Assessment of Fees on Certain Bank Holding Companies and Nonbank Financial Companies Supervised by the Federal Reserve Board To Cover the Expenses of the Financial Research Fund, 15378-15382 [2020-05083]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 150
RIN 1505–AC59
Assessment of Fees on Certain Bank
Holding Companies and Nonbank
Financial Companies Supervised by
the Federal Reserve Board To Cover
the Expenses of the Financial
Research Fund
Departmental Offices,
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury (‘‘Treasury’’) is issuing this
final rule to implement section 401 of
the Economic Growth, Regulatory
Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
(the ‘‘Economic Growth Act’’), which
amends section 155 of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (the ‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’).
As amended, section 155 requires the
Secretary of the Treasury to establish, by
regulation, an assessment schedule
applicable to bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $250
billion or greater and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (‘‘the Board’’), to collect
assessments equal to the total expenses
of the Office of Financial Research (the
‘‘OFR’’). The final rule also simplifies
the method for determining the amount
of total assessable assets for foreign
banking organizations, which is made
possible by a new regulatory data
source. This rule finalizes a November
4, 2019 proposed rule without change.
DATES: This rule is effective April 17,
2020.
SUMMARY:
John
Zitko, Senior Counsel, OFR, (202) 927–
8372.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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I. Background
Section 155(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Secretary of the Treasury to
establish, by regulation, and with the
approval of the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (the ‘‘Council’’), an
assessment schedule to collect
assessments from certain companies
equal to the total expenses of the OFR.
On May 21, 2012, Treasury published a
final regulation implementing section
155(d) in the Federal Register, codified
at 31 CFR part 150 (the ‘‘Original
Rule’’). Before the enactment of the
Economic Growth Act, pursuant to
section 155(d) and the implementing
regulation, Treasury collected
assessments from bank holding
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companies with total consolidated
assets of $50,000,000,000 or greater and
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.
On May 24, 2018, the Economic
Growth Act was signed into law.
Section 401(c)(1) of the Economic
Growth Act replaced the $50 billion
reference in section 155(d) of the DoddFrank Act with $250 billion. In
addition, section 401(f) of the Economic
Growth Act required any bank holding
company identified as a global
systemically important bank holding
company (‘‘G–SIB’’) pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402 to be considered a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
equal to or greater than $250 billion for
purposes of section 155(d) of the DoddFrank Act. As a result of this statutory
amendment, bank holding companies
with less than $250 billion in total
consolidated assets that are not G–SIBs
are not to be assessed under Dodd-Frank
Act section 155(d).
The Economic Growth Act sets forth
two different effective dates. For bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of less than $100
billion, it became effective on May 24,
2018 (the date of enactment). For bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $100 billion or
more and for G–SIBs, the effective date
was November 24, 2019 (18 months
after the date of enactment). This final
rule, in part, implements section 401.
Under section 118 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, the expenses of the Council are
treated as expenses of, and are paid by,
the OFR. In addition, under section 210
of the Dodd-Frank Act, certain
implementation expenses of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (‘‘FDIC’’)
associated with the FDIC’s orderly
liquidation authority are treated as
expenses of the Council,1 and the FDIC
is directed to periodically submit
requests for reimbursement to the
Chairperson of the Council. The total
expenses for the OFR therefore include
the combined expenses of the OFR and
the Council and certain expenses of the
FDIC. All of these expenses are paid out
of the Financial Research Fund (the
‘‘FRF’’), a fund managed by Treasury.
The Council was established by the
Dodd-Frank Act to identify risks to U.S.
financial stability, promote market
discipline, and respond to emerging
1 Under Section 210(n)(10)(C) of the Dodd-Frank
Act the term implementation expenses ‘‘(i) means
costs incurred by [the FDIC] beginning on the date
of enactment of this Act, as part of its efforts to
implement [Title II] that do not relate to a particular
covered financial company; and (ii) includes the
costs incurred in connection with the development
of policies, procedures, rules, and regulations and
other planning activities of the [FDIC] consistent
with carrying out [Title II].’’
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threats to the stability of the U.S.
financial system. The Council is chaired
by the Secretary of the Treasury, and its
15 members include all of the federal
financial regulators, an independent
member with insurance expertise
appointed by the President, and state
financial regulators.
The OFR was established within
Treasury by the Dodd-Frank Act to
support the Council and its member
agencies. Among the OFR’s key duties
are:
• Collecting data on behalf of the
Council and providing such data to the
Council and member agencies;
• Standardizing the types and formats
of data reported and collected;
• Performing research;
• Developing tools for risk
measurement and monitoring; and
• Reporting to Congress and the
public on the OFR’s assessment of
significant financial market
developments and potential emerging
threats to U.S. financial stability.
II. The Proposed and Final Rule
Treasury issued a proposed rule on
November 4, 2019, to implement the
changes to the FRF assessments
required by the Economic Growth Act.2
The proposed rule also included certain
other amendments to 31 CFR part 150
to simplify the method for determining
the amount of total assessable assets for
certain entities, to remove outdated
references to the initial assessment
period (which concluded in 2013), and
to make other non-substantive changes
to add clarifying or remove redundant
language.
Treasury received no public
comments on the proposed rule.
Accordingly, Treasury is issuing this
final rule as proposed. Following is a
description of the changes the final rule
makes to the Original Rule.
a. Determination of Assessed
Companies
To impose assessments under section
155 of the Dodd-Frank Act, Treasury
must identify companies that are subject
to the assessment. As described in the
Original Rule and below, Treasury
works closely with the Board to
determine the population of assessed
companies.
The original text of Dodd-Frank Act
section 155(d) required assessments to
be collected from bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or greater and
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board. The Economic
Growth Act raised the asset threshold
2 84
FR 59320 (November 4, 2019).
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for bank holding companies to $250
billion and also stated that a bank
holding company, regardless of asset
size, that has been identified as a G–SIB
under § 217.402 of title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations, shall be considered
a bank holding company with total
consolidated assets equal to or greater
than $250 billion for purposes of section
155(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Accordingly, the final rule changes
the definitions of ‘‘Assessed Company’’
and ‘‘Total Assessable Assets’’ in 12
CFR 150.2, and deletes the reference to
foreign banking organizations with less
than $50 billion in 12 CFR 150.5.
b. Determination of Total Assessable
Assets
i. Foreign Banking Organizations
At the time of adoption of the Original
Rule, there was no single regulatory
reporting form that provided a foreign
banking organization’s total assets of
combined U.S. operations, including its
U.S. branches, agencies, and
subsidiaries. The preamble to the
Original Rule specifically noted the
possibility that reporting requirements
for foreign banking organizations would
change over time and that the list of
reports would need to be adjusted.3 To
allow for the possibility of these
changes, the Original Rule did not
include a list of specific reference
reports for foreign banking
organizations, in contrast to U.S. bank
holding companies. It was noted that
calculating banking organizations’ total
assets of combined U.S. operations
based on multiple reports could result
in double-counting.4 The preamble to
the Original Rule stated that Treasury
would make every effort to avoid
double-counting, consulting with the
Board and the affected firms as
necessary, and that any questions could
be addressed through the appeals
process.5
After the adoption of the Original
Rule, the Board modified its form FR Y–
7Q by adding a line item for reporting
the total combined assets of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations.
Line item 6 of part 1A of FR Y–7Q now
requires reporting of the total combined
assets of a top-tier foreign banking
organization’s U.S.-domiciled affiliates,
branches, and agencies, excluding
intercompany balances and
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3 77
FR 29890 (May 21, 2012).
FR 29888–89 (May 21, 2012).
5 77 FR 29889 (May 21, 2012).
4 77
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intercompany transactions between
those entities to the extent such items
are not already eliminated in
consolidation.6 Accordingly, to simplify
the method for determining the amount
of total assessable assets for foreign
banking organizations and to adopt an
approach for foreign banking
organizations comparable to the
approach under the Original Rule for
U.S. bank holding companies, the final
rule includes changes to the definition
of ‘‘total assessable assets’’ by specifying
that the calculation of a foreign banking
organization’s total assessable assets
shall be based on the data reported in
the FR Y–7Q.
ii. Timing of Determination Dates,
Billing, and Collection
Under the Original Rule, assessments
were semiannual. On the specified
determination date before each
assessment period, Treasury determined
the pool of assessed companies, which
received confirmation statements. After
any appeals, assessments were debited
from assessed companies’ accounts on
the assessment payment date.
The Original Rule generally used a
period of four calendar quarters to
measure the total assessable assets of
both U.S. and foreign entities for
assessments. Thus, for the assessment
period with a November 30
determination date, total assessable
assets were based on the company’s
regulatory filings for the fourth quarter
of the previous calendar year and the
first three quarters of the same calendar
year. For the assessment period with a
May 31 determination date, total
assessable assets were based on the
company’s filings for the last three
quarters of the previous year and the
first quarter of the same calendar year.
Both the Federal Reserve’s form FR
Y–9C, which the Original Rule required
to be used to determine total assessable
assets of U.S. bank holding companies,
and the FR Y–7Q, which the final rule
incorporates to determine the total
assessable assets of foreign banking
organizations, are quarterly reports.
Their filing deadlines, however, are
asynchronous, as the FR Y–9C generally
must be filed within 40 calendar days
after each calendar quarter,7 and the FR
Y–7Q generally must be filed within 90
6 See Federal Reserve, The Capital and Asset
Report for Foreign Banking Organizations—FR Y–
7Q, available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
reportforms/forms/FR_Y-7Q20190331_f.pdf.
7 Reports as of December 31 are due 45 calendar
days later.
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calendar days after the quarter ends.
The timing of updated reports therefore
varies. For example, on the
determination date of May 31 under the
Original Rule, the FR Y–9C reports were
already available for Q1 of the same
year, but Q1 reports on FR Y–7Q were
not due until approximately one month
later (June 29).
To enable consistency in the timing of
determining assessable assets for U.S.
and foreign entities, the final rule moves
each of the two semiannual
determination dates one month earlier.
Accordingly, the first determination
date in each calendar year will be April
30 instead of May 31 as under the
Original Rule, and the second
determination date will be October 31,
instead of November 30 as under the
Original Rule. This change enables each
assessment to be based on companies’
filings for the last two calendar quarters
of the previous year and the first two
quarters of the current calendar year for
assessment periods with an October 31
determination date, and all four quarters
of the previous calendar year for
assessment periods with an April 30
determination date.
Consistent with Treasury’s process
under the Original Rule, the final rule
provides that before each assessment
period, after determining the pool of
assessed companies and publishing an
assessment fee rate, Treasury will
calculate the assessment fee for each
assessed company, send an electronic
billing notification to each assessed
company, and, on the assessment
payment date, initiate a direct debit to
each company’s account through
www.pay.gov to collect the assessments.
The final rule retains the process under
the Original Rule, with one additional
month added to the beginning of each
cycle, as described above, while keeping
the dates under the Original Rule for the
notice of fees, billing, and payment. In
order to provide additional clarity as to
when redetermination requests must be
received from companies wishing to
appeal their status as an assessed
company or the total assessable assets
that the Department has determined will
be used for calculating the company’s
assessment, the final rule amends the
reference to such date in 12 CFR
150.6(b) from ‘‘one month’’ to ‘‘30
calendar days.’’
The table below shows approximate
dates of the assessment billing and
collection process under the final rule:
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Assessment period
Determination
date
Confirmation
statement date
1st semiannual assessment period.
(April—September)
October 31 ...
November 15 (or
next business
day).
2nd semiannual assessment period.
(October—March) ..
April 30 .........
May 15 (or next
business day).
Initial response to
redetermination
request
Redetermination
request deadline
30 calendar days
from date of
Confirmation
Statement.
30 calendar days
from date of
Confirmation
Statement.
21 calendar days
from receipt of
Redetermination
Request.
21 calendar days
from receipt of
Redetermination
Request.
Publication of
notice of fees *
Billing date
Payment date
February 15 (or
next business
day).
March 1 (or prior
business day).
March 15 (or next
business day).
August 15 (or next
business day).
September 1 (or
prior business
day).
September 15 (or
next business
day).
* Rate published in the Notice of Fees.
The timeframe for sending
confirmation statements and receiving
appeals under the final remains the
same as under the Original Rule.
Specifically, confirmation statements
will continue to be mailed no later than
15 calendar days after the determination
date, and appeals by assessable
companies will continue to be due one
month later. In addition to promoting
consistent measurements of U.S. and
foreign entities, as noted above, adding
a month to the beginning of the FRF
assessments cycle will also afford
assessed companies additional time to
address appeals and make payment
arrangements, and will provide
Treasury additional time to calculate
assessments and administer the billing
process.
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III. Administrative Law Matters
a. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Congress enacted the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (the ‘‘RFA’’) to address
concerns related to the effects of agency
rules on small entities.8 Treasury is
sensitive to the impact its rules may
impose on small entities. The RFA
requires agencies either to provide an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
with a proposed rule for which general
notice of proposed rulemaking is
required, or to certify that the proposed
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.9
Under regulations issued by the Small
Business Administration, a ‘‘small
entity’’ includes those firms within the
‘‘Finance and Insurance’’ sector with
asset sizes that vary from $7.5 million
in assets to $600 million or less in
assets.10 For purposes of the RFA,
entities that are banks are considered
small entities if their assets are less than
or equal to $600 million.
As discussed above, under section
155 of the Dodd-Frank Act, as amended
by the Economic Growth Act, only bank
holding companies with more than $250
billion in total consolidated assets, G85
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
U.S.C. 603(a).
10 13 CFR 121.201.
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SIBs, and nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board will be subject
to assessments under the final rule. As
such, the final rule will not apply to
small entities and a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), it is hereby
certified that this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
b. Paperwork Reduction Act
We estimate that there are certain
direct costs associated with complying
with these rules. On a one-time basis,
assessed entities are required to set up
a bank account for fund transfers and to
provide the required information to
Treasury through an information
collection form. The form includes bank
account routing information and contact
information for the individuals at the
company who will be responsible for
setting up the account and ensuring that
funds are available on the billing date.
We estimate that approximately 20
companies could be affected, and that
completing the form and submitting it to
Treasury will take approximately 15
minutes. The aggregate paperwork
burden is estimated at 5.0 hours.
However, all of these companies have
already established an account for
payments or collections to the U.S.
Government pursuant to the Original
Rule.
On a semiannual basis, assessed
companies have the opportunity to
review the confirmation statement and
assessment bill. The final rule does not
require the companies to conduct this
review, but does permit it. We
anticipate that at least some of the
companies will conduct reviews, in part
because the cost associated with it is
very low.
The collection of information
contained in the final rule has been
reviewed and approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
OMB control number 1505–0245. An
agency may not conduct or sponsor and
a person is not required to respond to
a collection of information unless it
displays a valid OMB control number.
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c. Regulatory Planning and Review
(Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)
This final rule is not a significant
regulatory action as defined in section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 as
supplemented by Executive Order
13563.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 150
Bank holding companies, Financial
research fund, Nonbank financial
companies.
■ For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, title 31, part 150, of the Code
of Federal Regulations is revised to read
as follows:
PART 150—FINANCIAL RESEARCH
FUND
Sec.
150.1
150.2
150.3
150.4
150.5
150.6
Scope.
Definitions.
Determination of assessed companies.
Calculation of assessment basis.
Calculation of assessments.
Notice and payment of assessments.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5345; 31 U.S.C. 321;
12 U.S.C. 5365 note (Section 401(d), Pub. L.
115–174, 132 Stat. 1358; Section 401(f), Pub.
L. 115–174, 132 Stat. 1359).
§ 150.1
Scope.
The assessments contained in this
part are made pursuant to the authority
contained in 12 U.S.C. 5345.
§ 150.2
Definitions.
As used in this part:
Assessed company means:
(1) A bank holding company that has
$250 billion or more in total assessable
assets; or
(2) A bank holding company,
regardless of asset size, that has been
identified as a global systemically
important bank holding company under
§ 217.402 of title 12, Code of Federal
Regulations; or
(3) A nonbank financial company that
the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act shall
be supervised by the Board.
Assessment basis means, for a given
assessment period, an estimate of the
total expenses that are necessary or
appropriate to carry out the
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responsibilities of the Office of
Financial Research (OFR) and the
Council as set out in the Dodd-Frank
Act (including an amount necessary to
reimburse reasonable implementation
expenses of the Corporation that shall
be treated as expenses of the Council
pursuant to section 210(n)(10) of the
Dodd-Frank Act).
Assessment fee rate, with regard to a
particular assessment period, means the
rate published by the Department for the
calculation of assessment fees for that
period.
Assessment payment date means:
(1) For any assessment period ending
on March 31 of a given calendar year,
September 15 of the prior calendar year;
and
(2) For any assessment period ending
on September 30 of a given calendar
year, March 15 of the same year.
Assessment period means:
(1) Any period of time beginning on
October 1 and ending on March 31 of
the following calendar year; or
(2) Any period of time beginning on
April 1 and ending on September 30 of
the same calendar year.
Bank holding company means:
(1) A bank holding company as
defined in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841);
or
(2) A foreign banking organization.
Board means the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System.
Corporation means the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Council means the Financial Stability
Oversight Council.
Department means the Department of
the Treasury.
Determination date means:
(1) For any assessment period ending
on March 31 of a given calendar year,
April 30 of the prior calendar year; and
(2) For any assessment period ending
on September 30 of a given calendar
year, October 31 of the prior calendar
year.
Dodd-Frank Act means the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act.
Foreign banking organization means a
foreign bank or company that is treated
as a bank holding company for purposes
of the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956, pursuant to section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106(a)).
OFR means the Office of Financial
Research established by section 152 of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
Total assessable assets means:
(1) For a bank holding company other
than a foreign banking organization, the
average of the company’s total
consolidated assets for the four quarters
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preceding the relevant determination
date, as reported on the bank holding
company’s four most recent
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Bank Holding Companies—FR Y–9C
filings;
(2) For any foreign banking
organization, the average of the
company’s total assets of combined U.S.
operations for the four quarters
preceding the relevant determination
date, as reported on the foreign banking
organization’s four most recent quarterly
Capital and Asset Report for Foreign
Banking Organizations—FR Y–7Q
filings, or, if the foreign banking
organization only files such form
annually, the average of the two most
recent annual filings on such form; or
(3) For a nonbank financial company
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act shall
be supervised by the Board, either the
average of the company’s total
consolidated assets for the four quarters
preceding the relevant determination
date, if the company is a U.S. company,
or the average of the total assets of the
company’s combined U.S. operations for
the four quarters preceding the relevant
determination date, if the company is a
non-U.S. company.
§ 150.3 Determination of assessed
companies.
(a) The determination that a bank
holding company or a nonbank financial
company is an assessed company will
be made by the Department.
(b) The Department will apply the
following principles in determining
whether a company is an assessed
company:
(1) For tiered bank holding companies
for which a holding company owns or
controls, or is owned or controlled by,
other holding companies, the assessed
company shall be the top-tier, regulated
holding company.
(2) In situations where more than one
top-tier, regulated bank holding
company has a legal authority for
control of a U.S. bank, each of the toptier regulated holding companies shall
be designated as an assessed company.
(3) In situations where a company has
not filed four consecutive quarters of the
financial reports referenced above for
the most recent quarters (or two
consecutive years for annual filers of the
FR Y–7Q or successor form), such as
may be true for companies that recently
converted to a bank holding company,
the Department will use, at its
discretion, other financial or annual
reports filed by the company, such as
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) filings, to determine a company’s
total consolidated assets.
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(4) In situations where a company
does not report total consolidated assets
in its public reports or where a company
uses a financial reporting methodology
other than U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) to report
on its U.S. operations, the Department
will use, at its discretion, any
comparable financial information that
the Department may require from the
company for this determination.
(c) Any company that the Department
determines is an assessed company on
a given determination date will be an
assessed company for the entire
assessment period related to such
determination date, and will be subject
to the full assessment fee for that
assessment period, regardless of any
changes in the company’s assets or other
attributes that occur after the
determination date.
§ 150.4
Calculation of assessment basis.
For each assessment period, the
Department will calculate an assessment
basis that shall be sufficient to replenish
the Financial Research Fund to a level
equivalent to the sum of:
(a) Budgeted operating expenses for
the OFR for the applicable assessment
period;
(b) Budgeted operating expenses for
the Council for the applicable
assessment period;
(c) Budgeted capital expenses for the
OFR for the 12-month period beginning
on the first day of the applicable
assessment period;
(d) Budgeted capital expenses for the
Council for the 12-month period
beginning on the first day of the
applicable assessment period; and
(e) An amount necessary to reimburse
reasonable implementation expenses of
the Corporation as provided under
section 210(n)(10) of the Dodd-Frank
Act.
§ 150.5
Calculation of assessments.
(a) For each assessed company, the
Department will calculate the total
assessable assets in accordance with the
definition in § 150.2.
(b) The Department will allocate the
assessment basis to the assessed
companies in the following manner:
(1) Based on the sum of all assessed
companies’ total assessable assets, the
Department will calculate the
assessment fee rate necessary to collect
the assessment basis for the applicable
assessment period.
(2) The assessment payable by an
assessed company for each assessment
period shall be equal to the assessment
fee rate for that assessment period
multiplied by the total assessable assets
of such assessed company.
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§ 150.6 Notice and payment of
assessments.
(a) No later than fifteen calendar days
after the determination date, the
Department will send to each assessed
company a statement that:
(1) Confirms that such company has
been determined by the Department to
be an assessed company; and
(2) States the total assessable assets
that the Department has determined will
be used for calculating the company’s
assessment.
(b) If a company that is required to
make an assessment payment for a given
assessment period believes that the
statement referred to in paragraph (a) of
this section contains an error, the
company may provide the Department
with a written request for a revised
statement. Such request must be
received by the Department via email
within 30 calendar days and must
include all facts that the company
requests the Department to consider.
The Department will respond to all such
requests within 21 calendar days of
receipt thereof.
(c) No later than the 14 calendar days
prior to the payment date for a given
assessment period, the Department will
send an electronic billing notification to
each assessed company, containing the
final assessment that is required to be
paid by such assessed company.
(d) For the purpose of making the
payments described in § 150.5, each
assessed company shall designate a
deposit account for direct debit by the
Department through www.pay.gov or
successor website. No later than the
later of 30 days prior to the payment
date for an assessment period, or April
17, 2020, each such company shall
provide notice to the Department of the
account designated, including all
information and authorizations required
by the Department for direct debit of the
account. After the initial notice of the
designated account, no further notice is
required unless the company designates
a different account for assessment debit
by the Department, in which case the
requirements of the preceding sentence
apply.
(e) Each assessed company shall take
all actions necessary to allow the
Department to debit assessments from
such company’s designated deposit
account. Each such company shall, prior
to each assessment payment date,
ensure that funds in an amount at least
equal to the amount on the relevant
electronic billing notification are
available in the designated deposit
account for debit by the Department.
Failure to take any such action or to
provide such funding of the account
shall be deemed to constitute
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:10 Mar 17, 2020
Jkt 250001
nonpayment of the assessment. The
Department will cause the amount
stated in the applicable electronic
billing notification to be directly debited
on the appropriate payment date from
the deposit account so designated.
(f) In the event that, for a given
assessment period, an assessed
company materially misstates or
misrepresents any information that is
used by the Department in calculating
that company’s total assessable assets,
the Department may at any time recalculate the assessment payable by that
company for that assessment period,
and the assessed company shall take all
actions necessary to allow the
Department to immediately debit any
additional payable amounts from such
assessed company’s designated deposit
account.
(g) If a due date under this section
falls on a date that is not a business day,
the applicable date shall be the next
business day.
Dated: March 6, 2020.
Kipp Kranbuhl,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary,
Financial Markets, Department of the
Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2020–05083 Filed 3–17–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P
I. Table of Abbreviations
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 100
[Docket Number USCG–2020–0153]
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulation; Gulfport
Grand Prix, Boca Ciego Bay, Gulfport,
FL
Coast Guard, DHS.
Temporary final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is
establishing a special local regulation on
the waters of the Boca Ciego Bay in the
vicinity of Gulfport, Florida, during the
Gulfport Grand Prix High Speed Boat
Race. Approximately 75 boats, 14–30
feet in length, traveling at speeds in
excess of 120 miles per hour are
expected to participate. Additionally, it
is anticipated that 100 spectator vessels
will be present along the race course.
The special local regulation is necessary
to protect the safety of race participants,
participant vessels, spectators, and the
general public on navigable waters of
the Gulf of Mexico during the event.
The special local regulation will
establish the following regulated areas:
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
A race area where all non-participant
persons and vessels are prohibited from
entering, transiting through, anchoring
in, or remaining within the regulated
area unless authorized by the Captain of
the Port St. Petersburg (COTP) or a
designated representative; and a buffer
zone where designated representatives
may control vessel traffic as deemed
necessary by the COTP St. Petersburg or
a designated representative based upon
prevailing weather conditions.
DATES: This rule is effective from 8 a.m.
on March 27, 2020 through 6 p.m. on
March 29, 2020.
ADDRESSES: To view documents
mentioned in this preamble as being
available in the docket, go to https://
www.regulations.gov, type USCG–2020–
0153 in the ‘‘SEARCH’’ box and click
‘‘SEARCH.’’ Click on Open Docket
Folder on the line associated with this
rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this rule, call or
email Marine Science Technician First
Class Michael D. Shackleford, Sector St.
Petersburg Prevention Department,
Coast Guard; telephone (813) 228–2191,
email Michael.D.Shackleford@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Sfmt 4700
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
DHS Department of Homeland Security
FR Federal Register
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
Pub. L. Public Law
§ Section
U.S.C. United States Code
COTP Captain of the Port
II. Background Information and
Regulatory History
On January 14, 2020, the Coast Guard
issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM) entitled ‘‘Special Local
Regulations: Recurring Marine Events,
Sector St. Petersburg’’ (85 FR 2069)
proposing to amend the list of recurring
marine events/special local regulations
occurring solely within the COTP St.
Petersburg Zone. The NPRM provided
for a 30 day comment period which
closed on February 13, 2020. An event
listed in the NPRM, titled ‘‘Gulfport
Grand Prix/Gulfport Grand Prix LLC 1’’
is scheduled to occur daily from 8 a.m.
until 6 p.m. on March 27, 2020 through
March 29, 2020.
The Coast Guard is issuing this
temporary rule without prior notice and
opportunity to comment pursuant to
authority under section 4(a) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5
1 This event is listed in the NPRMs proposed
regulatory text at 33 CFR 100.703, Table to
§ 100.703, line number 3.
E:\FR\FM\18MRR1.SGM
18MRR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 53 (Wednesday, March 18, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 15378-15382]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-05083]
[[Page 15378]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
31 CFR Part 150
RIN 1505-AC59
Assessment of Fees on Certain Bank Holding Companies and Nonbank
Financial Companies Supervised by the Federal Reserve Board To Cover
the Expenses of the Financial Research Fund
AGENCY: Departmental Offices, Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Department of the Treasury (``Treasury'') is issuing this
final rule to implement section 401 of the Economic Growth, Regulatory
Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (the ``Economic Growth Act''),
which amends section 155 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (the ``Dodd-Frank Act''). As amended, section
155 requires the Secretary of the Treasury to establish, by regulation,
an assessment schedule applicable to bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $250 billion or greater and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (``the Board''), to collect assessments equal to the total
expenses of the Office of Financial Research (the ``OFR''). The final
rule also simplifies the method for determining the amount of total
assessable assets for foreign banking organizations, which is made
possible by a new regulatory data source. This rule finalizes a
November 4, 2019 proposed rule without change.
DATES: This rule is effective April 17, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John Zitko, Senior Counsel, OFR, (202)
927-8372.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 155(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Secretary of the
Treasury to establish, by regulation, and with the approval of the
Financial Stability Oversight Council (the ``Council''), an assessment
schedule to collect assessments from certain companies equal to the
total expenses of the OFR. On May 21, 2012, Treasury published a final
regulation implementing section 155(d) in the Federal Register,
codified at 31 CFR part 150 (the ``Original Rule''). Before the
enactment of the Economic Growth Act, pursuant to section 155(d) and
the implementing regulation, Treasury collected assessments from bank
holding companies with total consolidated assets of $50,000,000,000 or
greater and nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board.
On May 24, 2018, the Economic Growth Act was signed into law.
Section 401(c)(1) of the Economic Growth Act replaced the $50 billion
reference in section 155(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act with $250 billion. In
addition, section 401(f) of the Economic Growth Act required any bank
holding company identified as a global systemically important bank
holding company (``G-SIB'') pursuant to 12 CFR 217.402 to be considered
a bank holding company with total consolidated assets equal to or
greater than $250 billion for purposes of section 155(d) of the Dodd-
Frank Act. As a result of this statutory amendment, bank holding
companies with less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets that
are not G-SIBs are not to be assessed under Dodd-Frank Act section
155(d).
The Economic Growth Act sets forth two different effective dates.
For bank holding companies with total consolidated assets of less than
$100 billion, it became effective on May 24, 2018 (the date of
enactment). For bank holding companies with total consolidated assets
of $100 billion or more and for G-SIBs, the effective date was November
24, 2019 (18 months after the date of enactment). This final rule, in
part, implements section 401.
Under section 118 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the expenses of the
Council are treated as expenses of, and are paid by, the OFR. In
addition, under section 210 of the Dodd-Frank Act, certain
implementation expenses of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(``FDIC'') associated with the FDIC's orderly liquidation authority are
treated as expenses of the Council,\1\ and the FDIC is directed to
periodically submit requests for reimbursement to the Chairperson of
the Council. The total expenses for the OFR therefore include the
combined expenses of the OFR and the Council and certain expenses of
the FDIC. All of these expenses are paid out of the Financial Research
Fund (the ``FRF''), a fund managed by Treasury.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Under Section 210(n)(10)(C) of the Dodd-Frank Act the term
implementation expenses ``(i) means costs incurred by [the FDIC]
beginning on the date of enactment of this Act, as part of its
efforts to implement [Title II] that do not relate to a particular
covered financial company; and (ii) includes the costs incurred in
connection with the development of policies, procedures, rules, and
regulations and other planning activities of the [FDIC] consistent
with carrying out [Title II].''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Council was established by the Dodd-Frank Act to identify risks
to U.S. financial stability, promote market discipline, and respond to
emerging threats to the stability of the U.S. financial system. The
Council is chaired by the Secretary of the Treasury, and its 15 members
include all of the federal financial regulators, an independent member
with insurance expertise appointed by the President, and state
financial regulators.
The OFR was established within Treasury by the Dodd-Frank Act to
support the Council and its member agencies. Among the OFR's key duties
are:
Collecting data on behalf of the Council and providing
such data to the Council and member agencies;
Standardizing the types and formats of data reported and
collected;
Performing research;
Developing tools for risk measurement and monitoring; and
Reporting to Congress and the public on the OFR's
assessment of significant financial market developments and potential
emerging threats to U.S. financial stability.
II. The Proposed and Final Rule
Treasury issued a proposed rule on November 4, 2019, to implement
the changes to the FRF assessments required by the Economic Growth
Act.\2\ The proposed rule also included certain other amendments to 31
CFR part 150 to simplify the method for determining the amount of total
assessable assets for certain entities, to remove outdated references
to the initial assessment period (which concluded in 2013), and to make
other non-substantive changes to add clarifying or remove redundant
language.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 84 FR 59320 (November 4, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Treasury received no public comments on the proposed rule.
Accordingly, Treasury is issuing this final rule as proposed. Following
is a description of the changes the final rule makes to the Original
Rule.
a. Determination of Assessed Companies
To impose assessments under section 155 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
Treasury must identify companies that are subject to the assessment. As
described in the Original Rule and below, Treasury works closely with
the Board to determine the population of assessed companies.
The original text of Dodd-Frank Act section 155(d) required
assessments to be collected from bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or greater and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board. The Economic Growth Act raised the
asset threshold
[[Page 15379]]
for bank holding companies to $250 billion and also stated that a bank
holding company, regardless of asset size, that has been identified as
a G-SIB under Sec. 217.402 of title 12, Code of Federal Regulations,
shall be considered a bank holding company with total consolidated
assets equal to or greater than $250 billion for purposes of section
155(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Accordingly, the final rule changes the definitions of ``Assessed
Company'' and ``Total Assessable Assets'' in 12 CFR 150.2, and deletes
the reference to foreign banking organizations with less than $50
billion in 12 CFR 150.5.
b. Determination of Total Assessable Assets
i. Foreign Banking Organizations
At the time of adoption of the Original Rule, there was no single
regulatory reporting form that provided a foreign banking
organization's total assets of combined U.S. operations, including its
U.S. branches, agencies, and subsidiaries. The preamble to the Original
Rule specifically noted the possibility that reporting requirements for
foreign banking organizations would change over time and that the list
of reports would need to be adjusted.\3\ To allow for the possibility
of these changes, the Original Rule did not include a list of specific
reference reports for foreign banking organizations, in contrast to
U.S. bank holding companies. It was noted that calculating banking
organizations' total assets of combined U.S. operations based on
multiple reports could result in double-counting.\4\ The preamble to
the Original Rule stated that Treasury would make every effort to avoid
double-counting, consulting with the Board and the affected firms as
necessary, and that any questions could be addressed through the
appeals process.\5\
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\3\ 77 FR 29890 (May 21, 2012).
\4\ 77 FR 29888-89 (May 21, 2012).
\5\ 77 FR 29889 (May 21, 2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the adoption of the Original Rule, the Board modified its
form FR Y-7Q by adding a line item for reporting the total combined
assets of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations. Line item 6
of part 1A of FR Y-7Q now requires reporting of the total combined
assets of a top-tier foreign banking organization's U.S.-domiciled
affiliates, branches, and agencies, excluding intercompany balances and
intercompany transactions between those entities to the extent such
items are not already eliminated in consolidation.\6\ Accordingly, to
simplify the method for determining the amount of total assessable
assets for foreign banking organizations and to adopt an approach for
foreign banking organizations comparable to the approach under the
Original Rule for U.S. bank holding companies, the final rule includes
changes to the definition of ``total assessable assets'' by specifying
that the calculation of a foreign banking organization's total
assessable assets shall be based on the data reported in the FR Y-7Q.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See Federal Reserve, The Capital and Asset Report for
Foreign Banking Organizations--FR Y-7Q, available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/reportforms/forms/FR_Y-7Q20190331_f.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Timing of Determination Dates, Billing, and Collection
Under the Original Rule, assessments were semiannual. On the
specified determination date before each assessment period, Treasury
determined the pool of assessed companies, which received confirmation
statements. After any appeals, assessments were debited from assessed
companies' accounts on the assessment payment date.
The Original Rule generally used a period of four calendar quarters
to measure the total assessable assets of both U.S. and foreign
entities for assessments. Thus, for the assessment period with a
November 30 determination date, total assessable assets were based on
the company's regulatory filings for the fourth quarter of the previous
calendar year and the first three quarters of the same calendar year.
For the assessment period with a May 31 determination date, total
assessable assets were based on the company's filings for the last
three quarters of the previous year and the first quarter of the same
calendar year.
Both the Federal Reserve's form FR Y-9C, which the Original Rule
required to be used to determine total assessable assets of U.S. bank
holding companies, and the FR Y-7Q, which the final rule incorporates
to determine the total assessable assets of foreign banking
organizations, are quarterly reports. Their filing deadlines, however,
are asynchronous, as the FR Y-9C generally must be filed within 40
calendar days after each calendar quarter,\7\ and the FR Y-7Q generally
must be filed within 90 calendar days after the quarter ends. The
timing of updated reports therefore varies. For example, on the
determination date of May 31 under the Original Rule, the FR Y-9C
reports were already available for Q1 of the same year, but Q1 reports
on FR Y-7Q were not due until approximately one month later (June 29).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Reports as of December 31 are due 45 calendar days later.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To enable consistency in the timing of determining assessable
assets for U.S. and foreign entities, the final rule moves each of the
two semiannual determination dates one month earlier. Accordingly, the
first determination date in each calendar year will be April 30 instead
of May 31 as under the Original Rule, and the second determination date
will be October 31, instead of November 30 as under the Original Rule.
This change enables each assessment to be based on companies' filings
for the last two calendar quarters of the previous year and the first
two quarters of the current calendar year for assessment periods with
an October 31 determination date, and all four quarters of the previous
calendar year for assessment periods with an April 30 determination
date.
Consistent with Treasury's process under the Original Rule, the
final rule provides that before each assessment period, after
determining the pool of assessed companies and publishing an assessment
fee rate, Treasury will calculate the assessment fee for each assessed
company, send an electronic billing notification to each assessed
company, and, on the assessment payment date, initiate a direct debit
to each company's account through www.pay.gov to collect the
assessments. The final rule retains the process under the Original
Rule, with one additional month added to the beginning of each cycle,
as described above, while keeping the dates under the Original Rule for
the notice of fees, billing, and payment. In order to provide
additional clarity as to when redetermination requests must be received
from companies wishing to appeal their status as an assessed company or
the total assessable assets that the Department has determined will be
used for calculating the company's assessment, the final rule amends
the reference to such date in 12 CFR 150.6(b) from ``one month'' to
``30 calendar days.''
The table below shows approximate dates of the assessment billing
and collection process under the final rule:
[[Page 15380]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial response
Determination Confirmation Redetermination to Publication of
Assessment period date statement date request deadline redetermination notice of fees * Billing date Payment date
request
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1st semiannual assessment October 31..... November 15 (or 30 calendar days 21 calendar days February 15 (or March 1 (or March 15 (or
period. next business from date of from receipt of next business prior business next business
(April--September)........... day). Confirmation Redetermination day). day). day).
Statement. Request.
2nd semiannual assessment April 30....... May 15 (or next 30 calendar days 21 calendar days August 15 (or September 1 (or September 15
period. business day). from date of from receipt of next business prior business (or next
(October--March)............. Confirmation Redetermination day). day). business day).
Statement. Request.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Rate published in the Notice of Fees.
The timeframe for sending confirmation statements and receiving
appeals under the final remains the same as under the Original Rule.
Specifically, confirmation statements will continue to be mailed no
later than 15 calendar days after the determination date, and appeals
by assessable companies will continue to be due one month later. In
addition to promoting consistent measurements of U.S. and foreign
entities, as noted above, adding a month to the beginning of the FRF
assessments cycle will also afford assessed companies additional time
to address appeals and make payment arrangements, and will provide
Treasury additional time to calculate assessments and administer the
billing process.
III. Administrative Law Matters
a. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Congress enacted the Regulatory Flexibility Act (the ``RFA'') to
address concerns related to the effects of agency rules on small
entities.\8\ Treasury is sensitive to the impact its rules may impose
on small entities. The RFA requires agencies either to provide an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis with a proposed rule for which
general notice of proposed rulemaking is required, or to certify that
the proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\9\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under regulations issued by the Small Business Administration, a
``small entity'' includes those firms within the ``Finance and
Insurance'' sector with asset sizes that vary from $7.5 million in
assets to $600 million or less in assets.\10\ For purposes of the RFA,
entities that are banks are considered small entities if their assets
are less than or equal to $600 million.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 13 CFR 121.201.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed above, under section 155 of the Dodd-Frank Act, as
amended by the Economic Growth Act, only bank holding companies with
more than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, G-SIBs, and
nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board will be subject to
assessments under the final rule. As such, the final rule will not
apply to small entities and a regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), it is
hereby certified that this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
b. Paperwork Reduction Act
We estimate that there are certain direct costs associated with
complying with these rules. On a one-time basis, assessed entities are
required to set up a bank account for fund transfers and to provide the
required information to Treasury through an information collection
form. The form includes bank account routing information and contact
information for the individuals at the company who will be responsible
for setting up the account and ensuring that funds are available on the
billing date. We estimate that approximately 20 companies could be
affected, and that completing the form and submitting it to Treasury
will take approximately 15 minutes. The aggregate paperwork burden is
estimated at 5.0 hours. However, all of these companies have already
established an account for payments or collections to the U.S.
Government pursuant to the Original Rule.
On a semiannual basis, assessed companies have the opportunity to
review the confirmation statement and assessment bill. The final rule
does not require the companies to conduct this review, but does permit
it. We anticipate that at least some of the companies will conduct
reviews, in part because the cost associated with it is very low.
The collection of information contained in the final rule has been
reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
under OMB control number 1505-0245. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to respond to a collection of
information unless it displays a valid OMB control number.
c. Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)
This final rule is not a significant regulatory action as defined
in section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 as supplemented by Executive
Order 13563.
List of Subjects in 31 CFR Part 150
Bank holding companies, Financial research fund, Nonbank financial
companies.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, title 31, part 150, of the
Code of Federal Regulations is revised to read as follows:
PART 150--FINANCIAL RESEARCH FUND
Sec.
150.1 Scope.
150.2 Definitions.
150.3 Determination of assessed companies.
150.4 Calculation of assessment basis.
150.5 Calculation of assessments.
150.6 Notice and payment of assessments.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5345; 31 U.S.C. 321; 12 U.S.C. 5365 note
(Section 401(d), Pub. L. 115-174, 132 Stat. 1358; Section 401(f),
Pub. L. 115-174, 132 Stat. 1359).
Sec. 150.1 Scope.
The assessments contained in this part are made pursuant to the
authority contained in 12 U.S.C. 5345.
Sec. 150.2 Definitions.
As used in this part:
Assessed company means:
(1) A bank holding company that has $250 billion or more in total
assessable assets; or
(2) A bank holding company, regardless of asset size, that has been
identified as a global systemically important bank holding company
under Sec. 217.402 of title 12, Code of Federal Regulations; or
(3) A nonbank financial company that the Council has determined
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act shall be supervised by the
Board.
Assessment basis means, for a given assessment period, an estimate
of the total expenses that are necessary or appropriate to carry out
the
[[Page 15381]]
responsibilities of the Office of Financial Research (OFR) and the
Council as set out in the Dodd-Frank Act (including an amount necessary
to reimburse reasonable implementation expenses of the Corporation that
shall be treated as expenses of the Council pursuant to section
210(n)(10) of the Dodd-Frank Act).
Assessment fee rate, with regard to a particular assessment period,
means the rate published by the Department for the calculation of
assessment fees for that period.
Assessment payment date means:
(1) For any assessment period ending on March 31 of a given
calendar year, September 15 of the prior calendar year; and
(2) For any assessment period ending on September 30 of a given
calendar year, March 15 of the same year.
Assessment period means:
(1) Any period of time beginning on October 1 and ending on March
31 of the following calendar year; or
(2) Any period of time beginning on April 1 and ending on September
30 of the same calendar year.
Bank holding company means:
(1) A bank holding company as defined in section 2 of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841); or
(2) A foreign banking organization.
Board means the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Corporation means the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Council means the Financial Stability Oversight Council.
Department means the Department of the Treasury.
Determination date means:
(1) For any assessment period ending on March 31 of a given
calendar year, April 30 of the prior calendar year; and
(2) For any assessment period ending on September 30 of a given
calendar year, October 31 of the prior calendar year.
Dodd-Frank Act means the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act.
Foreign banking organization means a foreign bank or company that
is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956, pursuant to section 8(a) of the International
Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
OFR means the Office of Financial Research established by section
152 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Total assessable assets means:
(1) For a bank holding company other than a foreign banking
organization, the average of the company's total consolidated assets
for the four quarters preceding the relevant determination date, as
reported on the bank holding company's four most recent Consolidated
Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies--FR Y-9C filings;
(2) For any foreign banking organization, the average of the
company's total assets of combined U.S. operations for the four
quarters preceding the relevant determination date, as reported on the
foreign banking organization's four most recent quarterly Capital and
Asset Report for Foreign Banking Organizations--FR Y-7Q filings, or, if
the foreign banking organization only files such form annually, the
average of the two most recent annual filings on such form; or
(3) For a nonbank financial company that the Council has determined
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act shall be supervised by the
Board, either the average of the company's total consolidated assets
for the four quarters preceding the relevant determination date, if the
company is a U.S. company, or the average of the total assets of the
company's combined U.S. operations for the four quarters preceding the
relevant determination date, if the company is a non-U.S. company.
Sec. 150.3 Determination of assessed companies.
(a) The determination that a bank holding company or a nonbank
financial company is an assessed company will be made by the
Department.
(b) The Department will apply the following principles in
determining whether a company is an assessed company:
(1) For tiered bank holding companies for which a holding company
owns or controls, or is owned or controlled by, other holding
companies, the assessed company shall be the top-tier, regulated
holding company.
(2) In situations where more than one top-tier, regulated bank
holding company has a legal authority for control of a U.S. bank, each
of the top-tier regulated holding companies shall be designated as an
assessed company.
(3) In situations where a company has not filed four consecutive
quarters of the financial reports referenced above for the most recent
quarters (or two consecutive years for annual filers of the FR Y-7Q or
successor form), such as may be true for companies that recently
converted to a bank holding company, the Department will use, at its
discretion, other financial or annual reports filed by the company,
such as Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, to determine
a company's total consolidated assets.
(4) In situations where a company does not report total
consolidated assets in its public reports or where a company uses a
financial reporting methodology other than U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) to report on its U.S. operations, the
Department will use, at its discretion, any comparable financial
information that the Department may require from the company for this
determination.
(c) Any company that the Department determines is an assessed
company on a given determination date will be an assessed company for
the entire assessment period related to such determination date, and
will be subject to the full assessment fee for that assessment period,
regardless of any changes in the company's assets or other attributes
that occur after the determination date.
Sec. 150.4 Calculation of assessment basis.
For each assessment period, the Department will calculate an
assessment basis that shall be sufficient to replenish the Financial
Research Fund to a level equivalent to the sum of:
(a) Budgeted operating expenses for the OFR for the applicable
assessment period;
(b) Budgeted operating expenses for the Council for the applicable
assessment period;
(c) Budgeted capital expenses for the OFR for the 12-month period
beginning on the first day of the applicable assessment period;
(d) Budgeted capital expenses for the Council for the 12-month
period beginning on the first day of the applicable assessment period;
and
(e) An amount necessary to reimburse reasonable implementation
expenses of the Corporation as provided under section 210(n)(10) of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
Sec. 150.5 Calculation of assessments.
(a) For each assessed company, the Department will calculate the
total assessable assets in accordance with the definition in Sec.
150.2.
(b) The Department will allocate the assessment basis to the
assessed companies in the following manner:
(1) Based on the sum of all assessed companies' total assessable
assets, the Department will calculate the assessment fee rate necessary
to collect the assessment basis for the applicable assessment period.
(2) The assessment payable by an assessed company for each
assessment period shall be equal to the assessment fee rate for that
assessment period multiplied by the total assessable assets of such
assessed company.
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Sec. 150.6 Notice and payment of assessments.
(a) No later than fifteen calendar days after the determination
date, the Department will send to each assessed company a statement
that:
(1) Confirms that such company has been determined by the
Department to be an assessed company; and
(2) States the total assessable assets that the Department has
determined will be used for calculating the company's assessment.
(b) If a company that is required to make an assessment payment for
a given assessment period believes that the statement referred to in
paragraph (a) of this section contains an error, the company may
provide the Department with a written request for a revised statement.
Such request must be received by the Department via email within 30
calendar days and must include all facts that the company requests the
Department to consider. The Department will respond to all such
requests within 21 calendar days of receipt thereof.
(c) No later than the 14 calendar days prior to the payment date
for a given assessment period, the Department will send an electronic
billing notification to each assessed company, containing the final
assessment that is required to be paid by such assessed company.
(d) For the purpose of making the payments described in Sec.
150.5, each assessed company shall designate a deposit account for
direct debit by the Department through www.pay.gov or successor
website. No later than the later of 30 days prior to the payment date
for an assessment period, or April 17, 2020, each such company shall
provide notice to the Department of the account designated, including
all information and authorizations required by the Department for
direct debit of the account. After the initial notice of the designated
account, no further notice is required unless the company designates a
different account for assessment debit by the Department, in which case
the requirements of the preceding sentence apply.
(e) Each assessed company shall take all actions necessary to allow
the Department to debit assessments from such company's designated
deposit account. Each such company shall, prior to each assessment
payment date, ensure that funds in an amount at least equal to the
amount on the relevant electronic billing notification are available in
the designated deposit account for debit by the Department. Failure to
take any such action or to provide such funding of the account shall be
deemed to constitute nonpayment of the assessment. The Department will
cause the amount stated in the applicable electronic billing
notification to be directly debited on the appropriate payment date
from the deposit account so designated.
(f) In the event that, for a given assessment period, an assessed
company materially misstates or misrepresents any information that is
used by the Department in calculating that company's total assessable
assets, the Department may at any time re-calculate the assessment
payable by that company for that assessment period, and the assessed
company shall take all actions necessary to allow the Department to
immediately debit any additional payable amounts from such assessed
company's designated deposit account.
(g) If a due date under this section falls on a date that is not a
business day, the applicable date shall be the next business day.
Dated: March 6, 2020.
Kipp Kranbuhl,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Financial Markets, Department of
the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2020-05083 Filed 3-17-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-25-P