income census tracts originated by all banks
evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12 in the
assessment area.
(c) Borrower distribution test--(1) Home mortgage lending product
line. To pass the borrower distribution test for the home mortgage
lending product line, a bank's percentage of home mortgage loans to
low- and moderate-income individuals and families originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed the
threshold established for either the associated borrower demographic
comparator or the associated borrower peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
low- and moderate-income families in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of home mortgage
loans to low- or moderate-income individuals and families originated by
all banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec.
25.12 in the assessment area.
(2) Consumer lending product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for a consumer lending product line, a bank's
percentage of consumer loans to low- and moderate-income individuals
and families originated during the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the
associated demographic borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
low- and moderate-income individuals in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of consumer loans
to low- or moderate-income individuals and families originated by all
banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12
in the assessment area.
(3) Small loan to a business product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for the small loan to a business product line, a
bank's percentage of small loans to businesses provided to small
businesses originated during the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the
associated demographic borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
small businesses in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
businesses provided to small businesses from all banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in Sec. 25.12 in the assessment
area.
(4) Small loan to a farm product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for the small loan to a farm product line, a bank's
percentage of small loans to farms provided to small farms originated
during the evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed
the thresholds established for either the associated demographic
borrower comparator or the associated demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
small farms in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
farms provided to small farms from all banks evaluated under the
general performance standards in Sec. 25.12 in the assessment area.
Sec. 25.12 General performance standards and presumptive rating.
(a) General. The bank-level presumptive rating and assessment area
presumptive rating(s) for banks assessed under this section are
determined by evaluating whether a bank has met all the performance
standards associated with a given rating category, at the bank level
and in each assessment area. A bank will use the performance standards
in effect on the first day of its evaluation period for the duration of
its evaluation period, unless the bank elects to use performance
standards published later during the evaluation period. If the bank
elects to use a later-published performance standard, that performance
standard will apply during the entire evaluation period.
(b) Performance standards adjustments. The agencies will
periodically adjust the performance standards.
(1) Factors considered. When adjusting the performance standards,
the agencies will consider factors such as the level of qualifying
activities conducted by all banks, market conditions, and unmet needs
and opportunities.
(2) Public notice and comment. The agencies will provide for a
public notice and comment period on any proposed adjustments prior to
finalizing the adjustments.
(c) Bank-level performance standards--(1) Outstanding. The bank-
level outstanding performance standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The average of the bank's bank-level
CRA evaluation measures during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 11 percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank received an assigned rating
of outstanding in a significant portion of its assessment areas and in
those assessment areas where it holds a significant amount of deposits;
and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec. 25.07, divided by the
average
[[Page 1247]]
quarterly value of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of the close
of business on the last day of each quarter of the evaluation period,
must meet or exceed 2 percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The bank-level satisfactory performance standards
are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The average of the bank's bank-level
CRA evaluation measures during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6 percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank received at least an
assigned rating of satisfactory in a significant portion of its
assessment areas and in those assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec. 25.07, divided by the
average quarterly value of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of
the close of business on the last day of each quarter of the evaluation
period, must meet or exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The bank-level needs to improve performance
standard is an average bank-level CRA evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that meets or exceeds 3
percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The bank-level substantial
noncompliance standard is an average bank-level CRA evaluation measure
during the evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that does not
meet or exceed 3 percent.
(d) Assessment area performance standards--(1) Outstanding. The
assessment area outstanding performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests. The bank must pass the
geographic and borrower distribution tests for its major retail lending
product lines evaluated in Sec. 25.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 11 percent; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments in
the assessment area during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec.
25.07, divided by the average quarterly value of the bank's assessment
area retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on the last
day of each quarter of the evaluation period, must meet or exceed 2
percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The assessment area satisfactory performance
standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests. The bank must pass both the
geographic and borrower distribution tests for all retail lending
product lines evaluated in Sec. 25.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6 percent; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments in
the assessment area during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec.
25.07, divided by the average quarterly value of the bank's assessment
area retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on the last
day of each quarter of the evaluation period, must meet or exceed 2
percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The assessment area needs to improve
performance standard is an assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that
must meet or exceed 3 percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The assessment area substantial
noncompliance performance standard is an assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage that does not meet or exceed 3 percent.
Sec. 25.13 Small bank performance standards.
(a) Performance lending test criteria. The OCC evaluates the record
of a small bank of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal
variation, and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such
as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets, community
development loans, or community development investments;
(2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
related activities located in the bank's assessment area(s);
(3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate, engaging
in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different income
levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
(5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in response
to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet credit
needs in its assessment area(s).
(b) Small bank performance rating. The OCC assesses the performance
of a small bank evaluated under this section as provided in appendix A
of this part.
Sec. 25.14 Consideration of performance context.
(a) General. Performance context is used to assess how the factors
in paragraph (b) of this section affect a bank's capacity and
opportunity to meet the performance standards described in Sec. Sec.
25.12, 25.13, or 25.16. Based on that assessment, the OCC may adjust:
(1) The assessment area and bank-level presumptive ratings in Sec.
25.12; or
(2) The small bank lending test and bank-level ratings as described
in appendix A.
(b) Performance context factors. In assessing performance context,
the OCC considers and documents the effect of the following factors
when determining the assigned rating:
(1) The bank's explanation of how its capacity to meet the
performance standards described in Sec. Sec. 25.12, 25.13, or 25.16
was affected by:
(i) The bank's product offerings and business strategy;
(ii) The bank's unique constraints, such as its financial
condition, safety and soundness limitations, or other factors;
(iii) The innovativeness, complexity, and flexibility of the bank's
qualifying activities;
(iv) The bank's development of business infrastructure and staffing
to support the purpose of this part; and
(v) The responsiveness of the bank's qualifying activities to the
needs of the community;
(2) The bank's explanation of how its opportunity to engage in
qualifying activities was affected by:
(i) The demand for qualifying activities, including credit needs
and market opportunities identified in a Federal Home Loan Bank
Targeted Community Lending Plan provided for in 12 CFR 1290.6(a)(5), as
applicable;
(ii) The demand for retail loans in low- or moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) Demographic factors (e.g., housing costs, unemployment rates
variation);
(3) The bank's competitive environment, as demonstrated by peer
performance.
(4) Any written comments about assessment area needs and
opportunities submitted to the bank or the OCC; and
(5) Any other information deemed relevant by the OCC.
[[Page 1248]]
(c) Form. Banks other than small banks must submit the information
in paragraph (b) of this section on the performance context form
available on www.occ.gov.
Sec. 25.15 Discriminatory and other illegal credit practices.
(a) Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. A
bank's CRA performance is adversely affected by evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. In assessing a bank's
CRA performance, the OCC's evaluation will consider evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit practices including but not
limited to:
(1) Discrimination against applicants on a prohibited basis in
violation, for example, of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act or the Fair
Housing Act;
(2) Violations of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act;
(3) Violations of section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act;
(4) Violations of section 8 of the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act;
(5) Violations of the Truth in Lending Act provisions regarding a
consumer's right of rescission;
(6) Violations of the Military Lending Act; and
(7) Violations of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.
(b) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices. In determining the effect of evidence of practices described
in paragraph (a) of this section on the bank's assigned rating, the OCC
considers the nature, extent, and strength of the evidence of the
practices; the policies and procedures that the bank has in place to
prevent the practices; any corrective action that the bank has taken or
has committed to take, including voluntary corrective action resulting
from self-assessment; and any other relevant information.
Sec. 25.16 Strategic plan.
(a) General. The OCC assesses a bank's record of helping to meet
the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a strategic plan if:
(1) The bank has submitted the plan to the OCC as provided for in
this section;
(2) The OCC has approved the plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at least
one year.
(b) Plan submission--(1) Required submission. A bank must submit a
strategic plan that meets the requirements of this section if the bank:
(i) Would otherwise be evaluated under Sec. 25.12 and does not
maintain retail domestic deposits on-balance sheet; or
(ii) Is a small bank that does not originate retail loans.
(2) Optional submission. A bank not covered under paragraph (b)(1)
of this section may submit a strategic plan to the OCC for approval.
(c) Data reporting. The OCC's approval of a plan does not affect
the bank's data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting obligations,
if any, in Sec. Sec. 25.19, 25.20, 25.22, and 25.23, unless otherwise
determined in writing by the OCC. The OCC may require additional bank-
specific data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting under a
strategic plan, as appropriate.
(d) Plans in general--(1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more
than five years, and any multi-year plan must include annual interim
measurable goals under which the OCC evaluates the bank's performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one assessment
area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment areas or
separate plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
(e) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a
plan to the OCC for approval, a bank must:
(1) Solicit public comment on the plan for at least 30 days by
submitting the plan for publication on the OCC's website and by
publishing notice in at least one newspaper of general circulation in
each assessment area covered by the plan; and
(2) During the public comment period, make copies of the plan
available for review by the public and provide copies of the plan upon
request for a reasonable fee to cover copying, printing, or mailing, if
applicable.
(f) Submission of plan. The bank must submit its complete plan to
the OCC at least six months prior to the proposed effective date of the
plan. The bank must also submit with its plan a description of any
written public comments received, including how the plan was revised in
light of the comments received. If the OCC determines the plan is not
complete, the OCC will notify bank specifying the information needed,
designating a reasonable period of time for the bank to provide the
information, and informing the bank that failure to provide the
information requested will result in no further consideration being
given to the plan.
(g) Plan content--(1) Performance standards--(i) A plan must
specify measurable goals for helping to meet the credit needs of the
bank's communities at the bank level and in each of its assessment
areas, particularly the needs of low- and moderate-income census tracts
and low- and moderate-income individuals and families, through
qualifying activities.
(ii) A plan must address the types and volume of qualifying
activities the bank will conduct. A plan may focus on one or more types
of qualifying activities considering the bank's capacity and
constraints, product offerings, and business strategy.
(2) Assessment area delineation. A plan must include a delineation
of the bank's assessment area(s) that meets the requirements of Sec.
25.08(a)-(d). In addition, the plan may include assessment area
delineations that reflect its target geographic market as defined by
the bank in its strategic plan. For a de novo bank, the assessment area
delineations should include the projected location of its facilities,
retail domestic deposit base, and lending activities.
(3) Confidential information. A bank may submit additional
information to the OCC on a confidential basis, to the extent permitted
by law, but the goals stated in the plan must be sufficiently specific
to enable the public and the OCC to judge the merits of the plan.
(4) Satisfactory and outstanding performance standards. A plan must
specify measurable goals that constitute satisfactory performance. A
plan may specify measurable goals that constitute outstanding
performance. If a bank submits, and the OCC approves, both satisfactory
and outstanding performance goals, the OCC considers the bank eligible
for an outstanding performance rating.
(h) Plan approval--(1) Timing. The OCC will act upon a plan within
6 months after the OCC receives the complete plan and other material
required under paragraph (g) of this section. If the OCC does not act
within this time period, the plan will be deemed approved unless the
OCC extends the review period for good cause for no more than 90 days.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the OCC
considers any written public comment on the plan and any response by
the bank to any written public comment on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating a plan. The OCC evaluates a plan's
goals by considering the extent and breadth of the qualifying
activities including:
(i) Community development loans, community development investments,
and community development services; and
(ii) The use of innovative, flexible, or complex qualifying
activities.
(i) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may request
the OCC
[[Page 1249]]
to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has been a
material change in circumstances. The OCC reserves the right to require
a bank that requests an amendment to a plan to comply with the public
participation process described in paragraph (e) of this section.
Sec. 25.17 Assigned ratings.
(a) General performance standards--(1) Bank-level assigned rating.
The OCC determines the bank-level assigned rating for a bank evaluated
under Sec. 25.12 based on its bank-level presumptive rating under
Sec. 25.12, adjusted for performance context under Sec. 25.14, and
consideration of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices under
Sec. 25.15.
(2) Assessment area assigned rating. The OCC determines the
assessment area assigned ratings for a bank evaluated under Sec. 25.12
based on its assessment area presumptive rating under Sec. 25.12,
adjusted for performance context under Sec. 25.14 and consideration of
discriminatory or other illegal credit practices under Sec. 25.15.
(b) Strategic plans assigned rating. A bank operating under a
strategic plan will receive, as applicable, assessment area assigned
ratings, a bank-level assigned rating, and state-level and multistate
metropolitan statistical area assigned ratings of satisfactory or
outstanding if it has met the measurable goals in the plan that
correspond to those ratings after considering performance context under
Sec. 25.14.
Sec. 25.18 State/multistate metropolitan statistical area assigned
rating.
For a bank evaluated under Sec. 25.12 with interstate branches,
the OCC will assign a rating for each state where the bank has a
facility-based assessment area and each multistate metropolitan
statistical area where the bank has a main office, branch, or non-
branch deposit-taking facility in two or more states in the multistate
metropolitan statistical area. The state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating for that state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area is the lowest rating assigned to a
significant number of its assessment areas within that state or
multistate metropolitan statistical area.
Subpart E [Redesignated]
0
3. Redesignate subpart E as subpart F and redesignate Sec. Sec. 25.61
through 25.65 as Sec. Sec. 25.28 through 25.32, respectively.
0
4. Add new subpart E to read as follows:
Subpart E--Data Collection, Recordkeeping, and Reporting
Sec.
25.19 Data collection for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 25.12 or a strategic plan under Sec.
25.16.
25.20 Retail domestic deposit data collection and recordkeeping for
small banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards in
Sec. 25.13.
25.21 Activity location.
25.22 Recordkeeping.
25.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 25.12 or a strategic plan under Sec. 25.16.
25.24 Public disclosures.
25.25 Content and availability of public file.
25.26 Availability of planned evaluation schedule.
25.27 Public notice by banks.
Sec. 25.19 Data collection for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 25.12 or a strategic plan under Sec.
25.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 25.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under Sec. 25.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the OCC,
must collect and maintain the information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. A bank must collect and maintain
the results of its:
(1) Retail lending distribution tests under Sec. 25.11 for the
borrower distribution and geographic distribution tests for each major
retail lending product line evaluated in the assessment area;
(2) Bank-level and each assessment-area level CRA evaluation
measures calculated under Sec. 25.10; and
(3) Presumptive ratings under Sec. 25.12.
(c) Qualifying activities and retail domestic deposit data required
to be collected and maintained. A bank subject to this section must
collect and maintain the following data and supporting documentation
for all qualifying activities and certain non-qualifying activities
conducted by the bank until the completion of its next CRA evaluation:
(1) Qualifying loan data. For each qualifying loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol to identify the
relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) Date of:
(A) Origination for loans originated by the bank, if applicable;
(B) Purchase for loans not originated by the bank, if applicable;
and
(C) Sale if the loan is a retail loan and sold by the bank within
90 days of origination;
(iv) An indicator of whether the loan was originated or purchased;
(v) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
(vi) The outstanding dollar amount of the loan, as of the close of
business on the last day of the month, for each month that the loan is
on-balance sheet;
(vii) The loan location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract;
(viii) The income or revenue of the borrower; and
(ix) The criteria in Sec. 25.04 that the loan satisfies or that it
is on the illustrative list referenced in Sec. 25.05 and whether it
serves a particular assessment area, if applicable.
(2) Other loan data. A bank must collect and maintain the following
data and supporting documentation for non-qualifying home mortgage
loans and consumer loans originations by the bank until the completion
of its next CRA evaluation:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol to identify the
relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) The date of origination;
(iv) The loan amount at origination;
(v) The loan location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract; and
(vi) The income of the borrower.
(3) Number of home mortgage and consumer loans. For the home
mortgage product line and each consumer loan product line as defined in
Sec. 25.03, for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated; and
(ii) The number of loans originated to low- and moderate-income
borrowers.
(4) Number of small loans to businesses. For the small loan to a
business product line, for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to small businesses.
(5) Number of small loans to farms. For the small loan to a farm
product line for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to small farms.
(6) Community development investment data. For each community
development investment:
(i) A unique number, alpha-numeric symbol, or another mechanism to
identify the investment;
(ii) Investment type;
[[Page 1250]]
(iii) Date of investment by the bank;
(iv) The outstanding dollar value of the investment, as of the
close of business on the last day of the month, for each month that the
investment is on-balance sheet;
(v) The value of the monetary donation, as quantified in Sec.
25.06;
(vi) The value of the in-kind donation, as quantified in Sec.
25.06;
(vii) The investment location and the associated FIPS code for the
MSA, state, county or county equivalent, and census tract, if
applicable; and
(viii) The criteria in Sec. 25.04 that the investment satisfies or
that it is on the illustrative list referenced in Sec. 25.05 and
whether it serves a particular assessment area, if applicable.
(7) Community development services data. For each community
development service:
(i) The dollar value of the services, as quantified in Sec. 25.06;
(ii) A description of the qualifying activity;
(iii) The date the service was performed;
(iv) The service location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract, if applicable;
and
(v) The qualifying activity criteria in Sec. 25.04 that the
service satisfies or that it is on the illustrative list referenced in
Sec. 25.05.
(8) Retail domestic deposit data. The value of each retail domestic
deposit account and the physical address of each depositor as of the
close of business on the last day of each quarter during the
examination period.
(d) Data collection certification. A bank must collect and maintain
a certification from each party conducting qualifying activities on
behalf of the bank that the information that the party provided to the
bank as described in paragraph (a) of this section is true and correct.
(e) Assessment areas. A bank must collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation a list of its assessment area(s)
showing within the assessment area(s) each:
(1) County or county equivalent;
(2) Metropolitan division;
(3) Nonmetropolitan area;
(4) Metropolitan statistical area; or
(5) State.
(f) Bank facilities. A bank must collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation information indicating whether
each facility operated by the bank during the evaluation period was a
depository or non-depository facility.
Sec. 25.20 Retail domestic deposit data collection and recordkeeping
for small banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards in
Sec. 25.13.
Retail domestic deposit data collection. Small banks must collect
and maintain data on the value of each retail domestic deposit account
and the physical address of each depositor as of the close of business
on the last day of each quarter during the examination period until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation.
Sec. 25.21 Activity location.
(a) For the purpose of this part:
(1) A consumer loan is located at the borrower's physical address
on file with the bank;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located at the address of the property
to which the loan relates; and
(3) A business or farm loan is located at the physical address of
the main business facility or farm or the physical address where the
loan proceeds will be applied, as indicated by the borrower; and
(b) For the purpose of this part, the location of a community
development loan, a community development investment, or a community
development service is:
(1) The address of a particular project to the extent a bank can
document that the services or funding it provided was allocated to that
particular project; or
(2) Determined by allocating the activity across all of a bank's
assessment areas and other metropolitan statistical areas or non-
metropolitan statistical areas served by the activity according to the
share of the bank's deposits in those areas, treating the bank's
deposits in the region served by the activity as if they were all of
the bank's deposits, to the extent the bank cannot document that the
services or funding it provided was allocated to a particular project.
Sec. 25.22 Recordkeeping.
Banks must keep the data collected under Sec. 25.19 and Sec.
25.20 in machine readable form (as prescribed by the OCC) until the
completion of their next CRA evaluation.
Sec. 25.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 25.12 or a strategic plan under Sec.
25.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 25.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under Sec. 25.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the OCC,
must report the information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. On an annual basis, a bank subject
to this section must report to the OCC the information required by
Sec. 25.19(b).
(c) Qualifying activities data. On an annual basis, a bank subject
to this section must report to the OCC the following data for all
qualifying activities conducted during the annual period:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of community development investments; and
(4) The quantified value of community development services.
(d) Data collection certification. A bank subject to this section
must annually provide to the OCC any certification required by Sec.
25.19(d).
(e) Assessment area data. For each assessment area, a bank subject
to this section must annually report to the OCC the information
required by Sec. 25.19(e).
(f) Retail loans. A bank subject to this section must annually
report to the OCC the information required by Sec. 25.19(c)(3)-(5) for
loans originated during the annual period.
(g) Retail domestic deposit data. A bank subject to this section
must annually report its average quarterly retail domestic deposits as
of the close of business on the last day of each quarter.
(h) Performance context information. A bank subject to this section
must report performance context information on the form required by
Sec. 25.14(c).
(i) Form. Banks subject to this section must use the CRA data
reporting form available at www.occ.gov to meet the reporting
requirements in this section.
Sec. 25.24 Public disclosures.
(a) Individual CRA Disclosure Statement. The OCC prepares annually
a CRA Disclosure Statement for each bank evaluated under Sec. 25.12
that contains at the bank level:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of community development investments; and
(4) The quantified value of community development services.
(b) Aggregate CRA Disclosure Statement. The OCC prepares annually,
for each county, an aggregate CRA Disclosure Statement of home
mortgage, consumer, small loans to businesses, and small loans to farms
lending by all banks subject to reporting under this part. This
disclosure statement includes the following information, at the county
[[Page 1251]]
level, from all banks evaluated under Sec. 25.12, except that the OCC
may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of special
circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or bank:
(1) The number of home mortgage loan originations;
(2) The number of home mortgage loan originations to low- or
moderate-income individuals and families;
(3) The number of originations for each consumer loan product line;
(4) The number of originations to low- or moderate-income
individuals and families for each consumer loan product line;
(5) The number of small loans to businesses;
(6) The number of small loans to businesses in low- and moderate-
income census tracts;
(7) The number of small loans to businesses provided to small
businesses;
(8) The number of small loans to farms;
(9) The number of small loans to farms in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(10) The number of small loans to farms provided to small farms;
(c) Availability of CRA disclosure statements. The OCC will
annually make publicly available the aggregate and individual CRA
Disclosure Statements, described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section.
(d) Availability of ratings. The OCC will make available the
ratings of all OCC-regulated banks and a list of all banks that achieve
an assigned rating of outstanding. A bank that achieves an outstanding
assigned rating will receive a certificate or seal of achievement that
may be displayed on its website and in its main office and branches.
Sec. 25.25 Content and availability of public file.
(a) Information available to the public. A bank must maintain a
public file that includes the following information:
(1) All written comments received from the public for the current
year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate
to assessment area needs and opportunities, and any response to the
comments by the bank, if neither the comments nor the responses contain
statements that reflect adversely on the good name or reputation of any
persons other than the bank or publication of which would violate
specific provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation prepared by the OCC. The bank must place this
copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt from
the OCC;
(3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and
census tracts;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the
current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street
addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available
loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at
the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in the
availability or cost of services at particular branches, if any. At its
option, a bank may include information regarding the availability of
alternative systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs,
ATMs not owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by
telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or
bank-by-mail programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the
area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either
on the map or in a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the bank chooses.
(b) Additional information available to the public--(1) Banks with
strategic plans. A bank that has been approved to be assessed under a
strategic plan must include in its public file a copy of that plan. A
bank need not include information submitted to the OCC on a
confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
(2) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank that received
a less than satisfactory rating during its most recent examination must
include in its public file a description of its current efforts to
improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its
entire community. The bank must update the description quarterly.
(c) Availability of public information. A bank must make available
to the public the information required in this section.
(d) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bank
must ensure that the information required by this section is current as
of April 1 of each year.
Sec. 25.26 Availability of planned evaluation schedule.
The OCC will make available at least 30 days in advance of the
beginning of each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA
evaluations in that quarter.
Sec. 25.27 Public notice by banks.
A bank must make available to the public the notice set forth in
Appendix B of this part. Parenthetical text must be adjusted by each
bank as appropriate. Bracketed text must be included if applicable.
0
5. Revise paragraph (a) of newly designated Sec. 25.29 to read as
follows:
Sec. 25.29 Definitions.
* * * * *
(a) Bank means, unless the context indicates otherwise, a national
bank and a foreign bank as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 3101(7)
and 12 CFR 28.11(i).
* * * * *
Sec. 25.30 [Amended]
0
6. In newly designated Sec. 25.30 amend paragraph (b)(2) by removing
``Sec. 25.64'' and adding ``Sec. 25.31'' in its place.
0
7. Revise Appendix A to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 25--Small Bank Ratings
(a) Ratings in general--(1) In assigning a rating, the OCC
evaluates a small bank's performance under the applicable
performance criteria in Sec. 25.13, adjusting for performance
context in Sec. 25.14 and consideration of any evidence of
discriminatory and illegal credit practices as described in Sec.
25.15. This includes consideration of low-cost education loans
provided to low-income borrowers and activities in cooperation with
minority- or women-owned financial institutions and low-income
credit unions.
(2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a
particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and
exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may
compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall
performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound banking
practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile as
follows.
(b) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards--
(1) Lending test ratings--(i) Eligibility for a satisfactory lending
test rating. The OCC rates a small bank's lending performance
``satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal
variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit
needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities such as loan
originations for sale to the secondary markets and community
development loans and community development investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
related activities, are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities for individuals of different income
levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and
businesses and farms of
[[Page 1252]]
different sizes that is reasonable given the demographics of the
bank's assessment area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action, when warranted, in
response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's performance
in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the
bank's assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an ``outstanding'' lending test rating. A
small bank that meets each of the standards for a ``satisfactory''
rating under this paragraph and exceeds some or all of those
standards may warrant consideration for a lending test rating of
``outstanding.''
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A
small bank may also receive a lending test rating of ``needs to
improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree
to which its performance has failed to meet the standard for a
``satisfactory'' rating.
(2) Bank-level rating--(i) Eligibility for an outstanding
overall rating. A small bank that meets each of the standards for a
``satisfactory'' rating under the lending test and exceeds some or
all of those standards may warrant consideration for a bank-level
rating of ``outstanding.'' In assessing whether a bank's performance
is ``outstanding,'' the OCC considers the extent to which the bank
exceeds each of the performance standards for a ``satisfactory''
rating and its performance in making community development
investments and its performance in providing branches and other
services and delivery systems that enhance credit availability in
its assessment area(s).
(ii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance overall
ratings. A small bank may also receive a rating of ``needs to
improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree
to which its performance has failed to meet the standards for a
``satisfactory'' rating.
0
8. Revise Appendix B to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 25--Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) evaluates our record of helping to
meet the credit needs of this community, consistent with safe and
sound operations. The OCC also takes this record into account when
deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information
about our branches, such as their location and services provided at
them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation, prepared by the OCC; and comments received from the
public relating to assessment area needs and opportunities, as well
as our responses to those comments. You may review this information
today by reviewing the public section of our most recent CRA
evaluation, prepared by the OCC, which is available at (web address
and/or physical address at which the public file can be reviewed and
copied).
You may also have access to the following additional
information, which we will make available to you after you make a
request to us: (1) A map showing the assessment area containing a
select branch, which is the area in which the OCC evaluates our CRA
performance for that particular community; (2) branch addresses and
associated branch facilities and hours in any assessment area; (3) a
list of services we provide at those locations; (4) our most recent
rating in the assessment area; and (5) copies of all written
comments received by us that specifically relate to the needs and
opportunities of a given assessment area, and any responses we have
made to those comments. If we are operating under an approved
strategic plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the OCC
publishes a nationwide list of the (entity type) that are scheduled
for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is available from the
Deputy Comptroller (address). You may send written comments
regarding the needs and opportunities of any of the (entity type)'s
assessment area(s) to (name, address, and email address of official
at bank) and Deputy Comptroller (address and email address). Your
comments, together with any response by us, will be considered by
the Comptroller in evaluating our CRA performance and may be made
public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the Deputy
Comptroller. You may also request from the Deputy Comptroller an
announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the
Comptroller. (We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a
(entity type) holding company. You may request from the (title of
responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of __(address) an
announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by (entity
type) holding companies.)
PART 195--[REMOVED]
0
9. Under the authority of 12 U.S.C. 93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464, and
5412(b)(2)(B), remove part 195.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Chapter III
0
10. For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Board of Directors
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation proposes to revise part
345 of chapter III of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations to
read as follows:
PART 345--COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT
Subpart A--General
Sec.
345.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
345.02 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
345.03 Definitions.
Subpart B--Qualifying Activities
345.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
345.05 Qualifying activities confirmation and illustrative list.
345.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
345.07 Qualifying activities value.
Subpart C--Assessment Area
345.08 Assessment area.
Subpart D--Performance Evaluations
345.09 Performance standards and ratings, in general.
345.10 CRA evaluation measure.
345.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
345.12 General performance standards and presumptive rating.
345.13 Small bank performance standards.
345.14 Consideration of performance context.
345.15 Discriminatory and other illegal credit practices.
345.16 Strategic plan.
345.17 Assigned ratings.
345.18 State/multistate metropolitan statistical area assigned
rating.
Subpart E--Data Collection, Recordkeeping, and Reporting
345.19 Data collection for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 345.12 or a strategic plan under
Sec. 34.16.
345.20 Retail domestic deposit data collection and recordkeeping for
small banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards in
Sec. 345.13.
345.21 Activity location.
345.22 Recordkeeping.
345.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 345.12 or a strategic plan under Sec. 345.16.
345.24 Public disclosures.
345.25 Content and availability of public file.
345.26 Availability of planned evaluation schedule.
345.27 Public notice by banks.
Appendix A to Part 345--Small Bank Ratings
Appendix B to Part 345--Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1814-1817, 1819-1820, 1828, 1831u and 2901-
2908, 3103-3104, and 3108(a).
Subpart A--General
Sec. 345.01 Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority. The authority for this part is 12 U.S.C. 1814-1817,
1819-1820, 1828, 1831u and 2901-2907, 3103-3104, and 3108(a).
(b) Purposes. In enacting the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the
Congress required each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency
to assess an institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs
of the local communities in which the institution is chartered,
consistent with the safe and sound operation of the institution, and to
take this record into account in the
[[Page 1253]]
agency's evaluation of an application for a deposit facility by the
institution. This part is intended to carry out the purposes of the CRA
by:
(1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) assesses a bank's record of
helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, including
low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and
sound operation of the bank; and
(2) Providing that the FDIC takes that record into account in
considering certain applications.
(c) Scope--(1) General. This part applies to all insured State
nonmember banks, including insured State branches as described in
paragraph (c)(2) and any uninsured State branch that results from an
acquisition described in section 5(a)(8) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(8)).
(2) Insured State branches. Insured State branches are branches of
a foreign bank established and operating under the laws of any State,
the deposits of which are insured in accordance with the provisions of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA). In the case of insured State
branches, references in this part to main office mean the principal
branch within the United States and the term branch or branches refers
to any insured State branch or branches located within the United
States. The assessment area of an insured State branch is the community
or communities located within the United States served by the branch as
described in Sec. 345.08.
(3) Certain exempt banks. This part does not apply to banks that do
not perform commercial or retail banking services by granting credit or
offering credit-related products or services to the public in the
ordinary course of business, other than as incident to their
specialized operations and done on an accommodation basis. These banks
include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24(Seventh), and banks
that engage only in one or more of the following activities: Providing
cash management controlled disbursement services or serving as
correspondent banks, trust companies, or clearing agents.
(4) Compliance Dates--(i) Banks other than small banks--(A) Banks
that are not small banks must comply with the following requirements of
this part on the following dates:
(1) One year after the effective date of the final rule for the
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in
Sec. Sec. 345.08, 345.19, and 345.22; and
(2) Two years after the effective date of the final rule for the
reporting requirements in Sec. 345.23.
(B) Banks that are not small banks must comply with the applicable
requirements of the other sections of this part after completing the
evaluation period that concludes immediately after the reporting
requirements compliance date in paragraph (c)(4)(i)(A)(2) of this
section, including any extensions approved by the FDIC.
(ii) Small banks--(A) Small banks must comply with the assessment
area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in Sec. Sec.
345.08, 345.20, and 345.22 one year after the effective date of this
rule.
(B) Small banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the compliance date in paragraph
(c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section, including any extensions approved by the
FDIC.
(iii) Small banks that opt into the general performance standards
in Sec. 345.12 as of the effective date of this rule and banks that no
longer meet the small bank definition--(A) Small banks that opt into
the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12 as of the effective
date of this rule pursuant to Sec. 345.09(b) and banks that no longer
meet the small bank definition must comply with the following
requirements on the following dates:
(1) Two years after the effective date of the final rule for the
assessment area, data collection, and recordkeeping requirements in
Sec. Sec. 345.08, 345.19, and 345.22; and
(2) Three years after the effective date of the final rule for the
reporting requirements in Sec. 345.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the reporting requirements compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A)(2) of this section, including any
extensions approved by the FDIC.
(iv) Small banks that opt into the general performance standards in
Sec. 345.12 after the effective date of the final rule--(A) Small
banks that opt into the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12
after the effective date of the final rule pursuant to Sec. 345.09(b)
must comply with the following requirements on the following dates:
(1) One year after the bank opts in for the assessment area, data
collection, and recordkeeping requirements in Sec. Sec. 345.08,
345.19, and 345.22; and
(2) Two years after the bank opts in for the reporting requirements
in Sec. 345.23.
(B) Those banks must comply with the applicable requirements of the
other sections of this part after completing the evaluation period that
concludes immediately after the reporting requirements compliance date
in paragraph (c)(4)(iv)(A)(2) of this section, including any extensions
approved by FDIC.
Sec. 345.02 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the FDIC takes into
account the record of performance under the CRA of each applicant bank
in considering an application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic branch or other facility with
the ability to accept deposits;
(2) The relocation of the bank's main office or a branch;
(3) The merger, consolidation, acquisition of assets, or assumption
of liabilities; and
(4) Deposit insurance for a newly chartered financial institution.
(b) New financial institutions. A newly chartered financial
institution shall submit with its application for deposit insurance a
description of how it will meet its CRA objectives. The FDIC takes the
description into account in considering the application and may deny or
condition approval on that basis.
(c) Interested parties. The FDIC takes into account any views
expressed by interested parties that are submitted in accordance with
the FDIC's procedures set forth in part 303 of this chapter in
considering CRA performance in an application listed in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A bank's record
of performance may be the basis for denying or conditioning approval of
an application listed in paragraph (a) of this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this section,
the term ``insured depository institution'' has the same meaning as
this term is given in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
Sec. 345.03 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
Activity means a loan, investment, or service by a bank.
Affiliate has the same meaning as this term is given in Regulation
W, 12 CFR 223.2(a) and (b) as of the effective date of this rule but
applies to member and non-member banks.
[[Page 1254]]
Agencies means the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and
the FDIC.
Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the metropolitan statistical area,
if a person or census tract is located in a metropolitan statistical
area, or for the metropolitan division, if a person or census tract is
located in a metropolitan statistical area that has been subdivided
into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a person
or census tract is located outside a metropolitan statistical area.
Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in accordance
with Sec. 345.08.
Average means the statistical mean.
Bank means a State nonmember bank, as that term is defined in
section 3(e)(2) of the FDIA, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1813(e)(2)), with
Federally insured deposits, except as provided in Sec. 345.01(c). The
term bank also includes an insured State branch.
Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as a branch,
whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a mini-branch in a
grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction with any other local
business or non-profit organization. The term ``branch'' only includes
a ``domestic branch'' as that term is defined in section 3(o) of the
FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(o)).
Call Report means Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income as
filed under 12 U.S.C. 161.
Community Development Financial Institution has the same meaning as
this term is given in 12 U.S.C. 4702(5).
Community development investment means a lawful investment,
membership share, deposit, legally-binding commitment to invest that is
reported on the Call Report, Schedule RC-L, or monetary or in-kind
donation that meets the criteria of Sec. 345.04(c).
Community development loan means a loan, line of credit, or
contingent commitment to lend that meets the criteria of Sec.
345.04(c).
Community development services means bank employee time spent
volunteering as a representative of the bank on activities that meet
the criteria of Sec. 345.04(c) or supporting activities that meet the
criteria of Sec. 345.04(c)(2), (11). A bank employee may receive
expense reimbursement for volunteer time related to the community
development activity.
Compensation means the Bureau of Labor Statistics calculation of
the hourly wage for that type of work engaged in by a bank employee in
the course of conducting community development services.
Consumer loan means a loan reported on the Call Report, Schedule
RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 6, Loans to
individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures,
which include the following product lines:
(1) Credit card, which is an extension of credit to an individual
for household, family, and other personal expenditures arising from
credit cards;
(2) Other revolving credit plan, which is an extension of credit to
an individual for household, family, and other personal expenditures
arising from prearranged overdraft plans and other revolving credit
plans not accessed by credit cards;
(3) Automobile loan, which is a consumer loan extended for the
purpose of purchasing new and used passenger cars and other vehicles
such as minivans, vans, sport-utility vehicles, pickup trucks, and
similar light trucks for personal use; and
(4) Other consumer loan, which is any other loan to an individual
for household, family, and other personal expenditures (other than
those that meet the definition of a ``loan secured by real estate'' and
other than those for purchasing or carrying securities), including low-
cost education loans, which is any private education loan, as defined
in section 140(a)(8) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1650(a)(8))
(including a loan under a state or local education loan program),
originated by the bank for a student at an ``institution of higher
education,'' as that term is generally defined in sections 101 and 102
of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the
implementing regulations published by the U.S. Department of Education,
with interest rates and fees no greater than those of comparable
education loans offered directly by the U.S. Department of Education.
Such rates and fees are specified in section 455 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087e).
Contingent commitment to lend means a legally-binding commitment to
extend credit in instances where another bank initially funded, or
committed to fund, a project but cannot, for financial or legal
reasons, advance unanticipated additional funds necessary to complete
the project.
Distressed area means a middle-income census tract identified by
the agencies that meets one or more of the following conditions:
(1) An unemployment rate of at least 1.5 times the national
average,
(2) A poverty rate of 20 percent or more, or
(3) A population loss of 10 percent or more between the previous
and most recent decennial census or a net migration loss of five
percent or more over the five-year period preceding the most recent
census.
Essential community facility means a public facility, including but
not limited to a school, library, park, hospital and health care
facility, and public safety facility.
Essential infrastructure means:
(1) Public infrastructure, including but not limited to public
roads, bridges, tunnels; and
(2) Essential telecommunications infrastructure, mass transit,
water supply and distribution, utilities supply and distribution,
sewage treatment and collection, and industrial parks.
Family farm has the same meaning as the term is given by the Farm
Service Agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 7 CFR 761.2(b)
as of the effective date of this rule.
Financing means permissible equity or debt facilities, such as
loans, lines of credit, bonds, private funds, securities, or other
permissible investments.
High-cost area means any county in which the percentage of
households who have monthly housing costs greater than 30 percent of
their monthly income is greater than 40 percent.
Home mortgage loan means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part I,
specifically:
(1) Item 1.a.(1) 1-4 family residential construction loans;
(2) Item 1.c Loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties
(includes closed-end and open-end loans); or
(3) Item 1.d Loans secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential
properties.
Income levels are:
(1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less than
50 percent of the area median income, or a median family income that is
less than 50 percent in the case of a census tract.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income, or
a median family income that is at least 50 percent and less than 80
percent in the case of a census tract.
(3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median income,
or a median family income that is at least 80 percent and less than 120
percent in the case of a census tract.
(4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120
percent or
[[Page 1255]]
more of the area median income, or a median family income that is 120
percent or more in the case of a census tract.
Indian country has the same meaning as this term is given in 18
U.S.C. 1151.
Insured State branches mean the branches of a foreign bank
established and operating under the laws of any State, the deposits of
which are insured in accordance with the provisions of the FDIA. In the
case of insured State branches, references in this part to main office
mean the principal branch within the United States and the term branch
or branches refers to any insured State branch or branches located
within the United States.
Low-income credit union has the same meaning as this term is given
in 12 CFR 701.34.
Major retail lending product line means a bank's retail lending
product line that composes at least 15 percent of the bank-level dollar
volume of total retail loan originations during the evaluation period.
Metropolitan division has the same meaning as this term is given by
the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Metropolitan statistical area has the same meaning as this term is
given by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Military bank means a bank whose business predominately consists of
serving the needs of military personnel who serve or have served in the
armed forces (including the U.S. Army, Navy, Marine Corp., Air Force,
and Coast Guard) or dependents of military personnel. A bank whose
business predominantly consists of serving the needs of military
personnel or their dependents means a bank whose most important
customer group is military personnel or their dependents.
Minority depository institution means a depository institution as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)(1).
Monetary or in-kind donation means:
(1) A grant, monetary contribution, or monetary donation, or
(2) A contribution of goods, commodities, or other non-monetary
resources.
Non-branch deposit-taking facility means a banking facility other
than a branch owned or operated by, or operated exclusively for, the
bank that is authorized to take deposits that is located in any state
or territory of the United States of America.
Nonmetropolitan area means any area that is not located in a
metropolitan statistical area.
Partially benefits means 50 percent or less of the dollar value of
the activity or of the individuals or census tracts served by the
activity.
Primarily benefits means:
(1) Greater than 50 percent of the dollar value of the activity or
of the individuals or census tracts served by the activity; or
(2) The express, bona fide intent, purpose, or mandate of the
activity as stated, for example, in a prospectus, loan proposal, or
community action plan.
Qualifying activity means an activity that helps meet the credit
needs of a bank's entire community, including low- and moderate-income
individuals and communities, in accordance with Sec. 345.04.
Qualifying loan means a retail loan that meets the criteria in
Sec. 345.04(b) or a community development loan that meets the criteria
in Sec. 345.04(c).
Retail domestic deposit means a ``deposit'' as defined in section
3(l) of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1813(l)) and as reported on Schedule RC-E,
item 1, of the Call Report that is held in the United States and is
provided by an individual, partnership, or corporation other than a
deposit that is obtained, directly or indirectly, from or through the
mediation or assistance of a deposit broker as that term is defined in
section 29 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)).
Retail loan means a home mortgage loan, small loan to a business,
small loan to a farm, or consumer loan.
Retail lending product line means a:
(1) Home mortgage loan product line, which includes all home
mortgage loans;
(2) Small loan to a business product line, which includes all small
loans to businesses;
(3) Small loan to a farm product line, which includes all small
loans to farms; or
(4) Consumer lending product line, which includes:
(ii) An automobile loan product line;
(iii) A credit card product line;
(iv) An other revolving credit plan product line; or
(v) An other consumer loan product line.
Small bank--(1) Definition. Small bank means a bank that:
(i) Had assets of $500 million or less in each of the previous four
calendar quarters; or
(ii) Was a small bank as of the close of the calendar quarter
immediately preceding the close of the last calendar quarter and did
not have assets of greater than $500 million as of the close of each of
the past four calendar quarters.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in this definition shall be
adjusted annually and published by the FDIC, based on the year-to-year
change in the average of the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers, not seasonally adjusted, for each twelve-
month period ending in November, with rounding to the nearest $100,000.
Small business means a business that has gross annual revenues of
no greater than $2 million. The FDIC will annually adjust the $2
million threshold for inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold
will be made publicly available.
Small farm means a farm with gross annual revenues of no greater
than $2 million. The FDIC will annually adjust the $2 million threshold
for inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold will be made
publicly available.
Small loan to a business means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.e,
Secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties, or Item 4, Commercial and
industrial loans, and of no greater than $2 million. The FDIC will
annually adjust the $2 million threshold for inflation, and the
adjustment to the threshold will be made publicly available.
Small loan to a farm means a loan reported on the Call Report,
Schedule RC-C, Loans and Lease Financing Receivables, Part 1, Item 1.b,
Secured by farmland, or Item 3, Loans to finance agricultural
production and other loans to farmers, and of no greater than $2
million. The FDIC will annually adjust the $2 million threshold for
inflation, and the adjustment to the threshold will be made publicly
available.
Underserved area means a middle-income census tract:
(1) Identified by the agencies as meeting the criteria for
population size, density, and dispersion that indicate the area's
population is sufficiently small, thin, and distant from a population
center that the tract is likely to have difficulty financing the fixed
costs of meeting essential community needs. The agencies will use as
the basis for these designations the ``urban influence codes,''
numbered ``7,'' ``10,'' ``11,'' and ``12,'' maintained by the Economic
Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture; or
(2) Identified by the agencies as:
(i) Not having a branch of any bank within:
(A) 2 miles of the center of the census tract if it is an urban
census tract, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data;
(B) 5 miles of the center of the census tract if it is a mixed
census tract, as
[[Page 1256]]
defined by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
Census data;
(C) 10 miles of the center of the census tract if it is a rural
census tract, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data; or
(D) 5 miles of the center of the census tract if the census tract
is an island area, as defined by the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council Census data; and
(ii) Not having any branch within the census tract.
Women's depository institution means a depository institution as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 2907(b)(2).
Subpart B--Qualifying Activities
Sec. 345.04 Qualifying activities criteria.
(a) General. Retail loans, community development loans, community
development investments, and community development services that help
meet the credit needs of a bank's entire community, including low- and
moderate-income communities, are qualifying activities if they meet the
criteria in this section at the time the activity is originated, made,
or conducted. If the activity is subsequently purchased by another
bank, it is a qualifying activity if it meets the criteria in this
section at the time of purchase.
(b) Retail loans. A home mortgage loan, small loan to a business,
small loan to a farm, or consumer loan is a qualifying activity if it
is:
(1) Provided to a:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individual or family;
(ii) Small business; or
(iii) Small farm;
(2) Located in Indian country;
(3) A small loan to a business located in a low- or moderate-income
census tract; or
(4) A small loan to a farm located in a low- or moderate-income
census tract.
(c) Community development loans, community development investments,
and community development services. A community development loan,
community development investment, or community development service is a
qualifying activity if it provides financing for or supports:
(1) Affordable housing, which means:
(i) Rental housing:
(A) That is likely to partially or primarily benefit low- or
moderate-income individuals or families as demonstrated by median rents
that do not and are not projected at the time of the transaction to
exceed 30 percent of 80 percent of the area median income;
(B) That partially or primarily benefits low- or moderate-income
individuals or families as demonstrated by an affordable housing set-
aside required by a federal, state, local, or tribal government;
(C) That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal,
state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for low-
or moderate-income individuals or families;
(D) That partially or primarily benefits middle-income individuals
or families in high-cost areas as demonstrated by an affordable housing
set-aside required by a federal, state, local, or tribal government; or
(E) That is undertaken in conjunction with an explicit federal,
state, local, or tribal government affordable housing program for
middle-income individuals or families in high-cost areas; or
(ii) Owner-occupied housing purchased, refinanced, or improved by
low- or moderate-income individuals or families, except for home
mortgage loans provided directly to individuals or families;
(2) Another bank's community development loan, community
development investment, or community development service;
(3) Businesses or Farms that meet the size-eligibility standards of
the Small Business Administration Certified Development Company, as
that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, or the Small Business Investment
Company, as described 13 CFR part 107, by providing technical
assistance and supportive services, such as shared space, technology,
or administrative assistance through an intermediary;
(4) Community support services which means activities, such as
child care, education, health services, and housing services, that
partially or primarily serve or assist low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(5) Essential community facilities that partially or primarily
benefit or serve:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, disaster areas consistent with a disaster recovery
plan, or Indian country;
(6) Essential infrastructure that benefits or serves:
(i) Low- or moderate-income individuals or families; or
(ii) Low- or moderate-income census tracts, distressed areas,
underserved areas, disaster areas consistent with a disaster recovery
plan, or Indian country;
(7) A family farm's:
(i) Purchase or lease of farm land, equipment, and other farm-
related inputs,
(ii) Receipt of technical assistance and supportive services, such
as shared space, technology, or administrative assistance through an
intermediary; or
(iii) Sale and trade of family farm products;
(8) Federal, state, local, or tribal government programs, projects,
or initiatives that:
(i) Partially or primarily benefit low- or moderate-income
individuals or families;
(ii) Partially or primarily benefit small businesses or small farms
as those terms are defined in the programs, projects or initiatives; or
(iii) Are consistent with a bona fide government revitalization,
stabilization, or recovery plan for a low- or moderate-income census
tract; a distressed area; an underserved area; a disaster area; or
Indian country;
(9) Financial literacy programs or education or homebuyer
counseling;
(10) Owner-occupied and rental housing development, construction,
rehabilitation, improvement, or maintenance in Indian country;
(11) Qualified opportunity funds, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-
2(d)(1), that benefit low- or moderate-income qualified opportunity
zones, as defined in 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-1(a);
(12) A Small Business Administration Certified Development Company,
as that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, a Small Business Investment
Company, as described 13 CFR part 107, a New Markets Venture Capital
company, as described in 13 CFR part 108, a qualified Community
Development Entity, as defined in 26 CFR 45D(c), or a U.S. Department
of Agriculture Rural Business Investment Company, as defined in 7 CFR
4290.50; or
(13) Ventures undertaken, including capital investments and loan
participations, by a bank in cooperation with a minority depository
institution, women's depository institution, Community Development
Financial Institution, or low-income credit union, if the activity
helps to meet the credit needs of local communities in which such
institutions are chartered, including activities that indirectly help
to meet community credit needs by promoting the sustainability and
profitability of those institutions and credit unions.
Sec. 345.05 Qualifying activities confirmation and illustrative list.
(a) Qualifying activities list. The FDIC maintains a publicly
available illustrative list on the FDIC's website of
[[Page 1257]]
non-exhaustive examples of qualifying activities that meet and
activities that do not meet the criteria in Sec. 345.04.
(b) Confirmation of a qualifying activity. A bank may request that
the FDIC confirm that an activity meets the criteria in Sec. 345.04
and is a qualifying activity in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(1) When the FDIC confirms that an activity is consistent with the
criteria in Sec. 345.04, the FDIC will notify the requestor and may
add this activity to the list of activities that meet the qualifying
activities criteria described in paragraph (a) of this section,
incorporating any conditions imposed, if applicable.
(2) When the FDIC determines that an activity is not consistent
with the criteria in Sec. 345.04, the FDIC will notify the requestor
and may add this activity to the list of activities that do not meet
the qualifying activities criteria described in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) Process--(1) A bank may request that the FDIC confirm that an
activity is a qualifying activity by submitting a complete Qualifying
Activity Confirmation Request Form available on the FDIC's website.
(2) In responding to a confirmation request that an activity is
consistent with the criteria in Sec. 345.04, the FDIC will consider:
(i) The information on the Qualifying Activity Confirmation Request
Form;
(ii) Whether the activity is consistent with the safe and sound
operation of the bank; and
(iii) Any other information the FDIC deems relevant.
(3) The FDIC may impose conditions on its confirmation to ensure
that an activity is consistent with the criteria in Sec. 345.04.
(4) An activity is confirmed as a qualifying activity if the bank
is not informed of an FDIC objection within 6 months of submission of a
complete Qualifying Activity Confirmation Request Form.
(d) Modifying the qualifying activities list. In addition to
updating the list in paragraph (a) of this section on an ongoing basis
in response to requests for confirmation described in paragraph (b) of
this section, the FDIC will publish the qualifying activities list no
less frequently than every three years for notice and comment to
determine whether the list should change. If the FDIC determines that a
qualifying loan or community development investment no longer meets the
criteria in Sec. 345.04, that loan or community development investment
will not be considered a qualifying activity for any subsequent
purchasers.
Sec. 345.06 Qualifying activities quantification.
(a) Community development service quantification. The dollar value
of a community development service is the compensation of for the
community development service multiplied by the number of hours the
employee spent performing the service, as adjusted by paragraph (e) of
this section.
(b) In-kind donation quantification. The dollar value of an in-kind
donation is the fair market value of the donation, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section.
(c) Monetary donation quantification. The dollar value of a
monetary donation is the actual dollar value of the donation, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section.
(d) Qualifying loan and other community development investment
quantification. The dollar value of a qualifying loan or a community
development investment not included in paragraph (b) or (c) of this
section, is:
(1) Except for qualifying loans in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, the average of the dollar value, as of the close of business
on the last day of the month, for each month the loan or investment is
on-balance sheet, of:
(i) The outstanding balance of a loan or investment, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section;
(ii) Any legally-binding commitment to invest, as adjusted by
paragraph (e) of this section; and
(iii) The allowance for credit losses on off balance sheet credit
exposures for contingent commitments to lend, as calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the Call Report, Schedule RC-G, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section; or
(2) For qualifying retail loans sold within 90 days of origination,
25 percent of the aggregate dollar value of the loan at origination, as
adjusted by paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) Portion of qualifying activities that partially benefit. The
dollar value of a qualifying activity that partially benefits, as
defined in Sec. 345.03, is calculated by multiplying the percentage of
the partial benefit by the full dollar value of the qualifying activity
quantified under paragraphs (a)-(d) of this section.
Sec. 345.07 Qualifying activities value.
(a) Bank-level qualifying activities value. A bank evaluated under
Sec. 345.12 calculates its bank-level qualifying activities value
annually based on the dollar value of all qualifying activities
originated, made, purchased, or performed on behalf of the bank and not
included in the bank-level qualifying activities value of another bank
subject to this part or part 25. The qualifying activities value equals
the sum, during a given annual period, of:
(1) The quantified dollar value of qualifying loans and community
development investments, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section;
and
(2) The aggregate:
(i) Quantified dollar value of community development services
conducted, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this section;
(ii) Quantified dollar value of in-kind donations made, as adjusted
in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(iii) Monetary donations made, as adjusted in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(b) Multipliers. The dollar value of the following qualifying
activities will be adjusted by multiplying the actual or quantified
dollar value by 2.
(1) Activities provided to or that support Community Development
Financial Institutions, except activities related to mortgage-backed
securities;
(2) Other community development investments, except community
development investments in mortgage-backed securities and municipal
bonds; and
(3) Other affordable housing-related community development loans.
(c) Assessment area qualifying activities value. A bank evaluated
under Sec. 345.12 calculates its assessment area qualifying activities
value for each assessment area by using the process described in
paragraph (a) of this section for qualifying activities located in the
assessment area.
Subpart C--Assessment Area
Sec. 345.08 Assessment area.
(a) General. A bank must delineate one or more assessment areas
within which the FDIC evaluates the bank's record of helping to meet
the credit needs of its community. The FDIC reviews the delineation for
compliance with the requirements of this section. Unless pursuant to an
approved application covered under Sec. 345.02(a)(3) for a merger or
consolidation with an insured depository institution, an assessment
area delineation can only change once during an evaluation period and
must not change within the annual period used to determine an
assessment area CRA evaluation measure under Sec. 345.10(c).
(b) Facility-based assessment area(s)--(1) A bank must delineate an
assessment area encompassing each location where the bank maintains a
[[Page 1258]]
main office, a branch, or a non-branch deposit-taking facility as well
as the surrounding locations in which the bank has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its qualifying retail loans.
Assessment areas delineated under this paragraph may contain one or
more of these facilities.
(2) A facility-based assessment area must be delineated to consist
of:
(i) One whole metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan
statistical area boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the
calendar year in which the delineation is made);
(ii) The whole nonmetropolitan area of a state;
(iii) One or more whole, contiguous metropolitan divisions in a
single metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan division
boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in
which the delineation is made); or
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous counties or county equivalents
in a single metropolitan statistical area or nonmetropolitan area.
(3) A bank may delineate its facility-based assessment area(s) in
the smallest geographic area where it maintains a main office, branch,
or non-branch deposit-taking facility, but may delineate a larger
assessment area that includes these locations, as provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(4) A facility-based assessment area may not extend beyond a
metropolitan statistical area or state boundary unless the assessment
area is located in a multistate metropolitan statistical area. If a
bank serves a geographic area that extends beyond a state boundary, the
bank must delineate separate assessment areas for the areas in each
state. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends beyond a
metropolitan statistical area boundary, the bank must delineate
separate assessment areas for the areas inside and outside the
metropolitan statistical area.
(c) Deposit-based assessment area(s)--(1) A bank that receives 50
percent or more of its retail domestic deposits from geographic areas
outside of its facility-based assessment areas must delineate separate,
non-overlapping assessment areas in the smallest geographic area where
it receives 5 percent or more of its retail domestic deposits.
(2) A deposit-based assessment area must be delineated to consist
of:
(i) One whole state;
(ii) One whole metropolitan statistical area (using the
metropolitan statistical area boundaries that were in effect as of
January 1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is made);
(iii) The whole nonmetropolitan area of a state;
(iv) One or more whole, contiguous metropolitan divisions in a
single metropolitan statistical area (using the metropolitan division
boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in
which the delineation is made);
(v) The remaining geographic area of a state, metropolitan
statistical area, nonmetropolitan area, or metropolitan division other
than where it has a facility-based assessment area; or
(vi) One or more whole, contiguous counties or county equivalents
in a single metropolitan statistical area or nonmetropolitan area.
(d) Limitations on delineation of assessment areas. A bank's
assessment areas must not:
(1) Reflect illegal discrimination; or
(2) Arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income geographies, taking
into account the bank's size and financial condition.
(e) Military banks. Notwithstanding the requirements of this
section, a military bank's assessment area will consist of the entire
United States of America and its territories. A military bank will only
be evaluated based on its entire deposit customer base at the bank
level under Sec. 345.12.
(f) Banks evaluated under strategic plans. A bank evaluated under a
strategic plan will delineate its assessment area(s) in accordance with
the requirements of Sec. 345.16(g)(2).
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The FDIC uses the assessment area(s)
delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the bank's CRA performance
unless the FDIC determines that the assessment area(s) do not comply
with the requirements of this section.
Subpart D--Performance Evaluations
Sec. 345.09 Performance standards and ratings, in general.
(a) Performance standards. The FDIC assesses the CRA performance of
a bank in an examination as follows:
(1) General performance standards--(i) The FDIC assesses the CRA
performance of a bank other than banks described in paragraphs (a)(2)
and (a)(3) of this section based on the bank's application of the
general performance standards and determination of its presumptive
ratings under Sec. 345.12.
(ii) The FDIC determines the assigned ratings for a bank evaluated
under Sec. 345.12 as provided in Sec. 345.17.
(iii) The FDIC determines the state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area ratings for a bank evaluated under Sec. 345.12 as
provided in Sec. 345.18.
(2) Small bank performance standards--(i) The FDIC applies the
small bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 345.13 in
evaluating the performance of a small bank, unless the bank is
evaluated under an approved strategic plan as described under (a)(3) of
this section or elects to opt in to the general performance standards
under paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) The FDIC assigns a small bank evaluated under the small bank
performance standards in Sec. 345.13 lending test and bank-level
ratings as provided for in Appendix A of this part.
(3) Strategic plan. The FDIC evaluates the performance of a bank
under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the FDIC approves, a
strategic plan as provided in Sec. 345.16.
(b) General performance standards opt in. A small bank may elect to
opt in to be evaluated under the general performance standards
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section and this election must
occur at least six months before the start of a bank's next evaluation
period. Small banks that elect to be evaluated under the general
performance standards must collect, maintain, and report the data
required for other banks under Sec. Sec. 345.19, 345.22, and 345.23.
Once a small bank has elected to opt in, it must complete at least one
evaluation period under the general performance standards and may elect
no more than once to opt out of the general performance standards and
must do so six months before the start of its next evaluation period.
Small banks that opt out will revert to being evaluated according to
the small bank performance standards as provided in Sec. 345.13 in
evaluating the performance of a small bank, unless the bank is
evaluated under an approved strategic plan as described under (a)(3) of
this section.
(c) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do not require
a bank to make loans or investments or to provide services that are
inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To the contrary, the FDIC
anticipates banks can meet the standards of this part with safe and
sound loans, investments, and services on which the banks expect to
make a profit. Banks are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply
flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or
moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with
safe and sound operations.
Sec. 345.10 CRA evaluation measure.
(a) CRA evaluation measure. A bank evaluated as described in Sec.
345.12 will determine its bank-level and assessment
[[Page 1259]]
area CRA evaluation measures annually as part of its CRA performance
evaluation.
(b) Determination of the bank-level CRA evaluation measure. A
bank's bank-level CRA evaluation measure is the sum of:
(1) The bank's annual bank-level qualifying activities values
calculated under Sec. 345.07(a) divided by the average quarterly value
of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on
the last day of each quarter for the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value; and
(2) The number of the bank's branches located in low- or moderate-
income census tracts, distressed areas, underserved areas, and Indian
country divided by its total number of branches as of the close of
business on the last day of the same period used to calculate the
annual qualifying activities value multiplied by .01.
(c) Determination of the assessment area CRA evaluation measure. A
bank's assessment area CRA evaluation measure is determined in each
assessment area and is the sum of:
(1) The bank's annual assessment area qualifying activities value
calculated under Sec. 345.07(c); divided by the average quarterly
value of the bank's assessment area retail domestic deposits as of the
close of business on the last day of each quarter for the same period
used to calculate the annual assessment area qualifying activities
value; and
(2) The number of the bank's branches located in low- or moderate-
income census tracts in the assessment area divided by its total number
of branches in the assessment area as of the close of business on the
last day of the same period used to calculate the annual assessment
area qualifying activities value multiplied by .01.
(d) Average CRA evaluation measures. For each evaluation period, a
bank will calculate the average of its:
(1) Annual bank-level CRA evaluation measures for each year in the
evaluation period; and
(2) Annual assessment area CRA evaluation measures for each year in
the evaluation period, separately for each assessment area.
Sec. 345.11 Retail lending distribution tests.
(a) General. In each assessment area, a bank evaluated as described
in Sec. 345.12 will apply a:
(1) Geographic distribution test for its small loan to a business
product line or small loan to a farm product line if those product
lines are major retail lending product lines with 20 or more
originations in the assessment area during the evaluation period; and
(2) Borrower distribution test for each major retail lending
product line with 20 or more originations in the assessment area during
the evaluation period.
(b) Geographic distribution test--(1) Small loan to a business
product line. To pass the geographic distribution test for the small
loan to a business product line, a bank's percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- or moderate-income census tracts originated during
the evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed the
threshold established for either the associated geographic demographic
comparator or the associated geographic peer comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
businesses in low- and moderate-income census tracts in the assessment
area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
businesses in low- and moderate-income census tracts originated by all
banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12
in the assessment area.
(2) Small loan to a farm product line. To pass the geographic
distribution test for the small loan to a farm product line, a bank's
percentage of small loans to farms in low- or moderate-income census
tracts originated during the evaluation period in the assessment area
must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the associated
geographic demographic comparator or the associated geographic peer
comparator.
(i) Geographic demographic comparator threshold. The geographic
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
farms in low- and moderate-income census tracts in the assessment area.
(ii) Geographic peer comparator threshold. The geographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
farms in low- and moderate-income census tracts originated by all banks
evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12 in
the assessment area.
(c) Borrower distribution test--(1) Home mortgage lending product
line. To pass the borrower distribution test for the home mortgage
lending product line, a bank's percentage of home mortgage loans to
low- and moderate-income individuals and families originated during the
evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed the
threshold established for either the associated borrower demographic
comparator or the associated borrower peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
low- and moderate-income families in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of home mortgage
loans to low- or moderate-income individuals and families originated by
all banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec.
345.12 in the assessment area.
(2) Consumer lending product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for a consumer lending product line, a bank's
percentage of consumer loans to low- and moderate-income individuals
and families originated during the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the
associated demographic borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
low- and moderate-income individuals in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of consumer loans
to low- or moderate-income individuals and families originated by all
banks evaluated under the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12
in the assessment area.
(3) Small loan to a business product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for the small loan to a business product line, a
bank's percentage of small loans to businesses provided to small
businesses originated during the evaluation period in the assessment
area must meet or exceed the threshold established for either the
associated demographic borrower comparator or the associated
demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
small businesses in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
businesses provided to small businesses from all banks evaluated under
the general performance standards in Sec. 345.12 in the assessment
area.
[[Page 1260]]
(4) Small loan to a farm product line. To pass the borrower
distribution test for the small loan to a farm product line, a bank's
percentage of small loans to farms provided to small farms originated
during the evaluation period in the assessment area must meet or exceed
the thresholds established for either the associated demographic
borrower comparator or the associated demographic peer comparator.
(i) Borrower demographic comparator threshold. The borrower
demographic comparator threshold is 55 percent of the percentage of
small farms in the assessment area.
(ii) Borrower peer comparator threshold. The demographic peer
comparator threshold is 65 percent of the percentage of small loans to
farms provided to small farms from all banks evaluated under the
general performance standards in Sec. 345.12 in the assessment area.
Sec. 345.12 General performance standards and presumptive rating.
(a) General. The bank-level presumptive rating and assessment area
presumptive rating(s) for banks assessed under this section are
determined by evaluating whether a bank has met all the performance
standards associated with a given rating category, at the bank level
and in each assessment area. A bank will use the performance standards
in effect on the first day of its evaluation period for the duration of
its evaluation period, unless the bank elects to use performance
standards published later during the evaluation period. If the bank
elects to use a later-published performance standard, that performance
standard will apply during the entire evaluation period.
(b) Performance standards adjustments. The agencies will
periodically adjust the performance standards.
(1) Factors considered. When adjusting the performance standards,
the agencies will consider factors such as the level of qualifying
activities conducted by all banks, market conditions, and unmet needs
and opportunities.
(2) Public notice and comment. The agencies will provide for a
public notice and comment period on any proposed adjustments prior to
finalizing the adjustments.
(c) Bank-level performance standards--(1) Outstanding. The bank-
level outstanding performance standards are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The average of the bank's bank-level
CRA evaluation measures during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 11 percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank received an assigned rating
of outstanding in a significant portion of its assessment areas and in
those assessment areas where it holds a significant amount of deposits;
and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec. 345.07, divided by the
average quarterly value of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of
the close of business on the last day of each quarter of the evaluation
period, must meet or exceed 2 percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The bank-level satisfactory performance standards
are:
(i) CRA evaluation measure. The average of the bank's bank-level
CRA evaluation measures during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6 percent;
(ii) Assessment area ratings. The bank received at least an
assigned rating of satisfactory in a significant portion of its
assessment areas and in those assessment areas where it holds a
significant amount of deposits; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments
during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec. 345.07, divided by the
average quarterly value of the bank's retail domestic deposits as of
the close of business on the last day of each quarter of the evaluation
period, must meet or exceed 2 percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The bank-level needs to improve performance
standard is an average bank-level CRA evaluation measure during the
evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that meets or exceeds 3
percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The bank-level substantial
noncompliance standard is an average bank-level CRA evaluation measure
during the evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that does not
meet or exceed 3 percent.
(d) Assessment area performance standards--(1) Outstanding. The
assessment area outstanding performance standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests. The bank must pass the
geographic and borrower distribution tests for its major retail lending
product lines evaluated in Sec. 345.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 11 percent; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments in
the assessment area during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec.
345.07, divided by the average quarterly value of the bank's assessment
area retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on the last
day of each quarter of the evaluation period, must meet or exceed 2
percent.
(2) Satisfactory. The assessment area satisfactory performance
standards are:
(i) Retail lending distribution tests. The bank must pass both the
geographic and borrower distribution tests for all retail lending
product lines evaluated in Sec. 345.11;
(ii) CRA evaluation measure. The assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, must meet or exceed 6 percent; and
(iii) Community development minimum. The quantified value of
community development loans and community development investments in
the assessment area during the evaluation period, as valued in Sec.
345.07, divided by the average quarterly value of the bank's assessment
area retail domestic deposits as of the close of business on the last
day of each quarter of the evaluation period, must meet or exceed 2
percent.
(3) Needs to improve. The assessment area needs to improve
performance standard is an assessment area average CRA evaluation
measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a percentage, that
must meet or exceed 3 percent.
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The assessment area substantial
noncompliance performance standard is an assessment area average CRA
evaluation measure during the evaluation period, expressed as a
percentage, that does not meet or exceed 3 percent.
Sec. 345.13 Small bank performance standards.
(a) Performance lending test criteria. The FDIC evaluates the
record of a small bank of helping to meet the credit needs of its
assessment area(s) pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal
variation, and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities, such
as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets, community
development loans, or community development investments;
[[Page 1261]]
(2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
related activities located in the bank's assessment area(s);
(3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate, engaging
in other lending-related activities for borrowers of different income
levels and businesses and farms of different sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
(5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in response
to written complaints about its performance in helping to meet credit
needs in its assessment area(s).
(b) Small bank performance rating. The FDIC assesses the
performance of a small bank evaluated under this section as provided in
appendix A of this part.
Sec. 345.14 Consideration of performance context.
(a) General. Performance context is used to assess how the factors
in paragraph (b) of this section affect a bank's capacity and
opportunity to meet the performance standards described in Sec. Sec.
345.12, 345.13, or 345.16. Based on that assessment, the FDIC may
adjust:
(1) The assessment area and bank-level presumptive ratings in Sec.
345.12; or
(2) The small bank lending test and bank-level ratings as described
in appendix A.
(b) Performance context factors. In assessing performance context,
the FDIC considers and documents the effect of the following factors
when determining the assigned rating:
(1) The bank's explanation of how its capacity to meet the
performance standards described in Sec. Sec. 345.12, 345.13, or 345.16
was affected by:
(i) The bank's product offerings and business strategy;
(ii) The bank's unique constraints, such as its financial
condition, safety and soundness limitations, or other factors;
(iii) The innovativeness, complexity, and flexibility of the bank's
qualifying activities;
(iv) The bank's development of business infrastructure and staffing
to support the purpose of this part; and
(v) The responsiveness of the bank's qualifying activities to the
needs of the community;
(2) The bank's explanation of how its opportunity to engage in
qualifying activities was affected by:
(i) The demand for qualifying activities, including credit needs
and market opportunities identified in a Federal Home Loan Bank
Targeted Community Lending Plan provided for in 12 CFR 1290.6(a)(5), as
applicable;
(ii) The demand for retail loans in low- or moderate-income census
tracts; and
(iii) Demographic factors (e.g., housing costs, unemployment rates
variation);
(3) The bank's competitive environment, as demonstrated by peer
performance.
(4) Any written comments about assessment area needs and
opportunities submitted to the bank or the FDIC; and
(5) Any other information deemed relevant by the FDIC.
(c) Form. Banks other than small banks must submit the information
in paragraph (b) of this section on the performance context form
available on the FDIC's website.
Sec. 345.15 Discriminatory and other illegal credit practices.
(a) Evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. A
bank's CRA performance is adversely affected by evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit practices. In assessing a bank's
CRA performance, the FDIC's evaluation will consider evidence of
discriminatory or other illegal credit practices including but not
limited to:
(1) Discrimination against applicants on a prohibited basis in
violation, for example, of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act or the Fair
Housing Act;
(2) Violations of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act;
(3) Violations of section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act;
(4) Violations of section 8 of the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act;
(5) Violations of the Truth in Lending Act provisions regarding a
consumer's right of rescission;
(6) Violations of the Military Lending Act; and
(7) Violations of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.
(b) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices. In determining the effect of evidence of practices described
in paragraph (a) of this section on the bank's assigned rating, the
FDIC considers the nature, extent, and strength of the evidence of the
practices; the policies and procedures that the bank has in place to
prevent the practices; any corrective action that the bank has taken or
has committed to take, including voluntary corrective action resulting
from self-assessment; and any other relevant information.
Sec. 345.16 Strategic plan.
(a) General. The FDIC assesses a bank's record of helping to meet
the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a strategic plan if:
(1) The bank has submitted the plan to the FDIC as provided for in
this section;
(2) The FDIC has approved the plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at least
one year.
(b) Plan submission--(1) Required submission. A bank must submit a
strategic plan that meets the requirements of this section if the bank:
(i) Would otherwise be evaluated under Sec. 345.12 and does not
maintain retail domestic deposits on-balance sheet; or
(ii) Is a small bank that does not originate retail loans.
(2) Optional submission. A bank not covered under paragraph (b)(1)
of this section may submit a strategic plan to the FDIC for approval.
(c) Data reporting. The FDIC's approval of a plan does not affect
the bank's data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting obligations,
if any, in Sec. Sec. 345.19, 345.20, 345.22, and 345.23 unless
otherwise determined in writing by the FDIC. The FDIC may require
additional bank-specific data collection, recordkeeping, and reporting
under a strategic plan, as appropriate.
(d) Plans in general--(1) Term. A plan may have a term of no more
than five years, and any multi-year plan must include annual interim
measurable goals under which the FDIC evaluates the bank's performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one assessment
area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment areas or
separate plans for one or more of its assessment areas.
(e) Public participation in plan development. Before submitting a
plan to the FDIC for approval, a bank must:
(1) Solicit public comment on the plan for at least 30 days by
submitting the plan for publication on the FDIC's website and by
publishing notice in at least one newspaper of general circulation in
each assessment area covered by the plan; and
(2) During the public comment period, make copies of the plan
available for review by the public and provide copies of the plan upon
request for a reasonable fee to cover copying, printing, or mailing, if
applicable.
(f) Submission of plan. The bank must submit its complete plan to
the FDIC at least six months prior to the proposed effective date of
the plan. The bank must also submit with its plan a description of any
written public comments received, including how the plan was revised in
light of the comments received. If the FDIC
[[Page 1262]]
determines the plan is not complete, the FDIC will notify bank
specifying the information needed, designating a reasonable period of
time for the bank to provide the information, and informing the bank
that failure to provide the information requested will result in no
further consideration being given to the plan.
(g) Plan content--(1) Performance standards--(i) A plan must
specify measurable goals for helping to meet the credit needs of the
bank's communities at the bank level and in each of its assessment
areas, particularly the needs of low- and moderate-income census tracts
and low- and moderate-income individuals and families, through
qualifying activities.
(ii) A plan must address the types and volume of qualifying
activities the bank will conduct. A plan may focus on one or more types
of qualifying activities considering the bank's capacity and
constraints, product offerings, and business strategy.
(2) Assessment area delineation. A plan must include a delineation
of the bank's assessment area(s) that meets the requirements of Sec.
345.08(a)-(d). In addition, the plan may include assessment area
delineations that reflect its target geographic market as defined by
the bank in its strategic plan. For a de novo bank, the assessment area
delineations should include the projected location of its facilities,
retail domestic deposit base, and lending activities.
(3) Confidential information. A bank may submit additional
information to the FDIC on a confidential basis, to the extent
permitted by law, but the goals stated in the plan must be sufficiently
specific to enable the public and the FDIC to judge the merits of the
plan.
(4) Satisfactory and outstanding performance standards. A plan must
specify measurable goals that constitute satisfactory performance. A
plan may specify measurable goals that constitute outstanding
performance. If a bank submits, and the FDIC approves, both
satisfactory and outstanding performance goals, the FDIC considers the
bank eligible for an outstanding performance rating.
(h) Plan approval--(1) Timing. The FDIC will act upon a plan within
6 months after the FDIC receives the complete plan and other material
required under paragraph (g) of this section. If the FDIC does not act
within this time period, the plan will be deemed approved unless the
FDIC extends the review period for good cause for no more than 90 days.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals, the FDIC
considers any written public comment on the plan and any response by
the bank to any written public comment on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating a plan. The FDIC evaluates a plan's
goals by considering the extent and breadth of the qualifying
activities including:
(i) Community development loans, community development investments,
and community development services; and
(ii) The use of innovative, flexible, or complex qualifying
activities.
(i) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may request
the FDIC to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has
been a material change in circumstances. The FDIC reserves the right to
require a bank that requests an amendment to a plan to comply with the
public participation process described in paragraph (e) of this
section.
Sec. 345.17 Assigned ratings.
(a) General performance standards--(1) Bank-level assigned rating.
The FDIC determines the bank-level assigned rating for a bank evaluated
under Sec. 345.12 based on its bank-level presumptive rating under
Sec. 345.12, adjusted for performance context under Sec. 345.14, and
consideration of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices under
Sec. 345.15.
(2) Assessment area assigned rating. The FDIC determines the
assessment area assigned ratings for a bank evaluated under Sec.
345.12 based on its assessment area presumptive rating under Sec.
345.12, adjusted for performance context under Sec. 345.14 and
consideration of discriminatory or other illegal credit practices under
Sec. 345.15.
(b) Strategic plans assigned rating. A bank operating under a
strategic plan will receive, as applicable, assessment area assigned
ratings, a bank-level assigned rating, and state-level and multistate
metropolitan statistical area assigned ratings of satisfactory or
outstanding if it has met the measurable goals in the plan that
correspond to those ratings after considering performance context under
Sec. 345.14.
Sec. 345.18 State/multistate metropolitan statistical area assigned
rating.
For a bank evaluated under Sec. 345.12 with interstate branches,
the FDIC will assign a rating for each state where the bank has a
facility-based assessment area and each multistate metropolitan
statistical area where the bank has a main office, branch, or non-
branch deposit-taking facility in two or more states in the multistate
metropolitan statistical area. The state or multistate metropolitan
statistical area assigned rating for that state or multistate
metropolitan statistical area is the lowest rating assigned to a
significant number of its assessment areas within that state or
multistate metropolitan statistical area.
Subpart E--Data Collection, Recordkeeping, and Reporting
Sec. 345.19 Data collection for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 345.12 or a strategic plan under Sec.
345.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 345.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under Sec. 345.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the FDIC,
must collect and maintain the information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. A bank must collect and maintain
the results of its
(1) Retail lending distribution tests under Sec. 345.11 for the
borrower distribution and geographic distribution tests for each major
retail lending product line evaluated in the assessment area;
(2) Bank-level and each assessment-area level CRA evaluation
measures calculated under Sec. 345.10; and
(3) Presumptive ratings under Sec. 345.12.
(c) Qualifying activities and retail domestic deposit data required
to be collected and maintained. A bank subject to this section must
collect and maintain the following data and supporting documentation
for all qualifying activities and certain non-qualifying activities
conducted by the bank until the completion of its next CRA evaluation:
(1) Qualifying loan data. For each qualifying loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol to identify the
relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) Date of
(A) Origination for loans originated by the bank, if applicable;
(B) Purchase for loans not originated by the bank, if applicable;
and
(C) Sale if the loan is a retail loan and sold by the bank within
90 days of origination;
(iv) An indicator of whether the loan was originated or purchased;
(v) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
(vi) The outstanding dollar amount of the loan, as of the close of
business on the last day of the month, for each month that the loan is
on-balance sheet;
(vii) The loan location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract;
[[Page 1263]]
(viii) The income or revenue of the borrower; and
(ix) The criteria in Sec. 345.04 that the loan satisfies or that
it is on the illustrative list referenced in Sec. 345.05 and whether
it serves a particular assessment area, if applicable.
(2) Other loan data. A bank must collect and maintain the following
data and supporting documentation for non-qualifying home mortgage
loans and consumer loans originations by the bank until the completion
of its next CRA evaluation:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol to identify the
relevant loan file;
(ii) Loan type;
(iii) The date of origination;
(iv) The loan amount at origination;
(v) The loan location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract; and
(vi) The income of the borrower.
(3) Number of home mortgage and consumer loans. For the home
mortgage product line and each consumer loan product line as defined in
Sec. 345.03, for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated; and
(ii) The number of loans originated to low- and moderate-income
borrowers.
(4) Number of small loans to businesses. For the small loan to a
business product line, for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to small businesses.
(5) Number of small loans to farms. For the small loan to a farm
product line for each county or county equivalent:
(i) The number of loans originated;
(ii) The number of loans originated in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(iii) The number of loans originated to small farms.
(6) Community development investment data. For each community
development investment:
(i) A unique number, alpha-numeric symbol, or another mechanism to
identify the investment;
(ii) Investment type;
(iii) Date of investment by the bank;
(iv) The outstanding dollar value of the investment, as of the
close of business on the last day of the month, for each month that the
investment is on-balance sheet;
(v) The value of the monetary donation, as quantified in Sec.
345.06;
(vi) The value of the in-kind donation, as quantified in Sec.
345.06;
(vii) The investment location and the associated FIPS code for the
MSA, state, county or county equivalent, and census tract, if
applicable; and
(viii) The criteria in Sec. 345.04 that the investment satisfies
or that it is on the illustrative list referenced in Sec. 345.05 and
whether it serves a particular assessment area, if applicable.
(7) Community development services data. For each community
development service:
(i) The dollar value of the services, as quantified in Sec.
345.06;
(ii) A description of the qualifying activity;
(iii) The date the service was performed;
(iv) The service location and the associated FIPS code for the MSA,
state, county or county equivalent, and census tract, if applicable;
and
(v) The qualifying activity criteria in Sec. 345.04 that the
service satisfies or that it is on the illustrative list referenced in
Sec. 345.05.
(8) Retail domestic deposit data. The value of each retail domestic
deposit account and the physical address of each depositor as of the
close of business on the last day of each quarter during the
examination period.
(c) Data collection certification. A bank must collect and maintain
a certification from each party conducting qualifying activities on
behalf of the bank that the information that the party provided to the
bank as described in paragraph (a) of this section is true and correct.
(d) Assessment areas. A bank must collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation a list of its assessment area(s)
showing within the assessment area(s) each:
(1) County or county equivalent;
(2) Metropolitan division;
(3) Nonmetropolitan area;
(4) Metropolitan statistical area; or
(5) State.
(e) Bank facilities. A bank must collect and maintain until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation information indicating whether
each facility operated by the bank during the evaluation period was a
depository or non-depository facility.
Sec. 345.20 Retail domestic deposit data collection and recordkeeping
for small banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards in
Sec. 345.13.
Retail domestic deposit data collection. Small banks must collect
and maintain data on the value of each retail domestic deposit account
and the physical address of each depositor as of the close of business
on the last day of each quarter during the examination period until the
completion of its next CRA evaluation.
Sec. 345.21 Activity location.
(a) For the purpose of this part:
(1) A consumer loan is located at the borrower's physical address
on file with the bank;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located at the address of the property
to which the loan relates; and
(3) A business or farm loan is located at the physical address of
the main business facility or farm or the physical address where the
loan proceeds will be applied, as indicated by the borrower; and
(b) For the purpose of this part, the location of a community
development loan, a community development investment, or a community
development service is:
(1) The address of a particular project to the extent a bank can
document that the services or funding it provided was allocated to that
particular project; or
(2) Determined by allocating the activity across all of a bank's
assessment areas and other metropolitan statistical areas or non-
metropolitan statistical areas served by the activity according to the
share of the bank's deposits in those areas, treating the bank's
deposits in the region served by the activity as if they were all of
the bank's deposits, to the extent the bank cannot document that the
services or funding it provided was allocated to a particular project.
Sec. 345.22 Recordkeeping.
Banks must keep the data collected under Sec. 345.19 and Sec.
345.20 in machine readable form (as prescribed by the FDIC) until the
completion of their next CRA evaluation.
Sec. 345.23 Reporting for banks evaluated under the general
performance standards in Sec. 345.12 or a strategic plan under Sec.
345.16.
(a) General. Banks evaluated under the general performance
standards in Sec. 345.12 and banks evaluated under a strategic plan
under Sec. 345.16, unless otherwise determined in writing by the FDIC,
must report the information required by this section.
(b) Performance standards data. On an annual basis, a bank subject
to this section must report to the FDIC the information required by
Sec. 345.19(b).
(c) Qualifying activities data. On an annual basis, a bank subject
to this section must report to the FDIC the following data for all
qualifying activities conducted during the annual period:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of community development loans;
[[Page 1264]]
(3) The quantified value of community development investments; and
(4) The quantified value of community development services.
(d) Data collection certification. A bank subject to this section
must annually provide to the FDIC any certification required by Sec.
345.19(d).
(e) Assessment area data. For each assessment area, a bank subject
to this section must annually report to the FDIC the information
required by Sec. 345.19(e).
(f) Retail loans. A bank subject to this section must annually
report to the FDIC the information required by Sec. 345.19(c)(3)-(5)
for loans originated during the annual period.
(g) Retail domestic deposit data. A bank subject to this section
must annually report its average quarterly retail domestic deposits as
of the close of business on the last day of each quarter.
(h) Performance context information. A bank subject to this section
must report performance context information on the form required by
Sec. 345.14(c).
(i) Form. Banks subject to this section must use the CRA data
reporting form available on the FDIC's website to meet the reporting
requirements in this section.
Sec. 345.24 Public disclosures.
(a) Individual CRA Disclosure Statement. The FDIC prepares annually
a CRA Disclosure Statement for each bank evaluated under Sec. 345.12
that contains at the bank level:
(1) The quantified value of qualifying retail loans;
(2) The quantified value of community development loans;
(3) The quantified value of community development investments; and
(4) The quantified value of community development services.
(b) Aggregate CRA Disclosure Statement. The FDIC prepares annually,
for each county, an aggregate CRA Disclosure Statement of home
mortgage, consumer, small loans to businesses, and small loans to farms
lending by all banks subject to reporting under this part. This
disclosure statement includes the following information, at the county
level, from all banks evaluated under Sec. 345.12, except that the
FDIC may adjust the form of the disclosure if necessary, because of
special circumstances, to protect the privacy of a borrower or bank:
(1) The number of home mortgage loan originations;
(2) The number of home mortgage loan originations to low- or
moderate-income individuals and families;
(3) The number of originations for each consumer loan product line;
(4) The number of originations to low- or moderate-income
individuals and families for each consumer loan product line;
(5) The number of small loans to businesses;
(6) The number of small loans to businesses in low- and moderate-
income census tracts;
(7) The number of small loans to businesses provided to small
businesses;
(8) The number of small loans to farms;
(9) The number of small loans to farms in low- and moderate-income
census tracts; and
(10) The number of small loans to farms provided to small farms;
(c) Availability of CRA disclosure statements. The FDIC will
annually make publicly available the aggregate and individual CRA
Disclosure Statements, described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section.
(d) Availability of ratings. The FDIC will make available the
ratings of all FDIC-regulated banks and a list of all banks that
achieve an assigned rating of outstanding. A bank that achieves an
outstanding assigned rating will receive a certificate or seal of
achievement that may be displayed on its website and in its main office
and branches.
Sec. 345.25 Content and availability of public file.
(a) Information available to the public. A bank must maintain a
public file that includes the following information:
(1) All written comments received from the public for the current
year and each of the prior two calendar years that specifically relate
to assessment area needs and opportunities, and any response to the
comments by the bank, if neither the comments nor the responses contain
statements that reflect adversely on the good name or reputation of any
persons other than the bank or publication of which would violate
specific provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation prepared by the FDIC. The bank must place this
copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt from
the FDIC;
(3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and
census tracts;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the
current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street
addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available
loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered at
the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in the
availability or cost of services at particular branches, if any. At its
option, a bank may include information regarding the availability of
alternative systems for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs,
ATMs not owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by
telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or
bank-by-mail programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the
area and identifying the geographies contained within the area, either
on the map or in a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the bank chooses.
(b) Additional information available to the public--(1) Banks with
strategic plans. A bank that has been approved to be assessed under a
strategic plan must include in its public file a copy of that plan. A
bank need not include information submitted to the FDIC on a
confidential basis in conjunction with the plan.
(2) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank that received
a less than satisfactory rating during its most recent examination must
include in its public file a description of its current efforts to
improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its
entire community. The bank must update the description quarterly.
(c) Availability of public information. A bank must make available
to the public the information required in this section.
(d) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this section, a bank
must ensure that the information required by this section is current as
of April 1 of each year.
Sec. 345.26 Availability of planned evaluation schedule.
The FDIC will make available at least 30 days in advance of the
beginning of each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA
evaluations in that quarter.
Sec. 345.27 Public notice by banks.
A bank must make available to the public the notice set forth in
Appendix B of this part. Parenthetical text must be adjusted by each
bank as appropriate. Bracketed text must be included if applicable.
Appendix A to Part 345--Small Bank Ratings
(a) Ratings in general--(1) In assigning a rating, the FDIC
evaluates a small bank's
[[Page 1265]]
performance under the applicable performance criteria in Sec.
345.13, adjusting for performance context in Sec. 345.14 and
consideration of any evidence of discriminatory and illegal credit
practices as described in Sec. 345.15. This includes consideration
of low-cost education loans provided to low-income borrowers and
activities in cooperation with minority- or women-owned financial
institutions and low-income credit unions.
(2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a
particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and
exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may
compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall
performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound banking
practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile as
follows.
(b) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance standards--
(1) Lending test ratings--(i) Eligibility for a satisfactory lending
test rating. The FDIC rates a small bank's lending performance
``satisfactory'' if, in general, the bank demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal
variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit
needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities such as loan
originations for sale to the secondary markets and community
development loans and community development investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other lending-
related activities, are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities for individuals of different income
levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and
businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given the
demographics of the bank's assessment area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action, when warranted, in
response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's performance
in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the
bank's assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an ``outstanding'' lending test rating. A
small bank that meets each of the standards for a ``satisfactory''
rating under this paragraph and exceeds some or all of those
standards may warrant consideration for a lending test rating of
``outstanding.''
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance ratings. A
small bank may also receive a lending test rating of ``needs to
improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree
to which its performance has failed to meet the standard for a
``satisfactory'' rating.
(2) Bank-level rating--(i) Eligibility for an outstanding
overall rating. A small bank that meets each of the standards for a
``satisfactory'' rating under the lending test and exceeds some or
all of those standards may warrant consideration for a bank-level
rating of ``outstanding.'' In assessing whether a bank's performance
is ``outstanding,'' the FDIC considers the extent to which the bank
exceeds each of the performance standards for a ``satisfactory''
rating and its performance in making community development
investments and its performance in providing branches and other
services and delivery systems that enhance credit availability in
its assessment area(s).
(ii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance overall
ratings. A small bank may also receive a rating of ``needs to
improve'' or ``substantial noncompliance'' depending on the degree
to which its performance has failed to meet the standards for a
``satisfactory'' rating.
Appendix B to Part 345--Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) evaluates our record of helping
to meet the credit needs of this community, consistent with safe and
sound operations. The FDIC also takes this record into account when
deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information
about our branches, such as their location and services provided at
them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation, prepared by the FDIC; and comments received from the
public relating to assessment area needs and opportunities, as well
as our responses to those comments. You may review this information
today by reviewing the public section of our most recent CRA
evaluation, prepared by the FDIC, which is available at (web address
and/or physical address at which the public file can be reviewed and
copied).
You may also have access to the following additional
information, which we will make available to you after you make a
request to us: (1) A map showing the assessment area containing a
select branch, which is the area in which the FDIC evaluates our CRA
performance for that particular community; (2) branch addresses and
associated branch facilities and hours in any assessment area; (3) a
list of services we provide at those locations; (4) our most recent
rating in the assessment area; and (5) copies of all written
comments received by us that specifically relate to the needs and
opportunities of a given assessment area, and any responses we have
made to those comments. If we are operating under an approved
strategic plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the FDIC
publishes a nationwide list of the (entity type) that are scheduled
for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is available from the
Regional Director, FDIC (address). You may send written comments
regarding the needs and opportunities of any of the (entity type)'s
assessment area(s) to (name, address, and email address of official
at bank) and the FDIC Regional Director (address and email address).
Your comments, together with any response by us, will be considered
by the FDIC in evaluating our CRA performance and may be made
public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the FDIC
Regional Director. You may also request from the FDIC Regional
Director an announcement of our applications covered by the CRA
filed with the FDIC. (We are an affiliate of (name of holding
company), a (entity type) holding company. You may request from the
(title of responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of __
(address) an announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed
by (entity type) holding companies.)
Dated: December 12, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on December 12, 2019.
Annmarie H. Boyd,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-27940 Filed 1-8-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P; 6714-01-P