Parent Companies of Industrial Banks and Industrial Loan Companies, 10703-10729 [2020-28473]
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10703
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 86, No. 34
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Table of Contents
12 CFR Part 354
RIN 3064–AF31
Parent Companies of Industrial Banks
and Industrial Loan Companies
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation is adopting a
final rule that requires certain
conditions and commitments for each
deposit insurance application approval,
non-objection to a change in control
notice, and merger application approval
that would result in an insured
industrial bank or industrial loan
company becoming, on or after the
effective date of the final rule, a
subsidiary of a company that is not
subject to consolidated supervision by
the Federal Reserve Board. The final
rule also requires that before any
industrial bank or industrial loan
company may become a subsidiary of a
company that is not subject to
consolidated supervision by the Federal
Reserve Board, such company and the
industrial bank or industrial loan
company must enter into one or more
written agreements with the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation.
DATES: The rule is effective on April 1,
2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amanda Ledig, Attorney, (202) 898–
7261, aledig@fdic.gov; Merritt Pardini,
Counsel, (202) 898–6680, mpardini@
fdic.gov; Joyce Raidle, Counsel, (202)
898–6763, jraidle@fdic.gov; Gregory
Feder, Counsel, (202) 898–8724, gfeder@
fdic.gov; Catherine Topping, Counsel,
(202) 898–3975, ctopping@fdic.gov;
Mark Flanigan, Senior Counsel, (202)
898–7426, mflanigan@fdic.gov; Ashby
Hilsman, Assistant General Counsel,
(202) 898–6636, ahilsman@fdic.gov,
Legal Division; Scott Leifer, Senior
SUMMARY:
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Review Examiner, (508) 698–0361,
Extension 8027, sleifer@fdic.gov; Don
Hamm, Special Advisor, (202) 898–
3528, dhamm@fdic.gov; Patricia
Colohan, Associate Director, Risk
Management Examinations Branch,
(202) 898–7283, pcolohan@fdic.gov,
Division of Risk Management
Supervision.
I. Policy Objectives
II. Background
A. History
B. Industrial Bank Exclusion Under the
BHCA
C. Industry Profile
D. Supervision
E. GAO and OIG Reports
F. FDIC Moratorium and Other Agency
Actions
G. 2007 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking—
Part 354
H. Dodd-Frank Act and Industrial Banks
III. The Proposed Rule
IV. Discussion of General Comments and
Final Rule
A. General Comments
1. Banking and Commerce
2. Lack of Federal Consolidated
Supervision
3. Consumer Protection Risks
4. Justification for the Proposed Rule
B. Description of the Final Rule
1. Section 354.1—Scope
2. Section 354.2—Definitions
3. Section 354.3—Written Agreement
4. Section 354.4—Required Commitments
and Provisions of Written Agreement
5. Section 354.5—Restrictions on Industrial
Bank Subsidiaries of Covered Companies
6. Section 354.6—Reservation of Authority
7. Responses to Additional Questions
V. Expected Effects
A. Overview of Industrial Banks
B. Analysis of the Commitments
C. Safety and Soundness of Affected Banks
D. Broad Effects on the Banking Industry
E. Expected Effects on Consumers
F. Expected Effects on the Economy
VI. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Plain Language
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
E. Congressional Review Act
I. Policy Objectives
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) monitors, evaluates,
and takes necessary action to ensure the
safety and soundness of State
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nonmember banks,1 including industrial
banks and industrial loan companies
(together, ‘‘industrial banks’’).2 In
granting deposit insurance, issuing a
non-objection to a change in control, or
approving a merger, the FDIC must
consider the factors listed in sections 6,3
7(j),4 and 18(c),5 respectively, of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act).
Congress expressly made all industrial
banks eligible for Federal deposit
insurance in 1982.6 As deposit insurer
and as the appropriate Federal banking
agency for industrial banks, the FDIC
supervises industrial banks. A key part
of its supervision is evaluating and
mitigating the risks arising from the
activities of the control parties and
owners of insured industrial banks to
ensure they do not threaten the safe and
sound operations of those industrial
banks or pose undue risk to the Deposit
Insurance Fund (DIF).
Existing State and Federal laws allow
both financial and commercial
companies to own and control
industrial banks. Congress expressly
adopted an exception to permit such
companies to own and control
industrial banks, without becoming a
bank holding company (BHC) under the
Bank Holding Company Act (BHCA), as
part of the Competitive Equality
Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA).7 Industrial
banks today are owned by financial and
nonfinancial commercial firms. The
FDIC has in recent years received
applications from groups seeking to
establish new industrial banks that
would be owned by commercial parents.
Proposals regarding industrial banks
have presented unique risk profiles
compared to traditional community
1 See 12 U.S.C. 1811, 1818, 1821, 1831o–1,
1831p–1.
2 Herein, the term ‘‘industrial bank’’ means any
insured State-chartered bank that is an industrial
bank, industrial loan company, or other similar
institution that is excluded from the definition of
‘‘bank’’ in the Bank Holding Company Act pursuant
to 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H). State laws refer to both
industrial loan companies and industrial banks. For
purposes of this rule, the FDIC is treating the two
types of institutions as the same. The rule does not
apply to limited purpose trust companies and credit
card banks that also are exempt from the definition
of ‘‘bank.’’
3 12 U.S.C. 1816.
4 12 U.S.C. 1817(j).
5 12 U.S.C. 1828(c).
6 Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of
1982, Public Law 97–320, 96 Stat. 1469 (Oct. 15,
1982).
7 Public Law 100–86, 101 Stat. 552 (Aug. 10,
1987).
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bank proposals. These profiles have
included potential owners that would
not be subject to Federal consolidated
supervision,8 affiliations with
organizations whose activities are
primarily commercial in nature, and
non-community bank business models.9
Given the continuing interest in the
industrial bank charter and the evolving
business models, the FDIC proposed a
rule in March 2020 to codify existing
practices utilized by the FDIC to
supervise industrial banks and their
parent companies, to mitigate undue
risk to the DIF that may otherwise be
presented in the absence of Federal
consolidated supervision of an
industrial bank and its parent company,
and to ensure that the parent company
that owns or controls an industrial bank
serves as a source of financial strength
for the industrial bank, consistent with
section 38A of the FDI Act.10 The
proposed rule described certain
commitments that would be required as
a condition of the FDIC’s approval of, or
non-objection to, each deposit insurance
application, change in control notice, or
merger application resulting in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary
of a company not subject to
consolidated supervision by the Federal
Reserve Board (FRB; each such parent
company a Covered Company). The
proposed rule required such a company
and the subsidiary industrial bank to
enter into one or more written
agreements with the FDIC that contain
certain commitments to be undertaken
by the company to ensure the safe and
sound operation of such industrial bank.
The required commitments include
capital and liquidity support from the
parent to the industrial bank that have
been incorporated in some form in the
FDIC’s prior actions to create an
appropriate supervisory structure for
8 In the context of the proposed rule, ‘‘Federal
consolidated supervision’’ referred to the
supervision of a parent company and its
subsidiaries by the Federal Reserve Board (FRB).
Consolidated supervision of a bank holding
company by the FRB encompasses the parent
company and its subsidiaries, and allows the FRB
to understand ‘‘the organization’s structure,
activities, resources, and risks, as well as to address
financial, managerial, operational, or other
deficiencies before they pose a danger to the BHC’s
subsidiary depository institutions.’’ See SR Letter
08–9, ‘‘Consolidated Supervision of Bank Holding
Companies and the Combined U.S. Operations of
Foreign Banking Organizations’’ (Oct. 16, 2008).
9 See FDIC Deposit Insurance Applications,
Procedures Manual Supplement, Applications from
Non-Bank and Non-Community Bank Applicants,
FIL–8–2020 (Feb. 10, 2020).
10 Parent Companies of Industrial Banks and
Industrial Loan Companies, 85 FR 17771, 17772–73
(Mar. 31, 2020). See also 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(b).
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industrial banks and their parent
companies.11
The FDIC is now issuing a final rule,
which is largely consistent with the
proposed rule. The final rule makes four
substantive changes to the proposed
rule. First, the final rule requires
compliance from covered entities on or
after the effective date of the rule rather
than simply after, as proposed. Second,
the final rule requires additional
reporting by Covered Companies
regarding systems for protecting the
security, confidentiality, and integrity of
consumer and nonpublic personal
information. Third, the threshold
regarding the limitation of a Covered
Company’s representation on the board
of a subsidiary industrial bank has been
raised in the final rule from 25 percent,
as proposed, to less than 50 percent.
Lastly, the final rule modifies the
restrictions on industrial bank
subsidiaries concerning the
appointment of directors and senior
executive officers to apply to the
industrial bank only during the first
three years after becoming a subsidiary
of a Covered Company. These changes
are discussed in sections IV.B.1.,
IV.B.4., and IV.B.5. of this
Supplementary Information section
below. In addition to providing this
comprehensive framework for
supervision, the final rule also provides
interested parties with certainty and
transparency regarding the FDIC’s
practices when making determinations
on filings involving industrial banks.
II. Background
A. History
Industrial banks began as small Statechartered loan companies in the early
1900s to provide small loans to
industrial workers. Initially, many
industrial banks did not accept any
deposits and funded themselves instead
by issuing investment certificates.
However, the Garn-St. Germain
Depository Institutions Act of 1982,12
among other effects, made all industrial
banks eligible for Federal deposit
insurance. This expanded eligibility for
Federal deposit insurance brought
industrial banks under the supervision
11 In March of 2020, the FDIC approved two
deposit insurance applications for industrial banks
owned by firms whose businesses are
predominantly financial in nature, Square Financial
Services, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah (Square
Financial), and Nelnet Bank, Salt Lake City, Utah
(Nelnet). As part of both approvals, the FDIC
required the industrial banks and their parent
companies to enter into written agreements with the
FDIC that are consistent with the requirements of
the proposed and this final rule.
12 96 Stat. 1469.
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of both a State authority and the FDIC.13
The chartering States gradually
expanded the powers of their industrial
banks so that today industrial banks
generally have the same commercial and
consumer lending powers as
commercial banks.
Under the FDI Act, industrial banks
are ‘‘State banks’’ 14 and all of the
existing FDIC-insured industrial banks
are ‘‘State nonmember banks.’’ 15 As a
result, the FDIC is the appropriate
Federal banking agency for industrial
banks.16 Each industrial bank is also
regulated by its respective State
chartering authority. The FDIC generally
exercises the same supervisory and
regulatory authority over industrial
banks as it does over other State
nonmember banks.
B. Industrial Bank Exclusion Under the
BHCA
In 1987, Congress enacted the CEBA,
which exempted industrial banks from
the definition of ‘‘bank’’ in the BHCA.
As a result, parent companies that
control industrial banks are not BHCs
under the BHCA and are not subject to
the BHCA’s activities restrictions or FRB
supervision and regulation. The
industrial bank exception in the BHCA
therefore allows for commercial firms to
own or control a bank. By contrast,
BHCs and savings and loan holding
companies (SLHCs) are subject to
Federal consolidated supervision by the
FRB and are generally prohibited from
engaging in commercial activities.17
More specifically, the CEBA redefined
the term ‘‘bank’’ in the BHCA to
include: (1) Any FDIC-insured
institution, and (2) any other institution
that accepts demand or checkable
deposit accounts and is engaged in the
13 Prior to 1982, the FDIC had allowed some
industrial banks to become federally insured, but
FDIC insurance was typically limited to those
industrial banks chartered by States where the
relevant State’s law allowed them to receive
‘‘deposits’’ or to use ‘‘bank’’ in their name. For
additional historical context regarding industrial
bank supervision, see The FDIC’s Supervision of
Industrial Loan Companies: A Historical
Perspective, Supervisory Insights (2004).
14 12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(2).
15 12 U.S.C. 1813(e)(2).
16 12 U.S.C. 1813(q)(2).
17 Section 4 of the BHCA generally prohibits a
BHC from acquiring ownership or control of any
company which is not a bank or engaging in any
activity other than those of banking or of managing
or controlling banks and other subsidiaries
authorized under the BHCA. See 12 U.S.C.
1843(a)(1) and (2). The Home Owners’ Loan Act
(HOLA) governs the activities of SLHCs, as
amended by the Dodd-Frank Act, which generally
subjects these companies to the permissible
financial holding company activities under section
4(k) of the BHCA (12 U.S.C. 1843(k), activities that
are financial in nature or incidental to a financial
activity). See 12 U.S.C. 1467a(c)(2)(H).
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business of making commercial loans.18
This change effectively closed the socalled ‘‘nonbank bank’’ exception
implicit in the prior BHCA definition of
‘‘bank.’’ The CEBA created explicit
exceptions from this definition for
certain categories of federally insured
institutions, including industrial banks,
credit card banks, and limited purpose
trust companies. The exclusions from
the definition of the term ‘‘bank’’
created in 1987 by the CEBA remain in
effect today. To be eligible for the CEBA
exception from the BHCA definition of
‘‘bank,’’ an industrial bank must have
received a charter from one of the
limited number of States eligible to
issue industrial bank charters, and the
law of the chartering State must have
required Federal deposit insurance as of
March 5, 1987. In addition, an industrial
bank must meet one of the following
criteria: (i) Not accept demand
deposits,19 (ii) have total assets of less
than $100 million, or (iii) have been
acquired prior to August 10, 1987.20
Industrial banks are currently
chartered in California, Hawaii,
Minnesota, Nevada, and Utah. Under
the CEBA, these States were permitted
to grandfather existing industrial banks
and continue to charter new industrial
banks.21 Generally, industrial banks
offer limited deposit products, a full
range of commercial and consumer
loans, and other banking services.
Although some industrial banks that
have total assets of less than $100
million accept demand deposits, most
industrial banks do not offer demand
deposits. Negotiable order of
withdrawal (NOW) accounts 22 may be
18 12
U.S.C. 1841(c)(1).
D, 12 CFR part 204, implements the
reserve requirements of section 19 of the Federal
Reserve Act and defines a demand deposit as a
deposit that is payable on demand, or issued with
an original maturity or required notice period of
less than seven days, or a deposit representing
funds for which the depository institution does not
reserve the right to require at least seven days’
written notice of an intended withdrawal. Demand
deposits may be in the form of (i) checking
accounts; (ii) certified, cashier’s, teller’s, and
officer’s checks; and (iii) traveler’s checks and
money orders that are primary obligations of the
issuing institution. Other forms of accounts may
also meet the definition of ‘‘demand deposit.’’ See
12 CFR 204.2(b)(1).
20 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H).
21 Colorado was also grandfathered but it has no
active industrial banks and has since repealed its
industrial bank statute.
22 A NOW account is an interest-earning bank
account whereby the owner may write drafts against
the money held on deposit. NOW accounts were
developed when certain financial institutions were
prohibited from paying interest on demand
deposits. The prohibition on paying interest on
demand deposits was lifted when the FRB repealed
its Regulation Q, effective July 21, 2011. See 76 FR
42015 (July 18, 2011). Many provisions of the
repealed Regulation Q were transferred to the FRB’s
Regulation D.
19 Regulation
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offered by industrial banks.23 Industrial
banks have branching rights, subject to
certain State law constraints.
C. Industry Profile
The industrial bank industry has
evolved since the enactment of the
CEBA. The industry experienced
significant asset growth between 1987
and 2006 when total assets held by
industrial banks grew from $4.2 billion
to $213 billion.24 From 2000 to 2006, 24
industrial banks became insured.25 As
of January 30, 2007, there were 58
insured industrial banks with $177
billion in aggregate total assets.26 The
ownership structure and business
models of industrial banks evolved as
industrial banks were acquired or
formed by a variety of commercial firms,
including, among others, BMW, Target,
Pitney Bowes, and Harley Davidson. For
instance, certain companies established
industrial banks, in part, to support the
sale of the manufactured products (e.g.
automobiles) or other services, whereas
certain retailers established industrial
banks to issue general purpose credit
cards. In addition, certain financial
companies also formed or acquired
industrial banks to provide access to
Federal deposit insurance for brokerage
customers’ cash management account
balances. The cash balances their
customers maintain with the securities
affiliate are swept into insured, interestbearing accounts at the industrial bank
subsidiary, thereby providing the
brokerage customers with FDIC-insured
deposits during the period of time that
cash is held for future investment.
Since 2007, the industrial bank
industry has experienced contraction
both in terms of the number of
institutions and aggregate total assets.
As of September 30, 2020, there were 23
industrial banks 27 with $173 billion in
23 12 U.S.C. 1832(a). Only certain types of
customers may maintain deposits in a NOW
account. 12 U.S.C. 1832(a)(2).
24 Most of the growth during this period is
attributable to financial services firms that
controlled industrial banks offering sweep deposit
programs to provide Federal deposit insurance for
customers’ free cash balances and to American
Express moving its credit card operations from its
Delaware-chartered credit card bank to its Utahchartered industrial bank.
25 During this time period, the FDIC received 57
applications for Federal deposit insurance for
industrial banks, 53 of which were acted on. Also
during this time period, 21 industrial banks ceased
to operate due to mergers, conversions, voluntary
liquidations, and one failure (Southern Pacific
Bank, Torrance, CA, failed in 2003).
26 Of the 58 industrial banks existing at this time,
45 were chartered in Utah and California. The
remaining industrial banks were chartered in
Colorado, Hawaii, Minnesota, and Nevada.
27 Of the 23 industrial banks existing as of June
30, 2020, 14 were chartered in Utah, four in
Nevada, three in California, one in Hawaii, and one
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10705
aggregate total assets. Four industrial
banks reported total assets of $10 billion
or more; ten industrial banks reported
total assets of $1 billion or more but less
than $10 billion. The industrial bank
sector today includes a diverse group of
insured financial institutions operating
a variety of business models. A
significant number of the existing
industrial banks support the commercial
or specialty finance operations of their
parent company and are funded through
non-core sources.
The reduction in the number of
industrial banks from 2007 to 2020 was
due to a variety of factors, including
mergers, conversions, voluntary
liquidations, and the failure of two
small institutions.28 For business,
marketplace, or strategic reasons,
several industrial banks converted to
commercial banks and thus became
‘‘banks’’ under the BHCA. Four
industrial banks were approved in 2007
and 2008; however, none of those
institutions exist today.29 Moratoria
imposed by the FDIC and Congress (as
discussed below) were also a factor.
Since the beginning of 2017, the FDIC
has received 12 Federal deposit
insurance applications related to
proposed industrial banks. Of those, two
have been approved,30 eight have been
withdrawn, and two are pending.31 The
FDIC anticipates potential continued
interest in the establishment of
industrial banks, particularly with
regard to proposed institutions that plan
to pursue a specialty or limited purpose
business model.
in Minnesota. An additional industrial bank, Nelnet
Bank, began operations in November of 2020.
Square Financial was approved in March and has
not opened for business.
28 Security Savings Bank, Henderson, Nevada,
failed in February 2009, and Advanta Bank
Corporation, Draper, Utah, failed in March 2010.
29 In each case, the institution pursued a
voluntary transaction that led to termination of the
respective institution’s industrial bank charter. One
institution converted to a commercial bank charter
and continues to operate, one merged and the
resultant bank continues to operate, and two
terminated deposit insurance following voluntary
liquidations. Such transactions generally result
from proprietary strategic determinations by the
institutions and their parent companies or
investors.
30 In March of 2020, the FDIC approved the
deposit insurance applications of Nelnet Bank and
Square Financial. Square Financial has not yet
commenced operations.
31 Decisions to withdraw an application are made
at the discretion of the organizers and can be
attributed to a variety of reasons. In some cases, an
application is withdrawn and then refiled after
changes are incorporated into the proposal. In such
cases, the new application is reviewed by the FDIC
without prejudice. In other cases, the applicant
may, for strategic reasons, determine that pursuing
an insured industrial bank charter is not in the
organizers’ best interests.
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D. Supervision
Because industrial banks are insured
State nonmember banks, they are
subject to the FDIC’s Rules and
Regulations, as well as other provisions
of law, including restrictions under the
Federal Reserve Act governing
transactions with affiliates,32 anti-tying
provisions of the BHCA,33 and insider
lending regulations. Industrial banks are
also subject to regular examination,
including examinations focused on
safety and soundness, Bank Secrecy Act
and Anti-Money Laundering
compliance, consumer protection
including Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA) compliance, information
technology (IT), and trust services, as
appropriate. Pursuant to section 10(b)(4)
of the FDI Act, the FDIC has the
authority to examine the affairs of any
industrial bank affiliate, including the
parent company, as may be necessary to
determine the relationship between the
institution and the affiliate, and the
effect of such relationship on the
depository institution.34
In addition, under section 38A of the
FDI Act, as amended by the Dodd Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act),35 the
FDIC is required to impose a
requirement on companies that directly
or indirectly own or control an
industrial bank to serve as a source of
financial strength for that institution.36
In addition, subsection (d) of section
38A of the FDI Act provides explicit
statutory authority for the appropriate
Federal banking agency to require
reports from a controlling company to
assess the ability of the company to
comply with the source of strength
requirement, and to enforce compliance
by such company.37
Consistent with section 38A and other
authorities under the FDI Act, the FDIC
has historically required capital and
liquidity maintenance agreements
(CALMAs) 38 and other written
agreements between the FDIC and
controlling parties of industrial banks as
well as the imposition of prudential
conditions when approving or nonobjecting to certain filings involving an
32 See
12 U.S.C. 1828(j)(1)(A).
purposes of section 106 of the BHCA, an
industrial bank is treated as a ‘‘bank’’ and is subject
to the anti-tying restrictions therein. See 12 U.S.C.
1843(f)(1).
34 12 U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
35 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21,
2010).
36 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(b).
37 See 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(d).
38 When the FDIC has required a CALMA, the
capital levels required generally have exceeded the
average thresholds required of community banks,
due to the risks involved in the business plans of
many industrial banks.
33 For
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industrial bank. Such written
agreements provide required
commitments for the parent company to
provide financial resources and a means
for the FDIC to pursue formal
enforcement action under sections 8 and
50 of the FDI Act 39 should a party fail
to comply with the agreements.
E. GAO and OIG Reports
Beginning in 2004, the FDIC Office of
Inspector General (OIG) conducted two
evaluations and the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) conducted
a statutorily mandated study regarding
the FDIC’s supervision of industrial
banks, including its use of prudential
conditions.40 An OIG evaluation
published in 2004 focused on whether
industrial banks posed greater risk to
the DIF than other financial institutions,
and reviewed the FDIC’s supervisory
approach in identifying and mitigating
material risks posed to those institutions
by their parent companies. A July 2006
OIG evaluation reviewed the FDIC’s
process for reviewing and approving
industrial bank applications for deposit
insurance and monitoring conditions
imposed with respect to industrial bank
business plans. A September 2005 GAO
study cited several risks posed to banks
operating in a holding company
structure, including adverse
intercompany transactions, operations
risk, and reputation risk. The GAO
study also discussed concerns about the
FDIC’s ability to protect an industrial
bank from those risks as effectively as
the Federal consolidated supervisory
approach under the BHCA.41
These reports acknowledged the
FDIC’s supervisory actions to ensure the
independence and safety and soundness
of commercially owned industrial
banks. The reports further
acknowledged the FDIC’s authorities to
protect an industrial bank from the risks
posed by its parent company and
affiliates. These authorities include the
FDIC’s authority to conduct
examinations, impose conditions on and
enter into written agreements with an
industrial bank parent company,
terminate an industrial bank’s deposit
39 See
12 U.S.C. 1818 and 1831aa.
OIG Evaluation 04–048, The Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection’s Approach
for Supervising Limited-Charter Depository
Institutions (2004), available at https://
www.fdicig.gov/reports04/04-048.pdf; OIG
Evaluation 06–014, The FDIC’s Industrial Loan
Company Deposit Insurance Application Process
(2006), available at https://www.fdicig.gov/
reports06/06-014.pdf; U.S. Gov’t Accountability
Office, GAO–05–621, Industrial Loan Corporations:
Recent Asset Growth and Commercial Interest
Highlight Differences in Regulatory Authority (Sept.
2005), available at https://www.gao.gov/products/
GAO-05-621(GAO-05-621).
41 GAO–05–621.
40 See
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insurance, enter into written agreements
during the acquisition of an insured
depository institution, and to pursue
enforcement actions.
F. FDIC Moratorium and Other Agency
Actions
In 2005, Wal-Mart Bank’s application
for Federal deposit insurance drew
extensive public attention to the
industrial bank charter. The FDIC
received more than 13,800 comment
letters regarding Wal-Mart’s proposal.
Most of the commenters were opposed
to the application. Commenters also
raised broader concerns about industrial
banks, including the risk posed to the
DIF by industrial banks owned by
parent companies that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision.
Similar concerns were expressed by
witnesses during three days of public
hearings held by the FDIC in the spring
of 2006 concerning the Wal-Mart
application. Also in 2006, The Home
Depot filed a change in control notice in
connection with its proposed
acquisition of EnerBank, a Utahchartered industrial bank. The FDIC
received approximately 830 comment
letters regarding the notice, almost all of
which expressed opposition to the
proposed acquisition. Ultimately, the
Wal-Mart application and The Home
Depot’s notice were withdrawn.
To evaluate the concerns and issues
raised with respect to the Wal-Mart and
The Home Depot filings and industrial
banks generally, on July 28, 2006, the
FDIC imposed a six-month moratorium
on FDIC action with respect to deposit
insurance applications and change in
control notices involving industrial
banks.42 The FDIC suspended agency
action in order to further evaluate (i)
industry developments; (ii) the various
issues, facts, and arguments raised with
respect to the industrial bank industry;
(iii) whether there were emerging safety
and soundness issues or policy issues
involving industrial banks or other risks
to the DIF; and (iv) whether statutory,
regulatory, or policy changes should be
made in the FDIC’s oversight of
industrial banks in order to protect the
DIF or important Congressional
objectives.43
In connection with this moratorium,
on August 23, 2006, the FDIC published
a notice and request for comment on a
wide range of issues concerning
industrial banks.44 The FDIC received
42 See Moratorium on Certain Industrial Loan
Company Applications and Notices, 71 FR 43482
(Aug. 1, 2006).
43 Id. at 43483.
44 See Industrial Loan Companies and Industrial
Banks, 71 FR 49456 (Aug. 23, 2006). The Notice
included questions concerning the current risk
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over 12,600 comment letters in response
to the notice.45 The substantive
comments related to the risk profile of
the industrial bank industry, concerns
over the mixing of banking and
commerce, the FDIC’s practices when
making determinations in industrial
bank applications and notices, whether
commercial ownership of industrial
banks should be allowed, and perceived
needs for supervisory change.
The moratorium was effective through
January 31, 2007, at which time the
FDIC extended the moratorium one
additional year for deposit insurance
applications and change in control
notices for industrial banks that would
be owned by commercial companies.46
The moratorium was not applicable to
industrial banks to be owned by
financial companies.
G. 2007 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPR)—Part 354
In addition to extending the
moratorium for one year with respect to
commercial parent companies, the FDIC
published for comment a proposed rule
designed to strengthen the FDIC’s
consideration of applications and
notices for industrial banks to be
controlled by financial companies not
subject to Federal consolidated bank
supervision, identified as part 354 (2007
NPR).47 The 2007 NPR would have
imposed requirements on applications
for deposit insurance, merger
applications, and notices for change in
control that would result in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary
of a company engaged solely in
financial activities that is not subject to
Federal consolidated bank supervision
by either the FRB or the then-existing
Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS). The
rule would have established safeguards
profile of the industrial bank industry, safety and
soundness issues uniquely associated with
ownership of such institutions, the FDIC’s practice
with respect to evaluating and making
determinations on industrial bank applications and
notices, whether a distinction should be made
when the industrial bank is owned by an entity that
is commercial in nature, and the adequacy of the
FDIC’s supervisory approach with respect to
industrial banks.
45 Approximately 12,485 comments on the notice
were generated either supporting or opposing the
proposed industrial bank to be owned by Wal-Mart
or the proposed acquisition of Enerbank, also an
industrial bank, by The Home Depot. The remaining
comment letters were sent by individuals, law
firms, community banks, financial services trade
associations, existing and proposed industrial banks
or their parent companies, the Conference of State
Bank Supervisors, and two members of Congress.
46 See Moratorium on Certain Industrial Bank
Applications and Notices, 72 FR 5290 (Feb. 5,
2007).
47 See Industrial Bank Subsidiaries of Financial
Companies 72 FR 5217 (Feb. 5, 2007); see also
https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2007/
pr07007.html.
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to assess the parent company’s
continuing ability to serve as a source of
strength for the insured industrial bank,
and to identify and respond to problems
or risks that may develop in the
company or its subsidiaries.
Similar to this final rule, the 2007
NPR would have required a parent
company to enter into a written
agreement with the FDIC containing
required commitments related to the
examination of, and reporting and
recordkeeping by, the industrial bank,
the parent company, and its affiliates.
The majority of commenters did not
oppose these requirements, noting the
FDIC already has authority to collect
such information under section 10(b)(4)
of the FDI Act.48 Many commenters,
however, objected to limiting parent
company representation on the
industrial bank subsidiary’s board of
directors to 25 percent, and argued
instead for requiring that a majority of
directors be independent. The majority
of commenters stated that the FDIC
should not impose capital requirement
commitments as contemplated in the
2007 NPR on commercial parents of
industrial banks because a one-size-fits
all regulatory approach to capital
requirements would not be appropriate
due to the idiosyncratic business
models and operations of such parent
companies.
Though the 2007 NPR did not affect
industrial banks that would be
controlled by companies engaged in
commercial activities, several
commenters addressed the distinction
between industrial banks owned by
financial and nonfinancial companies.
Two commenters contended that the
FDIC lacked authority to draw a
distinction between financial and
nonfinancial industrial bank owners
absent a change in law. Several
commenters argued that drawing such a
distinction would essentially repeal the
exception of industrial banks from the
definition of ‘‘bank’’ in the BHCA. There
was little consensus among commenters
as to whether commercially owned
industrial banks pose unique safety and
soundness issues.
The FDIC did not finalize the 2007
NPR. Although multiple factors
contributed to the FDIC’s decision to not
advance a final rule, the most significant
factor was the onset of two
interconnected and overlapping crises:
the financial crisis of 2008–09, and the
banking crisis from 2008 to 2013.49 With
48 See
12 U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
Crisis and Response, An FDIC History,
2008–2013, available at https://www.fdic.gov/bank/
historical/crisis/. The financial crisis in 2008 and
2009 threatened large financial institutions of all
49 See
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10707
the advent of the crises, applications to
form de novo insured institutions, or to
acquire existing institutions, declined
significantly, including with respect to
industrial banks.
H. Dodd-Frank Act and Industrial Banks
As discussed above and in reaction to
the 2008–09 financial crisis, the DoddFrank Act amended the FDI Act by
adding section 38A.50 Under section
38A, for any insured depository
institution that is not a subsidiary of a
BHC or SLHC, the appropriate Federal
banking agency for the insured
depository institution must require any
company that directly or indirectly
controls such institution to serve as a
source of financial strength for the
institution.51
Through the Dodd-Frank Act,
Congress also imposed a three-year
moratorium on the FDIC’s approval of
deposit insurance applications for
industrial banks that were owned or
controlled by a commercial firm.52 The
Dodd-Frank Act moratorium also
applied to the FDIC’s non-objection to
any change in control of an industrial
bank that would place the institution
under the control of a commercial
firm.53 The moratorium expired in July
2013, without any further action by
Congress.
In addition, the Dodd-Frank Act
directed the GAO to conduct a study of
the implications of removing all
exceptions from the definition of
‘‘bank’’ under the BHCA. The GAO
report was published in January of
2012.54 This report examined the
number and general characteristics of
kinds, both inside and outside the traditional
banking system, and thus endangered the financial
system itself. Second, a banking crisis,
accompanied by a swiftly increasing number of
both troubled and failed insured depository
institutions, began in 2008 and continued until
2013.
50 See 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1.
51 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(b). This amendment also
requires the appropriate Federal banking agency for
a BHC or SLHC to require the BHC or SLHC to serve
as a source of financial strength for any subsidiary
of the BHC or SLHC that is a depository institution.
12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(a).
52 Public Law 111–203, title VI, section 603(a),
124 Stat. 1597 (2010). Section 603(a) also imposed
a moratorium on FDIC action on deposit insurance
applications by credit card banks and trust banks
owned or controlled by a commercial firm. The
Dodd-Frank Act defined a ‘‘commercial firm’’ for
this purpose as a company that derives less than 15
percent of its annual gross revenues from activities
that are financial in nature, as defined in section
4(k) of the BHCA (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)), or from
ownership or control of depository institutions.
53 Id.
54 See U.S. Government Accountability Office,
GAO–12–160, Characteristics and Regulation of
Exempt Institutions and the Implications of
Removing the Exemptions (Jan. 2012), available at
https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-160.
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exempt institutions, the Federal
regulatory system for such institutions,
and potential implications of subjecting
the holding companies of such
institutions to BHCA requirements. The
GAO report noted that the industrial
bank industry experienced significant
asset growth in the 2000s and, during
this time, the profile of industrial banks
changed: Rather than representing a
class of small, limited-purpose
institutions, industrial banks became a
diverse group of insured institutions
with a variety of business lines.55
Ultimately, the GAO found that Federal
regulation of the exempt institutions’
parent companies varied, noting that
FDIC officials interviewed in connection
with the study indicated that
supervision of exempt institutions was
adequate, but also noted the added
benefit of Federal consolidated
supervision. Finally, data examined by
the GAO suggested that removing the
BHCA exceptions would likely have a
limited impact on the overall credit
market, chiefly because the overall
market share of exempt institutions was,
at the time of the study, small.56
III. The Proposed Rule
On March 31, 2020, the FDIC
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR or proposal) to
establish a supervisory framework for
industrial banks and their parent
companies that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision.57 The
proposed rule required certain
conditions, commitments, and
restrictions for each deposit insurance
application approval, non-objection to a
change in control notice, and merger
application approval that would result
in an industrial bank becoming a
subsidiary of a company not subject to
consolidated supervision by the FRB.
The proposal required such a Covered
Company to enter into one or more
written agreements with the FDIC and
the industrial bank subsidiary. The
commitments included:
• Furnishing an initial listing, with
annual updates, of the Covered
Company’s subsidiaries.
• Consenting to FDIC examination of
the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries.
• Submitting an annual report on the
Covered Company and its subsidiaries,
and such other reports as requested.
• Maintaining such records as the
FDIC deemed necessary.
55 Id.
at 13.
GAO did not recommend repeal of the
exemption.
57 85 FR 17771 (Mar. 31, 2020).
56 The
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• Causing an independent annual
audit of each industrial bank.
• Limiting the Covered Company’s
representation on the industrial bank’s
board of directors or managers (board),
as the case may be, to 25 percent.
• Maintaining the industrial bank’s
capital and liquidity at such levels as
deemed appropriate and take other
action necessary to provide the
industrial bank with a resource for
additional capital or liquidity.
• Entering into a tax allocation
agreement.58
The proposal also set forth the FDIC’s
authority to require, as an additional
commitment, a contingency plan that,
among other items, provides a strategy
for the orderly disposition of the
industrial bank without the need for the
appointment of a receiver or
conservator.
Recently, a number of companies
have considered options for providing
financial products and services by
establishing an industrial bank
subsidiary. Many companies have
publicly noted the benefits of deposit
insurance and establishing a deposittaking institution. Although many
interested parties operate business
models focused on traditional
community bank products and services,
others operate unique business models,
some of which are focused on
innovative technologies and strategies,
including newer business models
employed by fintech firms that utilize
novel or unproven products or
processes.
Some of the companies recently
exploring an industrial bank charter
engage in commercial activities or have
diversified business operations and
activities that would not otherwise be
permissible for BHCs under the BHCA
and applicable regulations. Given the
continuing interest in the establishment
of industrial banks, particularly with
regard to proposed institutions that plan
to implement specialty or limited
purpose business models, including
those focused on innovative
technologies, the FDIC believes a rule is
appropriate to provide necessary
transparency for market participants.
Through this final rule, the FDIC is
formalizing its framework to supervise
industrial banks and mitigate risk to the
DIF that may otherwise be presented in
the absence of Federal consolidated
supervision of an industrial bank and its
parent company.
The FDIC has the authority to issue
rules to carry out the provisions of the
58 See
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Fmt 4700
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FDI Act,59 including rules to ensure the
safety and soundness of industrial banks
and to protect the DIF. Moreover, as the
only agency with the power to grant or
terminate deposit insurance, the FDIC
has a unique responsibility for the safety
and soundness of all insured
institutions.60 In granting deposit
insurance, the FDIC must consider the
factors in section 6 of the FDI Act; 61
these factors generally focus on the
safety and soundness of the proposed
institution and any risk it may pose to
the DIF. The FDIC is also authorized to
permit or deny various transactions by
State nonmember banks, including
merger and change in bank control
transactions, based to a large extent on
safety and soundness considerations
and on its assessment of the risk to the
DIF.62
The FDIC has the responsibility to
consider filings based on statutory
criteria and make decisions. Following
the publication of the proposed rule, the
FDIC approved two deposit insurance
applications, by Square Financial and
Nelnet, to create de novo industrial
banks, the first such approvals since
2008. The FDIC determined that the
applications satisfied the seven
statutory factors under section 6 of the
FDI Act, and the FDIC’s approval of
deposit insurance for these industrial
banks fulfilled the Agency’s statutory
responsibility. As part of both
approvals, the FDIC required the
industrial banks and their parent
companies to enter into CALMAs and
Parent Company Agreements to protect
the industrial bank and address
potential risks to the DIF.
The FDIC invited comment on all
aspects of the March 2020 proposal,
including questions posed by the
Agency. The comment period for the
proposed rule ended on July 1, 2020.63
59 ‘‘[T]he Corporation . . . shall have power . . .
[t]o prescribe by its Board of Directors such rules
and regulations as it may deem necessary to carry
out the provisions of this chapter or of any other
law which it has the responsibility of administering
or enforcing (except to the extent that authority to
issue such rules and regulations has been expressly
and exclusively granted to any other regulatory
agency).’’ 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth).
60 See 12 U.S.C. 1815, 1818(a).
61 Such factors are the financial history and
condition of the depository institution, the
adequacy of the depository institution’s capital
structure, the future earnings prospects of the
depository institution, the general character and
fitness of the management of the depository
institution, the risk presented by such depository
institution to the DIF, the convenience and needs
of the community to be served by such depository
institution, and whether the depository institution’s
corporate powers are consistent with the purposes
of the FDI Act. See 12 U.S.C. 1816.
62 See 12 U.S.C. 1817(j), 1828(c), and 1828(d).
63 Given the disruptions caused by the COVID–19
global pandemic, the FDIC announced on May 27,
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The FDIC received 29 comments from
industry group/trade associations,
insured depository institutions,
consumer and public interest groups,
State banking regulator(s), law firms, a
member of Congress, academics, and
other interested parties.64 In addition,
the FDIC received three letters related to
the subject matter considered in the
proposed rule prior to the formal
comment period. The FDIC is now
finalizing the proposed rule, with
changes based on public comments, as
described in detail below.
IV. Discussion of General Comments
and Final Rule
A. General Comments
Many commenters were supportive of
the FDIC’s overall effort to provide
certainty, clarity, and transparency to
the supervisory framework for the
parent companies and affiliates of
industrial banks. A number of
commenters were generally supportive
of the industrial bank charter citing the
benefits of charter choice, increased
competition, and the provision of
financial services. These commenters
asserted the charter poses no increased
risk to the DIF. In their view, the parent
companies serve as an important source
of strength and governance for the
subsidiary industrial bank. They
asserted that in times of stress, a
diversified parent may be in a better
position to provide capital support to a
bank subsidiary than a BHC whose
assets consist almost entirely of the
bank subsidiary. These commenters also
argued that an industrial bank benefits
from its business relationship with the
parent, for example, through marketing
support and fewer start-up costs. State
regulators stated that the joint
supervisory approach to supervising
industrial banks with the FDIC has been
effective, and industrial banks with
commercial parents do not present an
outsized safety and soundness risk.
Comments submitted by bank trade
associations, consumer groups, and
academics were generally critical of the
2020, that it would extend the comment period
from June 1, 2020, to July 1, 2020, to allow
interested parties additional time to analyze the
proposal and prepare comments.
64 On March 15, 2020, bank trade groups, and
consumer and civil rights groups sent a letter to the
FDIC urging the agency not to approve deposit
insurance applications submitted by industrial
banks until the NPR is finalized. See https://
bpi.com/consumer-civil-rights-groups-industryurge-fdic-halt-approval-of-industrial-bankapplications-close-ilc-loopholes-first/. On July 29,
2020, some of the same groups sent a letter to
Congress requesting a three-year moratorium on
industrial bank licensing applications. See https://
bpi.com/banking-and-consumer-groups-call-oncongress-to-close-ilc-loophole/.
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proposed rule and expressed a range of
concerns, which are discussed below.
1. Banking and Commerce
Commenters’ criticism of the
industrial bank charter, and by
extension the proposed rule, is focused,
in part, on the mixing of banking and
commerce through the commercial
ownership of an industrial bank. The
main argument is that commercial
ownership of an industrial bank
disregards the policy of separation of
banking and commerce embodied in the
BHCA 65 and raises risk to the DIF as a
result of a lack of Federal consolidated
supervision over the commercial parent
company.
Although Federal banking regulation
has historically advanced a policy of
separating banking and commerce, there
is an express Congressional exception of
industrial banks from the BHCA’s
restrictions on commercial affiliations.66
The CEBA exception does not limit
eligible parent companies to those
engaged in financial activities. The
FDIC’s responsibility is to implement
the law as it exists today. Whether
commercial firms should continue to be
able to own industrial banks is a policy
decision for Congress to make.
Some commenters requested that the
FDIC impose a new moratorium on
deposit insurance applications
involving industrial banks to allow for
legislative action. Certain commenters
argued that a moratorium, or a delay in
the rulemaking more generally, was
important in light of the current
economic stress and uncertainty caused
by the COVID–19 pandemic. The
purpose of this final rule is to ensure
adequate oversight of industrial banks
owned by financial and commercial
companies. Additional moratoria or
delays in processing and considering
applications are outside the scope of
this rulemaking and would be
inconsistent with the express
65 See Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
Economic Letter 1998–21, The Separation of
Banking and Commerce (July 3, 1998), available at
https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/
publications/economic-letter/1998/july/separationbanking-commerce/.
66 The legislative history of the CEBA offers no
explanation of why this exception was adopted.
While the industrial bank exception was included
in the Senate version of the Act, the House version
omitted it. The Conference report does not shed
much light:
INDUSTRIAL LOAN COMPANY EXEMPTION
SECTION 2(C) (2) (H) OF THE BANK HOLDING
COMPANY ACT
The Senate amendment exempts from the
definition of ‘‘bank’’ certain industrial banks;
industrial loan companies, or other similar
institutions. The House recedes to the Senate.
Conference Report to accompany H.R. 27—
Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (July 31,
1987), at 121.
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10709
Congressional exception of industrial
banks from the BHCA’s restrictions on
commercial affiliations and the FDIC’s
statutory obligations to receive and
process applications related to
industrial banks.
These commenters also argued that
allowing commercial firms and
industrial banks to combine could
potentially lead to conflicts of interest
in the lending process and undue
concentrations of economic power—
concerns they contend underlie the
general prohibition against the mixing
of commerce and banking in the BHCA.
As noted above, the decision to allow
commercial firms to own industrial
banks was a decision made by Congress.
Industrial banks are restricted from
making favorable loans to their affiliates
by sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act, which quantitatively and
qualitatively limit transactions between
an industrial bank and its affiliates.67
Furthermore, section 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act requires that any
transaction between a bank and its
affiliates must be ‘‘on terms and under
circumstances, including credit
standards, that are substantially the
same, or at least as favorable to [the]
bank or its subsidiary as those
prevailing at the time for comparable
transactions’’ with unaffiliated
companies.68 All covered transactions
between an industrial bank and its
affiliates must be on terms and
conditions that are consistent with safe
and sound banking practices.69
Commenters’ competition concerns
were based on the possibility that large
commercial or technology firms will
acquire industrial banks and lead to
commercial and financial conglomerates
with concentrated and excessive
economic power. These commenters
were concerned that the FDIC will not
adequately consider the anti-trust
implications of commercial and
financial conglomerates. The FDIC
recognizes that there is a possibility that
large and complex companies may seek
to acquire an industrial bank as
emerging technologies and other trends
are leading to changes in the provision
of banking services. The FDIC has
discretion to evaluate the competitive
effects of such proposals when
considering a deposit insurance
application, specifically the statutory
factors of the risk to the DIF and the
convenience and needs of the
community to be served, in order to
ensure the market for the provision of
67 12 U.S.C. 371c(a)(1), 371c–1(a)(1); see also 12
U.S.C. 1828(j).
68 12 U.S.C. 371c–1(b).
69 12 U.S.C. 371c(a)(4).
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banking services remains competitive
and safe and sound.70 Moreover, the
FDIC must consider the anticompetitive
effects of a transaction when it is
evaluating a notice under the Change in
Bank Control Act (CBCA) or an
application under the Bank Merger
Act.71 Recognizing that the business
models proposed by industrial banks are
evolving (e.g., the increasing interplay
of services between the bank and its
nonfinancial affiliates), the FDIC is
issuing this rule in order to help ensure
the safety and soundness of industrial
banks that become subsidiaries of
Covered Companies.
2. Lack of Federal Consolidated
Supervision
Many commenters that were critical
of the proposed rule also argued that the
potential future expansion of banks
operating under the CEBA exception
threatens the Federal safety net because
the FDIC lacks the statutory tools to
adequately examine and supervise
industrial banks and their parents and
affiliates. These commenters noted for
instance the many ecommerce affiliate
relationships of a large, overseas parent
company. The FDIC sought comment on
whether the commitments requiring
examination and reporting included in
the proposed rule were the best
approach to gain transparency and
identify any potential risk to the
industrial banks. A number of
commenters argued that the eight
commitments in the FDIC’s proposed
rule ‘‘fail to achieve parity with the
regime of consolidated supervision
required for BHCs.’’ Elements they
viewed as lacking included
consolidated capital and liquidity
standards for the Covered Company,
including both the industrial bank and
all affiliated entities under common
ownership, examination for compliance
with the Volcker Rule requirements,
sections 23A and 23B, and provisions in
the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) 72
on data safeguards and privacy of
customer information. Such
commenters also argued that the FDIC
does not have the authority to conduct
full-scope examinations across any and
all affiliates, including the parent
company, in their own right. Several
commenters suggested that the FDIC ask
Congress to transfer the supervision of
parent companies of industrial banks to
the FRB to conduct consolidated
supervision.
70 As part of its considerations, the FDIC may also
seek the views of other Federal agencies.
71 See 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)(A), (B); 1828(c)(5).
72 Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999,
Public Law 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338 (1999).
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As discussed in the proposed rule, the
FDIC has both the authority and the
capacity to effectively regulate
industrial banks and their parent
companies, and this rule strengthens the
FDIC’s supervision. The FDIC uses its
supervisory authorities to mitigate the
risks posed to insured depository
institutions whose parent companies are
not subject to consolidated supervision.
In considering applications for deposit
insurance and mergers, as well as
change in control notices, the FDIC uses
prudential conditions, as needed, to
ensure sufficient autonomy and
insulation of the insured depository
institution from its parent and affiliates.
The FDIC also requires CALMAs, which
generally exceed the minimum capital
requirements for traditional community
banks, and other written agreements
between the FDIC and controlling
parties of industrial banks. These
agreements are enforceable under
sections 8 and 50 of the FDI Act. In
addition, under section 38A of the FDI
Act, the FDIC is required to impose a
requirement on companies that directly
or indirectly own or control an
industrial bank to serve as a source of
financial strength for that institution.73
Subsection (d) of section 38A of the FDI
Act also provides explicit statutory
authority for the appropriate Federal
banking agency to require reports from
a controlling company to assess the
ability of the company to comply with
the source of strength requirement, and
to enforce compliance by such
company.74 These prudential conditions
and requirements will be embodied in
written agreements consistent with the
framework established by this final rule.
In addition, an important focus of the
FDIC’s examination and supervision
program is evaluating and mitigating
risk to insured depository institutions
from affiliates. This includes examining
the insured depository institution for
compliance with laws and regulations,
including affiliate transaction limits and
capital maintenance.75 The examination
reviews envisioned under this final rule
provide the basis and opportunity to
more fully evaluate the institution’s
affiliate relationships. As noted above,
most conflict situations affecting banks
and their affiliates can be mitigated
through the supervisory process and
application of the restrictions in
sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
73 12
U.S.C. 1831o–1(b).
12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(d).
75 See Report to the Congress and the Financial
Stability Oversight Council Pursuant to Section 620
of the Dodd-Frank Act (Sept. 2016). The 2016 joint
report evaluated the risks of bank activities and
affiliations, as required by section 620 of the DoddFrank Act.
74 See
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Reserve Act and need not pose
excessive risk to the bank or the banking
system.
The rule also strengthens the FDIC
supervisory framework in the area of
contingency planning. This rule allows
the FDIC to impose a contingency plan
requirement, as needed, which will lead
the FDIC, as well as the Covered
Company and its subsidiary industrial
bank, to a better understanding of the
interdependencies, operational risks,
and other circumstances or events that
could create safety and soundness
concerns for the insured industrial bank
and attendant risk to the DIF. When
imposed, this additional commitment
will provide for recovery actions that
address any financial or operational
stress that may threaten the industrial
bank.
Finally, the FDIC’s oversight and
enforcement power extends to the
parent or affiliates of any industrial
bank whose activities affect that bank,
further protecting the industrial bank
from risky activities of affiliates.76
The FDIC has not found that
industrial banks pose unique safety and
soundness concerns based on the
activities of the parent organization.
Industrial banks are subject to all of the
same restrictions and requirements,
regulatory oversight, and safety and
soundness exams as any other kind of
insured depository institution. As such,
the risks posed are substantially similar
to those of all other charter types. A
number of commenters noted that two
industrial banks failed during the recent
financial crisis. While these failed
institutions were owned by parent
companies not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision, the failures
were not the result of factors related to
the industrial bank charter, as further
discussed below.
Certain commenters also observed
that several large corporate owners of
industrial banks experienced stress
during the 2008–09 financial crisis. In
some cases, the parent organizations
ultimately filed bankruptcy, while
others pursued strategies to resolve the
stress, including through access to
government programs intended to
alleviate the effects of the crisis within
the financial services sector. These
programs included the FDIC’s
Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
(TLGP) and the Troubled Asset Relief
Program (TARP) administered by the
Department of the Treasury. Desired
access to these programs contributed to
several companies pursuing conversions
of an industrial bank to a commercial
bank, which required approval of the
76 See
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parent company to become a BHC
subject to regulation and supervision by
the FRB.
However, it is important to note that
each institution or company described
in the comments was engaged in
activities permissible for all Federal and
State banks, BHCs, or financial holding
companies, as evidenced by the ability
to gain approval for the conversions to
commercial banks and BHCs. Further,
the types and degree of stress were also
experienced by many other insured
depository institutions and banking
companies, some of which also sought
participation in TLGP and/or TARP,
failed, or pursued transactions to
restructure the organization, merge, or
raise capital to alleviate stress or avert
failure. As such, the circumstances
involving the companies highlighted in
the comments were not dissimilar to
those facing other banking companies,
including companies subject to Federal
consolidated supervision.
3. Consumer Protection Risks
Commenters opposed to the proposed
rule also argued that the growth in
industrial banks poses broader
consumer protection risks. They
asserted that the parent companies of
industrial banks are not subject to
Federal financial privacy and
information security requirements and
the absence of these requirements
creates risk for customers of the
industrial banks, whether or not they
also obtain products and services from
the parent companies or nonfinancial
affiliates. BHCs and SLHCs are limited
in their use of consumer financial data
for commercial purposes. These
commenters asserted that industrial
bank parent companies should be
subject to the same restrictions.
While there is no general Federal
regime covering how nonpublic
personal information held in the U.S.
may be disclosed or how it must be
secured, financial institutions,
including industrial banks, are subject
to Title V of the GLBA.77 The GLBA and
its implementing regulations, cited by
some commenters, impose a range of
privacy obligations on financial
77 Subtitle A of Title V of the GLBA, captioned
‘‘Disclosure of Nonpublic Personal Information,’’
limits the instances in which a financial institution
may disclose nonpublic personal information about
a consumer to nonaffiliated third parties, and
requires a financial institution to disclose certain
information sharing practices. ‘‘Nonpublic personal
information’’ is defined to mean any personally
identifiable financial information that is provided
by the consumer to the financial institution; results
from any transaction with the consumer or service
performed for the consumer; or is otherwise
obtained by the financial institution, but which is
not ‘‘publicly available information.’’ See 15 U.S.C.
6801–09.
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institutions, including industrial banks,
that exceed those imposed on most
other business types. Specifically, the
GLBA and implementing rules (1)
impose limitations on information
sharing between financial institutions
and nonaffiliated third parties and
require disclosure of information
sharing policies and practices to
consumers and customers, and (2)
require financial institutions to develop,
implement, and maintain
comprehensive information security
programs.78 However, businesses that
are not subject to the GLBA are not free
from all privacy and data protection
requirements. There are other Federal
laws that address privacy and data
protection that may apply to a Covered
Company and its affiliates as well as
financial institutions. As one example,
the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
establishes standards for collection and
permissible purposes for dissemination
of data by consumer reporting agencies
and obligations on furnishers of
information. As another example,
section 5 of the Federal Trade
Commission Act (FTC Act) provides
broad authority to the FTC to pursue
unfair and deceptive trade acts and
practices against most businesses arising
from privacy and data protection
practices.79 Further, the Dodd-Frank Act
granted the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (CFPB) broad
authority to enforce unfair, deceptive,
and abusive acts and practices related to
consumer financial products and
services that may cover the activities of
a Covered Company and its affiliates.80
Adding to the complexity at the Federal
level, States have enacted laws
governing the collection, use,
protection, and disclosure of personal
information. Many States have
consumer protection and privacy laws
as well as laws similar to the FTC Act
that prohibit unfair or deceptive
business practices.81
78 See, e.g., 12 CFR part 332, Privacy of Consumer
Financial Information.
79 The FTC is empowered to seek injunctive relief
and voluntary consent decrees that can result in
FTC oversight of a company for a period of up to
20 years and may carry financial penalties for future
violations. The Federal banking agencies enforce
section 5 as to financial institutions under their
supervision.
80 The CFPB has been active in the privacy area
and recently issued an advanced notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANPR) seeking input on the financial
records access right granted by section 1033 of the
Dodd-Frank Act pertaining to consumer
information in the control or possession of
consumer financial services providers. 85 FR 71003
(Nov. 6, 2020).
81 For example, the California Consumer Privacy
Act of 2018 serves as an omnibus law governing
privacy rights. It was recently amended and
expanded by the California Privacy Rights Act. 2020
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10711
In the absence of a single,
comprehensive Federal law regulating
privacy and the collection use,
processing, disclosure, security, and
disposal of personal information, the
FDIC will continue to supervise and
examine industrial banks and enforce
compliance with the GLBA and all other
Federal consumer protection laws and
regulations. In addition, and in response
to the concerns expressed by
commenters that a Covered Company
and affiliates that are not engaged in
financial services would not be covered
by the GLBA, the FDIC is including in
the final rule a requirement for a
Covered Company to inform the FDIC
about its systems for protecting the
security, confidentiality, and integrity of
consumer and nonpublic personal
information, as part of the Covered
Company’s commitment to submit an
annual report to the FDIC. This
reporting will provide the FDIC with a
better understanding across all of a
Covered Company’s financial and
nonfinancial affiliates and activities and
provide the means to monitor for
potential consumer protection risks.
The FDIC will evaluate privacy and
data protection issues presented by a
deposit insurance application, a change
in control notice, or a merger
application involving an industrial bank
on a case-by-case basis. When
appropriate, the FDIC may consider
imposing heightened requirements
specific to industrial banks and Covered
Companies regarding the use of
consumer financial data for commercial
purposes. Decisions will be based on the
size and complexity of the industrial
bank, the nature and scope of its
activities, the sensitivity of any
customer information at issue, and the
unique facts and circumstances of the
filing before the FDIC.
Certain commenters expressed
concerns about industrial bank and
nonbank partnerships that the
commenters believe have led to
increased predatory lending.82 A major
Cal. Legis. Serv. Prop. 24 (2020). The Massachusetts
Data Security Regulation includes State-level
general data protection security requirements. 201
Mass. Code Regs. 17.00 et seq. The Act to Protect
the Privacy of Online Consumer Information
enacted by the Maine legislature is another example
of a State law governing the privacy of consumer
information. 35–A M.R.S. section 9301. These
examples underscore the fact that although a
uniform Federal law has not been enacted, privacy
is increasingly in the forefront of the public and
legislators alike.
82 The concern appears to arise from perceived
abuses of longstanding statutory authority rather
than the proposed rule. Congress enacted section 27
of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1831d, in 1980, permitting
State banks to charge interest at the rate permitted
by the law of the State where the bank is located,
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component of the FDIC’s mission is to
ensure that financial institutions treat
consumers and depositors fairly, and
operate in compliance with Federal
consumer protection, antidiscrimination, and community
reinvestment laws. The FDIC addresses
the problem of predatory lending by
taking supervisory action, by
encouraging and assisting banks to serve
all sectors of their community, and by
providing consumers with information
to help make informed financial
decisions.
4. Justification for the Proposed Rule
Several commenters raised concerns
that the FDIC offered insufficient
justification for the proposed rule. In
particular, commenters argued that the
proposed rule did not set out a
sufficient factual, legal, or policy basis
for proposed rule, and that there was
insufficient discussion of the risks,
public policy concerns, and statutory
public interest factors concerning
industrial banks.
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) 83 requires a notice of proposed
rulemaking to provide sufficient factual
detail and rationale for the rule to
permit interested parties to comment
meaningfully.84
The proposed rule set out a clear
description of the basis for the proposed
rule. The NPR discussed the history of
industrial banks in the U.S., both
generally and in the context of
controversies over the past two decades.
The NPR acknowledged the arguments
raised by critics, reviewing the potential
risks inherent in approving and
supervising industrial banks. These
include concerns over the mixing of
banking and commerce as well as the
risk to the DIF posed by the lack of
Federal consolidated supervision of
parent companies. The NPR also set out
the justification for the proposed rule,
including the need to codify and clarify
supervisory expectations for industrial
banks and the importance of imposing
commitments on parent companies to
ensure the parent company can serve as
a source of strength for its subsidiary
industrial bank. The NPR provided
sufficient discussion of the factual,
even if that rate exceeds the rate permitted by the
law of the borrower’s State. Federal court
precedents reviewing this authority have upheld
this practice for decades. Section 27 also permits
States to opt out of its coverage by adopting a law,
or certifying that the voters of the State have voted
in favor of a provision which states explicitly that
the State does not want section 27 to apply with
respect to loans made in such State.
83 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
84 5 U.S.C. 553(b); see, e.g., National Lifeline
Association v. F.C.C., 921 F.3d 1105, 1115 (D.C. Cir.
2019).
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legal, and policy considerations for the
proposed rule, such that interested
parties were able to—and did—submit a
variety of comments on a number of
issues raised in and by the proposed
rule.
A few commenters argued that the
NPR did not adequately discuss the
FDIC’s decision to allow industrial bank
applications in the wake of both the
temporary moratorium the FDIC put
into place from 2006 to 2008 and the
subsequent 2010 to 2013 moratorium
Congress enacted through the DoddFrank Act. To reverse the industrial
bank moratorium without additional
details, these commenters suggest, is
arbitrary and capricious and violates the
APA.
As the Supreme Court has noted,
‘‘Agencies are free to change their
existing policies as long as they provide
a reasoned explanation for the
change.’’ 85 The explanation need not
prove that ‘‘the reasons for the new
policy are better than the reasons for the
old one; it suffices that the new policy
is permissible under the statute, that
there are good reasons for it, and that
the agency believes it to be better, which
the conscious change of course
adequately indicates.’’ 86 Specifically,
‘‘the agency must examine the relevant
data and articulate a satisfactory
explanation for its action including a
rational connection between the facts
found and the choice made.’’ 87
The NPR provided a reasoned
discussion of the decision to move
forward with the proposed rule, as
discussed above. Furthermore, the NPR
also explained why it was proceeding
now when it chose not to do so with the
2007 rulemaking. The NPR noted that
the FDIC’s decision not to go forward
with the 2007 proposal was rooted in a
number of factors. More specifically,
while the FDIC considered the
comments received on the 2007
rulemaking, industry conditions and
other factors had the effect of reducing
organizer interest in establishing new
industrial banks. Most notably, interest
in organizing new institutions of all
charter types, including industrial
banks, diminished given the
deteriorating economic and market
conditions identified as early as mid2007. In part, this diminished interest
reflected the market uncertainty,
restricted liquidity, reduced availability
of capital, and difficult interest rate
environment experienced by all
85 Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136 S.Ct.
2117, 2126 (2016).
86 F.C.C. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S.
502, 515 (2009).
87 Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut.
Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983).
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institutions across the banking industry.
In addition, interest in industrial bank
charters was affected by changes in
certain State laws that limited the
ability to form or acquire industrial
banks, and was reflected in the number
of industrial banks seeking conversions
to commercial bank charters. The
factors, collectively, argued against
moving forward with a final rule, as did
the opportunity to closely monitor the
performance of industrial banks during
a period of significant stress.88
Overall, the performance and
condition of industrial banks during the
most recent banking crises was
generally consistent with other FDICinsured institutions based on assigned
supervisory ratings, which consider
each institution’s unique business
model, complexity, and risk profile.
From the beginning of 2009 through
2011, on average, industrial banks were
assigned composite and component
ratings similar to other charter types
with regard to safety and soundness,
consumer protection, and the CRA.
Further, the portfolio of industrial banks
reflected similar proportions of
institutions that were composite rated 3,
4, or 5 89 during the crisis, as well as a
similar rate of failure as the portfolio of
traditional community banks.
Looking more specifically at financial
performance, and notwithstanding their
general focus on nontraditional business
models, industrial banks have
experienced, by most key measures of
performance and condition, comparable
results to other insured institutions.
Industrial banks tend to maintain higher
levels of capital and generate higher
earnings. At year-ends 2009 through
2011, industrial banks maintained a
median tier 1 leverage capital (T1LC)
ratio between 13.1 percent and 15.4
percent, whereas, other insured
institutions maintained a median T1LC
ratio between 9.3 percent and 9.7
percent. As of June 30, 2020, the median
T1LC ratio for industrial banks was 14.6
88 As noted above in section II.H of this
Supplementary Information section, after 2013, the
moratorium imposed by Congress in the DoddFrank Act expired by its terms and was not
renewed.
89 Each financial institution is assigned composite
and component ratings for safety and soundness
under the Uniform Financial Institutions Rating
System (UFIRS). Under the UFIRS, composite
ratings are based on an evaluation and rating of six
essential components of an institution’s financial
condition and operations: Adequacy of capital, the
quality of assets, the capability of management, the
quality and level of earnings, the adequacy of
liquidity, and the sensitivity to market risk.
Evaluations of the components take into
consideration the institution’s size and
sophistication, the nature and complexity of its
activities, and its risk profile.
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percent as compared to 10.3 percent for
other insured institutions.90
Similarly, industrial banks reported a
median return on average assets (ROAA)
ratio of between 0.6 percent and 2.5
percent at year-ends 2009 through 2011,
versus a median ROAA ratio of between
0.4 percent and 0.7 percent for other
insured institutions. The median ROAA
ratio for industrial banks and other
insured institutions as of June 30, 2020,
were 1.1 percent and 0.9 percent,
respectively.91
The capital and earnings ratios for
industrial banks is reflective of the
higher degree of risk inherent in their
business models. The specialty nature of
most industrial bank business models,
particularly when compared to
traditional community banks (which
constitute a large proportion of all other
insured institutions), have contributed
to the maintenance of higher levels of
capital and earnings, generally.
Additionally, since the mid-2000s,
approved filings for industrial banks
have largely included CALMAs that
required higher capital requirements
than other insured institutions.
Further, industrial banks have been
assigned examination ratings for the
capital and earnings components that,
on average, were very similar to those of
other insured institutions. This
generally indicates that industrial banks
have implemented and maintained
appropriate risk management practices
that, given financial condition and
performance, have adequately
compensated for the risks inherent in
the business models.
When compared to other insured
institutions, industrial banks typically
maintain a lower volume of liquid assets
and rely more heavy on non-core
liabilities to fund longer-term earning
assets. As a result, while still
satisfactory, the liquidity posture for
industrial banks was considered slightly
lower both during and subsequent to the
2008–09 financial crisis. In the FDIC’s
experience, asset quality has been
comparable between industrial banks
and other insured institutions,
indicating both a manageable volume of
past due loans or other problem assets,
as well as satisfactory risk management
practices. In addition, management
practices for industrial banks also have
been in line with that of other insured
institutions, both during and after the
financial crisis.
Despite the above, it is important to
note that some industrial banks
experienced stress during the 2008–09
financial crisis. The circumstances
90 FDIC
Call Report Data, June 30, 2020.
91 Id.
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experienced by industrial banks during
the crisis were not dissimilar from the
circumstances confronting other insured
institutions and were not the result of
factors related to the industrial bank
charter. In general, the FDIC’s
supervision helped to isolate the
insured industrial bank from the stress
of the parent organization, which
helped in managing the potential risk to
the industrial bank and the DIF.
Nevertheless, as discussed above,
several commenters noted the
participation of industrial banks or their
parent organizations in various
government programs established
during the crisis. There were six
industrial banks (or their parent
companies) among the more than 110
companies that accessed the debt
guarantee program component of the
TLGP, including several owned by
parent companies organized as thrift
holding companies. However, it is
important to note that establishment of
the TLGP was prompted by the
unexpected and precipitous market
conditions brought on by the related
housing, financial, and banking crises
that occurred over the period of 2007
through 2011.92 These conditions
impacted even the largest banking
companies in the U.S. and abroad.93
Some comments noted the crisis-era
conversions of industrial banks and
their parent organizations to commercial
banks and BHCs. Of the conversions
noted by commenters, the majority
involved industrial banks that were
fundamentally sound, based on the most
recent examinations prior to the
conversions. The same held with
respect to the respective parent
companies, one of which converted
from a thrift holding company to a bank
holding company during the crisis. In
each case, the FRB determined that
92 As has been noted in Crisis and Response, the
housing bubble that developed during the early
2000s burst in 2007, bringing the financial system
‘‘relatively quickly to the brink of collapse’’ and
resulted in the worst economic dislocation in
decades. Large losses in economic output and large
declines in economic indicators were evident,
including with respect to steep declines in
employment and household wealth, among other
indicators. The related banking crisis was also
severe, with almost 500 institutions failing during
the period of 2008 through 2013. In addition,
between March 2008 and December 2009, the
number of problem banks rose from 90 to over 700,
and ultimately peaked at almost 900 in early 2011.
This level constituted nearly 12 percent of all FDICinsured institutions. See note 49.
93 Some of the industrial banks that were owned
by thrift holding companies had sister financial
institutions that were also FDIC-insured.
Ownership of an industrial bank was not the
driving force that caused or allowed these entities
to issue guaranteed debt through the TLGP. Rather,
the companies could have accessed the program
simply by virtue of being a thrift holding company
or owning an FDIC-insured institution.
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10713
approval of the BHC applications was
warranted, based on evaluation of the
relevant statutory factors and regulatory
requirements. Given these
circumstances, the conversions and
participation in crisis-related programs
reflected responses to the broader
conditions in all segments of the
economy, including the financial sector.
Finally, industrial banks did not
experience a disproportionate rate of
failures when compared to other types
of institutions, and there have not been
any industrial bank failures since
2010.94
This experience with supervision in
the industrial banking space informs the
present rulemaking. The heightened
source of strength requirements, along
with other regulatory requirements
included in the final rule, are examples
of how the FDIC is applying lessons
learned in this rulemaking process.
Some commenters also questioned
why the proposed rule applies to
industrial banks that would be owned
by financial and commercial companies,
when the FDIC’s 2007 rulemaking was
limited to financial companies and the
FDIC’s extended moratorium applied
only to commercial companies. As the
FDIC discussed in the proposed rule,
commenters on the 2007 rulemaking
observed that the FDIC lacked authority
to draw a distinction between financial
and nonfinancial industrial bank
owners absent a change in law. The
FDIC agrees that the CEBA exception
does not distinguish between
commercial and financial parent
companies of industrial banks in
excluding them from the definition of
‘‘bank.’’ As discussed above, the FDIC’s
supervisory experience has shown that
a distinction based on the activities of
the parent company is not warranted in
this final rule.
Most crucial, though, is the fact that
the most recent of the moratoriums
commenters reference expired in 2013.
In the ensuing years, Congress has
declined to act with regard to industrial
banks. The FDIC, as all agencies, is
charged with enacting the laws as they
exist today. Therefore, given that the
rule is permissible under the statute,
that it is sufficiently supported by the
reasoning presented in the NPR and this
Supplementary Information section, and
that there is a clear connection between
the facts at hand and the choice to
proceed, the rule is a permissible
change in policy.
The FDIC believes that the final rule,
which is largely consistent with the
94 As noted above, Security Savings Bank,
Henderson, Nevada, failed in February 2009, and
Advanta Bank Corporation, Draper, Utah, failed in
March 2010.
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proposed rule, is an appropriate
response to safety and soundness issues
surrounding financial and commercial
ownership of industrial banks under
existing law. Specific suggestions from
commenters on the regulation itself are
described below in the appropriate
sections of this preamble on the specific
sections of the rule.
B. Description of the Final Rule
1. Section 354.1—Scope
This section of the proposed rule
described the industrial banks and
parent companies that would be subject
to the rule. The proposed rule applied
to industrial banks that, after the
effective date, become subsidiaries of
companies that are Covered Companies,
as such term is defined in § 354.2.
Industrial bank subsidiaries of
companies that are subject to Federal
consolidated supervision by the FRB
would not have been covered by the
proposed rule. An industrial bank that,
on or before the effective date, is a
subsidiary of a company that is not
subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB (a grandfathered
industrial bank) generally would not
have been covered by the proposed
rule.95 A grandfathered industrial bank
could become subject to the proposed
rule following a grant of deposit
insurance, change in control, or merger
occurring on or after the effective date
in which the resulting institution is an
industrial bank that is a subsidiary of a
Covered Company. Thus, a
grandfathered industrial bank would
have been subject to the proposed rule,
as would its parent company that is not
subject to Federal consolidated
supervision, if such a parent company
acquired control of the grandfathered
industrial bank pursuant to a grant of
deposit insurance after the effective
date, a change in bank control
transaction that closes after the effective
date, or if the grandfathered industrial
bank is the surviving institution in a
merger transaction that closes after the
effective date. Industrial banks that are
not subsidiaries of a company, for
example, those wholly owned by one or
more individuals, would not have been
subject to the proposed rule.
The FDIC specifically sought
comment on whether to apply the rule
prospectively or to all industrial banks
95 Although generally not subject to the rule,
grandfathered industrial banks and their parent
companies that are not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision by the FRB will remain
subject to FDIC supervision, including but not
limited to examinations and capital requirements.
See also the discussion of the reservation of
authority in section IV.B.6. of this Supplementary
Information.
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21:28 Feb 22, 2021
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that, as of the effective date, are a
subsidiary of a parent company that is
not subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB. A number of
commenters expressed the view that the
rule, if adopted, should apply only
prospectively; that is, to industrial
banks that become a subsidiary of a
parent company that is a Covered
Company as of the effective date of the
rule, noting that existing industrial
banks and their parents are subject to
most of the standards of the proposed
rule. Three commenters requested that
the rule apply to a parent company and
its subsidiary industrial bank if the
parent company became a Covered
Company after either the date of FDIC’s
notice announcing the FDIC board
meeting at which the proposed rule was
considered or the date of the FDIC board
meeting, rather than the effective date.
Some commenters supported the
retroactive application of the proposed
rule to all industrial banks that, as of the
effective date, are a subsidiary of a
parent that is not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision. These
commenters asserted that otherwise
existing industrial banks would enjoy a
regulatory advantage over new
industrial banks. They also argued that
retroactive application would enhance
the FDIC’s ability to perform its
supervisory responsibilities. However,
other commenters expressed concerns
that applying the rule retroactively
would violate the APA as parent
companies of existing industrial banks
had no opportunity to consider these
requirements in their decision to
establish or acquire an industrial bank.
These commenters also argued that
existing industrial banks have a record
of sound operations under the existing
supervisory framework.
In addition, one commenter
recommended that the final rule apply
to grandfathered industrial banks that
undergo certain other changes, such as
when the industrial bank parent
company acquires a subsidiary engaged
in nonfinancial activities, or the
industrial bank parent company engages
in new nonfinancial activities. The final
rule operates prospectively on the basis
of a filing that would result in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary
of a company not subject to
consolidated Federal supervision. In
contrast, the suggested triggers, as
described, would be applied to existing
industrial banks and their parent
companies, would not be related to a
filing, and would not necessarily result
in any impact to the industrial bank.
Should such an impact be identified,
the FDIC would rely on its supervisory
or enforcement authority as the
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Sfmt 4700
appropriate means to ensure the safe
and sound operation of the industrial
bank. Further, the commenter’s
suggestion would be difficult to
administer because the recommended
triggers for applicability of the rule—
engaging in ‘‘nonfinancial’’ activities—
historically has proven difficult to
define and measure. Accordingly, the
final rule does not adopt the
commenter’s recommendation.
However, the FDIC will continue to
apply all appropriate supervisory and
enforcement authorities to existing
industrial banks and their parent
organizations, as appropriate, to ensure
the continued safety and soundness of
the industrial bank.
The FDIC also sought comment on
whether the rule should apply to
industrial banks that do not have a
parent company or to industrial banks
that are controlled by an individual
rather than a company. Several
commenters asserted that it was not
necessary to apply the requirements of
the proposed rule to industrial banks
without parent companies (or that are
controlled by an individual rather than
a company), in part because industrial
banks themselves are subject to the
same regulatory treatment as State
nonmember banks. By contrast, several
commenters asserted the requirements
should be applied to such industrial
banks and/or also to an individual that
controls an industrial bank. The FDIC
believes that industrial banks that are
owned by individuals or do not have a
parent company generally do not
present the same potential risks as
industrial banks owned by companies.
Industrial banks that are controlled by a
parent company, whether engaged in
commercial or financial activities, that
are not subject to Federal consolidated
supervision present the risks that are
addressed by the safeguards in this final
rule. In addition, applying the rule to
industrial banks that have a parent
company and requiring that the parent
company provide capital support is
consistent with the statutory
requirements of section 38A of the FDI
Act.
After considering these comments
regarding the scope of the proposed
rule, the final rule will apply only
prospectively as of the effective date of
the rule, to industrial banks that become
subsidiaries of companies that are
Covered Companies.96 The FDIC must
96 The proposed rule divided the rule into two
temporal states, on or before the effective date on
the one hand, and after the effective date on the
other hand. The final rule amends the dividing line
so that the relevant timeframes would be before the
effective date and on or after the effective date. This
change was made because the effective date is
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consider the requirements of the APA
and the Riegle Community Development
and Regulatory Improvement Act
(RCDRIA) in determining the effective
date of new regulations, and both of
these statutory schemes generally
provide for an effective date that follows
the date on which the regulations are
published in final form. Thus, the final
rule will be effective on April 1, 2021.97
The FDIC also sought comment on
whether an individual that controls the
parent company of an industrial bank
should be responsible for the
maintenance of the industrial bank’s
capital and liquidity at or above FDICspecified levels and for causing the
parent company to comply with the
written agreements, commitments, and
restrictions imposed on the industrial
bank. The FDIC also asked whether an
individual who is the dominant
shareholder of a Covered Company
should be required to commit to the
maintenance of appropriate capital and
liquidity levels. As discussed below,
§ 354.3(b) of the proposed rule provided
that the FDIC may condition a grant of
deposit insurance, issuance of a nonobjection to a change in control, or
approval of a merger on an individual
who is a controlling shareholder of a
Covered Company joining as a party to
the written agreements required under
the rule. In such cases where the FDIC
would require the controlling
shareholder to join as a party, the
controlling shareholder would be
required to cause the Covered Company
to fulfill its obligations under the
written agreements through the voting
of shares, or otherwise. These
obligations include, among other things,
maintaining each subsidiary industrial
bank’s capital and liquidity at such
levels as the FDIC deems necessary for
the safe and sound operation of the
industrial bank (commitment (7)).
Several commenters criticized the
controlling shareholder requirement.
Some commenters argued that an
individual who controls or owns a
parent company should not be held
personally liable for maintaining the
industrial bank’s capital or liquidity.
These commenters expressed concern
that such a requirement would make it
more difficult to attract shareholders
and capital. As noted above, in cases
commonly understood to be the date upon which
a rule is effective, not the day before a rule would
take effect.
97 During the period before the effective date of
the final rule, the FDIC will consider pending
deposit insurance applications, change in control
notices, and merger applications for industrial
banks on a case-by-case basis and impose
conditions and requirements as appropriate and
that are consistent with current practice.
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where the FDIC would require a person
that controls a Covered Company to join
as a party, such person would be
required to vote their shares or take
such other appropriate actions to cause
the Covered Company to fulfill its
obligations under the written
agreements. The obligation to maintain
the subsidiary industrial bank’s capital
and liquidity rests with the Covered
Company.
Other commenters noted that the
parent company already commits in the
CALMA to provide support and were
concerned that requiring the parent
company’s shareholders to also provide
a guarantee of support will drive away
investors. These commenters, however,
were not opposed to a requirement for
the controlling shareholder to commit to
vote his or her shares to comply with
the CALMA. One commenter noted that
the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC) may impose certain
commitments on the controlling
shareholder related to the ownership of
shares and how the controlling
shareholder exercises shareholder
rights.
Several commenters supported the
approach of imposing certain conditions
at the level of the Covered Company’s
controlling shareholder as necessary to
ensure the safety and soundness of the
subsidiary industrial bank. Some
commenters asserted that the FDIC
should require the dominant
shareholders of a parent company to
maintain appropriate levels of capital
and liquidity. Another commenter
argued that the choice of ownership
structure should not relieve an
individual from source of strength and
other obligations.
The FDIC believes that in order to
ensure that a Covered Company serves
as a continuing source of financial
strength to the subsidiary industrial
bank, the FDIC may exercise its
supervisory discretion to require a
controlling, or dominant, shareholder of
a Covered Company to join as a party to
the written agreements required under
the rule. An individual with controlling
ownership has a direct and effective
means by which to influence the major
decisions of the Covered Company by
voting shares or by exercising an
influence as a member of the Covered
Company’s board of directors.
Accordingly, the FDIC is finalizing this
requirement in § 354.3(b) as proposed.
As discussed in the proposed rule, in
such cases where FDIC would require
the controlling shareholder to join as a
party, the controlling shareholder would
be required to cause the Covered
Company to fulfill its obligations under
the written agreements through voting
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10715
shares, or otherwise, including to
maintain the capital and liquidity levels
of the subsidiary industrial bank at or
above FDIC-specified levels. The FDIC
intends to make such a determination
on a case-by-case basis and will
consider the business plan, capital
structure, risk profile, and business
activities of the Covered Company.
2. Section 354.2—Definitions
This section of the proposed rule
listed the definitions that applied to part
354. Terms that were not defined in the
proposed rule that are defined in section
3 of the FDI Act had the meanings given
in section 3 of the FDI Act.98
The term ‘‘control’’ was defined to
mean the power, directly or indirectly,
to direct the management or policies of
a company or to vote 25 percent or more
of any class of voting securities of a
company and specifically would have
included the rebuttable presumption of
control at 12 CFR 303.82(b)(1) and the
presumptions of acting in concert at 12
CFR 303.82(b)(2) 99 in the same manner
and to the same extent as if they applied
to an acquisition of securities of a
company instead of a ‘‘covered
institution.’’ These definitions are
nearly the same as the definitions of
‘‘control’’ in the CBCA 100 and the
FDIC’s regulations implementing the
CBCA 101 except that they would have
broadened the term to apply to control
of a company and not solely insured
depository institutions so that the
definition can accurately describe the
relationship between the parent
company of an industrial bank and any
of its nonbank subsidiaries, which also
would be affiliates of the industrial
bank.
Two commenters suggested that the
rule should incorporate the definition of
control used in the BHCA and its
implementing regulations. One trade
group commenter argued that such an
approach would lead to consistency in
the treatment of parent companies of
insured depository institutions. An
industrial bank commenter suggested
that aligning the proposed rule’s
definition of control with the BHCA and
the FRB’s regulatory framework 102
would create a more uniform system
that would make it easier for investors
98 12
U.S.C. 1813.
proposed rule erroneously referred to the
presumptions set forth at 12 CFR 303.83(b)(1) and
(2). The final rule corrects that technical error to
correctly refer to § 303.82(b)(1) and (2).
100 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(8)(B).
101 12 CFR 303.80 through 303.88.
102 85 FR 12398 (Mar. 2, 2020); see also
Regulation Y—Frequently Asked Questions,
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
supervisionreg/reg-y-faqs.htm.
99 The
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to balance their investment decisions
with the regulatory implications of
certain levels of investment.
The FDIC has considered these
comments and has decided to retain the
definition used in the proposed rule.
First, the definition of control proposed
in the NPR is consistent with the
definition of control that the FDIC uses
in other contexts, namely changes in
bank control. The FDIC in 2015
amended its filing requirements and
processing procedures for notices filed
under the CBCA with respect to
proposed acquisitions of State
nonmember banks and certain parent
companies thereof.103 Among other
things, the FDIC’s CBCA implementing
regulations adopted the best practices of
the related regulations of the OCC and
FRB, rendering more consistent the
CBCA implementing regulations of the
Federal banking agencies.
Second, the FDIC is not the Federal
banking agency responsible for
implementing and interpreting the
BHCA and has not developed precedent
for the implementation of the BHCA. In
adopting the CBCA implementing
regulations, the FDIC noted that it found
the logic of the FRB’s interpretations
regarding control under the BHCA
useful in analyzing fact patterns under
the CBCA, but did not adopt the FRB’s
interpretations, preferring instead to
review each case based on the facts and
circumstances presented.104
The term ‘‘Covered Company’’ meant
any company that is not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision by the
FRB and that, directly or indirectly,
controls an industrial bank (i) as a result
of a change in bank control under
section 7(j) of the FDI Act,105 (ii) as a
result of a merger transaction pursuant
to section 18(c) of the FDI Act,106 or (iii)
that is granted deposit insurance under
section 6 of the FDI Act,107 in each case
after the effective date of the rule.
Under these provisions, a company
would control an industrial bank if the
company would have the power,
directly or indirectly, (i) to vote 25
percent or more of any class of voting
shares of any industrial bank or any
company that controls the industrial
bank (i.e., a parent company), or (ii) to
direct the management or policies of
any industrial bank or any parent
company. In addition, the FDIC
presumes that a company would have
the power to direct the management or
103 80 FR 65889 (Oct. 28, 2015). The FDIC
received no comments on its approach.
104 80 FR 65889, 65893.
105 12 U.S.C. 1817(j).
106 12 U.S.C. 1828(c).
107 12 U.S.C. 1816.
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policies of any industrial bank or any
parent company if the company will,
directly or indirectly, own, control, or
hold with power to vote at least 10
percent of any class of voting securities
of any industrial bank or any parent
company, and either the industrial
bank’s shares or the parent company’s
shares are registered under section 12 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or
no other person (including a company)
will own, control, or hold with power
to vote a greater percentage of any class
of voting securities. If two or more
companies, not acting in concert, will
each have the same percentage, each
such company will have control. As
noted above, control of an industrial
bank can be indirect. For example,
company A may control company B,
which in turn may control company C
which may control an industrial bank.
Company A and company B would each
have indirect control of the industrial
bank, and company C would have direct
control. As a result, the industrial bank
would be a subsidiary of companies A,
B, and C.
One commenter observed that the
Supplementary Information for the
proposed rule characterized BHCs and
SLHCs as generally prohibited from
engaging in commercial activities.108
This commenter noted that
grandfathered unitary SLHCs are
permitted to engage in certain
‘‘grandfathered’’ activities, which may
include commercial activities and
requested that the FDIC clarify its
position with respect to grandfathered
unitary SLHCs. The FDIC recognizes
that certain grandfathered unitary
SLHCs may be able to engage in
commercial activities. Further, as the
FDIC intends to apply the final rule
prospectively, a grandfathered unitary
SLHC that is subject to Federal
consolidated supervision would not be
subject to the final rule.
In response to question 5 in the NPR,
commenters were split on whether to
require a Covered Company to form an
intermediate holding company from
which to conduct its financial activities.
One commenter suggested that there
would be limited benefit to requiring a
Covered Company that conducts
activities other than financial activities
to conduct some or all of its financial
activities (including ownership and
control of an industrial bank) through
an intermediate holding company,
observing that any potential benefit
could be significantly outweighed by
the complexity and cost of
implementing an intermediate holding
company structure, and may only serve
108 See
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Frm 00014
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Sfmt 4700
to organizationally distance the bank
from the primary source of strength,
most commonly the top tier parent
company. Another commenter strongly
opposed the possible requirement,
arguing that in many cases it would not
make sense to create a corporate
structure in service of an industrial bank
that is a small part of the overall
activities or assets of a Covered
Company.
Another commenter argued that
complex diversified Covered Companies
that conduct nonfinancial activities
must be required to structure their
financial activities under an
intermediate holding company so that
the intermediate holding company may
be subjected to enhanced supervision.
The final rule will not require a
Covered Company that conducts
activities other than financial activities
to conduct some or all of its financial
activities (including ownership and
control of an industrial bank) through
an intermediate holding company.109
The FDIC believes that such a structure
is not required to adequately supervise
industrial banks and their parent
companies.
The final rule includes the definition
of Covered Company as proposed with
one revision: The proposed rule defined
a Covered Company as a company that
is not subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB and that
controls an industrial bank as a result of
the non-objection to a change in bank
control, or approval of a merger
transaction or deposit insurance after
the effective date. The final rule applies
where such a non-objection or approval
occurs on or after the effective date.
This revision is not a change in FDIC
policy, but rather a recognition that the
effective date is commonly understood
to be the date upon which a rule is
effective.110
The FDIC received no comment on a
number of definitions: The terms ‘‘FDI
Act,’’ ‘‘filing,’’ ‘‘FRB,’’ ‘‘industrial
bank,’’ and ‘‘senior executive officer.’’
The final rule adopts these terms as
proposed.
In the NPR, the FDIC requested
comment on whether the rule should
include other types of nonbank banks,
in addition to industrial banks. One
commenter stated that all bank and
financial service companies, including
industrial banks and other institutions
that have been excluded from the BHCA
definition of bank (such as credit card
109 The FDIC may consider requiring an
intermediate holding company in the case of a
Covered Company that is not located in the United
States and presents unique circumstances.
110 See also supra note 96.
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and limited purpose trust banks) should
be subject to a level playing field,
including subjecting the parent
company to Federal consolidated
supervision. Another commenter stated
that it was not necessary to include
credit card banks and trust companies
in the scope of the rule because they are
limited purpose institutions. Another
commenter suggested that the rule may
be appropriate for other kinds of banks
whose owners are not subject to the
BHCA, but cautioned that there may be
unique issues related to those charters
that should be considered before
extending the rule to such institutions.
The FDIC has decided not to extend
the scope of the final rule at this time
to other types of banking institutions
that have parent companies not subject
to Federal consolidated supervision.
These other types of institutions (credit
card banks and limited purpose trust
companies) operate under a limited
purpose charter, which narrows the
range of services they may offer. As a
result, the FDIC’s experience indicates
these charter types have generally not
presented the broad issues as presented
by industrial banks.
Commenters also suggested additional
terms for which definitions would be
useful. The FDIC believes that the final
rule is sufficiently clear that such
additional definitions were not
determined to be necessary, although
section IV.B.5. of this Supplementary
Information section provides examples
of what will and will not be considered
a ‘‘material change’’ to a business plan
requiring prior FDIC approval.
3. Section 354.3—Written Agreement
This section of the proposed rule
prohibited any industrial bank from
becoming a subsidiary of a Covered
Company unless the Covered Company
enters into one or more written
agreements with the FDIC and its
subsidiary industrial bank. In such
agreements, the Covered Company
would make certain required
commitments to the FDIC and the
industrial bank, including those listed
in paragraphs (a)(1) through (8) of
§ 354.4, the restrictions in § 354.5, and
such other provisions as the FDIC may
deem appropriate in the particular
circumstances. When two or more
Covered Companies will control (as the
term ‘‘control’’ is defined in § 354.2),
directly or indirectly, the industrial
bank, each such Covered Company
would be required to execute such
written agreement(s). This circumstance
could occur, for example, (i) when two
or more Covered Companies will each
have the power to vote 10 percent or
more of the voting stock of an industrial
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bank or of a company that controls an
industrial bank, the stock of which is
registered under section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or (ii)
when one Covered Company will
control another Covered Company that
directly controls an industrial bank.
Section 354.3(a) of the final rule is
unchanged from the proposal.
As discussed above, proposed
§ 354.3(b) allowed the FDIC, in its sole
discretion, to require, as a condition to
the approval of or non-objection to a
filing, that a controlling shareholder of
a Covered Company join as a party to
any written agreement required in
§ 354.3. In such cases, the controlling
shareholder would be required to cause
the Covered Company to fulfill its
obligations under the written agreement,
through the voting of shares, or
otherwise.
In addition to the written agreements,
commitments, and restrictions of the
final rule, the FDIC will condition an
approval of an application or a nonobjection to a notice on one or more
actions or inactions of the applicant or
notificant, as deemed appropriate by the
FDIC.111 The FDIC may enforce
conditions imposed in writing in
connection with any action on any
application, notice, or other request by
an industrial bank or a company that
controls an industrial bank,112 so it is
not necessary to include provisions
regarding conditions in the proposed
rule.
4. Section 354.4—Required
Commitments and Provisions of Written
Agreement
The FDIC historically has included
conditions in deposit insurance
approval orders for industrial banks that
are intended to create a sufficient
supervisory structure with respect to a
Covered Company. The commitments
that the FDIC has required industrial
banks and their parent companies to
undertake in written agreements have
varied on a case-by-case basis,
depending on the facts and
circumstances and the particular
concerns the FDIC has identified during
the review of the application materials.
Section 354.4 of the proposed rule
required each party to a written
agreement to comply with paragraphs
(a)(1) through (8). These required
commitments are intended to provide
the safeguards and protections that the
FDIC believes are prudent to impose to
111 See 12 CFR 303.11(a) (‘‘The FDIC may
approve, conditionally approve, deny, or not object
to a filing after appropriate review and
consideration of the record.’’). See 12 CFR 303.2(bb)
for a list of standard conditions.
112 12 U.S.C. 1818(b); 1831aa(a).
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10717
maintain the safety and soundness of
industrial banks that are controlled by
Covered Companies. These required
commitments and other provisions are
intended to establish a level of
information reporting and parent
company obligations similar to that
which would be in place if the Covered
Company were subject to Federal
consolidated supervision. The
requirements reflect commitments and
additional provisions that, for the most
part, the FDIC has previously required
as a condition of granting deposit
insurance to industrial banks. The FDIC
proposed to include these required
commitments in the rule to provide
transparency to current and potential
industrial banks, the companies that
control them, and the general public.
In order to provide the FDIC with
more timely and more complete
information about the activities,
financial performance and condition,
operations, prospects, and risk profile of
each Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, the proposed rule required
that each Covered Company furnish to
the FDIC an initial listing, with annual
updates, of all of the Covered
Company’s subsidiaries (commitment
(1)); consent to the FDIC’s examination
of the Covered Company and each of its
subsidiaries to monitor compliance with
any written agreements, commitments,
conditions, and certain provisions of
law (commitment (2)); submit to the
FDIC an annual report on the Covered
Company and its subsidiaries, and such
other reports as the FDIC may request
(commitment (3)); maintain such
records as the FDIC deems necessary to
assess the risks to the industrial bank
and to the DIF (commitment (4)); and
cause an independent audit of each
subsidiary industrial bank to be
performed annually (commitment (5)).
In the NPR, the FDIC sought comment
on whether the proposed commitments
requiring examination and reporting
serve the supervisory purpose of
transparency and identifying any
potential risks to the industrial bank
and whether there was a better approach
for supervising a Covered Company. As
discussed above in section IV.A.2. of
this Supplementary Information section,
a number of commenters were generally
critical of the proposed commitments as
being inadequate and failing to achieve
parity with the regime of consolidated
supervision required for BHCs. The
FDIC believes that the examination
reviews envisioned under the final rule
enhance the existing supervisory
practices and allow for a more robust
evaluation of the industrial bank’s
affiliate relationships. In addition, the
FDIC believes the enhanced reporting
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requirements in the final rule are
consistent with section 38A(d) of the
FDI Act, which provides explicit
statutory authority for the FDIC to
require reports from a controlling
company of an industrial bank to assess
the ability of the company to comply
with the source of strength requirement,
and to enforce compliance by such
company.113 The final rule adopts these
commitments as proposed, other than as
described below. Implementation of the
rule positions the FDIC to better protect
the industrial bank from activities of a
parent organization that present
heightened risk to the organization and
the bank and to ensure that the parent
company is a continuing source of
financial strength.114
In response to the concerns expressed
by commenters that a Covered Company
that is not engaged in financial services
would not be covered by the GLBA, the
FDIC is revising the commitment in the
final rule that a Covered Company
submit an annual report to the FDIC
(commitment (3)) to include a
requirement for a Covered Company to
inform the FDIC about its systems for
protecting the security, confidentiality,
and integrity of consumer and
nonpublic personal information. This
reporting will provide the FDIC
appropriate information across all of a
Covered Company’s financial and
nonfinancial activities to monitor for
potential consumer protection risks.
The FDIC also sought comment on
whether the commitment and
requirements of the rule are
appropriately tailored in light of the
GLBA’s restrictions on the extent to
which a Federal banking agency may
regulate and supervise a functionally
regulated affiliate of an insured
depository institution.
Most commenters supported the
reporting 115 and examination
requirements that enable the FDIC to
monitor and evaluate financial and
other conditions in the parent
113 See
12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(d).
12 U.S.C. 1820(b) and 1820(b)(4)(A).
115 If the Covered Company is required to submit
reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the requirement to submit an annual report
may be satisfied through submission of SEC Form
10–K (or equivalent), along with the company’s
annual audit report and management letter (with
management responses), provided that the
combination of reports addresses each requirement
as stated in the rule. In some cases, it may be
necessary or appropriate to also submit evaluations
of the Covered Company’s internal operations,
along with management responses, satisfying the
Statement on Standards for Attestation
Engagements (SSAE) Number 18, Report on
Controls at a Service Organization Relevant to User
Entities’ Internal Control over Financial Reporting,
as issued or amended by the Auditing Standards
Board, or similar reports or evaluations.
114 See
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organization that are relevant to the
industrial bank. One commenter
supported carving out functionally
regulated entities from the scope of the
required commitments in § 354.4 to be
consistent with ‘‘jurisdictional
boundaries’’ contemplated by the GLBA.
While functionally regulated financial
firms do not raise the types of concerns
that commercial firms do with respect to
industrial banks, different regulatory
supervisors will have different
supervisory approaches and will be
focused, by design, on the aspects of a
business that concern that regulator.116
The FDIC serves as the regulator for the
industrial bank and exercises oversight
of the parent company to the extent
necessary to ensure the safety and
soundness of the industrial bank
subsidiary and to protect the DIF.
Through examination and reporting, the
FDIC will be able to gauge and monitor
the operational risks an industrial bank
affiliate, whether functionally regulated
or unregulated, presents to the
industrial bank. The FDIC may take
action to prevent or redress an unsafe or
unsound practice if action to address
that risk when limited to the industrial
bank would not effectively protect
against the risk.
The FDIC sought comment on
whether a Covered Company should be
required to disclose to the FDIC certain
additional affiliates or portfolio
companies of the Covered Company
because these affiliates could engage in
transactions with, or otherwise impact,
the subsidiary industrial bank. One
trade association commenter opposed
any further extension of the reporting
requirement as being burdensome. A
number of commenters acknowledged
the FDIC’s authority to understand
affiliate relationships and their impact
on the industrial bank, but suggested
that the reporting be tailored by
including a materiality threshold.
Otherwise, these commenters believed
the reporting would be burdensome
while potentially providing information
with no real relevance to the industrial
bank.
Other commenters argued that the
final rule should require a Covered
Company to disclose its affiliates and
portfolio companies that could engage
in transactions with, or otherwise
impact, the subsidiary industrial bank
in order to provide the FDIC a complete
and transparent picture of the business
model. These commenters observed that
related entities may impact the financial
116 For example, in a situation where a parent
company issues securities, the SEC’s role and
expertise lies in supervising the parent company as
an issuer of securities, not in the role of a parent
company of an industrial bank.
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condition and results of operations of
the Covered Company, which may
negatively impact its ability to serve as
a source of strength for the industrial
bank.
The FDIC believes that the
relationship of a bank with its affiliated
organizations is important to the
analysis of the condition of the bank
itself. Because of commonality of
ownership or management that may
exist, transactions with affiliates may
not be subject to the same sort of
objective analysis that exists in
transactions between independent
parties. Also, affiliates offer an
opportunity to engage in types of
business activities that are prohibited to
the bank itself yet those activities may
affect the condition of the bank. In
recognition of the importance of these
relationships, the FDIC has been granted
authority, under certain conditions to
examine affiliates in connection with its
examination of a bank to disclose the
relationship between the bank and a
given affiliate, as well as the effect of
that relationship on the bank.117 The
FDIC also has been granted authority to
bring enforcement actions against
insured State nonmember banks and
their institution-affiliated parties.118 As
discussed above in section IV.A.2.,
industrial banks are subject to these
same examination and enforcement
authorities as other banks, as well as
sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act and Regulation W, which
govern transactions with affiliates. In
addition, section 38A of the FDI Act
provides authority for the FDIC to
require reports from a company that
controls an industrial bank to assess the
ability of the company to comply with
the source of strength requirement, and
to enforce compliance by such
company.119 Section 38A of the FDI Act
therefore provides an additional
supervisory tool to the FDIC in
regulating Covered Companies,
including their subsidiaries.
In supervising industrial banks, the
FDIC considers each industrial bank’s
purpose and placement within the
organizational structure and tailors
reporting and other requirements
accordingly. Requiring the disclosure of
the Covered Companies’ subsidiaries
along with the other reporting tools
available to the FDIC as discussed above
are sufficient and will appropriately
cover those affiliates of the industrial
bank of most concern to the FDIC.
Accordingly, the FDIC is adopting
§ 354.4(a)(1) as proposed.
117 12
U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
U.S.C. 1813(u) and 1818.
119 See 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1(d).
118 12
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In order to limit the extent of each
Covered Company’s influence over a
subsidiary industrial bank, the proposed
rule required each Covered Company to
commit to limit its representation on the
industrial bank’s board of directors to 25
percent of the members of the board, or
if the bank is organized as a limited
liability company and is managed by a
board of managers, to 25 percent of the
members of the board of managers, or if
the bank is organized as a limited
liability company and is managed by its
members, to 25 percent of managing
member interests (commitment (6)). For
example, if company A, which has 15
percent representation on the subsidiary
industrial bank’s board, controls
company B, then the companies’
representation would be aggregated and
limited to no more than 25 percent.
Thus, company B’s representation
would be limited to no more than 10
percent.
The FDIC sought comment on
whether this threshold is appropriate.
Three commenters argued against any
limitation of a Covered Company’s
representation on the board of a
subsidiary industrial bank. These
commenters noted the burden in
identifying independent director
candidates and obtaining the prior
approval for candidates associated with
a Covered Company. In addition, these
commenters argued that the restriction
would limit the coordination necessary
and appropriate among entities within
an organization. One commenter
expressed the concern that there could
be a negative effect on the remaining
directors if an independent director
leaves a board. That is, the potential
need to eliminate a director associated
with a Covered Company in order to
comply with the rule on a continuing
basis.
One commenter asserted that there
may be conflicts between the rule
limitation and unspecified State law,
while another noted the lack of
comparable limitations on other legal
structures, creating a distinct difference
between Covered Companies and other
operating entities. A number of
commenters also suggested that relying
on the simple majority of independent
directors, as has been applied in other
instances, has not led to issues or
concerns regarding the subsidiary
industrial bank.
To address the concerns regarding the
limitation, commenters suggested either
raising the threshold from 25 percent to
one-third, or requiring that a simple
majority be independent. While
acknowledging the need for some degree
of director independence to limit the
potential influence from Covered
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Companies, these commenters noted
that the higher threshold may enhance
coordination between the industrial
bank and Covered Companies. By
extension, the increased coordination
would enable the Covered Companies to
have a better understanding of the
industrial bank’s obligations. One
comment also noted that the FDIC
would retain its full enforcement
authority should circumstances require
action.
The FDIC understands the challenges
involved in the selection of directors of
insured institutions. However, the prior
approval requirement should not
substantially interfere in a wellqualified candidate’s ability to assume
the responsibilities of the position in a
timely manner, and thereby to achieve
the noted benefits of appropriate
coordination between the industrial
bank and the Covered Company. As to
the possibility that an independent
director’s departure from a board may
result in temporary non-compliance
with the established threshold, the
FDIC’s construction and use of written
agreements provides sufficient
mechanisms by which compliance can
be timely achieved without the extreme
consequence of removing other directors
or requiring FDIC actions to enforce the
commitment.
As to the specific threshold, the FDIC
is revising the commitment in the final
rule to establish a less than 50 percent
threshold, which will maintain a
sufficient number of independent
directors while addressing a number of
the commenters’ concerns. In making
this change, the FDIC considered the
potential numeric challenges that could
confront industrial banks whose boards
are comprised of a comparatively small
number of directors. In addition, the
change enables Covered Companies and
industrial banks to select director
candidates believed to be most qualified
to direct and oversee the institution. As
such, the change enables Covered
Companies and industrial banks to
exercise some additional flexibility
when selecting directors. Nevertheless,
the FDIC retains the authority, as
appropriate, to require a higher
threshold of director independence.
Finally, one comment requested
clarification as to whether officers of the
industrial bank would be included
within the limitation. In short, if an
officer in question is associated with a
Covered Company, the individual
would be counted against the limitation.
In order to ensure that a subsidiary
industrial bank has available to it the
resources necessary to maintain
sufficient capital and liquidity, the
proposed rule required each party to a
PO 00000
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10719
written agreement to commit to
maintain each subsidiary industrial
bank’s capital and liquidity at such
levels as the FDIC deems necessary for
the safe and sound operation of the
industrial bank, and to take such other
actions as the FDIC finds appropriate to
provide each subsidiary industrial bank
with the resources for additional capital
or liquidity (commitment (7)). As
discussed above, the FDIC is finalizing
§ 354.3(b) as proposed, which provides
that the FDIC may require the
controlling or dominant shareholder of
a Covered Company to join as a party to
the written agreements required under
the rule, including commitment (7). The
final rule includes commitment (7) as
proposed.
Lastly, the proposed rule required that
each Covered Company and its
subsidiary industrial bank(s) enter into
a tax allocation agreement that expressly
recognizes an agency relationship
between the Covered Company and the
subsidiary industrial bank with respect
to tax assets generated by such
industrial bank, and that further states
that all such tax assets are held in trust
by the Covered Company for the benefit
of the subsidiary industrial bank and
promptly remitted to such industrial
bank (commitment (8)). As proposed, a
tax allocation agreement would have
also provided that the amount and
timing of any payments or refunds to
the subsidiary industrial bank by the
Covered Company should be no less
favorable than if the subsidiary
industrial bank were a separate
taxpayer.
One commenter questioned the
FDIC’s statutory authority to impose
such a requirement. The FDIC has the
power to issue rules to carry out the
provisions of the FDI Act,120 including
rules to ensure the safety and soundness
of industrial banks and to protect the
DIF. As the FDIC discussed in the
proposed rule, companies and their
subsidiaries, including insured
depository institutions and their parent
companies, will often file a consolidated
income tax return. A 1998 interagency
policy statement issued by the Federal
banking agencies and the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, and an
addendum thereto 121 (collectively,
120 ‘‘[T]he Corporation . . . shall have power . . .
[t]o prescribe by its Board of Directors such rules
and regulations as it may deem necessary to carry
out the provisions of this chapter or of any other
law which it has the responsibility of administering
or enforcing (except to the extent that authority to
issue such rules and regulations has been expressly
and exclusively granted to any other regulatory
agency).’’ 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth).
121 See Interagency Policy Statement on Income
Tax Allocation in a Holding Company Structure, 63
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Policy Statement), acknowledges this
practice, noting that a consolidated
group may prepare and file Federal and
State income tax returns as a group so
long as the interests of any insured
depository institution subsidiaries are
not prejudiced. Given the potential
harm to insured subsidiary institutions,
the Policy Statement encourages parent
companies and their insured depository
institution subsidiaries to enter into
written, comprehensive tax allocation
agreements, and notes that inconsistent
practices regarding tax obligations may
be viewed as an unsafe and unsound
practice prompting either informal or
formal corrective action. The final rule,
consistent with the proposed rule,
similarly seeks to avoid potential harm
to a subsidiary industrial bank by
requiring such a written tax allocation
agreement. The final rule includes
commitment (8) as proposed.
In addition to the eight commitments
discussed above, § 354.4(b) of the
proposed rule permitted the FDIC to
condition the approval of an application
or non-objection to a notice on the
Covered Company and industrial bank
committing to adopt, maintain, and
implement an FDIC-approved
contingency plan that presents one or
more actions to address potential
significant financial or operational
stress that could threaten the safe and
sound operation of the insured
industrial bank. The plan also would
reflect strategies for the orderly
disposition of the industrial bank
without the need for the appointment of
a receiver or conservator. Such
disposition could include, for example,
sale of the industrial bank to, or merger
with, a third party.
The FDIC received two comments on
the contingency plan requirement. One
commenter stated that the FDIC should
consider size, complexity,
interdependencies, and other relevant
factors in requiring, reviewing, and
approving a contingency plan—similar
to the ‘‘living will’’ requirements under
section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act
where the FRB has tiered certain
requirements based upon an
institution’s asset size. This commenter
also suggested that the FDIC formalize
FR 64757 (Nov. 23, 1998); Addendum to the
Interagency Policy Statement on Income Tax
Allocation in a Holding Company Structure, 79 FR
35228 (June 19, 2014). The 2014 Addendum to the
Interagency Policy Statement on Income Tax
Allocation in a Holding Company Structure also
clarifies that all tax allocation agreements are
subject to the requirements of section 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act, and tax allocation agreements
that do not clearly acknowledge that an agency
relationship exists may be subject to additional
requirements under section 23A of the Federal
Reserve Act.
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these considerations in the final rule.
The other commenter stated that, while
dissolution requirements may be
appropriate for large complex
institutions that pose a risk to the DIF,
smaller banks do not pose the same
risks nor require the same level of
complex planning. According to this
commenter, the cost of contingency
planning would outweigh its benefit for
smaller institutions. This commenter
also stated that, at a minimum, any
contingency planning requirement
should be no more stringent than the
requirement for other FDIC-insured
intuitions of the same size.
As discussed in the NPR, a
contingency plan commitment would
only be required in certain
circumstances based upon the facts and
circumstances presented, and after
taking into consideration size,
complexity, interdependencies, and
other relevant factors. The final rule
preserves the FDIC’s supervisory
discretion to tailor the contents of any
contingency plan to a specific Covered
Company and its insured industrial
bank subsidiary. This ability to tailor
the requirements of a contingency plan
serves to minimize the burdens of
developing and implementing such a
plan. It should also be noted that
contingency plans are not the same as
resolution plans under section 165(d) of
the Dodd-Frank Act or § 360.10 of the
FDIC’s Rules and Regulations, and the
contents of a contingency plan (if
required) would be far less complex. A
contingency plan is an explanation of
the steps the industrial bank and
Covered Company could take to mitigate
the impacts of financial and operational
stress outside of the receivership
process. Finally, the FDIC believes that
a contingency plan, when required, may
help the FDIC, the Covered Company,
and its industrial bank subsidiary to
better understand the relevant
interdependencies, operational risks,
and other circumstances or events that
could create safety and soundness
concerns and attendant risk to the DIF.
Accordingly, the FDIC is finalizing this
requirement as proposed.
While the contingency plan is one
type of commitment that the FDIC
would be able to require of Covered
Companies and their industrial bank
subsidiaries, there may be other
commitments that the FDIC may
determine to be appropriate given the
business plan, capital levels, or
organizational structure of a Covered
Company or its subsidiary industrial
bank. Section 354.4(c) of the proposed
rule provided that the FDIC may require
such additional commitments from a
Covered Company or controlling
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
shareholder of a Covered Company in
addition to those described in § 354.4(a)
or (b) in order to ensure the safety and
soundness of the industrial bank and
reduce potential risk to the DIF.
Several commenters specifically
addressed § 354.4(c).122 One commenter
raised concerns that the rule would be
applied to Covered Companies or
controlling shareholders of existing
industrial banks. As discussed above,
because the rule is constructed to apply
prospectively, parties will become
subject to the rule only as the result of
(1) the formation of an industrial bank
on or after the effective date of the final
rule, or (2) a merger transaction or
change in control on or after the
effective date of the final rule, assuming
the institution retains its industrial bank
charter.
A second commenter raised concerns
that § 354.4(c) vests open-ended
authority in the FDIC to change, at any
time and for any reason, the obligations
of a Covered Company or controlling
shareholder. The commenter further
suggested that agreements should be
negotiated at the outset. Another
commenter also suggested that the FDIC
should rely on its enforcement authority
rather than including additional
commitments in the written agreements.
In response to commenters’ concerns
about the application of this section, the
FDIC is removing § 354.4(c) to avoid
confusion that the FDIC would
unilaterally impose additional
commitments (or restrictions).
Notwithstanding this deletion, the FDIC
retains its general supervision,
examination, and enforcement
authorities (as reserved by § 354.6) to
take any actions beyond the scope of the
final rule, including actions to ensure
the safe and sound operation of any
insured depository institution,
including an industrial bank, and
further to ensure that a parent of an
industrial bank acts as a source of
financial strength to that insured
institution. For example, the FDIC may
require additional, unique commitments
from a Covered Company or a
controlling shareholder of a Covered
Company when the FDIC determines it
is necessary to address specific elements
of a filing or circumstances related to
the filer. Additional commitments may
be derived, for instance, from elements
of the business model presented,
including the nature and scope of
activities conducted, the risk profile of
the activities, and the complexity of
operations. The proposed relationships
122 These commenters raised the same or similar
concerns with respect to § 354.5(b), which the FDIC
also is deleting in the final rule.
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and transactions with the parent
organization that may impact the
industrial bank also could be taken into
consideration.
The FDIC also sought comment on
whether the rule should include a
commitment that the parent company
will maintain its own capital at some
defined level on a consolidated basis. A
number of commenters argued that
creating consolidated capital
requirements for the parent company
would ensure that it is able to serve as
a source of strength for its subsidiary
industrial bank. Some commenters
argued that such capital standards
should be comparable to those imposed
on BHCs of similar size and systemic
significance. These commenters also
argued that the absence of a
consolidated capital standard for the
parent company creates a lower
standard of supervision than is imposed
by the BHCA. One commenter
recommended that such requirements
should be greater than the requirements
applicable to other FDIC-insured
depository institutions due to the
enhanced risk of the Covered Company
on the industrial bank and the DIF.
By contrast, several commenters
argued that applying a capital standard
on the parent company itself is not
encompassed within the FDIC’s
statutory mandate to preserve the safety
and soundness of insured depository
institutions. Other commenters
observed that for many industrial bank
parent companies, measures of tangible
equity are not often the most pertinent
indicator of the financial health of the
company or its ability to serve as a
source of strength. These commenters
argued that given the diversity of
industrial bank parent company
operations, a more tailored approach
would be appropriate.
The FDIC does not believe that the
final rule should impose capital
requirement commitments on Covered
Companies because a one-size-fits all
regulatory approach to capital
requirements would not be appropriate,
given the idiosyncratic business models
and operations of such parent
companies. The FDIC believes that the
final rule and its supervisory framework
adequately ensure that a parent
company of an industrial bank has the
ability to serve as a source of strength.
5. Section 354.5—Restrictions on
Industrial Bank Subsidiaries of Covered
Companies
Section 354.5 of the proposed rule
required the FDIC’s prior written
approval before an industrial bank that
is a subsidiary of a Covered Company
may take certain actions. These
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restrictions, like the required
commitments discussed above, are
generally intended to provide the
safeguards and protections that the FDIC
believes would be prudent to impose
with respect to maintaining the safety
and soundness of industrial banks that
become controlled by companies that
are not subject to Federal consolidated
supervision. Accordingly, the proposed
rule required prior FDIC approval for
the subsidiary industrial bank to take
any of five actions set forth in § 354.5(a).
In order to ensure that the industrial
bank does not immediately after
becoming a subsidiary of a Covered
Company engage in high-risk or other
inappropriate activities, the subsidiary
industrial bank would have been
required to obtain the FDIC’s prior
approval to make a material change in
its business plan after becoming a
subsidiary of a Covered Company
(paragraph (a)(1)). In order to limit the
influence of the parent Covered
Company, the subsidiary industrial
bank would have been required to
obtain the FDIC’s prior approval to add
or replace a member of the board of
directors or board of managers or a
managing member, as the case may be
(paragraph (a)(2)); add or replace a
senior executive officer (paragraph
(a)(3)); employ a senior executive officer
who is associated in any manner with
an affiliate of the industrial bank, such
as a director, officer, employee, agent,
owner, partner, or consultant of the
Covered Company or a subsidiary
thereof (paragraph (a)(4)); or enter into
any contract for material services with
the Covered Company or a subsidiary
thereof (paragraph (a)(5)). Pursuant to
proposed § 354.5(b), the FDIC would
have been able to, on a case-by-case
basis, impose additional restrictions on
the Covered Company or its controlling
shareholder if circumstances warrant.
The FDIC is adopting revisions to the
restrictions in § 354.5(a)(2), (3), and (4)
and removing § 354.5(b), as discussed
below.
The FDIC sought comment on
whether these restrictions should be
time-limited. A number of commenters
generally argued that the restrictions
should only apply during the industrial
bank’s de novo period (i.e., the first
three-years of operation). Some
commenters suggested that the FDIC
should or could apply ongoing
restrictions (beyond the de novo period)
when special circumstances exist. One
commenter proposed that the FDIC
implement a process to allow an
industrial bank to request a waiver of
the requirements at the conclusion of
the de novo period. Two commenters
recommended limiting the restrictions
PO 00000
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10721
to the de novo period except for
paragraph (a)(4) covering employment
of a senior executive officer who is also
currently associated with an affiliate of
the industrial bank. Most of these
commenters were concerned that the
ongoing restrictions in these sections
created greater burdens on industrial
banks than required of non-industrial
banks.
By contrast, other commenters argued
that these restrictions should be
perpetual in duration and viewed them
as important safeguards on the actions
of a Covered Company with respect to
an industrial bank subsidiary. One
commenter argued that given the unique
and significant risks posed by industrial
banks and their parent companies, the
restrictions should not be limited to any
number of years after an industrial bank
becomes a subsidiary of a Covered
Company.
The FDIC previously has imposed
restrictions similar to those contained in
§ 354.5 in prior actions on filings
involving industrial banks. The agency’s
experience indicates that there are
advantages and disadvantages to
imposing such restrictions on a
perpetual basis, just as there are
advantages and disadvantages to
imposing the restrictions on a timelimited basis. The relative advantages
and disadvantages vary depending on
the nature of the particular restriction.
Nevertheless, certain items are believed
so directly related to the industrial
bank’s ongoing safe and sound
operation that a perpetual restriction is
warranted. As such, the FDIC is
adopting the restrictions regarding
material changes to business plans,
entering into contracts for material
services with a Covered Company or its
subsidiaries, and employing a senior
executive officer that is associated with
an affiliate of the industrial bank as
proposed, with one exception noted
below.
However, having considered
commenters’ suggestions regarding the
restrictions on the appointment of
directors (paragraph (a)(2)) and senior
executive officers (paragraph (a)(3)), the
FDIC is modifying the final rule to apply
a three-year period to filings approved
by the FDIC for an industrial bank that
is a subsidiary of a Covered Company.
This modification provides flexibility
for industrial banks to timely appoint
directors and officers. The FDIC’s
supervisory efforts and enforcement
authorities remain fully accessible if an
industrial bank’s director or officer
selection raises concerns. Further,
consistent with § 354.6 of the final rule,
the FDIC may impose additional
restrictions if appropriate to a particular
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filing. Thus, as circumstances warrant,
the FDIC may extend the three-year
period or impose the restriction on a
perpetual basis.
In light of the changes to paragraphs
(a)(2) and (3) above, the FDIC is also
adopting a revision to the restriction on
employment of a senior executive
officer who is currently associated with
an affiliate of the industrial bank
(paragraph (a)(4)). The restriction is
modified in the final rule to cover a
senior executive officer who is or was
during the past three years associated
with an affiliate of the industrial bank
to prevent evasion of the restriction. As
noted above, this restriction is not
otherwise modified with respect to its
perpetual duration.
As discussed above, proposed
§ 354.5(b) has been removed to align
with the change the FDIC made to
§ 354.4(c).
Several commenters requested that
the FDIC clarify what is meant by a
‘‘material change’’ to the industrial
bank’s business plan that requires the
FDIC’s written approval prior to
effecting such change. Because business
plan changes or deviations may alter the
facts and circumstances that supported
the FDIC’s action on a filing in which
the business plan condition was
imposed, the following generally have
been determined to constitute a material
change in or deviation from an
institution’s business plan:
• Increases in financial statement
categories or subcategories (such as
types of loans, funding, revenue, or
capital) of 25 percent or more;
• Introduction of distinctly new or
different business strategies or
objectives, including products or
services, target markets, delivery
channels, or business development
strategies;
• Changes to the institution’s
financial strategies, or the acquisition of
assets, an operating entity, or the
assumption of deposits or other
liabilities; or
• Changes in organizational
relationships such that the manner in
which the institution implements or
carries out its business strategies or
objectives is impacted.
6. Section 354.6—Reservation of
Authority
The FDIC proposed to clarify that it
retains the authority to take supervisory
or enforcement actions, including
actions to address unsafe or unsound
practices, or violations of law.
The FDIC has broad supervision,
examination and enforcement powers
and authorities granted to it by the FDI
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Act and other laws.123 The reservation
of authority in § 354.6 clarifies that,
notwithstanding the final rule, the FDIC
retains the authority to exercise those
powers, as it would for any insured
depository institution where it is the
appropriate Federal banking agency,
which includes industrial banks. While
the final rule establishes certain
commitments and restrictions with
respect to industrial banks and Covered
Companies, § 354.6 recognizes that the
FDIC could require industrial banks and
their parent companies that are not
subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB to enter into
written agreements, provide additional
commitments, or abide by additional
restrictions if necessary to maintain the
safety and soundness of the industrial
bank. Additionally, the FDIC’s powers
and authorities may be applied to
require written commitments and/or to
impose restrictions in the context of a
particular industrial bank and its parent
to mitigate risk and ensure the safe and
sound operation of the insured
depository institution, even if not in
connection with a filing pursuant to this
part.
The FDIC received only one comment
that addressed the proposed reservation
of authority, noting that the FDIC’s use
of its discretion in applying the
restrictions on industrial banks
contained in § 354.5, together with a
reservation of its examination authority,
would allow for a practical
implementation of the FDIC’s powers.
The FDIC is adopting § 354.6 as
proposed. During the period before the
effective date of the final rule, the FDIC
will consider pending deposit insurance
applications, change in control notices,
and merger applications for industrial
banks on a case-by-case basis and
impose conditions and requirements as
appropriate and that are consistent with
current practice and the FDIC’s general
examination, supervision, and
enforcement authorities.
7. Responses to Additional Questions
In addition to the questions discussed
above, the FDIC sought responses to
several additional questions. In
response to the FDIC’s question whether
there were additional categories of
information that the FDIC should
consider in evaluating an industrial
bank’s ability to meet the convenience
and needs of the community to be
served, some commenters opposed to
the rule expressed concern that the CRA
requires modernization or is otherwise
inadequate to ensure industrial banks
are properly serving the credit needs of
123 See
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Sfmt 4700
the communities in which the industrial
bank operates. Two community group
commenters went further indicating that
the FDIC should not move forward with
this rule until CRA assessment area
procedures are updated.
In January of 2020, the FDIC joined
the OCC in issuing a CRA proposal to
modernize CRA regulations.124 On May
20, 2020, the OCC issued its CRA final
rule.125 The FDIC did not move forward
with a final rule following the proposal
and continues to enforce its existing
CRA regulation.126 More recently, on
September 21, 2020, the FRB issued an
ANPR to solicit public input regarding
modernizing the FRB’s CRA regulatory
and supervisory framework.127
Modernizing CRA regulations
applicable to FDIC-supervised
institutions is an important endeavor,
and the FDIC is considering further
rulemaking in this area, which may
include seeking additional public input
and engaging with the other prudential
regulators. For the time being, however,
the FDIC will continue to operate under
the existing CRA regulations, which
contain provisions including public
participation in strategic plans and
consideration for community
development activity in insured
institutions’ broader State-wide and
regional areas.
However, the statutory factor
addressing convenience and needs of
the community to be served is broader
than the CRA. In assessing the statutory
factor convenience and needs of the
community to be served, the essential
considerations are the deposit and
credit needs of the community to be
served, the nature and extent of the
opportunity available to the applicant in
that location, and the willingness and
ability of the applicant to serve those
financial needs.128 The markets to be
served and the economic and
competitive conditions within the
markets are important to these
considerations. The applicant’s CRA
Plan is an important part of the FDIC’s
evaluation of the convenience and
needs to be served, but it is not the only
consideration. The FDIC believes the
benefits to finalizing this rule are
significant, and formalizing and
strengthening FDIC’s existing
supervisory processes and policies that
124 85
FR 1204.
FR 34734.
126 State savings associations will be examined by
the FDIC under the CRA regulations of the OCC, 12
CFR part 25 and 12 CFR part 195, as may be
amended from time to time.
127 85 FR 66410.
128 See Statement of Policy on Applications for
Deposit Insurance, 63 FR 44756 (Nov. 20, 1998),
amended by 67 FR 79276 (Dec. 27, 2002).
125 85
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apply to parent companies of industrial
banks that are not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision should
proceed even in the absence of a unified
interagency rule on CRA.
The FDIC also sought comment on the
FDIC’s approach to foreign ownership of
industrial banks. Some commenters
argued that foreign ownership of
industrial banks should not be
permitted, or if permitted, should be
heavily regulated. A commenter argued
that the FDIC would not be well
positioned to foresee the risks that a
might arise for a foreign Covered
Company in its home market. Another
commenter asserted that the proposed
supervisory approach fell short of the
FRB’s consolidated supervision
framework, leaving the FDIC with
limited examination authority and
therefore unable to adequately monitor
foreign companies whose risks might be
spread across multiple entities. Another
commenter opposed foreign ownership
of industrial banks, but suggested that if
such arrangements were permitted,
further commitments such as a high net
stable funding ratio and a prefunded
orderly liquidation fund should be
required of foreign Covered Companies.
On the other hand, a number of
commenters indicated that there was no
need to build in additional restrictions
specific to foreign Covered Companies.
These commenters noted that the FDIC
already has robust supervisory authority
to address unsafe and unsound
conditions impacting insured
depository institutions, and that the
FDIC’s practice of securing additional
commitments from foreign parent
companies of industrial banks has been
effective. Other commenters also argued
for flexibility, indicating that
determining what additional
commitments would be necessary in
such instances is a fact-specific inquiry
and should be based on the parent
company’s ability to be a source of
strength for the industrial bank.
The final rule does not contain any
specific requirements for foreign
Covered Companies beyond those to
which U.S.-based Covered Companies
are subject. The FDIC’s supervisory
experience with foreign parent
companies of industrial banks has
shown that retaining the flexibility to
secure additional commitments from
such entities as needed is an effective
approach. Such commitments would be
in addition to the substantial
requirements a Covered Company is
subject to in the written agreements
with the FDIC required by the final rule,
including examination and reporting
requirements, capital maintenance of
the industrial bank, and contingency
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planning. These commitments allow the
FDIC to ensure that a Covered Company
can and will serve as a source of
strength for its industrial bank, and
along with the added flexibility to
require additional commitments as
needed, they are sufficient to address
both domestic and foreign Covered
Companies.129
V. Expected Effects
As previously discussed, the final rule
requires or imposes certain conditions,
commitments, and restrictions for each
deposit insurance application approval,
non-objection to a change in control
notice, and merger application approval
that would result in an industrial bank
becoming, pursuant to the rule, a
subsidiary of a Covered Company. The
final rule requires such Covered
Company to enter into one or more
written agreements with the FDIC and
the industrial bank subsidiary.
A. Overview of Industrial Banks
As of June 30, 2020, the FDIC
supervised 3,270 insured depository
institutions, with combined assets of
$3.84 trillion. Of these, 23 institutions
were industrial banks, comprising 0.7
percent of all FDIC-supervised
institutions. The industrial banks hold
combined assets of $169 billion,
comprising 4.54 percent of the
combined assets of FDIC-supervised
institutions.130 The majority of
industrial banks are headquartered in
Utah and Nevada, and hold nearly all of
the combined assets of industrial banks.
As of June 30, 2020, 14 industrial banks
were headquartered in Utah, four in
Nevada, three in California, one in
Hawaii, and one in Minnesota.
The final rule applies prospectively to
deposit insurance, change in control,
and merger transactions resulting in an
industrial bank that is controlled by a
Covered Company. It is difficult to
estimate the number of potential
Covered Companies that will seek to
establish or acquire an industrial bank,
as such an estimate depends on
considerations that affect Covered
Companies’ decisions. These
considerations, and how they affect
decision making, are difficult for the
FDIC to forecast, estimate, or model, as
the considerations include external
parties’ evaluations of potential
business strategies for the industrial
bank as well as future financial
conditions, rates of return on capital,
and innovations in the provision of
129 The FDIC may require, in the case of a
Covered Company located outside the United
States, United States-based capital and liquidity
support of the subsidiary industrial bank.
130 FDIC Call Report Data, June 30, 2020.
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10723
financial services, among others.
However, during the period of 2017
through 2019, the FDIC received nine
industrial bank deposit insurance
applications and one change in control
application.131 Consistent with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) 132
estimates presented elsewhere in this
rule, for this analysis the FDIC is
estimating the final rule applies to four
filings per year seeking to establish or
acquire an industrial bank.
The final rule could indirectly affect
subsidiaries of Covered Companies.
Such Covered Companies operate
through a variety of structures that
include a range of subsidiaries and
affiliates. Further, the final rule includes
the FDIC’s reservation of authority to
require any industrial bank and its
parent company, if not otherwise
subject to part 354, to enter into written
agreements, provide commitments, or
abide by restrictions, as appropriate.
Therefore, it is difficult to estimate the
number of subsidiaries and affiliates of
prospective Covered Companies, based
on information currently available to the
FDIC. However, based on the FDIC’s
experience as the primary Federal
regulator of industrial banks,133 the
FDIC believes that the number of
subsidiaries of the prospective Covered
Companies affected by the final rule is
likely to be small.
B. Analysis of the Commitments
Under the final rule, prospective
Covered Companies are required to
agree to the eight commitments, and
may be required to agree to additional
commitments under certain
circumstances, which in summary
include commitments by the Covered
Company to:
• Furnish an initial listing, with
annual updates, of the Covered
Company’s subsidiaries.
• Consent to the examination of the
Covered Company and its subsidiaries.
• Submit an annual report on the
Covered Company and its subsidiaries,
and such other reports as requested.
• Maintain such records as deemed
necessary.
• Cause an independent annual audit
of each industrial bank.
• Limit the Covered Company’s
representation on the industrial bank’s
board of directors or managers (board),
131 During the same period, the FDIC did not
receive any merger applications involving
industrial banks.
132 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
133 Historically, industrial banks have elected not
to become members of the Federal Reserve System.
The FDIC is the primary Federal regulator for State
nonmember banks and the insurer for all insured
depository institutions.
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as the case may be, to less than 50
percent.
• Maintain the industrial bank’s
capital and liquidity at such levels as
deemed appropriate and take such other
action to provide the industrial bank
with a resource for additional capital or
liquidity.
• Enter into a tax allocation
agreement.
• Depending on the facts and
circumstances, provide, adopt, and
implement a contingency plan that sets
forth strategies for recovery actions and
the orderly disposition of the industrial
bank without the need for a receiver or
conservator.
The FDIC historically has imposed
prudential conditions similar to the
commitments listed above in connection
with approving or not objecting to
certain industrial bank filings. These
conditions generally relate to the board
and senior management, the business
plan, operating policies, financial
records, affiliate relationships, and other
conditions on a case-by-case basis,
depending on the facts and
circumstances identified during the
review of the respective filings.134
The table below presents the FDIC’s
analysis of the estimated costs to
institutions that would be affected by
the final rule of each required
commitment. In each case, the FDIC
used a total hourly compensation
estimate of $94.15 per hour.135 The
FDIC received no comments regarding
the estimated burden of the rule as
proposed.
Estimated annual
compliance hours
Proposed commitment
Estimated annual
compliance costs
Lists of Subsidiaries .........................................................................................................................
Consent to the FDIC Examination ...................................................................................................
Annual and Such Other Reports as the FDIC may Request ..........................................................
Maintain Such Records as the FDIC Deems Necessary ................................................................
Independent Audit 1 .........................................................................................................................
Limit Membership on Board 2 ..........................................................................................................
Maintain Capital and Liquidity .........................................................................................................
Tax Allocation Agreement 3 .............................................................................................................
4
100
10
10
100
0
12
0
$376.60
9,415.00
941.50
941.50
9,415.00
0.00
1,129.80
0.00
Total ..........................................................................................................................................
236
22,219.40
1 The
disclosure requirement and time to fulfill it are due to satisfying regulatory inquiries about the audit, and do not include the cost of the
audit itself because Covered Companies already conduct audits for other purposes.
2 Determinations regarding board membership are considered in the normal course of business.
3 Tax allocation agreements are normal and customary among affiliated corporate entities.
The final rule also authorizes the
FDIC to require additional
commitments, including a contingency
plan that sets forth strategies for
recovery actions and the orderly
disposition of the industrial bank
without the appointment of a receiver or
conservator. The additional contingency
plan commitment would be required
only in certain circumstances, based on
the facts and circumstances presented
and taking into consideration the size,
complexity, interdependencies, and
other factors relevant to the industrial
bank and Covered Company.
It is difficult to estimate the
recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure
costs associated with the contingency
plan aspect of the final rule because
such an estimate would depend on the
organizational structure and activities of
potential future Covered Companies.
The FDIC currently lacks such detailed
information on potential future Covered
Companies. While the contingency plan
commitment is meaningfully different
from resolution plan requirements for
large banks, and while industrial banks
that might need to develop such
contingency plans are meaningfully
different from large banks subject to
resolution planning requirements, the
FDIC considered prior analyses
regarding resolution planning
requirements imposed on certain
institutions to inform its analysis.
Based in part on the FDIC’s
experience implementing and managing
the resolution planning requirements of
§ 360.10, the FDIC estimates that
Covered Companies and their industrial
banks subject to the contingency plan
commitment could incur $326,000 in
recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure
compliance costs annually. To put the
estimated cost of this commitment into
context, the pre-tax net income of the
median industrial bank in 2019 was
$64,515,000.136 But, because the FDIC
would have the supervisory discretion
to tailor the contents of any contingency
plan to a given Covered Company and
its industrial bank, and because of the
unique circumstances of the respective
Covered Companies and industrial
banks, the compliance costs incurred by
Covered Companies would vary on a
case-by-case basis, and could be lower.
The final rule incorporates an
additional element as part of the
reporting commitment to address
Covered Companies’ systems for
protecting the security, confidentiality,
and integrity of consumer and
nonpublic personal information.
However, the rule is constructed to
134 See FDIC Deposit Insurance Application
Procedures Manual Supplement, Applications from
Non-Bank and Non-Community Bank Applicants,
FIL–8–2020 (Feb. 10, 2020).
135 Subject matter experts in the FDIC’s Division
of Risk Management Supervision estimated that
time devoted to complying with the commitments
is broken down as follows: 25 percent (Executives
and Managers), 15 percent (Legal), 15 percent
(Compliance Officers), 15 percent (Financial
Analysts), 15 percent (IT Specialists), and 15
percent (Clerical). The Standard Occupational
Classification System occupations and codes used
by the FDIC are: Executives and Managers
(Management Occupations, 110000), Lawyers
(Lawyers, Judges, and Related Workers, 231000),
Compliance Officers (Compliance Officers, 131041),
Financial Analysts (Financial Analysts, 132051), IT
Specialists (Computer and Mathematical
Occupations, 150000), and Clerical (Office and
Administrative Support Occupations, 430000). To
estimate the weighted average hourly compensation
cost of these employees, the 75th percentile hourly
wages reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) National Industry-Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates as used for the
relevant occupations in the Depository Credit
Intermediation sector, as of May 2018. The 75thpercentile wage for lawyers is not reported, as it
exceeds $100 per hour, so $100 per hour is used.
The hourly wage rates reported do not include nonmonetary compensation. According to the
September 2019 Employer Cost of Employee
Compensation data, compensation rates for health
and other benefits are 33.8 percent of total
compensation. To account for non-monetary
compensation, the hourly wage rates reported by
BLS are adjusted by that percentage. The hourly
wage is adjusted by 2.28 percent based on changes
in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers
from May 2018 to September 2019 to account for
inflation and ensure that the wage information is
contemporaneous with the non-monetary
compensation statistic. Finally, the benefit-andinflation-adjusted wages for each occupation are
weighted by the percentages listed above to arrive
at a weighted hourly compensation rate of $94.15.
136 FDIC Call Report Data, December 31, 2019.
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enable affected parties to comply with
the various commitments by relying on
established and ongoing reports and
records, to the extent possible. As such,
while recognizing the difficulty in
estimating the costs associated with this
additional element due to the unique
circumstances of each affected party, the
FDIC believes the enhanced
commitment should have no material
impact on the estimated overall burden.
As illustrated by the preceding
analysis, the final rule could pose as
much as $348,000 in additional
recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure
compliance costs for each Covered
Company that seeks to establish or
acquire an industrial bank.137 Covered
Companies would also be likely to incur
some regulatory costs associated with
making the necessary changes to
internal systems and processes. For
context, the estimated $348,000
recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure
costs only comprise 0.8 percent of the
median noninterest expense for the 23
existing industrial banks.138
The FDIC believes that the final rule
would benefit the public by providing
transparency for market participants
and other interested parties.
Additionally, the FDIC believes that the
final rule would benefit the public by
formalizing a framework by which the
FDIC would supervise industrial banks
and mitigate risk to the DIF that may
otherwise be presented.
It is difficult to estimate whether the
final rule would serve as an incentive or
disincentive for affected parties.
Decisions to establish or acquire an
industrial bank depend on many
considerations that the FDIC cannot
accurately forecast, estimate, or model,
such as future financial conditions, rates
of return on capital, and innovations in
the provision of financial services. The
final rule would enhance transparency
in the FDIC’s evaluation of filings,
which could increase the number of
applications received. However, such
transparency could also serve to limit
the number of applications received.
The FDIC analyzed historical trends
in filings that would be subject to the
final rule. Based on that analysis, and
consistent with the FDIC’s PRA
analysis, the FDIC assumes four
applications: Three deposit insurance
applications, and one change in bank
control notice per year, on average.
Between 2000 and 2009, the FDIC
received as many as 12 and as few as
137 $22,219.40 for all Covered Companies that
seek to establish or acquire an industrial bank, and
an additional $326,000 for those institutions
required to adopt, implement, and adhere to a
contingency plan.
138 FDIC Call Report Data, December 31, 2019.
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two deposit insurance applications from
entities seeking to organize an industrial
bank; between 2017 and 2019, the FDIC
received as many as four and as few as
two such applications. Therefore, the
FDIC believes it is reasonable to assume
an annual deposit insurance application
volume of four for the purpose of this
analysis. In addition, the FDIC has
received three change in bank control
notices relating to industrial banks since
2010; therefore, the FDIC believes it is
reasonable to assume an annual volume
of one for the purpose of this analysis.
C. Safety and Soundness of Affected
Banks
The FDIC believes the final rule is
consistent with supervisory approaches
the FDIC has used to insulate industrial
banks from risks posed by their parent
companies, and that these supervisory
approaches have been effective. For
example, as previously noted, only two
small industrial banks failed during the
crisis. The FDIC believes the final rule
would provide a prudentially sound
framework for reaching decisions on
industrial bank filings that the FDIC
receives from time to time.
D. Broad Effects on the Banking
Industry
To the extent that the final rule results
in higher numbers of industrial banks,
the increase could lead to increased
competition for depositors and
borrowers. The increased competition
could result in one or more of: Higher
yields on deposit products, lower
interest rates on loan products, reduced
fees, less restrictive underwriting
standards, greater account opening
bonuses for new customers, and other
benefits. To the extent that the final rule
does not result in a higher number of
industrial banks, this would not be
expected to lead to increased
competition for depositors and
borrowers.
E. Expected Effects on Consumers
To the degree the final rule results in
an increase in the number of industrial
banks, consumers could benefit from
increased competition within the
banking industry. These benefits could
take the form of higher rates on deposit
accounts, improved access to credit
with better terms or lower rates, and
lower fees for banking services. To the
extent that the proposed rule does not
result in a higher number of industrial
banks, this would not be expected to
lead to potential benefits from increased
competition within the banking
industry. Finally, in response to
comments the final rule includes a
commitment for a Covered Company to
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10725
inform the FDIC about the Covered
Company’s systems for protecting the
security, confidentiality, and integrity of
consumer and nonpublic personal
information. This aspect of the final rule
is expected to benefit consumers by
helping to mitigate potential consumer
protection risks.
F. Expected Effects on the Economy
The final rule’s effects on the
economy are likely to be modest, in line
with its potential effects on the banking
industry and consumers. If the final rule
results in a modest increase in the
number of industrial banks or
improvement in the provision of
banking products and services, the
effects on the economy are likely to be
modest.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires an agency, in
connection with a final rule, to prepare
and make available for public comment
a final regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the impact of a final rule on
small entities.139 However, a final
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required if the agency certifies that the
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.140 The Small
Business Administration (SBA) has
defined ‘‘small entities’’ to include
banking organizations with total assets
of less than or equal to $600 million.141
Generally, the FDIC considers a
significant effect to be a quantified effect
in excess of 5 percent of total annual
salaries and benefits per institution, or
2.5 percent of total noninterest
expenses. The FDIC has considered the
potential impact of the final rule on
small entities in accordance with the
RFA. Based on its analysis and for the
reasons stated below, the FDIC believes
that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
139 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
U.S.C. 605(b).
141 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, effective Aug. 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, regardless of whether the affiliates
are organized for profit.’’ 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.
140 5
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As of June 30, 2020, the FDIC
supervises 3,270 institutions, of which
2,492 are defined as small institutions
by the terms of the RFA.142 Of these
3,270 institutions, 23 are industrial
banks.
As previously discussed, a currently
chartered industrial bank would be
subject to the final rule, as would its
parent company that is not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision, if
such a parent company acquired control
of the grandfathered industrial bank
pursuant to a change in bank control
transaction that closes after the effective
date of the final rule, or if the
grandfathered industrial bank is the
surviving institution in a merger
transaction that closes after the effective
date of the final rule.
Of the 23 existing industrial banks,
eight reported total assets less than $600
million, indicating that they could be
small entities. However, to determine
whether an institution is ‘‘small’’ for the
purposes of the RFA, the SBA requires
consideration of the receipts,
employees, or other measure of size of
the concern whose size is at issue and
all of its domestic and foreign
affiliates.143 The FDIC conducted an
analysis to determine whether each
industrial bank’s parent company was
‘‘small,’’ according to the SBA size
standards applicable to each particular
parent company.144 Of the eight
industrial banks that reported total
assets less than $600 million, the FDIC
was able to determine that three of these
potentially small industrial banks were
owned by holding companies which
were not small for purposes of the RFA.
However, the FDIC currently lacks
information necessary to determine
whether the remaining five industrial
banks are small. Therefore, of the 23
existing industrial banks, 18 are not
small entities for purposes of the RFA,
but no more than five, or about 22
percent, may be small entities.
Additionally, the FDIC has received
three change in control notices relating
to industrial banks since 2010. Of those
three, only one was from an industrial
bank that could possibly be small for
purposes of the RFA.
Therefore, given that no more than
five of the 23 existing industrial banks
are small entities for the purposes of the
RFA, and that no more than one change
in control notice received by the FDIC
since 2010 may be from a small entity,
the FDIC believes the aspects of the final
rule relating to change in control notices
or merger applications involving
industrial banks is not likely to affect a
substantial number of small entities
among existing industrial banks.
As previously discussed, the final rule
applies to industrial banks that, as of the
effective date, become subsidiaries of
companies that are Covered Companies,
as such term is defined in § 354.2. It is
difficult for the FDIC to estimate the
volume of future applications from
entities who seek to own and operate an
insured industrial bank, or whether
those entities would be considered
‘‘small’’ according to the terms of RFA,
with the information currently available
to the FDIC. Such estimates would
require detailed information on the
particular business models of
institutions, prevailing economic and
financial conditions, the decisions of
senior management, and the demand for
financial services, among other things.
However, the FDIC reviewed the firms
with industrial bank applications
pending before the FDIC as of December
31, 2019. Each publically traded
applicant had a market capitalization of
at least $1 billion as of March 6, 2020.
Each applicant operates either
nationally within the United States, or
operates worldwide, and none appear
likely to be small for purposes of the
RFA. Therefore, the FDIC believes that
the aspects of the final rule relating to
entities who seek to own and operate an
insured industrial bank is not likely to
affect a substantial number of small
entities among existing industrial banks.
Therefore, based on the preceding
information, the FDIC certifies that the
final rule does not significantly affect a
substantial number of small entities.
142 FDIC Call Report Data, September 30, 2019. In
order to determine whether an entity is ‘‘small’’ for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the FDIC
uses its ‘‘affiliated and acquired assets’’ as
described in the immediately preceding footnote.
The latest available bank and thrift holding
company reports, which the FDIC uses to determine
an entity’s ‘‘affiliated and acquired assets,’’ are as
of September 30, 2019.
143 12 CFR 121.103.
144 For example, if a particular industrial bank’s
parent company was a motorcycle manufacturer,
then the size standards applicable to motorcycle
manufacturers were used.
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B. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements
of the PRA,145 the FDIC may not
conduct or sponsor, and the respondent
is not required to respond to, an
information collection unless it displays
a currently valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number.
As discussed above, the final rule
imposes PRA reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for each
industrial bank subject to the rule and
its Covered Company. In particular,
each industrial bank, and each Covered
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Company that directly or indirectly
controls the industrial bank, must (i)
agree to furnish the FDIC an initial
listing, with annual updates, of all of the
Covered Company’s subsidiaries; (ii)
submit to the FDIC an annual report on
the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, and such other reports as
the FDIC may request; 146 (iii) maintain
such records as the FDIC deems
necessary to assess the risks to the
industrial bank and to the DIF; and (iv)
in the event that the FDIC has concerns
about a complex organizational
structure or based on other
circumstances presented by a particular
filing, the FDIC may condition the
approval of an application or the nonobjection to a notice—in each case that
would result in an industrial bank being
controlled, directly or indirectly, by a
Covered Company—on the Covered
Company and industrial bank
committing to providing to the FDIC,
and thereafter adopting and
implementing, a contingency plan that
sets forth, at a minimum, one or more
strategies for recovery actions and the
orderly disposition of such industrial
bank, without the need for the
appointment of a receiver or
conservator.
The FDIC submitted its request to
OMB for review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)) and § 1320.11 of OMB’s
implementing regulations (5 CFR part
1320) at the proposed rule stage. OMB
filed a comment assigning the FDIC
OMB control number 3064–0213 and
indicated that OMB would re-review the
PRA submission once the proposed rule
was finalized. The FDIC did not receive
any comments on the PRA. In addition,
as stated above, because the final rule
has been constructed to enable affected
parties to comply with the various
reporting commitments by relying on
established and ongoing reports and
records, the FDIC believes that the
enhanced reporting commitment should
have no effect on the PRA burden listed
at the proposed rule stage.
Information Collection
Title: Industrial Banks and Industrial
Loan Companies.
OMB Number: 3064–0213.
Affected Public: Prospective parent
companies of industrial banks and
industrial loan companies.
145 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
final rule requires additional reporting by
Covered Companies regarding systems for
protecting the security, confidentiality, and
integrity of consumer and nonpublic personal
information as part of the annual report.
146 The
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10727
SUMMARY OF ANNUAL BURDEN AND INTERNAL COST
Estimated
number of
respondents
Estimated
frequency of
responses
Estimated
time per
response
Obligation to
respond
Initial listing of all of the Covered Company’s
subsidiaries.
Annual update of listing of all of the Covered
Company’s subsidiaries.
Annual report on the Covered Company and
its subsidiaries, and such other reports as
the FDIC may request.
Maintain records to assess the risks to the
industrial bank and to the DIF.
Contingency Plan ...........................................
Reporting ...............
Mandatory .....
4
1.00
4
One Time ......
16
Reporting ...............
Mandatory .....
4
1.00
4
Annual ..........
16
Reporting ...............
Mandatory .....
4
1.00
10
Annual ..........
40
Recordkeeping .......
Mandatory .....
4
1.00
10
Annual ..........
40
Reporting ...............
Mandatory .....
1
1.00
345
Total Hourly Burden ................................
................................
.......................
........................
........................
....................
C. Plain Language
E. Congressional Review Act
GLBA 147
Section 722 of the
requires
each Federal banking agency to use
plain language in all of its proposed and
final rules published after January 1,
2000. The FDIC sought to present the
final rule in a simple and
straightforward manner and did not
receive any comments on the use of
plain language in the proposed rule.
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the
RCDRIA,148 in determining the effective
date and administrative compliance
requirements for new regulations that
impose additional reporting, disclosure,
or other requirements on insured
depository institutions, each Federal
banking agency must consider,
consistent with principles of safety and
soundness and the public interest, any
administrative burdens that such
regulations would place on affected
depository institutions, including small
depository institutions, and customers
of depository institutions, as well as the
benefits of such regulations. In addition,
section 302(b) of RCDRIA requires new
regulations and amendments to
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on insured depository
institutions generally to take effect on
the first day of a calendar quarter that
begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final
form.149 The FDIC considered the
administrative burdens and benefits of
the final rule in determining its effective
date and administrative compliance
requirements. As such, the final rule
will be effective on April 1, 2021.
U.S.C. 4809.
U.S.C. 4802(a).
149 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).
For purposes of the Congressional
Review Act, OMB makes a
determination as to whether a final rule
constitutes a ‘‘major’’ rule.150 If a rule is
deemed a ‘‘major rule’’ by the OMB, the
Congressional Review Act generally
provides that the rule may not take
effect until at least 60 days following its
publication.151
The Congressional Review Act defines
a ‘‘major rule’’ as any rule that the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
the OMB finds has resulted in or is
likely to result in (1) an annual effect on
the economy of $100,000,000 or more;
(2) a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State, or local government
agencies or geographic regions, or (3)
significant adverse effects on
competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the
ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreignbased enterprises in domestic and
export markets.152
The FDIC will submit the final rule
and other appropriate reports to
Congress and the Government
Accountability Office for review.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 354
Bank deposit insurance, Banks,
banking, Finance, Holding companies,
Industrial banks, Industrial loan
company, Insurance, Parent company,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation amends title 12 of the Code
147 12
150 5
148 12
151 5
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:28 Feb 22, 2021
U.S.C. 801 et seq.
U.S.C. 801(a)(3).
152 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
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Frequency of
response
Total annual
estimated
burden
(hours)
Type of burden
On Occasion
345
.......................
457
of Federal Regulations by adding part
354 to read as follows:
PART 354—INDUSTRIAL BANKS
Sec.
354.1 Scope.
354.2 Definitions.
354.3 Written agreement.
354.4 Required commitments and
provisions of written agreement.
354.5 Restrictions on industrial bank
subsidiaries of Covered Companies.
354.6 Reservation of authority.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1811, 1815, 1816,
1817, 1818, 1819(a) (Seventh) and (Tenth),
1820(g), 1831o–1, 3108, 3207.
§ 354.1
Scope.
(a) In addition to the applicable filing
procedures of part 303 of this chapter,
this part establishes certain
requirements for filings involving an
industrial bank or a Covered Company.
(b) The requirements of this part do
not apply to an industrial bank that is
organized as a subsidiary of a company
that is not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision by the Federal
Reserve Board (FRB) before April 1,
2021. In addition, this part does not
apply to:
(1) Any industrial bank that is or
becomes controlled by a company that
is subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB; and
(2) Any industrial bank that is not or
will not become a subsidiary of a
company.
§ 354.2
Definitions.
Unless defined in this section, terms
shall have the meaning given to them in
section 3 of the FDI Act.
Control means the power, directly or
indirectly, to direct the management or
policies of a company or to vote 25
percent or more of any class of voting
securities of a company, and includes
the rebuttable presumptions of control
at § 303.82(b)(1) of this chapter and of
acting in concert at § 303.82(b)(2) of this
chapter. For purposes of this part, the
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presumptions set forth in § 303.82(b)(1)
and (2) of this chapter shall apply with
respect to any company in the same
manner and to the same extent as if they
applied to an acquisition of securities of
the company.
Covered Company means any
company that is not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision by the FRB
and that controls an industrial bank:
(1) As a result of a change in bank
control pursuant to section 7(j) of the
FDI Act;
(2) As a result of a merger transaction
pursuant to section 18(c) of the FDI Act;
or
(3) That is granted deposit insurance
by the FDIC pursuant to section 6 of the
FDI Act, in each case on or after April
1, 2021.
FDI Act means the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1811, et seq.
Filing has the meaning given to it in
§ 303.2(s) of this chapter.
FRB means the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System and each
Federal Reserve Bank.
Industrial bank means any insured
State bank that is an industrial bank,
industrial loan company, or other
similar institution that is excluded from
the definition of the term ‘‘bank’’ in
section 2(c)(2)(H) of the Bank Holding
Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H).
Senior executive officer has the
meaning given it in § 303.101(b) of this
chapter.
§ 354.3
Written agreement.
(a) No industrial bank may become a
subsidiary of a Covered Company unless
the Covered Company enters into one or
more written agreements with both the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) and the subsidiary industrial
bank, which contain commitments by
the Covered Company to comply with
each of paragraphs (a)(1) through (8) in
§ 354.4 and such other written
agreements, commitments, or
restrictions as the FDIC deems
appropriate, including, but not limited
to, the provisions of §§ 354.4 and 354.5.
(b) The FDIC may, at its sole
discretion, condition a grant of deposit
insurance, issuance of a non-objection
to a change in control, or approval of a
merger on an individual who is a
controlling shareholder of a Covered
Company joining as a party to any
written agreement required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
§ 354.4 Required commitments and
provisions of written agreement.
(a) The commitments required to be
made in the written agreements
referenced in § 354.3 are set forth in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (8) of this
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21:28 Feb 22, 2021
Jkt 253001
section. In addition, with respect to an
industrial bank subject to this part, the
FDIC will condition each grant of
deposit insurance, each issuance of a
non-objection to a change in control,
and each approval of a merger on
compliance with paragraphs (a)(1)
through (8) of this section by the parties
to the written agreement. As required,
each Covered Company must:
(1) Submit to the FDIC an initial
listing of all of the Covered Company’s
subsidiaries and update such list
annually;
(2) Consent to the examination by the
FDIC of the Covered Company and each
of its subsidiaries to permit the FDIC to
assess compliance with the provisions
of any written agreement, commitment,
or condition imposed; the FDI Act; or
any other Federal law for which the
FDIC has specific enforcement
jurisdiction against such Covered
Company or subsidiary, and all relevant
laws and regulations;
(3) Submit to the FDIC an annual
report describing the Covered
Company’s operations and activities, in
the form and manner prescribed by the
FDIC, and such other reports as may be
requested by the FDIC to inform the
FDIC as to the Covered Company’s:
(i) Financial condition;
(ii) Systems for identifying,
measuring, monitoring, and controlling
financial and operational risks;
(iii) Transactions with depository
institution subsidiaries of the Covered
Company;
(iv) Systems for protecting the
security, confidentiality, and integrity of
consumer and nonpublic personal
information; and
(v) Compliance with applicable
provisions of the FDI Act and any other
law or regulation;
(4) Maintain such records as the FDIC
may deem necessary to assess the risks
to the subsidiary industrial bank or to
the Deposit Insurance Fund;
(5) Cause an independent audit of
each subsidiary industrial bank to be
performed annually;
(6) Limit the Covered Company’s
direct and indirect representation on the
board of directors or board of managers,
as the case may be, of each subsidiary
industrial bank to less than 50 percent
of the members of such board of
directors or board of managers, in the
aggregate, and, in the case of a
subsidiary industrial bank that is
organized as a member-managed limited
liability company, limit the Covered
Company’s direct and indirect
representation as a managing member to
less than 50 percent of the managing
member interests of the subsidiary
industrial bank, in the aggregate;
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(7) Maintain the capital and liquidity
of the subsidiary industrial bank at such
levels as the FDIC deems appropriate,
and take such other actions as the FDIC
deems appropriate to provide the
subsidiary industrial bank with a
resource for additional capital and
liquidity including, for example,
pledging assets, obtaining and
maintaining a letter of credit from a
third-party institution acceptable to the
FDIC, and providing indemnification of
the subsidiary industrial bank; and
(8) Execute a tax allocation agreement
with its subsidiary industrial bank that
expressly states that an agency
relationship exists between the Covered
Company and the subsidiary industrial
bank with respect to tax assets generated
by such industrial bank, and that further
states that all such tax assets are held in
trust by the Covered Company for the
benefit of the subsidiary industrial bank
and will be promptly remitted to such
industrial bank. The tax allocation
agreement also must provide that the
amount and timing of any payments or
refunds to the subsidiary industrial
bank by the Covered Company should
be no less favorable than if the
subsidiary industrial bank were a
separate taxpayer.
(b) The FDIC may require such
Covered Company and industrial bank
to commit to provide to the FDIC, and,
thereafter, implement and adhere to, a
contingency plan subject to the FDIC’s
approval that sets forth, at a minimum,
recovery actions to address significant
financial or operational stress that could
threaten the safe and sound operation of
the industrial bank and one or more
strategies for the orderly disposition of
such industrial bank without the need
for the appointment of a receiver or
conservator.
§ 354.5 Restrictions on industrial bank
subsidiaries of Covered Companies.
Without the FDIC’s prior written
approval, an industrial bank that is
controlled by a Covered Company shall
not:
(a) Make a material change in its
business plan after becoming a
subsidiary of such Covered Company;
(b) Add or replace a member of the
board of directors, board of managers, or
a managing member, as the case may be,
of the subsidiary industrial bank during
the first three years after becoming a
subsidiary of such Covered Company;
(c) Add or replace a senior executive
officer during the first three years after
becoming a subsidiary of such Covered
Company;
(d) Employ a senior executive officer
who is, or during the past three years
has been, associated in any manner (e.g.,
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as a director, officer, employee, agent,
owner, partner, or consultant) with an
affiliate of the industrial bank; or
(e) Enter into any contract for services
material to the operations of the
industrial bank (for example, loan
servicing function) with such Covered
Company or any subsidiary thereof.
§ 354.6
Reservation of authority.
Nothing in this part limits the
authority of the FDIC under any other
provision of law or regulation to take
supervisory or enforcement actions,
including actions to address unsafe or
unsound practices or conditions, or
violations of law.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on December 15,
2020.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020–28473 Filed 2–22–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 704
RIN 3133–AF13
Corporate Credit Unions
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Final rule.
The NCUA Board (Board) is
issuing a final rule that amends the
NCUA’s corporate credit union
regulation. The final rule updates the
definitions in this regulation and makes
clear that corporate credit unions may
purchase subordinated debt instruments
issued by natural person credit unions.
The final rule also specifies the capital
treatment of these instruments for
corporate credit unions that purchase
them.
SUMMARY:
The final rule is effective January
1, 2022.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Policy and Analysis: Robert Dean,
National Supervision Analyst, Office of
National Examinations and Supervision,
(703) 518–6652; Legal: Rachel
Ackmann, Senior Staff Attorney, Office
of General Counsel, (703) 548–2601; or
by mail at National Credit Union
Administration, 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, VA 22314.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:28 Feb 22, 2021
Jkt 253001
I. Introduction
a. Legal Authority and Background
The Board is issuing this rule
pursuant to its authority under the
Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act).1
Under the FCU Act, the NCUA is the
chartering and supervisory authority for
Federal credit unions (FCUs) and the
federal supervisory authority for
federally insured credit unions (FICUs).
The FCU Act grants the NCUA a broad
mandate to issue regulations governing
both FCUs and FICUs. Section 120 of
the FCU Act is a general grant of
regulatory authority and authorizes the
Board to prescribe regulations for the
administration of the FCU Act.2 Section
209 of the FCU Act is a plenary grant
of regulatory authority to the NCUA to
issue regulations necessary or
appropriate to carry out its role as share
insurer for all FICUs.3 The FCU Act also
includes an express grant of authority
for the Board to subject federally
chartered central, or corporate, credit
unions to such rules, regulations, and
orders as the Board deems appropriate.4
Part 704 of the NCUA’s regulations
implements the requirements of the
FCU Act regarding corporate credit
unions.5 In 2010, the Board
comprehensively revised the regulations
governing corporate credit unions to
provide longer-term structural
enhancements to the corporate system
in response to the financial crisis of
2007–2009.6 The provisions of the 2010
rule successfully stabilized the
corporate system and improved
corporate credit unions’ ability to
function and provide services to natural
person credit unions. Since 2010, and as
part of the Board’s continuous
reevaluation of its regulation of
corporate credit unions, the Board has
amended part 704 on several occasions.7
In 2017, the Board amended corporate
credit union capital standards to change
the calculation of capital after a
consolidation and to set a retained
earnings ratio target in meeting prompt
corrective action (commonly referred to
as PCA) standards.8 In October 2020, the
Board issued a final rule to amend
several provisions relating to corporate
credit union investments in credit union
service organizations (CUSOs) and other
provisions relating to corporate credit
1 12
U.S.C. 1751 et seq.
U.S.C. 1766(a).
3 12 U.S.C. 1789.
4 12 U.S.C. 1766(a).
5 12 CFR part 704.
6 75 FR 64786 (Oct. 20, 2010).
7 See e.g., 80 FR 25932 (May 6, 2015), 80 FR
57283 (Sept. 23, 2015), and 82 FR 55497 (Nov. 22,
2017).
8 82 FR 55497 (Nov. 22, 2017).
2 12
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
10729
union governance and technical matters,
as discussed in the following sections.
b. February 2020 Proposed Rule on Part
704
On February 20, 2020, the Board
approved a notice of proposed
rulemaking to update, clarify, and
simplify several provisions of part 704
(proposed rule).9 The proposed rule
provided for a 60-day comment period,
which the Board later extended by 60
days because of COVID–19.10 The
comment period ended on July 27, 2020.
c. October 2020 Final Rule on Part 704
The NCUA received 35 comment
letters on the proposed rule. Comments
were received from credit unions, both
corporate and natural persons, credit
union leagues and trade associations,
individuals, corporate CUSOs, and an
association of state credit union
supervisors. In October 2020, the Board
issued a final rule that: (1) Permits a
corporate credit union to make a
minimal investment in a CUSO without
the CUSO being classified as a corporate
CUSO and subject to heightened NCUA
oversight; (2) expands the categories of
senior staff positions at member credit
unions eligible to serve on a corporate
credit union’s board; (3) removes the
experience and independence
requirement for a corporate credit
union’s enterprise risk management
expert; (4) clarifies the definition of a
collateralized debt obligation; and (5)
simplifies the requirement for net
interest income modeling.11
The October 2020 final rule deferred
final action on the provisions in the
proposed rule that addressed the
permissibility and capital treatment for
corporate credit union purchases of
subordinated debt instruments under
the Board’s January 2020 proposed rule
on subordinated debt.12 In the October
2020 final rule, the Board discussed the
comments on this part of the proposed
rule and noted that the commenters that
addressed these provisions all
supported them. The Board did not
adopt the provisions at that time
because it had not yet finalized the
January 2020 proposed rule on
subordinated debt.
d. Final Rule on Subordinated Debt
The Board has now adopted the
January 2020 proposed rule on
subordinated debt as final.13 These
9 85
FR 17288 (Mar. 27, 2020).
FR 20431 (Apr. 13, 2020).
11 85 FR 71817 (Nov. 12, 2020).
12 85 FR 13982 (Mar. 10, 2020).
13 See, https://www.ncua.gov/files/agenda-items/
AG20201217Item5b.pdf.
10 85
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 34 (Tuesday, February 23, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 10703-10729]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-28473]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 34 / Tuesday, February 23, 2021 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 10703]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 354
RIN 3064-AF31
Parent Companies of Industrial Banks and Industrial Loan
Companies
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is adopting a final
rule that requires certain conditions and commitments for each deposit
insurance application approval, non-objection to a change in control
notice, and merger application approval that would result in an insured
industrial bank or industrial loan company becoming, on or after the
effective date of the final rule, a subsidiary of a company that is not
subject to consolidated supervision by the Federal Reserve Board. The
final rule also requires that before any industrial bank or industrial
loan company may become a subsidiary of a company that is not subject
to consolidated supervision by the Federal Reserve Board, such company
and the industrial bank or industrial loan company must enter into one
or more written agreements with the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
DATES: The rule is effective on April 1, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amanda Ledig, Attorney, (202) 898-
7261, [email protected]; Merritt Pardini, Counsel, (202) 898-6680,
[email protected]; Joyce Raidle, Counsel, (202) 898-6763,
[email protected]; Gregory Feder, Counsel, (202) 898-8724,
[email protected]; Catherine Topping, Counsel, (202) 898-3975,
[email protected]; Mark Flanigan, Senior Counsel, (202) 898-7426,
[email protected]; Ashby Hilsman, Assistant General Counsel, (202)
898-6636, [email protected], Legal Division; Scott Leifer, Senior
Review Examiner, (508) 698-0361, Extension 8027, [email protected]; Don
Hamm, Special Advisor, (202) 898-3528, [email protected]; Patricia
Colohan, Associate Director, Risk Management Examinations Branch, (202)
898-7283, [email protected], Division of Risk Management Supervision.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Policy Objectives
II. Background
A. History
B. Industrial Bank Exclusion Under the BHCA
C. Industry Profile
D. Supervision
E. GAO and OIG Reports
F. FDIC Moratorium and Other Agency Actions
G. 2007 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking--Part 354
H. Dodd-Frank Act and Industrial Banks
III. The Proposed Rule
IV. Discussion of General Comments and Final Rule
A. General Comments
1. Banking and Commerce
2. Lack of Federal Consolidated Supervision
3. Consumer Protection Risks
4. Justification for the Proposed Rule
B. Description of the Final Rule
1. Section 354.1--Scope
2. Section 354.2--Definitions
3. Section 354.3--Written Agreement
4. Section 354.4--Required Commitments and Provisions of Written
Agreement
5. Section 354.5--Restrictions on Industrial Bank Subsidiaries
of Covered Companies
6. Section 354.6--Reservation of Authority
7. Responses to Additional Questions
V. Expected Effects
A. Overview of Industrial Banks
B. Analysis of the Commitments
C. Safety and Soundness of Affected Banks
D. Broad Effects on the Banking Industry
E. Expected Effects on Consumers
F. Expected Effects on the Economy
VI. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Plain Language
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act
of 1994
E. Congressional Review Act
I. Policy Objectives
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) monitors,
evaluates, and takes necessary action to ensure the safety and
soundness of State nonmember banks,\1\ including industrial banks and
industrial loan companies (together, ``industrial banks'').\2\ In
granting deposit insurance, issuing a non-objection to a change in
control, or approving a merger, the FDIC must consider the factors
listed in sections 6,\3\ 7(j),\4\ and 18(c),\5\ respectively, of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act). Congress expressly made all
industrial banks eligible for Federal deposit insurance in 1982.\6\ As
deposit insurer and as the appropriate Federal banking agency for
industrial banks, the FDIC supervises industrial banks. A key part of
its supervision is evaluating and mitigating the risks arising from the
activities of the control parties and owners of insured industrial
banks to ensure they do not threaten the safe and sound operations of
those industrial banks or pose undue risk to the Deposit Insurance Fund
(DIF).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See 12 U.S.C. 1811, 1818, 1821, 1831o-1, 1831p-1.
\2\ Herein, the term ``industrial bank'' means any insured
State-chartered bank that is an industrial bank, industrial loan
company, or other similar institution that is excluded from the
definition of ``bank'' in the Bank Holding Company Act pursuant to
12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H). State laws refer to both industrial loan
companies and industrial banks. For purposes of this rule, the FDIC
is treating the two types of institutions as the same. The rule does
not apply to limited purpose trust companies and credit card banks
that also are exempt from the definition of ``bank.''
\3\ 12 U.S.C. 1816.
\4\ 12 U.S.C. 1817(j).
\5\ 12 U.S.C. 1828(c).
\6\ Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, Public
Law 97-320, 96 Stat. 1469 (Oct. 15, 1982).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Existing State and Federal laws allow both financial and commercial
companies to own and control industrial banks. Congress expressly
adopted an exception to permit such companies to own and control
industrial banks, without becoming a bank holding company (BHC) under
the Bank Holding Company Act (BHCA), as part of the Competitive
Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA).\7\ Industrial banks today are
owned by financial and nonfinancial commercial firms. The FDIC has in
recent years received applications from groups seeking to establish new
industrial banks that would be owned by commercial parents. Proposals
regarding industrial banks have presented unique risk profiles compared
to traditional community
[[Page 10704]]
bank proposals. These profiles have included potential owners that
would not be subject to Federal consolidated supervision,\8\
affiliations with organizations whose activities are primarily
commercial in nature, and non-community bank business models.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Public Law 100-86, 101 Stat. 552 (Aug. 10, 1987).
\8\ In the context of the proposed rule, ``Federal consolidated
supervision'' referred to the supervision of a parent company and
its subsidiaries by the Federal Reserve Board (FRB). Consolidated
supervision of a bank holding company by the FRB encompasses the
parent company and its subsidiaries, and allows the FRB to
understand ``the organization's structure, activities, resources,
and risks, as well as to address financial, managerial, operational,
or other deficiencies before they pose a danger to the BHC's
subsidiary depository institutions.'' See SR Letter 08-9,
``Consolidated Supervision of Bank Holding Companies and the
Combined U.S. Operations of Foreign Banking Organizations'' (Oct.
16, 2008).
\9\ See FDIC Deposit Insurance Applications, Procedures Manual
Supplement, Applications from Non-Bank and Non-Community Bank
Applicants, FIL-8-2020 (Feb. 10, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given the continuing interest in the industrial bank charter and
the evolving business models, the FDIC proposed a rule in March 2020 to
codify existing practices utilized by the FDIC to supervise industrial
banks and their parent companies, to mitigate undue risk to the DIF
that may otherwise be presented in the absence of Federal consolidated
supervision of an industrial bank and its parent company, and to ensure
that the parent company that owns or controls an industrial bank serves
as a source of financial strength for the industrial bank, consistent
with section 38A of the FDI Act.\10\ The proposed rule described
certain commitments that would be required as a condition of the FDIC's
approval of, or non-objection to, each deposit insurance application,
change in control notice, or merger application resulting in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary of a company not subject to
consolidated supervision by the Federal Reserve Board (FRB; each such
parent company a Covered Company). The proposed rule required such a
company and the subsidiary industrial bank to enter into one or more
written agreements with the FDIC that contain certain commitments to be
undertaken by the company to ensure the safe and sound operation of
such industrial bank. The required commitments include capital and
liquidity support from the parent to the industrial bank that have been
incorporated in some form in the FDIC's prior actions to create an
appropriate supervisory structure for industrial banks and their parent
companies.\11\
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\10\ Parent Companies of Industrial Banks and Industrial Loan
Companies, 85 FR 17771, 17772-73 (Mar. 31, 2020). See also 12 U.S.C.
1831o-1(b).
\11\ In March of 2020, the FDIC approved two deposit insurance
applications for industrial banks owned by firms whose businesses
are predominantly financial in nature, Square Financial Services,
Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah (Square Financial), and Nelnet Bank, Salt
Lake City, Utah (Nelnet). As part of both approvals, the FDIC
required the industrial banks and their parent companies to enter
into written agreements with the FDIC that are consistent with the
requirements of the proposed and this final rule.
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The FDIC is now issuing a final rule, which is largely consistent
with the proposed rule. The final rule makes four substantive changes
to the proposed rule. First, the final rule requires compliance from
covered entities on or after the effective date of the rule rather than
simply after, as proposed. Second, the final rule requires additional
reporting by Covered Companies regarding systems for protecting the
security, confidentiality, and integrity of consumer and nonpublic
personal information. Third, the threshold regarding the limitation of
a Covered Company's representation on the board of a subsidiary
industrial bank has been raised in the final rule from 25 percent, as
proposed, to less than 50 percent. Lastly, the final rule modifies the
restrictions on industrial bank subsidiaries concerning the appointment
of directors and senior executive officers to apply to the industrial
bank only during the first three years after becoming a subsidiary of a
Covered Company. These changes are discussed in sections IV.B.1.,
IV.B.4., and IV.B.5. of this Supplementary Information section below.
In addition to providing this comprehensive framework for supervision,
the final rule also provides interested parties with certainty and
transparency regarding the FDIC's practices when making determinations
on filings involving industrial banks.
II. Background
A. History
Industrial banks began as small State-chartered loan companies in
the early 1900s to provide small loans to industrial workers.
Initially, many industrial banks did not accept any deposits and funded
themselves instead by issuing investment certificates. However, the
Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982,\12\ among other
effects, made all industrial banks eligible for Federal deposit
insurance. This expanded eligibility for Federal deposit insurance
brought industrial banks under the supervision of both a State
authority and the FDIC.\13\ The chartering States gradually expanded
the powers of their industrial banks so that today industrial banks
generally have the same commercial and consumer lending powers as
commercial banks.
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\12\ 96 Stat. 1469.
\13\ Prior to 1982, the FDIC had allowed some industrial banks
to become federally insured, but FDIC insurance was typically
limited to those industrial banks chartered by States where the
relevant State's law allowed them to receive ``deposits'' or to use
``bank'' in their name. For additional historical context regarding
industrial bank supervision, see The FDIC's Supervision of
Industrial Loan Companies: A Historical Perspective, Supervisory
Insights (2004).
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Under the FDI Act, industrial banks are ``State banks'' \14\ and
all of the existing FDIC-insured industrial banks are ``State nonmember
banks.'' \15\ As a result, the FDIC is the appropriate Federal banking
agency for industrial banks.\16\ Each industrial bank is also regulated
by its respective State chartering authority. The FDIC generally
exercises the same supervisory and regulatory authority over industrial
banks as it does over other State nonmember banks.
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\14\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(2).
\15\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(e)(2).
\16\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(q)(2).
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B. Industrial Bank Exclusion Under the BHCA
In 1987, Congress enacted the CEBA, which exempted industrial banks
from the definition of ``bank'' in the BHCA. As a result, parent
companies that control industrial banks are not BHCs under the BHCA and
are not subject to the BHCA's activities restrictions or FRB
supervision and regulation. The industrial bank exception in the BHCA
therefore allows for commercial firms to own or control a bank. By
contrast, BHCs and savings and loan holding companies (SLHCs) are
subject to Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB and are
generally prohibited from engaging in commercial activities.\17\
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\17\ Section 4 of the BHCA generally prohibits a BHC from
acquiring ownership or control of any company which is not a bank or
engaging in any activity other than those of banking or of managing
or controlling banks and other subsidiaries authorized under the
BHCA. See 12 U.S.C. 1843(a)(1) and (2). The Home Owners' Loan Act
(HOLA) governs the activities of SLHCs, as amended by the Dodd-Frank
Act, which generally subjects these companies to the permissible
financial holding company activities under section 4(k) of the BHCA
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k), activities that are financial in nature or
incidental to a financial activity). See 12 U.S.C. 1467a(c)(2)(H).
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More specifically, the CEBA redefined the term ``bank'' in the BHCA
to include: (1) Any FDIC-insured institution, and (2) any other
institution that accepts demand or checkable deposit accounts and is
engaged in the
[[Page 10705]]
business of making commercial loans.\18\ This change effectively closed
the so-called ``nonbank bank'' exception implicit in the prior BHCA
definition of ``bank.'' The CEBA created explicit exceptions from this
definition for certain categories of federally insured institutions,
including industrial banks, credit card banks, and limited purpose
trust companies. The exclusions from the definition of the term
``bank'' created in 1987 by the CEBA remain in effect today. To be
eligible for the CEBA exception from the BHCA definition of ``bank,''
an industrial bank must have received a charter from one of the limited
number of States eligible to issue industrial bank charters, and the
law of the chartering State must have required Federal deposit
insurance as of March 5, 1987. In addition, an industrial bank must
meet one of the following criteria: (i) Not accept demand deposits,\19\
(ii) have total assets of less than $100 million, or (iii) have been
acquired prior to August 10, 1987.\20\
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\18\ 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(1).
\19\ Regulation D, 12 CFR part 204, implements the reserve
requirements of section 19 of the Federal Reserve Act and defines a
demand deposit as a deposit that is payable on demand, or issued
with an original maturity or required notice period of less than
seven days, or a deposit representing funds for which the depository
institution does not reserve the right to require at least seven
days' written notice of an intended withdrawal. Demand deposits may
be in the form of (i) checking accounts; (ii) certified, cashier's,
teller's, and officer's checks; and (iii) traveler's checks and
money orders that are primary obligations of the issuing
institution. Other forms of accounts may also meet the definition of
``demand deposit.'' See 12 CFR 204.2(b)(1).
\20\ 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H).
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Industrial banks are currently chartered in California, Hawaii,
Minnesota, Nevada, and Utah. Under the CEBA, these States were
permitted to grandfather existing industrial banks and continue to
charter new industrial banks.\21\ Generally, industrial banks offer
limited deposit products, a full range of commercial and consumer
loans, and other banking services. Although some industrial banks that
have total assets of less than $100 million accept demand deposits,
most industrial banks do not offer demand deposits. Negotiable order of
withdrawal (NOW) accounts \22\ may be offered by industrial banks.\23\
Industrial banks have branching rights, subject to certain State law
constraints.
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\21\ Colorado was also grandfathered but it has no active
industrial banks and has since repealed its industrial bank statute.
\22\ A NOW account is an interest-earning bank account whereby
the owner may write drafts against the money held on deposit. NOW
accounts were developed when certain financial institutions were
prohibited from paying interest on demand deposits. The prohibition
on paying interest on demand deposits was lifted when the FRB
repealed its Regulation Q, effective July 21, 2011. See 76 FR 42015
(July 18, 2011). Many provisions of the repealed Regulation Q were
transferred to the FRB's Regulation D.
\23\ 12 U.S.C. 1832(a). Only certain types of customers may
maintain deposits in a NOW account. 12 U.S.C. 1832(a)(2).
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C. Industry Profile
The industrial bank industry has evolved since the enactment of the
CEBA. The industry experienced significant asset growth between 1987
and 2006 when total assets held by industrial banks grew from $4.2
billion to $213 billion.\24\ From 2000 to 2006, 24 industrial banks
became insured.\25\ As of January 30, 2007, there were 58 insured
industrial banks with $177 billion in aggregate total assets.\26\ The
ownership structure and business models of industrial banks evolved as
industrial banks were acquired or formed by a variety of commercial
firms, including, among others, BMW, Target, Pitney Bowes, and Harley
Davidson. For instance, certain companies established industrial banks,
in part, to support the sale of the manufactured products (e.g.
automobiles) or other services, whereas certain retailers established
industrial banks to issue general purpose credit cards. In addition,
certain financial companies also formed or acquired industrial banks to
provide access to Federal deposit insurance for brokerage customers'
cash management account balances. The cash balances their customers
maintain with the securities affiliate are swept into insured,
interest-bearing accounts at the industrial bank subsidiary, thereby
providing the brokerage customers with FDIC-insured deposits during the
period of time that cash is held for future investment.
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\24\ Most of the growth during this period is attributable to
financial services firms that controlled industrial banks offering
sweep deposit programs to provide Federal deposit insurance for
customers' free cash balances and to American Express moving its
credit card operations from its Delaware-chartered credit card bank
to its Utah-chartered industrial bank.
\25\ During this time period, the FDIC received 57 applications
for Federal deposit insurance for industrial banks, 53 of which were
acted on. Also during this time period, 21 industrial banks ceased
to operate due to mergers, conversions, voluntary liquidations, and
one failure (Southern Pacific Bank, Torrance, CA, failed in 2003).
\26\ Of the 58 industrial banks existing at this time, 45 were
chartered in Utah and California. The remaining industrial banks
were chartered in Colorado, Hawaii, Minnesota, and Nevada.
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Since 2007, the industrial bank industry has experienced
contraction both in terms of the number of institutions and aggregate
total assets. As of September 30, 2020, there were 23 industrial banks
\27\ with $173 billion in aggregate total assets. Four industrial banks
reported total assets of $10 billion or more; ten industrial banks
reported total assets of $1 billion or more but less than $10 billion.
The industrial bank sector today includes a diverse group of insured
financial institutions operating a variety of business models. A
significant number of the existing industrial banks support the
commercial or specialty finance operations of their parent company and
are funded through non-core sources.
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\27\ Of the 23 industrial banks existing as of June 30, 2020, 14
were chartered in Utah, four in Nevada, three in California, one in
Hawaii, and one in Minnesota. An additional industrial bank, Nelnet
Bank, began operations in November of 2020. Square Financial was
approved in March and has not opened for business.
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The reduction in the number of industrial banks from 2007 to 2020
was due to a variety of factors, including mergers, conversions,
voluntary liquidations, and the failure of two small institutions.\28\
For business, marketplace, or strategic reasons, several industrial
banks converted to commercial banks and thus became ``banks'' under the
BHCA. Four industrial banks were approved in 2007 and 2008; however,
none of those institutions exist today.\29\ Moratoria imposed by the
FDIC and Congress (as discussed below) were also a factor.
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\28\ Security Savings Bank, Henderson, Nevada, failed in
February 2009, and Advanta Bank Corporation, Draper, Utah, failed in
March 2010.
\29\ In each case, the institution pursued a voluntary
transaction that led to termination of the respective institution's
industrial bank charter. One institution converted to a commercial
bank charter and continues to operate, one merged and the resultant
bank continues to operate, and two terminated deposit insurance
following voluntary liquidations. Such transactions generally result
from proprietary strategic determinations by the institutions and
their parent companies or investors.
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Since the beginning of 2017, the FDIC has received 12 Federal
deposit insurance applications related to proposed industrial banks. Of
those, two have been approved,\30\ eight have been withdrawn, and two
are pending.\31\ The FDIC anticipates potential continued interest in
the establishment of industrial banks, particularly with regard to
proposed institutions that plan to pursue a specialty or limited
purpose business model.
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\30\ In March of 2020, the FDIC approved the deposit insurance
applications of Nelnet Bank and Square Financial. Square Financial
has not yet commenced operations.
\31\ Decisions to withdraw an application are made at the
discretion of the organizers and can be attributed to a variety of
reasons. In some cases, an application is withdrawn and then refiled
after changes are incorporated into the proposal. In such cases, the
new application is reviewed by the FDIC without prejudice. In other
cases, the applicant may, for strategic reasons, determine that
pursuing an insured industrial bank charter is not in the
organizers' best interests.
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[[Page 10706]]
D. Supervision
Because industrial banks are insured State nonmember banks, they
are subject to the FDIC's Rules and Regulations, as well as other
provisions of law, including restrictions under the Federal Reserve Act
governing transactions with affiliates,\32\ anti-tying provisions of
the BHCA,\33\ and insider lending regulations. Industrial banks are
also subject to regular examination, including examinations focused on
safety and soundness, Bank Secrecy Act and Anti-Money Laundering
compliance, consumer protection including Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA) compliance, information technology (IT), and trust services, as
appropriate. Pursuant to section 10(b)(4) of the FDI Act, the FDIC has
the authority to examine the affairs of any industrial bank affiliate,
including the parent company, as may be necessary to determine the
relationship between the institution and the affiliate, and the effect
of such relationship on the depository institution.\34\
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\32\ See 12 U.S.C. 1828(j)(1)(A).
\33\ For purposes of section 106 of the BHCA, an industrial bank
is treated as a ``bank'' and is subject to the anti-tying
restrictions therein. See 12 U.S.C. 1843(f)(1).
\34\ 12 U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
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In addition, under section 38A of the FDI Act, as amended by the
Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank
Act),\35\ the FDIC is required to impose a requirement on companies
that directly or indirectly own or control an industrial bank to serve
as a source of financial strength for that institution.\36\ In
addition, subsection (d) of section 38A of the FDI Act provides
explicit statutory authority for the appropriate Federal banking agency
to require reports from a controlling company to assess the ability of
the company to comply with the source of strength requirement, and to
enforce compliance by such company.\37\
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\35\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010).
\36\ 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(b).
\37\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(d).
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Consistent with section 38A and other authorities under the FDI
Act, the FDIC has historically required capital and liquidity
maintenance agreements (CALMAs) \38\ and other written agreements
between the FDIC and controlling parties of industrial banks as well as
the imposition of prudential conditions when approving or non-objecting
to certain filings involving an industrial bank. Such written
agreements provide required commitments for the parent company to
provide financial resources and a means for the FDIC to pursue formal
enforcement action under sections 8 and 50 of the FDI Act \39\ should a
party fail to comply with the agreements.
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\38\ When the FDIC has required a CALMA, the capital levels
required generally have exceeded the average thresholds required of
community banks, due to the risks involved in the business plans of
many industrial banks.
\39\ See 12 U.S.C. 1818 and 1831aa.
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E. GAO and OIG Reports
Beginning in 2004, the FDIC Office of Inspector General (OIG)
conducted two evaluations and the Government Accountability Office
(GAO) conducted a statutorily mandated study regarding the FDIC's
supervision of industrial banks, including its use of prudential
conditions.\40\ An OIG evaluation published in 2004 focused on whether
industrial banks posed greater risk to the DIF than other financial
institutions, and reviewed the FDIC's supervisory approach in
identifying and mitigating material risks posed to those institutions
by their parent companies. A July 2006 OIG evaluation reviewed the
FDIC's process for reviewing and approving industrial bank applications
for deposit insurance and monitoring conditions imposed with respect to
industrial bank business plans. A September 2005 GAO study cited
several risks posed to banks operating in a holding company structure,
including adverse intercompany transactions, operations risk, and
reputation risk. The GAO study also discussed concerns about the FDIC's
ability to protect an industrial bank from those risks as effectively
as the Federal consolidated supervisory approach under the BHCA.\41\
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\40\ See OIG Evaluation 04-048, The Division of Supervision and
Consumer Protection's Approach for Supervising Limited-Charter
Depository Institutions (2004), available at https://www.fdicig.gov/reports04/04-048.pdf; OIG Evaluation 06-014, The FDIC's Industrial
Loan Company Deposit Insurance Application Process (2006), available
at https://www.fdicig.gov/reports06/06-014.pdf; U.S. Gov't
Accountability Office, GAO-05-621, Industrial Loan Corporations:
Recent Asset Growth and Commercial Interest Highlight Differences in
Regulatory Authority (Sept. 2005), available at https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-621(GAO-05-621).
\41\ GAO-05-621.
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These reports acknowledged the FDIC's supervisory actions to ensure
the independence and safety and soundness of commercially owned
industrial banks. The reports further acknowledged the FDIC's
authorities to protect an industrial bank from the risks posed by its
parent company and affiliates. These authorities include the FDIC's
authority to conduct examinations, impose conditions on and enter into
written agreements with an industrial bank parent company, terminate an
industrial bank's deposit insurance, enter into written agreements
during the acquisition of an insured depository institution, and to
pursue enforcement actions.
F. FDIC Moratorium and Other Agency Actions
In 2005, Wal-Mart Bank's application for Federal deposit insurance
drew extensive public attention to the industrial bank charter. The
FDIC received more than 13,800 comment letters regarding Wal-Mart's
proposal. Most of the commenters were opposed to the application.
Commenters also raised broader concerns about industrial banks,
including the risk posed to the DIF by industrial banks owned by parent
companies that are not subject to Federal consolidated supervision.
Similar concerns were expressed by witnesses during three days of
public hearings held by the FDIC in the spring of 2006 concerning the
Wal-Mart application. Also in 2006, The Home Depot filed a change in
control notice in connection with its proposed acquisition of EnerBank,
a Utah-chartered industrial bank. The FDIC received approximately 830
comment letters regarding the notice, almost all of which expressed
opposition to the proposed acquisition. Ultimately, the Wal-Mart
application and The Home Depot's notice were withdrawn.
To evaluate the concerns and issues raised with respect to the Wal-
Mart and The Home Depot filings and industrial banks generally, on July
28, 2006, the FDIC imposed a six-month moratorium on FDIC action with
respect to deposit insurance applications and change in control notices
involving industrial banks.\42\ The FDIC suspended agency action in
order to further evaluate (i) industry developments; (ii) the various
issues, facts, and arguments raised with respect to the industrial bank
industry; (iii) whether there were emerging safety and soundness issues
or policy issues involving industrial banks or other risks to the DIF;
and (iv) whether statutory, regulatory, or policy changes should be
made in the FDIC's oversight of industrial banks in order to protect
the DIF or important Congressional objectives.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ See Moratorium on Certain Industrial Loan Company
Applications and Notices, 71 FR 43482 (Aug. 1, 2006).
\43\ Id. at 43483.
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In connection with this moratorium, on August 23, 2006, the FDIC
published a notice and request for comment on a wide range of issues
concerning industrial banks.\44\ The FDIC received
[[Page 10707]]
over 12,600 comment letters in response to the notice.\45\ The
substantive comments related to the risk profile of the industrial bank
industry, concerns over the mixing of banking and commerce, the FDIC's
practices when making determinations in industrial bank applications
and notices, whether commercial ownership of industrial banks should be
allowed, and perceived needs for supervisory change.
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\44\ See Industrial Loan Companies and Industrial Banks, 71 FR
49456 (Aug. 23, 2006). The Notice included questions concerning the
current risk profile of the industrial bank industry, safety and
soundness issues uniquely associated with ownership of such
institutions, the FDIC's practice with respect to evaluating and
making determinations on industrial bank applications and notices,
whether a distinction should be made when the industrial bank is
owned by an entity that is commercial in nature, and the adequacy of
the FDIC's supervisory approach with respect to industrial banks.
\45\ Approximately 12,485 comments on the notice were generated
either supporting or opposing the proposed industrial bank to be
owned by Wal-Mart or the proposed acquisition of Enerbank, also an
industrial bank, by The Home Depot. The remaining comment letters
were sent by individuals, law firms, community banks, financial
services trade associations, existing and proposed industrial banks
or their parent companies, the Conference of State Bank Supervisors,
and two members of Congress.
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The moratorium was effective through January 31, 2007, at which
time the FDIC extended the moratorium one additional year for deposit
insurance applications and change in control notices for industrial
banks that would be owned by commercial companies.\46\ The moratorium
was not applicable to industrial banks to be owned by financial
companies.
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\46\ See Moratorium on Certain Industrial Bank Applications and
Notices, 72 FR 5290 (Feb. 5, 2007).
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G. 2007 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR)--Part 354
In addition to extending the moratorium for one year with respect
to commercial parent companies, the FDIC published for comment a
proposed rule designed to strengthen the FDIC's consideration of
applications and notices for industrial banks to be controlled by
financial companies not subject to Federal consolidated bank
supervision, identified as part 354 (2007 NPR).\47\ The 2007 NPR would
have imposed requirements on applications for deposit insurance, merger
applications, and notices for change in control that would result in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary of a company engaged solely in
financial activities that is not subject to Federal consolidated bank
supervision by either the FRB or the then-existing Office of Thrift
Supervision (OTS). The rule would have established safeguards to assess
the parent company's continuing ability to serve as a source of
strength for the insured industrial bank, and to identify and respond
to problems or risks that may develop in the company or its
subsidiaries.
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\47\ See Industrial Bank Subsidiaries of Financial Companies 72
FR 5217 (Feb. 5, 2007); see also https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2007/pr07007.html.
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Similar to this final rule, the 2007 NPR would have required a
parent company to enter into a written agreement with the FDIC
containing required commitments related to the examination of, and
reporting and recordkeeping by, the industrial bank, the parent
company, and its affiliates. The majority of commenters did not oppose
these requirements, noting the FDIC already has authority to collect
such information under section 10(b)(4) of the FDI Act.\48\ Many
commenters, however, objected to limiting parent company representation
on the industrial bank subsidiary's board of directors to 25 percent,
and argued instead for requiring that a majority of directors be
independent. The majority of commenters stated that the FDIC should not
impose capital requirement commitments as contemplated in the 2007 NPR
on commercial parents of industrial banks because a one-size-fits all
regulatory approach to capital requirements would not be appropriate
due to the idiosyncratic business models and operations of such parent
companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ See 12 U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Though the 2007 NPR did not affect industrial banks that would be
controlled by companies engaged in commercial activities, several
commenters addressed the distinction between industrial banks owned by
financial and nonfinancial companies. Two commenters contended that the
FDIC lacked authority to draw a distinction between financial and
nonfinancial industrial bank owners absent a change in law. Several
commenters argued that drawing such a distinction would essentially
repeal the exception of industrial banks from the definition of
``bank'' in the BHCA. There was little consensus among commenters as to
whether commercially owned industrial banks pose unique safety and
soundness issues.
The FDIC did not finalize the 2007 NPR. Although multiple factors
contributed to the FDIC's decision to not advance a final rule, the
most significant factor was the onset of two interconnected and
overlapping crises: the financial crisis of 2008-09, and the banking
crisis from 2008 to 2013.\49\ With the advent of the crises,
applications to form de novo insured institutions, or to acquire
existing institutions, declined significantly, including with respect
to industrial banks.
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\49\ See Crisis and Response, An FDIC History, 2008-2013,
available at https://www.fdic.gov/bank/historical/crisis/. The
financial crisis in 2008 and 2009 threatened large financial
institutions of all kinds, both inside and outside the traditional
banking system, and thus endangered the financial system itself.
Second, a banking crisis, accompanied by a swiftly increasing number
of both troubled and failed insured depository institutions, began
in 2008 and continued until 2013.
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H. Dodd-Frank Act and Industrial Banks
As discussed above and in reaction to the 2008-09 financial crisis,
the Dodd-Frank Act amended the FDI Act by adding section 38A.\50\ Under
section 38A, for any insured depository institution that is not a
subsidiary of a BHC or SLHC, the appropriate Federal banking agency for
the insured depository institution must require any company that
directly or indirectly controls such institution to serve as a source
of financial strength for the institution.\51\
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\50\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1.
\51\ 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(b). This amendment also requires the
appropriate Federal banking agency for a BHC or SLHC to require the
BHC or SLHC to serve as a source of financial strength for any
subsidiary of the BHC or SLHC that is a depository institution. 12
U.S.C. 1831o-1(a).
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Through the Dodd-Frank Act, Congress also imposed a three-year
moratorium on the FDIC's approval of deposit insurance applications for
industrial banks that were owned or controlled by a commercial
firm.\52\ The Dodd-Frank Act moratorium also applied to the FDIC's non-
objection to any change in control of an industrial bank that would
place the institution under the control of a commercial firm.\53\ The
moratorium expired in July 2013, without any further action by
Congress.
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\52\ Public Law 111-203, title VI, section 603(a), 124 Stat.
1597 (2010). Section 603(a) also imposed a moratorium on FDIC action
on deposit insurance applications by credit card banks and trust
banks owned or controlled by a commercial firm. The Dodd-Frank Act
defined a ``commercial firm'' for this purpose as a company that
derives less than 15 percent of its annual gross revenues from
activities that are financial in nature, as defined in section 4(k)
of the BHCA (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)), or from ownership or control of
depository institutions.
\53\ Id.
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In addition, the Dodd-Frank Act directed the GAO to conduct a study
of the implications of removing all exceptions from the definition of
``bank'' under the BHCA. The GAO report was published in January of
2012.\54\ This report examined the number and general characteristics
of
[[Page 10708]]
exempt institutions, the Federal regulatory system for such
institutions, and potential implications of subjecting the holding
companies of such institutions to BHCA requirements. The GAO report
noted that the industrial bank industry experienced significant asset
growth in the 2000s and, during this time, the profile of industrial
banks changed: Rather than representing a class of small, limited-
purpose institutions, industrial banks became a diverse group of
insured institutions with a variety of business lines.\55\ Ultimately,
the GAO found that Federal regulation of the exempt institutions'
parent companies varied, noting that FDIC officials interviewed in
connection with the study indicated that supervision of exempt
institutions was adequate, but also noted the added benefit of Federal
consolidated supervision. Finally, data examined by the GAO suggested
that removing the BHCA exceptions would likely have a limited impact on
the overall credit market, chiefly because the overall market share of
exempt institutions was, at the time of the study, small.\56\
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\54\ See U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO-12-160,
Characteristics and Regulation of Exempt Institutions and the
Implications of Removing the Exemptions (Jan. 2012), available at
https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-12-160.
\55\ Id. at 13.
\56\ The GAO did not recommend repeal of the exemption.
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III. The Proposed Rule
On March 31, 2020, the FDIC published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR or proposal) to establish a supervisory framework for
industrial banks and their parent companies that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision.\57\ The proposed rule required
certain conditions, commitments, and restrictions for each deposit
insurance application approval, non-objection to a change in control
notice, and merger application approval that would result in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary of a company not subject to
consolidated supervision by the FRB. The proposal required such a
Covered Company to enter into one or more written agreements with the
FDIC and the industrial bank subsidiary. The commitments included:
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\57\ 85 FR 17771 (Mar. 31, 2020).
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Furnishing an initial listing, with annual updates, of the
Covered Company's subsidiaries.
Consenting to FDIC examination of the Covered Company and
its subsidiaries.
Submitting an annual report on the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, and such other reports as requested.
Maintaining such records as the FDIC deemed necessary.
Causing an independent annual audit of each industrial
bank.
Limiting the Covered Company's representation on the
industrial bank's board of directors or managers (board), as the case
may be, to 25 percent.
Maintaining the industrial bank's capital and liquidity at
such levels as deemed appropriate and take other action necessary to
provide the industrial bank with a resource for additional capital or
liquidity.
Entering into a tax allocation agreement.\58\
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\58\ See proposed Sec. 354.4(a)(1) through (8).
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The proposal also set forth the FDIC's authority to require, as an
additional commitment, a contingency plan that, among other items,
provides a strategy for the orderly disposition of the industrial bank
without the need for the appointment of a receiver or conservator.
Recently, a number of companies have considered options for
providing financial products and services by establishing an industrial
bank subsidiary. Many companies have publicly noted the benefits of
deposit insurance and establishing a deposit-taking institution.
Although many interested parties operate business models focused on
traditional community bank products and services, others operate unique
business models, some of which are focused on innovative technologies
and strategies, including newer business models employed by fintech
firms that utilize novel or unproven products or processes.
Some of the companies recently exploring an industrial bank charter
engage in commercial activities or have diversified business operations
and activities that would not otherwise be permissible for BHCs under
the BHCA and applicable regulations. Given the continuing interest in
the establishment of industrial banks, particularly with regard to
proposed institutions that plan to implement specialty or limited
purpose business models, including those focused on innovative
technologies, the FDIC believes a rule is appropriate to provide
necessary transparency for market participants. Through this final
rule, the FDIC is formalizing its framework to supervise industrial
banks and mitigate risk to the DIF that may otherwise be presented in
the absence of Federal consolidated supervision of an industrial bank
and its parent company.
The FDIC has the authority to issue rules to carry out the
provisions of the FDI Act,\59\ including rules to ensure the safety and
soundness of industrial banks and to protect the DIF. Moreover, as the
only agency with the power to grant or terminate deposit insurance, the
FDIC has a unique responsibility for the safety and soundness of all
insured institutions.\60\ In granting deposit insurance, the FDIC must
consider the factors in section 6 of the FDI Act; \61\ these factors
generally focus on the safety and soundness of the proposed institution
and any risk it may pose to the DIF. The FDIC is also authorized to
permit or deny various transactions by State nonmember banks, including
merger and change in bank control transactions, based to a large extent
on safety and soundness considerations and on its assessment of the
risk to the DIF.\62\
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\59\ ``[T]he Corporation . . . shall have power . . . [t]o
prescribe by its Board of Directors such rules and regulations as it
may deem necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter or of
any other law which it has the responsibility of administering or
enforcing (except to the extent that authority to issue such rules
and regulations has been expressly and exclusively granted to any
other regulatory agency).'' 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth).
\60\ See 12 U.S.C. 1815, 1818(a).
\61\ Such factors are the financial history and condition of the
depository institution, the adequacy of the depository institution's
capital structure, the future earnings prospects of the depository
institution, the general character and fitness of the management of
the depository institution, the risk presented by such depository
institution to the DIF, the convenience and needs of the community
to be served by such depository institution, and whether the
depository institution's corporate powers are consistent with the
purposes of the FDI Act. See 12 U.S.C. 1816.
\62\ See 12 U.S.C. 1817(j), 1828(c), and 1828(d).
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The FDIC has the responsibility to consider filings based on
statutory criteria and make decisions. Following the publication of the
proposed rule, the FDIC approved two deposit insurance applications, by
Square Financial and Nelnet, to create de novo industrial banks, the
first such approvals since 2008. The FDIC determined that the
applications satisfied the seven statutory factors under section 6 of
the FDI Act, and the FDIC's approval of deposit insurance for these
industrial banks fulfilled the Agency's statutory responsibility. As
part of both approvals, the FDIC required the industrial banks and
their parent companies to enter into CALMAs and Parent Company
Agreements to protect the industrial bank and address potential risks
to the DIF.
The FDIC invited comment on all aspects of the March 2020 proposal,
including questions posed by the Agency. The comment period for the
proposed rule ended on July 1, 2020.\63\
[[Page 10709]]
The FDIC received 29 comments from industry group/trade associations,
insured depository institutions, consumer and public interest groups,
State banking regulator(s), law firms, a member of Congress, academics,
and other interested parties.\64\ In addition, the FDIC received three
letters related to the subject matter considered in the proposed rule
prior to the formal comment period. The FDIC is now finalizing the
proposed rule, with changes based on public comments, as described in
detail below.
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\63\ Given the disruptions caused by the COVID-19 global
pandemic, the FDIC announced on May 27, 2020, that it would extend
the comment period from June 1, 2020, to July 1, 2020, to allow
interested parties additional time to analyze the proposal and
prepare comments.
\64\ On March 15, 2020, bank trade groups, and consumer and
civil rights groups sent a letter to the FDIC urging the agency not
to approve deposit insurance applications submitted by industrial
banks until the NPR is finalized. See https://bpi.com/consumer-civil-rights-groups-industry-urge-fdic-halt-approval-of-industrial-bank-applications-close-ilc-loopholes-first/. On July 29, 2020, some
of the same groups sent a letter to Congress requesting a three-year
moratorium on industrial bank licensing applications. See https://bpi.com/banking-and-consumer-groups-call-on-congress-to-close-ilc-loophole/.
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IV. Discussion of General Comments and Final Rule
A. General Comments
Many commenters were supportive of the FDIC's overall effort to
provide certainty, clarity, and transparency to the supervisory
framework for the parent companies and affiliates of industrial banks.
A number of commenters were generally supportive of the industrial bank
charter citing the benefits of charter choice, increased competition,
and the provision of financial services. These commenters asserted the
charter poses no increased risk to the DIF. In their view, the parent
companies serve as an important source of strength and governance for
the subsidiary industrial bank. They asserted that in times of stress,
a diversified parent may be in a better position to provide capital
support to a bank subsidiary than a BHC whose assets consist almost
entirely of the bank subsidiary. These commenters also argued that an
industrial bank benefits from its business relationship with the
parent, for example, through marketing support and fewer start-up
costs. State regulators stated that the joint supervisory approach to
supervising industrial banks with the FDIC has been effective, and
industrial banks with commercial parents do not present an outsized
safety and soundness risk.
Comments submitted by bank trade associations, consumer groups, and
academics were generally critical of the proposed rule and expressed a
range of concerns, which are discussed below.
1. Banking and Commerce
Commenters' criticism of the industrial bank charter, and by
extension the proposed rule, is focused, in part, on the mixing of
banking and commerce through the commercial ownership of an industrial
bank. The main argument is that commercial ownership of an industrial
bank disregards the policy of separation of banking and commerce
embodied in the BHCA \65\ and raises risk to the DIF as a result of a
lack of Federal consolidated supervision over the commercial parent
company.
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\65\ See Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Economic Letter
1998-21, The Separation of Banking and Commerce (July 3, 1998),
available at https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/publications/economic-letter/1998/july/separation-banking-commerce/.
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Although Federal banking regulation has historically advanced a
policy of separating banking and commerce, there is an express
Congressional exception of industrial banks from the BHCA's
restrictions on commercial affiliations.\66\ The CEBA exception does
not limit eligible parent companies to those engaged in financial
activities. The FDIC's responsibility is to implement the law as it
exists today. Whether commercial firms should continue to be able to
own industrial banks is a policy decision for Congress to make.
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\66\ The legislative history of the CEBA offers no explanation
of why this exception was adopted. While the industrial bank
exception was included in the Senate version of the Act, the House
version omitted it. The Conference report does not shed much light:
INDUSTRIAL LOAN COMPANY EXEMPTION SECTION 2(C) (2) (H) OF THE
BANK HOLDING COMPANY ACT
The Senate amendment exempts from the definition of ``bank''
certain industrial banks; industrial loan companies, or other
similar institutions. The House recedes to the Senate.
Conference Report to accompany H.R. 27--Competitive Equality
Banking Act of 1987 (July 31, 1987), at 121.
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Some commenters requested that the FDIC impose a new moratorium on
deposit insurance applications involving industrial banks to allow for
legislative action. Certain commenters argued that a moratorium, or a
delay in the rulemaking more generally, was important in light of the
current economic stress and uncertainty caused by the COVID-19
pandemic. The purpose of this final rule is to ensure adequate
oversight of industrial banks owned by financial and commercial
companies. Additional moratoria or delays in processing and considering
applications are outside the scope of this rulemaking and would be
inconsistent with the express Congressional exception of industrial
banks from the BHCA's restrictions on commercial affiliations and the
FDIC's statutory obligations to receive and process applications
related to industrial banks.
These commenters also argued that allowing commercial firms and
industrial banks to combine could potentially lead to conflicts of
interest in the lending process and undue concentrations of economic
power--concerns they contend underlie the general prohibition against
the mixing of commerce and banking in the BHCA. As noted above, the
decision to allow commercial firms to own industrial banks was a
decision made by Congress. Industrial banks are restricted from making
favorable loans to their affiliates by sections 23A and 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act, which quantitatively and qualitatively limit
transactions between an industrial bank and its affiliates.\67\
Furthermore, section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act requires that any
transaction between a bank and its affiliates must be ``on terms and
under circumstances, including credit standards, that are substantially
the same, or at least as favorable to [the] bank or its subsidiary as
those prevailing at the time for comparable transactions'' with
unaffiliated companies.\68\ All covered transactions between an
industrial bank and its affiliates must be on terms and conditions that
are consistent with safe and sound banking practices.\69\
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\67\ 12 U.S.C. 371c(a)(1), 371c-1(a)(1); see also 12 U.S.C.
1828(j).
\68\ 12 U.S.C. 371c-1(b).
\69\ 12 U.S.C. 371c(a)(4).
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Commenters' competition concerns were based on the possibility that
large commercial or technology firms will acquire industrial banks and
lead to commercial and financial conglomerates with concentrated and
excessive economic power. These commenters were concerned that the FDIC
will not adequately consider the anti-trust implications of commercial
and financial conglomerates. The FDIC recognizes that there is a
possibility that large and complex companies may seek to acquire an
industrial bank as emerging technologies and other trends are leading
to changes in the provision of banking services. The FDIC has
discretion to evaluate the competitive effects of such proposals when
considering a deposit insurance application, specifically the statutory
factors of the risk to the DIF and the convenience and needs of the
community to be served, in order to ensure the market for the provision
of
[[Page 10710]]
banking services remains competitive and safe and sound.\70\ Moreover,
the FDIC must consider the anticompetitive effects of a transaction
when it is evaluating a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act
(CBCA) or an application under the Bank Merger Act.\71\ Recognizing
that the business models proposed by industrial banks are evolving
(e.g., the increasing interplay of services between the bank and its
nonfinancial affiliates), the FDIC is issuing this rule in order to
help ensure the safety and soundness of industrial banks that become
subsidiaries of Covered Companies.
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\70\ As part of its considerations, the FDIC may also seek the
views of other Federal agencies.
\71\ See 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)(A), (B); 1828(c)(5).
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2. Lack of Federal Consolidated Supervision
Many commenters that were critical of the proposed rule also argued
that the potential future expansion of banks operating under the CEBA
exception threatens the Federal safety net because the FDIC lacks the
statutory tools to adequately examine and supervise industrial banks
and their parents and affiliates. These commenters noted for instance
the many ecommerce affiliate relationships of a large, overseas parent
company. The FDIC sought comment on whether the commitments requiring
examination and reporting included in the proposed rule were the best
approach to gain transparency and identify any potential risk to the
industrial banks. A number of commenters argued that the eight
commitments in the FDIC's proposed rule ``fail to achieve parity with
the regime of consolidated supervision required for BHCs.'' Elements
they viewed as lacking included consolidated capital and liquidity
standards for the Covered Company, including both the industrial bank
and all affiliated entities under common ownership, examination for
compliance with the Volcker Rule requirements, sections 23A and 23B,
and provisions in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) \72\ on data
safeguards and privacy of customer information. Such commenters also
argued that the FDIC does not have the authority to conduct full-scope
examinations across any and all affiliates, including the parent
company, in their own right. Several commenters suggested that the FDIC
ask Congress to transfer the supervision of parent companies of
industrial banks to the FRB to conduct consolidated supervision.
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\72\ Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, Public Law
106-102, 113 Stat. 1338 (1999).
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As discussed in the proposed rule, the FDIC has both the authority
and the capacity to effectively regulate industrial banks and their
parent companies, and this rule strengthens the FDIC's supervision. The
FDIC uses its supervisory authorities to mitigate the risks posed to
insured depository institutions whose parent companies are not subject
to consolidated supervision. In considering applications for deposit
insurance and mergers, as well as change in control notices, the FDIC
uses prudential conditions, as needed, to ensure sufficient autonomy
and insulation of the insured depository institution from its parent
and affiliates. The FDIC also requires CALMAs, which generally exceed
the minimum capital requirements for traditional community banks, and
other written agreements between the FDIC and controlling parties of
industrial banks. These agreements are enforceable under sections 8 and
50 of the FDI Act. In addition, under section 38A of the FDI Act, the
FDIC is required to impose a requirement on companies that directly or
indirectly own or control an industrial bank to serve as a source of
financial strength for that institution.\73\ Subsection (d) of section
38A of the FDI Act also provides explicit statutory authority for the
appropriate Federal banking agency to require reports from a
controlling company to assess the ability of the company to comply with
the source of strength requirement, and to enforce compliance by such
company.\74\ These prudential conditions and requirements will be
embodied in written agreements consistent with the framework
established by this final rule.
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\73\ 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(b).
\74\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, an important focus of the FDIC's examination and
supervision program is evaluating and mitigating risk to insured
depository institutions from affiliates. This includes examining the
insured depository institution for compliance with laws and
regulations, including affiliate transaction limits and capital
maintenance.\75\ The examination reviews envisioned under this final
rule provide the basis and opportunity to more fully evaluate the
institution's affiliate relationships. As noted above, most conflict
situations affecting banks and their affiliates can be mitigated
through the supervisory process and application of the restrictions in
sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act and need not pose
excessive risk to the bank or the banking system.
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\75\ See Report to the Congress and the Financial Stability
Oversight Council Pursuant to Section 620 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(Sept. 2016). The 2016 joint report evaluated the risks of bank
activities and affiliations, as required by section 620 of the Dodd-
Frank Act.
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The rule also strengthens the FDIC supervisory framework in the
area of contingency planning. This rule allows the FDIC to impose a
contingency plan requirement, as needed, which will lead the FDIC, as
well as the Covered Company and its subsidiary industrial bank, to a
better understanding of the interdependencies, operational risks, and
other circumstances or events that could create safety and soundness
concerns for the insured industrial bank and attendant risk to the DIF.
When imposed, this additional commitment will provide for recovery
actions that address any financial or operational stress that may
threaten the industrial bank.
Finally, the FDIC's oversight and enforcement power extends to the
parent or affiliates of any industrial bank whose activities affect
that bank, further protecting the industrial bank from risky activities
of affiliates.\76\
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\76\ See 12 U.S.C. 1820(b) and 1820(b)(4)(A).
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The FDIC has not found that industrial banks pose unique safety and
soundness concerns based on the activities of the parent organization.
Industrial banks are subject to all of the same restrictions and
requirements, regulatory oversight, and safety and soundness exams as
any other kind of insured depository institution. As such, the risks
posed are substantially similar to those of all other charter types. A
number of commenters noted that two industrial banks failed during the
recent financial crisis. While these failed institutions were owned by
parent companies not subject to Federal consolidated supervision, the
failures were not the result of factors related to the industrial bank
charter, as further discussed below.
Certain commenters also observed that several large corporate
owners of industrial banks experienced stress during the 2008-09
financial crisis. In some cases, the parent organizations ultimately
filed bankruptcy, while others pursued strategies to resolve the
stress, including through access to government programs intended to
alleviate the effects of the crisis within the financial services
sector. These programs included the FDIC's Temporary Liquidity
Guarantee Program (TLGP) and the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)
administered by the Department of the Treasury. Desired access to these
programs contributed to several companies pursuing conversions of an
industrial bank to a commercial bank, which required approval of the
[[Page 10711]]
parent company to become a BHC subject to regulation and supervision by
the FRB.
However, it is important to note that each institution or company
described in the comments was engaged in activities permissible for all
Federal and State banks, BHCs, or financial holding companies, as
evidenced by the ability to gain approval for the conversions to
commercial banks and BHCs. Further, the types and degree of stress were
also experienced by many other insured depository institutions and
banking companies, some of which also sought participation in TLGP and/
or TARP, failed, or pursued transactions to restructure the
organization, merge, or raise capital to alleviate stress or avert
failure. As such, the circumstances involving the companies highlighted
in the comments were not dissimilar to those facing other banking
companies, including companies subject to Federal consolidated
supervision.
3. Consumer Protection Risks
Commenters opposed to the proposed rule also argued that the growth
in industrial banks poses broader consumer protection risks. They
asserted that the parent companies of industrial banks are not subject
to Federal financial privacy and information security requirements and
the absence of these requirements creates risk for customers of the
industrial banks, whether or not they also obtain products and services
from the parent companies or nonfinancial affiliates. BHCs and SLHCs
are limited in their use of consumer financial data for commercial
purposes. These commenters asserted that industrial bank parent
companies should be subject to the same restrictions.
While there is no general Federal regime covering how nonpublic
personal information held in the U.S. may be disclosed or how it must
be secured, financial institutions, including industrial banks, are
subject to Title V of the GLBA.\77\ The GLBA and its implementing
regulations, cited by some commenters, impose a range of privacy
obligations on financial institutions, including industrial banks, that
exceed those imposed on most other business types. Specifically, the
GLBA and implementing rules (1) impose limitations on information
sharing between financial institutions and nonaffiliated third parties
and require disclosure of information sharing policies and practices to
consumers and customers, and (2) require financial institutions to
develop, implement, and maintain comprehensive information security
programs.\78\ However, businesses that are not subject to the GLBA are
not free from all privacy and data protection requirements. There are
other Federal laws that address privacy and data protection that may
apply to a Covered Company and its affiliates as well as financial
institutions. As one example, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
establishes standards for collection and permissible purposes for
dissemination of data by consumer reporting agencies and obligations on
furnishers of information. As another example, section 5 of the Federal
Trade Commission Act (FTC Act) provides broad authority to the FTC to
pursue unfair and deceptive trade acts and practices against most
businesses arising from privacy and data protection practices.\79\
Further, the Dodd-Frank Act granted the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau (CFPB) broad authority to enforce unfair, deceptive, and abusive
acts and practices related to consumer financial products and services
that may cover the activities of a Covered Company and its
affiliates.\80\ Adding to the complexity at the Federal level, States
have enacted laws governing the collection, use, protection, and
disclosure of personal information. Many States have consumer
protection and privacy laws as well as laws similar to the FTC Act that
prohibit unfair or deceptive business practices.\81\
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\77\ Subtitle A of Title V of the GLBA, captioned ``Disclosure
of Nonpublic Personal Information,'' limits the instances in which a
financial institution may disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to nonaffiliated third parties, and requires a
financial institution to disclose certain information sharing
practices. ``Nonpublic personal information'' is defined to mean any
personally identifiable financial information that is provided by
the consumer to the financial institution; results from any
transaction with the consumer or service performed for the consumer;
or is otherwise obtained by the financial institution, but which is
not ``publicly available information.'' See 15 U.S.C. 6801-09.
\78\ See, e.g., 12 CFR part 332, Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information.
\79\ The FTC is empowered to seek injunctive relief and
voluntary consent decrees that can result in FTC oversight of a
company for a period of up to 20 years and may carry financial
penalties for future violations. The Federal banking agencies
enforce section 5 as to financial institutions under their
supervision.
\80\ The CFPB has been active in the privacy area and recently
issued an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) seeking
input on the financial records access right granted by section 1033
of the Dodd-Frank Act pertaining to consumer information in the
control or possession of consumer financial services providers. 85
FR 71003 (Nov. 6, 2020).
\81\ For example, the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018
serves as an omnibus law governing privacy rights. It was recently
amended and expanded by the California Privacy Rights Act. 2020 Cal.
Legis. Serv. Prop. 24 (2020). The Massachusetts Data Security
Regulation includes State-level general data protection security
requirements. 201 Mass. Code Regs. 17.00 et seq. The Act to Protect
the Privacy of Online Consumer Information enacted by the Maine
legislature is another example of a State law governing the privacy
of consumer information. 35-A M.R.S. section 9301. These examples
underscore the fact that although a uniform Federal law has not been
enacted, privacy is increasingly in the forefront of the public and
legislators alike.
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In the absence of a single, comprehensive Federal law regulating
privacy and the collection use, processing, disclosure, security, and
disposal of personal information, the FDIC will continue to supervise
and examine industrial banks and enforce compliance with the GLBA and
all other Federal consumer protection laws and regulations. In
addition, and in response to the concerns expressed by commenters that
a Covered Company and affiliates that are not engaged in financial
services would not be covered by the GLBA, the FDIC is including in the
final rule a requirement for a Covered Company to inform the FDIC about
its systems for protecting the security, confidentiality, and integrity
of consumer and nonpublic personal information, as part of the Covered
Company's commitment to submit an annual report to the FDIC. This
reporting will provide the FDIC with a better understanding across all
of a Covered Company's financial and nonfinancial affiliates and
activities and provide the means to monitor for potential consumer
protection risks.
The FDIC will evaluate privacy and data protection issues presented
by a deposit insurance application, a change in control notice, or a
merger application involving an industrial bank on a case-by-case
basis. When appropriate, the FDIC may consider imposing heightened
requirements specific to industrial banks and Covered Companies
regarding the use of consumer financial data for commercial purposes.
Decisions will be based on the size and complexity of the industrial
bank, the nature and scope of its activities, the sensitivity of any
customer information at issue, and the unique facts and circumstances
of the filing before the FDIC.
Certain commenters expressed concerns about industrial bank and
nonbank partnerships that the commenters believe have led to increased
predatory lending.\82\ A major
[[Page 10712]]
component of the FDIC's mission is to ensure that financial
institutions treat consumers and depositors fairly, and operate in
compliance with Federal consumer protection, anti-discrimination, and
community reinvestment laws. The FDIC addresses the problem of
predatory lending by taking supervisory action, by encouraging and
assisting banks to serve all sectors of their community, and by
providing consumers with information to help make informed financial
decisions.
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\82\ The concern appears to arise from perceived abuses of
longstanding statutory authority rather than the proposed rule.
Congress enacted section 27 of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1831d, in
1980, permitting State banks to charge interest at the rate
permitted by the law of the State where the bank is located, even if
that rate exceeds the rate permitted by the law of the borrower's
State. Federal court precedents reviewing this authority have upheld
this practice for decades. Section 27 also permits States to opt out
of its coverage by adopting a law, or certifying that the voters of
the State have voted in favor of a provision which states explicitly
that the State does not want section 27 to apply with respect to
loans made in such State.
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4. Justification for the Proposed Rule
Several commenters raised concerns that the FDIC offered
insufficient justification for the proposed rule. In particular,
commenters argued that the proposed rule did not set out a sufficient
factual, legal, or policy basis for proposed rule, and that there was
insufficient discussion of the risks, public policy concerns, and
statutory public interest factors concerning industrial banks.
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) \83\ requires a notice of
proposed rulemaking to provide sufficient factual detail and rationale
for the rule to permit interested parties to comment meaningfully.\84\
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\83\ 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
\84\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b); see, e.g., National Lifeline Association
v. F.C.C., 921 F.3d 1105, 1115 (D.C. Cir. 2019).
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The proposed rule set out a clear description of the basis for the
proposed rule. The NPR discussed the history of industrial banks in the
U.S., both generally and in the context of controversies over the past
two decades. The NPR acknowledged the arguments raised by critics,
reviewing the potential risks inherent in approving and supervising
industrial banks. These include concerns over the mixing of banking and
commerce as well as the risk to the DIF posed by the lack of Federal
consolidated supervision of parent companies. The NPR also set out the
justification for the proposed rule, including the need to codify and
clarify supervisory expectations for industrial banks and the
importance of imposing commitments on parent companies to ensure the
parent company can serve as a source of strength for its subsidiary
industrial bank. The NPR provided sufficient discussion of the factual,
legal, and policy considerations for the proposed rule, such that
interested parties were able to--and did--submit a variety of comments
on a number of issues raised in and by the proposed rule.
A few commenters argued that the NPR did not adequately discuss the
FDIC's decision to allow industrial bank applications in the wake of
both the temporary moratorium the FDIC put into place from 2006 to 2008
and the subsequent 2010 to 2013 moratorium Congress enacted through the
Dodd-Frank Act. To reverse the industrial bank moratorium without
additional details, these commenters suggest, is arbitrary and
capricious and violates the APA.
As the Supreme Court has noted, ``Agencies are free to change their
existing policies as long as they provide a reasoned explanation for
the change.'' \85\ The explanation need not prove that ``the reasons
for the new policy are better than the reasons for the old one; it
suffices that the new policy is permissible under the statute, that
there are good reasons for it, and that the agency believes it to be
better, which the conscious change of course adequately indicates.''
\86\ Specifically, ``the agency must examine the relevant data and
articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a
rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.'' \87\
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\85\ Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, 136 S.Ct. 2117, 2126
(2016).
\86\ F.C.C. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515
(2009).
\87\ Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983).
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The NPR provided a reasoned discussion of the decision to move
forward with the proposed rule, as discussed above. Furthermore, the
NPR also explained why it was proceeding now when it chose not to do so
with the 2007 rulemaking. The NPR noted that the FDIC's decision not to
go forward with the 2007 proposal was rooted in a number of factors.
More specifically, while the FDIC considered the comments received on
the 2007 rulemaking, industry conditions and other factors had the
effect of reducing organizer interest in establishing new industrial
banks. Most notably, interest in organizing new institutions of all
charter types, including industrial banks, diminished given the
deteriorating economic and market conditions identified as early as
mid-2007. In part, this diminished interest reflected the market
uncertainty, restricted liquidity, reduced availability of capital, and
difficult interest rate environment experienced by all institutions
across the banking industry. In addition, interest in industrial bank
charters was affected by changes in certain State laws that limited the
ability to form or acquire industrial banks, and was reflected in the
number of industrial banks seeking conversions to commercial bank
charters. The factors, collectively, argued against moving forward with
a final rule, as did the opportunity to closely monitor the performance
of industrial banks during a period of significant stress.\88\
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\88\ As noted above in section II.H of this Supplementary
Information section, after 2013, the moratorium imposed by Congress
in the Dodd-Frank Act expired by its terms and was not renewed.
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Overall, the performance and condition of industrial banks during
the most recent banking crises was generally consistent with other
FDIC-insured institutions based on assigned supervisory ratings, which
consider each institution's unique business model, complexity, and risk
profile. From the beginning of 2009 through 2011, on average,
industrial banks were assigned composite and component ratings similar
to other charter types with regard to safety and soundness, consumer
protection, and the CRA. Further, the portfolio of industrial banks
reflected similar proportions of institutions that were composite rated
3, 4, or 5 \89\ during the crisis, as well as a similar rate of failure
as the portfolio of traditional community banks.
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\89\ Each financial institution is assigned composite and
component ratings for safety and soundness under the Uniform
Financial Institutions Rating System (UFIRS). Under the UFIRS,
composite ratings are based on an evaluation and rating of six
essential components of an institution's financial condition and
operations: Adequacy of capital, the quality of assets, the
capability of management, the quality and level of earnings, the
adequacy of liquidity, and the sensitivity to market risk.
Evaluations of the components take into consideration the
institution's size and sophistication, the nature and complexity of
its activities, and its risk profile.
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Looking more specifically at financial performance, and
notwithstanding their general focus on nontraditional business models,
industrial banks have experienced, by most key measures of performance
and condition, comparable results to other insured institutions.
Industrial banks tend to maintain higher levels of capital and generate
higher earnings. At year-ends 2009 through 2011, industrial banks
maintained a median tier 1 leverage capital (T1LC) ratio between 13.1
percent and 15.4 percent, whereas, other insured institutions
maintained a median T1LC ratio between 9.3 percent and 9.7 percent. As
of June 30, 2020, the median T1LC ratio for industrial banks was 14.6
[[Page 10713]]
percent as compared to 10.3 percent for other insured institutions.\90\
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\90\ FDIC Call Report Data, June 30, 2020.
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Similarly, industrial banks reported a median return on average
assets (ROAA) ratio of between 0.6 percent and 2.5 percent at year-ends
2009 through 2011, versus a median ROAA ratio of between 0.4 percent
and 0.7 percent for other insured institutions. The median ROAA ratio
for industrial banks and other insured institutions as of June 30,
2020, were 1.1 percent and 0.9 percent, respectively.\91\
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\91\ Id.
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The capital and earnings ratios for industrial banks is reflective
of the higher degree of risk inherent in their business models. The
specialty nature of most industrial bank business models, particularly
when compared to traditional community banks (which constitute a large
proportion of all other insured institutions), have contributed to the
maintenance of higher levels of capital and earnings, generally.
Additionally, since the mid-2000s, approved filings for industrial
banks have largely included CALMAs that required higher capital
requirements than other insured institutions.
Further, industrial banks have been assigned examination ratings
for the capital and earnings components that, on average, were very
similar to those of other insured institutions. This generally
indicates that industrial banks have implemented and maintained
appropriate risk management practices that, given financial condition
and performance, have adequately compensated for the risks inherent in
the business models.
When compared to other insured institutions, industrial banks
typically maintain a lower volume of liquid assets and rely more heavy
on non-core liabilities to fund longer-term earning assets. As a
result, while still satisfactory, the liquidity posture for industrial
banks was considered slightly lower both during and subsequent to the
2008-09 financial crisis. In the FDIC's experience, asset quality has
been comparable between industrial banks and other insured
institutions, indicating both a manageable volume of past due loans or
other problem assets, as well as satisfactory risk management
practices. In addition, management practices for industrial banks also
have been in line with that of other insured institutions, both during
and after the financial crisis.
Despite the above, it is important to note that some industrial
banks experienced stress during the 2008-09 financial crisis. The
circumstances experienced by industrial banks during the crisis were
not dissimilar from the circumstances confronting other insured
institutions and were not the result of factors related to the
industrial bank charter. In general, the FDIC's supervision helped to
isolate the insured industrial bank from the stress of the parent
organization, which helped in managing the potential risk to the
industrial bank and the DIF.
Nevertheless, as discussed above, several commenters noted the
participation of industrial banks or their parent organizations in
various government programs established during the crisis. There were
six industrial banks (or their parent companies) among the more than
110 companies that accessed the debt guarantee program component of the
TLGP, including several owned by parent companies organized as thrift
holding companies. However, it is important to note that establishment
of the TLGP was prompted by the unexpected and precipitous market
conditions brought on by the related housing, financial, and banking
crises that occurred over the period of 2007 through 2011.\92\ These
conditions impacted even the largest banking companies in the U.S. and
abroad.\93\
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\92\ As has been noted in Crisis and Response, the housing
bubble that developed during the early 2000s burst in 2007, bringing
the financial system ``relatively quickly to the brink of collapse''
and resulted in the worst economic dislocation in decades. Large
losses in economic output and large declines in economic indicators
were evident, including with respect to steep declines in employment
and household wealth, among other indicators. The related banking
crisis was also severe, with almost 500 institutions failing during
the period of 2008 through 2013. In addition, between March 2008 and
December 2009, the number of problem banks rose from 90 to over 700,
and ultimately peaked at almost 900 in early 2011. This level
constituted nearly 12 percent of all FDIC-insured institutions. See
note 49.
\93\ Some of the industrial banks that were owned by thrift
holding companies had sister financial institutions that were also
FDIC-insured. Ownership of an industrial bank was not the driving
force that caused or allowed these entities to issue guaranteed debt
through the TLGP. Rather, the companies could have accessed the
program simply by virtue of being a thrift holding company or owning
an FDIC-insured institution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some comments noted the crisis-era conversions of industrial banks
and their parent organizations to commercial banks and BHCs. Of the
conversions noted by commenters, the majority involved industrial banks
that were fundamentally sound, based on the most recent examinations
prior to the conversions. The same held with respect to the respective
parent companies, one of which converted from a thrift holding company
to a bank holding company during the crisis. In each case, the FRB
determined that approval of the BHC applications was warranted, based
on evaluation of the relevant statutory factors and regulatory
requirements. Given these circumstances, the conversions and
participation in crisis-related programs reflected responses to the
broader conditions in all segments of the economy, including the
financial sector.
Finally, industrial banks did not experience a disproportionate
rate of failures when compared to other types of institutions, and
there have not been any industrial bank failures since 2010.\94\
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\94\ As noted above, Security Savings Bank, Henderson, Nevada,
failed in February 2009, and Advanta Bank Corporation, Draper, Utah,
failed in March 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This experience with supervision in the industrial banking space
informs the present rulemaking. The heightened source of strength
requirements, along with other regulatory requirements included in the
final rule, are examples of how the FDIC is applying lessons learned in
this rulemaking process.
Some commenters also questioned why the proposed rule applies to
industrial banks that would be owned by financial and commercial
companies, when the FDIC's 2007 rulemaking was limited to financial
companies and the FDIC's extended moratorium applied only to commercial
companies. As the FDIC discussed in the proposed rule, commenters on
the 2007 rulemaking observed that the FDIC lacked authority to draw a
distinction between financial and nonfinancial industrial bank owners
absent a change in law. The FDIC agrees that the CEBA exception does
not distinguish between commercial and financial parent companies of
industrial banks in excluding them from the definition of ``bank.'' As
discussed above, the FDIC's supervisory experience has shown that a
distinction based on the activities of the parent company is not
warranted in this final rule.
Most crucial, though, is the fact that the most recent of the
moratoriums commenters reference expired in 2013. In the ensuing years,
Congress has declined to act with regard to industrial banks. The FDIC,
as all agencies, is charged with enacting the laws as they exist today.
Therefore, given that the rule is permissible under the statute, that
it is sufficiently supported by the reasoning presented in the NPR and
this Supplementary Information section, and that there is a clear
connection between the facts at hand and the choice to proceed, the
rule is a permissible change in policy.
The FDIC believes that the final rule, which is largely consistent
with the
[[Page 10714]]
proposed rule, is an appropriate response to safety and soundness
issues surrounding financial and commercial ownership of industrial
banks under existing law. Specific suggestions from commenters on the
regulation itself are described below in the appropriate sections of
this preamble on the specific sections of the rule.
B. Description of the Final Rule
1. Section 354.1--Scope
This section of the proposed rule described the industrial banks
and parent companies that would be subject to the rule. The proposed
rule applied to industrial banks that, after the effective date, become
subsidiaries of companies that are Covered Companies, as such term is
defined in Sec. 354.2. Industrial bank subsidiaries of companies that
are subject to Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB would not
have been covered by the proposed rule. An industrial bank that, on or
before the effective date, is a subsidiary of a company that is not
subject to Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB (a grandfathered
industrial bank) generally would not have been covered by the proposed
rule.\95\ A grandfathered industrial bank could become subject to the
proposed rule following a grant of deposit insurance, change in
control, or merger occurring on or after the effective date in which
the resulting institution is an industrial bank that is a subsidiary of
a Covered Company. Thus, a grandfathered industrial bank would have
been subject to the proposed rule, as would its parent company that is
not subject to Federal consolidated supervision, if such a parent
company acquired control of the grandfathered industrial bank pursuant
to a grant of deposit insurance after the effective date, a change in
bank control transaction that closes after the effective date, or if
the grandfathered industrial bank is the surviving institution in a
merger transaction that closes after the effective date. Industrial
banks that are not subsidiaries of a company, for example, those wholly
owned by one or more individuals, would not have been subject to the
proposed rule.
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\95\ Although generally not subject to the rule, grandfathered
industrial banks and their parent companies that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB will remain subject to
FDIC supervision, including but not limited to examinations and
capital requirements. See also the discussion of the reservation of
authority in section IV.B.6. of this Supplementary Information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC specifically sought comment on whether to apply the rule
prospectively or to all industrial banks that, as of the effective
date, are a subsidiary of a parent company that is not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB. A number of commenters
expressed the view that the rule, if adopted, should apply only
prospectively; that is, to industrial banks that become a subsidiary of
a parent company that is a Covered Company as of the effective date of
the rule, noting that existing industrial banks and their parents are
subject to most of the standards of the proposed rule. Three commenters
requested that the rule apply to a parent company and its subsidiary
industrial bank if the parent company became a Covered Company after
either the date of FDIC's notice announcing the FDIC board meeting at
which the proposed rule was considered or the date of the FDIC board
meeting, rather than the effective date.
Some commenters supported the retroactive application of the
proposed rule to all industrial banks that, as of the effective date,
are a subsidiary of a parent that is not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision. These commenters asserted that otherwise
existing industrial banks would enjoy a regulatory advantage over new
industrial banks. They also argued that retroactive application would
enhance the FDIC's ability to perform its supervisory responsibilities.
However, other commenters expressed concerns that applying the rule
retroactively would violate the APA as parent companies of existing
industrial banks had no opportunity to consider these requirements in
their decision to establish or acquire an industrial bank. These
commenters also argued that existing industrial banks have a record of
sound operations under the existing supervisory framework.
In addition, one commenter recommended that the final rule apply to
grandfathered industrial banks that undergo certain other changes, such
as when the industrial bank parent company acquires a subsidiary
engaged in nonfinancial activities, or the industrial bank parent
company engages in new nonfinancial activities. The final rule operates
prospectively on the basis of a filing that would result in an
industrial bank becoming a subsidiary of a company not subject to
consolidated Federal supervision. In contrast, the suggested triggers,
as described, would be applied to existing industrial banks and their
parent companies, would not be related to a filing, and would not
necessarily result in any impact to the industrial bank. Should such an
impact be identified, the FDIC would rely on its supervisory or
enforcement authority as the appropriate means to ensure the safe and
sound operation of the industrial bank. Further, the commenter's
suggestion would be difficult to administer because the recommended
triggers for applicability of the rule--engaging in ``nonfinancial''
activities--historically has proven difficult to define and measure.
Accordingly, the final rule does not adopt the commenter's
recommendation. However, the FDIC will continue to apply all
appropriate supervisory and enforcement authorities to existing
industrial banks and their parent organizations, as appropriate, to
ensure the continued safety and soundness of the industrial bank.
The FDIC also sought comment on whether the rule should apply to
industrial banks that do not have a parent company or to industrial
banks that are controlled by an individual rather than a company.
Several commenters asserted that it was not necessary to apply the
requirements of the proposed rule to industrial banks without parent
companies (or that are controlled by an individual rather than a
company), in part because industrial banks themselves are subject to
the same regulatory treatment as State nonmember banks. By contrast,
several commenters asserted the requirements should be applied to such
industrial banks and/or also to an individual that controls an
industrial bank. The FDIC believes that industrial banks that are owned
by individuals or do not have a parent company generally do not present
the same potential risks as industrial banks owned by companies.
Industrial banks that are controlled by a parent company, whether
engaged in commercial or financial activities, that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision present the risks that are addressed
by the safeguards in this final rule. In addition, applying the rule to
industrial banks that have a parent company and requiring that the
parent company provide capital support is consistent with the statutory
requirements of section 38A of the FDI Act.
After considering these comments regarding the scope of the
proposed rule, the final rule will apply only prospectively as of the
effective date of the rule, to industrial banks that become
subsidiaries of companies that are Covered Companies.\96\ The FDIC must
[[Page 10715]]
consider the requirements of the APA and the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA) in determining the
effective date of new regulations, and both of these statutory schemes
generally provide for an effective date that follows the date on which
the regulations are published in final form. Thus, the final rule will
be effective on April 1, 2021.\97\
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\96\ The proposed rule divided the rule into two temporal
states, on or before the effective date on the one hand, and after
the effective date on the other hand. The final rule amends the
dividing line so that the relevant timeframes would be before the
effective date and on or after the effective date. This change was
made because the effective date is commonly understood to be the
date upon which a rule is effective, not the day before a rule would
take effect.
\97\ During the period before the effective date of the final
rule, the FDIC will consider pending deposit insurance applications,
change in control notices, and merger applications for industrial
banks on a case-by-case basis and impose conditions and requirements
as appropriate and that are consistent with current practice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC also sought comment on whether an individual that controls
the parent company of an industrial bank should be responsible for the
maintenance of the industrial bank's capital and liquidity at or above
FDIC-specified levels and for causing the parent company to comply with
the written agreements, commitments, and restrictions imposed on the
industrial bank. The FDIC also asked whether an individual who is the
dominant shareholder of a Covered Company should be required to commit
to the maintenance of appropriate capital and liquidity levels. As
discussed below, Sec. 354.3(b) of the proposed rule provided that the
FDIC may condition a grant of deposit insurance, issuance of a non-
objection to a change in control, or approval of a merger on an
individual who is a controlling shareholder of a Covered Company
joining as a party to the written agreements required under the rule.
In such cases where the FDIC would require the controlling shareholder
to join as a party, the controlling shareholder would be required to
cause the Covered Company to fulfill its obligations under the written
agreements through the voting of shares, or otherwise. These
obligations include, among other things, maintaining each subsidiary
industrial bank's capital and liquidity at such levels as the FDIC
deems necessary for the safe and sound operation of the industrial bank
(commitment (7)).
Several commenters criticized the controlling shareholder
requirement. Some commenters argued that an individual who controls or
owns a parent company should not be held personally liable for
maintaining the industrial bank's capital or liquidity. These
commenters expressed concern that such a requirement would make it more
difficult to attract shareholders and capital. As noted above, in cases
where the FDIC would require a person that controls a Covered Company
to join as a party, such person would be required to vote their shares
or take such other appropriate actions to cause the Covered Company to
fulfill its obligations under the written agreements. The obligation to
maintain the subsidiary industrial bank's capital and liquidity rests
with the Covered Company.
Other commenters noted that the parent company already commits in
the CALMA to provide support and were concerned that requiring the
parent company's shareholders to also provide a guarantee of support
will drive away investors. These commenters, however, were not opposed
to a requirement for the controlling shareholder to commit to vote his
or her shares to comply with the CALMA. One commenter noted that the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) may impose certain
commitments on the controlling shareholder related to the ownership of
shares and how the controlling shareholder exercises shareholder
rights.
Several commenters supported the approach of imposing certain
conditions at the level of the Covered Company's controlling
shareholder as necessary to ensure the safety and soundness of the
subsidiary industrial bank. Some commenters asserted that the FDIC
should require the dominant shareholders of a parent company to
maintain appropriate levels of capital and liquidity. Another commenter
argued that the choice of ownership structure should not relieve an
individual from source of strength and other obligations.
The FDIC believes that in order to ensure that a Covered Company
serves as a continuing source of financial strength to the subsidiary
industrial bank, the FDIC may exercise its supervisory discretion to
require a controlling, or dominant, shareholder of a Covered Company to
join as a party to the written agreements required under the rule. An
individual with controlling ownership has a direct and effective means
by which to influence the major decisions of the Covered Company by
voting shares or by exercising an influence as a member of the Covered
Company's board of directors. Accordingly, the FDIC is finalizing this
requirement in Sec. 354.3(b) as proposed. As discussed in the proposed
rule, in such cases where FDIC would require the controlling
shareholder to join as a party, the controlling shareholder would be
required to cause the Covered Company to fulfill its obligations under
the written agreements through voting shares, or otherwise, including
to maintain the capital and liquidity levels of the subsidiary
industrial bank at or above FDIC-specified levels. The FDIC intends to
make such a determination on a case-by-case basis and will consider the
business plan, capital structure, risk profile, and business activities
of the Covered Company.
2. Section 354.2--Definitions
This section of the proposed rule listed the definitions that
applied to part 354. Terms that were not defined in the proposed rule
that are defined in section 3 of the FDI Act had the meanings given in
section 3 of the FDI Act.\98\
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\98\ 12 U.S.C. 1813.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The term ``control'' was defined to mean the power, directly or
indirectly, to direct the management or policies of a company or to
vote 25 percent or more of any class of voting securities of a company
and specifically would have included the rebuttable presumption of
control at 12 CFR 303.82(b)(1) and the presumptions of acting in
concert at 12 CFR 303.82(b)(2) \99\ in the same manner and to the same
extent as if they applied to an acquisition of securities of a company
instead of a ``covered institution.'' These definitions are nearly the
same as the definitions of ``control'' in the CBCA \100\ and the FDIC's
regulations implementing the CBCA \101\ except that they would have
broadened the term to apply to control of a company and not solely
insured depository institutions so that the definition can accurately
describe the relationship between the parent company of an industrial
bank and any of its nonbank subsidiaries, which also would be
affiliates of the industrial bank.
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\99\ The proposed rule erroneously referred to the presumptions
set forth at 12 CFR 303.83(b)(1) and (2). The final rule corrects
that technical error to correctly refer to Sec. 303.82(b)(1) and
(2).
\100\ 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(8)(B).
\101\ 12 CFR 303.80 through 303.88.
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Two commenters suggested that the rule should incorporate the
definition of control used in the BHCA and its implementing
regulations. One trade group commenter argued that such an approach
would lead to consistency in the treatment of parent companies of
insured depository institutions. An industrial bank commenter suggested
that aligning the proposed rule's definition of control with the BHCA
and the FRB's regulatory framework \102\ would create a more uniform
system that would make it easier for investors
[[Page 10716]]
to balance their investment decisions with the regulatory implications
of certain levels of investment.
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\102\ 85 FR 12398 (Mar. 2, 2020); see also Regulation Y--
Frequently Asked Questions, available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/reg-y-faqs.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC has considered these comments and has decided to retain
the definition used in the proposed rule. First, the definition of
control proposed in the NPR is consistent with the definition of
control that the FDIC uses in other contexts, namely changes in bank
control. The FDIC in 2015 amended its filing requirements and
processing procedures for notices filed under the CBCA with respect to
proposed acquisitions of State nonmember banks and certain parent
companies thereof.\103\ Among other things, the FDIC's CBCA
implementing regulations adopted the best practices of the related
regulations of the OCC and FRB, rendering more consistent the CBCA
implementing regulations of the Federal banking agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\103\ 80 FR 65889 (Oct. 28, 2015). The FDIC received no comments
on its approach.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the FDIC is not the Federal banking agency responsible for
implementing and interpreting the BHCA and has not developed precedent
for the implementation of the BHCA. In adopting the CBCA implementing
regulations, the FDIC noted that it found the logic of the FRB's
interpretations regarding control under the BHCA useful in analyzing
fact patterns under the CBCA, but did not adopt the FRB's
interpretations, preferring instead to review each case based on the
facts and circumstances presented.\104\
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\104\ 80 FR 65889, 65893.
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The term ``Covered Company'' meant any company that is not subject
to Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB and that, directly or
indirectly, controls an industrial bank (i) as a result of a change in
bank control under section 7(j) of the FDI Act,\105\ (ii) as a result
of a merger transaction pursuant to section 18(c) of the FDI Act,\106\
or (iii) that is granted deposit insurance under section 6 of the FDI
Act,\107\ in each case after the effective date of the rule.
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\105\ 12 U.S.C. 1817(j).
\106\ 12 U.S.C. 1828(c).
\107\ 12 U.S.C. 1816.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under these provisions, a company would control an industrial bank
if the company would have the power, directly or indirectly, (i) to
vote 25 percent or more of any class of voting shares of any industrial
bank or any company that controls the industrial bank (i.e., a parent
company), or (ii) to direct the management or policies of any
industrial bank or any parent company. In addition, the FDIC presumes
that a company would have the power to direct the management or
policies of any industrial bank or any parent company if the company
will, directly or indirectly, own, control, or hold with power to vote
at least 10 percent of any class of voting securities of any industrial
bank or any parent company, and either the industrial bank's shares or
the parent company's shares are registered under section 12 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or no other person (including a
company) will own, control, or hold with power to vote a greater
percentage of any class of voting securities. If two or more companies,
not acting in concert, will each have the same percentage, each such
company will have control. As noted above, control of an industrial
bank can be indirect. For example, company A may control company B,
which in turn may control company C which may control an industrial
bank. Company A and company B would each have indirect control of the
industrial bank, and company C would have direct control. As a result,
the industrial bank would be a subsidiary of companies A, B, and C.
One commenter observed that the Supplementary Information for the
proposed rule characterized BHCs and SLHCs as generally prohibited from
engaging in commercial activities.\108\ This commenter noted that
grandfathered unitary SLHCs are permitted to engage in certain
``grandfathered'' activities, which may include commercial activities
and requested that the FDIC clarify its position with respect to
grandfathered unitary SLHCs. The FDIC recognizes that certain
grandfathered unitary SLHCs may be able to engage in commercial
activities. Further, as the FDIC intends to apply the final rule
prospectively, a grandfathered unitary SLHC that is subject to Federal
consolidated supervision would not be subject to the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See 85 FR at 17772-73.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to question 5 in the NPR, commenters were split on
whether to require a Covered Company to form an intermediate holding
company from which to conduct its financial activities.
One commenter suggested that there would be limited benefit to
requiring a Covered Company that conducts activities other than
financial activities to conduct some or all of its financial activities
(including ownership and control of an industrial bank) through an
intermediate holding company, observing that any potential benefit
could be significantly outweighed by the complexity and cost of
implementing an intermediate holding company structure, and may only
serve to organizationally distance the bank from the primary source of
strength, most commonly the top tier parent company. Another commenter
strongly opposed the possible requirement, arguing that in many cases
it would not make sense to create a corporate structure in service of
an industrial bank that is a small part of the overall activities or
assets of a Covered Company.
Another commenter argued that complex diversified Covered Companies
that conduct nonfinancial activities must be required to structure
their financial activities under an intermediate holding company so
that the intermediate holding company may be subjected to enhanced
supervision.
The final rule will not require a Covered Company that conducts
activities other than financial activities to conduct some or all of
its financial activities (including ownership and control of an
industrial bank) through an intermediate holding company.\109\ The FDIC
believes that such a structure is not required to adequately supervise
industrial banks and their parent companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ The FDIC may consider requiring an intermediate holding
company in the case of a Covered Company that is not located in the
United States and presents unique circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rule includes the definition of Covered Company as
proposed with one revision: The proposed rule defined a Covered Company
as a company that is not subject to Federal consolidated supervision by
the FRB and that controls an industrial bank as a result of the non-
objection to a change in bank control, or approval of a merger
transaction or deposit insurance after the effective date. The final
rule applies where such a non-objection or approval occurs on or after
the effective date. This revision is not a change in FDIC policy, but
rather a recognition that the effective date is commonly understood to
be the date upon which a rule is effective.\110\
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\110\ See also supra note 96.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC received no comment on a number of definitions: The terms
``FDI Act,'' ``filing,'' ``FRB,'' ``industrial bank,'' and ``senior
executive officer.'' The final rule adopts these terms as proposed.
In the NPR, the FDIC requested comment on whether the rule should
include other types of nonbank banks, in addition to industrial banks.
One commenter stated that all bank and financial service companies,
including industrial banks and other institutions that have been
excluded from the BHCA definition of bank (such as credit card
[[Page 10717]]
and limited purpose trust banks) should be subject to a level playing
field, including subjecting the parent company to Federal consolidated
supervision. Another commenter stated that it was not necessary to
include credit card banks and trust companies in the scope of the rule
because they are limited purpose institutions. Another commenter
suggested that the rule may be appropriate for other kinds of banks
whose owners are not subject to the BHCA, but cautioned that there may
be unique issues related to those charters that should be considered
before extending the rule to such institutions.
The FDIC has decided not to extend the scope of the final rule at
this time to other types of banking institutions that have parent
companies not subject to Federal consolidated supervision. These other
types of institutions (credit card banks and limited purpose trust
companies) operate under a limited purpose charter, which narrows the
range of services they may offer. As a result, the FDIC's experience
indicates these charter types have generally not presented the broad
issues as presented by industrial banks.
Commenters also suggested additional terms for which definitions
would be useful. The FDIC believes that the final rule is sufficiently
clear that such additional definitions were not determined to be
necessary, although section IV.B.5. of this Supplementary Information
section provides examples of what will and will not be considered a
``material change'' to a business plan requiring prior FDIC approval.
3. Section 354.3--Written Agreement
This section of the proposed rule prohibited any industrial bank
from becoming a subsidiary of a Covered Company unless the Covered
Company enters into one or more written agreements with the FDIC and
its subsidiary industrial bank. In such agreements, the Covered Company
would make certain required commitments to the FDIC and the industrial
bank, including those listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (8) of Sec.
354.4, the restrictions in Sec. 354.5, and such other provisions as
the FDIC may deem appropriate in the particular circumstances. When two
or more Covered Companies will control (as the term ``control'' is
defined in Sec. 354.2), directly or indirectly, the industrial bank,
each such Covered Company would be required to execute such written
agreement(s). This circumstance could occur, for example, (i) when two
or more Covered Companies will each have the power to vote 10 percent
or more of the voting stock of an industrial bank or of a company that
controls an industrial bank, the stock of which is registered under
section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or (ii) when one
Covered Company will control another Covered Company that directly
controls an industrial bank. Section 354.3(a) of the final rule is
unchanged from the proposal.
As discussed above, proposed Sec. 354.3(b) allowed the FDIC, in
its sole discretion, to require, as a condition to the approval of or
non-objection to a filing, that a controlling shareholder of a Covered
Company join as a party to any written agreement required in Sec.
354.3. In such cases, the controlling shareholder would be required to
cause the Covered Company to fulfill its obligations under the written
agreement, through the voting of shares, or otherwise.
In addition to the written agreements, commitments, and
restrictions of the final rule, the FDIC will condition an approval of
an application or a non-objection to a notice on one or more actions or
inactions of the applicant or notificant, as deemed appropriate by the
FDIC.\111\ The FDIC may enforce conditions imposed in writing in
connection with any action on any application, notice, or other request
by an industrial bank or a company that controls an industrial
bank,\112\ so it is not necessary to include provisions regarding
conditions in the proposed rule.
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\111\ See 12 CFR 303.11(a) (``The FDIC may approve,
conditionally approve, deny, or not object to a filing after
appropriate review and consideration of the record.''). See 12 CFR
303.2(bb) for a list of standard conditions.
\112\ 12 U.S.C. 1818(b); 1831aa(a).
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4. Section 354.4--Required Commitments and Provisions of Written
Agreement
The FDIC historically has included conditions in deposit insurance
approval orders for industrial banks that are intended to create a
sufficient supervisory structure with respect to a Covered Company. The
commitments that the FDIC has required industrial banks and their
parent companies to undertake in written agreements have varied on a
case-by-case basis, depending on the facts and circumstances and the
particular concerns the FDIC has identified during the review of the
application materials.
Section 354.4 of the proposed rule required each party to a written
agreement to comply with paragraphs (a)(1) through (8). These required
commitments are intended to provide the safeguards and protections that
the FDIC believes are prudent to impose to maintain the safety and
soundness of industrial banks that are controlled by Covered Companies.
These required commitments and other provisions are intended to
establish a level of information reporting and parent company
obligations similar to that which would be in place if the Covered
Company were subject to Federal consolidated supervision. The
requirements reflect commitments and additional provisions that, for
the most part, the FDIC has previously required as a condition of
granting deposit insurance to industrial banks. The FDIC proposed to
include these required commitments in the rule to provide transparency
to current and potential industrial banks, the companies that control
them, and the general public.
In order to provide the FDIC with more timely and more complete
information about the activities, financial performance and condition,
operations, prospects, and risk profile of each Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, the proposed rule required that each Covered Company
furnish to the FDIC an initial listing, with annual updates, of all of
the Covered Company's subsidiaries (commitment (1)); consent to the
FDIC's examination of the Covered Company and each of its subsidiaries
to monitor compliance with any written agreements, commitments,
conditions, and certain provisions of law (commitment (2)); submit to
the FDIC an annual report on the Covered Company and its subsidiaries,
and such other reports as the FDIC may request (commitment (3));
maintain such records as the FDIC deems necessary to assess the risks
to the industrial bank and to the DIF (commitment (4)); and cause an
independent audit of each subsidiary industrial bank to be performed
annually (commitment (5)).
In the NPR, the FDIC sought comment on whether the proposed
commitments requiring examination and reporting serve the supervisory
purpose of transparency and identifying any potential risks to the
industrial bank and whether there was a better approach for supervising
a Covered Company. As discussed above in section IV.A.2. of this
Supplementary Information section, a number of commenters were
generally critical of the proposed commitments as being inadequate and
failing to achieve parity with the regime of consolidated supervision
required for BHCs. The FDIC believes that the examination reviews
envisioned under the final rule enhance the existing supervisory
practices and allow for a more robust evaluation of the industrial
bank's affiliate relationships. In addition, the FDIC believes the
enhanced reporting
[[Page 10718]]
requirements in the final rule are consistent with section 38A(d) of
the FDI Act, which provides explicit statutory authority for the FDIC
to require reports from a controlling company of an industrial bank to
assess the ability of the company to comply with the source of strength
requirement, and to enforce compliance by such company.\113\ The final
rule adopts these commitments as proposed, other than as described
below. Implementation of the rule positions the FDIC to better protect
the industrial bank from activities of a parent organization that
present heightened risk to the organization and the bank and to ensure
that the parent company is a continuing source of financial
strength.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\113\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(d).
\114\ See 12 U.S.C. 1820(b) and 1820(b)(4)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to the concerns expressed by commenters that a Covered
Company that is not engaged in financial services would not be covered
by the GLBA, the FDIC is revising the commitment in the final rule that
a Covered Company submit an annual report to the FDIC (commitment (3))
to include a requirement for a Covered Company to inform the FDIC about
its systems for protecting the security, confidentiality, and integrity
of consumer and nonpublic personal information. This reporting will
provide the FDIC appropriate information across all of a Covered
Company's financial and nonfinancial activities to monitor for
potential consumer protection risks.
The FDIC also sought comment on whether the commitment and
requirements of the rule are appropriately tailored in light of the
GLBA's restrictions on the extent to which a Federal banking agency may
regulate and supervise a functionally regulated affiliate of an insured
depository institution.
Most commenters supported the reporting \115\ and examination
requirements that enable the FDIC to monitor and evaluate financial and
other conditions in the parent organization that are relevant to the
industrial bank. One commenter supported carving out functionally
regulated entities from the scope of the required commitments in Sec.
354.4 to be consistent with ``jurisdictional boundaries'' contemplated
by the GLBA. While functionally regulated financial firms do not raise
the types of concerns that commercial firms do with respect to
industrial banks, different regulatory supervisors will have different
supervisory approaches and will be focused, by design, on the aspects
of a business that concern that regulator.\116\ The FDIC serves as the
regulator for the industrial bank and exercises oversight of the parent
company to the extent necessary to ensure the safety and soundness of
the industrial bank subsidiary and to protect the DIF. Through
examination and reporting, the FDIC will be able to gauge and monitor
the operational risks an industrial bank affiliate, whether
functionally regulated or unregulated, presents to the industrial bank.
The FDIC may take action to prevent or redress an unsafe or unsound
practice if action to address that risk when limited to the industrial
bank would not effectively protect against the risk.
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\115\ If the Covered Company is required to submit reports to
the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the requirement to
submit an annual report may be satisfied through submission of SEC
Form 10-K (or equivalent), along with the company's annual audit
report and management letter (with management responses), provided
that the combination of reports addresses each requirement as stated
in the rule. In some cases, it may be necessary or appropriate to
also submit evaluations of the Covered Company's internal
operations, along with management responses, satisfying the
Statement on Standards for Attestation Engagements (SSAE) Number 18,
Report on Controls at a Service Organization Relevant to User
Entities' Internal Control over Financial Reporting, as issued or
amended by the Auditing Standards Board, or similar reports or
evaluations.
\116\ For example, in a situation where a parent company issues
securities, the SEC's role and expertise lies in supervising the
parent company as an issuer of securities, not in the role of a
parent company of an industrial bank.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC sought comment on whether a Covered Company should be
required to disclose to the FDIC certain additional affiliates or
portfolio companies of the Covered Company because these affiliates
could engage in transactions with, or otherwise impact, the subsidiary
industrial bank. One trade association commenter opposed any further
extension of the reporting requirement as being burdensome. A number of
commenters acknowledged the FDIC's authority to understand affiliate
relationships and their impact on the industrial bank, but suggested
that the reporting be tailored by including a materiality threshold.
Otherwise, these commenters believed the reporting would be burdensome
while potentially providing information with no real relevance to the
industrial bank.
Other commenters argued that the final rule should require a
Covered Company to disclose its affiliates and portfolio companies that
could engage in transactions with, or otherwise impact, the subsidiary
industrial bank in order to provide the FDIC a complete and transparent
picture of the business model. These commenters observed that related
entities may impact the financial condition and results of operations
of the Covered Company, which may negatively impact its ability to
serve as a source of strength for the industrial bank.
The FDIC believes that the relationship of a bank with its
affiliated organizations is important to the analysis of the condition
of the bank itself. Because of commonality of ownership or management
that may exist, transactions with affiliates may not be subject to the
same sort of objective analysis that exists in transactions between
independent parties. Also, affiliates offer an opportunity to engage in
types of business activities that are prohibited to the bank itself yet
those activities may affect the condition of the bank. In recognition
of the importance of these relationships, the FDIC has been granted
authority, under certain conditions to examine affiliates in connection
with its examination of a bank to disclose the relationship between the
bank and a given affiliate, as well as the effect of that relationship
on the bank.\117\ The FDIC also has been granted authority to bring
enforcement actions against insured State nonmember banks and their
institution-affiliated parties.\118\ As discussed above in section
IV.A.2., industrial banks are subject to these same examination and
enforcement authorities as other banks, as well as sections 23A and 23B
of the Federal Reserve Act and Regulation W, which govern transactions
with affiliates. In addition, section 38A of the FDI Act provides
authority for the FDIC to require reports from a company that controls
an industrial bank to assess the ability of the company to comply with
the source of strength requirement, and to enforce compliance by such
company.\119\ Section 38A of the FDI Act therefore provides an
additional supervisory tool to the FDIC in regulating Covered
Companies, including their subsidiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\117\ 12 U.S.C. 1820(b)(4).
\118\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(u) and 1818.
\119\ See 12 U.S.C. 1831o-1(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In supervising industrial banks, the FDIC considers each industrial
bank's purpose and placement within the organizational structure and
tailors reporting and other requirements accordingly. Requiring the
disclosure of the Covered Companies' subsidiaries along with the other
reporting tools available to the FDIC as discussed above are sufficient
and will appropriately cover those affiliates of the industrial bank of
most concern to the FDIC. Accordingly, the FDIC is adopting Sec.
354.4(a)(1) as proposed.
[[Page 10719]]
In order to limit the extent of each Covered Company's influence
over a subsidiary industrial bank, the proposed rule required each
Covered Company to commit to limit its representation on the industrial
bank's board of directors to 25 percent of the members of the board, or
if the bank is organized as a limited liability company and is managed
by a board of managers, to 25 percent of the members of the board of
managers, or if the bank is organized as a limited liability company
and is managed by its members, to 25 percent of managing member
interests (commitment (6)). For example, if company A, which has 15
percent representation on the subsidiary industrial bank's board,
controls company B, then the companies' representation would be
aggregated and limited to no more than 25 percent. Thus, company B's
representation would be limited to no more than 10 percent.
The FDIC sought comment on whether this threshold is appropriate.
Three commenters argued against any limitation of a Covered Company's
representation on the board of a subsidiary industrial bank. These
commenters noted the burden in identifying independent director
candidates and obtaining the prior approval for candidates associated
with a Covered Company. In addition, these commenters argued that the
restriction would limit the coordination necessary and appropriate
among entities within an organization. One commenter expressed the
concern that there could be a negative effect on the remaining
directors if an independent director leaves a board. That is, the
potential need to eliminate a director associated with a Covered
Company in order to comply with the rule on a continuing basis.
One commenter asserted that there may be conflicts between the rule
limitation and unspecified State law, while another noted the lack of
comparable limitations on other legal structures, creating a distinct
difference between Covered Companies and other operating entities. A
number of commenters also suggested that relying on the simple majority
of independent directors, as has been applied in other instances, has
not led to issues or concerns regarding the subsidiary industrial bank.
To address the concerns regarding the limitation, commenters
suggested either raising the threshold from 25 percent to one-third, or
requiring that a simple majority be independent. While acknowledging
the need for some degree of director independence to limit the
potential influence from Covered Companies, these commenters noted that
the higher threshold may enhance coordination between the industrial
bank and Covered Companies. By extension, the increased coordination
would enable the Covered Companies to have a better understanding of
the industrial bank's obligations. One comment also noted that the FDIC
would retain its full enforcement authority should circumstances
require action.
The FDIC understands the challenges involved in the selection of
directors of insured institutions. However, the prior approval
requirement should not substantially interfere in a well-qualified
candidate's ability to assume the responsibilities of the position in a
timely manner, and thereby to achieve the noted benefits of appropriate
coordination between the industrial bank and the Covered Company. As to
the possibility that an independent director's departure from a board
may result in temporary non-compliance with the established threshold,
the FDIC's construction and use of written agreements provides
sufficient mechanisms by which compliance can be timely achieved
without the extreme consequence of removing other directors or
requiring FDIC actions to enforce the commitment.
As to the specific threshold, the FDIC is revising the commitment
in the final rule to establish a less than 50 percent threshold, which
will maintain a sufficient number of independent directors while
addressing a number of the commenters' concerns. In making this change,
the FDIC considered the potential numeric challenges that could
confront industrial banks whose boards are comprised of a comparatively
small number of directors. In addition, the change enables Covered
Companies and industrial banks to select director candidates believed
to be most qualified to direct and oversee the institution. As such,
the change enables Covered Companies and industrial banks to exercise
some additional flexibility when selecting directors. Nevertheless, the
FDIC retains the authority, as appropriate, to require a higher
threshold of director independence.
Finally, one comment requested clarification as to whether officers
of the industrial bank would be included within the limitation. In
short, if an officer in question is associated with a Covered Company,
the individual would be counted against the limitation.
In order to ensure that a subsidiary industrial bank has available
to it the resources necessary to maintain sufficient capital and
liquidity, the proposed rule required each party to a written agreement
to commit to maintain each subsidiary industrial bank's capital and
liquidity at such levels as the FDIC deems necessary for the safe and
sound operation of the industrial bank, and to take such other actions
as the FDIC finds appropriate to provide each subsidiary industrial
bank with the resources for additional capital or liquidity (commitment
(7)). As discussed above, the FDIC is finalizing Sec. 354.3(b) as
proposed, which provides that the FDIC may require the controlling or
dominant shareholder of a Covered Company to join as a party to the
written agreements required under the rule, including commitment (7).
The final rule includes commitment (7) as proposed.
Lastly, the proposed rule required that each Covered Company and
its subsidiary industrial bank(s) enter into a tax allocation agreement
that expressly recognizes an agency relationship between the Covered
Company and the subsidiary industrial bank with respect to tax assets
generated by such industrial bank, and that further states that all
such tax assets are held in trust by the Covered Company for the
benefit of the subsidiary industrial bank and promptly remitted to such
industrial bank (commitment (8)). As proposed, a tax allocation
agreement would have also provided that the amount and timing of any
payments or refunds to the subsidiary industrial bank by the Covered
Company should be no less favorable than if the subsidiary industrial
bank were a separate taxpayer.
One commenter questioned the FDIC's statutory authority to impose
such a requirement. The FDIC has the power to issue rules to carry out
the provisions of the FDI Act,\120\ including rules to ensure the
safety and soundness of industrial banks and to protect the DIF. As the
FDIC discussed in the proposed rule, companies and their subsidiaries,
including insured depository institutions and their parent companies,
will often file a consolidated income tax return. A 1998 interagency
policy statement issued by the Federal banking agencies and the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, and an addendum thereto \121\
(collectively,
[[Page 10720]]
Policy Statement), acknowledges this practice, noting that a
consolidated group may prepare and file Federal and State income tax
returns as a group so long as the interests of any insured depository
institution subsidiaries are not prejudiced. Given the potential harm
to insured subsidiary institutions, the Policy Statement encourages
parent companies and their insured depository institution subsidiaries
to enter into written, comprehensive tax allocation agreements, and
notes that inconsistent practices regarding tax obligations may be
viewed as an unsafe and unsound practice prompting either informal or
formal corrective action. The final rule, consistent with the proposed
rule, similarly seeks to avoid potential harm to a subsidiary
industrial bank by requiring such a written tax allocation agreement.
The final rule includes commitment (8) as proposed.
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\120\ ``[T]he Corporation . . . shall have power . . . [t]o
prescribe by its Board of Directors such rules and regulations as it
may deem necessary to carry out the provisions of this chapter or of
any other law which it has the responsibility of administering or
enforcing (except to the extent that authority to issue such rules
and regulations has been expressly and exclusively granted to any
other regulatory agency).'' 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth).
\121\ See Interagency Policy Statement on Income Tax Allocation
in a Holding Company Structure, 63 FR 64757 (Nov. 23, 1998);
Addendum to the Interagency Policy Statement on Income Tax
Allocation in a Holding Company Structure, 79 FR 35228 (June 19,
2014). The 2014 Addendum to the Interagency Policy Statement on
Income Tax Allocation in a Holding Company Structure also clarifies
that all tax allocation agreements are subject to the requirements
of section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act, and tax allocation
agreements that do not clearly acknowledge that an agency
relationship exists may be subject to additional requirements under
section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act.
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In addition to the eight commitments discussed above, Sec.
354.4(b) of the proposed rule permitted the FDIC to condition the
approval of an application or non-objection to a notice on the Covered
Company and industrial bank committing to adopt, maintain, and
implement an FDIC-approved contingency plan that presents one or more
actions to address potential significant financial or operational
stress that could threaten the safe and sound operation of the insured
industrial bank. The plan also would reflect strategies for the orderly
disposition of the industrial bank without the need for the appointment
of a receiver or conservator. Such disposition could include, for
example, sale of the industrial bank to, or merger with, a third party.
The FDIC received two comments on the contingency plan requirement.
One commenter stated that the FDIC should consider size, complexity,
interdependencies, and other relevant factors in requiring, reviewing,
and approving a contingency plan--similar to the ``living will''
requirements under section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act where the FRB
has tiered certain requirements based upon an institution's asset size.
This commenter also suggested that the FDIC formalize these
considerations in the final rule. The other commenter stated that,
while dissolution requirements may be appropriate for large complex
institutions that pose a risk to the DIF, smaller banks do not pose the
same risks nor require the same level of complex planning. According to
this commenter, the cost of contingency planning would outweigh its
benefit for smaller institutions. This commenter also stated that, at a
minimum, any contingency planning requirement should be no more
stringent than the requirement for other FDIC-insured intuitions of the
same size.
As discussed in the NPR, a contingency plan commitment would only
be required in certain circumstances based upon the facts and
circumstances presented, and after taking into consideration size,
complexity, interdependencies, and other relevant factors. The final
rule preserves the FDIC's supervisory discretion to tailor the contents
of any contingency plan to a specific Covered Company and its insured
industrial bank subsidiary. This ability to tailor the requirements of
a contingency plan serves to minimize the burdens of developing and
implementing such a plan. It should also be noted that contingency
plans are not the same as resolution plans under section 165(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act or Sec. 360.10 of the FDIC's Rules and Regulations, and
the contents of a contingency plan (if required) would be far less
complex. A contingency plan is an explanation of the steps the
industrial bank and Covered Company could take to mitigate the impacts
of financial and operational stress outside of the receivership
process. Finally, the FDIC believes that a contingency plan, when
required, may help the FDIC, the Covered Company, and its industrial
bank subsidiary to better understand the relevant interdependencies,
operational risks, and other circumstances or events that could create
safety and soundness concerns and attendant risk to the DIF.
Accordingly, the FDIC is finalizing this requirement as proposed.
While the contingency plan is one type of commitment that the FDIC
would be able to require of Covered Companies and their industrial bank
subsidiaries, there may be other commitments that the FDIC may
determine to be appropriate given the business plan, capital levels, or
organizational structure of a Covered Company or its subsidiary
industrial bank. Section 354.4(c) of the proposed rule provided that
the FDIC may require such additional commitments from a Covered Company
or controlling shareholder of a Covered Company in addition to those
described in Sec. 354.4(a) or (b) in order to ensure the safety and
soundness of the industrial bank and reduce potential risk to the DIF.
Several commenters specifically addressed Sec. 354.4(c).\122\ One
commenter raised concerns that the rule would be applied to Covered
Companies or controlling shareholders of existing industrial banks. As
discussed above, because the rule is constructed to apply
prospectively, parties will become subject to the rule only as the
result of (1) the formation of an industrial bank on or after the
effective date of the final rule, or (2) a merger transaction or change
in control on or after the effective date of the final rule, assuming
the institution retains its industrial bank charter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\122\ These commenters raised the same or similar concerns with
respect to Sec. 354.5(b), which the FDIC also is deleting in the
final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A second commenter raised concerns that Sec. 354.4(c) vests open-
ended authority in the FDIC to change, at any time and for any reason,
the obligations of a Covered Company or controlling shareholder. The
commenter further suggested that agreements should be negotiated at the
outset. Another commenter also suggested that the FDIC should rely on
its enforcement authority rather than including additional commitments
in the written agreements.
In response to commenters' concerns about the application of this
section, the FDIC is removing Sec. 354.4(c) to avoid confusion that
the FDIC would unilaterally impose additional commitments (or
restrictions). Notwithstanding this deletion, the FDIC retains its
general supervision, examination, and enforcement authorities (as
reserved by Sec. 354.6) to take any actions beyond the scope of the
final rule, including actions to ensure the safe and sound operation of
any insured depository institution, including an industrial bank, and
further to ensure that a parent of an industrial bank acts as a source
of financial strength to that insured institution. For example, the
FDIC may require additional, unique commitments from a Covered Company
or a controlling shareholder of a Covered Company when the FDIC
determines it is necessary to address specific elements of a filing or
circumstances related to the filer. Additional commitments may be
derived, for instance, from elements of the business model presented,
including the nature and scope of activities conducted, the risk
profile of the activities, and the complexity of operations. The
proposed relationships
[[Page 10721]]
and transactions with the parent organization that may impact the
industrial bank also could be taken into consideration.
The FDIC also sought comment on whether the rule should include a
commitment that the parent company will maintain its own capital at
some defined level on a consolidated basis. A number of commenters
argued that creating consolidated capital requirements for the parent
company would ensure that it is able to serve as a source of strength
for its subsidiary industrial bank. Some commenters argued that such
capital standards should be comparable to those imposed on BHCs of
similar size and systemic significance. These commenters also argued
that the absence of a consolidated capital standard for the parent
company creates a lower standard of supervision than is imposed by the
BHCA. One commenter recommended that such requirements should be
greater than the requirements applicable to other FDIC-insured
depository institutions due to the enhanced risk of the Covered Company
on the industrial bank and the DIF.
By contrast, several commenters argued that applying a capital
standard on the parent company itself is not encompassed within the
FDIC's statutory mandate to preserve the safety and soundness of
insured depository institutions. Other commenters observed that for
many industrial bank parent companies, measures of tangible equity are
not often the most pertinent indicator of the financial health of the
company or its ability to serve as a source of strength. These
commenters argued that given the diversity of industrial bank parent
company operations, a more tailored approach would be appropriate.
The FDIC does not believe that the final rule should impose capital
requirement commitments on Covered Companies because a one-size-fits
all regulatory approach to capital requirements would not be
appropriate, given the idiosyncratic business models and operations of
such parent companies. The FDIC believes that the final rule and its
supervisory framework adequately ensure that a parent company of an
industrial bank has the ability to serve as a source of strength.
5. Section 354.5--Restrictions on Industrial Bank Subsidiaries of
Covered Companies
Section 354.5 of the proposed rule required the FDIC's prior
written approval before an industrial bank that is a subsidiary of a
Covered Company may take certain actions. These restrictions, like the
required commitments discussed above, are generally intended to provide
the safeguards and protections that the FDIC believes would be prudent
to impose with respect to maintaining the safety and soundness of
industrial banks that become controlled by companies that are not
subject to Federal consolidated supervision. Accordingly, the proposed
rule required prior FDIC approval for the subsidiary industrial bank to
take any of five actions set forth in Sec. 354.5(a).
In order to ensure that the industrial bank does not immediately
after becoming a subsidiary of a Covered Company engage in high-risk or
other inappropriate activities, the subsidiary industrial bank would
have been required to obtain the FDIC's prior approval to make a
material change in its business plan after becoming a subsidiary of a
Covered Company (paragraph (a)(1)). In order to limit the influence of
the parent Covered Company, the subsidiary industrial bank would have
been required to obtain the FDIC's prior approval to add or replace a
member of the board of directors or board of managers or a managing
member, as the case may be (paragraph (a)(2)); add or replace a senior
executive officer (paragraph (a)(3)); employ a senior executive officer
who is associated in any manner with an affiliate of the industrial
bank, such as a director, officer, employee, agent, owner, partner, or
consultant of the Covered Company or a subsidiary thereof (paragraph
(a)(4)); or enter into any contract for material services with the
Covered Company or a subsidiary thereof (paragraph (a)(5)). Pursuant to
proposed Sec. 354.5(b), the FDIC would have been able to, on a case-
by-case basis, impose additional restrictions on the Covered Company or
its controlling shareholder if circumstances warrant. The FDIC is
adopting revisions to the restrictions in Sec. 354.5(a)(2), (3), and
(4) and removing Sec. 354.5(b), as discussed below.
The FDIC sought comment on whether these restrictions should be
time-limited. A number of commenters generally argued that the
restrictions should only apply during the industrial bank's de novo
period (i.e., the first three-years of operation). Some commenters
suggested that the FDIC should or could apply ongoing restrictions
(beyond the de novo period) when special circumstances exist. One
commenter proposed that the FDIC implement a process to allow an
industrial bank to request a waiver of the requirements at the
conclusion of the de novo period. Two commenters recommended limiting
the restrictions to the de novo period except for paragraph (a)(4)
covering employment of a senior executive officer who is also currently
associated with an affiliate of the industrial bank. Most of these
commenters were concerned that the ongoing restrictions in these
sections created greater burdens on industrial banks than required of
non-industrial banks.
By contrast, other commenters argued that these restrictions should
be perpetual in duration and viewed them as important safeguards on the
actions of a Covered Company with respect to an industrial bank
subsidiary. One commenter argued that given the unique and significant
risks posed by industrial banks and their parent companies, the
restrictions should not be limited to any number of years after an
industrial bank becomes a subsidiary of a Covered Company.
The FDIC previously has imposed restrictions similar to those
contained in Sec. 354.5 in prior actions on filings involving
industrial banks. The agency's experience indicates that there are
advantages and disadvantages to imposing such restrictions on a
perpetual basis, just as there are advantages and disadvantages to
imposing the restrictions on a time-limited basis. The relative
advantages and disadvantages vary depending on the nature of the
particular restriction. Nevertheless, certain items are believed so
directly related to the industrial bank's ongoing safe and sound
operation that a perpetual restriction is warranted. As such, the FDIC
is adopting the restrictions regarding material changes to business
plans, entering into contracts for material services with a Covered
Company or its subsidiaries, and employing a senior executive officer
that is associated with an affiliate of the industrial bank as
proposed, with one exception noted below.
However, having considered commenters' suggestions regarding the
restrictions on the appointment of directors (paragraph (a)(2)) and
senior executive officers (paragraph (a)(3)), the FDIC is modifying the
final rule to apply a three-year period to filings approved by the FDIC
for an industrial bank that is a subsidiary of a Covered Company. This
modification provides flexibility for industrial banks to timely
appoint directors and officers. The FDIC's supervisory efforts and
enforcement authorities remain fully accessible if an industrial bank's
director or officer selection raises concerns. Further, consistent with
Sec. 354.6 of the final rule, the FDIC may impose additional
restrictions if appropriate to a particular
[[Page 10722]]
filing. Thus, as circumstances warrant, the FDIC may extend the three-
year period or impose the restriction on a perpetual basis.
In light of the changes to paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) above, the
FDIC is also adopting a revision to the restriction on employment of a
senior executive officer who is currently associated with an affiliate
of the industrial bank (paragraph (a)(4)). The restriction is modified
in the final rule to cover a senior executive officer who is or was
during the past three years associated with an affiliate of the
industrial bank to prevent evasion of the restriction. As noted above,
this restriction is not otherwise modified with respect to its
perpetual duration.
As discussed above, proposed Sec. 354.5(b) has been removed to
align with the change the FDIC made to Sec. 354.4(c).
Several commenters requested that the FDIC clarify what is meant by
a ``material change'' to the industrial bank's business plan that
requires the FDIC's written approval prior to effecting such change.
Because business plan changes or deviations may alter the facts and
circumstances that supported the FDIC's action on a filing in which the
business plan condition was imposed, the following generally have been
determined to constitute a material change in or deviation from an
institution's business plan:
Increases in financial statement categories or
subcategories (such as types of loans, funding, revenue, or capital) of
25 percent or more;
Introduction of distinctly new or different business
strategies or objectives, including products or services, target
markets, delivery channels, or business development strategies;
Changes to the institution's financial strategies, or the
acquisition of assets, an operating entity, or the assumption of
deposits or other liabilities; or
Changes in organizational relationships such that the
manner in which the institution implements or carries out its business
strategies or objectives is impacted.
6. Section 354.6--Reservation of Authority
The FDIC proposed to clarify that it retains the authority to take
supervisory or enforcement actions, including actions to address unsafe
or unsound practices, or violations of law.
The FDIC has broad supervision, examination and enforcement powers
and authorities granted to it by the FDI Act and other laws.\123\ The
reservation of authority in Sec. 354.6 clarifies that, notwithstanding
the final rule, the FDIC retains the authority to exercise those
powers, as it would for any insured depository institution where it is
the appropriate Federal banking agency, which includes industrial
banks. While the final rule establishes certain commitments and
restrictions with respect to industrial banks and Covered Companies,
Sec. 354.6 recognizes that the FDIC could require industrial banks and
their parent companies that are not subject to Federal consolidated
supervision by the FRB to enter into written agreements, provide
additional commitments, or abide by additional restrictions if
necessary to maintain the safety and soundness of the industrial bank.
Additionally, the FDIC's powers and authorities may be applied to
require written commitments and/or to impose restrictions in the
context of a particular industrial bank and its parent to mitigate risk
and ensure the safe and sound operation of the insured depository
institution, even if not in connection with a filing pursuant to this
part.
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\123\ See supra notes 59-62 and accompanying text.
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The FDIC received only one comment that addressed the proposed
reservation of authority, noting that the FDIC's use of its discretion
in applying the restrictions on industrial banks contained in Sec.
354.5, together with a reservation of its examination authority, would
allow for a practical implementation of the FDIC's powers. The FDIC is
adopting Sec. 354.6 as proposed. During the period before the
effective date of the final rule, the FDIC will consider pending
deposit insurance applications, change in control notices, and merger
applications for industrial banks on a case-by-case basis and impose
conditions and requirements as appropriate and that are consistent with
current practice and the FDIC's general examination, supervision, and
enforcement authorities.
7. Responses to Additional Questions
In addition to the questions discussed above, the FDIC sought
responses to several additional questions. In response to the FDIC's
question whether there were additional categories of information that
the FDIC should consider in evaluating an industrial bank's ability to
meet the convenience and needs of the community to be served, some
commenters opposed to the rule expressed concern that the CRA requires
modernization or is otherwise inadequate to ensure industrial banks are
properly serving the credit needs of the communities in which the
industrial bank operates. Two community group commenters went further
indicating that the FDIC should not move forward with this rule until
CRA assessment area procedures are updated.
In January of 2020, the FDIC joined the OCC in issuing a CRA
proposal to modernize CRA regulations.\124\ On May 20, 2020, the OCC
issued its CRA final rule.\125\ The FDIC did not move forward with a
final rule following the proposal and continues to enforce its existing
CRA regulation.\126\ More recently, on September 21, 2020, the FRB
issued an ANPR to solicit public input regarding modernizing the FRB's
CRA regulatory and supervisory framework.\127\ Modernizing CRA
regulations applicable to FDIC-supervised institutions is an important
endeavor, and the FDIC is considering further rulemaking in this area,
which may include seeking additional public input and engaging with the
other prudential regulators. For the time being, however, the FDIC will
continue to operate under the existing CRA regulations, which contain
provisions including public participation in strategic plans and
consideration for community development activity in insured
institutions' broader State-wide and regional areas.
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\124\ 85 FR 1204.
\125\ 85 FR 34734.
\126\ State savings associations will be examined by the FDIC
under the CRA regulations of the OCC, 12 CFR part 25 and 12 CFR part
195, as may be amended from time to time.
\127\ 85 FR 66410.
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However, the statutory factor addressing convenience and needs of
the community to be served is broader than the CRA. In assessing the
statutory factor convenience and needs of the community to be served,
the essential considerations are the deposit and credit needs of the
community to be served, the nature and extent of the opportunity
available to the applicant in that location, and the willingness and
ability of the applicant to serve those financial needs.\128\ The
markets to be served and the economic and competitive conditions within
the markets are important to these considerations. The applicant's CRA
Plan is an important part of the FDIC's evaluation of the convenience
and needs to be served, but it is not the only consideration. The FDIC
believes the benefits to finalizing this rule are significant, and
formalizing and strengthening FDIC's existing supervisory processes and
policies that
[[Page 10723]]
apply to parent companies of industrial banks that are not subject to
Federal consolidated supervision should proceed even in the absence of
a unified interagency rule on CRA.
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\128\ See Statement of Policy on Applications for Deposit
Insurance, 63 FR 44756 (Nov. 20, 1998), amended by 67 FR 79276 (Dec.
27, 2002).
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The FDIC also sought comment on the FDIC's approach to foreign
ownership of industrial banks. Some commenters argued that foreign
ownership of industrial banks should not be permitted, or if permitted,
should be heavily regulated. A commenter argued that the FDIC would not
be well positioned to foresee the risks that a might arise for a
foreign Covered Company in its home market. Another commenter asserted
that the proposed supervisory approach fell short of the FRB's
consolidated supervision framework, leaving the FDIC with limited
examination authority and therefore unable to adequately monitor
foreign companies whose risks might be spread across multiple entities.
Another commenter opposed foreign ownership of industrial banks, but
suggested that if such arrangements were permitted, further commitments
such as a high net stable funding ratio and a prefunded orderly
liquidation fund should be required of foreign Covered Companies.
On the other hand, a number of commenters indicated that there was
no need to build in additional restrictions specific to foreign Covered
Companies. These commenters noted that the FDIC already has robust
supervisory authority to address unsafe and unsound conditions
impacting insured depository institutions, and that the FDIC's practice
of securing additional commitments from foreign parent companies of
industrial banks has been effective. Other commenters also argued for
flexibility, indicating that determining what additional commitments
would be necessary in such instances is a fact-specific inquiry and
should be based on the parent company's ability to be a source of
strength for the industrial bank.
The final rule does not contain any specific requirements for
foreign Covered Companies beyond those to which U.S.-based Covered
Companies are subject. The FDIC's supervisory experience with foreign
parent companies of industrial banks has shown that retaining the
flexibility to secure additional commitments from such entities as
needed is an effective approach. Such commitments would be in addition
to the substantial requirements a Covered Company is subject to in the
written agreements with the FDIC required by the final rule, including
examination and reporting requirements, capital maintenance of the
industrial bank, and contingency planning. These commitments allow the
FDIC to ensure that a Covered Company can and will serve as a source of
strength for its industrial bank, and along with the added flexibility
to require additional commitments as needed, they are sufficient to
address both domestic and foreign Covered Companies.\129\
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\129\ The FDIC may require, in the case of a Covered Company
located outside the United States, United States-based capital and
liquidity support of the subsidiary industrial bank.
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V. Expected Effects
As previously discussed, the final rule requires or imposes certain
conditions, commitments, and restrictions for each deposit insurance
application approval, non-objection to a change in control notice, and
merger application approval that would result in an industrial bank
becoming, pursuant to the rule, a subsidiary of a Covered Company. The
final rule requires such Covered Company to enter into one or more
written agreements with the FDIC and the industrial bank subsidiary.
A. Overview of Industrial Banks
As of June 30, 2020, the FDIC supervised 3,270 insured depository
institutions, with combined assets of $3.84 trillion. Of these, 23
institutions were industrial banks, comprising 0.7 percent of all FDIC-
supervised institutions. The industrial banks hold combined assets of
$169 billion, comprising 4.54 percent of the combined assets of FDIC-
supervised institutions.\130\ The majority of industrial banks are
headquartered in Utah and Nevada, and hold nearly all of the combined
assets of industrial banks. As of June 30, 2020, 14 industrial banks
were headquartered in Utah, four in Nevada, three in California, one in
Hawaii, and one in Minnesota.
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\130\ FDIC Call Report Data, June 30, 2020.
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The final rule applies prospectively to deposit insurance, change
in control, and merger transactions resulting in an industrial bank
that is controlled by a Covered Company. It is difficult to estimate
the number of potential Covered Companies that will seek to establish
or acquire an industrial bank, as such an estimate depends on
considerations that affect Covered Companies' decisions. These
considerations, and how they affect decision making, are difficult for
the FDIC to forecast, estimate, or model, as the considerations include
external parties' evaluations of potential business strategies for the
industrial bank as well as future financial conditions, rates of return
on capital, and innovations in the provision of financial services,
among others. However, during the period of 2017 through 2019, the FDIC
received nine industrial bank deposit insurance applications and one
change in control application.\131\ Consistent with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) \132\ estimates presented elsewhere in this rule,
for this analysis the FDIC is estimating the final rule applies to four
filings per year seeking to establish or acquire an industrial bank.
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\131\ During the same period, the FDIC did not receive any
merger applications involving industrial banks.
\132\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
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The final rule could indirectly affect subsidiaries of Covered
Companies. Such Covered Companies operate through a variety of
structures that include a range of subsidiaries and affiliates.
Further, the final rule includes the FDIC's reservation of authority to
require any industrial bank and its parent company, if not otherwise
subject to part 354, to enter into written agreements, provide
commitments, or abide by restrictions, as appropriate. Therefore, it is
difficult to estimate the number of subsidiaries and affiliates of
prospective Covered Companies, based on information currently available
to the FDIC. However, based on the FDIC's experience as the primary
Federal regulator of industrial banks,\133\ the FDIC believes that the
number of subsidiaries of the prospective Covered Companies affected by
the final rule is likely to be small.
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\133\ Historically, industrial banks have elected not to become
members of the Federal Reserve System. The FDIC is the primary
Federal regulator for State nonmember banks and the insurer for all
insured depository institutions.
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B. Analysis of the Commitments
Under the final rule, prospective Covered Companies are required to
agree to the eight commitments, and may be required to agree to
additional commitments under certain circumstances, which in summary
include commitments by the Covered Company to:
Furnish an initial listing, with annual updates, of the
Covered Company's subsidiaries.
Consent to the examination of the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries.
Submit an annual report on the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, and such other reports as requested.
Maintain such records as deemed necessary.
Cause an independent annual audit of each industrial bank.
Limit the Covered Company's representation on the
industrial bank's board of directors or managers (board),
[[Page 10724]]
as the case may be, to less than 50 percent.
Maintain the industrial bank's capital and liquidity at
such levels as deemed appropriate and take such other action to provide
the industrial bank with a resource for additional capital or
liquidity.
Enter into a tax allocation agreement.
Depending on the facts and circumstances, provide, adopt,
and implement a contingency plan that sets forth strategies for
recovery actions and the orderly disposition of the industrial bank
without the need for a receiver or conservator.
The FDIC historically has imposed prudential conditions similar to
the commitments listed above in connection with approving or not
objecting to certain industrial bank filings. These conditions
generally relate to the board and senior management, the business plan,
operating policies, financial records, affiliate relationships, and
other conditions on a case-by-case basis, depending on the facts and
circumstances identified during the review of the respective
filings.\134\
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\134\ See FDIC Deposit Insurance Application Procedures Manual
Supplement, Applications from Non-Bank and Non-Community Bank
Applicants, FIL-8-2020 (Feb. 10, 2020).
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The table below presents the FDIC's analysis of the estimated costs
to institutions that would be affected by the final rule of each
required commitment. In each case, the FDIC used a total hourly
compensation estimate of $94.15 per hour.\135\ The FDIC received no
comments regarding the estimated burden of the rule as proposed.
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\135\ Subject matter experts in the FDIC's Division of Risk
Management Supervision estimated that time devoted to complying with
the commitments is broken down as follows: 25 percent (Executives
and Managers), 15 percent (Legal), 15 percent (Compliance Officers),
15 percent (Financial Analysts), 15 percent (IT Specialists), and 15
percent (Clerical). The Standard Occupational Classification System
occupations and codes used by the FDIC are: Executives and Managers
(Management Occupations, 110000), Lawyers (Lawyers, Judges, and
Related Workers, 231000), Compliance Officers (Compliance Officers,
131041), Financial Analysts (Financial Analysts, 132051), IT
Specialists (Computer and Mathematical Occupations, 150000), and
Clerical (Office and Administrative Support Occupations, 430000). To
estimate the weighted average hourly compensation cost of these
employees, the 75th percentile hourly wages reported by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS) National Industry-Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates as used for the relevant occupations
in the Depository Credit Intermediation sector, as of May 2018. The
75th-percentile wage for lawyers is not reported, as it exceeds $100
per hour, so $100 per hour is used. The hourly wage rates reported
do not include non-monetary compensation. According to the September
2019 Employer Cost of Employee Compensation data, compensation rates
for health and other benefits are 33.8 percent of total
compensation. To account for non-monetary compensation, the hourly
wage rates reported by BLS are adjusted by that percentage. The
hourly wage is adjusted by 2.28 percent based on changes in the
Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers from May 2018 to September
2019 to account for inflation and ensure that the wage information
is contemporaneous with the non-monetary compensation statistic.
Finally, the benefit-and-inflation-adjusted wages for each
occupation are weighted by the percentages listed above to arrive at
a weighted hourly compensation rate of $94.15.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated annual Estimated annual
Proposed commitment compliance hours compliance costs
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lists of Subsidiaries....... 4 $376.60
Consent to the FDIC 100 9,415.00
Examination................
Annual and Such Other 10 941.50
Reports as the FDIC may
Request....................
Maintain Such Records as the 10 941.50
FDIC Deems Necessary.......
Independent Audit \1\....... 100 9,415.00
Limit Membership on Board 0 0.00
\2\........................
Maintain Capital and 12 1,129.80
Liquidity..................
Tax Allocation Agreement \3\ 0 0.00
-------------------------------------------
Total................... 236 22,219.40
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The disclosure requirement and time to fulfill it are due to
satisfying regulatory inquiries about the audit, and do not include
the cost of the audit itself because Covered Companies already conduct
audits for other purposes.
\2\ Determinations regarding board membership are considered in the
normal course of business.
\3\ Tax allocation agreements are normal and customary among affiliated
corporate entities.
The final rule also authorizes the FDIC to require additional
commitments, including a contingency plan that sets forth strategies
for recovery actions and the orderly disposition of the industrial bank
without the appointment of a receiver or conservator. The additional
contingency plan commitment would be required only in certain
circumstances, based on the facts and circumstances presented and
taking into consideration the size, complexity, interdependencies, and
other factors relevant to the industrial bank and Covered Company.
It is difficult to estimate the recordkeeping, reporting, and
disclosure costs associated with the contingency plan aspect of the
final rule because such an estimate would depend on the organizational
structure and activities of potential future Covered Companies. The
FDIC currently lacks such detailed information on potential future
Covered Companies. While the contingency plan commitment is
meaningfully different from resolution plan requirements for large
banks, and while industrial banks that might need to develop such
contingency plans are meaningfully different from large banks subject
to resolution planning requirements, the FDIC considered prior analyses
regarding resolution planning requirements imposed on certain
institutions to inform its analysis.
Based in part on the FDIC's experience implementing and managing
the resolution planning requirements of Sec. 360.10, the FDIC
estimates that Covered Companies and their industrial banks subject to
the contingency plan commitment could incur $326,000 in recordkeeping,
reporting, and disclosure compliance costs annually. To put the
estimated cost of this commitment into context, the pre-tax net income
of the median industrial bank in 2019 was $64,515,000.\136\ But,
because the FDIC would have the supervisory discretion to tailor the
contents of any contingency plan to a given Covered Company and its
industrial bank, and because of the unique circumstances of the
respective Covered Companies and industrial banks, the compliance costs
incurred by Covered Companies would vary on a case-by-case basis, and
could be lower.
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\136\ FDIC Call Report Data, December 31, 2019.
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The final rule incorporates an additional element as part of the
reporting commitment to address Covered Companies' systems for
protecting the security, confidentiality, and integrity of consumer and
nonpublic personal information. However, the rule is constructed to
[[Page 10725]]
enable affected parties to comply with the various commitments by
relying on established and ongoing reports and records, to the extent
possible. As such, while recognizing the difficulty in estimating the
costs associated with this additional element due to the unique
circumstances of each affected party, the FDIC believes the enhanced
commitment should have no material impact on the estimated overall
burden.
As illustrated by the preceding analysis, the final rule could pose
as much as $348,000 in additional recordkeeping, reporting, and
disclosure compliance costs for each Covered Company that seeks to
establish or acquire an industrial bank.\137\ Covered Companies would
also be likely to incur some regulatory costs associated with making
the necessary changes to internal systems and processes. For context,
the estimated $348,000 recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure costs
only comprise 0.8 percent of the median noninterest expense for the 23
existing industrial banks.\138\
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\137\ $22,219.40 for all Covered Companies that seek to
establish or acquire an industrial bank, and an additional $326,000
for those institutions required to adopt, implement, and adhere to a
contingency plan.
\138\ FDIC Call Report Data, December 31, 2019.
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The FDIC believes that the final rule would benefit the public by
providing transparency for market participants and other interested
parties. Additionally, the FDIC believes that the final rule would
benefit the public by formalizing a framework by which the FDIC would
supervise industrial banks and mitigate risk to the DIF that may
otherwise be presented.
It is difficult to estimate whether the final rule would serve as
an incentive or disincentive for affected parties. Decisions to
establish or acquire an industrial bank depend on many considerations
that the FDIC cannot accurately forecast, estimate, or model, such as
future financial conditions, rates of return on capital, and
innovations in the provision of financial services. The final rule
would enhance transparency in the FDIC's evaluation of filings, which
could increase the number of applications received. However, such
transparency could also serve to limit the number of applications
received.
The FDIC analyzed historical trends in filings that would be
subject to the final rule. Based on that analysis, and consistent with
the FDIC's PRA analysis, the FDIC assumes four applications: Three
deposit insurance applications, and one change in bank control notice
per year, on average. Between 2000 and 2009, the FDIC received as many
as 12 and as few as two deposit insurance applications from entities
seeking to organize an industrial bank; between 2017 and 2019, the FDIC
received as many as four and as few as two such applications.
Therefore, the FDIC believes it is reasonable to assume an annual
deposit insurance application volume of four for the purpose of this
analysis. In addition, the FDIC has received three change in bank
control notices relating to industrial banks since 2010; therefore, the
FDIC believes it is reasonable to assume an annual volume of one for
the purpose of this analysis.
C. Safety and Soundness of Affected Banks
The FDIC believes the final rule is consistent with supervisory
approaches the FDIC has used to insulate industrial banks from risks
posed by their parent companies, and that these supervisory approaches
have been effective. For example, as previously noted, only two small
industrial banks failed during the crisis. The FDIC believes the final
rule would provide a prudentially sound framework for reaching
decisions on industrial bank filings that the FDIC receives from time
to time.
D. Broad Effects on the Banking Industry
To the extent that the final rule results in higher numbers of
industrial banks, the increase could lead to increased competition for
depositors and borrowers. The increased competition could result in one
or more of: Higher yields on deposit products, lower interest rates on
loan products, reduced fees, less restrictive underwriting standards,
greater account opening bonuses for new customers, and other benefits.
To the extent that the final rule does not result in a higher number of
industrial banks, this would not be expected to lead to increased
competition for depositors and borrowers.
E. Expected Effects on Consumers
To the degree the final rule results in an increase in the number
of industrial banks, consumers could benefit from increased competition
within the banking industry. These benefits could take the form of
higher rates on deposit accounts, improved access to credit with better
terms or lower rates, and lower fees for banking services. To the
extent that the proposed rule does not result in a higher number of
industrial banks, this would not be expected to lead to potential
benefits from increased competition within the banking industry.
Finally, in response to comments the final rule includes a commitment
for a Covered Company to inform the FDIC about the Covered Company's
systems for protecting the security, confidentiality, and integrity of
consumer and nonpublic personal information. This aspect of the final
rule is expected to benefit consumers by helping to mitigate potential
consumer protection risks.
F. Expected Effects on the Economy
The final rule's effects on the economy are likely to be modest, in
line with its potential effects on the banking industry and consumers.
If the final rule results in a modest increase in the number of
industrial banks or improvement in the provision of banking products
and services, the effects on the economy are likely to be modest.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an agency,
in connection with a final rule, to prepare and make available for
public comment a final regulatory flexibility analysis that describes
the impact of a final rule on small entities.\139\ However, a final
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required if the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.\140\ The Small Business
Administration (SBA) has defined ``small entities'' to include banking
organizations with total assets of less than or equal to $600
million.\141\
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\139\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\140\ 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
\141\ 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, effective Aug. 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, regardless of whether the affiliates are organized for
profit.'' 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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Generally, the FDIC considers a significant effect to be a
quantified effect in excess of 5 percent of total annual salaries and
benefits per institution, or 2.5 percent of total noninterest expenses.
The FDIC has considered the potential impact of the final rule on small
entities in accordance with the RFA. Based on its analysis and for the
reasons stated below, the FDIC believes that this final rule will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
[[Page 10726]]
As of June 30, 2020, the FDIC supervises 3,270 institutions, of
which 2,492 are defined as small institutions by the terms of the
RFA.\142\ Of these 3,270 institutions, 23 are industrial banks.
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\142\ FDIC Call Report Data, September 30, 2019. In order to
determine whether an entity is ``small'' for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, the FDIC uses its ``affiliated and
acquired assets'' as described in the immediately preceding
footnote. The latest available bank and thrift holding company
reports, which the FDIC uses to determine an entity's ``affiliated
and acquired assets,'' are as of September 30, 2019.
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As previously discussed, a currently chartered industrial bank
would be subject to the final rule, as would its parent company that is
not subject to Federal consolidated supervision, if such a parent
company acquired control of the grandfathered industrial bank pursuant
to a change in bank control transaction that closes after the effective
date of the final rule, or if the grandfathered industrial bank is the
surviving institution in a merger transaction that closes after the
effective date of the final rule.
Of the 23 existing industrial banks, eight reported total assets
less than $600 million, indicating that they could be small entities.
However, to determine whether an institution is ``small'' for the
purposes of the RFA, the SBA requires consideration of the receipts,
employees, or other measure of size of the concern whose size is at
issue and all of its domestic and foreign affiliates.\143\ The FDIC
conducted an analysis to determine whether each industrial bank's
parent company was ``small,'' according to the SBA size standards
applicable to each particular parent company.\144\ Of the eight
industrial banks that reported total assets less than $600 million, the
FDIC was able to determine that three of these potentially small
industrial banks were owned by holding companies which were not small
for purposes of the RFA. However, the FDIC currently lacks information
necessary to determine whether the remaining five industrial banks are
small. Therefore, of the 23 existing industrial banks, 18 are not small
entities for purposes of the RFA, but no more than five, or about 22
percent, may be small entities.
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\143\ 12 CFR 121.103.
\144\ For example, if a particular industrial bank's parent
company was a motorcycle manufacturer, then the size standards
applicable to motorcycle manufacturers were used.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the FDIC has received three change in control notices
relating to industrial banks since 2010. Of those three, only one was
from an industrial bank that could possibly be small for purposes of
the RFA.
Therefore, given that no more than five of the 23 existing
industrial banks are small entities for the purposes of the RFA, and
that no more than one change in control notice received by the FDIC
since 2010 may be from a small entity, the FDIC believes the aspects of
the final rule relating to change in control notices or merger
applications involving industrial banks is not likely to affect a
substantial number of small entities among existing industrial banks.
As previously discussed, the final rule applies to industrial banks
that, as of the effective date, become subsidiaries of companies that
are Covered Companies, as such term is defined in Sec. 354.2. It is
difficult for the FDIC to estimate the volume of future applications
from entities who seek to own and operate an insured industrial bank,
or whether those entities would be considered ``small'' according to
the terms of RFA, with the information currently available to the FDIC.
Such estimates would require detailed information on the particular
business models of institutions, prevailing economic and financial
conditions, the decisions of senior management, and the demand for
financial services, among other things. However, the FDIC reviewed the
firms with industrial bank applications pending before the FDIC as of
December 31, 2019. Each publically traded applicant had a market
capitalization of at least $1 billion as of March 6, 2020. Each
applicant operates either nationally within the United States, or
operates worldwide, and none appear likely to be small for purposes of
the RFA. Therefore, the FDIC believes that the aspects of the final
rule relating to entities who seek to own and operate an insured
industrial bank is not likely to affect a substantial number of small
entities among existing industrial banks.
Therefore, based on the preceding information, the FDIC certifies
that the final rule does not significantly affect a substantial number
of small entities.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements of the PRA,\145\ the FDIC may
not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is not required to respond
to, an information collection unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number.
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\145\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
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As discussed above, the final rule imposes PRA reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for each industrial bank subject to the rule
and its Covered Company. In particular, each industrial bank, and each
Covered Company that directly or indirectly controls the industrial
bank, must (i) agree to furnish the FDIC an initial listing, with
annual updates, of all of the Covered Company's subsidiaries; (ii)
submit to the FDIC an annual report on the Covered Company and its
subsidiaries, and such other reports as the FDIC may request; \146\
(iii) maintain such records as the FDIC deems necessary to assess the
risks to the industrial bank and to the DIF; and (iv) in the event that
the FDIC has concerns about a complex organizational structure or based
on other circumstances presented by a particular filing, the FDIC may
condition the approval of an application or the non-objection to a
notice--in each case that would result in an industrial bank being
controlled, directly or indirectly, by a Covered Company--on the
Covered Company and industrial bank committing to providing to the
FDIC, and thereafter adopting and implementing, a contingency plan that
sets forth, at a minimum, one or more strategies for recovery actions
and the orderly disposition of such industrial bank, without the need
for the appointment of a receiver or conservator.
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\146\ The final rule requires additional reporting by Covered
Companies regarding systems for protecting the security,
confidentiality, and integrity of consumer and nonpublic personal
information as part of the annual report.
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The FDIC submitted its request to OMB for review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) and Sec. 1320.11 of
OMB's implementing regulations (5 CFR part 1320) at the proposed rule
stage. OMB filed a comment assigning the FDIC OMB control number 3064-
0213 and indicated that OMB would re-review the PRA submission once the
proposed rule was finalized. The FDIC did not receive any comments on
the PRA. In addition, as stated above, because the final rule has been
constructed to enable affected parties to comply with the various
reporting commitments by relying on established and ongoing reports and
records, the FDIC believes that the enhanced reporting commitment
should have no effect on the PRA burden listed at the proposed rule
stage.
Information Collection
Title: Industrial Banks and Industrial Loan Companies.
OMB Number: 3064-0213.
Affected Public: Prospective parent companies of industrial banks
and industrial loan companies.
[[Page 10727]]
Summary of Annual Burden and Internal Cost
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Total
Estimated Estimated Estimated annual
Type of burden Obligation to number of frequency of time per Frequency of estimated
respond respondents responses response response burden
(hours)
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Initial listing of all of the Reporting.............. Mandatory........ 4 1.00 4 One Time......... 16
Covered Company's subsidiaries.
Annual update of listing of all Reporting.............. Mandatory........ 4 1.00 4 Annual........... 16
of the Covered Company's
subsidiaries.
Annual report on the Covered Reporting.............. Mandatory........ 4 1.00 10 Annual........... 40
Company and its subsidiaries,
and such other reports as the
FDIC may request.
Maintain records to assess the Recordkeeping.......... Mandatory........ 4 1.00 10 Annual........... 40
risks to the industrial bank
and to the DIF.
Contingency Plan............... Reporting.............. Mandatory........ 1 1.00 345 On Occasion...... 345
--------------------------------------------- ------------
Total Hourly Burden........ ....................... ................. .............. .............. ........... ................. 457
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C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the GLBA \147\ requires each Federal banking agency
to use plain language in all of its proposed and final rules published
after January 1, 2000. The FDIC sought to present the final rule in a
simple and straightforward manner and did not receive any comments on
the use of plain language in the proposed rule.
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\147\ 12 U.S.C. 4809.
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D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the RCDRIA,\148\ in determining the
effective date and administrative compliance requirements for new
regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository institutions, each Federal banking
agency must consider, consistent with principles of safety and
soundness and the public interest, any administrative burdens that such
regulations would place on affected depository institutions, including
small depository institutions, and customers of depository
institutions, as well as the benefits of such regulations. In addition,
section 302(b) of RCDRIA requires new regulations and amendments to
regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on insured depository institutions generally to take
effect on the first day of a calendar quarter that begins on or after
the date on which the regulations are published in final form.\149\ The
FDIC considered the administrative burdens and benefits of the final
rule in determining its effective date and administrative compliance
requirements. As such, the final rule will be effective on April 1,
2021.
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\148\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
\149\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).
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E. Congressional Review Act
For purposes of the Congressional Review Act, OMB makes a
determination as to whether a final rule constitutes a ``major''
rule.\150\ If a rule is deemed a ``major rule'' by the OMB, the
Congressional Review Act generally provides that the rule may not take
effect until at least 60 days following its publication.\151\
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\150\ 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
\151\ 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(3).
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The Congressional Review Act defines a ``major rule'' as any rule
that the Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs of the OMB finds has resulted in or is likely to result in (1)
an annual effect on the economy of $100,000,000 or more; (2) a major
increase in costs or prices for consumers, individual industries,
Federal, State, or local government agencies or geographic regions, or
(3) significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment,
productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in domestic and
export markets.\152\
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\152\ 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
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The FDIC will submit the final rule and other appropriate reports
to Congress and the Government Accountability Office for review.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 354
Bank deposit insurance, Banks, banking, Finance, Holding companies,
Industrial banks, Industrial loan company, Insurance, Parent company,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation amends title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by adding part 354 to read as follows:
PART 354--INDUSTRIAL BANKS
Sec.
354.1 Scope.
354.2 Definitions.
354.3 Written agreement.
354.4 Required commitments and provisions of written agreement.
354.5 Restrictions on industrial bank subsidiaries of Covered
Companies.
354.6 Reservation of authority.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1811, 1815, 1816, 1817, 1818, 1819(a)
(Seventh) and (Tenth), 1820(g), 1831o-1, 3108, 3207.
Sec. 354.1 Scope.
(a) In addition to the applicable filing procedures of part 303 of
this chapter, this part establishes certain requirements for filings
involving an industrial bank or a Covered Company.
(b) The requirements of this part do not apply to an industrial
bank that is organized as a subsidiary of a company that is not subject
to Federal consolidated supervision by the Federal Reserve Board (FRB)
before April 1, 2021. In addition, this part does not apply to:
(1) Any industrial bank that is or becomes controlled by a company
that is subject to Federal consolidated supervision by the FRB; and
(2) Any industrial bank that is not or will not become a subsidiary
of a company.
Sec. 354.2 Definitions.
Unless defined in this section, terms shall have the meaning given
to them in section 3 of the FDI Act.
Control means the power, directly or indirectly, to direct the
management or policies of a company or to vote 25 percent or more of
any class of voting securities of a company, and includes the
rebuttable presumptions of control at Sec. 303.82(b)(1) of this
chapter and of acting in concert at Sec. 303.82(b)(2) of this chapter.
For purposes of this part, the
[[Page 10728]]
presumptions set forth in Sec. 303.82(b)(1) and (2) of this chapter
shall apply with respect to any company in the same manner and to the
same extent as if they applied to an acquisition of securities of the
company.
Covered Company means any company that is not subject to Federal
consolidated supervision by the FRB and that controls an industrial
bank:
(1) As a result of a change in bank control pursuant to section
7(j) of the FDI Act;
(2) As a result of a merger transaction pursuant to section 18(c)
of the FDI Act; or
(3) That is granted deposit insurance by the FDIC pursuant to
section 6 of the FDI Act, in each case on or after April 1, 2021.
FDI Act means the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1811, et
seq.
Filing has the meaning given to it in Sec. 303.2(s) of this
chapter.
FRB means the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and
each Federal Reserve Bank.
Industrial bank means any insured State bank that is an industrial
bank, industrial loan company, or other similar institution that is
excluded from the definition of the term ``bank'' in section 2(c)(2)(H)
of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(H).
Senior executive officer has the meaning given it in Sec.
303.101(b) of this chapter.
Sec. 354.3 Written agreement.
(a) No industrial bank may become a subsidiary of a Covered Company
unless the Covered Company enters into one or more written agreements
with both the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the
subsidiary industrial bank, which contain commitments by the Covered
Company to comply with each of paragraphs (a)(1) through (8) in Sec.
354.4 and such other written agreements, commitments, or restrictions
as the FDIC deems appropriate, including, but not limited to, the
provisions of Sec. Sec. 354.4 and 354.5.
(b) The FDIC may, at its sole discretion, condition a grant of
deposit insurance, issuance of a non-objection to a change in control,
or approval of a merger on an individual who is a controlling
shareholder of a Covered Company joining as a party to any written
agreement required by paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 354.4 Required commitments and provisions of written agreement.
(a) The commitments required to be made in the written agreements
referenced in Sec. 354.3 are set forth in paragraphs (a)(1) through
(8) of this section. In addition, with respect to an industrial bank
subject to this part, the FDIC will condition each grant of deposit
insurance, each issuance of a non-objection to a change in control, and
each approval of a merger on compliance with paragraphs (a)(1) through
(8) of this section by the parties to the written agreement. As
required, each Covered Company must:
(1) Submit to the FDIC an initial listing of all of the Covered
Company's subsidiaries and update such list annually;
(2) Consent to the examination by the FDIC of the Covered Company
and each of its subsidiaries to permit the FDIC to assess compliance
with the provisions of any written agreement, commitment, or condition
imposed; the FDI Act; or any other Federal law for which the FDIC has
specific enforcement jurisdiction against such Covered Company or
subsidiary, and all relevant laws and regulations;
(3) Submit to the FDIC an annual report describing the Covered
Company's operations and activities, in the form and manner prescribed
by the FDIC, and such other reports as may be requested by the FDIC to
inform the FDIC as to the Covered Company's:
(i) Financial condition;
(ii) Systems for identifying, measuring, monitoring, and
controlling financial and operational risks;
(iii) Transactions with depository institution subsidiaries of the
Covered Company;
(iv) Systems for protecting the security, confidentiality, and
integrity of consumer and nonpublic personal information; and
(v) Compliance with applicable provisions of the FDI Act and any
other law or regulation;
(4) Maintain such records as the FDIC may deem necessary to assess
the risks to the subsidiary industrial bank or to the Deposit Insurance
Fund;
(5) Cause an independent audit of each subsidiary industrial bank
to be performed annually;
(6) Limit the Covered Company's direct and indirect representation
on the board of directors or board of managers, as the case may be, of
each subsidiary industrial bank to less than 50 percent of the members
of such board of directors or board of managers, in the aggregate, and,
in the case of a subsidiary industrial bank that is organized as a
member-managed limited liability company, limit the Covered Company's
direct and indirect representation as a managing member to less than 50
percent of the managing member interests of the subsidiary industrial
bank, in the aggregate;
(7) Maintain the capital and liquidity of the subsidiary industrial
bank at such levels as the FDIC deems appropriate, and take such other
actions as the FDIC deems appropriate to provide the subsidiary
industrial bank with a resource for additional capital and liquidity
including, for example, pledging assets, obtaining and maintaining a
letter of credit from a third-party institution acceptable to the FDIC,
and providing indemnification of the subsidiary industrial bank; and
(8) Execute a tax allocation agreement with its subsidiary
industrial bank that expressly states that an agency relationship
exists between the Covered Company and the subsidiary industrial bank
with respect to tax assets generated by such industrial bank, and that
further states that all such tax assets are held in trust by the
Covered Company for the benefit of the subsidiary industrial bank and
will be promptly remitted to such industrial bank. The tax allocation
agreement also must provide that the amount and timing of any payments
or refunds to the subsidiary industrial bank by the Covered Company
should be no less favorable than if the subsidiary industrial bank were
a separate taxpayer.
(b) The FDIC may require such Covered Company and industrial bank
to commit to provide to the FDIC, and, thereafter, implement and adhere
to, a contingency plan subject to the FDIC's approval that sets forth,
at a minimum, recovery actions to address significant financial or
operational stress that could threaten the safe and sound operation of
the industrial bank and one or more strategies for the orderly
disposition of such industrial bank without the need for the
appointment of a receiver or conservator.
Sec. 354.5 Restrictions on industrial bank subsidiaries of Covered
Companies.
Without the FDIC's prior written approval, an industrial bank that
is controlled by a Covered Company shall not:
(a) Make a material change in its business plan after becoming a
subsidiary of such Covered Company;
(b) Add or replace a member of the board of directors, board of
managers, or a managing member, as the case may be, of the subsidiary
industrial bank during the first three years after becoming a
subsidiary of such Covered Company;
(c) Add or replace a senior executive officer during the first
three years after becoming a subsidiary of such Covered Company;
(d) Employ a senior executive officer who is, or during the past
three years has been, associated in any manner (e.g.,
[[Page 10729]]
as a director, officer, employee, agent, owner, partner, or consultant)
with an affiliate of the industrial bank; or
(e) Enter into any contract for services material to the operations
of the industrial bank (for example, loan servicing function) with such
Covered Company or any subsidiary thereof.
Sec. 354.6 Reservation of authority.
Nothing in this part limits the authority of the FDIC under any
other provision of law or regulation to take supervisory or enforcement
actions, including actions to address unsafe or unsound practices or
conditions, or violations of law.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on December 15, 2020.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-28473 Filed 2-22-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P