Unsafe and Unsound Banking Practices: Brokered Deposits Restrictions, 7453-7472 [2019-28275]
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7453
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 85, No. 27
Monday, February 10, 2020
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
information provided, will be posted
generally without change to https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Division of Risk Management
Supervision: Rae-Ann Miller, Associate
Director, (202) 898–3898, rmiller@
fdic.gov. Legal Division: Vivek V. Khare,
Counsel, (202) 898–6847, vkhare@
fdic.gov.
12 CFR Parts 303 and 337
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
RIN 3064–AE94
I. Policy Objectives
Unsafe and Unsound Banking
Practices: Brokered Deposits
Restrictions
On December 18, 2018, the FDIC
Board adopted an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPR) to obtain
input from the public on its brokered
deposit and interest rate regulations in
light of significant changes in
technology, business models, the
economic environment, and products
since the regulations were adopted.1
After reviewing comments received, the
FDIC is proposing changes to its
regulations relating to brokered
deposits.2
Through these proposed changes, the
FDIC intends to modernize its brokered
deposit regulations to reflect recent
technological changes and innovations
that have occurred. The FDIC recognizes
that the definition of ‘‘deposit broker,’’
and its corresponding staff
interpretations, may not be as relevant
compared to the deposit placement
arrangements that exist in the market
today. Notably, in recent times, banks
collaborate with third parties, including
financial technology companies, for a
variety of business purposes including
access to deposits. Moreover, banks are
increasingly relying on new
technologies to engage and interact with
their customers, and it appears that this
trend will continue given rapid
technological evolution. Through these
proposed changes, the FDIC’s brokered
deposit regulations will continue to
promote safe and sound practices while
ensuring that the classification of a
deposit as brokered appropriately
reflects changes in the banking
landscape since 1989, when the law on
brokered deposits was first enacted.
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and request for comment.
AGENCY:
The FDIC is inviting comment
on proposed revisions to its regulations
relating to the brokered deposits
restrictions that apply to less than well
capitalized insured depository
institutions. The proposed rule would
create a new framework for analyzing
certain provisions of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition, including
‘‘facilitating’’ and ‘‘primary purpose.’’
The proposed rule would also establish
an application and reporting process
with respect to the primary purpose
exception. The application process
would be available to insured
depository institutions and third parties
that wish to utilize the exception.
DATES: Comments must be received by
the FDIC no later than April 10, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on the notice of proposed rulemaking
using any of the following methods:
• Agency website: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments on the agency website.
• Email: comments@fdic.gov. Include
RIN 3064–AE94 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.
• Hand Delivery: Comments may be
hand delivered to the guard station at
the rear of the 550 17th Street NW
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Public Inspection: All comments
received, including any personal
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SUMMARY:
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1 The ANPR was published for comment in the
Federal Register on February 6, 2019. See 84 FR
2366 (February 6, 2019).
2 On August 20, 2019, the FDIC proposed
revisions to its regulations relating to the interest
rate restrictions. See 84 FR 46470 (September 4,
2019).
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II. Background
Section 29 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDI Act) restricts the
acceptance of deposits by insured
depository institutions from a ‘‘deposit
broker.’’ 3 Well capitalized insured
depository institutions are not restricted
from accepting deposits from a deposit
broker. An ‘‘adequately capitalized’’
insured depository institution may
accept deposits from a deposit broker
only if it has received a waiver from the
FDIC.4 A waiver may be granted by the
FDIC ‘‘upon a finding that the
acceptance of such deposits does not
constitute an unsafe or unsound
practice’’ with respect to that
institution.5 An ‘‘undercapitalized’’
depository institution is prohibited from
accepting deposits from a deposit
broker.6
A. Current Law and Regulations
Section 29 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDI Act), titled
‘‘Brokered Deposits,’’ was originally
added to the FDI Act by the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA). The
law originally restricted troubled
institutions (i.e., those that did not meet
the minimum capital requirements)
from (1) accepting deposits from a
deposit broker without a waiver and (2)
soliciting deposits by offering rates of
interest on deposits that were
significantly higher than the prevailing
rates of interest on deposits offered by
other insured depository institutions
(‘‘IDIs’’) having the same type of charter
in such depository institution’s normal
market area.7
Two years later, Congress enacted the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA),
which added the Prompt Corrective
Action (PCA) capital regime to the FDI
Act and also amended the threshold for
the brokered deposit and interest rate
restrictions from a troubled institution
to a bank falling below the ‘‘well
capitalized’’ PCA level. At the same
time, the FDIC was authorized to waive
3 The statute also restricts a less than well
capitalized institution generally from offering
interest rates that significantly exceed the market
rates offered in an institutions normal market area.
4 See 12 U.S.C. 1831f.
5 See id.
6 See id.
7 See Public Law 101–73, August 9, 1989, 103
Stat. 183.
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the brokered deposit restrictions for a
bank that is adequately capitalized upon
a finding that the acceptance of such
deposits does not constitute an unsafe
or unsound practice with respect to the
institution.8 FDICIA did not authorize
the FDIC to waive the brokered deposit
restrictions for less than adequately
capitalized institutions. Most recently,
earlier this year, Section 29 of the FDI
Act was amended as part of the
Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief,
and Consumer Protection Act, to except
a capped amount of certain reciprocal
deposits from treatment as brokered
deposits.
Section 337.6 of the FDIC’s Rules and
Regulations implements and closely
tracks the statutory text of Section 29,
particularly with respect to the
definition of ‘‘deposit broker’’ and its
exceptions.9 Section 29 of the FDI Act
does not directly define a ‘‘brokered
deposit,’’ rather, it defines a ‘‘deposit
broker’’ for purposes of the
restrictions.10 Thus, the meaning of the
term ‘‘brokered deposit’’ turns upon the
definition of ‘‘deposit broker.’’
Section 29 and the FDIC’s
implementing regulation define the term
‘‘deposit broker’’ to include:
Æ Any person engaged in the business
of placing deposits, or facilitating the
placement of deposits, of third parties
with insured depository institutions or
the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the
purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties; and
Æ An agent or trustee who establishes
a deposit account to facilitate a business
arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the
account to fund a prearranged loan.
This definition is subject to the
following nine statutory exceptions:
1. An insured depository institution,
with respect to funds placed with that
depository institution;
2. An employee of an insured
depository institution, with respect to
funds placed with the employing
depository institution;
3. A trust department of an insured
depository institution, if the trust in
question has not been established for
the primary purpose of placing funds
with insured depository institutions;
4. The trustee of a pension or other
employee benefit plan, with respect to
funds of the plan;
8 See Public Law 102–242, December 19, 1991,
105 Stat 2236.
9 See 12 CFR 337.6. The FDIC issued two
rulemakings related to the interest rate restrictions
under this section. A discussion of those
rulemakings, and the interest rate restrictions, is
provided in Section (II)(B) of this Notice.
10 See 12 U.S.C. 1831f.
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5. A person acting as a plan
administrator or an investment adviser
in connection with a pension plan or
other employee benefit plan provided
that that person is performing
managerial functions with respect to the
plan;
6. The trustee of a testamentary
account;
7. The trustee of an irrevocable trust
(other than one described in paragraph
(1)(B)), as long as the trust in question
has not been established for the primary
purpose of placing funds with insured
depository institutions;
8. A trustee or custodian of a pension
or profit sharing plan qualified under
section 401(d) or 430(a) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986; or
9. An agent or nominee whose
primary purpose is not the placement of
funds with depository institutions.
The statute and regulation also define
an ‘‘employee’’ to mean any employee:
(1) Who is employed exclusively by the
insured depository institution; (2)
whose compensation is primarily in the
form of a salary; (3) who does not share
such employee’s compensation with a
deposit broker; and (4) whose office
space or place of business is used
exclusively for the benefit of the insured
depository institution which employs
such individual.
As listed above, the statute includes
nine exceptions to the definition of
‘‘deposit broker.’’ In 1992, the FDIC
amended its regulations to include the
following tenth exception: ‘‘An insured
depository institution acting as an
intermediary or agent of a U.S.
government department or agency for a
government sponsored minority or
women-owned depository institution
program.’’ The FDIC indicated in the
preamble for the 1992 final rule that
implemented the FDICIA revisions to
Section 29 that those revisions were not
intended to apply to deposits placed by
insured depository institutions assisting
government departments and agencies
in administration of minority or womenowned deposit programs.11
B. Issues Raised by Commenters
In response to the ANPR on brokered
deposits and the interest rate
restrictions applicable to less than well
capitalized banks, the FDIC received
over 130 comments from individuals,
banking organizations, non-profits, as
well as industry and trade groups,
representing banks, insurance
companies, and the broader financial
services industry. Of the total
comments, over 100 comments related
to brokered deposits.
11 See
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57 FR 23933, 23040 (1992).
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Generally, a common theme amongst
the commenters was a desire for the
FDIC to clarify its historical
interpretation of the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition and its corresponding
statutory and regulatory exceptions.
Stable Funding. Seven commenters
advanced their general point to be that
brokered deposits are not inherently
risky and that many types of deposits
currently considered to be brokered are
just as stable as core deposits and
should be treated as such for
supervisory purposes and assessments.
A number of other commenters
specifically noted that certain types of
deposits (e.g., health savings accounts
(HSAs), deposits underlying prepaid
cards, and ‘‘relationship’’ deposits) are
stable sources of funding (these
comments are discussed in more detail
under separate headings). Several
commenters suggested that the more
relevant issue with respect to potential
bank failures is not the source of
funding but rather the oversight of asset
growth, specifically the increase in risky
loans. Similarly, one consulting firm
suggested that the FDIC focus its
supervisory concerns on bank asset
growth rates, especially rapid growth in
risky loan categories, and that the FDIC
should view brokered deposits as an
important, stable funding source that
complements retail deposit-gathering.
One bank commenter stated that in the
bank’s experience, brokered deposits
have been a stable, relatively low-cost,
convenient, non-volatile source of funds
for the past ten years. Another bank
noted that brokered deposits have been
a safe, stable and useful funding source
for the bank and that any additional
restrictions on the use of brokered
deposits would cause significant
additional costs and risks to the bank.
Two commenters specifically
discussed the use of brokered deposits
by rural community banks. One urged
the FDIC to revisit its views on brokered
deposits because many rural institutions
rely upon third-party funding to help
provide loans to local agriculture and
manufacturing businesses (that are
capital-intensive) to support their
operations. According to commenters,
brokered deposits are more important
now that many rural communities are
seeing a decrease in the amount of
deposits being placed by its local
community. The other commenter
stated that brokered deposits are a good
source of supplemental funding for
banks in rural areas or markets which
lack ample local deposits to meet the
legitimate credit needs of the
community.
Definition and Scope of ‘‘Brokered
Deposit.’’ While many commenters
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focused on specific types of products
that they believe should not meet the
regulatory definition of ‘‘brokered
deposit,’’ 11 commenters generally
stated that the definition of brokered
deposit should be revised. These
commenters indicated that the
definition is unclear and has been
interpreted too broadly, capturing many
products or transactions that were not
intended to be covered. One bank stated
that the current regulations lack
definitional clarity and that FDIC staff
interpretations unnecessarily capture
any third party that is involved in the
administering or marketing of an
account.
Several of these commenters noted
that technology has brought significant
changes to the marketplace, including
online advertising and deposit
marketing through third parties. In
particular, one banker stated that more
institutions are being forced to rely
upon funding channels that involve
third parties due to the evolution of
online banking activities and that this
often triggers the definition of brokered
deposit. Another commenter suggested
that the definition be limited to those
deposits that inherently pose risks to
banks.
One commenter stated that the FDIC’s
current interpretation of what
constitutes a ‘‘deposit broker’’
seemingly hinges on the involvement of
any third party (including affiliates or
subsidiaries of the bank) in sourcing the
customer relationship or servicing the
customer. By taking such a view, the
commenter argued, the FDIC has
significantly expanded the types of
entities considered to be deposit brokers
beyond what was originally
contemplated when Section 29 was
enacted. This commenter stated that as
a result, entities such as retailers,
employers, technology platforms,
advertising and marketing partners, and
Fintech partners may currently be
classified as deposit brokers, even
though their activities may only be
incidentally linked to a deposit account.
The commenter requested that the FDIC
limit its determination of what
constitutes a ‘‘deposit broker’’ to what
they believe was a narrow scope
contemplated by Section 29.
While the majority of the comments
sought to constrict the definition of
‘‘brokered deposits,’’ one organization
argued against any such a reduction in
scope. The commenter stated that
brokered deposits contributed to the
savings and loan crisis of the 1980’s that
cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of
dollars. The commenter also noted that
brokered deposits have already received
permissive regulatory treatment and that
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more than 99% of banks are considered
‘‘well-capitalized’’ and therefore can
accept brokered deposits without any
statutory or regulatory restriction.
Primary Purpose Exception. A
number of commenters discussed the
‘‘primary purpose exception’’ to the
deposit broker definition in various
contexts. Many of those commenters
focused on specific deposit placement
arrangements relating to health savings
accounts (HSAs), prepaid cards, and
affiliated broker-dealers. These
comments are discussed more
specifically under those headings. In
addition to these specific deposit
placement arrangements, a number of
comments focused more generally on
how the primary purpose exception
should be interpreted. One bank
commented that third parties that are
involved in placing deposits but do so
to achieve some other purpose outside
of providing a deposit account, where
the deposits do not have the risks
associated with traditional brokered
deposits, should meet the primary
purpose exception. Another commenter
proposed amending the primary
purpose exception and making it
available to entities that place deposits
but also offer consumers an array of
financial services. The commenter
argued that the correct way to determine
such person’s ‘‘primary purpose’’ is to
review the entire range of services
offered by the person to its customers
and to exclude deposits that are
facilitated or placed by persons for
whom deposit brokerage revenue and
income is less than 50 percent of their
total consolidated revenue and income.
Alternatively, one commenter argued
that one key test for whether a person
meets the primary purpose exception
should be if the person facilitating
placement of a deposit is paid a fee by
the bank, which the commenter stated is
a prominent feature of a ‘‘classic’’
deposit broker. The commenter also
stated that in contrast, a securities
broker or mutual fund administrator is
paid a fee by the owner of the funds.
According to the commenter, that is the
key distinction that should be used to
define a brokered deposit is whether the
broker drives the selection of bank or
whether the depositor drives the
selection.
A consulting firm asked the FDIC to
take a ‘‘principles-based’’ approach
toward the brokered deposit regulation
and primary purpose exception that
places the burden on the banks and
their ability to explain, document and
defend their operating and contingency
management policies and practices.
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs).
Nine separate commenters mentioned
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HSAs, in general arguing that third
party administrators (or HSA
custodians) that assist in placing HSA
deposits at insured depository
institutions meet one of two statutory
exceptions to the deposit broker
definitions. Specifically, commenters
believe that the third party
administrators fit within the statutory
exception for plan administrators for
employee benefit plans, or that these
third party administrators should meet
the ‘‘primary purpose exemption.’’
Commenters who argued that third
party administrators fit within the
primary purpose exception noted that
HSAs are opened primarily for the
purpose of facilitating savings in an
effort to assist employees to meet
deductibles and pay qualified medical
expenses. One commenter noted that
the primary purpose exception applies
to HSAs because the funds are placed
with banks incidental to providing a tax
advantaged program for healthcare
expenditures. Similarly, one commenter
stated simply that placing HSA funds in
banks is only incidental to the primary
purpose of the non-bank administrators.
Others pointed out that HSAs placed
at insured depository institutions by
third parties do not represent ‘‘hot
money’’ but rather are a stable source of
funding. Third party administrators also
do not have the same authority to
control the HSAs in a manner
comparable to the control of traditional
deposit brokers. One trade association
made a public policy argument in favor
of HSAs not being considered brokered
deposits, stating that HSAs are a
desirable option for both employers and
employees to offset high employee
healthcare costs. Another commenter
also articulated a public policy reason
for HSAs not being brokered deposits,
noting that HSAs benefit consumers
through increased competition,
innovation and reduced costs.
Prepaid Cards. Eight commenters
discussed prepaid cards, generally
stating that prepaid card companies are
not deposit brokers because they are not
engaged in the business of placing
deposits, but rather are involved in a
much larger economic activity of
offering prepaid payments on products
to replace inefficient and costlier,
traditional payments. One commenter
noted that program managers of prepaid
card products meet the primary purpose
exception because prepaid card
managers place deposits to enable
cardholders to make purchases
throughout the interbank payment
system and that prepaid cards are a
source of stable funding. One trade
association argued that funds
underlying prepaid cards are not ‘‘hot
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money’’ because they are typically held
in pooled custodial accounts and the IDI
is generally required to receive written
approval of its primary federal regulator
before assuming a large transfer of
pooled funds. A few commenters noted
that funds underlying prepaid cards
should not be considered brokered
deposits because they are low balance,
stable, and relatively low-cost compared
to other deposits. A large payments
company similarly argued that funds
underlying prepaid cards are not ‘‘hot
money’’ and often have stable rates. The
commenter further stated that prepaid
card program managers provide
consumers with a payment mechanism
that substitutes for cash or a money
order. Additionally, a commenter
suggested that prepaid program
structures that get paid based upon
administrative services should qualify
for the primary purpose exception,
similar to the exception provided for
government benefit programs.
Broker-Dealer Sweeps. Currently,
certain affiliated broker dealer sweeps
are not considered to be brokered
deposits. Two commenters stated that
unaffiliated broker-dealer sweeps
should also not be considered brokered,
with one commenter suggesting that
unaffiliated broker dealers meet the
primary purpose exception.
Several commenters suggested that
the regulations should explicitly
provide that affiliated broker dealers
meet the primary purpose exception.
Moreover, some commenters suggested
that the FDIC reconsider the criteria that
it has considered as part of its existing
interpretation in Advisory Opinion 05–
02.12 A consulting company suggested
that the FDIC incorporate that staff
opinion into the regulatory exceptions,
and that the FDIC also codify, through
rulemaking, that a separately
incorporated trust company affiliate of a
bank that acts as a bona fide trust
custodian in placing deposits at an IDI,
meets the primary purpose exception.
Affiliate Transactions. Sixteen
commenters suggested that deposit
referrals made by affiliated entities
should not be considered brokered
deposits, and that affiliates making such
referrals should not be considered
deposit brokers. One bank argued that
affiliate referrals serve to strengthen and
deepen the customer relationship. The
bank also urged the FDIC to clarify, by
regulation, that an affiliate of a
depository institution does not
constitute a deposit broker. A trade
association representing the banking
industry suggested that employees of
12 FDIC Staff Advisory Opinion 05–02 (February
3, 2005).
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bank affiliates and subsidiaries should
not be considered deposit brokers. One
bank similarly argued that deposits
sourced from affiliates generally are
similar to traditional core deposits
because they are funds of customers
with long-term relationships with the
firm. One commenter suggested that
affiliates that refer customers to a bank
should not be treated as deposit brokers
as long as the customer establishes a
direct account relationship with the
bank, the affiliate institution does not
have the legal authority to move
customers’ funds to another depository
institution, and the bank retains
complete control over setting rates, fees,
terms, and conditions for the account as
well as full discretion over the opening
or closing of the account.
A trade association representing
community banks stated that dual and
affiliated employees who provide a suite
of nonbanking and deposit products and
services to customers, and are not paid
commissions or fees based upon the
volume of deposits placed, should not
meet the deposit broker definition.
Another banking trade association
suggested that information sharing with
affiliates should not be determinative
factor for the FDIC in considering
whether a deposit is brokered. A state
banker’s association stated that they
found little evidence that so-called
‘‘relationship deposits’’ gathered
through the normal course of providing
banking services through affiliates or
marketing partnerships pose an
enhanced risk to safety and soundness
or the deposit insurance fund. Two
congressional commenters stated that
there are characteristics of an affiliated
broker-dealer’s relationship with an
insured depository institution that
should result in deposits opened by
them as being viewed as nonbrokered.
Two commenters argued that deposits
placed into a parent bank by its whollyowned operating subsidiary should not
be brokered deposits. According to the
commenter, this is because whollyowned operating subsidiaries are treated
as part of the bank under certain federal
banking laws.
Insurance Agents. A bank suggested
that the FDIC change its position
regarding deposits marketed through
non-employee, exclusive agents of, an
insurance company engaged primarily
in the sale of insurance if the bank is an
affiliate of the insurance company and
the agents market exclusively to such
insurer’s bank affiliate.
Government Accounts. One
commenter stated that large government
investment pools that place deposits on
behalf of municipalities and other
governmental entities should not be
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classified as ‘‘deposit brokers’’ because
they invest their portfolio assets as
principal fiduciary and not as agent.
Therefore, such pools do not act for the
‘‘primary purpose’’ of investing fund
assets in deposit accounts.
Listing Services. One commenter
stated that brokered deposits expressly
exclude deposits derived from listing
services and that the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition excludes listing services. The
commenter suggested that the use of
deposit listing services benefits the
Deposit Insurance Fund by allowing
bank customers to source multiple
depository relationships, thereby
minimizing losses to either the DIF or to
the customer if deposits were placed at
a single institution. Another commenter
urged the FDIC to preserve its
longstanding position regarding online
listing services and stated that the
position should remain even if a fee is
paid for preferential placement on the
listing service website.
Custodial Deposits. A management
company stated that FDIC’s regulations
should clarify that so-called ‘‘custodial
deposits’’ are nonbrokered deposits
because custodial deposits level the
playing field between community banks
and larger money center banks by
allowing a custodian bank to break
down large corporate, municipal, and
not-for-profit institutional deposits and
distribute them to smaller banks.
Deposit Insurance Assessments. Three
commenters suggested that the FDIC
revise its deposit insurance assessment
regulations with respect to valuation of
brokered deposits. While this matter is
outside the scope of this rulemaking
process, the FDIC acknowledges the
comments and will consider them, as
appropriate, in any future assessment
rulemaking.
III. Discussion of Proposed Rule
A. Deposit Broker Definition
A person meets the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition under Section 29 of the FDI
Act if it is engaged in the business of
placing deposits, or facilitating the
placement of deposits, of third parties
with insured depository institutions or
the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the
purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties. An agent or
trustee meets the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition when establishing a deposit
account to facilitate a business
arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the
account to fund a prearranged loan. As
discussed below, the FDIC is proposing
to define certain prongs of the deposit
broker definition.
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1. Engaged in the Business of Placing
Deposits
The statute provides that a person
meets the definition of ‘‘deposit broker’’
if it is ‘‘engaged in the business of
placing deposits’’ on behalf of a third
party (i.e., a depositor) at insured
depository institutions. The FDIC would
view a person to be engaged in the
business of placing deposits if that
person has a business relationship with
its customers, and as part of that
relationship, places deposits on behalf
of the customer (e.g., acting as custodian
or agent for the underlying depositor).
As such, any person that places
deposits at insured depository
institutions on behalf of a depositor, as
part of its business relationship with
that depositor, fits within the meaning
of the ‘‘deposit broker’’ definition.
Question 1: Is the FDIC’s proposed
definition of ‘‘engaged in the business of
placing deposits’’ appropriate?
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2. Engaged in the Business of
Facilitating the Placement of Deposits
a. Background and Comments Received
Section 29 of the FDI Act also
provides that a person is a deposit
broker when it is ‘‘facilitating’’ the
placement of deposits of third parties
with insured depository institutions. In
contrast to the first prong of the
definition, the ‘‘facilitation’’ prong of
the deposit broker definition refers to
activities where the person does not
directly place deposits on behalf of its
customers with an insured depository
institution. Historically, the term
‘‘facilitating the placement of deposits’’
has been interpreted by staff at the FDIC
to include actions taken by third parties
to connect insured depository
institutions with potential depositors.
Commenters argue that, under the
current FDIC staff interpretations, the
term ‘‘facilitating’’ has been broadly
interpreted to include any actions taken
by third parties to connect insured
depository institutions with potential
depositors. Commenters also contend
that determining whether a third party
is ‘‘facilitating the placement of
deposits’’ is not always clear because
the FDIC’s staff interpretative letters do
not always apply perfectly to new
arrangements relating—for example—to
whether deposits placed in new ways
stemming from technological or
marketplace changes would be
considered brokered deposits.
Since enactment of Section 29, there
have been significant technological
advances in the way banks seek and
source deposits, well beyond what was
contemplated at that time and by staff
at the FDIC in the following years. As
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a result, some of the historical factors
that have been considered may not be
relevant as compared to current deposit
placement arrangements in the market.
Today, banks are increasingly relying
on new technologies to engage and
interact with their customers and, it
appears that this trend will continue
given rapid technological evolution.
Specifically, the proliferation of various
online marketing and advertising
channels have provided new
opportunities for insured depository
institutions to attract depositors from
different parts of the country. In an
effort to ensure that the term brokered
deposit appropriately reflects the
banking landscape, and to ensure that
the FDIC’s regulations promote safe and
sound practices, the FDIC is proposing
to refine the activities that result in a
person being ‘‘engaged in the business
of facilitating the placement’’ of third
party deposits at an insured depository
institution.
b. Proposed Definition of Engaged in the
Business of Facilitating the Placement of
Deposits
Under the proposal, the FDIC
proposes that a person would meet the
‘‘facilitation’’ prong of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition by, while engaged in
business, engaging in any one, or more
than one, of the following activities:
Æ The person directly or indirectly
shares any third party information with
the insured depository institution;
Æ The person has legal authority,
contractual or otherwise, to close the
account or move the third party’s funds
to another insured depository
institution;
Æ The person provides assistance or
is involved in setting rates, fees, terms,
or conditions for the deposit account;
or,
Æ The person is acting, directly or
indirectly, with respect to the placement
of deposits, as an intermediary between
a third party that is placing deposits on
behalf of a depositor and an insured
depository institution, other than in a
purely administrative capacity.
By engaging in one or more than one
of the above listed activities, while
engaged in business, the person would
be engaged in the business of facilitating
the placement of customer deposits at
an insured depository and therefore
meet the ‘‘deposit broker’’ definition.
For example, if a person assists in
setting rates, fees, or terms, then that
person would be considered a deposit
broker despite the fact that the person
may not share third party information
with the insured depository institution.
The proposed ‘‘facilitation’’ definition
is intended to capture activities that
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indicate that the person takes an active
role in the opening of an account or
maintains a level of influence or control
over the deposit account even after the
account is open. It is the FDIC’s view
that a level of control or influence
indicates that the deposit relationship is
between the depositor and the person
rather than the depositor and the
insured depository institution. Having a
level of control or influence over the
depositor allows the person to influence
the movement of funds between
institutions and makes the deposits less
stable than deposits brought to the
insured depository institution through a
single point of contact where that
contact does not have influence over the
movement of deposits between insured
depository institutions. Ultimately, the
FDIC believes that if the person is not
engaged in any of the activities above,
then the needs of the depositor are the
primary drivers of the selection of a
bank, and therefore the person is not
facilitating the placement of deposits.
The proposal would also define any
person that acts as an intermediary
between another person that is placing
deposits on behalf of a depositor and an
insured depository institution, other
than in a purely administrative capacity,
as facilitating the placement of deposits.
In other words, any assistance provided
by such intermediaries, outside of
providing purely administrative
functions, would result in the
intermediary meeting the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition and any deposits
placed through the assistance of such
intermediaries would be brokered
deposits. For example, if an agent or
nominee that meets the primary purpose
exception uses an intermediary (in a
manner that is not purely
administrative) in placing, or facilitating
the placement of, deposits, then the
intermediary would be a deposit broker,
and the resulting deposits would be
brokered. Administrative functions
would include, for example, any
reporting or bookkeeping assistance
provided to the person placing its
customers’ deposits with insured
depository institutions. Administrative
functions would not include, for
example, assisting in decision-making
or steering persons (including the
underlying depositors) to particular
insured depository institutions. The
FDIC believes such an interpretation is
warranted, in part, because deposits
placed through the assistance of such
intermediaries are more likely to raise
concerns traditionally associated with
brokered deposits. For example, it is
possible that such entities are able to
directly or indirectly control or
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influence the movement of funds
between insured depository institutions
without any involvement or input from
the underlying depositor.
This proposal would provide industry
participants with clarity over whether
the actions of a person, in assisting with
the placement of deposits, meet the
‘‘facilitation’’ part of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition.
Question 2: Is the FDIC’s proposed
definition of ‘‘engaged in the business of
facilitating the placement of deposits’’
appropriate?
Question 3: Is the FDIC’s list of
activities that would determine whether
a person meets the ‘‘facilitation’’ prong
of the ‘‘deposit broker’’ definition
appropriate?
Question 4: Has the FDIC provided
sufficient clarity surrounding whether a
third party intermediary would meet the
‘‘facilitation’’ prong of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition?
Question 5: Should the FDIC provide
more clarity regarding whether any
specific types of deposit placement
arrangements would or would not meet
the ‘‘facilitation’’ prong of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition? If so, please describe
any such deposit placement
arrangements.
3. Selling Interests in Deposits to Third
Parties
The third prong of the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition includes a person
‘‘engaged in the business of placing
deposits with insured depository
institutions for the purpose of selling
interests in those deposits to third
parties.’’ This part of the definition
specifically captures the brokered
certificates of deposit (CD) market
(referred to herein as ‘‘brokered CDs’’).
These are typically deposit placement
arrangements where brokered CDs are
issued in wholesale amounts by a bank
seeking to place funds under certain
terms and sold through a registered
broker-dealer to investors, typically in
fully-insured amounts. The brokers
subdivide the bank-issued ‘‘master CD’’
and alter the terms of the original CD
before selling the new CDs to its
brokerage customers. These brokered
CDs are (in most cases) held in bookentry form at the Depository Trust
Corporation (‘‘DTC’’) and use the CUSIP
system for identification and trading in
a primary and secondary market.
Deposits placed through this market
have always been marketed and
classified as brokered deposits and are
specifically captured under the
placement of deposits ‘‘for the purpose
of selling interests in those deposits to
third parties’’ prong of the deposit
broker definition. Through this
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rulemaking, the FDIC is not proposing
any changes to the brokered
classification of such deposits. In other
words, under this proposal, without
exception, and as further explained
below in the section discussing the
primary purpose exception, brokered
CDs would continue to be classified as
brokered.
In addition, the FDIC notes that the
brokered CD market has evolved since
Section 29 was first enacted, and will
likely continue to evolve. As such, it is
the FDIC’s intention that third parties
that assist in the placement of brokered
CDs, or any similar deposit placement
arrangement with a similar purpose,
continue to meet the deposit broker
definition.
B. Exceptions to the Deposit Broker
Definition
Section 29 provides nine statutory
exceptions to the definition of deposit
broker and, as noted earlier, the FDIC
added one regulatory exception to the
definition. Through this rulemaking, the
FDIC proposes amending two
exceptions—(1) the exception for
insured depository institutions, with
respect to funds placed with that
depository institution (the ‘‘IDI
exception’’) and (2) the exception for an
agent or nominee whose primary
purpose is not the placement of funds
with depository institutions (the
‘‘primary purpose exception’’).
1. Bank Operating Subsidiaries and the
IDI Exception
Section 29 of the FDI Act expressly
excludes from the definition of ‘‘deposit
broker’’ an insured depository
institution, with respect to funds placed
with that depository institution, also
known as the ‘‘IDI Exception.’’ 13 Under
the IDI Exception, an IDI is not
considered to be a deposit broker when
it (or its employees) places funds at the
bank.
In response to the ANPR, commenters
suggest that funds deposited at an IDI
through the IDI’s relationship with a
wholly-owned subsidiary should not be
considered brokered deposits. The
commenters state that operating
subsidiaries of an IDI are under the
exclusive control of the parent IDI,
engage only in activities permissible for
an IDI and are treated as a division of
the IDI for a variety of regulatory
purposes.
The FDIC recognizes that the
exception currently is limited to IDIs
only, and not their subsidiaries. The IDI
Exception currently applies, for
example, in the case of a division of an
13 12
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IDI that places deposits exclusively with
the parent IDI, but does not apply if a
separately incorporated subsidiary of
the IDI places deposits exclusively with
the parent. The FDIC also recognizes
that a wholly-owned operating
subsidiary that meets certain criteria can
be considered similar to a division of an
IDI for certain purposes. In fact, whollyowned subsidiaries are treated
differently under various legal and
regulatory frameworks. For example, the
Bank Merger Act and Receivership law
treat wholly-owned subsidiaries as
separate from its parent IDI, whereas
Section 23A and Section 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act and Call Reports
treat wholly-owned subsidiaries as part
of the parent IDI.
There is little practical difference
between deposits placed at an IDI by a
division of the IDI versus deposits
placed by a wholly-owned subsidiary of
the IDI. Therefore, the FDIC proposes
that the IDI exception be available to
wholly-owned operating subsidiaries
provided that such a subsidiary meets
the criteria discussed below. The FDIC
believes that setting forth specific
criteria is appropriate to limit the
exception to wholly-owned subsidiaries
that are functioning essentially as
divisions of parent IDIs.
For the reasons described above, the
FDIC is proposing that a subsidiary be
eligible for the IDI exception, provided
all of the following criteria are met:
Æ The subsidiary is a wholly owned
operating subsidiary of the IDI, meaning
that the IDI owns 100% of the
subsidiary’s outstanding stock;
Æ The subsidiary places deposits of
retail customers exclusively with the
parent IDI; and
Æ The subsidiary engages only in
activities permissible for the parent IDI.
Under the proposal, wholly-owned
subsidiaries, based on the above listed
conditions, would be eligible for the IDI
exception to the definition of deposit
broker with respect to funds placed at
the IDI. However, the FDIC notes that
such deposits would be considered
brokered if a third party is involved that
is itself a deposit broker.
Question 6: Is it appropriate for a
separately incorporated operating
subsidiary to be included in the IDI
exception?
Question 7: Are the criteria for
including an operating subsidiary in the
IDI exception too broad or too narrow?
2. Primary Purpose Exception
a. Background
The statute provides that the primary
purpose exception applies to ‘‘an agent
or nominee whose primary purpose is
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not the placement of funds with
depository institutions.’’ Generally, if a
person is engaged in the business of
either placing deposits for its customers,
or facilitating the placement of deposits
for its customers, at insured depository
institutions, then it meets the ‘‘deposit
broker’’ definition. However, if the
person meets the primary purpose
exception, then the person is excepted
from the definition of ‘‘deposit broker’’
and any deposits that it places with
insured depository institutions are not
brokered deposits.
As noted in the ANPR, in evaluating
whether a person meets the primary
purpose exception, staff has focused on
the relationship between the depositor
and the person acting as agent or
nominee for that depositor.14 In
particular, staff has generally analyzed
whether the agent’s placement of
deposits is for a substantial purpose
other than (1) to provide deposit
insurance, or (2) for a deposit-placement
service. In analyzing this principle, staff
has considered whether the depositplacement activity is incidental to some
other purpose.
b. General Overview of Proposal
The FDIC is proposing to set forth
regulatory changes to the primary
purpose exception. Specifically, the
FDIC is proposing that the application
of the primary purpose exception be
based on the business relationship
between the agent or nominee and its
customers. As such, the proposal would
amend the primary purpose exception
in the regulation to apply when the
primary purpose of the agent’s or
nominee’s business relationship with its
customers is not the placement of funds
with depository institutions.
The FDIC recognizes that, since
Section 29 was first enacted, there have
been a number of different agents and
nominees that have sought views on the
applicability of the primary purpose
exception, and this proposed
amendment to the primary purpose
exception would expand the number of
entities that meet the exception. The
FDIC also recognizes that every deposit
broker can claim a primary purpose
other than the placement of funds at a
depository institution, and Congress did
not intend for every potential deposit
broker to become exempt through the
primary purpose exception. In order for
the FDIC to properly scrutinize whether
a primary purpose exception is
warranted, the FDIC is proposing to
establish an application and reporting
process to ensure that the FDIC’s role in
protecting the Deposit Insurance Fund
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FR 2366, 2372 (February 6, 2019).
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and ensuring safety and soundness is
preserved.15
c. Business Relationships Deemed To
Meet the Primary Purpose Exception
Subject to the Application Process
1. Deposit Placements of Less Than 25
Percent of Customer Assets Under
Management by the Third Party
Through this rulemaking, the FDIC
proposes that the primary purpose of an
agent’s or nominee’s business
relationship with its customers will not
be considered to be the placement of
funds, subject to an application process,
if less than 25 percent of the total assets
that the agent or nominee has under
management for its customers, in a
particular business line, is placed at
depository institutions. It is the FDIC’s
view that the primary purpose of a third
party’s business relationship with its
customers is not the placement of funds
with depository institutions if the third
party places less than 25 percent of
customer assets under management for
its customers, for a particular business
line, at insured depository institutions.
The FDIC believes that if 75 percent or
more of the customer assets under
management of the third party is not
being placed at depository institutions,
for a particular business line, the third
party has demonstrated that the primary
purpose of that business line is not the
placement of funds at depository
institutions. The FDIC also believes that
establishing a transparent, bright line
test is beneficial for all parties.
To give an example, a broker dealer
that sweeps uninvested cash balances
into deposit accounts at depository
institutions would meet the primary
purpose exception if the amount of
customer funds it places at deposit
accounts represents less than a quarter
of the total amount of customer assets it
manages for its broker dealer business.
However, if 25 percent or more of the
customer assets the broker dealer
manages is placed at depository
institutions, the FDIC would, barring
information to the contrary, likely
conclude that the primary purpose of
the broker dealer’s business is placing
funds at depository institutions, rather
than the placing of funds at depository
institutions being ancillary to its
primary purpose.
An agent or nominee that seeks to
avail itself of the primary purpose
exception based on this standard would
15 The proposed application and reporting
process would be set forth in a new 12 CFR
303.243(b). The brokered deposit waiver procedures
would be moved to 12 CFR 303.243(a)(1)–(7) with
no change to the text.
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be required to submit an application, as
discussed below.
Customer Assets Under Management.
In determining the amount of customer
assets under management by an agent or
nominee, for a particular business line,
the FDIC would measure the total
market value of all the financial assets
(including cash balances) that the agent
or nominee manages on behalf of its
customers that participate in a
particular business line.
Question 8: Is it appropriate to
interpret the primary purpose of a third
party’s business relationship with its
customers as not placement of funds if
the third party places less than 25
percent of customer assets under
management for its customers, for a
particular business line, at depository
institutions? Is a bright line test
appropriate? If so, is 25 percent an
appropriate threshold?
Question 9: Should the FDIC
specifically provide more clarity
regarding what is meant by customer
assets under ‘‘management’’ by a broker
dealer or third party?
2. Deposit Placements That Enable
Transactions
The FDIC proposes, subject to an
application process, that the primary
purpose of an agent’s or nominee’s
business relationship with its customers
will not be considered to be the
placement of funds if the agent or
nominee places depositors’ funds into
transactional accounts for the purpose
of enabling payments. The FDIC does
not intend for this exception to capture
all third parties that place deposits into
accounts that have transaction features
and does not intend to create an
incentive for deposit brokers to move
customers from time deposits to
transaction accounts in order to evade
brokered deposits restrictions. Rather,
the exception would be construed to
apply only to third parties whose
business purpose is to place funds in
transactional accounts to enable
transactions or make payments.
Under the proposal, if an agent or
nominee places 100 percent of its
customer funds into transaction
accounts at depository institutions and
no fees, interest, or other remuneration
is provided to the depositor, then it
would meet the primary purpose
exception of enabling payments, subject
to providing information as part of an
application process. In such a case, the
FDIC would conclude that the primary
purpose of the agent’s or nominee’s
business is to enable payments.
If the agent or nominee, or the
depository institution, pays any sort of
interest, fee, or provides any
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remuneration, (e.g., nominal interest
paid to the deposit account), then the
FDIC would more closely scrutinize the
agent’s or nominee’s business to
determine whether the primary purpose
is truly to enable payments. In such a
case, the FDIC would consider a number
of factors, including the volume of
transactions in customer accounts, and
the interest, fees, or other remuneration
provided, in determining the
applicability of the primary purpose
exception.
An agent or nominee that seeks to
avail itself of the primary purpose
exception based on this standard would
be required to submit an application.
Question 10: Is it appropriate to make
available the primary purpose exception
to third parties whose business purpose
is to place funds in transactional
accounts to enable transactions or make
payments?
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d. Other Deposit Placements That May
Meet the Primary Purpose Exception
Agents or nominees that do not fit
within the business arrangements
detailed above would also be eligible to
apply for the primary purpose
exception, subject to the application
process.16 In such a case, in order to
qualify for the primary purpose
exception, the FDIC would expect the
agent or nominee to demonstrate
through its application that the primary
purpose of the agent or nominee is
something other than the placement of
funds at depository institutions. In such
applications, the FDIC would consider a
number of factors in determining
whether the agent or nominee meets the
primary purpose exception.
The FDIC notes that agents or
nominees seeking a primary purpose
exception under this category may be
placing more than 25 percent of its
customer assets under management, for
a particular business line, into deposit
accounts at depository institutions. As
such, the applicant would be required to
provide information sufficient to
establish that its primary purpose is
something other than the placement of
funds, despite the fact that it places
more than 25 percent of its customer
assets under management, for a
particular business line, in deposit
accounts.
One factor the FDIC would review is
the revenue structure for the agent or
nominee. If the agent or nominee
receives a majority of its revenue from
its deposit placement activity, rather
16 Persons that meet the deposit broker definition
because they are ‘‘facilitating the placement’’ of
deposits would also be eligible to submit an
application under this process.
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than for some other service it offers,
then it would likely not meet the
primary purpose exception. A second
factor would be whether the agent’s or
nominee’s marketing activities to
prospective depositors is aimed at
opening a deposit account or to provide
some other service, and if there is some
other service, whether the opening of
the deposit account is incidental to that
other service. As part of reviewing this
factor, the FDIC would also consider
whether it is necessary for the customer
to open a deposit account first before
receiving the other services provided by
the agent or nominee. A third factor
would be the fees, and type of fees,
received by an agent or nominee for any
deposit placement service it offers.
Ultimately, the FDIC’s review of
whether an agent or nominee meets the
primary purpose exception would be a
case-by-case review and depend upon a
consideration of factors detailed in the
application section below, as well as the
information presented by the applicant
as to why it should meet the primary
purpose exception.
e. Business Relationships That Do Not
Meet the Primary Purpose Exception
1. Deposit Placements of Brokered CDs
Through this proposal, the FDIC
would continue to consider a person’s
placement of brokered CDs (as described
in the third prong to the deposit broker
definition and as discussed above) as
deposit brokering. For purposes of
establishing the person’s primary
purpose, the person’s placement of
brokered CDs would be considered a
discrete and independent business line
from other deposit placement
businesses, and so the primary purpose
for that particular business line will
always be the placement of deposits at
depository institutions. Accordingly,
such deposits would continue to be
considered brokered notwithstanding
that the person may not be considered
a deposit broker for other deposits that
it places (or for which it facilitates the
placement), which would be evaluated
as a separate business line.
Brokered CD products are marketed to
customers as a way to increase FDIC
deposit insurance coverage and increase
yield. One historical form of brokered
CDs is CD participations, where a broker
dealer purchases a CD issued by a bank
and sells the interests in the CD to its
customers. CD participations, at the
time that Section 29 was being
contemplated, were a core form of
deposit brokering. This activity enables
any insured depository institution to
attract large volumes of funds
irrespective of the institutions’
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managerial and financial characteristics.
While such deposits can provide a
helpful source of liquidity to
institutions, their availability and
pricing make it possible for poorlymanaged institutions to continue
operating beyond the time at which
natural market forces would have
otherwise resulted in failure. Moreover,
and as provided in the ANPR, brokered
CDs have caused significant losses to
the deposit insurance fund.17
Accordingly, for purposes of
effectuating the intent and policy of
Section 29 (and Part 337 of the FDIC’s
regulations), brokered CDs, as has been
the case since 1989, will be considered
brokered, without exception. As
discussed below, deposits related to
brokered CDs would not be included for
purposes of determining whether a
person’s other business line meets the
primary purpose exception.
2. Deposit Placements for Purposes of
Encouraging Savings
The FDIC would not grant a primary
purpose exception if the third party’s
primary purpose for its business
relationship with its customers is to
place (or assist in the placement of)
funds into deposit accounts to
‘‘encourage savings,’’ ‘‘maximize yield,’’
‘‘provide deposit insurance’’, or any
similar purpose. The FDIC is concerned
that these types of purposes evade the
purposes of Section 29. It is the FDIC’s
view that there is no meaningful
distinction between these objectives and
the objectives for placing funds into a
deposit account. As such, third parties
that either place or assist in the
placement of deposits to provide these
core deposit-placement services for its
customers would not meet the primary
purpose exception.
f. Applicability of Prior FDIC Staff
Advisory Opinions
The FDIC recognizes that some
insured depository institutions may
have met the primary propose exception
based on a previous FDIC staff advisory
opinion. As part of this rulemaking
process, the FDIC intends to evaluate
existing staff opinions to identify those
that are no longer relevant or applicable
based on any revisions made to the
brokered deposit regulations. The FDIC
plans as part of any final rule to codify
staff opinions of general applicability
that continue to be relevant and
applicable, and to rescind any staff
opinions that are superseded or obsolete
or are no longer relevant or applicable.
Question 11: Are there particular
FDIC staff opinions of general
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applicability that should or should not
be codified as part of the final rule? If
so, which ones, and why?
g. Evaluation of Business Lines
In evaluating whether the primary
purpose would apply, the FDIC believes
it is necessary to analyze specific
business lines. Otherwise, any agent or
nominee engaged in the brokering of
deposits could evade the statutory
restrictions by adding or combining its
brokering business with another
business such that the deposit broker
business is no longer its primary
purpose. In this proposal, the term
business line would refer to the
business relationships an agent or
nominee has with a group of customers
for whom the business places or
facilitates the placement of deposits. For
example, a company that offered
brokerage accounts to various types of
customers that allowed customers to
buy and sell assets, with a traditional
cash sweep option, would be considered
a business line. Brokerage accounts that
did not offer a cash sweep option would
not be considered part of the business
line (because those customers are not
part of the group of customers for whom
the person is placing deposits), and any
accounts in which customers are only
able to place money in accounts at
depository institutions (and not invest
in other types of assets) would also be
considered a separate business line.
Ultimately, the determination of what
constitutes a business line will depend
on the facts and circumstances of a
particular case, and the FDIC retains
discretion to determine the appropriate
business line to which the primary
purpose exception would apply.
Question 12: Has the FDIC provided
sufficient clarity regarding what will be
considered a ‘‘business line’’? How can
the FDIC provide more clarity? Are
there other factors that should be
considered in determining an agent’s or
nominee’s business line(s)?
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h. Application Process for the Primary
Purpose Exception
1. General Overview of the Application
Process
For purposes of the application
process, the term applicant includes an
insured depository institution or a
nonbank third party 18 that meets the
‘‘deposit broker’’ definition by either
placing (or facilitating the placement of)
customer deposits at insured depository
institutions and seeks to be excluded
from that definition by application of
18 The FDIC will look to each separately
incorporated legal entity as its own ‘‘third party’’
for purposes of this application process.
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the primary purpose exception. Under
the proposal, the FDIC would establish
an application process under which any
agent or nominee that seeks to avail
itself of the primary purpose exception,
or an insured depository institution
acting on behalf of an agent or nominee,
could request that the FDIC consider
certain deposits as nonbrokered as a
result of the primary purpose exception.
If an application from the agent or
nominee is approved, deposits placed or
facilitated by that party would be
considered nonbrokered for a particular
business line.
As mentioned, an applicant may be an
insured depository institution that
applies to the FDIC on behalf of a third
party seeking a determination that the
third party meets the primary purpose
exception. In this case, if appropriate,
the FDIC would evaluate the third
party’s relationships with all IDIs in
which the third party places, or
facilitates the placement of, deposits.
An approval that a third party meets the
primary purpose exception (based on an
application by an IDI on behalf of the
third party) could be applicable to all
deposit placements by that third party at
other IDI(s) to the extent that the deposit
placement arrangements with the other
IDI(s) are the same as the arrangement
between the applicant and the third
party. The FDIC anticipates that an
agent or nominee who places, or
facilitates the placement of, deposits at
multiple IDIs and seeks a primary
purpose exception is likely to apply on
its own behalf, given that the
information required to complete an
application will be in possession of the
agent or nominee.
Question 13: Are there scenarios
where a nonbank third party, as part of
the same business line, has different
deposit placement arrangements with
IDIs?
Applicants would receive a written
determination from the FDIC within 120
days of a complete application. For
applications seeking the primary
purpose exception as described above in
paragraphs C(1) and C(2) (with the
exception of applicants seeking a
primary purpose exception based on
enabling payments where interest, fees,
or remuneration, is provided to
depositors), if the application is simple
and straightforward and meets the
relevant standards, the FDIC intends to
provide an expedited processing of the
application. The FDIC expects such
applications to generally be simple and
straightforward, but recognizes there
may be some cases, such as when
defining the scope of the ‘‘business
line’’ is complicated, in which the FDIC
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may need more time to process the
application.
Question 14: Is the application
process proposed for the primary
purpose exception appropriate? Are
there ways the application process
could be modified to make it more
effective or efficient?
Question 15: Is the application
process for IDIs that apply on behalf of
a third party workable? Are there ways
to improve the process for IDIs that
apply on behalf of third parties?
Question 16: Are there additional
ways that the FDIC could better ensure
that the primary purpose exception is
applied consistently, transparently, and
in accordance with the statute?
Question 17: Should some or all FDIC
decisions on applications for the
primary purpose exception be publicly
available? If so, in what format?
Question 18: Are there commonly
known deposit placement arrangements
not mentioned above that are
sufficiently simple and straightforward
that applications for such arrangements
should receive expedited application
processing, as described above?
Question 19: Are there other deposit
placement arrangements with respect to
which the FDIC should provide
additional clarity as part of this
rulemaking?
2. Application Contents
An applicant would need to submit
certain information, depending on the
basis on which the primary purpose
exception is being sought. Below are the
application contents that would be
required for each of the three types of
previously discussed business
arrangements.
Application Contents for Third Parties
that Seek Primary Purpose Based on
Placing Less Than 25 Percent of
Customer Assets Under Management at
IDIs. The applicant would be required to
provide (1) a description of the business
line for which the applicant is filing an
application; (2) the total amount of
customer assets under management by
the third party for that particular
business line and (3) the total amount of
deposits placed by the third party on
behalf of its customers, for that
particular business line, at all
depository institutions. The total
amount of deposits placed by the third
party should be exclusive of the amount
of brokered CDs being placed by the
third party, which is treated as a
separate business line. An application
would also need to include a
description of the deposit placement
arrangement(s) with the IDI or IDIs and
the services provided by any other third
parties involved. The FDIC would be
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permitted to request additional
information at any time during the
review of the application to render the
application complete and initiate its
review.
The FDIC will approve primary
purpose applications if the total amount
of customer funds placed at insured
depository institutions by the third
party is less than 25 percent of total
customer assets under management by
the third party for a particular business
line.
Question 20: Are the criteria for
considering and approving primary
purpose applications for third parties
that seek a primary purpose exception
based on placing less than 25 percent of
customer assets under management at
depository institutions appropriate?
Application Contents for Third Parties
that Seek Primary Purpose Based on
Enabling Transactions. The applicant
would need to submit information,
including contracts with customers and
with the depository institutions in
which the third party is placing
deposits, showing that all of its
customer deposits are in transaction
accounts. An application would also
need to include a description of the
deposit placement arrangement(s) with
the IDI or IDIs and the services provided
by any other third parties involved. The
applicant would also need to submit
information on the amount of interest,
fees, or remuneration being provided or
paid for the transaction accounts. For
third parties that pay interest, fees, or
provide other remuneration, the
applicant would need to provide
information regarding the volume of
transactions in customer accounts. In
addition, for third parties that pay
interest, fees, or provide other
remuneration, applicants would need to
provide an explanation of how its
customers utilize its services for the
purpose of making payments and not for
the receipt of a deposit placement
service or deposit insurance. The FDIC
would be permitted to request
additional information at any time
during the review of the application to
render the application complete and
initiate its review.
The FDIC would approve primary
purpose applications if an agent or
nominee places funds into transactional
accounts for the purpose of enabling
payments, and no fees, interest, or other
remuneration is being provided to the
depositor.
Question 21: Are the criteria for
considering and approving primary
purpose applications based on enabling
transactions appropriate?
Application Contents for Other
Business Relationships That May Meet
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the Primary Purpose Exception.
Applicants seeking the primary purpose
exception not based on business
relationships described above (in
paragraphs C(1) and C(2)) would request
that the FDIC view a particular business
relationship between a third party and
an IDI as meeting the primary purpose
exception. This process would be
available, for example, to third parties
that place more than 25 percent of the
total assets under management for its
customers, for a particular business line,
into deposit accounts at insured
depository institutions.
Application Contents. In order for an
application to be considered, the
following information, at a minimum,
would be required, to the extent
applicable:
(1) A description of the deposit
placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(2) A description of the business line
for which the applicant is filing an
application;
(3) A description of the primary
purpose of the particular business line;
(4) The total amount of assets under
management by the third party;
(5) The total amount of deposits
placed by the third party at all insured
depository institutions, including the
amounts placed with the applicant, if
the applicant is an insured depository
institution. This includes the total
amount of term deposits and
transactional deposits placed by the
third party, but should be exclusive of
the amount of brokered CDs being
placed by that third party;
(6) Revenue generated from the third
party’s activities related to the
placement, or the facilitating of the
placement, of deposits;
(7) Revenue generated from the third
party’s activities not related to the
placement, or the facilitating of the
placement, of deposits;
(8) A description of the marketing
activities provided by the third party to
prospective depositors;
(9) The reasons the third party meets
the primary purpose exception;
(10) Any other information the
applicant deems relevant; and
(11) Any other information that the
FDIC requires to initiate its review and
render the application complete.
Supporting documentation and
contracts related to the items above
would also be required. The FDIC
would be permitted to request
additional information at any time
during its review to render the
application complete and initiate its
review. The FDIC’s review of whether a
third party meets the primary purpose
exception would be based on the
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application and all supporting
information provided. After receipt of a
complete application, the FDIC will
notify the applicant, in writing, of its
response within 120 days.
Under the proposal, the FDIC would
approve applications submitted under
this process if the application
demonstrates, with respect to the
particular business line under which the
third party places or facilitates the
placement of deposits, that the primary
purpose of the third party, for that
business line, is a purpose other than
the placement or facilitation of
placement of deposits.
Question 22: Are proposed
requirements for the application process
for business relationships, other than
those described in paragraphs (C)(1) and
(C)(2), appropriate?
3. Ongoing Reporting
An agent or nominee that meets the
primary purpose exception, or an IDI
that applies on behalf of the agent or
nominee, would need to provide reports
to the FDIC and, if applicable, in the
case of insured depository institutions,
its primary federal regulator. The FDIC
will describe the reporting
requirements, including the frequency
and any calculation methodology, as
part of its written approval for a primary
purpose exception. The FDIC
anticipates that the reporting would be
required on a quarterly basis. As an
example, if a primary purpose approval
is granted based, in part, on the
representation that a nonbank third
party places less than 25 percent of its
customer assets under management into
deposit accounts, then the FDIC would
likely require as a condition of the
approval that the nonbank third party
provide reporting of the amount of
deposits, based upon the average daily
balances, placed by the nonbank third
party at all depository institutions and
the total amount of assets, based upon
the average daily balances, under the
third party’s management. The FDIC
believes it is more efficient for the
nonbank third party to report directly to
the FDIC, rather than for the nonbank
third party to send the same information
to each IDI in which it places deposits,
each of which would then in turn report
this identical information to the FDIC.
Question 23: Is it appropriate to
require reporting from nonbank entities
that have received approval for a
primary purpose exception? Should the
FDIC require IDIs to report on behalf of
such nonbank entities instead? Are
there other ways the FDIC should
consider to ensure that applicants that
receive the primary purpose exception
remain within the relevant standards?
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Question 24: How frequently should
the FDIC require reporting?
IDIs would be responsible for
monitoring a nonbank third parties’
eligibility for the primary purpose
exception. For example, if a certain
percentage of a nonbank third party’s
revenue is from some activity other than
deposit placement, and the FDIC
approves a primary purpose exception
in reliance of this factor, among other
factors, then the FDIC would require
that an insured depository institution
that receives such deposits provide a
notice to the FDIC and the primary
federal regulator if there are any
material change to the nonbank third
party’s revenue structure. When
establishing a contractual relationship
with a nonbank third party for the
placement of deposits that may be
classified as nonbrokered due to the
primary purpose exception, an IDI may
wish to consider the reporting and
monitoring requirements described
here.
Question 25: Is it appropriate for the
FDIC to require IDIs to monitor third
parties for eligibility for the primary
purpose exception? Are there additional
or better ways to ensure that third
parties continue to remain eligible for
the exception?
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4. Modification and Withdrawals
At any time after approval, the FDIC
proposes that it may, with notice and as
appropriate, require additional
information to ensure that the approval
is still appropriate, or to verify the
accuracy of the information that was
provided by a third party to an IDI or
submitted to the FDIC. In addition, in
certain circumstances, such as if an
entity previously approved for a
primary purpose exception has
undergone material changes to its
business, the FDIC would be able to
require that the applicant reapply for
approval, impose additional conditions
on the approval, or withdraw a
previously granted approval, if
warranted and with sufficient notice.
C. Brokered Deposits and Assessments
Under the proposal, some deposits
that are currently considered brokered
will no longer be considered brokered.
In a future rulemaking, the FDIC plans
to consider modifications to the
assessment regulations in light of any
changes made to the brokered deposits
regulation.
D. Reporting of Certain Deposits on Call
Reports
Also, after a final rule is adopted, the
FDIC will consider requiring reporting
of deposits that are excluded from being
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reported as brokered deposits because of
the application of the primary purpose
exception. The FDIC will monitor this
information to assess the risk factors
associated with the deposits and
determine assessment implications, if
any. Any changes to reporting
requirements applicable to the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (‘‘Call Reports’’), and its
instructions, would be effectuated in
coordination with the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council in a
separate Paperwork Reduction Act
notice.
E. Treatment of Non-Maturity Deposits
for Purposes of the Brokered Deposits
Restrictions
As discussed in the FDIC’s notice of
proposed rulemaking for interest rate
restrictions, the FDIC is looking at the
question of when non-maturity deposits
in an existing account are considered
‘‘accepted.’’ The FDIC is in the process
of considering comments received in
response to that notice of proposed
rulemaking.
The FDIC is considering a similar
approach for brokered deposits as it did
for interest rate restrictions. For
brokered nonmaturity deposits, through
this proposal, the FDIC is considering
an interpretation under which nonmaturity brokered deposits are viewed
as ‘‘accepted’’ for the brokered deposits
restrictions at the time any new nonmaturity deposits are placed at an
institution by or through a deposit
broker.
Under this proposed interpretation,
brokered balances in a money market
demand account or other savings
account, as well as transaction accounts,
at the time an institution falls below
well capitalized, would not be subject to
the brokered deposits restrictions.
However, if brokered funds were
deposited into such an account after the
institution became less than well
capitalized, the entire balance of the
account would be subject to the
brokered deposits restrictions. If,
however, the same customer deposited
brokered funds into a new account and
the balance in that account was subject
to the brokered deposits restrictions, the
balance in the initial account would
continue to not be subject to the
brokered deposits restrictions so long as
no additional funds were accepted.
Brokered deposits restrictions also
generally apply to any new nonmaturity brokered deposit accounts
opened after the institution falls to
below well capitalized.
The term ‘‘accept’’ is also used in
PCA-triggered restrictions related to
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employee benefit plan deposits.19 The
FDIC plans to address in a future
rulemaking when deposits are
‘‘accepted’’ for purposes of these PCArelated restrictions, both for nonmaturity deposits, such as transaction
accounts and MMDAs, as well as for
certificates of deposits and other time
deposits.
Question 26: Is the FDIC’s proposed
definition of ‘‘accept’’ appropriate?
Would there be substantial operational
difficulties for institutions to monitor
additions into these existing accounts?
Is there another interpretation that
would be more appropriate and
consistent with the statute?
F. Additional Supervisory Matters
The FDIC recognizes that, under this
proposal, numerous categories of
deposits that are currently considered
brokered would instead be nonbrokered.
The FDIC will continue to take such
supervisory efforts as may be necessary
to ensure that banks are operating in a
safe and sound manner. Nothing in this
proposal is intended to limit the FDIC’s
ability to review or take supervisory
action with respect to funding-related
matters, including funding
concentrations, that may affect the
safety and soundness of individual
banks or the industry generally.
IV. Alternatives
The FDIC is proposing these
comprehensive changes to the brokered
deposit regulations after considering
comments received pursuant to the
ANPR and evaluating alternative
options for modernizing the regulations.
The FDIC considered a number of
alternative approaches, including taking
more incremental approaches through
which more limited changes would be
made. Additionally, the FDIC
considered more narrowly revisiting
certain existing staff interpretations to
identify those that should be updated.
However, the FDIC ultimately
determined that the best course of
action was to take a fresh, holistic look
at the regulations and interpretations,
and propose a new framework that
reflects technological and other changes
in the banking industry over the past
three decades and is consistent with the
FDI Act.
V. Expected Effects
As described previously, the proposed
rule would amend the FDIC’s
regulations that implement provisions
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
regarding brokered deposits. The
proposed rule creates a new framework
19 See
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for analyzing certain provisions of the
statutory definition of ‘‘deposit broker.’’
Further, the proposed rule amends two
of the ten current regulatory exceptions
to the definition of ‘‘deposit broker.’’
The aggregate effect likely would be
some amount of deposits currently
designated as brokered deposits to no
longer be so designated.
As of June 30th, 2019, there were
5,303 insured depository institutions
holding approximately $18 trillion in
assets and $13 trillion in domestic
deposits. Of those domestic deposits,
$1.1 trillion (8.5 percent) are currently
classified as brokered deposits.
Approximately 41 percent (2,154) of
FDIC-insured institutions reported some
positive amount of brokered deposits.
These insured institutions accounted for
the vast majority of banking industry
holdings—almost $17 trillion (92
percent) of assets and almost $12 trillion
(91 percent) of domestic deposits.
Traditional brokered CDs would still
be defined by the rule as brokered and
subject to the associated statutory and
regulatory restrictions. Certain types of
deposits, notably deposits placed by
agents or nominees that satisfy criteria
set forth in the proposed revisions to the
primary purpose exception, would not
be considered brokered deposits subject
to an application process. The amount
of deposits currently reported as
brokered that may be re-designated as
non-brokered as a result of the rule may
be material. However, a reliable estimate
of this change in designation is not
possible with the information currently
available to the FDIC.
There are potentially four broad
categories of effects of the proposed
rule: effects on consumers and
economic activity; effects applicable to
potentially any insured institution;
effects applicable to less than wellcapitalized institutions; and effects
applicable to nonbank entities that may
or may not be deemed deposit brokers.
A. Consumers and the Economy
The proposed rule would amend the
FDIC’s brokered deposit regulations to
better reflect recent technological
changes and innovations. There are
benefits to banks and consumers if
innovative deposit placement
arrangements that do not present undue
funding risk are not classified as
brokered deposits. Changes and
innovations in deposit placement
activity are likely to continue,
suggesting that demand for, and
utilization of, certain types of deposit
accounts currently classified as
brokered are likely to grow in the years
to come. These could include the use of
technology services that help enable
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payments and online marketing
channels that refer customers to certain
banks. To the extent that the proposed
rule would treat such deposits as
nonbrokered, it could support ease of
access to deposit placement services for
U.S. consumers. Unbanked or
underbanked customers, for example,
may benefit from increased ease of
access to deposit placement services
because banks would be more willing to
accept deposits that would be no longer
considered brokered under the proposal.
Additionally, to the extent that the
proposed rule supports greater
utilization of deposits currently
classified as brokered deposits, but
classified as non-brokered under the
proposed rule, it could increase the
funds available to insured depository
institutions for lending to U.S.
consumers. If the proposed rule does
result in an increase in bank lending,
some associated increase in measured
U.S. economic output would be
expected, in part because the imputed
value of the credit services banks
provide is a component of measured
GDP.
B. All Insured Institutions
The proposed rule could immediately
affect the 2,154 FDIC-insured
institutions currently reporting brokered
deposits. Going forward, the rule could
affect all 5,303 FDIC-insured
institutions whose decisions regarding
the types of deposits to accept could be
affected.
The proposed rule would benefit
insured institutions and other interested
parties by providing greater legal clarity
regarding the treatment of brokered
deposits. As result of this increased
clarity, the proposed rule would reduce
the extent of reliance by banks and third
parties on FDIC Staff Advisory opinions
and informal written and telephonic
inquiries with FDIC staff. This would
have two important benefits. First, the
likelihood of inconsistent outcomes,
where some institutions may report
certain types of deposits as brokered
and others do not, would be reduced.
Second, to the extent the classification
of deposits as brokered or non-brokered
can be clearly addressed in regulation,
the need for potentially time-consuming
staff analyses can be minimized.
The FDIC has heard from a number of
insured institutions that they perceive a
stigma associated with accepting
brokered deposits. Historical experience
has been that higher use of deposits
currently reported to the FDIC as
brokered has been associated with
higher probability of bank failure and
higher deposit insurance fund loss
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rates.20 The funding characteristics of
brokered deposits, however, are nonuniform. For example, brokered CDs are
often used by bank customers searching
for relatively high yields on their
insured deposits, and as such these
deposits may be less stable and more
subject to deposit interest rate
competition. The behavior of other
types of deposit placement
arrangements, such as deposits placed
through sweeps or that underlie prepaid
card programs, may be more based on a
business relationship than on interest
rate competition. Given limitations on
available data, however, historical
studies have not been able to
differentiate the experience of banks
based on the different types of deposits
accepted. To the extent the proposed
rule reduces bankers’ perception of a
stigma associated with certain types of
deposits, more institutions may be
incentivized to accept such deposits.
The proposed rule could incentivize
the development of banking
relationships between banks and other
firms. The new opportunities could spur
growth in the third party deposit
placement industry, particularly for
third parties that receive the primary
purpose exception, potentially resulting
in greater access to, or use of, bank
deposits by a greater variety of
customers. It is difficult to accurately
estimate such potential effects with the
information currently available to the
FDIC, because such effects depend, in
part, on the future commercial
development of such activities.
FDIC deposit insurance assessments
would be affected by the proposed
changes, potentially affecting any
insured institution that currently
accepts brokered deposits or might do
so in the future. Since 2009, insured
institutions with a significant
concentration of brokered deposits may
pay higher quarterly assessments,
depending on other factors. To the
extent that deposits currently defined as
brokered would no longer be considered
brokered deposits under this NPR, a
bank’s assessment may decrease, all else
equal. However, as noted above, in a
future rulemaking the FDIC plans to
consider modifications to its assessment
regulations in light of the proposed rule.
Certain calculations required under the
Liquidity Coverage Ratio rule applicable
to some large banks could also be
affected by the proposed rule. Available
data do not allow for a reliable estimate
of the amount of deposits currently
designated as brokered that would no
longer be designated as such under the
20 See FDIC’s 2011 Study on Core and Brokered
Deposits, July 8, 2011.
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proposed rule, and consequently do not
allow for an estimate of effects on
assessments or the reported Liquidity
Coverage Ratio.
Insured institutions could benefit
from the rule by having greater certainty
and greater access to funding sources
that would no longer be designated as
brokered deposits, thereby easing their
liquidity planning and reducing the
likelihood that a liquidity failure of an
otherwise viable institution might be
precipitated by the brokered deposit
regulations. Another benefit of the rule
could result if greater access to funding
sources supported insured institutions’
ability to provide credit. However, these
effects are difficult to estimate because
the decision to receive third party
deposits depends on the specific
financial conditions of each bank,
fluctuating market conditions for third
party deposits, and future management
decisions.
C. Less Than Well-Capitalized
Institutions
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As discussed previously, the
acceptance of brokered deposits is
subject to statutory and regulatory
restrictions for banks that are not well
capitalized. Adequately capitalized
banks may not accept brokered deposits
without a waiver from the FDIC, and
banks that are less than adequately
capitalized may not accept them at all.
As a result, adequately capitalized and
undercapitalized banks generally hold
less brokered deposits—as of June 30,
2019, brokered deposits make up
approximately 3 percent of domestic
deposits held by not well capitalized
banks, well below the 9 percent held by
all IDIs. By generally reducing the scope
of deposits that are considered brokered,
the proposed rule would allow not well
capitalized banks to increase their
holdings of deposits that are currently
reported as brokered but would not be
reported as brokered under the
proposal. As of June 30, 2019, there are
only 16 adequately capitalized and
undercapitalized banks.21 These banks
hold approximately $2.2 billion in
assets, $2.0 billion in domestic deposits,
and $61 million in brokered deposits.
These banks could be directly affected
by the proposed rule in that they could
potentially accept more or different
21 Information
based on June 30, 2019
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income. The
16 institutions do not include any quantitatively
well capitalized institutions that may have been
administratively classified as less than well
capitalized. See generally, FDIC—12 CFR
324.403(b)(1)(v); Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System—12 CFR 208.43(b)(1)(v); Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency—12 CFR
6.4(c)(1)(v).
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types of deposits currently designated as
brokered.
More broadly speaking with respect to
future developments, another aspect of
brokered deposit restrictions is that,
consistent with their statutory purpose,
they act as a constraint on growth and
risk-taking by troubled institutions.
Conversely, as noted previously, access
to funding can prevent needless
liquidity failures of viable institutions.
D. Entities That May or May Not Be
Deposit Brokers
The proposed revisions to the
brokered deposit regulations would
likely give rise to some activity by nonbank third parties seeking to determine
whether they are, or are not, deposit
brokers under the rule. This may
include the filing of applications by
some parties that seek to avail
themselves of the primary purpose
exception. Ongoing activity by these
entities to ensure compliance with the
revised rule would also be expected.
The FDIC is interested in commenters’
views on the effects, costs, and benefits
of the proposed rule.
VI. Administrative Law Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
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
FDIC 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 information collection
requirements contained in this proposed
rule are being submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval 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).
FDIC is revising its existing information
collection entitled ‘‘Application for
Waiver of Prohibition on Acceptance of
Brokered Deposits’’ (OMB Control
Number 3064–0099) and will rename
the information collection ‘‘Reporting
and Recordkeeping Requirements for
Brokered Deposits.’’
Current Actions
Under the proposed rulemaking:
Æ Respondents may file an
application with the FDIC for a
‘‘Primary Purpose Exception’’ based on
the placement of less than 25% of
customer assets under management
(reporting requirement to obtain or
retain a benefit);
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7465
Æ Respondents may file an
application with the FDIC for a
‘‘Primary Purpose Exception’’ based on
‘‘Enabling Transactions’’ (reporting
requirement to obtain or retain a
benefit); and
Æ Respondents may file an
application with the FDIC for a
‘‘Primary Purpose Exception’’ based on
factors other than ‘‘Enabling
Transactions’’ or the placement of less
than 25% of customer assets under
management (reporting requirement to
obtain or retain a benefit).
The proposed rule would establish
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for third parties that apply
for and maintain a primary purpose
exception under § 303.243.22 The FDIC
estimated the annual burden associated
with the proposal based on the
following assumptions and according to
the methodology described below:
Æ First, the FDIC lacks the data
necessary to determine the number of
third parties which will take advantage
of the applications relating to
exceptions from the definition of
‘‘deposit broker,’’ and invites comments
on how its estimates could be improved.
The first type of exception, that based
on placing less than 25 percent of
customer assets under management, is
expected to be sought largely by brokerdealers. With few exceptions, brokerdealers must register with the Securities
and Exchange Commission and be
members of FINRA.23 There were 3,607
FINRA registered broker-dealer firms in
2018.24 Some of the 3,607 brokerdealers may not engage in activity
which meets the definition of ‘‘deposit
broker,’’ while some firms which do
engage in such activity may not be
among the 3,607 FINRA registered
broker-dealers. However, in the absence
of a more refined figure, the FDIC
estimated that 1,203 firms will apply for
an exception based on placing less than
25 percent of customer assets under
management on average each year over
three years.
Æ Second, the FDIC expects that the
exceptions based on enabling
transactions and on other business
arrangements will be sought by firms
engaged in deposit brokering. However,
the FDIC is unable to determine the
number of firms which engage in
deposit brokering. According to Census
data, there are 1,105 establishments
22 IDIs can apply for an exception on behalf of a
third party, and third parties can apply directly for
an exception. See § 303.243(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
23 FINRA, https://www.finra.org/investors/learnto-invest/choosing-investment-professional/brokers.
24 2019 FINRA Industry Snapshot, pg. 13, https://
www.finra.org/sites/default/files/2019%20Industry
%20Snapshot.pdf.
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within the industry in which deposit
brokers are classified.25 Not all 1,105
establishments engage in deposit
brokering, and some firms which engage
in deposit brokering may be classified in
another industry. In the absence of
better data, the FDIC estimated that,
over the three-year period covered by
this information collection request, an
average of 369 firms will apply for an
exception based on enabling
transactions and other business
arrangements.
Æ Third, the FDIC lacks the data
necessary to determine the number of
business lines for which firms may
submit applications, and in the absence
of a more refined estimate, assumed that
all respondents submit one application.
Æ Fourth, the FDIC estimated the
amount of time required to complete
each application type. The most
straightforward application type is that
for which a primary purpose exception
to the definition of deposit broker is
sought based on placing less than 25
percent of customer assets under
management, by business line, with
IDIs. For this type of application, three
items are required: (1) A description of
the business line for which the
applicant is filing an application, (2) the
total amount of customer assets under
control by the third party for that
particular business line, and (3) the total
amount of deposits placed by the third
party on behalf of its customers, for that
particular business line, at all IDIs,
exclusive of the amount of brokered CDs
being placed by that third party. Given
the ‘‘bright line’’ nature of this
application type, and the limited
number of line items required, the FDIC
estimated it would take each respondent
three hours on average to gather the
material and submit the request
required for this application type.
The second application type is that
for which a primary purpose exception
to the definition of deposit broker is
sought based on placing funds to enable
transactions. Under this application
type, the applicant would need to
submit information, including a copy of
the form of contracts used with
customers and with the IDIs in which
the third party is placing deposits,
showing that all of its customer deposits
are in transaction accounts, and that no
interest, fees, or other remuneration is
being provided to or paid for the
25 Deposit brokers are classified according to the
2017 North American Industry Classification
System as belonging to the ‘‘Miscellaneous
Financial Investment Activities’’ industry (NAICS
code 523999). See U.S. Census Bureau, 2017 County
Business Patterns Data, available at https://
www.census.gov/data/datasets/2017/econ/cbp/
2017-cbp.html.
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transaction accounts. In addition,
applicants would need to submit a
description of the deposit placement
arrangement between the entities
involved. For third parties that pay
interest, fees, or provide other
remuneration, the applicant would need
to provide information regarding the
volume of transactions in customer
accounts. In addition, for applications
where the third party pays interest, fees,
or provides other remuneration,
applicants would also need to provide
an explanation of how its customers
utilize its services for the purpose of
making payments and not for the receipt
of a deposit placement service or
deposit insurance. Because the second
application type should require more
time to prepare than the first, the FDIC
estimated it would take each respondent
five hours on average the gather the
required material and submit the
application.
The third application type is for a
primary purpose exception where the
business arrangement is not covered by
the other two types described above.
This third type requires the items
enumerated in this proposal, and due to
the number of items requested, the FDIC
estimates it would take each respondent
10 hours on average to gather the
material required for this application
type and submit the application.
Æ Fifth, each application type would
have associated quarterly (ongoing)
reporting requirements, which are to be
spelled out by the FDIC in its written
approval of the application. For the first
two application types, the FDIC
estimates it would take each respondent
an average of 30 minutes per quarter to
gather the information and submit the
report for an annual average of 2 burden
hours. In FDIC assumes that initial
quarterly report may take longer to
prepare, but once reporting and
recordkeeping systems are in place, the
FDIC believes an average of 30 minutes
per quarter is a reasonable estimate for
this. The third application type, due to
its greater number of required items, is
estimated to take each respondent an
average of one hour per quarter to gather
the information and submit the report
for an annual average of 4 burden hours.
Æ In addition, the FDIC revised its
estimates for the information collection
‘‘Application for Waiver of Prohibition
on Acceptance of Brokered Deposits.’’
Based on consultations with subject
matter experts, the FDIC estimates nine
IDIs will file this application each year,
on average. Each IDI applicant will
spend six hours, on average, to file.
Thus, the FDIC estimates the average
annual burden at 54 hours.
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Æ Based on the above assumptions
and methodology, the FDIC estimates
the proposed rule imposes new annual
reporting burden of 22,988 hours, or
approximately 15 hours per deposit
broker and broker-dealer.
Æ Finally, to estimate the annual
dollar cost of the total estimated annual
hourly burdens, the FDIC used the
occupational breakdown associated
with the Application for Waiver of
Prohibition on Acceptance of Brokered
Deposits for the new information
collection requirements contained in the
proposed rule. FDIC assumes that all of
the 23,042 estimated burden hours are
broken down into hours worked by
managers and executives (5 percent),
lawyers (5 percent), compliance officers
(10 percent), IT specialists (30 percent),
financial analysts (40 percent), and
clerical staff (10 percent), so that 100
percent of the hours are allocated to an
occupation.
The FDIC then used the 75th
percentile wage estimates for each
occupation, based on the industry of the
expected applicant, from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics, and adjusted them for
inflation and to account for the value of
non-wage benefits, to produce an annual
labor cost associated with the hours
estimated above.26 This resulted in an
estimated weighted average hourly wage
of $106.11 for applications relating to
exceptions from the definition of
‘‘deposit broker,’’ and $83.88 for the
Application for Waiver of Prohibition
on Acceptance of Brokered Deposits.
Based on the inflation adjusted wages,
and accounting for non-wage benefits,
26 Specifically, for the applications relating to
exceptions from the definition of ‘‘deposit broker,’’
the FDIC used the wage estimates from the Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS) ‘‘National IndustrySpecific Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates: Securities, Commodity Contracts, and
Other Financial Investments and Related Activities
Sector’’ (May 2018), while for the Application for
Waiver of Prohibition on Acceptance of Brokered
Deposits, the FDIC used the wage estimates from
the BLS ‘‘National Industry-Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates: Depository Credit
Intermediation Sector’’ (May 2018). Other BLS data
used were the Employer Cost of Employee
Compensation data (June 2019), and the Consumer
Price Index (June 2019). Hourly wage estimates at
the 75th percentile wage were used, except when
the estimate was greater than $100, in which case
$100 per hour was used, as the BLS does not report
hourly wages in excess of $100. The 75th percentile
wage information reported by the BLS in the
Specific Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates does not include health benefits and
other non-monetary benefits. According to the June
2019 Employer Cost of Employee Compensation
data, compensation rates for health and other
benefits are 33.8 percent of total compensation.
Additionally, the wage has been adjusted for
inflation according to BLS data on the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Consumers (CPI–U), so that
it is contemporaneous with the non-wage
compensation statistic. The inflation rate was 1.86
percent between May 2018 and June 2019.
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the FDIC estimates that the average
annual average reporting cost associated
with the proposal is approximately $2.4
7467
million, or approximately $1,545.70 per
respondent.
Burden Estimate:
SUMMARY OF ANNUAL BURDEN
Information collection (IC) description
Initial Implementation:
Application for Primary Purpose Exception Based on the Placement
of Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under Management.
Application for Primary Purpose Exception Based on Enabling Transactions.
Application for Primary Purpose Exception Not Based on Enabling
Transactions or Placement of
Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under Management.
Ongoing:
Reporting for Primary Purpose Exception Based on the Placement
of Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under Management.
Reporting for Primary Purpose Exception Based on Enabling Transactions.
Reporting for Primary Purpose Exception Not Based on Enabling
Transactions or Placement of
Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under Management.
Application for Waiver of Prohibition
on Acceptance of Brokered Deposits.
Total Estimated Annual Burden
Hours.
Type of
burden
Obligation
to respond
Estimated
number of
respondents
Estimated
time per
response
(hours)
Estimated
number of
responses
Frequency
of response
Total
estimated
annual burden
(hours)
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
1,203
1
3
On Occasion
3,609
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
369
1
5
On Occasion
1,845
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
369
1
10
On Occasion
3,690
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
3,607
4
0.5
Quarterly .....
7,214
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
1,105
4
0.5
Quarterly .....
2,210
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
1,105
4
1
Quarterly .....
4,420
Reporting ........
Obtain or Retain a
Benefit.
9
1
6
On Occasion
54
........................
................................
........................
........................
........................
.....................
23,042
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Note: The estimated number of respondents in the Initial Implementation section is an annual average calculated over three years.
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
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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.
B. Solicitation of Comments on Use of
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach
Bliley Act,27 requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language
in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
FDIC invites your comments on how to
make this revised proposal easier to
understand. For example:
Æ Has the FDIC organized the
material to suit your needs? If not, how
could the material be better organized?
Æ Are the requirements in the
proposed regulation clearly stated? If
not, how could the regulation be stated
more clearly?
Æ Does the proposed regulation
contain language or jargon that is
unclear? If so, which language requires
clarification?
27 Public Law 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov.
12, 1999).
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Æ Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand?
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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.28 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.29 Generally, the FDIC considers
28 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
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
29 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. The FDIC
does not believe that the proposed rule,
if adopted, will have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities. However, some
expected effects of the proposed rule are
difficult to assess or accurately quantify
given current information, therefore the
FDIC has included an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Act Analysis in this section.
Reasons Why This Action Is Being
Considered
As previously discussed in Section II.
Background, the agencies issued an
ANPR in 2018 to obtain input from the
public on its brokered deposit and
interest rate regulations in light of
significant changes in technology,
business models, the economic
environment, and products since the
agency’s regulations relating to brokered
deposits were adopted. Generally
speaking, commenters offered
information and expressed options that
suggested the FDIC needed to clarify
and update its historical interpretation
of the ‘‘deposit broker’’ definition to
better align with current market
practices and risks associated with
brokered deposits.
Policy Objectives
As previously discussed in Section I.
Policy Objectives, the FDIC is proposing
amendments to its regulations relating
to brokered deposits in order to
modernize those regulations to reflect
recent technological changes and
innovations that have occurred.
Additionally, the FDIC seeks to
continue to promote safe and sound
practices by FDIC-insured depository
institutions.
Legal Basis
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The FDIC is proposing this rule under
authorities granted by Section 29 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act).
The law restricts troubled institutions
(i.e. those that are not well capitalized)
from (1) accepting deposits by or
through a deposit broker without a
waiver and (2) soliciting deposits by
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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offering rates of interest on deposits that
were significantly higher than the
prevailing rates of interest on deposits
offered by other insured depository
institutions in such depository
institution’s normal market area. For a
more detailed discussion of the
proposed rule’s legal basis please refer
to Section A. Current Law and
Regulation, within Section II.
Background.
Description of the Rule
A person meets the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition under Section 29 of the FDI
Act if it is engaged in the business of
placing deposits, or facilitating the
placement of deposits, of third parties
with insured depository institutions or
the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the
purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties. An agent or
trustee meets the ‘‘deposit broker’’
definition when establishing a deposit
account to facilitate a business
arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the
account to fund a prearranged loan.
Additionally, Section 29 provides nine
statutory exceptions to the definition of
deposit broker and, as noted earlier, the
FDIC added one regulatory exception to
the definition. The FDIC is proposing a
new framework for analyzing certain
provisions of the statutory definition.
Among other things, through this
rulemaking, the FDIC proposes
amending the IDI exception and the
primary purpose exception. For a more
detailed description of the proposed
rule please refer to Section III.
Discussion of the Proposed Rule.
Small Entities Affected
The FDIC insures 5,303 depository
institutions, of which 3,947 are defined
as small institutions by the terms of the
RFA.30 Additionally, of those 3,947
small, FDIC-insured institutions, 1,297
currently report holding some volume of
brokered deposits. Further, of those
3,947 small, FDIC-insured institutions,
3,931 are currently classified as well
capitalized, while 16 are less than well
capitalized based on capital ratios
reported in their Call Reports.31
30 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.
31 Information based on June 30, 2019
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income. The
16 institutions do not include any quantitatively
well capitalized institutions that may have been
administratively classified as less than well
capitalized. See generally, FDIC—12 CFR
324.403(b)(1)(v); Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System—12 CFR 208.43(b)(1)(v); Office of
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Expected Effects
There are potentially three broad
categories of effects of the proposed rule
on small, FDIC-insured institutions:
Effects applicable to potentially any
small, insured institution; effects
applicable to small, less than wellcapitalized institutions; and effects
applicable to nonbank subsidiaries of
small, FDIC-insured institutions that
may or may not be deemed deposit
brokers.
All Small, FDIC-Insured Institutions
The proposed rule could immediately
affect the 1,297 small, FDIC-insured
institutions currently reporting brokered
deposits. Going forward, the rule could
affect all 3,947 small, FDIC-insured
institutions whose decisions regarding
the types of deposits to accept could be
affected.
The proposed rule would benefit
insured institutions and other interested
parties by providing greater legal clarity
regarding the treatment of brokered
deposits. The FDIC believes that as
result of this increased clarity, the
proposed rule would reduce the extent
of reliance by banks and third parties on
FDIC Staff Advisory Opinions and
informal written and telephonic
inquiries with FDIC staff. This would
have two important benefits. First, the
likelihood of inconsistent outcomes,
where some institutions may report
certain types of deposits as brokered
and others do not, would be reduced.
Second, to the extent the classification
of deposits as brokered or non-brokered
can be clearly addressed in regulation,
the need for potentially time-consuming
analyses can be minimized.
The FDIC has heard from a number of
insured institutions that they perceive a
stigma associated with accepting
brokered deposits. Historical experience
has been that higher use of deposits
currently reported to the FDIC as
brokered has been associated with
higher probability of bank failure and
higher deposit insurance fund loss
rates.32 The funding characteristics of
brokered deposits, however, are nonuniform. For example, brokered CDs are
often used by bank customers searching
for relatively high yields on their
insured deposits, and as such these
deposits may be less stable and more
subject to deposit interest rate
competition. The behavior of deposits
placed through sweeps or that underlie
prepaid card programs may be more
based on a business relationship than on
the Comptroller of the Currency—12 CFR
6.4(c)(1)(v).
32 See FDIC’s 2011 Study on Core and Brokered
Deposits, July 8, 2011.
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interest rate competition. Given
limitations on available data, however,
historical studies have not been able to
differentiate the experience of banks
based on the different types of deposits
accepted. To the extent the proposed
rule reduces bankers’ perception of a
stigma associated with certain types of
deposits, more institutions may be
incentivized to accept such deposits.
The proposed rule could incentivize
the development of banking
relationships between small, FDICinsured institutions and other firms.
The new opportunities could spur
growth in the third party deposit
placement industry, potentially
resulting in greater access to, or use of,
bank deposits by a greater variety of
customers. Further, such growth could
be of benefit to small, FDIC-insured
institutions allowing them to compete
against large financial institutions that
are utilizing internet based deposit
gathering methods across the country. It
is difficult to accurately estimate such
potential effects with the information
currently available to the FDIC, because
such effects depend, in part, on the
future commercial development of such
activities.
FDIC deposit insurance assessments
would be affected by the proposed
changes to the definition of deposit
broker, potentially affecting any insured
institution that currently accepts
brokered deposits or might do so in the
future. Since 2009, significant
concentrations of brokered deposits can
increase an institution’s quarterly
assessments, depending on other
factors. To the extent that certain
deposits would no longer be considered
brokered deposits under this NPR, a
bank’s assessment may decrease, all else
equal. However, as noted above, in a
future rulemaking the FDIC plans to
consider modifications to its assessment
regulations in light of this rule.
Small, FDIC-insured institutions
could benefit from the rule by having
greater certainty and greater access to
funding sources that would no longer be
designated as brokered deposits, thereby
easing their liquidity planning and
reducing the likelihood that a liquidity
failure of an otherwise viable institution
might be precipitated by the brokered
deposit regulations. Another benefit of
the rule could result if greater access to
funding sources supported small FDICinsured institutions’ ability to provide
credit. However, these effects are
difficult to estimate because the
decision to receive third party deposits
depends on the specific financial
conditions of each bank, fluctuating
market conditions for third party
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deposits, and future management
decisions.
The proposed rule would establish
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for IDIs and other nonbank
third parties that apply for and maintain
a primary purpose exception under
§ 303.243.33 As noted previously,
however, the FDIC anticipates that
nonbank third parties are likely to apply
on their own behalf, given that the
information required to complete an
application will be in possession of the
nonbank third party (rather than the
bank). The FDIC views the potential
burden on small FDIC-insured
institutions under the proposed rule as
minimal.
Less Than Well-Capitalized Institutions
As discussed previously, the
acceptance of brokered deposits is
subject to statutory and regulatory
restrictions for those banks that are less
than well capitalized. Adequately
capitalized banks may not accept
brokered deposits without a waiver from
the FDIC, and banks that are less than
adequately capitalized may not accept
them at all. As a result, adequately
capitalized and undercapitalized banks
generally hold less brokered deposits—
as of June 30, 2019, brokered deposits
make up approximately 3 percent of
domestic deposits held by less than well
capitalized banks, well below the 9
percent held by all IDIs. By generally
reducing the scope of deposits that are
considered brokered, the proposed rule
would allow less than well capitalized
banks to increase their holdings of
deposits that are currently reported as
brokered but would not be reported as
brokered under the proposal. As of June
30, 2019, there are only 16 less than
well capitalized small, FDIC-insured
institutions based on Call report
information. These banks hold
approximately $2.2 billion in assets,
$2.0 billion in domestic deposits, and
$61 million in brokered deposits. These
banks could be directly affected by the
proposed rule in that they could
potentially accept more or different
types of deposits currently designated as
brokered.
More broadly speaking with respect to
future developments, another aspect of
brokered deposit restrictions is that,
consistent with their statutory purpose,
they act as a constraint on growth and
risk-taking by troubled institutions.
Conversely, as noted previously, access
to funding can prevent needless
liquidity failures of viable institutions.
33 IDIs can apply for an exception on behalf of a
third party, and third parties can apply directly for
an exception. See § 303.243(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
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7469
Nonbank Subsidiaries of Small, FDICinsured Institutions That May or May
Not Be Deposit Brokers
The proposed revisions to the
brokered deposit regulations could have
effects on some nonbank subsidiaries of
small, FDIC-insured institutions. For
example, wholly owned subsidiaries of
small, FDIC-insured institutions that
may currently meet the deposit broker
definition would no longer be a deposit
broker under the proposed rule if they
meet the parameters of the rule.
Additionally, some nonbank
subsidiaries of small, FDIC-insured
institutions could seek to determine
whether they meet the primary purpose
exception, as defined under the IDI
exception (as proposed). This may
include the filing of applications by
some parties that seek to avail
themselves of the primary purpose
exception. Ongoing activity by these
entities to ensure that they continue to
meet the relevant exceptions would also
be expected.
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.
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
Section 302 of the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (RCDRIA), 12
U.S.C. 4701, requires that each Federal
banking agency, in determining the
effective date and administrative
compliance requirements for new
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository
institutions, 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.34 In addition, new
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on insured depository
institutions generally must take effect
on the first day of a calendar quarter
that begins on or after the date on which
34 12
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the regulations are published in final
form.
The FDIC invites comments that
further will inform the FDIC’s
consideration of RCDRIA.
VII. Request for Comments
The FDIC invites comment from all
members of the public regarding all
aspects of the proposal. This request for
comment is limited to this proposal.
The FDIC will carefully consider all
comments that relate to the proposal.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 303
Administrative practice and
procedure; Bank deposit insurance;
Banks, banking; Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements; Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 337
Banks, banking; Reports and
recordkeeping requirements; Savings
associations; Securities.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the FDIC proposes to amend
parts 303 and 337 of chapter III of Title
12, Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 303—FILING PROCEDURES
1. The authority citation for part 303
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 378, 1464, 1813, 1815,
1817, 1818, 1819(a) (Seventh and Tenth),
1820, 1823, 1828, 1831a, 1831e, 1831o,
1831p–1, 1831w, 1835a, 1843(l), 3104, 3105,
3108, 3207, 5414, 5415 and 15 U.S.C. 1601–
1607.
■
2. Revise § 303.243 to read as follows:
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§ 303.243
Brokered deposits.
(a) Brokered deposit waivers—(1)
Scope. Pursuant to section 29 of the FDI
Act (12 U.S.C. 1831f) and part 337 of
this chapter, an adequately capitalized
insured depository institution may not
accept, renew or roll over any brokered
deposits unless it has obtained a waiver
from the FDIC. A well-capitalized
insured depository institution may
accept brokered deposits without a
waiver, and an undercapitalized insured
depository institution may not accept,
renew or roll over any brokered deposits
under any circumstances. This section
contains the procedures to be followed
to file with the FDIC for a brokered
deposit waiver. The FDIC will provide
notice to the depository institution’s
appropriate federal banking agency and
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any state regulatory agency, as
appropriate, that a request for a waiver
has been filed and will consult with
such agency or agencies, prior to taking
action on the institution’s request for a
waiver. Prior notice and/or consultation
shall not be required in any particular
case if the FDIC determines that the
circumstances require it to take action
without giving such notice and
opportunity for consultation.
(2) Where to file. Applicants shall
submit a letter application to the
appropriate FDIC office.
(3) Content of filing. The application
shall contain the following:
(i) The time period for which the
waiver is requested;
(ii) A statement of the policy
governing the use of brokered deposits
in the institution’s overall funding and
liquidity management program;
(iii) The volume, rates and maturities
of the brokered deposits held currently
and anticipated during the waiver
period sought, including any internal
limits placed on the terms, solicitation
and use of brokered deposits;
(iv) How brokered deposits are costed
and compared to other funding
alternatives and how they are used in
the institution’s lending and investment
activities, including a detailed
discussion of asset growth plans;
(v) Procedures and practices used to
solicit brokered deposits, including an
identification of the principal sources of
such deposits;
(vi) Management systems overseeing
the solicitation, acceptance and use of
brokered deposits;
(vii) A recent consolidated financial
statement with balance sheet and
income statements; and
(viii) The reasons the institution
believes its acceptance, renewal or
rollover of brokered deposits would
pose no undue risk.
(4) Additional information. The FDIC
may request additional information at
any time during processing of the
application.
(5) Expedited processing for eligible
depository institutions. An application
filed under this section by an eligible
depository institution as defined in this
paragraph will be acknowledged in
writing by the FDIC and will receive
expedited processing, unless the
applicant is notified in writing to the
contrary and provided with the basis for
that decision. For the purpose of this
section, an applicant will be deemed an
eligible depository institution if it
satisfies all of the criteria contained in
§ 303.2(r) except that the applicant may
be adequately capitalized rather than
well-capitalized. The FDIC may remove
an application from expedited
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processing for any of the reasons set
forth in § 303.11(c)(2). Absent such
removal, an application processed
under expedited procedures will be
deemed approved 21 days after the
FDIC’s receipt of a substantially
complete application.
(6) Standard processing. For those
filings which are not processed
pursuant to the expedited procedures,
the FDIC will provide the applicant
with written notification of the final
action as soon as the decision is
rendered.
(7) Conditions for approval. A waiver
issued pursuant to this section shall:
(i) Be for a fixed period, generally no
longer than two years, but may be
extended upon refiling; and
(ii) May be revoked by the FDIC at any
time by written notice to the institution.
(b) Application for primary purpose
exception—(1) Scope. Section 29 of the
FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1831f) provides that
an agent or nominee is excluded from
the definition of deposit broker if its
primary purpose is not the placement of
funds with depository institutions. This
paragraph (b) sets forth the application
procedures for insured depository
institutions and agents or nominees that
seek the FDIC’s determination that it, or
a nonbank agent or nominee on whose
behalf an insured depository institution
is submitting an application, is
excluded from the definition of deposit
broker pursuant to the primary purpose
exception.
(2) Definitions. For purposes of this
paragraph (b):
(i) Third party means an agent or
nominee that is applying to be excluded
from the definition of deposit broker
pursuant to the primary purpose
exception.
(ii) Applicant means a third party as
defined in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, or an insured depository
institution that is applying on behalf of
a third party for that third party to be
excluded from the definition of deposit
broker pursuant to the primary purpose
exception.
(iii) Appropriate FDIC office means
the office designated by the appropriate
regional director or designee.
(iv) Appropriate Regional Director
means the Director of the FDIC Region
in which the applicant is located.
(v) Brokered CD means a deposit
placement arrangement in which
certificates of deposit are issued in
wholesale amounts by a depository
institution, subdivided by a non-bank
entity or a depository institution, and
then sold by a nonbank entity or
depository institution to investors, or a
similar deposit placement arrangement
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that the FDIC determines is arranged for
a similar purpose.
(3) Filing procedures. (i) A third party
may submit a written application to the
appropriate FDIC office seeking a
primary purpose exception.
(ii) An insured depository institution
may submit a written application, on
behalf of a nonbank third party, to the
appropriate FDIC office of the insured
depository institution, seeking a
determination that the primary purpose
exception applies to the nonbank third
party.
(4) Content for filing. (i) Applications
that seek the primary purpose exception
for third parties based on the placement
of less than 25 percent of the total
amount of customer assets under
management by the third party, for a
particular business line, at depository
institutions shall contain the following
information:
(A) A description of the particular
business line;
(B) Total amount of customer assets
under management by the third party
for that particular business line;
(C) Total amount of deposits placed
by the third party on behalf of its
customers, for that particular business
line, at all depository institutions, but
exclusive of the amount of brokered CDs
being placed by that third party;
(D) A description of the deposit
placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(E) Any other information the
applicant deems relevant; and
(F) Any other information that the
FDIC requires to initiate its review and
render the application complete.
(ii) Applications that seek the primary
purpose exception for third parties
based on the placement of customer
funds, with respect to a particular
business line, at insured depository
institutions to enable its customers to
make transactions shall contain the
following information:
(A) Contracts with customers
evidencing the amount of interest, fees,
or other remuneration, accrued for all
customer accounts, and that all
customer deposits are in transaction
accounts;
(B) For third parties, or insured
depository institutions that pay interest,
fees, or provide other remuneration:
(1) The average volume of
transactions for all customer accounts;
and
(2) An explanation of how its
customers utilize its services for the
purpose of making payments and not for
the receipt of a deposit placement
service or deposit insurance;
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(C) A description of the deposit
placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(D) Any other information the
applicant deems relevant; and
(E) Any other information that the
FDIC requires to initiate its review and
render the application complete.
(iii) Applications that seek the
primary purpose exception for third
parties, other than applications under
paragraphs (b)(4)(i) and (ii) of this
section, with respect to a particular
business line, must include, to the
extent applicable:
(A) A description of the deposit
placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(B) A description of the particular
business line;
(C) A description of the primary
purpose of the particular business line;
(D) The total amount of customer
assets under management by the third
party;
(E) The total amount of deposits
placed by the third party at all insured
depository institutions, including the
amounts placed with the applicant, if
the applicant is an insured depository
institution. This includes the total
amount of term deposits and
transactional deposits placed by the
third party, but should be exclusive of
the amount of brokered CDs being
placed by that third party;
(F) Revenue generated from the third
party’s activities related to the
placement, or facilitating the placement,
of deposits;
(G) Revenue generated from the third
party’s activities not related to the
placement, or facilitating the placement,
of deposits;
(H) A description of the marketing
activities provided by the third party;
(I) The reasons the third party meets
the primary purpose exception;
(J) Any other information the
applicant deems relevant; and
(K) Any other information that the
FDIC requires to initiate its review and
render the application complete.
(5) Brokered CD placements not
eligible for primary purpose exception.
An agent or nominees’ placement of
brokered certificates of deposit as
described in 12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)(1)(A)
shall be considered a discrete and
independent business line from other
deposit placement businesses in which
the agent or nominee may be engaged.
(6) Additional information. The FDIC
may request additional information
from the applicant at any time during
processing of the application.
(7) Timing. (i) An applicant that
submits a complete application seeking
the primary purpose exception will
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7471
receive a written determination by the
FDIC within 120 days of receipt of a
complete application.
(ii) The FDIC may extend the 120-day
timeframe, if necessary, to complete its
review of a complete application, with
proper notice to the applicant.
(8) Approvals. The FDIC will approve
an application –
(i) Submitted under paragraph (b)(4)(i)
of this section, if the total amount of
customer funds placed at insured
depository institutions by the third
party is less than 25 percent of total
customer assets under management by
the third party, for purposes of a
particular business line.
(ii) Submitted under paragraph
(b)(4)(ii), if no interest, fees, or other
remuneration, is being provided or paid
on any customer accounts by the third
party.
(iii) Submitted under paragraph
(b)(4)(ii) in which interest, fees, or other
remuneration is being provided or paid
on any customer accounts by the third
party, if the applicant demonstrates that
the primary purpose of the particular
business line under which customer
accounts are offered is to enable its
customers to make transactions.
(iv) Submitted under paragraph
(b)(4)(iii), if the applicant demonstrates
that, with respect to the particular
business line under which the third
party places or facilitates the placement
of deposits, the primary purpose of the
third party, for the particular business
line, is a purpose other than the
placement or facilitation of placement of
deposits.
(9) Ongoing reporting—(i) General.
The FDIC will describe any reporting
requirements as part of its written
approval for a primary purpose
exception.
(ii) Reporting. Third parties, or
insured depository institutions that
apply on behalf of the third party, that
receive a written approval for the
primary purpose exception, shall
provide reporting to the appropriate
FDIC office and, in the case of an
insured depository institution, to its
primary federal regulator.
(10) Modification and withdrawal of a
previously granted approval. At any
time after approval of an application for
the primary purpose exception, the
FDIC may, with written notice and
adequate justification:
(i) Require additional information
from an applicant for which the FDIC
has approved the primary purpose
exception to ensure that the approval is
still appropriate, or for purposes of
verifying the accuracy and correctness
of the information provided to an
insured depository institution or
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submitted to the FDIC as part of the
application under this section;
(ii) Require the applicant for which
the FDIC has approved the primary
purpose exception to reapply for
approval;
(iii) Impose additional conditions on
an approval; or
(iv) Withdraw an approval.
PART 337—UNSAFE AND UNSOUND
BANKING PRACTICES
3. The authority for part 337
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 375a(4), 375b,
1463(a)(1),1816, 1818(a), 1818(b), 1819,
1820(d), 1828(j)(2), 1831, 1831f, 5412.
4. Amend § 337.6 as follows:
a. Revise paragraph (a)(5)(i);
b. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(5)(ii)
and (iii) as paragrapahs (a)(5)(iii) and
(iv), respectively;
■ c. Add a new paragraph (a)(5)(ii);
■ d. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (a)(5)(iii)(A) and (I);
The revision and addition read as
follows:
■
■
■
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§ 337.6
Brokered deposits.
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) The term deposit broker means:
(A) Any person engaged in the
business of placing deposits of third
parties with insured depository
institutions;
(B) Any person engaged in the
business of facilitating the placement of
deposits of third parties with insured
depository institutions;
(C) Any person engaged in the
business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the
purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties; and
(D) An agent or trustee who
establishes a deposit account to
facilitate a business arrangement with
an insured depository institution to use
the proceeds of the account to fund a
prearranged loan.
(ii) Engaged in the business of
facilitating the placement of deposits. A
person is engaged in the business of
facilitating the placement of deposits of
third parties with insured depository
institutions, by, while engaged in
business, engaging in one or more of the
following activities:
(A) The person directly or indirectly
shares any third party information with
the insured depository institution;
(B) The person has legal authority,
contractual or otherwise, to close the
account or move the third party’s funds
to another insured depository
institution;
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(C) The person provides assistance or
is involved in setting rates, fees, terms,
or conditions for the deposit account; or
(D) the person is acting, directly or
indirectly, with respect to the placement
of deposits, as an intermediary between
a third party that is placing deposits on
behalf of a depositor and an insured
depository institution, other than in a
purely administrative capacity.
(iii) * * *
(A) An insured depository institution,
with respect to funds placed with that
depository institution;
(1) A wholly owned operating
subsidiary is considered a part of its
parent insured depository institution,
for purposes of this section, if it meets
the following criteria:
(i) The parent insured depository
institution owns 100 percent of the
subsidiary’s outstanding stock;
(ii) The wholly owned subsidiary
places deposits of retail customers
exclusively with its parent insured
depository institution; and
(iii) The wholly owned subsidiary
engages only in activities permissible
for the parent insured depository
institution.
*
*
*
*
*
(I) An agent or nominee whose
primary purpose is not the placement of
funds with depository institutions if and
to the extent, the FDIC determines that
the agent or nominee meets this
exception under the application process
in 12 CFR 303.243(b); or
*
*
*
*
*
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. 2019–28275 Filed 2–7–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
[Docket No. FAA–2020–0110; Airspace
Docket No. 20–AGL–5]
RIN 2120–AA66
Proposed Establishment of Class E
Airspace; Killdeer and New Town, ND
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
This action proposes to
establish Class E airspace extending
SUMMARY:
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upward from 700 feet above the surface
at Dunn County Weydahl Field,
Killdeer, ND, and New Town Municipal
Airport, New Town, ND. The FAA is
proposing this action due to the
establishment of new public instrument
procedures at these airports. Airspace
design is necessary for the safety and
management of instrument flight rules
(IFR) operations at these airports.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before March 26, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Send comments on this
proposal to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations,
West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590; telephone (202)
366–9826, or (800) 647–5527. You must
identify FAA Docket No. FAA–2020–
0110/Airspace Docket No. 20–AGL–5, at
the beginning of your comments. You
may also submit comments through the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov.
You may review the public docket
containing the proposal, any comments
received, and any final disposition in
person in the Dockets Office between
9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except federal holidays.
FAA Order 7400.11D, Airspace
Designations and Reporting Points, and
subsequent amendments can be viewed
online at https://www.faa.gov/air_
traffic/publications/. For further
information, you can contact the
Airspace Policy Group, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20591;
telephone: (202) 267–8783. The Order is
also available for inspection at the
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of FAA
Order 7400.11D at NARA, email
fedreg.legal@nara.gov or go to https://
www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/
ibr-locations.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeffrey Claypool, Federal Aviation
Administration, Operations Support
Group, Central Service Center, 10101
Hillwood Parkway, Fort Worth, TX
76177; telephone (817) 222–5711.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for This Rulemaking
The FAA’s authority to issue rules
regarding aviation safety is found in
Title 49 of the United States Code.
Subtitle I, Section 106 describes the
authority of the FAA Administrator.
Subtitle VII, Aviation Programs,
describes in more detail the scope of the
agency’s authority. This rulemaking is
promulgated under the authority
described in Subtitle VII, Part A,
Subpart I, Section 40103. Under that
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[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 27 (Monday, February 10, 2020)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 7453-7472]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-28275]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 27 / Monday, February 10, 2020 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 7453]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 303 and 337
RIN 3064-AE94
Unsafe and Unsound Banking Practices: Brokered Deposits
Restrictions
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FDIC is inviting comment on proposed revisions to its
regulations relating to the brokered deposits restrictions that apply
to less than well capitalized insured depository institutions. The
proposed rule would create a new framework for analyzing certain
provisions of the ``deposit broker'' definition, including
``facilitating'' and ``primary purpose.'' The proposed rule would also
establish an application and reporting process with respect to the
primary purpose exception. The application process would be available
to insured depository institutions and third parties that wish to
utilize the exception.
DATES: Comments must be received by the FDIC no later than April 10,
2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on the notice of proposed rulemaking
using any of the following methods:
Agency website: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments on the agency
website.
Email: [email protected]. Include RIN 3064-AE94 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.
Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street NW Building (located on F
Street) on business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments received, including any
personal information provided, will be posted generally without change
to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Division of Risk Management
Supervision: Rae-Ann Miller, Associate Director, (202) 898-3898,
[email protected]. Legal Division: Vivek V. Khare, Counsel, (202) 898-
6847, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Policy Objectives
On December 18, 2018, the FDIC Board adopted an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPR) to obtain input from the public on its
brokered deposit and interest rate regulations in light of significant
changes in technology, business models, the economic environment, and
products since the regulations were adopted.\1\ After reviewing
comments received, the FDIC is proposing changes to its regulations
relating to brokered deposits.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The ANPR was published for comment in the Federal Register
on February 6, 2019. See 84 FR 2366 (February 6, 2019).
\2\ On August 20, 2019, the FDIC proposed revisions to its
regulations relating to the interest rate restrictions. See 84 FR
46470 (September 4, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Through these proposed changes, the FDIC intends to modernize its
brokered deposit regulations to reflect recent technological changes
and innovations that have occurred. The FDIC recognizes that the
definition of ``deposit broker,'' and its corresponding staff
interpretations, may not be as relevant compared to the deposit
placement arrangements that exist in the market today. Notably, in
recent times, banks collaborate with third parties, including financial
technology companies, for a variety of business purposes including
access to deposits. Moreover, banks are increasingly relying on new
technologies to engage and interact with their customers, and it
appears that this trend will continue given rapid technological
evolution. Through these proposed changes, the FDIC's brokered deposit
regulations will continue to promote safe and sound practices while
ensuring that the classification of a deposit as brokered appropriately
reflects changes in the banking landscape since 1989, when the law on
brokered deposits was first enacted.
II. Background
Section 29 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act) restricts
the acceptance of deposits by insured depository institutions from a
``deposit broker.'' \3\ Well capitalized insured depository
institutions are not restricted from accepting deposits from a deposit
broker. An ``adequately capitalized'' insured depository institution
may accept deposits from a deposit broker only if it has received a
waiver from the FDIC.\4\ A waiver may be granted by the FDIC ``upon a
finding that the acceptance of such deposits does not constitute an
unsafe or unsound practice'' with respect to that institution.\5\ An
``undercapitalized'' depository institution is prohibited from
accepting deposits from a deposit broker.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The statute also restricts a less than well capitalized
institution generally from offering interest rates that
significantly exceed the market rates offered in an institutions
normal market area.
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831f.
\5\ See id.
\6\ See id.
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A. Current Law and Regulations
Section 29 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act), titled
``Brokered Deposits,'' was originally added to the FDI Act by the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989
(FIRREA). The law originally restricted troubled institutions (i.e.,
those that did not meet the minimum capital requirements) from (1)
accepting deposits from a deposit broker without a waiver and (2)
soliciting deposits by offering rates of interest on deposits that were
significantly higher than the prevailing rates of interest on deposits
offered by other insured depository institutions (``IDIs'') having the
same type of charter in such depository institution's normal market
area.\7\
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\7\ See Public Law 101-73, August 9, 1989, 103 Stat. 183.
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Two years later, Congress enacted the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA), which added the Prompt
Corrective Action (PCA) capital regime to the FDI Act and also amended
the threshold for the brokered deposit and interest rate restrictions
from a troubled institution to a bank falling below the ``well
capitalized'' PCA level. At the same time, the FDIC was authorized to
waive
[[Page 7454]]
the brokered deposit restrictions for a bank that is adequately
capitalized upon a finding that the acceptance of such deposits does
not constitute an unsafe or unsound practice with respect to the
institution.\8\ FDICIA did not authorize the FDIC to waive the brokered
deposit restrictions for less than adequately capitalized institutions.
Most recently, earlier this year, Section 29 of the FDI Act was amended
as part of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act, to except a capped amount of certain reciprocal
deposits from treatment as brokered deposits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See Public Law 102-242, December 19, 1991, 105 Stat 2236.
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Section 337.6 of the FDIC's Rules and Regulations implements and
closely tracks the statutory text of Section 29, particularly with
respect to the definition of ``deposit broker'' and its exceptions.\9\
Section 29 of the FDI Act does not directly define a ``brokered
deposit,'' rather, it defines a ``deposit broker'' for purposes of the
restrictions.\10\ Thus, the meaning of the term ``brokered deposit''
turns upon the definition of ``deposit broker.''
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\9\ See 12 CFR 337.6. The FDIC issued two rulemakings related to
the interest rate restrictions under this section. A discussion of
those rulemakings, and the interest rate restrictions, is provided
in Section (II)(B) of this Notice.
\10\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831f.
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Section 29 and the FDIC's implementing regulation define the term
``deposit broker'' to include:
[cir] Any person engaged in the business of placing deposits, or
facilitating the placement of deposits, of third parties with insured
depository institutions or the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the purpose of selling interests in
those deposits to third parties; and
[cir] An agent or trustee who establishes a deposit account to
facilitate a business arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the account to fund a prearranged
loan.
This definition is subject to the following nine statutory
exceptions:
1. An insured depository institution, with respect to funds placed
with that depository institution;
2. An employee of an insured depository institution, with respect
to funds placed with the employing depository institution;
3. A trust department of an insured depository institution, if the
trust in question has not been established for the primary purpose of
placing funds with insured depository institutions;
4. The trustee of a pension or other employee benefit plan, with
respect to funds of the plan;
5. A person acting as a plan administrator or an investment adviser
in connection with a pension plan or other employee benefit plan
provided that that person is performing managerial functions with
respect to the plan;
6. The trustee of a testamentary account;
7. The trustee of an irrevocable trust (other than one described in
paragraph (1)(B)), as long as the trust in question has not been
established for the primary purpose of placing funds with insured
depository institutions;
8. A trustee or custodian of a pension or profit sharing plan
qualified under section 401(d) or 430(a) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986; or
9. An agent or nominee whose primary purpose is not the placement
of funds with depository institutions.
The statute and regulation also define an ``employee'' to mean any
employee: (1) Who is employed exclusively by the insured depository
institution; (2) whose compensation is primarily in the form of a
salary; (3) who does not share such employee's compensation with a
deposit broker; and (4) whose office space or place of business is used
exclusively for the benefit of the insured depository institution which
employs such individual.
As listed above, the statute includes nine exceptions to the
definition of ``deposit broker.'' In 1992, the FDIC amended its
regulations to include the following tenth exception: ``An insured
depository institution acting as an intermediary or agent of a U.S.
government department or agency for a government sponsored minority or
women-owned depository institution program.'' The FDIC indicated in the
preamble for the 1992 final rule that implemented the FDICIA revisions
to Section 29 that those revisions were not intended to apply to
deposits placed by insured depository institutions assisting government
departments and agencies in administration of minority or women-owned
deposit programs.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See 57 FR 23933, 23040 (1992).
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B. Issues Raised by Commenters
In response to the ANPR on brokered deposits and the interest rate
restrictions applicable to less than well capitalized banks, the FDIC
received over 130 comments from individuals, banking organizations,
non-profits, as well as industry and trade groups, representing banks,
insurance companies, and the broader financial services industry. Of
the total comments, over 100 comments related to brokered deposits.
Generally, a common theme amongst the commenters was a desire for
the FDIC to clarify its historical interpretation of the ``deposit
broker'' definition and its corresponding statutory and regulatory
exceptions.
Stable Funding. Seven commenters advanced their general point to be
that brokered deposits are not inherently risky and that many types of
deposits currently considered to be brokered are just as stable as core
deposits and should be treated as such for supervisory purposes and
assessments. A number of other commenters specifically noted that
certain types of deposits (e.g., health savings accounts (HSAs),
deposits underlying prepaid cards, and ``relationship'' deposits) are
stable sources of funding (these comments are discussed in more detail
under separate headings). Several commenters suggested that the more
relevant issue with respect to potential bank failures is not the
source of funding but rather the oversight of asset growth,
specifically the increase in risky loans. Similarly, one consulting
firm suggested that the FDIC focus its supervisory concerns on bank
asset growth rates, especially rapid growth in risky loan categories,
and that the FDIC should view brokered deposits as an important, stable
funding source that complements retail deposit-gathering. One bank
commenter stated that in the bank's experience, brokered deposits have
been a stable, relatively low-cost, convenient, non-volatile source of
funds for the past ten years. Another bank noted that brokered deposits
have been a safe, stable and useful funding source for the bank and
that any additional restrictions on the use of brokered deposits would
cause significant additional costs and risks to the bank.
Two commenters specifically discussed the use of brokered deposits
by rural community banks. One urged the FDIC to revisit its views on
brokered deposits because many rural institutions rely upon third-party
funding to help provide loans to local agriculture and manufacturing
businesses (that are capital-intensive) to support their operations.
According to commenters, brokered deposits are more important now that
many rural communities are seeing a decrease in the amount of deposits
being placed by its local community. The other commenter stated that
brokered deposits are a good source of supplemental funding for banks
in rural areas or markets which lack ample local deposits to meet the
legitimate credit needs of the community.
Definition and Scope of ``Brokered Deposit.'' While many commenters
[[Page 7455]]
focused on specific types of products that they believe should not meet
the regulatory definition of ``brokered deposit,'' 11 commenters
generally stated that the definition of brokered deposit should be
revised. These commenters indicated that the definition is unclear and
has been interpreted too broadly, capturing many products or
transactions that were not intended to be covered. One bank stated that
the current regulations lack definitional clarity and that FDIC staff
interpretations unnecessarily capture any third party that is involved
in the administering or marketing of an account.
Several of these commenters noted that technology has brought
significant changes to the marketplace, including online advertising
and deposit marketing through third parties. In particular, one banker
stated that more institutions are being forced to rely upon funding
channels that involve third parties due to the evolution of online
banking activities and that this often triggers the definition of
brokered deposit. Another commenter suggested that the definition be
limited to those deposits that inherently pose risks to banks.
One commenter stated that the FDIC's current interpretation of what
constitutes a ``deposit broker'' seemingly hinges on the involvement of
any third party (including affiliates or subsidiaries of the bank) in
sourcing the customer relationship or servicing the customer. By taking
such a view, the commenter argued, the FDIC has significantly expanded
the types of entities considered to be deposit brokers beyond what was
originally contemplated when Section 29 was enacted. This commenter
stated that as a result, entities such as retailers, employers,
technology platforms, advertising and marketing partners, and Fintech
partners may currently be classified as deposit brokers, even though
their activities may only be incidentally linked to a deposit account.
The commenter requested that the FDIC limit its determination of what
constitutes a ``deposit broker'' to what they believe was a narrow
scope contemplated by Section 29.
While the majority of the comments sought to constrict the
definition of ``brokered deposits,'' one organization argued against
any such a reduction in scope. The commenter stated that brokered
deposits contributed to the savings and loan crisis of the 1980's that
cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. The commenter also
noted that brokered deposits have already received permissive
regulatory treatment and that more than 99% of banks are considered
``well-capitalized'' and therefore can accept brokered deposits without
any statutory or regulatory restriction.
Primary Purpose Exception. A number of commenters discussed the
``primary purpose exception'' to the deposit broker definition in
various contexts. Many of those commenters focused on specific deposit
placement arrangements relating to health savings accounts (HSAs),
prepaid cards, and affiliated broker-dealers. These comments are
discussed more specifically under those headings. In addition to these
specific deposit placement arrangements, a number of comments focused
more generally on how the primary purpose exception should be
interpreted. One bank commented that third parties that are involved in
placing deposits but do so to achieve some other purpose outside of
providing a deposit account, where the deposits do not have the risks
associated with traditional brokered deposits, should meet the primary
purpose exception. Another commenter proposed amending the primary
purpose exception and making it available to entities that place
deposits but also offer consumers an array of financial services. The
commenter argued that the correct way to determine such person's
``primary purpose'' is to review the entire range of services offered
by the person to its customers and to exclude deposits that are
facilitated or placed by persons for whom deposit brokerage revenue and
income is less than 50 percent of their total consolidated revenue and
income.
Alternatively, one commenter argued that one key test for whether a
person meets the primary purpose exception should be if the person
facilitating placement of a deposit is paid a fee by the bank, which
the commenter stated is a prominent feature of a ``classic'' deposit
broker. The commenter also stated that in contrast, a securities broker
or mutual fund administrator is paid a fee by the owner of the funds.
According to the commenter, that is the key distinction that should be
used to define a brokered deposit is whether the broker drives the
selection of bank or whether the depositor drives the selection.
A consulting firm asked the FDIC to take a ``principles-based''
approach toward the brokered deposit regulation and primary purpose
exception that places the burden on the banks and their ability to
explain, document and defend their operating and contingency management
policies and practices.
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). Nine separate commenters mentioned
HSAs, in general arguing that third party administrators (or HSA
custodians) that assist in placing HSA deposits at insured depository
institutions meet one of two statutory exceptions to the deposit broker
definitions. Specifically, commenters believe that the third party
administrators fit within the statutory exception for plan
administrators for employee benefit plans, or that these third party
administrators should meet the ``primary purpose exemption.''
Commenters who argued that third party administrators fit within
the primary purpose exception noted that HSAs are opened primarily for
the purpose of facilitating savings in an effort to assist employees to
meet deductibles and pay qualified medical expenses. One commenter
noted that the primary purpose exception applies to HSAs because the
funds are placed with banks incidental to providing a tax advantaged
program for healthcare expenditures. Similarly, one commenter stated
simply that placing HSA funds in banks is only incidental to the
primary purpose of the non-bank administrators.
Others pointed out that HSAs placed at insured depository
institutions by third parties do not represent ``hot money'' but rather
are a stable source of funding. Third party administrators also do not
have the same authority to control the HSAs in a manner comparable to
the control of traditional deposit brokers. One trade association made
a public policy argument in favor of HSAs not being considered brokered
deposits, stating that HSAs are a desirable option for both employers
and employees to offset high employee healthcare costs. Another
commenter also articulated a public policy reason for HSAs not being
brokered deposits, noting that HSAs benefit consumers through increased
competition, innovation and reduced costs.
Prepaid Cards. Eight commenters discussed prepaid cards, generally
stating that prepaid card companies are not deposit brokers because
they are not engaged in the business of placing deposits, but rather
are involved in a much larger economic activity of offering prepaid
payments on products to replace inefficient and costlier, traditional
payments. One commenter noted that program managers of prepaid card
products meet the primary purpose exception because prepaid card
managers place deposits to enable cardholders to make purchases
throughout the interbank payment system and that prepaid cards are a
source of stable funding. One trade association argued that funds
underlying prepaid cards are not ``hot
[[Page 7456]]
money'' because they are typically held in pooled custodial accounts
and the IDI is generally required to receive written approval of its
primary federal regulator before assuming a large transfer of pooled
funds. A few commenters noted that funds underlying prepaid cards
should not be considered brokered deposits because they are low
balance, stable, and relatively low-cost compared to other deposits. A
large payments company similarly argued that funds underlying prepaid
cards are not ``hot money'' and often have stable rates. The commenter
further stated that prepaid card program managers provide consumers
with a payment mechanism that substitutes for cash or a money order.
Additionally, a commenter suggested that prepaid program structures
that get paid based upon administrative services should qualify for the
primary purpose exception, similar to the exception provided for
government benefit programs.
Broker-Dealer Sweeps. Currently, certain affiliated broker dealer
sweeps are not considered to be brokered deposits. Two commenters
stated that unaffiliated broker-dealer sweeps should also not be
considered brokered, with one commenter suggesting that unaffiliated
broker dealers meet the primary purpose exception.
Several commenters suggested that the regulations should explicitly
provide that affiliated broker dealers meet the primary purpose
exception. Moreover, some commenters suggested that the FDIC reconsider
the criteria that it has considered as part of its existing
interpretation in Advisory Opinion 05-02.\12\ A consulting company
suggested that the FDIC incorporate that staff opinion into the
regulatory exceptions, and that the FDIC also codify, through
rulemaking, that a separately incorporated trust company affiliate of a
bank that acts as a bona fide trust custodian in placing deposits at an
IDI, meets the primary purpose exception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ FDIC Staff Advisory Opinion 05-02 (February 3, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Affiliate Transactions. Sixteen commenters suggested that deposit
referrals made by affiliated entities should not be considered brokered
deposits, and that affiliates making such referrals should not be
considered deposit brokers. One bank argued that affiliate referrals
serve to strengthen and deepen the customer relationship. The bank also
urged the FDIC to clarify, by regulation, that an affiliate of a
depository institution does not constitute a deposit broker. A trade
association representing the banking industry suggested that employees
of bank affiliates and subsidiaries should not be considered deposit
brokers. One bank similarly argued that deposits sourced from
affiliates generally are similar to traditional core deposits because
they are funds of customers with long-term relationships with the firm.
One commenter suggested that affiliates that refer customers to a bank
should not be treated as deposit brokers as long as the customer
establishes a direct account relationship with the bank, the affiliate
institution does not have the legal authority to move customers' funds
to another depository institution, and the bank retains complete
control over setting rates, fees, terms, and conditions for the account
as well as full discretion over the opening or closing of the account.
A trade association representing community banks stated that dual
and affiliated employees who provide a suite of nonbanking and deposit
products and services to customers, and are not paid commissions or
fees based upon the volume of deposits placed, should not meet the
deposit broker definition. Another banking trade association suggested
that information sharing with affiliates should not be determinative
factor for the FDIC in considering whether a deposit is brokered. A
state banker's association stated that they found little evidence that
so-called ``relationship deposits'' gathered through the normal course
of providing banking services through affiliates or marketing
partnerships pose an enhanced risk to safety and soundness or the
deposit insurance fund. Two congressional commenters stated that there
are characteristics of an affiliated broker-dealer's relationship with
an insured depository institution that should result in deposits opened
by them as being viewed as nonbrokered.
Two commenters argued that deposits placed into a parent bank by
its wholly-owned operating subsidiary should not be brokered deposits.
According to the commenter, this is because wholly-owned operating
subsidiaries are treated as part of the bank under certain federal
banking laws.
Insurance Agents. A bank suggested that the FDIC change its
position regarding deposits marketed through non-employee, exclusive
agents of, an insurance company engaged primarily in the sale of
insurance if the bank is an affiliate of the insurance company and the
agents market exclusively to such insurer's bank affiliate.
Government Accounts. One commenter stated that large government
investment pools that place deposits on behalf of municipalities and
other governmental entities should not be classified as ``deposit
brokers'' because they invest their portfolio assets as principal
fiduciary and not as agent. Therefore, such pools do not act for the
``primary purpose'' of investing fund assets in deposit accounts.
Listing Services. One commenter stated that brokered deposits
expressly exclude deposits derived from listing services and that the
``deposit broker'' definition excludes listing services. The commenter
suggested that the use of deposit listing services benefits the Deposit
Insurance Fund by allowing bank customers to source multiple depository
relationships, thereby minimizing losses to either the DIF or to the
customer if deposits were placed at a single institution. Another
commenter urged the FDIC to preserve its longstanding position
regarding online listing services and stated that the position should
remain even if a fee is paid for preferential placement on the listing
service website.
Custodial Deposits. A management company stated that FDIC's
regulations should clarify that so-called ``custodial deposits'' are
nonbrokered deposits because custodial deposits level the playing field
between community banks and larger money center banks by allowing a
custodian bank to break down large corporate, municipal, and not-for-
profit institutional deposits and distribute them to smaller banks.
Deposit Insurance Assessments. Three commenters suggested that the
FDIC revise its deposit insurance assessment regulations with respect
to valuation of brokered deposits. While this matter is outside the
scope of this rulemaking process, the FDIC acknowledges the comments
and will consider them, as appropriate, in any future assessment
rulemaking.
III. Discussion of Proposed Rule
A. Deposit Broker Definition
A person meets the ``deposit broker'' definition under Section 29
of the FDI Act if it is engaged in the business of placing deposits, or
facilitating the placement of deposits, of third parties with insured
depository institutions or the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the purpose of selling interests in
those deposits to third parties. An agent or trustee meets the
``deposit broker'' definition when establishing a deposit account to
facilitate a business arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the account to fund a prearranged
loan. As discussed below, the FDIC is proposing to define certain
prongs of the deposit broker definition.
[[Page 7457]]
1. Engaged in the Business of Placing Deposits
The statute provides that a person meets the definition of
``deposit broker'' if it is ``engaged in the business of placing
deposits'' on behalf of a third party (i.e., a depositor) at insured
depository institutions. The FDIC would view a person to be engaged in
the business of placing deposits if that person has a business
relationship with its customers, and as part of that relationship,
places deposits on behalf of the customer (e.g., acting as custodian or
agent for the underlying depositor).
As such, any person that places deposits at insured depository
institutions on behalf of a depositor, as part of its business
relationship with that depositor, fits within the meaning of the
``deposit broker'' definition.
Question 1: Is the FDIC's proposed definition of ``engaged in the
business of placing deposits'' appropriate?
2. Engaged in the Business of Facilitating the Placement of Deposits
a. Background and Comments Received
Section 29 of the FDI Act also provides that a person is a deposit
broker when it is ``facilitating'' the placement of deposits of third
parties with insured depository institutions. In contrast to the first
prong of the definition, the ``facilitation'' prong of the deposit
broker definition refers to activities where the person does not
directly place deposits on behalf of its customers with an insured
depository institution. Historically, the term ``facilitating the
placement of deposits'' has been interpreted by staff at the FDIC to
include actions taken by third parties to connect insured depository
institutions with potential depositors.
Commenters argue that, under the current FDIC staff
interpretations, the term ``facilitating'' has been broadly interpreted
to include any actions taken by third parties to connect insured
depository institutions with potential depositors. Commenters also
contend that determining whether a third party is ``facilitating the
placement of deposits'' is not always clear because the FDIC's staff
interpretative letters do not always apply perfectly to new
arrangements relating--for example--to whether deposits placed in new
ways stemming from technological or marketplace changes would be
considered brokered deposits.
Since enactment of Section 29, there have been significant
technological advances in the way banks seek and source deposits, well
beyond what was contemplated at that time and by staff at the FDIC in
the following years. As a result, some of the historical factors that
have been considered may not be relevant as compared to current deposit
placement arrangements in the market.
Today, banks are increasingly relying on new technologies to engage
and interact with their customers and, it appears that this trend will
continue given rapid technological evolution. Specifically, the
proliferation of various online marketing and advertising channels have
provided new opportunities for insured depository institutions to
attract depositors from different parts of the country. In an effort to
ensure that the term brokered deposit appropriately reflects the
banking landscape, and to ensure that the FDIC's regulations promote
safe and sound practices, the FDIC is proposing to refine the
activities that result in a person being ``engaged in the business of
facilitating the placement'' of third party deposits at an insured
depository institution.
b. Proposed Definition of Engaged in the Business of Facilitating the
Placement of Deposits
Under the proposal, the FDIC proposes that a person would meet the
``facilitation'' prong of the ``deposit broker'' definition by, while
engaged in business, engaging in any one, or more than one, of the
following activities:
[cir] The person directly or indirectly shares any third party
information with the insured depository institution;
[cir] The person has legal authority, contractual or otherwise, to
close the account or move the third party's funds to another insured
depository institution;
[cir] The person provides assistance or is involved in setting
rates, fees, terms, or conditions for the deposit account; or,
[cir] The person is acting, directly or indirectly, with respect to
the placement of deposits, as an intermediary between a third party
that is placing deposits on behalf of a depositor and an insured
depository institution, other than in a purely administrative capacity.
By engaging in one or more than one of the above listed activities,
while engaged in business, the person would be engaged in the business
of facilitating the placement of customer deposits at an insured
depository and therefore meet the ``deposit broker'' definition. For
example, if a person assists in setting rates, fees, or terms, then
that person would be considered a deposit broker despite the fact that
the person may not share third party information with the insured
depository institution.
The proposed ``facilitation'' definition is intended to capture
activities that indicate that the person takes an active role in the
opening of an account or maintains a level of influence or control over
the deposit account even after the account is open. It is the FDIC's
view that a level of control or influence indicates that the deposit
relationship is between the depositor and the person rather than the
depositor and the insured depository institution. Having a level of
control or influence over the depositor allows the person to influence
the movement of funds between institutions and makes the deposits less
stable than deposits brought to the insured depository institution
through a single point of contact where that contact does not have
influence over the movement of deposits between insured depository
institutions. Ultimately, the FDIC believes that if the person is not
engaged in any of the activities above, then the needs of the depositor
are the primary drivers of the selection of a bank, and therefore the
person is not facilitating the placement of deposits.
The proposal would also define any person that acts as an
intermediary between another person that is placing deposits on behalf
of a depositor and an insured depository institution, other than in a
purely administrative capacity, as facilitating the placement of
deposits. In other words, any assistance provided by such
intermediaries, outside of providing purely administrative functions,
would result in the intermediary meeting the ``deposit broker''
definition and any deposits placed through the assistance of such
intermediaries would be brokered deposits. For example, if an agent or
nominee that meets the primary purpose exception uses an intermediary
(in a manner that is not purely administrative) in placing, or
facilitating the placement of, deposits, then the intermediary would be
a deposit broker, and the resulting deposits would be brokered.
Administrative functions would include, for example, any reporting or
bookkeeping assistance provided to the person placing its customers'
deposits with insured depository institutions. Administrative functions
would not include, for example, assisting in decision-making or
steering persons (including the underlying depositors) to particular
insured depository institutions. The FDIC believes such an
interpretation is warranted, in part, because deposits placed through
the assistance of such intermediaries are more likely to raise concerns
traditionally associated with brokered deposits. For example, it is
possible that such entities are able to directly or indirectly control
or
[[Page 7458]]
influence the movement of funds between insured depository institutions
without any involvement or input from the underlying depositor.
This proposal would provide industry participants with clarity over
whether the actions of a person, in assisting with the placement of
deposits, meet the ``facilitation'' part of the ``deposit broker''
definition.
Question 2: Is the FDIC's proposed definition of ``engaged in the
business of facilitating the placement of deposits'' appropriate?
Question 3: Is the FDIC's list of activities that would determine
whether a person meets the ``facilitation'' prong of the ``deposit
broker'' definition appropriate?
Question 4: Has the FDIC provided sufficient clarity surrounding
whether a third party intermediary would meet the ``facilitation''
prong of the ``deposit broker'' definition?
Question 5: Should the FDIC provide more clarity regarding whether
any specific types of deposit placement arrangements would or would not
meet the ``facilitation'' prong of the ``deposit broker'' definition?
If so, please describe any such deposit placement arrangements.
3. Selling Interests in Deposits to Third Parties
The third prong of the ``deposit broker'' definition includes a
person ``engaged in the business of placing deposits with insured
depository institutions for the purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties.'' This part of the definition specifically
captures the brokered certificates of deposit (CD) market (referred to
herein as ``brokered CDs''). These are typically deposit placement
arrangements where brokered CDs are issued in wholesale amounts by a
bank seeking to place funds under certain terms and sold through a
registered broker-dealer to investors, typically in fully-insured
amounts. The brokers subdivide the bank-issued ``master CD'' and alter
the terms of the original CD before selling the new CDs to its
brokerage customers. These brokered CDs are (in most cases) held in
book-entry form at the Depository Trust Corporation (``DTC'') and use
the CUSIP system for identification and trading in a primary and
secondary market.
Deposits placed through this market have always been marketed and
classified as brokered deposits and are specifically captured under the
placement of deposits ``for the purpose of selling interests in those
deposits to third parties'' prong of the deposit broker definition.
Through this rulemaking, the FDIC is not proposing any changes to the
brokered classification of such deposits. In other words, under this
proposal, without exception, and as further explained below in the
section discussing the primary purpose exception, brokered CDs would
continue to be classified as brokered.
In addition, the FDIC notes that the brokered CD market has evolved
since Section 29 was first enacted, and will likely continue to evolve.
As such, it is the FDIC's intention that third parties that assist in
the placement of brokered CDs, or any similar deposit placement
arrangement with a similar purpose, continue to meet the deposit broker
definition.
B. Exceptions to the Deposit Broker Definition
Section 29 provides nine statutory exceptions to the definition of
deposit broker and, as noted earlier, the FDIC added one regulatory
exception to the definition. Through this rulemaking, the FDIC proposes
amending two exceptions--(1) the exception for insured depository
institutions, with respect to funds placed with that depository
institution (the ``IDI exception'') and (2) the exception for an agent
or nominee whose primary purpose is not the placement of funds with
depository institutions (the ``primary purpose exception'').
1. Bank Operating Subsidiaries and the IDI Exception
Section 29 of the FDI Act expressly excludes from the definition of
``deposit broker'' an insured depository institution, with respect to
funds placed with that depository institution, also known as the ``IDI
Exception.'' \13\ Under the IDI Exception, an IDI is not considered to
be a deposit broker when it (or its employees) places funds at the
bank.
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\13\ 12 U.S.C. 1831f((g)(2)(A).
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In response to the ANPR, commenters suggest that funds deposited at
an IDI through the IDI's relationship with a wholly-owned subsidiary
should not be considered brokered deposits. The commenters state that
operating subsidiaries of an IDI are under the exclusive control of the
parent IDI, engage only in activities permissible for an IDI and are
treated as a division of the IDI for a variety of regulatory purposes.
The FDIC recognizes that the exception currently is limited to IDIs
only, and not their subsidiaries. The IDI Exception currently applies,
for example, in the case of a division of an IDI that places deposits
exclusively with the parent IDI, but does not apply if a separately
incorporated subsidiary of the IDI places deposits exclusively with the
parent. The FDIC also recognizes that a wholly-owned operating
subsidiary that meets certain criteria can be considered similar to a
division of an IDI for certain purposes. In fact, wholly-owned
subsidiaries are treated differently under various legal and regulatory
frameworks. For example, the Bank Merger Act and Receivership law treat
wholly-owned subsidiaries as separate from its parent IDI, whereas
Section 23A and Section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act and Call Reports
treat wholly-owned subsidiaries as part of the parent IDI.
There is little practical difference between deposits placed at an
IDI by a division of the IDI versus deposits placed by a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the IDI. Therefore, the FDIC proposes that the IDI
exception be available to wholly-owned operating subsidiaries provided
that such a subsidiary meets the criteria discussed below. The FDIC
believes that setting forth specific criteria is appropriate to limit
the exception to wholly-owned subsidiaries that are functioning
essentially as divisions of parent IDIs.
For the reasons described above, the FDIC is proposing that a
subsidiary be eligible for the IDI exception, provided all of the
following criteria are met:
[cir] The subsidiary is a wholly owned operating subsidiary of the
IDI, meaning that the IDI owns 100% of the subsidiary's outstanding
stock;
[cir] The subsidiary places deposits of retail customers
exclusively with the parent IDI; and
[cir] The subsidiary engages only in activities permissible for the
parent IDI.
Under the proposal, wholly-owned subsidiaries, based on the above
listed conditions, would be eligible for the IDI exception to the
definition of deposit broker with respect to funds placed at the IDI.
However, the FDIC notes that such deposits would be considered brokered
if a third party is involved that is itself a deposit broker.
Question 6: Is it appropriate for a separately incorporated
operating subsidiary to be included in the IDI exception?
Question 7: Are the criteria for including an operating subsidiary
in the IDI exception too broad or too narrow?
2. Primary Purpose Exception
a. Background
The statute provides that the primary purpose exception applies to
``an agent or nominee whose primary purpose is
[[Page 7459]]
not the placement of funds with depository institutions.'' Generally,
if a person is engaged in the business of either placing deposits for
its customers, or facilitating the placement of deposits for its
customers, at insured depository institutions, then it meets the
``deposit broker'' definition. However, if the person meets the primary
purpose exception, then the person is excepted from the definition of
``deposit broker'' and any deposits that it places with insured
depository institutions are not brokered deposits.
As noted in the ANPR, in evaluating whether a person meets the
primary purpose exception, staff has focused on the relationship
between the depositor and the person acting as agent or nominee for
that depositor.\14\ In particular, staff has generally analyzed whether
the agent's placement of deposits is for a substantial purpose other
than (1) to provide deposit insurance, or (2) for a deposit-placement
service. In analyzing this principle, staff has considered whether the
deposit-placement activity is incidental to some other purpose.
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\14\ 84 FR 2366, 2372 (February 6, 2019).
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b. General Overview of Proposal
The FDIC is proposing to set forth regulatory changes to the
primary purpose exception. Specifically, the FDIC is proposing that the
application of the primary purpose exception be based on the business
relationship between the agent or nominee and its customers. As such,
the proposal would amend the primary purpose exception in the
regulation to apply when the primary purpose of the agent's or
nominee's business relationship with its customers is not the placement
of funds with depository institutions.
The FDIC recognizes that, since Section 29 was first enacted, there
have been a number of different agents and nominees that have sought
views on the applicability of the primary purpose exception, and this
proposed amendment to the primary purpose exception would expand the
number of entities that meet the exception. The FDIC also recognizes
that every deposit broker can claim a primary purpose other than the
placement of funds at a depository institution, and Congress did not
intend for every potential deposit broker to become exempt through the
primary purpose exception. In order for the FDIC to properly scrutinize
whether a primary purpose exception is warranted, the FDIC is proposing
to establish an application and reporting process to ensure that the
FDIC's role in protecting the Deposit Insurance Fund and ensuring
safety and soundness is preserved.\15\
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\15\ The proposed application and reporting process would be set
forth in a new 12 CFR 303.243(b). The brokered deposit waiver
procedures would be moved to 12 CFR 303.243(a)(1)-(7) with no change
to the text.
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c. Business Relationships Deemed To Meet the Primary Purpose Exception
Subject to the Application Process
1. Deposit Placements of Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under
Management by the Third Party
Through this rulemaking, the FDIC proposes that the primary purpose
of an agent's or nominee's business relationship with its customers
will not be considered to be the placement of funds, subject to an
application process, if less than 25 percent of the total assets that
the agent or nominee has under management for its customers, in a
particular business line, is placed at depository institutions. It is
the FDIC's view that the primary purpose of a third party's business
relationship with its customers is not the placement of funds with
depository institutions if the third party places less than 25 percent
of customer assets under management for its customers, for a particular
business line, at insured depository institutions. The FDIC believes
that if 75 percent or more of the customer assets under management of
the third party is not being placed at depository institutions, for a
particular business line, the third party has demonstrated that the
primary purpose of that business line is not the placement of funds at
depository institutions. The FDIC also believes that establishing a
transparent, bright line test is beneficial for all parties.
To give an example, a broker dealer that sweeps uninvested cash
balances into deposit accounts at depository institutions would meet
the primary purpose exception if the amount of customer funds it places
at deposit accounts represents less than a quarter of the total amount
of customer assets it manages for its broker dealer business. However,
if 25 percent or more of the customer assets the broker dealer manages
is placed at depository institutions, the FDIC would, barring
information to the contrary, likely conclude that the primary purpose
of the broker dealer's business is placing funds at depository
institutions, rather than the placing of funds at depository
institutions being ancillary to its primary purpose.
An agent or nominee that seeks to avail itself of the primary
purpose exception based on this standard would be required to submit an
application, as discussed below.
Customer Assets Under Management. In determining the amount of
customer assets under management by an agent or nominee, for a
particular business line, the FDIC would measure the total market value
of all the financial assets (including cash balances) that the agent or
nominee manages on behalf of its customers that participate in a
particular business line.
Question 8: Is it appropriate to interpret the primary purpose of a
third party's business relationship with its customers as not placement
of funds if the third party places less than 25 percent of customer
assets under management for its customers, for a particular business
line, at depository institutions? Is a bright line test appropriate? If
so, is 25 percent an appropriate threshold?
Question 9: Should the FDIC specifically provide more clarity
regarding what is meant by customer assets under ``management'' by a
broker dealer or third party?
2. Deposit Placements That Enable Transactions
The FDIC proposes, subject to an application process, that the
primary purpose of an agent's or nominee's business relationship with
its customers will not be considered to be the placement of funds if
the agent or nominee places depositors' funds into transactional
accounts for the purpose of enabling payments. The FDIC does not intend
for this exception to capture all third parties that place deposits
into accounts that have transaction features and does not intend to
create an incentive for deposit brokers to move customers from time
deposits to transaction accounts in order to evade brokered deposits
restrictions. Rather, the exception would be construed to apply only to
third parties whose business purpose is to place funds in transactional
accounts to enable transactions or make payments.
Under the proposal, if an agent or nominee places 100 percent of
its customer funds into transaction accounts at depository institutions
and no fees, interest, or other remuneration is provided to the
depositor, then it would meet the primary purpose exception of enabling
payments, subject to providing information as part of an application
process. In such a case, the FDIC would conclude that the primary
purpose of the agent's or nominee's business is to enable payments.
If the agent or nominee, or the depository institution, pays any
sort of interest, fee, or provides any
[[Page 7460]]
remuneration, (e.g., nominal interest paid to the deposit account),
then the FDIC would more closely scrutinize the agent's or nominee's
business to determine whether the primary purpose is truly to enable
payments. In such a case, the FDIC would consider a number of factors,
including the volume of transactions in customer accounts, and the
interest, fees, or other remuneration provided, in determining the
applicability of the primary purpose exception.
An agent or nominee that seeks to avail itself of the primary
purpose exception based on this standard would be required to submit an
application.
Question 10: Is it appropriate to make available the primary
purpose exception to third parties whose business purpose is to place
funds in transactional accounts to enable transactions or make
payments?
d. Other Deposit Placements That May Meet the Primary Purpose Exception
Agents or nominees that do not fit within the business arrangements
detailed above would also be eligible to apply for the primary purpose
exception, subject to the application process.\16\ In such a case, in
order to qualify for the primary purpose exception, the FDIC would
expect the agent or nominee to demonstrate through its application that
the primary purpose of the agent or nominee is something other than the
placement of funds at depository institutions. In such applications,
the FDIC would consider a number of factors in determining whether the
agent or nominee meets the primary purpose exception.
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\16\ Persons that meet the deposit broker definition because
they are ``facilitating the placement'' of deposits would also be
eligible to submit an application under this process.
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The FDIC notes that agents or nominees seeking a primary purpose
exception under this category may be placing more than 25 percent of
its customer assets under management, for a particular business line,
into deposit accounts at depository institutions. As such, the
applicant would be required to provide information sufficient to
establish that its primary purpose is something other than the
placement of funds, despite the fact that it places more than 25
percent of its customer assets under management, for a particular
business line, in deposit accounts.
One factor the FDIC would review is the revenue structure for the
agent or nominee. If the agent or nominee receives a majority of its
revenue from its deposit placement activity, rather than for some other
service it offers, then it would likely not meet the primary purpose
exception. A second factor would be whether the agent's or nominee's
marketing activities to prospective depositors is aimed at opening a
deposit account or to provide some other service, and if there is some
other service, whether the opening of the deposit account is incidental
to that other service. As part of reviewing this factor, the FDIC would
also consider whether it is necessary for the customer to open a
deposit account first before receiving the other services provided by
the agent or nominee. A third factor would be the fees, and type of
fees, received by an agent or nominee for any deposit placement service
it offers.
Ultimately, the FDIC's review of whether an agent or nominee meets
the primary purpose exception would be a case-by-case review and depend
upon a consideration of factors detailed in the application section
below, as well as the information presented by the applicant as to why
it should meet the primary purpose exception.
e. Business Relationships That Do Not Meet the Primary Purpose
Exception
1. Deposit Placements of Brokered CDs
Through this proposal, the FDIC would continue to consider a
person's placement of brokered CDs (as described in the third prong to
the deposit broker definition and as discussed above) as deposit
brokering. For purposes of establishing the person's primary purpose,
the person's placement of brokered CDs would be considered a discrete
and independent business line from other deposit placement businesses,
and so the primary purpose for that particular business line will
always be the placement of deposits at depository institutions.
Accordingly, such deposits would continue to be considered brokered
notwithstanding that the person may not be considered a deposit broker
for other deposits that it places (or for which it facilitates the
placement), which would be evaluated as a separate business line.
Brokered CD products are marketed to customers as a way to increase
FDIC deposit insurance coverage and increase yield. One historical form
of brokered CDs is CD participations, where a broker dealer purchases a
CD issued by a bank and sells the interests in the CD to its customers.
CD participations, at the time that Section 29 was being contemplated,
were a core form of deposit brokering. This activity enables any
insured depository institution to attract large volumes of funds
irrespective of the institutions' managerial and financial
characteristics. While such deposits can provide a helpful source of
liquidity to institutions, their availability and pricing make it
possible for poorly-managed institutions to continue operating beyond
the time at which natural market forces would have otherwise resulted
in failure. Moreover, and as provided in the ANPR, brokered CDs have
caused significant losses to the deposit insurance fund.\17\
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\17\ 84 FR 2366, 2370 (February 6, 2019).
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Accordingly, for purposes of effectuating the intent and policy of
Section 29 (and Part 337 of the FDIC's regulations), brokered CDs, as
has been the case since 1989, will be considered brokered, without
exception. As discussed below, deposits related to brokered CDs would
not be included for purposes of determining whether a person's other
business line meets the primary purpose exception.
2. Deposit Placements for Purposes of Encouraging Savings
The FDIC would not grant a primary purpose exception if the third
party's primary purpose for its business relationship with its
customers is to place (or assist in the placement of) funds into
deposit accounts to ``encourage savings,'' ``maximize yield,''
``provide deposit insurance'', or any similar purpose. The FDIC is
concerned that these types of purposes evade the purposes of Section
29. It is the FDIC's view that there is no meaningful distinction
between these objectives and the objectives for placing funds into a
deposit account. As such, third parties that either place or assist in
the placement of deposits to provide these core deposit-placement
services for its customers would not meet the primary purpose
exception.
f. Applicability of Prior FDIC Staff Advisory Opinions
The FDIC recognizes that some insured depository institutions may
have met the primary propose exception based on a previous FDIC staff
advisory opinion. As part of this rulemaking process, the FDIC intends
to evaluate existing staff opinions to identify those that are no
longer relevant or applicable based on any revisions made to the
brokered deposit regulations. The FDIC plans as part of any final rule
to codify staff opinions of general applicability that continue to be
relevant and applicable, and to rescind any staff opinions that are
superseded or obsolete or are no longer relevant or applicable.
Question 11: Are there particular FDIC staff opinions of general
[[Page 7461]]
applicability that should or should not be codified as part of the
final rule? If so, which ones, and why?
g. Evaluation of Business Lines
In evaluating whether the primary purpose would apply, the FDIC
believes it is necessary to analyze specific business lines. Otherwise,
any agent or nominee engaged in the brokering of deposits could evade
the statutory restrictions by adding or combining its brokering
business with another business such that the deposit broker business is
no longer its primary purpose. In this proposal, the term business line
would refer to the business relationships an agent or nominee has with
a group of customers for whom the business places or facilitates the
placement of deposits. For example, a company that offered brokerage
accounts to various types of customers that allowed customers to buy
and sell assets, with a traditional cash sweep option, would be
considered a business line. Brokerage accounts that did not offer a
cash sweep option would not be considered part of the business line
(because those customers are not part of the group of customers for
whom the person is placing deposits), and any accounts in which
customers are only able to place money in accounts at depository
institutions (and not invest in other types of assets) would also be
considered a separate business line. Ultimately, the determination of
what constitutes a business line will depend on the facts and
circumstances of a particular case, and the FDIC retains discretion to
determine the appropriate business line to which the primary purpose
exception would apply.
Question 12: Has the FDIC provided sufficient clarity regarding
what will be considered a ``business line''? How can the FDIC provide
more clarity? Are there other factors that should be considered in
determining an agent's or nominee's business line(s)?
h. Application Process for the Primary Purpose Exception
1. General Overview of the Application Process
For purposes of the application process, the term applicant
includes an insured depository institution or a nonbank third party
\18\ that meets the ``deposit broker'' definition by either placing (or
facilitating the placement of) customer deposits at insured depository
institutions and seeks to be excluded from that definition by
application of the primary purpose exception. Under the proposal, the
FDIC would establish an application process under which any agent or
nominee that seeks to avail itself of the primary purpose exception, or
an insured depository institution acting on behalf of an agent or
nominee, could request that the FDIC consider certain deposits as
nonbrokered as a result of the primary purpose exception. If an
application from the agent or nominee is approved, deposits placed or
facilitated by that party would be considered nonbrokered for a
particular business line.
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\18\ The FDIC will look to each separately incorporated legal
entity as its own ``third party'' for purposes of this application
process.
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As mentioned, an applicant may be an insured depository institution
that applies to the FDIC on behalf of a third party seeking a
determination that the third party meets the primary purpose exception.
In this case, if appropriate, the FDIC would evaluate the third party's
relationships with all IDIs in which the third party places, or
facilitates the placement of, deposits. An approval that a third party
meets the primary purpose exception (based on an application by an IDI
on behalf of the third party) could be applicable to all deposit
placements by that third party at other IDI(s) to the extent that the
deposit placement arrangements with the other IDI(s) are the same as
the arrangement between the applicant and the third party. The FDIC
anticipates that an agent or nominee who places, or facilitates the
placement of, deposits at multiple IDIs and seeks a primary purpose
exception is likely to apply on its own behalf, given that the
information required to complete an application will be in possession
of the agent or nominee.
Question 13: Are there scenarios where a nonbank third party, as
part of the same business line, has different deposit placement
arrangements with IDIs?
Applicants would receive a written determination from the FDIC
within 120 days of a complete application. For applications seeking the
primary purpose exception as described above in paragraphs C(1) and
C(2) (with the exception of applicants seeking a primary purpose
exception based on enabling payments where interest, fees, or
remuneration, is provided to depositors), if the application is simple
and straightforward and meets the relevant standards, the FDIC intends
to provide an expedited processing of the application. The FDIC expects
such applications to generally be simple and straightforward, but
recognizes there may be some cases, such as when defining the scope of
the ``business line'' is complicated, in which the FDIC may need more
time to process the application.
Question 14: Is the application process proposed for the primary
purpose exception appropriate? Are there ways the application process
could be modified to make it more effective or efficient?
Question 15: Is the application process for IDIs that apply on
behalf of a third party workable? Are there ways to improve the process
for IDIs that apply on behalf of third parties?
Question 16: Are there additional ways that the FDIC could better
ensure that the primary purpose exception is applied consistently,
transparently, and in accordance with the statute?
Question 17: Should some or all FDIC decisions on applications for
the primary purpose exception be publicly available? If so, in what
format?
Question 18: Are there commonly known deposit placement
arrangements not mentioned above that are sufficiently simple and
straightforward that applications for such arrangements should receive
expedited application processing, as described above?
Question 19: Are there other deposit placement arrangements with
respect to which the FDIC should provide additional clarity as part of
this rulemaking?
2. Application Contents
An applicant would need to submit certain information, depending on
the basis on which the primary purpose exception is being sought. Below
are the application contents that would be required for each of the
three types of previously discussed business arrangements.
Application Contents for Third Parties that Seek Primary Purpose
Based on Placing Less Than 25 Percent of Customer Assets Under
Management at IDIs. The applicant would be required to provide (1) a
description of the business line for which the applicant is filing an
application; (2) the total amount of customer assets under management
by the third party for that particular business line and (3) the total
amount of deposits placed by the third party on behalf of its
customers, for that particular business line, at all depository
institutions. The total amount of deposits placed by the third party
should be exclusive of the amount of brokered CDs being placed by the
third party, which is treated as a separate business line. An
application would also need to include a description of the deposit
placement arrangement(s) with the IDI or IDIs and the services provided
by any other third parties involved. The FDIC would be
[[Page 7462]]
permitted to request additional information at any time during the
review of the application to render the application complete and
initiate its review.
The FDIC will approve primary purpose applications if the total
amount of customer funds placed at insured depository institutions by
the third party is less than 25 percent of total customer assets under
management by the third party for a particular business line.
Question 20: Are the criteria for considering and approving primary
purpose applications for third parties that seek a primary purpose
exception based on placing less than 25 percent of customer assets
under management at depository institutions appropriate?
Application Contents for Third Parties that Seek Primary Purpose
Based on Enabling Transactions. The applicant would need to submit
information, including contracts with customers and with the depository
institutions in which the third party is placing deposits, showing that
all of its customer deposits are in transaction accounts. An
application would also need to include a description of the deposit
placement arrangement(s) with the IDI or IDIs and the services provided
by any other third parties involved. The applicant would also need to
submit information on the amount of interest, fees, or remuneration
being provided or paid for the transaction accounts. For third parties
that pay interest, fees, or provide other remuneration, the applicant
would need to provide information regarding the volume of transactions
in customer accounts. In addition, for third parties that pay interest,
fees, or provide other remuneration, applicants would need to provide
an explanation of how its customers utilize its services for the
purpose of making payments and not for the receipt of a deposit
placement service or deposit insurance. The FDIC would be permitted to
request additional information at any time during the review of the
application to render the application complete and initiate its review.
The FDIC would approve primary purpose applications if an agent or
nominee places funds into transactional accounts for the purpose of
enabling payments, and no fees, interest, or other remuneration is
being provided to the depositor.
Question 21: Are the criteria for considering and approving primary
purpose applications based on enabling transactions appropriate?
Application Contents for Other Business Relationships That May Meet
the Primary Purpose Exception. Applicants seeking the primary purpose
exception not based on business relationships described above (in
paragraphs C(1) and C(2)) would request that the FDIC view a particular
business relationship between a third party and an IDI as meeting the
primary purpose exception. This process would be available, for
example, to third parties that place more than 25 percent of the total
assets under management for its customers, for a particular business
line, into deposit accounts at insured depository institutions.
Application Contents. In order for an application to be considered,
the following information, at a minimum, would be required, to the
extent applicable:
(1) A description of the deposit placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(2) A description of the business line for which the applicant is
filing an application;
(3) A description of the primary purpose of the particular business
line;
(4) The total amount of assets under management by the third party;
(5) The total amount of deposits placed by the third party at all
insured depository institutions, including the amounts placed with the
applicant, if the applicant is an insured depository institution. This
includes the total amount of term deposits and transactional deposits
placed by the third party, but should be exclusive of the amount of
brokered CDs being placed by that third party;
(6) Revenue generated from the third party's activities related to
the placement, or the facilitating of the placement, of deposits;
(7) Revenue generated from the third party's activities not related
to the placement, or the facilitating of the placement, of deposits;
(8) A description of the marketing activities provided by the third
party to prospective depositors;
(9) The reasons the third party meets the primary purpose
exception;
(10) Any other information the applicant deems relevant; and
(11) Any other information that the FDIC requires to initiate its
review and render the application complete.
Supporting documentation and contracts related to the items above
would also be required. The FDIC would be permitted to request
additional information at any time during its review to render the
application complete and initiate its review. The FDIC's review of
whether a third party meets the primary purpose exception would be
based on the application and all supporting information provided. After
receipt of a complete application, the FDIC will notify the applicant,
in writing, of its response within 120 days.
Under the proposal, the FDIC would approve applications submitted
under this process if the application demonstrates, with respect to the
particular business line under which the third party places or
facilitates the placement of deposits, that the primary purpose of the
third party, for that business line, is a purpose other than the
placement or facilitation of placement of deposits.
Question 22: Are proposed requirements for the application process
for business relationships, other than those described in paragraphs
(C)(1) and (C)(2), appropriate?
3. Ongoing Reporting
An agent or nominee that meets the primary purpose exception, or an
IDI that applies on behalf of the agent or nominee, would need to
provide reports to the FDIC and, if applicable, in the case of insured
depository institutions, its primary federal regulator. The FDIC will
describe the reporting requirements, including the frequency and any
calculation methodology, as part of its written approval for a primary
purpose exception. The FDIC anticipates that the reporting would be
required on a quarterly basis. As an example, if a primary purpose
approval is granted based, in part, on the representation that a
nonbank third party places less than 25 percent of its customer assets
under management into deposit accounts, then the FDIC would likely
require as a condition of the approval that the nonbank third party
provide reporting of the amount of deposits, based upon the average
daily balances, placed by the nonbank third party at all depository
institutions and the total amount of assets, based upon the average
daily balances, under the third party's management. The FDIC believes
it is more efficient for the nonbank third party to report directly to
the FDIC, rather than for the nonbank third party to send the same
information to each IDI in which it places deposits, each of which
would then in turn report this identical information to the FDIC.
Question 23: Is it appropriate to require reporting from nonbank
entities that have received approval for a primary purpose exception?
Should the FDIC require IDIs to report on behalf of such nonbank
entities instead? Are there other ways the FDIC should consider to
ensure that applicants that receive the primary purpose exception
remain within the relevant standards?
[[Page 7463]]
Question 24: How frequently should the FDIC require reporting?
IDIs would be responsible for monitoring a nonbank third parties'
eligibility for the primary purpose exception. For example, if a
certain percentage of a nonbank third party's revenue is from some
activity other than deposit placement, and the FDIC approves a primary
purpose exception in reliance of this factor, among other factors, then
the FDIC would require that an insured depository institution that
receives such deposits provide a notice to the FDIC and the primary
federal regulator if there are any material change to the nonbank third
party's revenue structure. When establishing a contractual relationship
with a nonbank third party for the placement of deposits that may be
classified as nonbrokered due to the primary purpose exception, an IDI
may wish to consider the reporting and monitoring requirements
described here.
Question 25: Is it appropriate for the FDIC to require IDIs to
monitor third parties for eligibility for the primary purpose
exception? Are there additional or better ways to ensure that third
parties continue to remain eligible for the exception?
4. Modification and Withdrawals
At any time after approval, the FDIC proposes that it may, with
notice and as appropriate, require additional information to ensure
that the approval is still appropriate, or to verify the accuracy of
the information that was provided by a third party to an IDI or
submitted to the FDIC. In addition, in certain circumstances, such as
if an entity previously approved for a primary purpose exception has
undergone material changes to its business, the FDIC would be able to
require that the applicant reapply for approval, impose additional
conditions on the approval, or withdraw a previously granted approval,
if warranted and with sufficient notice.
C. Brokered Deposits and Assessments
Under the proposal, some deposits that are currently considered
brokered will no longer be considered brokered. In a future rulemaking,
the FDIC plans to consider modifications to the assessment regulations
in light of any changes made to the brokered deposits regulation.
D. Reporting of Certain Deposits on Call Reports
Also, after a final rule is adopted, the FDIC will consider
requiring reporting of deposits that are excluded from being reported
as brokered deposits because of the application of the primary purpose
exception. The FDIC will monitor this information to assess the risk
factors associated with the deposits and determine assessment
implications, if any. Any changes to reporting requirements applicable
to the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (``Call Reports''),
and its instructions, would be effectuated in coordination with the
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council in a separate
Paperwork Reduction Act notice.
E. Treatment of Non-Maturity Deposits for Purposes of the Brokered
Deposits Restrictions
As discussed in the FDIC's notice of proposed rulemaking for
interest rate restrictions, the FDIC is looking at the question of when
non-maturity deposits in an existing account are considered
``accepted.'' The FDIC is in the process of considering comments
received in response to that notice of proposed rulemaking.
The FDIC is considering a similar approach for brokered deposits as
it did for interest rate restrictions. For brokered nonmaturity
deposits, through this proposal, the FDIC is considering an
interpretation under which non-maturity brokered deposits are viewed as
``accepted'' for the brokered deposits restrictions at the time any new
non-maturity deposits are placed at an institution by or through a
deposit broker.
Under this proposed interpretation, brokered balances in a money
market demand account or other savings account, as well as transaction
accounts, at the time an institution falls below well capitalized,
would not be subject to the brokered deposits restrictions. However, if
brokered funds were deposited into such an account after the
institution became less than well capitalized, the entire balance of
the account would be subject to the brokered deposits restrictions. If,
however, the same customer deposited brokered funds into a new account
and the balance in that account was subject to the brokered deposits
restrictions, the balance in the initial account would continue to not
be subject to the brokered deposits restrictions so long as no
additional funds were accepted. Brokered deposits restrictions also
generally apply to any new non-maturity brokered deposit accounts
opened after the institution falls to below well capitalized.
The term ``accept'' is also used in PCA-triggered restrictions
related to employee benefit plan deposits.\19\ The FDIC plans to
address in a future rulemaking when deposits are ``accepted'' for
purposes of these PCA-related restrictions, both for non-maturity
deposits, such as transaction accounts and MMDAs, as well as for
certificates of deposits and other time deposits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(D).
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Question 26: Is the FDIC's proposed definition of ``accept''
appropriate? Would there be substantial operational difficulties for
institutions to monitor additions into these existing accounts? Is
there another interpretation that would be more appropriate and
consistent with the statute?
F. Additional Supervisory Matters
The FDIC recognizes that, under this proposal, numerous categories
of deposits that are currently considered brokered would instead be
nonbrokered. The FDIC will continue to take such supervisory efforts as
may be necessary to ensure that banks are operating in a safe and sound
manner. Nothing in this proposal is intended to limit the FDIC's
ability to review or take supervisory action with respect to funding-
related matters, including funding concentrations, that may affect the
safety and soundness of individual banks or the industry generally.
IV. Alternatives
The FDIC is proposing these comprehensive changes to the brokered
deposit regulations after considering comments received pursuant to the
ANPR and evaluating alternative options for modernizing the
regulations. The FDIC considered a number of alternative approaches,
including taking more incremental approaches through which more limited
changes would be made. Additionally, the FDIC considered more narrowly
revisiting certain existing staff interpretations to identify those
that should be updated. However, the FDIC ultimately determined that
the best course of action was to take a fresh, holistic look at the
regulations and interpretations, and propose a new framework that
reflects technological and other changes in the banking industry over
the past three decades and is consistent with the FDI Act.
V. Expected Effects
As described previously, the proposed rule would amend the FDIC's
regulations that implement provisions of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act regarding brokered deposits. The proposed rule creates a new
framework
[[Page 7464]]
for analyzing certain provisions of the statutory definition of
``deposit broker.'' Further, the proposed rule amends two of the ten
current regulatory exceptions to the definition of ``deposit broker.''
The aggregate effect likely would be some amount of deposits currently
designated as brokered deposits to no longer be so designated.
As of June 30th, 2019, there were 5,303 insured depository
institutions holding approximately $18 trillion in assets and $13
trillion in domestic deposits. Of those domestic deposits, $1.1
trillion (8.5 percent) are currently classified as brokered deposits.
Approximately 41 percent (2,154) of FDIC-insured institutions reported
some positive amount of brokered deposits. These insured institutions
accounted for the vast majority of banking industry holdings--almost
$17 trillion (92 percent) of assets and almost $12 trillion (91
percent) of domestic deposits.
Traditional brokered CDs would still be defined by the rule as
brokered and subject to the associated statutory and regulatory
restrictions. Certain types of deposits, notably deposits placed by
agents or nominees that satisfy criteria set forth in the proposed
revisions to the primary purpose exception, would not be considered
brokered deposits subject to an application process. The amount of
deposits currently reported as brokered that may be re-designated as
non-brokered as a result of the rule may be material. However, a
reliable estimate of this change in designation is not possible with
the information currently available to the FDIC.
There are potentially four broad categories of effects of the
proposed rule: effects on consumers and economic activity; effects
applicable to potentially any insured institution; effects applicable
to less than well-capitalized institutions; and effects applicable to
nonbank entities that may or may not be deemed deposit brokers.
A. Consumers and the Economy
The proposed rule would amend the FDIC's brokered deposit
regulations to better reflect recent technological changes and
innovations. There are benefits to banks and consumers if innovative
deposit placement arrangements that do not present undue funding risk
are not classified as brokered deposits. Changes and innovations in
deposit placement activity are likely to continue, suggesting that
demand for, and utilization of, certain types of deposit accounts
currently classified as brokered are likely to grow in the years to
come. These could include the use of technology services that help
enable payments and online marketing channels that refer customers to
certain banks. To the extent that the proposed rule would treat such
deposits as nonbrokered, it could support ease of access to deposit
placement services for U.S. consumers. Unbanked or underbanked
customers, for example, may benefit from increased ease of access to
deposit placement services because banks would be more willing to
accept deposits that would be no longer considered brokered under the
proposal. Additionally, to the extent that the proposed rule supports
greater utilization of deposits currently classified as brokered
deposits, but classified as non-brokered under the proposed rule, it
could increase the funds available to insured depository institutions
for lending to U.S. consumers. If the proposed rule does result in an
increase in bank lending, some associated increase in measured U.S.
economic output would be expected, in part because the imputed value of
the credit services banks provide is a component of measured GDP.
B. All Insured Institutions
The proposed rule could immediately affect the 2,154 FDIC-insured
institutions currently reporting brokered deposits. Going forward, the
rule could affect all 5,303 FDIC-insured institutions whose decisions
regarding the types of deposits to accept could be affected.
The proposed rule would benefit insured institutions and other
interested parties by providing greater legal clarity regarding the
treatment of brokered deposits. As result of this increased clarity,
the proposed rule would reduce the extent of reliance by banks and
third parties on FDIC Staff Advisory opinions and informal written and
telephonic inquiries with FDIC staff. This would have two important
benefits. First, the likelihood of inconsistent outcomes, where some
institutions may report certain types of deposits as brokered and
others do not, would be reduced. Second, to the extent the
classification of deposits as brokered or non-brokered can be clearly
addressed in regulation, the need for potentially time-consuming staff
analyses can be minimized.
The FDIC has heard from a number of insured institutions that they
perceive a stigma associated with accepting brokered deposits.
Historical experience has been that higher use of deposits currently
reported to the FDIC as brokered has been associated with higher
probability of bank failure and higher deposit insurance fund loss
rates.\20\ The funding characteristics of brokered deposits, however,
are non-uniform. For example, brokered CDs are often used by bank
customers searching for relatively high yields on their insured
deposits, and as such these deposits may be less stable and more
subject to deposit interest rate competition. The behavior of other
types of deposit placement arrangements, such as deposits placed
through sweeps or that underlie prepaid card programs, may be more
based on a business relationship than on interest rate competition.
Given limitations on available data, however, historical studies have
not been able to differentiate the experience of banks based on the
different types of deposits accepted. To the extent the proposed rule
reduces bankers' perception of a stigma associated with certain types
of deposits, more institutions may be incentivized to accept such
deposits.
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\20\ See FDIC's 2011 Study on Core and Brokered Deposits, July
8, 2011.
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The proposed rule could incentivize the development of banking
relationships between banks and other firms. The new opportunities
could spur growth in the third party deposit placement industry,
particularly for third parties that receive the primary purpose
exception, potentially resulting in greater access to, or use of, bank
deposits by a greater variety of customers. It is difficult to
accurately estimate such potential effects with the information
currently available to the FDIC, because such effects depend, in part,
on the future commercial development of such activities.
FDIC deposit insurance assessments would be affected by the
proposed changes, potentially affecting any insured institution that
currently accepts brokered deposits or might do so in the future. Since
2009, insured institutions with a significant concentration of brokered
deposits may pay higher quarterly assessments, depending on other
factors. To the extent that deposits currently defined as brokered
would no longer be considered brokered deposits under this NPR, a
bank's assessment may decrease, all else equal. However, as noted
above, in a future rulemaking the FDIC plans to consider modifications
to its assessment regulations in light of the proposed rule. Certain
calculations required under the Liquidity Coverage Ratio rule
applicable to some large banks could also be affected by the proposed
rule. Available data do not allow for a reliable estimate of the amount
of deposits currently designated as brokered that would no longer be
designated as such under the
[[Page 7465]]
proposed rule, and consequently do not allow for an estimate of effects
on assessments or the reported Liquidity Coverage Ratio.
Insured institutions could benefit from the rule by having greater
certainty and greater access to funding sources that would no longer be
designated as brokered deposits, thereby easing their liquidity
planning and reducing the likelihood that a liquidity failure of an
otherwise viable institution might be precipitated by the brokered
deposit regulations. Another benefit of the rule could result if
greater access to funding sources supported insured institutions'
ability to provide credit. However, these effects are difficult to
estimate because the decision to receive third party deposits depends
on the specific financial conditions of each bank, fluctuating market
conditions for third party deposits, and future management decisions.
C. Less Than Well-Capitalized Institutions
As discussed previously, the acceptance of brokered deposits is
subject to statutory and regulatory restrictions for banks that are not
well capitalized. Adequately capitalized banks may not accept brokered
deposits without a waiver from the FDIC, and banks that are less than
adequately capitalized may not accept them at all. As a result,
adequately capitalized and undercapitalized banks generally hold less
brokered deposits--as of June 30, 2019, brokered deposits make up
approximately 3 percent of domestic deposits held by not well
capitalized banks, well below the 9 percent held by all IDIs. By
generally reducing the scope of deposits that are considered brokered,
the proposed rule would allow not well capitalized banks to increase
their holdings of deposits that are currently reported as brokered but
would not be reported as brokered under the proposal. As of June 30,
2019, there are only 16 adequately capitalized and undercapitalized
banks.\21\ These banks hold approximately $2.2 billion in assets, $2.0
billion in domestic deposits, and $61 million in brokered deposits.
These banks could be directly affected by the proposed rule in that
they could potentially accept more or different types of deposits
currently designated as brokered.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Information based on June 30, 2019 Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income. The 16 institutions do not include any
quantitatively well capitalized institutions that may have been
administratively classified as less than well capitalized. See
generally, FDIC--12 CFR 324.403(b)(1)(v); Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System--12 CFR 208.43(b)(1)(v); Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency--12 CFR 6.4(c)(1)(v).
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More broadly speaking with respect to future developments, another
aspect of brokered deposit restrictions is that, consistent with their
statutory purpose, they act as a constraint on growth and risk-taking
by troubled institutions. Conversely, as noted previously, access to
funding can prevent needless liquidity failures of viable institutions.
D. Entities That May or May Not Be Deposit Brokers
The proposed revisions to the brokered deposit regulations would
likely give rise to some activity by non-bank third parties seeking to
determine whether they are, or are not, deposit brokers under the rule.
This may include the filing of applications by some parties that seek
to avail themselves of the primary purpose exception. Ongoing activity
by these entities to ensure compliance with the revised rule would also
be expected.
The FDIC is interested in commenters' views on the effects, costs,
and benefits of the proposed rule.
VI. Administrative Law Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
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 FDIC 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 information collection requirements contained
in this proposed rule are being submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and approval 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). FDIC is revising its existing information
collection entitled ``Application for Waiver of Prohibition on
Acceptance of Brokered Deposits'' (OMB Control Number 3064-0099) and
will rename the information collection ``Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements for Brokered Deposits.''
Current Actions
Under the proposed rulemaking:
[cir] Respondents may file an application with the FDIC for a
``Primary Purpose Exception'' based on the placement of less than 25%
of customer assets under management (reporting requirement to obtain or
retain a benefit);
[cir] Respondents may file an application with the FDIC for a
``Primary Purpose Exception'' based on ``Enabling Transactions''
(reporting requirement to obtain or retain a benefit); and
[cir] Respondents may file an application with the FDIC for a
``Primary Purpose Exception'' based on factors other than ``Enabling
Transactions'' or the placement of less than 25% of customer assets
under management (reporting requirement to obtain or retain a benefit).
The proposed rule would establish recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for third parties that apply for and maintain a primary
purpose exception under Sec. 303.243.\22\ The FDIC estimated the
annual burden associated with the proposal based on the following
assumptions and according to the methodology described below:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ IDIs can apply for an exception on behalf of a third party,
and third parties can apply directly for an exception. See Sec.
303.243(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[cir] First, the FDIC lacks the data necessary to determine the
number of third parties which will take advantage of the applications
relating to exceptions from the definition of ``deposit broker,'' and
invites comments on how its estimates could be improved. The first type
of exception, that based on placing less than 25 percent of customer
assets under management, is expected to be sought largely by broker-
dealers. With few exceptions, broker-dealers must register with the
Securities and Exchange Commission and be members of FINRA.\23\ There
were 3,607 FINRA registered broker-dealer firms in 2018.\24\ Some of
the 3,607 broker-dealers may not engage in activity which meets the
definition of ``deposit broker,'' while some firms which do engage in
such activity may not be among the 3,607 FINRA registered broker-
dealers. However, in the absence of a more refined figure, the FDIC
estimated that 1,203 firms will apply for an exception based on placing
less than 25 percent of customer assets under management on average
each year over three years.
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\23\ FINRA, https://www.finra.org/investors/learn-to-invest/choosing-investment-professional/brokers.
\24\ 2019 FINRA Industry Snapshot, pg. 13, https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/2019%20Industry%20Snapshot.pdf.
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[cir] Second, the FDIC expects that the exceptions based on
enabling transactions and on other business arrangements will be sought
by firms engaged in deposit brokering. However, the FDIC is unable to
determine the number of firms which engage in deposit brokering.
According to Census data, there are 1,105 establishments
[[Page 7466]]
within the industry in which deposit brokers are classified.\25\ Not
all 1,105 establishments engage in deposit brokering, and some firms
which engage in deposit brokering may be classified in another
industry. In the absence of better data, the FDIC estimated that, over
the three-year period covered by this information collection request,
an average of 369 firms will apply for an exception based on enabling
transactions and other business arrangements.
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\25\ Deposit brokers are classified according to the 2017 North
American Industry Classification System as belonging to the
``Miscellaneous Financial Investment Activities'' industry (NAICS
code 523999). See U.S. Census Bureau, 2017 County Business Patterns
Data, available at https://www.census.gov/data/datasets/2017/econ/cbp/2017-cbp.html.
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[cir] Third, the FDIC lacks the data necessary to determine the
number of business lines for which firms may submit applications, and
in the absence of a more refined estimate, assumed that all respondents
submit one application.
[cir] Fourth, the FDIC estimated the amount of time required to
complete each application type. The most straightforward application
type is that for which a primary purpose exception to the definition of
deposit broker is sought based on placing less than 25 percent of
customer assets under management, by business line, with IDIs. For this
type of application, three items are required: (1) A description of the
business line for which the applicant is filing an application, (2) the
total amount of customer assets under control by the third party for
that particular business line, and (3) the total amount of deposits
placed by the third party on behalf of its customers, for that
particular business line, at all IDIs, exclusive of the amount of
brokered CDs being placed by that third party. Given the ``bright
line'' nature of this application type, and the limited number of line
items required, the FDIC estimated it would take each respondent three
hours on average to gather the material and submit the request required
for this application type.
The second application type is that for which a primary purpose
exception to the definition of deposit broker is sought based on
placing funds to enable transactions. Under this application type, the
applicant would need to submit information, including a copy of the
form of contracts used with customers and with the IDIs in which the
third party is placing deposits, showing that all of its customer
deposits are in transaction accounts, and that no interest, fees, or
other remuneration is being provided to or paid for the transaction
accounts. In addition, applicants would need to submit a description of
the deposit placement arrangement between the entities involved. For
third parties that pay interest, fees, or provide other remuneration,
the applicant would need to provide information regarding the volume of
transactions in customer accounts. In addition, for applications where
the third party pays interest, fees, or provides other remuneration,
applicants would also need to provide an explanation of how its
customers utilize its services for the purpose of making payments and
not for the receipt of a deposit placement service or deposit
insurance. Because the second application type should require more time
to prepare than the first, the FDIC estimated it would take each
respondent five hours on average the gather the required material and
submit the application.
The third application type is for a primary purpose exception where
the business arrangement is not covered by the other two types
described above. This third type requires the items enumerated in this
proposal, and due to the number of items requested, the FDIC estimates
it would take each respondent 10 hours on average to gather the
material required for this application type and submit the application.
[cir] Fifth, each application type would have associated quarterly
(ongoing) reporting requirements, which are to be spelled out by the
FDIC in its written approval of the application. For the first two
application types, the FDIC estimates it would take each respondent an
average of 30 minutes per quarter to gather the information and submit
the report for an annual average of 2 burden hours. In FDIC assumes
that initial quarterly report may take longer to prepare, but once
reporting and recordkeeping systems are in place, the FDIC believes an
average of 30 minutes per quarter is a reasonable estimate for this.
The third application type, due to its greater number of required
items, is estimated to take each respondent an average of one hour per
quarter to gather the information and submit the report for an annual
average of 4 burden hours.
[cir] In addition, the FDIC revised its estimates for the
information collection ``Application for Waiver of Prohibition on
Acceptance of Brokered Deposits.'' Based on consultations with subject
matter experts, the FDIC estimates nine IDIs will file this application
each year, on average. Each IDI applicant will spend six hours, on
average, to file. Thus, the FDIC estimates the average annual burden at
54 hours.
[cir] Based on the above assumptions and methodology, the FDIC
estimates the proposed rule imposes new annual reporting burden of
22,988 hours, or approximately 15 hours per deposit broker and broker-
dealer.
[cir] Finally, to estimate the annual dollar cost of the total
estimated annual hourly burdens, the FDIC used the occupational
breakdown associated with the Application for Waiver of Prohibition on
Acceptance of Brokered Deposits for the new information collection
requirements contained in the proposed rule. FDIC assumes that all of
the 23,042 estimated burden hours are broken down into hours worked by
managers and executives (5 percent), lawyers (5 percent), compliance
officers (10 percent), IT specialists (30 percent), financial analysts
(40 percent), and clerical staff (10 percent), so that 100 percent of
the hours are allocated to an occupation.
The FDIC then used the 75th percentile wage estimates for each
occupation, based on the industry of the expected applicant, from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, and adjusted them for inflation and to
account for the value of non-wage benefits, to produce an annual labor
cost associated with the hours estimated above.\26\ This resulted in an
estimated weighted average hourly wage of $106.11 for applications
relating to exceptions from the definition of ``deposit broker,'' and
$83.88 for the Application for Waiver of Prohibition on Acceptance of
Brokered Deposits. Based on the inflation adjusted wages, and
accounting for non-wage benefits,
[[Page 7467]]
the FDIC estimates that the average annual average reporting cost
associated with the proposal is approximately $2.4 million, or
approximately $1,545.70 per respondent.
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\26\ Specifically, for the applications relating to exceptions
from the definition of ``deposit broker,'' the FDIC used the wage
estimates from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) ``National
Industry-Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates:
Securities, Commodity Contracts, and Other Financial Investments and
Related Activities Sector'' (May 2018), while for the Application
for Waiver of Prohibition on Acceptance of Brokered Deposits, the
FDIC used the wage estimates from the BLS ``National Industry-
Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates: Depository
Credit Intermediation Sector'' (May 2018). Other BLS data used were
the Employer Cost of Employee Compensation data (June 2019), and the
Consumer Price Index (June 2019). Hourly wage estimates at the 75th
percentile wage were used, except when the estimate was greater than
$100, in which case $100 per hour was used, as the BLS does not
report hourly wages in excess of $100. The 75th percentile wage
information reported by the BLS in the Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates does not include health benefits and
other non-monetary benefits. According to the June 2019 Employer
Cost of Employee Compensation data, compensation rates for health
and other benefits are 33.8 percent of total compensation.
Additionally, the wage has been adjusted for inflation according to
BLS data on the Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers (CPI-U), so
that it is contemporaneous with the non-wage compensation statistic.
The inflation rate was 1.86 percent between May 2018 and June 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Burden Estimate:
Summary of Annual Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated Total
Information collection (IC) Obligation to Estimated Estimated time per Frequency of estimated
description Type of burden respond number of number of response response annual burden
respondents responses (hours) (hours)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Implementation:
Application for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 1,203 1 3 On Occasion...... 3,609
Purpose Exception Based a Benefit.
on the Placement of Less
Than 25 Percent of
Customer Assets Under
Management.
Application for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 369 1 5 On Occasion...... 1,845
Purpose Exception Based a Benefit.
on Enabling Transactions.
Application for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 369 1 10 On Occasion...... 3,690
Purpose Exception Not a Benefit.
Based on Enabling
Transactions or Placement
of Less Than 25 Percent
of Customer Assets Under
Management.
Ongoing:
Reporting for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 3,607 4 0.5 Quarterly........ 7,214
Purpose Exception Based a Benefit.
on the Placement of Less
Than 25 Percent of
Customer Assets Under
Management.
Reporting for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 1,105 4 0.5 Quarterly........ 2,210
Purpose Exception Based a Benefit.
on Enabling Transactions.
Reporting for Primary Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 1,105 4 1 Quarterly........ 4,420
Purpose Exception Not a Benefit.
Based on Enabling
Transactions or Placement
of Less Than 25 Percent
of Customer Assets Under
Management.
Application for Waiver of Reporting......... Obtain or Retain 9 1 6 On Occasion...... 54
Prohibition on Acceptance a Benefit.
of Brokered Deposits.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Estimated Annual .................. ................. .............. .............. .............. ................. 23,042
Burden Hours.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The estimated number of respondents in the Initial Implementation section is an annual average calculated over three years.
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.
B. Solicitation of Comments on Use of Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach Bliley Act,\27\ requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The FDIC invites your comments on how
to make this revised proposal easier to understand. For example:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Public Law 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov. 12, 1999).
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[cir] Has the FDIC organized the material to suit your needs? If
not, how could the material be better organized?
[cir] Are the requirements in the proposed regulation clearly
stated? If not, how could the regulation be stated more clearly?
[cir] Does the proposed regulation contain language or jargon that
is unclear? If so, which language requires clarification?
[cir] Would a different format (grouping and order of sections, use
of headings, paragraphing) make the regulation easier to understand?
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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.\28\ 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.\29\
Generally, the FDIC considers
[[Page 7468]]
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. The FDIC does not believe that the proposed
rule, if adopted, will have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities. However, some expected effects of
the proposed rule are difficult to assess or accurately quantify given
current information, therefore the FDIC has included an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis in this section.
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\28\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\29\ 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 previously discussed in Section II. Background, the agencies
issued an ANPR in 2018 to obtain input from the public on its brokered
deposit and interest rate regulations in light of significant changes
in technology, business models, the economic environment, and products
since the agency's regulations relating to brokered deposits were
adopted. Generally speaking, commenters offered information and
expressed options that suggested the FDIC needed to clarify and update
its historical interpretation of the ``deposit broker'' definition to
better align with current market practices and risks associated with
brokered deposits.
Policy Objectives
As previously discussed in Section I. Policy Objectives, the FDIC
is proposing amendments to its regulations relating to brokered
deposits in order to modernize those regulations to reflect recent
technological changes and innovations that have occurred. Additionally,
the FDIC seeks to continue to promote safe and sound practices by FDIC-
insured depository institutions.
Legal Basis
The FDIC is proposing this rule under authorities granted by
Section 29 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act). The law
restricts troubled institutions (i.e. those that are not well
capitalized) from (1) accepting deposits by or through a deposit broker
without a waiver and (2) soliciting deposits by offering rates of
interest on deposits that were significantly higher than the prevailing
rates of interest on deposits offered by other insured depository
institutions in such depository institution's normal market area. For a
more detailed discussion of the proposed rule's legal basis please
refer to Section A. Current Law and Regulation, within Section II.
Background.
Description of the Rule
A person meets the ``deposit broker'' definition under Section 29
of the FDI Act if it is engaged in the business of placing deposits, or
facilitating the placement of deposits, of third parties with insured
depository institutions or the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the purpose of selling interests in
those deposits to third parties. An agent or trustee meets the
``deposit broker'' definition when establishing a deposit account to
facilitate a business arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the account to fund a prearranged
loan. Additionally, Section 29 provides nine statutory exceptions to
the definition of deposit broker and, as noted earlier, the FDIC added
one regulatory exception to the definition. The FDIC is proposing a new
framework for analyzing certain provisions of the statutory definition.
Among other things, through this rulemaking, the FDIC proposes amending
the IDI exception and the primary purpose exception. For a more
detailed description of the proposed rule please refer to Section III.
Discussion of the Proposed Rule.
Small Entities Affected
The FDIC insures 5,303 depository institutions, of which 3,947 are
defined as small institutions by the terms of the RFA.\30\
Additionally, of those 3,947 small, FDIC-insured institutions, 1,297
currently report holding some volume of brokered deposits. Further, of
those 3,947 small, FDIC-insured institutions, 3,931 are currently
classified as well capitalized, while 16 are less than well capitalized
based on capital ratios reported in their Call Reports.\31\
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\30\ 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.
\31\ Information based on June 30, 2019 Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income. The 16 institutions do not include any
quantitatively well capitalized institutions that may have been
administratively classified as less than well capitalized. See
generally, FDIC--12 CFR 324.403(b)(1)(v); Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System--12 CFR 208.43(b)(1)(v); Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency--12 CFR 6.4(c)(1)(v).
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Expected Effects
There are potentially three broad categories of effects of the
proposed rule on small, FDIC-insured institutions: Effects applicable
to potentially any small, insured institution; effects applicable to
small, less than well-capitalized institutions; and effects applicable
to nonbank subsidiaries of small, FDIC-insured institutions that may or
may not be deemed deposit brokers.
All Small, FDIC-Insured Institutions
The proposed rule could immediately affect the 1,297 small, FDIC-
insured institutions currently reporting brokered deposits. Going
forward, the rule could affect all 3,947 small, FDIC-insured
institutions whose decisions regarding the types of deposits to accept
could be affected.
The proposed rule would benefit insured institutions and other
interested parties by providing greater legal clarity regarding the
treatment of brokered deposits. The FDIC believes that as result of
this increased clarity, the proposed rule would reduce the extent of
reliance by banks and third parties on FDIC Staff Advisory Opinions and
informal written and telephonic inquiries with FDIC staff. This would
have two important benefits. First, the likelihood of inconsistent
outcomes, where some institutions may report certain types of deposits
as brokered and others do not, would be reduced. Second, to the extent
the classification of deposits as brokered or non-brokered can be
clearly addressed in regulation, the need for potentially time-
consuming analyses can be minimized.
The FDIC has heard from a number of insured institutions that they
perceive a stigma associated with accepting brokered deposits.
Historical experience has been that higher use of deposits currently
reported to the FDIC as brokered has been associated with higher
probability of bank failure and higher deposit insurance fund loss
rates.\32\ The funding characteristics of brokered deposits, however,
are non-uniform. For example, brokered CDs are often used by bank
customers searching for relatively high yields on their insured
deposits, and as such these deposits may be less stable and more
subject to deposit interest rate competition. The behavior of deposits
placed through sweeps or that underlie prepaid card programs may be
more based on a business relationship than on
[[Page 7469]]
interest rate competition. Given limitations on available data,
however, historical studies have not been able to differentiate the
experience of banks based on the different types of deposits accepted.
To the extent the proposed rule reduces bankers' perception of a stigma
associated with certain types of deposits, more institutions may be
incentivized to accept such deposits.
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\32\ See FDIC's 2011 Study on Core and Brokered Deposits, July
8, 2011.
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The proposed rule could incentivize the development of banking
relationships between small, FDIC-insured institutions and other firms.
The new opportunities could spur growth in the third party deposit
placement industry, potentially resulting in greater access to, or use
of, bank deposits by a greater variety of customers. Further, such
growth could be of benefit to small, FDIC-insured institutions allowing
them to compete against large financial institutions that are utilizing
internet based deposit gathering methods across the country. It is
difficult to accurately estimate such potential effects with the
information currently available to the FDIC, because such effects
depend, in part, on the future commercial development of such
activities.
FDIC deposit insurance assessments would be affected by the
proposed changes to the definition of deposit broker, potentially
affecting any insured institution that currently accepts brokered
deposits or might do so in the future. Since 2009, significant
concentrations of brokered deposits can increase an institution's
quarterly assessments, depending on other factors. To the extent that
certain deposits would no longer be considered brokered deposits under
this NPR, a bank's assessment may decrease, all else equal. However, as
noted above, in a future rulemaking the FDIC plans to consider
modifications to its assessment regulations in light of this rule.
Small, FDIC-insured institutions could benefit from the rule by
having greater certainty and greater access to funding sources that
would no longer be designated as brokered deposits, thereby easing
their liquidity planning and reducing the likelihood that a liquidity
failure of an otherwise viable institution might be precipitated by the
brokered deposit regulations. Another benefit of the rule could result
if greater access to funding sources supported small FDIC-insured
institutions' ability to provide credit. However, these effects are
difficult to estimate because the decision to receive third party
deposits depends on the specific financial conditions of each bank,
fluctuating market conditions for third party deposits, and future
management decisions.
The proposed rule would establish recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for IDIs and other nonbank third parties that apply for
and maintain a primary purpose exception under Sec. 303.243.\33\ As
noted previously, however, the FDIC anticipates that nonbank third
parties are likely to apply on their own behalf, given that the
information required to complete an application will be in possession
of the nonbank third party (rather than the bank). The FDIC views the
potential burden on small FDIC-insured institutions under the proposed
rule as minimal.
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\33\ IDIs can apply for an exception on behalf of a third party,
and third parties can apply directly for an exception. See Sec.
303.243(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
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Less Than Well-Capitalized Institutions
As discussed previously, the acceptance of brokered deposits is
subject to statutory and regulatory restrictions for those banks that
are less than well capitalized. Adequately capitalized banks may not
accept brokered deposits without a waiver from the FDIC, and banks that
are less than adequately capitalized may not accept them at all. As a
result, adequately capitalized and undercapitalized banks generally
hold less brokered deposits--as of June 30, 2019, brokered deposits
make up approximately 3 percent of domestic deposits held by less than
well capitalized banks, well below the 9 percent held by all IDIs. By
generally reducing the scope of deposits that are considered brokered,
the proposed rule would allow less than well capitalized banks to
increase their holdings of deposits that are currently reported as
brokered but would not be reported as brokered under the proposal. As
of June 30, 2019, there are only 16 less than well capitalized small,
FDIC-insured institutions based on Call report information. These banks
hold approximately $2.2 billion in assets, $2.0 billion in domestic
deposits, and $61 million in brokered deposits. These banks could be
directly affected by the proposed rule in that they could potentially
accept more or different types of deposits currently designated as
brokered.
More broadly speaking with respect to future developments, another
aspect of brokered deposit restrictions is that, consistent with their
statutory purpose, they act as a constraint on growth and risk-taking
by troubled institutions. Conversely, as noted previously, access to
funding can prevent needless liquidity failures of viable institutions.
Nonbank Subsidiaries of Small, FDIC-insured Institutions That May or
May Not Be Deposit Brokers
The proposed revisions to the brokered deposit regulations could
have effects on some nonbank subsidiaries of small, FDIC-insured
institutions. For example, wholly owned subsidiaries of small, FDIC-
insured institutions that may currently meet the deposit broker
definition would no longer be a deposit broker under the proposed rule
if they meet the parameters of the rule. Additionally, some nonbank
subsidiaries of small, FDIC-insured institutions could seek to
determine whether they meet the primary purpose exception, as defined
under the IDI exception (as proposed). This may include the filing of
applications by some parties that seek to avail themselves of the
primary purpose exception. Ongoing activity by these entities to ensure
that they continue to meet the relevant exceptions would also be
expected.
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.
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act
Section 302 of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (RCDRIA), 12 U.S.C. 4701, requires that each
Federal banking agency, in determining the effective date and
administrative compliance requirements for new regulations that impose
additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements on insured
depository institutions, 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.\34\ In
addition, new regulations that impose additional reporting,
disclosures, or other new requirements on insured depository
institutions generally must take effect on the first day of a calendar
quarter that begins on or after the date on which
[[Page 7470]]
the regulations are published in final form.
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\34\ 12 U.S.C. 4802.
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The FDIC invites comments that further will inform the FDIC's
consideration of RCDRIA.
VII. Request for Comments
The FDIC invites comment from all members of the public regarding
all aspects of the proposal. This request for comment is limited to
this proposal. The FDIC will carefully consider all comments that
relate to the proposal.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 303
Administrative practice and procedure; Bank deposit insurance;
Banks, banking; Reporting and recordkeeping requirements; Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 337
Banks, banking; Reports and recordkeeping requirements; Savings
associations; Securities.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the FDIC proposes to amend
parts 303 and 337 of chapter III of Title 12, Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 303--FILING PROCEDURES
0
1. The authority citation for part 303 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 378, 1464, 1813, 1815, 1817, 1818, 1819(a)
(Seventh and Tenth), 1820, 1823, 1828, 1831a, 1831e, 1831o, 1831p-1,
1831w, 1835a, 1843(l), 3104, 3105, 3108, 3207, 5414, 5415 and 15
U.S.C. 1601-1607.
0
2. Revise Sec. 303.243 to read as follows:
Sec. 303.243 Brokered deposits.
(a) Brokered deposit waivers--(1) Scope. Pursuant to section 29 of
the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1831f) and part 337 of this chapter, an
adequately capitalized insured depository institution may not accept,
renew or roll over any brokered deposits unless it has obtained a
waiver from the FDIC. A well-capitalized insured depository institution
may accept brokered deposits without a waiver, and an undercapitalized
insured depository institution may not accept, renew or roll over any
brokered deposits under any circumstances. This section contains the
procedures to be followed to file with the FDIC for a brokered deposit
waiver. The FDIC will provide notice to the depository institution's
appropriate federal banking agency and any state regulatory agency, as
appropriate, that a request for a waiver has been filed and will
consult with such agency or agencies, prior to taking action on the
institution's request for a waiver. Prior notice and/or consultation
shall not be required in any particular case if the FDIC determines
that the circumstances require it to take action without giving such
notice and opportunity for consultation.
(2) Where to file. Applicants shall submit a letter application to
the appropriate FDIC office.
(3) Content of filing. The application shall contain the following:
(i) The time period for which the waiver is requested;
(ii) A statement of the policy governing the use of brokered
deposits in the institution's overall funding and liquidity management
program;
(iii) The volume, rates and maturities of the brokered deposits
held currently and anticipated during the waiver period sought,
including any internal limits placed on the terms, solicitation and use
of brokered deposits;
(iv) How brokered deposits are costed and compared to other funding
alternatives and how they are used in the institution's lending and
investment activities, including a detailed discussion of asset growth
plans;
(v) Procedures and practices used to solicit brokered deposits,
including an identification of the principal sources of such deposits;
(vi) Management systems overseeing the solicitation, acceptance and
use of brokered deposits;
(vii) A recent consolidated financial statement with balance sheet
and income statements; and
(viii) The reasons the institution believes its acceptance, renewal
or rollover of brokered deposits would pose no undue risk.
(4) Additional information. The FDIC may request additional
information at any time during processing of the application.
(5) Expedited processing for eligible depository institutions. An
application filed under this section by an eligible depository
institution as defined in this paragraph will be acknowledged in
writing by the FDIC and will receive expedited processing, unless the
applicant is notified in writing to the contrary and provided with the
basis for that decision. For the purpose of this section, an applicant
will be deemed an eligible depository institution if it satisfies all
of the criteria contained in Sec. 303.2(r) except that the applicant
may be adequately capitalized rather than well-capitalized. The FDIC
may remove an application from expedited processing for any of the
reasons set forth in Sec. 303.11(c)(2). Absent such removal, an
application processed under expedited procedures will be deemed
approved 21 days after the FDIC's receipt of a substantially complete
application.
(6) Standard processing. For those filings which are not processed
pursuant to the expedited procedures, the FDIC will provide the
applicant with written notification of the final action as soon as the
decision is rendered.
(7) Conditions for approval. A waiver issued pursuant to this
section shall:
(i) Be for a fixed period, generally no longer than two years, but
may be extended upon refiling; and
(ii) May be revoked by the FDIC at any time by written notice to
the institution.
(b) Application for primary purpose exception--(1) Scope. Section
29 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1831f) provides that an agent or nominee
is excluded from the definition of deposit broker if its primary
purpose is not the placement of funds with depository institutions.
This paragraph (b) sets forth the application procedures for insured
depository institutions and agents or nominees that seek the FDIC's
determination that it, or a nonbank agent or nominee on whose behalf an
insured depository institution is submitting an application, is
excluded from the definition of deposit broker pursuant to the primary
purpose exception.
(2) Definitions. For purposes of this paragraph (b):
(i) Third party means an agent or nominee that is applying to be
excluded from the definition of deposit broker pursuant to the primary
purpose exception.
(ii) Applicant means a third party as defined in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) of this section, or an insured depository institution that is
applying on behalf of a third party for that third party to be excluded
from the definition of deposit broker pursuant to the primary purpose
exception.
(iii) Appropriate FDIC office means the office designated by the
appropriate regional director or designee.
(iv) Appropriate Regional Director means the Director of the FDIC
Region in which the applicant is located.
(v) Brokered CD means a deposit placement arrangement in which
certificates of deposit are issued in wholesale amounts by a depository
institution, subdivided by a non-bank entity or a depository
institution, and then sold by a nonbank entity or depository
institution to investors, or a similar deposit placement arrangement
[[Page 7471]]
that the FDIC determines is arranged for a similar purpose.
(3) Filing procedures. (i) A third party may submit a written
application to the appropriate FDIC office seeking a primary purpose
exception.
(ii) An insured depository institution may submit a written
application, on behalf of a nonbank third party, to the appropriate
FDIC office of the insured depository institution, seeking a
determination that the primary purpose exception applies to the nonbank
third party.
(4) Content for filing. (i) Applications that seek the primary
purpose exception for third parties based on the placement of less than
25 percent of the total amount of customer assets under management by
the third party, for a particular business line, at depository
institutions shall contain the following information:
(A) A description of the particular business line;
(B) Total amount of customer assets under management by the third
party for that particular business line;
(C) Total amount of deposits placed by the third party on behalf of
its customers, for that particular business line, at all depository
institutions, but exclusive of the amount of brokered CDs being placed
by that third party;
(D) A description of the deposit placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(E) Any other information the applicant deems relevant; and
(F) Any other information that the FDIC requires to initiate its
review and render the application complete.
(ii) Applications that seek the primary purpose exception for third
parties based on the placement of customer funds, with respect to a
particular business line, at insured depository institutions to enable
its customers to make transactions shall contain the following
information:
(A) Contracts with customers evidencing the amount of interest,
fees, or other remuneration, accrued for all customer accounts, and
that all customer deposits are in transaction accounts;
(B) For third parties, or insured depository institutions that pay
interest, fees, or provide other remuneration:
(1) The average volume of transactions for all customer accounts;
and
(2) An explanation of how its customers utilize its services for
the purpose of making payments and not for the receipt of a deposit
placement service or deposit insurance;
(C) A description of the deposit placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(D) Any other information the applicant deems relevant; and
(E) Any other information that the FDIC requires to initiate its
review and render the application complete.
(iii) Applications that seek the primary purpose exception for
third parties, other than applications under paragraphs (b)(4)(i) and
(ii) of this section, with respect to a particular business line, must
include, to the extent applicable:
(A) A description of the deposit placement arrangements with all
entities involved;
(B) A description of the particular business line;
(C) A description of the primary purpose of the particular business
line;
(D) The total amount of customer assets under management by the
third party;
(E) The total amount of deposits placed by the third party at all
insured depository institutions, including the amounts placed with the
applicant, if the applicant is an insured depository institution. This
includes the total amount of term deposits and transactional deposits
placed by the third party, but should be exclusive of the amount of
brokered CDs being placed by that third party;
(F) Revenue generated from the third party's activities related to
the placement, or facilitating the placement, of deposits;
(G) Revenue generated from the third party's activities not related
to the placement, or facilitating the placement, of deposits;
(H) A description of the marketing activities provided by the third
party;
(I) The reasons the third party meets the primary purpose
exception;
(J) Any other information the applicant deems relevant; and
(K) Any other information that the FDIC requires to initiate its
review and render the application complete.
(5) Brokered CD placements not eligible for primary purpose
exception. An agent or nominees' placement of brokered certificates of
deposit as described in 12 U.S.C. 1831f(g)(1)(A) shall be considered a
discrete and independent business line from other deposit placement
businesses in which the agent or nominee may be engaged.
(6) Additional information. The FDIC may request additional
information from the applicant at any time during processing of the
application.
(7) Timing. (i) An applicant that submits a complete application
seeking the primary purpose exception will receive a written
determination by the FDIC within 120 days of receipt of a complete
application.
(ii) The FDIC may extend the 120-day timeframe, if necessary, to
complete its review of a complete application, with proper notice to
the applicant.
(8) Approvals. The FDIC will approve an application -
(i) Submitted under paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section, if the
total amount of customer funds placed at insured depository
institutions by the third party is less than 25 percent of total
customer assets under management by the third party, for purposes of a
particular business line.
(ii) Submitted under paragraph (b)(4)(ii), if no interest, fees, or
other remuneration, is being provided or paid on any customer accounts
by the third party.
(iii) Submitted under paragraph (b)(4)(ii) in which interest, fees,
or other remuneration is being provided or paid on any customer
accounts by the third party, if the applicant demonstrates that the
primary purpose of the particular business line under which customer
accounts are offered is to enable its customers to make transactions.
(iv) Submitted under paragraph (b)(4)(iii), if the applicant
demonstrates that, with respect to the particular business line under
which the third party places or facilitates the placement of deposits,
the primary purpose of the third party, for the particular business
line, is a purpose other than the placement or facilitation of
placement of deposits.
(9) Ongoing reporting--(i) General. The FDIC will describe any
reporting requirements as part of its written approval for a primary
purpose exception.
(ii) Reporting. Third parties, or insured depository institutions
that apply on behalf of the third party, that receive a written
approval for the primary purpose exception, shall provide reporting to
the appropriate FDIC office and, in the case of an insured depository
institution, to its primary federal regulator.
(10) Modification and withdrawal of a previously granted approval.
At any time after approval of an application for the primary purpose
exception, the FDIC may, with written notice and adequate
justification:
(i) Require additional information from an applicant for which the
FDIC has approved the primary purpose exception to ensure that the
approval is still appropriate, or for purposes of verifying the
accuracy and correctness of the information provided to an insured
depository institution or
[[Page 7472]]
submitted to the FDIC as part of the application under this section;
(ii) Require the applicant for which the FDIC has approved the
primary purpose exception to reapply for approval;
(iii) Impose additional conditions on an approval; or
(iv) Withdraw an approval.
PART 337--UNSAFE AND UNSOUND BANKING PRACTICES
0
3. The authority for part 337 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 375a(4), 375b, 1463(a)(1),1816, 1818(a),
1818(b), 1819, 1820(d), 1828(j)(2), 1831, 1831f, 5412.
0
4. Amend Sec. 337.6 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (a)(5)(i);
0
b. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(5)(ii) and (iii) as paragrapahs
(a)(5)(iii) and (iv), respectively;
0
c. Add a new paragraph (a)(5)(ii);
0
d. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (a)(5)(iii)(A) and (I);
The revision and addition read as follows:
Sec. 337.6 Brokered deposits.
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) The term deposit broker means:
(A) Any person engaged in the business of placing deposits of third
parties with insured depository institutions;
(B) Any person engaged in the business of facilitating the
placement of deposits of third parties with insured depository
institutions;
(C) Any person engaged in the business of placing deposits with
insured depository institutions for the purpose of selling interests in
those deposits to third parties; and
(D) An agent or trustee who establishes a deposit account to
facilitate a business arrangement with an insured depository
institution to use the proceeds of the account to fund a prearranged
loan.
(ii) Engaged in the business of facilitating the placement of
deposits. A person is engaged in the business of facilitating the
placement of deposits of third parties with insured depository
institutions, by, while engaged in business, engaging in one or more of
the following activities:
(A) The person directly or indirectly shares any third party
information with the insured depository institution;
(B) The person has legal authority, contractual or otherwise, to
close the account or move the third party's funds to another insured
depository institution;
(C) The person provides assistance or is involved in setting rates,
fees, terms, or conditions for the deposit account; or
(D) the person is acting, directly or indirectly, with respect to
the placement of deposits, as an intermediary between a third party
that is placing deposits on behalf of a depositor and an insured
depository institution, other than in a purely administrative capacity.
(iii) * * *
(A) An insured depository institution, with respect to funds placed
with that depository institution;
(1) A wholly owned operating subsidiary is considered a part of its
parent insured depository institution, for purposes of this section, if
it meets the following criteria:
(i) The parent insured depository institution owns 100 percent of
the subsidiary's outstanding stock;
(ii) The wholly owned subsidiary places deposits of retail
customers exclusively with its parent insured depository institution;
and
(iii) The wholly owned subsidiary engages only in activities
permissible for the parent insured depository institution.
* * * * *
(I) An agent or nominee whose primary purpose is not the placement
of funds with depository institutions if and to the extent, the FDIC
determines that the agent or nominee meets this exception under the
application process in 12 CFR 303.243(b); or
* * * * *
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. 2019-28275 Filed 2-7-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P