Simplification of Deposit Insurance Rules, 41766-41786 [2021-15732]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 3, 2021 / Proposed Rules
will make its own determination about
the confidential status of the
information and treat it according to its
determination.
It is DOE’s policy that all comments
may be included in the public docket,
without change and as received,
including any personal information
provided in the comments (except
information deemed to be exempt from
public disclosure).
VI. Approval of the Office of the
Secretary
The Secretary of Energy has approved
publication of this supplemental notice
of proposed rulemaking.
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 430
Administrative practice and
procedure, Confidential business
information, Energy conservation,
Household appliances, Imports,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Small
businesses.
Signing Authority
This document of the Department of
Energy was signed on July 22, 2021, by
Kelly Speakes-Backman, Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary and Acting
Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy, pursuant to
delegated authority from the Secretary
of Energy. That document with the
original signature and date is
maintained by DOE. For administrative
purposes only, and in compliance with
requirements of the Office of the Federal
Register, the undersigned DOE Federal
Register Liaison Officer has been
authorized to sign and submit the
document in electronic format for
publication, as an official document of
the Department of Energy. This
administrative process in no way alters
the legal effect of this document upon
publication in the Federal Register.
Signed in Washington, DC, on July 23,
2021.
Treena V. Garrett,
Federal Register Liaison Officer, U.S.
Department of Energy.
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For the reasons stated in the
preamble, DOE is proposing to amend
part 430 of Chapter II of Title 10, Code
of Federal Regulations as set forth
below:
PART 430—ENERGY CONSERVATION
PROGRAM FOR CONSUMER
PRODUCTS
1. The authority citation for part 430
continues to read as follows:
■
2. Appendix I to subpart B of part 430
is amended by:
■ a. Adding an introductory note; and
■ b. Revising section 2.1.1;
The addition and revision read as
follows:
■
Appendix I to Subpart B of Part 430—
Uniform Test Method for Measuring the
Energy Consumption of Cooking
Products
Note: Prior to [Date 180 days after
publication of a final rule], representations
with respect to the energy use or efficiency
of a microwave oven, including compliance
certifications, must be based on testing
conducted in accordance with either this
appendix as it now appears or appendix I as
it appeared at 10 CFR part 430, subpart B
revised as of January 1, 2021. Beginning on
[Date 180 days after publication of a final
rule] representations with respect to energy
use or efficiency of a microwave oven,
including compliance certifications, must be
based on testing conducted in accordance
with this appendix.
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12 CFR Part 330
RIN 3064–AF27
Simplification of Deposit Insurance
Rules
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
[FR Doc. 2021–16023 Filed 8–2–21; 8:45 am]
The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation is seeking
comment on proposed amendments to
its regulations governing deposit
insurance coverage. The proposed rule
would simplify the deposit insurance
regulations by establishing a ‘‘trust
accounts’’ category that would provide
for coverage of deposits of both
revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts,
and provide consistent deposit
insurance treatment for all mortgage
servicing account balances held to
satisfy principal and interest obligations
to a lender.
DATES: Comments will be accepted until
October 4, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on the notice of proposed rulemaking
using any of the following methods:
• Agency Website: https://
www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/
federal-register-publications/. Follow
the instructions for submitting
comments on the agency website.
• Email: comments@fdic.gov. Include
RIN 3064–AF27 on the subject line of
the message.
• Mail: James P. Sheesley, Assistant
Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments-RIN 3064–AF27, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery: Comments may be
hand delivered to the guard station at
the rear of the 550 17th Street NW
building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Public Inspection: All comments
received, including any personal
information provided, will be posted
generally without change to https://
www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/
federal-register-publications/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
James Watts, Counsel, Legal Division,
(202) 898–6678, jwatts@fdic.gov;
Kathryn Marks, Counsel, Legal Division,
(202) 898–3896, kmarks@fdic.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
Table of Contents
*
*
*
*
*
2.1.1 Microwave ovens, excluding any
microwave oven component of a combined
cooking product. Install the microwave oven
in accordance with the manufacturer’s
instructions and connect to an electrical
supply circuit with voltage as specified in
section 2.2.1 of this appendix. Install the
microwave oven in accordance with section
5, paragraph 5.2 of IEC 62301 (Second
Edition) (incorporated by reference; see
§ 430.3), disregarding the provisions
regarding batteries and the determination,
classification, and testing of relevant modes.
If the microwave oven can communicate
through a network (e.g., Bluetooth® or
internet connection), disable the network
function, by means provided in the
manufacturer’s user manual, for the duration
of testing. If the manufacturer’s user manual
does not provide a means for disabling the
network function, test the microwave oven
with the network function in the factory
default setting or in the as-shipped condition
as instructed in Section 5, Paragraph 5.2 of
IEC 62301 (Second Edition). The clock
display must be on, regardless of
manufacturer’s instructions or default setting
or supplied setting. The clock display must
remain on during testing, unless the clock
display powers down automatically with no
option for the consumer to override this
function. Install a watt meter in the circuit
that meets the requirements of section 2.6.1.1
of this appendix.
*
*
*
*
*
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SUMMARY:
I. Simplification of Deposit Insurance Trust
Rules
A. Policy Objectives
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 6291–6309; 28 U.S.C.
2461 note.
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FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
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B. Background
1. Deposit Insurance and the FDIC’s
Statutory and Regulatory Authority
2. Evolution of Insurance Coverage of Trust
Deposits
3. Current Rules for Coverage of Trust
Deposits
4. Part 370 and Recordkeeping at the
Largest IDIs
5. Need for Further Rulemaking
C. Description of Proposed Rule
D. Examples Demonstrating Coverage
Under Current and Proposed Rules
E. Alternatives Considered
F. Request for Comment
II. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
A. Policy Objectives
B. Background and Need for Rulemaking
C. Proposed Rule
D. Request for Comment
III. Regulatory Analysis
A. Expected Effects
1. Simplification of Trust Rules
2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
1. Simplification of Trust Rules
2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
E. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999—Assessment
of Federal Regulations and Policies on
Families
F. Plain Language
I. Simplification of Deposit Insurance
Trust Rules
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A. Policy Objectives
The Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) is seeking comment
on proposed amendments to its
regulations governing deposit insurance
coverage for deposits held in connection
with trusts.1 The proposed amendments
are intended to (1) provide depositors
and bankers with a rule for trust account
coverage that is easy to understand and
(2) to facilitate the prompt payment of
deposit insurance in accordance with
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI
Act), among other objectives.
Accomplishing these objectives also
would further the FDIC’s mission in
other respects, as discussed in greater
detail below.
Clarifying Insurance Coverage for Trust
Deposits
The proposed amendments would
clarify for depositors, bankers, and other
interested parties the insurance rules
and limits for trust accounts. The
proposal both reduces the number of
rules governing coverage for trust
accounts and establishes a
straightforward calculation to determine
coverage. The deposit insurance trust
rules have evolved over time and can be
difficult to apply in some
circumstances. The proposed
amendments are intended to alleviate
some of the confusion that depositors
and bankers may experience with
respect to insurance coverage and
limits. Under the current regulations,
there are distinct and separate sets of
rules applicable to deposits of revocable
trusts and irrevocable trusts. Each set of
rules has its own criteria for coverage
and methods by which coverage is
calculated. Despite the FDIC’s efforts to
simplify the revocable trust rules in
2008,2 over the last 13 years FDIC
deposit insurance specialists have
responded to approximately 20,000
complex insurance inquiries per year on
average. More than 50 percent of
inquiries pertain to deposit insurance
coverage for trust accounts (revocable or
irrevocable). The consistently high
volume of complex inquiries about trust
accounts over an extended period of
time suggests continued confusion
about insurance limits. To help clarify
insurance limits, the proposed
amendments would further simplify
insurance coverage of trust accounts
(revocable and irrevocable) by
harmonizing the coverage criteria for
certain types of trust accounts and by
establishing a simplified formula for
calculating coverage that would apply to
these deposits. The FDIC proposes using
the calculation that the FDIC first
adopted in 2008 for revocable trust
accounts with five or fewer
beneficiaries. This formula is
straightforward and is already generally
familiar to bankers and depositors.3
Prompt Payment of Deposit Insurance
The FDI Act requires the FDIC to pay
depositors ‘‘as soon as possible’’ after a
bank failure. However, the insurance
determination and subsequent payment
for many trust deposits can be delayed
when FDIC staff must review complex
trust agreements and apply various rules
for determining deposit insurance
coverage. The proposed amendments
are intended to facilitate more timely
deposit insurance determinations for
trust accounts by reducing the amount
of time needed to review trust
agreements and determine coverage.
These amendments should promote the
FDIC’s ability to pay insurance to
2 See
73 FR 56706 (Sep. 30, 2008).
2008, the FDIC adopted an insurance
calculation for revocable trusts that have five or
fewer beneficiaries. Under this rule, 12 CFR
330.10(a), each trust grantor is insured up to
$250,000 per beneficiary.
3 In
1 Trusts include informal revocable trusts
(commonly referred to as payable-on-death
accounts, in-trust-for accounts, or Totten trusts),
formal revocable trusts, and irrevocable trusts.
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depositors promptly following the
failure of an insured depository
institution (IDI), enabling depositors to
meet their financial needs and
obligations.
Facilitating Resolutions
The proposed changes will also
facilitate the resolution of failed IDIs.
The FDIC is routinely required to make
deposit insurance determinations in
connection with IDI failures. In many of
these instances, however, deposit
insurance coverage for trust deposits is
based upon information that is not
maintained in the failed IDI’s deposit
account records. As a result, FDIC staff
work with depositors, trustees, and
other parties to obtain trust
documentation following an IDI’s failure
in order to complete deposit insurance
determinations. The difficulties
associated with completing such a
determination are exacerbated by the
substantial growth in the use of formal
trusts in recent decades. The proposed
amendments could reduce the time
spent reviewing such information and
provide greater flexibility to automate
deposit insurance determinations,
thereby reducing potential delays in the
completion of deposit insurance
determinations and payments. Timely
payment of deposit insurance also helps
to avoid reductions in the franchise
value of failed IDIs, expanding
resolution options and mitigating losses.
Effects on the Deposit Insurance Fund
The FDIC is also mindful of the effect
that the proposed changes to the deposit
insurance regulations could have on
deposit insurance coverage and
generally on the Deposit Insurance Fund
(DIF), which is used to pay deposit
insurance in the event of an IDI’s
failure. The FDIC manages the DIF
according to parameters established by
Congress and continually evaluates the
adequacy of the DIF to protect insured
depositors. The FDIC’s general intent is
that proposed amendments to the trust
rules be neutral with respect to the DIF.
B. Background
1. Deposit Insurance and the FDIC’s
Statutory and Regulatory Authority
The FDIC is an independent agency
that maintains stability and public
confidence in the nation’s financial
system by: Insuring deposits; examining
and supervising IDIs for safety and
soundness and compliance with
consumer financial protection laws; and
resolving IDIs, including large and
complex financial institutions, and
managing receiverships. The FDIC has
helped to maintain public confidence in
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times of financial turmoil, including the
period from 2008 to 2013, when the
United States experienced a severe
financial crisis, and more recently in
2020 during the financial stress
associated with the COVID–19
pandemic. During the more than 88
years since the FDIC was established, no
depositor has lost a penny of FDICinsured funds.
The FDI Act establishes the key
parameters of deposit insurance
coverage, including the standard
maximum deposit insurance amount
(SMDIA), currently $250,000.4 In
addition to providing deposit insurance
coverage up to the SMDIA at each IDI
where a depositor maintains deposits,
the FDI Act also provides separate
insurance coverage for deposits that a
depositor maintains in different rights
and capacities (also known as insurance
categories) at the same IDI.5 For
example, deposits in the single
ownership category are separately
insured from deposits in the joint
ownership category at the same IDI.
The FDIC’s deposit insurance
categories have been defined through
both statute and regulation. Certain
categories, such as the government
deposit category, have been expressly
defined by Congress.6 Other categories,
such as joint deposits and corporate
deposits, have been based on statutory
interpretation and recognized through
regulations issued in 12 CFR part 330
pursuant to the FDIC’s rulemaking
authority. In addition to defining the
insurance categories, the deposit
insurance regulations in part 330
provide the criteria used to determine
insurance coverage for deposits in each
category.
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2. Evolution of Insurance Coverage of
Trust Deposits
Over the years, deposit insurance
coverage has evolved to reflect both the
FDIC’s experience and changes in the
banking industry. The FDI Act includes
provisions defining the coverage for
certain trust deposits,7 while coverage
for other trust deposits has been defined
by regulation.8 The following review of
historical coverage for trust deposits
provides context for the FDIC’s
proposed amendments to the trust rules.
In the FDIC’s earliest years, deposit
insurance coverage for trust deposits
depended upon whether the
4 See
12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(E).
12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(C) (deposits
‘‘maintained by a depositor in the same capacity
and the same right’’ at the same IDI are aggregated
for purposes of the deposit insurance limit).
6 12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(2).
7 See 12 U.S.C. 1817(i), 1821(a).
8 See 12 CFR 330.10, 330.13.
5 See
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beneficiaries of the trust were named in
the bank’s records. If the beneficiaries
were named in the bank’s records, the
trust deposit was insured according to
the beneficiaries’ respective interests
because the deposit was held in trust for
the beneficiaries. If beneficiaries were
not named in the bank’s records, the
grantor trustee was treated as the
depositor instead and insured to the
applicable limit (then $5,000); however,
the trust deposit was insured separately
from the trustee’s other deposits, if any,
at the same bank.9 If the bank itself was
designated as trustee of the trust,
deposits of the trust were insured up to
the $5,000 limit for each trust estate
pursuant to statute.10
Over time, some states began
recognizing the existence of a trust
based on a designation in the bank’s
records that a deposit was held in trust
for another person—even in the absence
of a written trust agreement. In 1955, the
FDIC’s then-General Counsel concluded
that if relevant state law recognized
these ‘‘Totten trusts’’ 11 and the
depositor complied with the law in
establishing the trust, the FDIC would
insure these deposits separately from
the depositor’s other deposit accounts.12
This was the first time the FDIC insured
informal trusts as trust deposits.
The FDIC further clarified insurance
coverage for trust deposits in 1967 when
it issued rules defining the deposit
insurance categories that the FDIC had
recognized.13 These rules defined a
‘‘testamentary accounts’’ category that
included revocable trust accounts,
tentative or Totten trust accounts, and
payable-on-death accounts and similar
accounts evidencing an intention that
the funds shall belong to another person
upon the depositor’s death.
Testamentary deposits were insured up
to the applicable limit (which Congress
had raised to $15,000) for each named
beneficiary who was the depositor’s
spouse, child, or grandchild. If the
9 See
1934 FDIC Annual Report at 143.
Banking Act of 1935, Public Law 74–305
(Aug. 23, 1935), section 101 (‘‘Trust funds held by
an insured bank in a fiduciary capacity whether
held in its trust or deposited in any other
department or in another bank shall be insured in
an amount not to exceed $5,000 for each trust
estate, and when deposited by the fiduciary bank
in another insured bank such trust funds shall be
similarly insured to the fiduciary bank according to
the trust estates represented.’’).
11 The name ‘‘Totten trust’’ is derived from an
early New York court decision recognizing this
form of trust, Matter of Totten, 179 N.Y. 112 (N.Y.
1904). Many other states have recognized similar
types of accounts, commonly known as ‘‘payableon-death’’ accounts or tentative trust accounts.
12 Separate Insurability of ‘‘Totten Trust’’
Accounts (June 1, 1955), Federal Banking Law
Reporter ¶ 92,583.
13 32 FR 10408 (July 14, 1967).
10 See
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named beneficiary did not satisfy this
kinship requirement, the deposit was
aggregated with the depositor’s
individual accounts for purposes of
deposit insurance coverage. The rules
also included a separate ‘‘trust
accounts’’ category for irrevocable trusts
with coverage of up to $15,000 for each
beneficiary’s trust interests in deposit
accounts established by the same
grantor pursuant to a trust agreement.
Irrevocable trust accounts were insured
separately from other deposit accounts
of the trustee, grantor, or beneficiary,
including testamentary accounts.
In 1989, Congress transferred
responsibility for insuring deposits of
savings associations from the Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation
(FSLIC) to the FDIC. As part of this
transition, the FDIC issued uniform
deposit insurance rules for the deposits
of banks and savings associations,
reconciling the differences between the
FDIC and FSLIC insurance rules.14
These uniform rules redesignated the
‘‘testamentary accounts’’ category as
‘‘revocable trust accounts,’’ and
continued to require beneficiaries for
revocable trust deposits to be named,
but added the requirement that these
beneficiaries be named in the failed
IDI’s deposit account records in order
for per-beneficiary coverage to apply. In
the notice of proposed rulemaking
discussing this change, the FDIC
explained that the change was expected
to simplify the deposit insurance
determination process for revocable
trust deposits and expedite the payment
of deposit insurance.15 These rules also
redesignated the ‘‘trust accounts’’
category as ‘‘irrevocable trust accounts’’
and introduced a distinction between
contingent interests and non-contingent
interests in irrevocable trusts that would
affect deposit insurance coverage. Noncontingent interests were each insured
up to the applicable limit (then
$100,000), while contingent interests
were aggregated and insured up to
$100,000 in total.16
As revocable trusts increased in
popularity during the late 1980s and
early 1990s as an estate planning tool,
the FDIC began receiving more inquiries
about the revocable trust rules. Many of
these inquiries were prompted by
complex trust agreements that included
numerous conditions prescribing
whether, when, or how a named
beneficiary would receive trust assets.
FDIC staff generally interpreted the
revocable trust rules to require
14 55
FR 20111 (May 15, 1990).
FR 52399, 52408 (Dec. 21, 1989) (notice of
proposed rulemaking).
16 55 FR 20126 (May 15, 1990).
15 54
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beneficiaries’ interests in formal and
informal revocable trusts to be vested in
order to qualify for separate insurance
coverage, meaning that, after a grantor’s
death, there was no condition attached
to the beneficiary’s interest that would
make the interest contingent (referred to
as a ‘‘defeating contingency’’).17 Staff
reasoned that only a vested trust interest
could establish a reasonable expectation
that the revocable trust deposit ‘‘shall
belong to’’ the beneficiary, as the
regulation required.
In 1996, the FDIC sought public
comment on potential simplification of
the deposit insurance rules, noting that
its experience with bank and savings
association failures and a steady volume
of inquiries on deposit insurance
coverage suggested that simplification
could be beneficial.18 Among other
changes, the FDIC proposed specific
amendments to the rules for revocable
trust deposits. Certain of these changes
were finalized in 1998, when a
provision was added to the rules
defining the conditions that would
constitute a defeating contingency.19
Soon afterward, the FDIC expanded the
list of beneficiaries that would qualify
for per-beneficiary coverage to include
siblings and parents, noting that some
depositors had lost money in bank
failures because they had named nonqualifying beneficiaries.20
In 2003, the FDIC proposed amending
the revocable trust rules, pointing to
continued confusion about the coverage
for revocable trust deposits.21
Specifically, the FDIC proposed to
eliminate the defeating contingency
provisions of the rules, with the result
that coverage would be based on the
interests of qualifying beneficiaries,
irrespective of any defeating
contingencies in the trust agreement.
The FDIC subsequently adopted this
change, noting that it more closely
aligned coverage for living trust
accounts with payable-on-death
accounts.22 Defeating contingency
provisions were not eliminated for
irrevocable trusts. At the same time, the
FDIC also eliminated the requirement to
name the beneficiaries of a formal
revocable trust in the IDI’s deposit
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17 See,
e.g., Advisory Opinion 94–32, Guidelines
for Insurance Coverage of Revocable Trust Accounts
(Including ‘‘Living Trust’’ Accounts), (May 18,
1994). While the vested interest requirement
applied to both formal and informal trusts, interests
in informal trusts were generally considered to be
vested because they automatically passed to the
designated beneficiaries upon the death of the last
grantor.
18 61 FR 25596 (May 22, 1996).
19 63 FR 25750 (May 11, 1998).
20 64 FR 15653 (Apr. 1, 1999).
21 68 FR 38645 (June 30, 2003).
22 69 FR 2825 (Jan. 21, 2004).
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account records.23 Because the FDIC
had to obtain and review trust
agreements from depositors following
an IDI’s failure to determine the
eligibility of the beneficiaries and
allocation of funds to each beneficiary,
eliminating this requirement was based
on the conclusion that also requiring
IDIs to maintain records of trust
beneficiaries, or requiring grantors to
inform IDIs of changes in their trust
agreements, was unnecessary and
burdensome. Though the additional
information might expedite deposit
insurance payments, the FDIC
determined that removing this
recordkeeping requirement would
support ongoing efforts under the
Economic Growth and Regulatory
Paperwork Reduction Act to eliminate
unnecessary regulatory requirements.
The FDIC’s experience with making
deposit insurance determinations
during the early stages of the most
recent financial crisis suggested that
further changes to the trust rules were
necessary. In 2008, the FDIC simplified
the rules in several respects.24 First, it
eliminated the kinship requirement for
revocable trust beneficiaries, instead
allowing any natural person, charitable
organization, or non-profit, to qualify for
per-beneficiary coverage. Second, a
simplified calculation was established if
a revocable trust named five or fewer
beneficiaries; coverage would be
determined without regard to the
allocation of interests among the
beneficiaries. This eliminated the need
to discern and consider beneficial
interests in many cases.
A different insurance calculation
applied to revocable trusts with more
than five beneficiaries. Specifically, at
that time, the SMDIA was $100,000 and
thus if more than five beneficiaries were
named in a revocable trust, coverage
would be the greater of: (1) $500,000; or
(2) the aggregate amount of all
beneficiaries’ interests in the trust(s),
limited to $100,000 per beneficiary.
When the SMDIA was increased to
$250,000, a similar adjustment was
made from $100,000 to $250,000 for the
calculation of per beneficiary coverage.
3. Current Rules for Coverage of Trust
Deposits
The FDIC currently recognizes three
different insurance categories for
deposits held in connection with trusts:
(1) Revocable trusts; (2) irrevocable
trusts; and (3) irrevocable trusts with an
IDI as trustee. The current rules for
determining insurance coverage for
deposits in each of these categories are
described below.
Revocable Trust Deposits
The revocable trust category applies
to deposits for which the depositor has
evidenced an intention that the deposit
shall belong to one or more beneficiaries
upon his or her death. This category
includes deposits held in connection
with formal revocable trusts—that is,
revocable trusts established through a
written trust agreement. It also includes
deposits that are not subject to a formal
trust agreement, where the IDI makes
payment to the beneficiaries identified
in the IDI’s records upon the depositor’s
death based on account titling and
applicable state law. The FDIC refers to
these types of deposits, including Totten
trust accounts, payable-on-death
accounts, and similar accounts, as
‘‘informal revocable trusts.’’ Deposits
associated with formal and informal
revocable trusts are aggregated for
purposes of the deposit insurance rules;
thus, deposits that will pass from the
same grantor to beneficiaries are
aggregated and insured up to the
SMDIA, currently $250,000, per
beneficiary, regardless of whether the
transfer would be accomplished through
a written revocable trust or an informal
revocable trust.25
Under the current revocable trust
rules, beneficiaries include natural
persons, charitable organizations, and
non-profit entities recognized as such
under the Internal Revenue Code of
1986.26 If a named beneficiary does not
satisfy this requirement, funds held in
trust for that beneficiary are treated as
single ownership funds of the grantor
and aggregated with any other single
ownership accounts that the grantor
maintains at the same IDI.27
Certain requirements also must be
satisfied for a deposit to be insured in
the revocable trust category. The
required intention that the funds shall
belong to the beneficiaries upon the
depositor’s death must be manifested in
the ‘‘title’’ of the account using
commonly accepted terms such as ‘‘in
trust for,’’ ‘‘as trustee for,’’ ‘‘payable-ondeath to,’’ or any acronym for these
terms. For purposes of this requirement,
‘‘title’’ includes the IDI’s electronic
deposit account records. For example,
an IDI’s electronic deposit account
records could identify the account as a
revocable trust account through coding
or a similar mechanism.28 In addition,
25 12
CFR 330.10(a).
CFR 330.10(c).
27 12 CFR 330.10(d).
28 12 CFR 330.10(b)(1).
26 12
23 69
24 73
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FR 56706 (Sep. 30, 2008).
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the beneficiaries of informal trusts (i.e.,
payable-on-death accounts) must be
named in the IDI’s deposit account
records.29 Since 2004, the requirement
to name beneficiaries in the IDI’s
deposit account records has not applied
to formal revocable trusts; the FDIC
generally obtains information on
beneficiaries of such trusts from
depositors following an IDI’s failure.
Therefore, if a formal revocable trust
deposit exceeds $250,000 and the
depositor’s IDI were to fail, this will
likely result in a hold being placed on
the deposit until the FDIC can review
the trust agreement and verify that the
beneficiary rules are satisfied, thereby
delaying insurance determinations and
payments to insured depositors.
The calculation of deposit insurance
coverage for revocable trust deposits
depends upon the number of unique
beneficiaries named by a depositor. If
five or fewer beneficiaries have been
named, the depositor is insured in an
amount up to the total number of named
beneficiaries multiplied by the SMDIA,
and the specific allocation of interests
among the beneficiaries is not
considered.30 If more than five
beneficiaries have been named, the
depositor is insured up to the greater of:
(1) Five times the SMDIA; or (2) the
total of the interests of each beneficiary,
with each such interest limited to the
SMDIA.31 For purposes of this
calculation, a life estate interest is
valued at the SMDIA.32
Where a revocable trust deposit is
jointly owned by multiple co-owners,
the interests of each account owner are
separately insured up to the SMDIA per
beneficiary.33 However, if the co-owners
are the only beneficiaries of the trust,
the account is instead insured under the
FDIC’s joint account rule.34
The current revocable trust rule also
contains a provision that was intended
to reduce confusion and the potential
for a decrease in deposit insurance
coverage in the case of the death of a
grantor. Specifically, if a revocable trust
becomes irrevocable due to the death of
the grantor, the trust’s deposit may
continue to be insured under the
revocable trust rules.35 Absent this
provision, the irrevocable trust rules
would apply following the grantor’s
death, as the revocable trust becomes
irrevocable at that time, which could
result in a reduction in coverage.36
Irrevocable Trust Deposits
Deposits held by an irrevocable trust
that has been established either by
written agreement or by statute are
insured in the irrevocable trust deposit
insurance category. Calculating coverage
for deposits insured in this category
requires a determination of whether
beneficiaries’ interests in the trust are
contingent or non-contingent. Noncontingent interests are interests that
may be determined without evaluation
of any contingencies, except for those
covered by the present worth and life
expectancy tables and the rules for their
use set forth in the IRS Federal Estate
Tax Regulations.37 Funds held for noncontingent trust interests are insured up
to the SMDIA for each such
beneficiary.38 Funds held for contingent
trust interests are aggregated and
insured up to the SMDIA in total.39
The irrevocable trust rules do not
apply to deposits held for a grantor’s
retained interest in an irrevocable
trust.40 Such deposits are aggregated
with the grantor’s other single
ownership deposits for purposes of
applying the deposit insurance limit.
Deposits Held by an IDI as Trustee of an
Irrevocable Trust
For deposits held by an IDI in its
capacity as trustee of an irrevocable
trust, deposit insurance coverage is
35 12
CFR 330.10(h).
revocable trust rules tend to provide
greater coverage than the irrevocable trust rules
because contingencies are not considered for
revocable trusts. In addition, where five or fewer
beneficiaries are named by a revocable trust,
specific allocations to beneficiaries also are not
considered.
37 12 CFR 330.1(m). For example, a life estate
interest is generally non-contingent, as it may be
valued using the life expectancy tables. However,
where a trustee has discretion to divert funds from
one beneficiary to another to provide for the second
beneficiary’s medical needs, the first beneficiary’s
interest is contingent upon the trustee’s discretion.
38 12 CFR 330.13(a).
39 12 CFR 330.13(b).
40 See 12 CFR 330.1(r) (definition of ‘‘trust
interest’’ does not include any interest retained by
the settlor).
36 The
29 12
CFR 330.10(b)(2).
CFR 330.10(a).
31 12 CFR 330.10(e).
32 12 CFR 330.10(g). For example, if a revocable
trust provides a life estate for the depositor’s spouse
and remainder interests for six other beneficiaries,
the spouse’s life estate interest would be valued at
$250,000 for purposes of the deposit insurance
calculation.
33 12 CFR 330.10(f)(1).
34 12 CFR 330.10(f)(2).
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governed by section 7(i) of the FDI Act,
a provision rooted in the Banking Act of
1935. Section 7(i) provides that ‘‘trust
funds held on deposit by an insured
depository institution in a fiduciary
capacity as trustee pursuant to any
irrevocable trust established pursuant to
any statute or written trust agreement
shall be insured in an amount not to
exceed the standard maximum deposit
insurance amount . . . for each trust
estate.’’ 41
The FDIC’s regulations governing
coverage for deposits held by an IDI in
its capacity as trustee of an irrevocable
trust are found in § 330.12. The rule
provides that ‘‘trust funds’’ held by an
IDI in its capacity as trustee of an
irrevocable trust, whether held in the
IDI’s trust department or another
department, or deposited by the
fiduciary institution in another IDI, are
insured up to the SMDIA for each owner
or beneficiary represented.42 This
coverage is separate from the coverage
provided for other deposits of the
owners or the beneficiaries,43 and
deposits held for a grantor’s retained
interest are not aggregated with the
grantor’s single ownership deposits.
Given the statutory basis for coverage,
the FDIC is not proposing any changes
to § 330.12.
4. Part 370 and Recordkeeping at the
Largest IDIs
Simplification of the deposit
insurance rules would make deposit
insurance coverage easier to understand
and improve the FDIC’s ability to
resolve insurance claims in a timely
manner, broadly benefiting the public
and IDIs, and it would have particular
significance for the large IDIs that are
subject to part 370 of the FDIC’s
regulations. Part 370 was adopted in
2016 to promote the timely payment of
deposit insurance in the event of the
failure of a large IDI.44 Its development
was prompted by the FDIC’s goal of
ensuring a timely insurance
determination in the event a large IDI
with a high volume of deposit accounts
fails. Part 370 requires ‘‘covered
institutions,’’ which generally include
IDIs with two million or more deposit
accounts, to maintain complete and
accurate depositor information and to
configure their information technology
systems so as to permit the FDIC to
calculate deposit insurance coverage
41 12
U.S.C. 1817(i).
330 defines ‘‘trust funds’’ as ‘‘funds held
by an insured depository institution as trustee
pursuant to any irrevocable trust established
pursuant to any statute or written trust agreement.’’
12 CFR 330.1(q).
43 12 CFR 330.12(a).
44 81 FR 87734 (Dec. 5, 2016).
42 Part
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promptly in the event of the IDI’s
failure. To implement part 370, covered
institutions are updating their deposit
account records and developing systems
capable of applying the deposit
insurance rules in an automated
manner.
In addition to broadly benefiting the
public and all IDIs, simplification of the
deposit insurance rules complements
part 370 in that it would further
promote the timely payment of deposit
insurance for depositors of the largest
IDIs. For instance, neither part 370 nor
any other rule requires covered
institutions to maintain certain records
necessary to make an insurance
determination for formal trust deposits,
meaning that the FDIC would need to
obtain and review revocable and
irrevocable trust agreements following a
covered institution’s failure. Analysis of
data from part 370 covered institutions
suggest the number of revocable trusts is
significant and, if a covered institution
were to fail, processing of deposit
insurance for formal revocable trusts
would likely extend well beyond
normal FDIC payment timeframes.
Simplification of the deposit insurance
rules would streamline insurance
determinations for trust accounts. The
FDIC expects that capabilities
developed in accordance with part 370
will be helpful in addressing many of
the challenges involved in making
deposit insurance determinations in
connection with a very large IDI’s
failure. Simplification of the deposit
insurance rules would provide
additional benefits by reducing the
amount of time needed to collect and
process trust information after failure in
order to make use of a covered
institution’s part 370 deposit insurance
calculation capabilities. With less time
needed to calculate insurance coverage,
the FDIC would be able to make more
timely insurance payments to insured
depositors.
5. Need for Further Rulemaking
The rules governing deposit insurance
coverage for trust deposits have been
simplified on several occasions, but are
still frequently misunderstood, and can
present some implementation
challenges. For example, the current
trust rules often require detailed, timeconsuming, and resource-intensive
review of trust documentation to obtain
the information that is necessary to
calculate deposit insurance coverage.
This information is often not found in
an IDI’s records and must be obtained
from depositors after an IDI’s failure.
For example, the FDIC’s deposit
insurance determinations for depositors
of IndyMac Bank, F.S.B. (IndyMac)
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following its failure in 2008 were
challenging in part because IndyMac
had a large number of trust accounts for
which deposit insurance coverage was
governed by complex deposit insurance
rules.45 FDIC claims personnel
contacted more than 10,500 IndyMac
depositors to obtain the trust
documentation necessary to complete
deposit insurance determinations for
their revocable trust and irrevocable
trust deposits. In some cases, this
process took several months. Revision of
the deposit insurance coverage rules for
trust deposits along the lines proposed
would reduce the amount of
information that must be provided by
trust depositors, as well as the
complexity of the FDIC’s review. This
revision should enable the FDIC to
complete deposit insurance
determinations more rapidly if another
IDI with a large number of trust
accounts were to fail in the future.
Delays in the payment of deposit
insurance can be consequential, as
revocable trust deposits in particular are
often used by depositors to satisfy their
daily financial obligations, and the
proposal would help to mitigate those
delays.
Several factors contribute to the
challenges of making insurance
determinations for trust deposits. First,
there are three different sets of rules
governing deposit insurance coverage
for trust deposits. Understanding the
coverage for a particular deposit
requires a threshold inquiry to
determine which set of rules to apply—
the revocable trust rules, the irrevocable
trust rules, or the rules for deposits held
by an IDI as trustee of an irrevocable
trust. This requires review of the trust
agreement to determine the type of trust
(revocable or irrevocable), and the
inquiry may be complicated by
innovations in state trust law that are
intended to increase the flexibility and
utility of trusts. In some cases, this
threshold inquiry is also complicated by
the provision of the revocable trust rules
that allows for continued coverage
under those rules where a trust becomes
irrevocable upon the grantor’s death.
The result of an irrevocable trust deposit
being insured under the revocable trust
rules has proven confusing for both
depositors and bankers.
Second, even after determining which
set of rules applies to a particular
deposit, it may be challenging to apply
the rules. For example, the revocable
trust rules include unique titling
requirements and beneficiary
45 See Crisis and Response: An FDIC History,
2008–2013 at 197, FN 48, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation 2017.
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requirements. These rules also provide
for two separate calculations to
determine insurance coverage,
depending in part upon whether there
are five or fewer trust beneficiaries or at
least six beneficiaries. In addition, for
revocable trusts that provide benefits to
multiple generations of potential
beneficiaries, the FDIC needs to evaluate
the trust agreement to determine
whether a beneficiary is a primary
beneficiary (immediately entitled to
funds when a grantor dies), contingent
beneficiary, or remainder beneficiary.
Only ‘‘eligible’’ primary beneficiaries
and remainder beneficiaries are
considered in calculating FDIC deposit
insurance coverage. The irrevocable
trust rules may require detailed review
of trust agreements to determine
whether beneficiaries’ interests are
contingent and may also require
actuarial or present value calculations.
These types of requirements complicate
the determination of insurance coverage
for trust deposits, have proven
confusing for depositors, and extend the
amount of time needed to complete a
deposit insurance determination and
insurance payment.
Third, the complexity and variety of
depositors’ trust arrangements adds to
the difficulty of determining deposit
insurance coverage. For example, trust
interests are sometimes defined through
numerous conditions and formulas, and
a careful analysis of these provisions
may be necessary in order to calculate
deposit insurance coverage under the
current rules. Arrangements involving
multiple trusts where the same
beneficiaries are named by the same
grantor(s) in different trusts add to the
difficulty of applying the trust rules.
The FDIC believes that simplification
of the deposit insurance rules also
presents an opportunity to more closely
align the coverage provided for different
types of trust deposits. For example, the
revocable trust rules generally provide
for a greater amount of coverage than
the irrevocable trust rules. This outcome
occurs because contingent interests for
irrevocable trusts are aggregated and
insured up to the SMDIA rather than
being insured up to the SMDIA per
beneficiary, while contingencies are not
considered and therefore do not limit
coverage in the same manner for
revocable trusts.
C. Description of Proposed Rule
The FDIC is proposing to amend the
rules governing deposit insurance
coverage for trust deposits. Generally,
the proposed amendments would:
Merge the revocable and irrevocable
trust categories into one category; apply
a simpler, common calculation method
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to determine insurance coverage for
deposits held by revocable and
irrevocable trusts; and eliminate certain
requirements found in the current rules
for revocable and irrevocable trusts.
Merger of Revocable and Irrevocable
Trust Categories
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As discussed above, the FDIC
historically has insured revocable trust
deposits and irrevocable trust deposits
under two separate insurance categories.
Staff’s experience has been that this
bifurcation often confuses depositors
and bankers, as it requires a threshold
inquiry to determine which set of rules
to apply to a trust deposit. Moreover,
each trust deposit must be categorized
before the aggregation of trust deposits
within each category can be completed.
The FDIC believes that trust deposits
held in connection with revocable and
irrevocable trusts are sufficiently
similar, for purposes of deposit
insurance coverage, to warrant the
merger of these two categories into one
category. Under the FDIC’s current
rules, deposit insurance coverage is
provided because the trustee maintains
the deposit for the benefit of the
beneficiaries. This is true regardless of
whether the trust is revocable or
irrevocable. Merger of the revocable and
irrevocable trust categories would better
conform deposit insurance coverage to
the substance—rather than the legal
form—of the trust arrangement. This
underlying principle of the deposit
insurance rules is particularly important
in the context of trusts, as state law
often provides flexibility to structure
arrangements in different ways to
accomplish a given purpose.46
Depositors may have a variety of reasons
for selecting a particular legal
arrangement, but that decision should
not significantly affect deposit
insurance coverage. Importantly, the
proposed merger of the revocable trust
and irrevocable trust categories into one
category for deposit insurance purposes
would not affect the application or
operation of state trust law; this only
would affect the determination of
deposit insurance coverage for these
types of trust deposits in the event of an
IDI’s failure.
Accordingly, the FDIC is proposing to
amend § 330.10 of its regulations, which
currently applies only to revocable trust
46 For example, the FDIC currently aggregates
deposits in payable-on-death accounts and deposits
of written revocable trusts for purposes of deposit
insurance coverage, despite their separate and
distinct legal mechanisms. Also, where the coowners of a revocable trust are also that trust’s sole
beneficiaries, the FDIC instead insures the trust’s
deposits as joint deposits, reflecting the
arrangement’s substance rather than its legal form.
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deposits, to establish a new ‘‘trust
accounts’’ category that would include
both revocable and irrevocable trust
deposits. The proposed rule defines the
deposits that would be included in this
category: (1) Informal revocable trust
deposits, such as payable-on-death
accounts, in-trust-for accounts, and
Totten trust accounts; (2) formal
revocable trust deposits, defined to
mean deposits held pursuant to a
written revocable trust agreement under
which a deposit passes to one or more
beneficiaries upon the grantor’s death;
and (3) irrevocable trust deposits,
meaning deposits held pursuant to an
irrevocable trust established by written
agreement or by statute. Section 330.10
would not apply to deposits maintained
by an IDI in its capacity as trustee of an
irrevocable trust; these deposits would
continue to be insured separately
pursuant to section 7(i) of the FDI Act
and § 330.12 of the deposit insurance
regulations.
In addition, the merger of the
revocable trust and irrevocable trust
categories eliminates the need for
§ 330.10(h)–(i) of the current revocable
trust rules, which provides that the
revocable trust rules may continue to
apply to a deposit where a revocable
trust becomes irrevocable due to the
death of one or more of the trust’s
grantors. These provisions were
intended to benefit depositors, who
sometimes were unaware that a trust
owner’s death could also trigger a
significant decrease in insurance
coverage as a revocable trust becomes
irrevocable. However, in the FDIC’s
experience, this rule has proven
complex in part because it results in
some irrevocable trusts being insured
per the revocable trust rules, while other
irrevocable trusts are insured under the
irrevocable trust rules.47 As a result, a
depositor could know a trust was
irrevocable but not know which deposit
insurance rules to apply. The proposed
rule would insure deposits of revocable
trusts and irrevocable trusts according
to a common set of rules, eliminating
the need for these provisions
(§ 330.10(h)–(i)) and simplifying
coverage for depositors. Accordingly,
the death of a revocable trust owner
would not result in a decrease in
deposit insurance coverage for the trust.
Coverage for irrevocable and revocable
trusts would fall under the same
category and deposit insurance coverage
would remain the same, even after the
expiration of the six-month grace period
47 As noted above, if a revocable trust becomes
irrevocable due to the death of the grantor, the
trust’s deposit continues to be insured under the
revocable trust rules. 12 CFR 330.10(h).
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following the death of a deposit
owner.48
Calculation of Coverage
The FDIC is proposing to use one
streamlined calculation to determine the
amount of deposit insurance coverage
for deposits of revocable and irrevocable
trusts. This method is already utilized
by the FDIC to calculate coverage for
revocable trusts that have five or fewer
beneficiaries and it is an aspect of the
rules that is generally well-understood
by bankers and trust depositors.
The proposed rule would provide that
a grantor’s trust deposits are insured in
an amount up to the SMDIA (currently
$250,000) multiplied by the number of
trust beneficiaries, not to exceed five
beneficiaries. The FDIC would presume
that, for deposit insurance purposes, the
trust provides for equal treatment of
beneficiaries such that specific
allocation of the funds to the respective
beneficiaries will not be relevant,
consistent with the FDIC’s current
treatment of revocable trusts with five or
fewer beneficiaries. This would, in
effect, limit coverage for a grantor’s trust
deposits at each IDI to a total of
$1,250,000; in other words, maximum
coverage would be equivalent to
$250,000 per beneficiary up to five
beneficiaries. In determining deposit
insurance coverage, the FDIC would
continue to only consider beneficiaries
that are expected to receive the deposit
held by the trust in the IDI; the FDIC
would not consider beneficiaries who
are expected to receive only non-deposit
assets of the trust.
The FDIC is proposing to calculate
coverage in this manner based on its
experience with the revocable trust
rules after the most recent modifications
to these rules in 2008. The FDIC has
found that the deposit insurance
calculation method for revocable trusts
with five or fewer beneficiaries has been
the most straightforward and is easy for
bankers and the public to understand.
This calculation provides for insurance
in an amount up to the total number of
unique grantor-beneficiary trust
relationships (i.e., the number of
grantors, multiplied by the total number
of beneficiaries, multiplied by the
SMDIA).49 In addition to being simpler,
48 The death of an account owner can affect
deposit insurance coverage, often reducing the
amount of coverage that applies to a family’s
accounts. To ensure that families dealing with the
death of a family member have adequate time to
review and restructure accounts if necessary, the
FDIC insures a deceased owner’s accounts as if he
or she were still alive for a period of six months
after his or her death. 12 CFR 330.3(j).
49 For example, two co-grantors that designate
five beneficiaries are insured for up to $2,500,000
(2 × 5 × $250,000).
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this calculation has proven beneficial in
resolutions, as it leads to more prompt
deposit insurance determinations and
quicker access to insured deposits for
depositors. Accordingly, the FDIC
proposes to calculate deposit insurance
coverage for trust deposits based on the
simpler calculation currently used for
revocable trusts with five or fewer
beneficiaries.
The streamlined calculation that
would be used to determine coverage for
revocable trust deposits and irrevocable
trust deposits includes a limit on the
total amount of deposit insurance
coverage for all of a depositor’s funds in
the trust category at the same IDI. The
proposed rule would provide coverage
for trust deposits at each IDI up to a total
of $1,250,000 per grantor; in other
words, each grantor’s insurance limit
would be $250,000 per beneficiary up to
a maximum of five beneficiaries. The
level of five beneficiaries is an
important threshold in the current
revocable trust rules, as it defines
whether a grantor’s coverage is
determined using the simpler
calculation of the number of
beneficiaries multiplied by the SMDIA,
rather than the more complex
calculation involving the consideration
of the amount of each beneficiary’s
specific interest (which applies when
there are six or more beneficiaries). The
trust rules currently limit coverage by
tying coverage to the specific interests of
each beneficiary of an irrevocable trust
or of each beneficiary of a revocable
trust with more than five beneficiaries.
The proposed rule’s $1,250,000 pergrantor, per-IDI limit is more
straightforward and balances the
objectives of simplifying the trust rules,
promoting timely payment of deposit
insurance, facilitating resolutions,
ensuring consistency with the FDI Act,
and limiting risk to the DIF.
The FDIC anticipates that limiting
coverage to $1,250,000 per grantor, per
IDI, for trust deposits would affect very
few depositors, as most trust deposits in
past IDI failures have had balances well
below this level. For example, data
obtained from a sample of IDI failures
from 2010–2020 suggests that only
about 0.085 percent of depositors
maintaining trust deposits might be
affected by the proposed $1,250,000
limit.50 The FDIC does not possess
50 Data from 2,550,001 depositors, including
249,257 trust account depositors, at 246 failed
banks from September 17, 2010–April 3, 2020. A
total of 212 out of 249,257 (.085 percent) trust
account depositors had more than $1.25 million in
deposits across all of their trust accounts. Of these
depositors, only 24 had more than five beneficiaries
named in the bank’s records. However, not all trust
accounts in the sample maintained beneficiary
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sufficient information, however, to
enable it to project the effects of the
proposed limit on current depositors,
and requests that commenters provide
information that might be helpful in this
regard.
Under the proposed rule, to determine
the level of insurance coverage that
would apply to trust deposits,
depositors would still need to identify
the grantors and the eligible
beneficiaries of the trust. The level of
coverage that applies to trust deposits
would no longer be affected by the
specific allocation of trust funds to each
of the beneficiaries of the trust or by
contingencies outlined in the trust
agreement. Instead, the proposed rule
would provide that a grantor’s trust
deposits are insured up to a total of
$1,250,000 per grantor, or an amount up
to the SMDIA multiplied by the number
of eligible beneficiaries, with a limit of
no more than five beneficiaries.
Aggregation
The proposed rule also provides for
the aggregation of revocable and
irrevocable trust deposits for purposes
of applying the deposit insurance limit.
Under the current rules, deposits of
informal revocable trusts and formal
revocable trusts are aggregated for this
purpose.51 The proposed rule would
aggregate a grantor’s informal and
formal revocable trust deposits, as well
as irrevocable trust deposits. For
example, all informal revocable trusts,
formal revocable trusts and irrevocable
trusts held for the same grantor, at the
same IDI would be aggregated and the
grantor’s insurance limit would be
determined by how many eligible and
unique beneficiaries were identified
between all of their trust accounts.52
The deposit insurance coverage
provided in the ‘‘trust accounts’’
category would continue to remain
separate from the coverage provided for
other deposits held in a different right
and capacity at the same IDI. However,
records at the bank, so this likely underestimates
the number of affected depositors.
51 See 12 CFR 330.10(a) (‘‘all funds that a
depositor holds in both living trust accounts and
payable-on-death accounts, at the same FDICinsured institution and naming the same
beneficiaries, are aggregated for insurance
purposes’’).
52 For example, if a grantor maintained both an
informal revocable trust account with three
beneficiaries and a formal revocable trust account
with three separate and unique beneficiaries, the
two accounts would be aggregated and the
maximum deposit insurance available would be
$1.25 million (1 grantor × SMDIA × number of
unique beneficiaries, limited to 5). However, if the
same three people were the beneficiaries of both
accounts, the maximum deposit insurance available
would be $750,000 (1 grantor × SMDIA × 3 unique
beneficiaries).
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a small number of depositors that
currently maintain both revocable trust
and irrevocable trust deposits at the
same IDI may have deposits in excess of
the insurance limit if these separate
categories are combined. The FDIC does
not have data on depositors’ trust
arrangements that would allow it to
estimate the number of depositors that
might be affected in this manner, and
requests that commenters provide
information that might be helpful in this
regard.
Eligible Beneficiaries
Currently, the revocable trust rules
provide that beneficiaries include
natural persons, charitable
organizations, and non-profit entities
recognized as such under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986,53 while the
irrevocable trust rules do not establish
criteria for beneficiaries. The FDIC
believes that a single definition should
be used to determine whether an entity
is an ‘‘eligible’’ beneficiary for all trust
deposits, and proposes to use the
current revocable trust rule’s definition.
The FDIC believes that this will result
in a change in deposit insurance
coverage only in very rare cases.
The proposed rule also would exclude
from the calculation of deposit
insurance coverage beneficiaries that
only would obtain an interest in a trust
if one or more named beneficiaries are
deceased (often referred to as contingent
beneficiaries). In this respect, the
proposed rule would codify existing
practice to include only primary, unique
beneficiaries in the deposit insurance
calculation.54 This would not represent
a substantive change in coverage.
Consistent with treatment under the
current trust rules, naming a chain of
contingent beneficiaries that would
obtain trust interests only in event of a
beneficiary’s death would not increase
deposit insurance coverage.
Finally, the proposed rule would
codify a longstanding interpretation of
the trust rules where an informal
53 12
CFR 330.10(c).
FDIC Financial Institution Employee’s
Guide to Deposit Insurance at 51 (‘‘Sometimes the
trust agreement will provide that if a primary
beneficiary predeceases the owner, the deceased
beneficiary’s share will pass to an alternative or
contingent beneficiary. Regardless of such language,
if the primary beneficiary is alive at the time of an
IDI’s failure, only the primary beneficiary, and not
the alternative or contingent beneficiary, is taken
into account in calculating deposit insurance
coverage.’’). Including only unique beneficiaries
means that when an owner names the same
beneficiary on multiple trust accounts, the
beneficiary will only be counted once in calculating
trust coverage. For example, if a grantor has two
trust deposit accounts and names the same
beneficiary in both trust documents, the total
deposit insurance coverage associated with that
beneficiary is limited to $250,000 in total.
54 See
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revocable trust designates the
depositor’s formal trust as its
beneficiary. A formal trust generally
does not meet the definition of an
eligible beneficiary for deposit
insurance purposes, but the FDIC has
treated such accounts as revocable trust
accounts under the trust rules, insuring
the account as if it were titled in the
name of the formal trust.55
Retained Interests and Ineligible
Beneficiaries’ Interests
The current trust rules provide that in
some instances, funds corresponding to
specific beneficiaries are aggregated
with a grantor’s single ownership
deposits at the same IDI for purposes of
the deposit insurance calculation. These
instances include a grantor’s retained
interest in an irrevocable trust 56 and
interests of beneficiaries that do not
satisfy the definition of ‘‘beneficiary.’’ 57
This adds complexity to the deposit
insurance calculation, as detailed
review of a trust agreement may be
required to value such interests in order
to aggregate them with a grantor’s other
funds. In order to implement the
streamlined calculation for trust
deposits, the FDIC is proposing to
eliminate these provisions. Under the
proposed rules, the grantor and other
beneficiaries that do not satisfy the
definition of ‘‘eligible beneficiary’’
would not be included for purposes of
the deposit insurance calculation.58
Importantly, this would not in any way
limit a grantor’s ability to establish such
trust interests under State law. These
interests simply would not factor into
the calculation of deposit insurance
coverage.
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Future Trusts Named as Beneficiaries
Trusts often contain provisions for the
establishment of one or more new trusts
upon the grantor’s death, and the
proposed rule also would clarify deposit
insurance coverage in these situations.
Specifically, if a trust agreement
provides that trust funds will pass into
one or more new trusts upon the death
of the grantor (or grantors), the future
trust (or trusts) would not be treated as
beneficiaries for purposes of the
calculation. The future trust(s) instead
would be considered mechanisms for
55 See FDIC Financial Institution Employee’s
Guide to Deposit Insurance at 71.
56 See 12 CFR 330.1(r); see also FDIC Financial
Institution Employee’s Guide to Deposit Insurance
at 87.
57 12 CFR 330.10(d).
58 In the unlikely event a trust does not name any
eligible beneficiaries, the FDIC would treat the
trust’s deposits as single ownership deposits. Such
deposits would be aggregated with any other single
ownership deposits that the grantor maintains at the
same IDI and insured up to the SMDIA of $250,000.
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distributing trust funds, and the natural
persons or organizations that receive the
trust funds through the future trusts
would be considered the beneficiaries
for purposes of the deposit insurance
calculation. This clarification is
consistent with published guidance and
would not represent a substantive
change in deposit insurance coverage.59
Naming of Beneficiaries in Deposit
Account Records
Consistent with the current revocable
trust rules, the proposed rule would
continue to require the beneficiaries of
an informal revocable trust to be
specifically named in the deposit
account records of the IDI.60 The FDIC
does not believe this requirement
imposes a burden on IDIs, as informal
revocable trusts by their nature require
the IDI to be able to identify the
individuals or entities to which a
deposit would be paid upon the
depositor’s death.
Presumption of Ownership
The proposed rule also would state
that, unless otherwise specified in an
IDI’s deposit account records, a deposit
of a trust established by multiple
grantors is presumed to be owned in
equal shares. This presumption is
consistent with the current revocable
trust rules.61
Bankruptcy Trustee Deposits
The proposed rule would continue
the current treatment of deposits placed
at an IDI by a bankruptcy trustee. If
funds of multiple bankruptcy estates
were commingled in a single account at
the IDI, each estate would be separately
insured up to the SMDIA.
Deposits Covered Under Other Rules
The proposed rule would exclude
from coverage under § 330.10 certain
trust deposits that are covered by other
sections of the deposit insurance
regulations. For example, employee
benefit plan deposits are insured
pursuant to § 330.14, and investment
company deposits are insured as
corporate deposits pursuant to § 330.11.
Deposits held by an insured depository
institution in its capacity as trustee of
an irrevocable trust are insured
pursuant to § 330.12. In addition, if the
co-owners of an informal or formal
revocable trust are the trust’s sole
beneficiaries, deposits held in
connection with the trust would be
treated as joint deposits under § 330.9.
59 See FDIC Financial Institution Employee’s
Guide to Deposit Insurance at 74.
60 See 12 CFR 330.10(b)(2).
61 See 12 CFR 330.10(f).
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In each of these cases, the FDIC is not
proposing to change the current rule.
Conforming Changes
The proposed simplification of the
calculation for insurance coverage for
trust deposits also would permit the
elimination of certain definitions from
§ 330.1 of the regulations. Specifically,
§ 330.1 defines ‘‘trust interest’’ and
‘‘non-contingent trust interest,’’ terms
that are used in connection with the
current irrevocable trust rules. Because
the proposed rule would eliminate the
evaluation of contingencies in
determining coverage for trust deposits,
the FDIC is proposing to remove these
definitions from the regulation.
Enhancements to Claims Processes
The FDIC is also considering
enhancements to its claims processes to
further promote prompt insurance
determinations for trust deposits. For
example, the FDIC may be able to
establish enhanced processes and
systems for reaching out to depositors
and obtaining trust documentation
following an IDI’s failure. The claims
process enhancements adopted by the
FDIC will likely depend upon the
amendments to the deposit insurance
rules, if any, that are adopted through
this rulemaking.
D. Examples Demonstrating Coverage
Under Current and Proposed Rules
To assist commenters, the FDIC is
providing examples demonstrating how
the proposed rule would apply to
determine deposit insurance coverage
for trust deposits. These examples are
not intended to be all-inclusive; they
merely address a few possible scenarios
involving trust deposits. The FDIC
expects that for the vast majority of
depositors, insurance coverage would
not change under the proposed rule.
The examples here specifically highlight
a few instances where coverage could be
reduced to ensure that commenters are
aware of them. In addition, in any
instances where a trust is established,
the examples assume that the trustee is
not an IDI.
Example 1: Payable-on-Death Account
Depositor A establishes a payable-ondeath account at an FDIC-insured bank.
A has designated three beneficiaries for
this deposit—B, C, and D—who will
receive the funds upon her death, and
listed all three on a form provided to the
bank. The only other deposit account
that A maintains at the same bank is a
checking account with no designated
beneficiaries. What is the maximum
amount of deposit insurance coverage
for A’s deposits at the bank?
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Under the proposed rule, Depositor
A’s payable-on-death account represents
an informal revocable trust and would
be insured in the trust accounts
category. The maximum coverage for
this deposit would be equal to the
SMDIA (currently $250,000) multiplied
by the number of grantors (in this case,
one because A established the account
herself) multiplied by the number of
beneficiaries, up to a maximum of five
(here three, the number of beneficiaries,
is less than five). A’s payable-on-death
account would be insured for up to:
($250,000) × (1) × (3) = $750,000.
The coverage for A’s payable-on-death
account is separate from the coverage
provided for A’s checking account,
which would be insured in the single
ownership category because she has not
named any beneficiaries for that
account. The single ownership checking
account would be insured up to the
SMDIA, $250,000. A’s total insurance
coverage for her deposits at the bank
would be: $750,000 + $250,000 =
$1,000,000. Notably, this level of
coverage is the same as that provided by
the current deposit insurance rules.
Example 2: Formal Revocable Trust and
Informal Revocable Trust
Depositors E and F jointly establish a
payable-on-death account at an FDICinsured bank. E and F have designated
three beneficiaries for this deposit—G,
H and I—who will receive the funds
after both E and F are deceased. They
list these beneficiaries on a form
provided to the bank. E and F also
jointly establish an account titled in the
name of the ‘‘E and F Living Trust’’ at
the same bank. E and F are the grantors
of the living trust, a formal revocable
trust that includes the same three
beneficiaries, G, H, and I. The grantors,
E and F, do not maintain any other
deposit accounts at this same bank.
What is the maximum amount of
deposit insurance coverage for E and F’s
deposits?
Under the proposed rule, E and F’s
payable-on-death account represents an
informal revocable trust and would be
insured in the trust accounts category. E
and F’s living trust account constitutes
a formal revocable trust and also would
be insured in the trust accounts
category. To the extent these deposits
would pass from the same grantor (E or
F) to beneficiaries (G, H, and I), they
would be aggregated for purposes of
applying the deposit insurance limit. As
under the current rules, it would be
irrelevant that the grantors’ deposits are
divided between the payable-on-death
account and the living trust account.
The maximum coverage for E and F’s
deposits would be equal to the SMDIA
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($250,000) multiplied by the number of
grantors (two, because E and F are the
grantors with respect to both deposits)
multiplied by the number of unique
beneficiaries, up to a maximum of five
(here three, the number of beneficiaries,
is less than five). Therefore, the
coverage for E and F’s trust deposits
would be: ($250,000) × (2) × (3) =
$1,500,000. This level of coverage is the
same as that provided by the current
deposit insurance rules.
Example 3: Two-Owner Trust and a
One-Owner Trust
Depositors J and K jointly establish a
payable-on-death account at an FDICinsured bank. J and K have designated
three beneficiaries for this deposit—L,
M and N—who will receive the funds
after both J and K are deceased. They
list these beneficiaries on a form
provided to the bank. At the same FDICinsured bank, J establishes a payable-ondeath account and designates K as the
beneficiary upon J’s death. What is the
maximum amount of coverage for J and
K’s deposits?
Under the proposed rule, both
accounts would be insured under the
trust account category. To the extent
these deposits would pass from the
same grantor (J or K) to beneficiaries
(such as L, M, and N), they would be
aggregated for purposes of applying the
deposit insurance limit. For example, K
identified three beneficiaries (L, M and
N), and therefore, K’s insurance limit is
$750,000 (or 1 × 3 × SMDIA). K would
be fully insured as long as one-half
interest of the co-owned trust account
was $750,000 or less, which is the same
level of coverage provided under
current rules.
In this example, J’s situation differs
from K because J has a second trust
account, but the insurance calculation
remains the same. Specifically, J has
two trust accounts and identified four
unique beneficiaries (L, M, N, and K);
therefore, J’s insurance limit is
$1,000,000 (or 1 × 4 × SMDIA). J would
remain fully insured as long as J’s trust
deposits—equal to one-half of the coowned trust account plus J’s personal
trust account—total no more than
$1,000,000. This methodology and level
of coverage is the same as that provided
by the current deposit insurance rules.
Example 4: Revocable and Irrevocable
Trusts
Depositor O establishes a deposit
account at an FDIC-insured bank titled
the ‘‘O Living Trust’’. O is the grantor
of this living trust, a formal revocable
trust that includes three beneficiaries—
P, Q, and R. The grantor, O, also
establishes an irrevocable trust for the
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benefit of the same three beneficiaries.
The trustee of the irrevocable trust
maintains a deposit account at the same
bank as the living trust account, titled
in the name of the irrevocable trust.
Neither O nor the trustee maintains
other deposit accounts at the same bank.
What is the insurance coverage for these
deposits?
Under the proposed rule, the living
trust account is a deposit of a formal
revocable trust and would be insured in
the trust accounts category. The deposit
of the irrevocable trust also would be
insured in the trust accounts category.
To the extent these deposits would pass
from the same grantor (O) to
beneficiaries (P, Q, or R), they would be
aggregated for purposes of applying the
deposit insurance limit. It would be
irrelevant that the deposits are divided
between the living trust account and the
irrevocable trust account. The maximum
coverage for these deposits would be
equal to the SMDIA ($250,000)
multiplied by the number of grantors
(one, because O is the grantor with
respect to both deposits) multiplied by
the number of beneficiaries, up to a
maximum of five (here three, the
number of beneficiaries, is less than
five). Therefore, the maximum coverage
for the trust deposits would be:
($250,000) × (1) × (3) = $750,000.
This is one of the isolated instances
where the proposed rule may provide a
reduced amount of coverage as a result
of the aggregation of revocable and
irrevocable trust deposits, depending on
the structure of the trust agreement.
Under the current rules, O would be
insured for up to $750,000 for revocable
trust deposits and separately insured for
up to $750,000 for irrevocable trust
deposits (assuming non-contingent
beneficial interests), resulting in
$1,500,000 in total coverage. If that were
the case, current coverage would exceed
that provided by the proposed rule.
However, the terms of irrevocable trusts
sometimes lead to less coverage than
depositors might expect. FDIC staff’s
experience is that irrevocable trust
deposits are often insured only up to
$250,000 under the current rules due to
contingencies in the trust agreement,
but determining this with certainty
often requires careful consideration of
the trust agreement’s contingency
provisions. Under the current rule, if
contingencies existed, current coverage
would exceed that provided by the
proposed rule, as O would be insured
up to $1,000,000; $750,000 for his
revocable trust and $250,000 for his
irrevocable trust. In the FDIC’s view,
one of the key benefits of the proposed
rule versus the current rule would be
greater clarity and predictability in
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would not depend upon the specific
allocation of funds among beneficiaries.
deposit insurance coverage because
whether contingencies exist would no
longer be a factor that could affect
deposit insurance.
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Example 5: Many Beneficiaries Named
Depositor S establishes a deposit
account at an FDIC-insured bank titled
in the name of the ‘‘S Living Trust’’.
This trust is a revocable trust naming
seven beneficiaries—T, U, V, W, X, Y,
and Z. The grantor, S, does not maintain
any other deposits at the same bank.
What is the coverage for this deposit?
Under the proposed rule, the living
trust account is a deposit of a formal
revocable trust and would be insured in
the trust accounts category. The
maximum coverage for this deposit
would be equal to the SMDIA
($250,000) multiplied by the number of
grantors (one, because S is the sole
grantor) multiplied by the number of
beneficiaries, up to a maximum of five.
Here the number of named beneficiaries
(seven) exceeds the maximum (five) so
insurance is calculated using the
maximum (five). Coverage for the
deposit would be: ($250,000) × (1) × (5)
= $1,250,000.
This is another limited instance
where the proposed rule may provide
for less coverage than the current rule.
Under the current rule, because more
than five beneficiaries are named, the
deposit is insured up to the greater of:
(1) Five times the SMDIA; or (2) the
total of the interests of each beneficiary,
with each such interest limited to the
SMDIA. Determining coverage requires
review of the trust agreement to
ascertain each beneficiary’s interest.
Each such insurable interest is limited
to the SMDIA, and the total of all of
these interests is compared with
$1,250,000 (five times the SMDIA). The
current rule provides coverage in the
greater of these two amounts. The result
would fall into a range from $1,250,000
to $1,750,000, depending on the precise
allocation of trust interests among the
beneficiaries.62 In the FDIC’s view, one
of the key benefits of the proposed rule
versus the current rule would be greater
clarity and predictability in deposit
insurance coverage because a single
formula would be used to determine
maximum coverage, and this formula
62 For example, if all of the beneficiaries’ interests
were equal, coverage would be: $250,000 × (7
beneficiaries) = $1,750,000. This is the maximum
coverage possible under the current rule.
Conversely, if a few beneficiaries had a large
interest in the trust, the total of all beneficiaries’
interests (limited to the SMDIA per beneficiary)
could be less than $1,250,000, in which case the
current rule would provide a minimum of
$1,250,000 in coverage. Depending upon the precise
allocation of interests, the amount of coverage
provided would fall somewhere within this range.
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E. Alternatives Considered
The FDIC has considered a number of
alternatives to the proposed rule that
could meet its objectives in this
rulemaking. Some of these alternatives
are described below.
Insuring Revocable Trust Deposits up to
$250,000 per Grantor and Irrevocable
Trust Deposits up to $250,000 per Trust
The FDIC considered limiting the
total amount of deposit insurance
coverage for revocable trust deposits to
the SMDIA (currently $250,000) for each
grantor and irrevocable trust deposits up
to $250,000 per trust. This would
dramatically simplify the trust rules
because the determination of coverage
would no longer require the review of
trust agreements or the consideration of
beneficiaries’ interests. This alternative
would therefore provide significant
benefits in terms of supporting the
timely payment of deposit insurance.
However, this would substantially
reduce deposit insurance coverage for
many trust deposits that currently
exceed $250,000. The FDIC therefore
declined to pursue this proposal.
Provide Per-Beneficiary Coverage Where
Beneficiary Information Is Maintained at
the IDI
The FDIC considered changing the
trust rules to provide coverage of
$250,000 per beneficiary for trust
deposits only where the trust
documentation necessary to determine
insurance coverage is maintained in an
IDI’s deposit account records. This
would promote the timely payment of
deposit insurance and simplify
insurance determinations, as the
information required to calculate
coverage would be immediately
available to the FDIC following the
failure of an IDI. However, such a
requirement could prove burdensome
and difficult to comply with for IDIs and
depositors. Furthermore, even if
depositors were to provide the
necessary documentation to IDIs, they
could be unaware as to whether the IDIs
are maintaining that information in their
records. Accordingly, the FDIC believes
that this alternative may not promote
depositor confidence in the level of
coverage for their deposits.
Retain Separate Trust Categories,
Harmonize Rules
The FDIC also considered
harmonizing the rules for calculating
coverage for revocable and irrevocable
trusts while maintaining these two
categories as separate for deposit
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insurance purposes. The use of common
rules would reduce complexity to some
extent. However, so long as these
categories remain separate, determining
the level of coverage for a trust deposit
would require the threshold inquiry as
to whether the trust is revocable or
irrevocable. This is because the deposits
in each category would still be
aggregated within each deposit
insurance category for purposes of
applying the insurance limit. The FDIC
believes that the proposed rule provides
greater benefits than this alternative.
Status Quo
The FDIC is proposing amendments to
the trust rules to advance the objectives
discussed above, including making the
rules more understandable for the
public and depositors, promoting the
timely payment of deposit insurance,
and facilitating the administration of
resolutions. The FDIC considered the
status quo alternative to not amend the
existing trust rules and not propose the
amendments. However, for reasons
previously stated in Section I.B entitled
‘‘Background,’’ the FDIC considers the
proposed rule to be a more appropriate
alternative.
F. Request for Comment
The FDIC is requesting comment on
all aspects of the proposed rule,
including the alternatives presented.
Comment is specifically invited with
respect to the following questions:
• Would the proposed amendments
to the deposit insurance rules make
insurance coverage for trust deposits
easier to understand for bankers and the
public?
• The FDIC believes that depositors
generally would have the information
necessary to readily calculate deposit
insurance coverage for their trust
deposits under the proposed rule,
allowing them to better understand
insurance coverage for their trust
deposits. Are there instances where a
depositor would not likely have the
necessary information?
• Are there any other types of trusts
not described in this proposal whose
deposits would be affected by the
proposed rule if adopted? What types of
trusts are those and how would they be
impacted?
• While the FDIC has substantial
experience regarding trust
arrangements, the FDIC does not possess
sufficiently detailed information on
depositors’ existing trust arrangements
to allow the FDIC to project the
proposed rule’s effects on current
depositors. Are there any other sources
of empirical information that the FDIC
should consider that may be helpful in
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understanding the effects of the
proposed rule? The FDIC also
encourages commenters to provide such
information, if possible.
• Grandfathering of the deposit
insurance rules would result in
significantly greater complexity for the
period of time during which two sets of
rules could apply to deposits—
especially in conducting resolutions.
Therefore, the FDIC is not inclined to
consider allowing grandfathering, but
rather rely on a delayed implementation
date to allow stakeholders to make
necessary adjustments as a result of the
new rules. However, the FDIC
recognizes there are instances, such as
trusts holding time deposits or other
deposit relationships, which may not be
easily restructured without adverse
consequences to the depositor. Are there
fact patterns where grandfathering the
current rules may be appropriate?
Would grandfathering be appropriate
with respect to the proposed rule’s
coverage limit of $1,250,000 per IDI for
a depositor’s trust deposits?
• Are the examples provided clear
and understandable? Are there other
common trust deposit scenarios that
would benefit from an example being
provided?
• Would any of the alternatives
described above better meet the FDIC’s
objectives in connection with this
rulemaking? Are there any other
alternatives that would better meet
those objectives? Are there any other
amendments to the deposit insurance
rules applicable to trusts that the FDIC
should consider?
• For the covered institutions subject
to part 370, what cost and time frame
might be required to update information
technology systems and deposit account
records to be capable of calculating
insurance coverage under the proposed
rule? The FDIC also seeks any
supporting information that commenters
might be able to provide on this topic.
II. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
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A. Policy Objectives
The FDIC’s regulations governing
deposit insurance coverage include
specific rules on deposits maintained at
IDIs by mortgage servicers. These rules
are intended to be easy to understand
and apply in determining the amount of
deposit insurance coverage for a
mortgage servicer’s deposits. The FDIC
also seeks to avoid uncertainty
concerning the extent of deposit
insurance coverage for such deposits, as
deposits in mortgage servicing accounts
(MSAs) provide a source of funding for
IDIs.
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The FDIC is proposing an amendment
to its rules governing insurance
coverage for deposits maintained at IDIs
by mortgage servicers that consist of
mortgagors’ principal and interest
payments. The proposed rule is
intended to address a servicing
arrangement that is not specifically
addressed in the current rules.
Specifically, some servicing
arrangements may permit or require
servicers to advance their own funds to
the lenders when mortgagors are
delinquent in making principal and
interest payments, and servicers might
commingle such advances in the MSA
with principal and interest payments
collected directly from mortgagors. This
may be required, for example, under
certain mortgage securitizations. The
FDIC believes that the factors that
motivated the FDIC to establish its
current rules for mortgage servicing
accounts, described below, argue for
treating funds advanced by a mortgage
servicer in order to satisfy mortgagors’
principal and interest obligations to the
lender as if such funds were collected
directly from borrowers.
B. Background and Need for
Rulemaking
The FDIC’s rules governing coverage
for mortgage servicing accounts were
adopted in 1990 following the transfer
of responsibility for insuring deposits of
savings associations from the FSLIC to
the FDIC. Under the rules adopted in
1990, funds representing payments of
principal and interest were insured on
a pass-through basis to mortgagees,
investors, or security holders. In
adopting this rule, the FDIC focused on
the fact that principal and interest funds
were generally owned by investors, on
whose behalf the servicer, as agent,
accepted principal and interest
payments. By contrast, payments of
taxes and insurance were insured to the
mortgagors or borrowers on a passthrough basis because the borrower
owns such funds until tax and
insurance bills are paid by the servicer.
In 2008, however, the FDIC
recognized that securitization methods
and vehicles for mortgages had become
more complex, exacerbating the
difficulty of determining the ownership
of deposits consisting of principal and
interest payments by mortgagors and
extending the time required to make a
deposit insurance determination for
deposits of a mortgage servicer in the
event of an IDI’s failure.63 The FDIC
expressed concern that a lengthy
insurance determination could lead to
continuous withdrawal of deposits of
63 See
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principal and interest payments from
IDIs and unnecessarily reduce a funding
source for such institutions. The FDIC
therefore amended its rules to provide
coverage to lenders based on each
mortgagor’s payments of principal and
interest into the mortgage servicing
account, up to the SMDIA (currently
$250,000) per mortgagor. The FDIC did
not amend the rule for coverage of tax
and insurance payments, which
continued to be insured to each
mortgagor on a pass-through basis and
aggregated with any other deposits
maintained by each mortgagor at the
same IDI in the same right and capacity.
The 2008 amendments to the rules for
mortgage servicing accounts did not
provide for the fact that servicers may
be required to advance their own funds
to make payments of principal and
interest on behalf of delinquent
borrowers to the lenders. However, this
is required of mortgage servicers in
some instances. For example, insured
depository institutions covered by 12
CFR part 370, the FDIC’s rule requiring
recordkeeping and information
technology capabilities for deposit
insurance purposes (covered
institutions), identified challenges to
implementing certain recordkeeping
requirements with respect to MSA
deposit balances as a result of the way
in which servicer advances are
administered and accounted.64
The current rule provides coverage for
principal and interest funds only to the
extent ‘‘paid into the account by the
mortgagors’’; it does not provide
coverage for funds paid into the account
from other sources, such as the
servicer’s own operating funds, even if
those funds satisfy mortgagors’ principal
and interest payments. As a result,
advances are not provided the same
level of coverage as other deposits in a
mortgage servicing account consisting of
principal and interest payments directly
from the borrower, which are insured
up to the SMDIA for each borrower.
Instead, the advances are aggregated and
insured to the servicer as corporate
funds for a total of $250,000. The FDIC
is concerned that this inconsistent
treatment of principal and interest
amounts could result in financial
instability during times of stress, and
could further complicate the insurance
determination process, a result that is
inconsistent with the FDIC’s policy
objective.
64 In order to fulfill their contractual obligations
with investors, covered institutions maintain
mortgage principal and interest balances at a pool
level and remittances, advances, advance
reimbursement and excess funds applications that
affect pool-level balances are not allocated back to
individual borrowers.
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C. Proposed Rule
The FDIC is proposing to amend the
rules governing coverage for deposits in
mortgage servicing accounts to provide
consistent deposit insurance treatment
for all MSA deposit balances held to
satisfy principal and interest obligations
to a lender, regardless of whether those
funds are paid into the account by
borrowers, or paid into the account by
another party (such as the servicer) in
order to satisfy a periodic obligation to
remit principal and interest due to the
lender. Under the proposed rule,
accounts maintained by a mortgage
servicer in an agency, custodial, or
fiduciary capacity, which consist of
payments of principal and interest,
would be insured for the cumulative
balance paid into the account in order
to satisfy principal and interest
obligations to the lender, whether paid
directly by the borrower or by another
party, up to the limit of the SMDIA per
mortgagor. Mortgage servicers’ advances
of principal and interest funds on behalf
of delinquent borrowers would therefore
be insured up to the SMDIA per
mortgagor, consistent with the coverage
rules for payments of principal and
interest collected directly from
borrowers.65
The composition of an MSA
attributable to principal and interest
payments would also include
collections by a servicer, such as
foreclosure proceeds, that are used to
satisfy a borrower’s principal and
interest obligation to the lender. In some
cases, foreclosure proceeds may not be
paid directly by a mortgagor. The
current rule does not address whether
foreclosure collections represent
payments of principal and interest by a
mortgagor. Under the proposed rule,
foreclosure proceeds used to satisfy a
borrower’s principal and interest
obligation would be insured up to the
limit of the SMDIA per mortgagor.
The proposed rule would make no
change to the deposit insurance
coverage provided for mortgage
servicing accounts comprised of
payments from mortgagors of taxes and
insurance premiums. Such aggregate
escrow accounts are held separately
from the principal and interest MSAs
and the deposits therein are held in
trust for the mortgagors until such time
65 Servicers’ advances may have been insured
under the rule that applied to mortgage servicing
account deposits prior to 2008. Prior to 2008,
mortgage servicing deposits were insured on a passthrough basis. Under the pass-through insurance
rules, the identity of the party that pays funds into
a deposit account does not generally factor into
insurance coverage. In this sense, the proposed rule
can be viewed as restoring coverage to the previous
level.
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as tax and insurance payments are
disbursed by the servicer on the
borrower’s behalf. Under the proposed
rule, such deposits would continue to
be insured based on the ownership
interest of each mortgagor in the
account and aggregated with other
deposits maintained by the mortgagor at
the same IDI in the same capacity and
right.
D. Request for Comment
The FDIC is requesting comment on
all aspects of the proposed rule.
Comment is specifically invited with
respect to the following questions:
• Would the proposed amendments
to the rules governing coverage for
mortgage servicing accounts adequately
address servicers’ practices with respect
to these accounts, as described above?
Are there any other funds representing
principal and interest that are
commingled with borrowers’ payments
that the FDIC should take into account
in the deposit insurance calculation,
consistent with its policy objectives?
• Would deposit insurance coverage
of servicer principal and interest
advances help to promote financial
stability in the financial system? If the
FDIC does not amend the rule as
proposed, how would mortgage
servicers react if their insured
depository institution, or the banking
industry as a whole, appears stressed? If
so, how would funding arrangements or
deposit relationships change?
• Does the proposed rule reduce the
compliance burden for part 370 covered
institutions?
• Are there any alternatives to the
proposed rule that would better achieve
the FDIC’s policy objectives in
connection with this rulemaking? Are
there any other amendments to the
deposit insurance rules applicable to
MSAs that the FDIC should consider?
III. Regulatory Analysis
A. Expected Effects
1. Simplification of Trust Rules
Generally, the proposed
simplification of the trust rules is
expected to have benefits including
clarifying depositors’ and bankers’
understanding of the insurance rules,
promoting the timely payment of
deposit insurance following an IDI’s
failure, facilitating the transfer of
deposit relationships to failed bank
acquirers (thereby potentially reducing
the FDIC’s resolution costs), and
addressing differences in the treatment
of revocable trust deposits and
irrevocable trust deposits contained in
the current rules. The proposed
amendments would directly affect the
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level of deposit insurance coverage
provided to some depositors with trust
deposits. In some cases, which the FDIC
expects are rare, the proposed
amendments could reduce deposit
insurance coverage; for the vast majority
of depositors, the FDIC expects the
coverage level to be unchanged. The
FDIC has also considered the impact of
any changes in the deposit insurance
rules on the DIF and on the covered
institutions that are subject to part 370.
Finally, the FDIC describes other
potential effects of the proposal, such as
the effects on information technology
(IT) service providers to the institutions
that could be affected by the proposed
rule. These effects are discussed in
greater detail below.
Effects on Deposit Insurance Coverage
The proposed rule would affect
deposit insurance coverage for deposits
held in connection with trusts.
According to the March 31, 2021 Call
Report data, the FDIC insures 4,987
depository institutions 66 that report
holding approximately 641 million
deposit accounts. Additionally, 1,573
IDIs have powers granted by a state or
national regulatory authority to
administer accounts in a fiduciary
capacity (i.e., trust powers) and 1,167
exercise those powers, comprising 31.5
percent and 23.4 percent, respectively,
of all IDIs.67 However, individual
depositors may establish a trust account
at an IDI even if that IDI does not itself
have or exercise trust powers, and in
fact, as discussed below, 99 percent of
a sample of failed banks had trust
accounts. Therefore, the FDIC estimates
that the proposed rule, if adopted, could
affect between 1,167 and 4,987 IDIs.
The FDIC does not have detailed data
on depositors’ trust arrangements that
would allow the FDIC to precisely
estimate the number of trust accounts
that are currently held by FDIC-insured
institutions. However, the FDIC
estimated the number of trust accounts
and trust account depositors utilizing
data from failed banks. Based on data
from 249 failed banks 68 between 2010
and 2020, 335,657 deposit accounts—
owned by 250,139 distinct depositors—
were trust accounts (revocable or
irrevocable), out of a total of 3,013,575
deposit accounts. Thus, about 11.14
percent of the deposit accounts at the
249 failed banks were trust accounts. Of
66 The count of institutions includes FDICinsured U.S. branches of institutions headquartered
in foreign countries.
67 FDIC Call Report data, March 31, 2021.
68 Data on failed banks comes from the FDIC’s
Claims Administration System, which contains data
on depositors’ funds from every failed IDI since
September 2010.
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the 249 institutions, 247 (99 percent)
reported having trust accounts at time of
failure. Of the 247 failed banks that
reported trust accounts, 212 reported
not having trust powers as of their last
Call Report. Assuming the percentage of
trust accounts at failed banks is
representative of the percentage of trust
accounts among all FDIC-insured
institutions, the FDIC estimates, for
purposes of this analysis, that there are
approximately 71.4 million trust
accounts in existence at FDIC-insured
institutions.69 Additionally, based on
the observed number of trust account
depositors per trust account in the
population of 249 failed banks, the FDIC
estimates, for purposes of this analysis,
that there are approximately 53.2
million trust depositors.70 These
estimates are subject to considerable
uncertainty, since the percentage of
deposit accounts that are trust accounts
and the number of depositors per trust
account for all FDIC insured institutions
may differ from what was observed at
the 249 failed banks. The FDIC does not
have information that would shed light
on whether or how the numbers of trust
accounts and trust depositors at failed
banks differs from the corresponding
numbers for other FDIC-insured
institutions.
The FDIC also does not have detailed
data on depositors’ trust arrangements
that would allow the FDIC to precisely
estimate the quantitative effects of the
proposed rule on deposit insurance
coverage. Thus, the effects of the
proposed changes to the insurance rules
are outlined qualitatively below. The
FDIC expects that most depositors
would experience no change in the
coverage for their deposits under the
proposed rule. However, some
depositors that maintain trust deposits
would experience a change in their
insurance coverage under the proposed
rule.
The FDIC anticipates that deposit
insurance coverage for some irrevocable
trust deposits would increase under the
proposed rule. The FDIC’s experience
suggests that the provisions of the
current irrevocable trust rules that
69 There were approximately 641 million deposit
accounts reported by FDIC-insured institutions as of
March 31, 2021, based on Call Report data.
Assuming that 11.14 percent of accounts are trust
accounts, then there are an estimated 71.4 million
trust accounts as of March 31, 2021.
70 Using the data from failed banks, 250,139
distinct depositors held 335,657 revocable or
irrevocable trust accounts, or there were 0.745 trust
account depositors per trust account (250,139
divided by 335,657). The estimated number of trust
depositors at FDIC-insured institutions (53.2
million) is obtained by multiplying the estimated
number of trust accounts by the number of trust
account depositors per trust account (71.4 million
multiplied by 0.745).
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require the identification and
aggregation of contingent interests often
apply due to the inclusion of
contingencies in such trusts.71 Thus,
even where an irrevocable trust names
multiple beneficiaries, the current trust
rules often provide a total of only
$250,000 in deposit insurance coverage.
The proposed rule would not consider
such contingencies in the calculation of
coverage, and per-beneficiary coverage
would apply.
In limited instances, the proposed
merger of the revocable trust and
irrevocable trust categories may
decrease coverage for depositors.
Deposits of revocable trusts and
deposits of irrevocable trusts are
currently insured separately. The
proposed rule would require aggregation
for purposes of applying the deposit
insurance limit, thereby increasing the
likelihood of the combined trust
account balances exceeding the
insurance limit.72 However, the FDIC’s
experience is that irrevocable trust
deposits comprise a relatively small
share of the average IDI’s deposit base,73
and that it is rare for IDIs to hold
deposits in connection with irrevocable
and revocable trusts established by the
same grantor(s).74 Individual grantors’
trust deposits held for the benefit of up
to five different beneficiaries would
continue to be separately insured.
With respect to revocable and
irrevocable trusts, depositors who have
designated more than five beneficiaries
and structured their trust accounts in a
manner that provides for more than
$1,250,000 in coverage per grantor, per
IDI under the current rules would
experience a reduction in coverage. The
FDIC’s experience suggests that the
$1,250,000 maximum coverage amount
per grantor, per IDI would not affect the
vast majority of trust depositors, as most
71 As discussed above, the provisions relating to
contingent interests may not apply when a trust has
become irrevocable due to the death of one or more
grantors. In such instances, the revocable trust rules
continue to apply.
72 As discussed above, deposits maintained by an
IDI as trustee of an irrevocable trust would not be
included in this aggregation, and would remain
separately insured pursuant to section 7(i) of the
FDI Act and 12 CFR 330.12.
73 Data obtained in connection with IDI failures
during the recent financial crisis suggests that
irrevocable trust deposits comprise less than one
percent of trust deposits. However, as discussed
above, the FDIC does not possess sufficient
information to enable it to estimate the effects of the
proposed rule on trust account depositors at all
IDIs.
74 In the data obtained in connection with IDI
failures during the recent financial crisis, only 51
out of 250,139 depositors with trust accounts had
both revocable and irrevocable types. Of these 51
depositors, nine had total trust account balances
greater than $250,000, and only one had a total trust
balance of more than $1.25 million.
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41779
trusts have either five or fewer
beneficiaries, less than $1,250,000 per
grantor on deposit at the same IDI, or are
structured in a manner that results in
only $1,250,000 in coverage under the
current rules. The FDIC estimates that
approximately 21,268 trust account
depositors and approximately 28,539
trust accounts could be directly affected
by this aspect of the proposed rule,
representing about 0.04 percent of both
the estimated number of trust account
depositors and the estimated number of
trust accounts.75 The actual number of
trust depositors and trust accounts
impacted will likely differ, as the
estimates rely on data from failed banks,
and failed banks may differ from other
institutions in their percentages of trust
depositors or trust accounts. It is also
possible depositors may restructure
their deposits in response to changes to
the rule, thus mitigating the potential
effects on deposit insurance coverage.
Clarification of Insurance Rules
The proposed merger of certain
revocable and irrevocable trust
categories is intended to clarify deposit
insurance coverage for trust accounts.
Specifically, the merger of these
categories would mostly eliminate the
need to distinguish revocable and
irrevocable trusts currently required to
determine coverage for a particular trust
deposit. The benefit of the common set
of rules would likely be particularly
significant for depositors that have
established arrangements involving
multiple trusts, as they would no longer
need to apply two different sets of rules
to determine the level of deposit
insurance coverage that would apply to
their deposits. For example, the
75 To estimate the numbers of trust account
depositors and trust accounts affected, the FDIC
performed the following calculation. First, based on
data from 249 failed banks between 2010 and 2020,
the FDIC determined that there were 335,657 trust
accounts out of 3,013,575 deposit accounts (trust
account share). Second, the FDIC determined the
number of trust accounts per trust depositor
(335,657/250,139). The FDIC then estimated the
number of trust accounts by multiplying the trust
account share (335,657/3,013,575) by the number of
deposit accounts across all IDIs (640,918,226)
according to March 31, 2021, Call Report data. This
step yielded an estimate of 71,386,539 trust
accounts. Based on the estimated number of trust
accounts per trust depositor from the failed bank
data, the FDIC estimated the total number of trust
depositors to be 53,198,823. Using failed bank data,
100 out of 250,139 trust depositors had balances in
excess of $1.25 million in their trust accounts.
Thus, the FDIC estimated that, of the approximately
53.2 million trust depositors, (100/250,139) of
them—approximately 21,268—had balances in
excess of $1.25 million in their trust accounts, and
therefore could be directly affected by the proposal.
These estimated 21,268 trust depositors are
associated with an estimated 28,539 trust accounts,
based on the observed number of trust accounts per
trust depositor from the data from 249 failed banks
between 2010 and 2020.
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proposed rule would eliminate the need
to consider the specific allocation of
interests among the beneficiaries of
revocable trusts with six or more
beneficiaries, as well as contingencies
established in irrevocable trusts. The
merger of the categories also would
eliminate the need for current
§ 330.10(h) and (i), which allows for the
continued application of the revocable
trust rules to the account of a revocable
trust that becomes irrevocable due to the
death of the trust’s owner. As previously
discussed, these provisions of the
current trust rules have proven
confusing as illustrated by the
numerous inquiries that are consistently
submitted to the FDIC on these topics.
FDIC-insured depository institutions
will incur some regulatory costs
associated with making necessary
changes to internal processes and
systems and bank personnel training in
order to accommodate the proposed
rule’s definition of ‘‘trust accounts’’ and
attendant deposit insurance coverage
terms, if adopted. There also may be
some initial cost for institutions to
become familiar with the proposed
changes to the trust insurance coverage
rules in order to be able to explain them
to potential trust customers,
counterbalanced to some extent by the
fact that the proposed rules should be
simpler for institutions to understand
and explain going forward. As the
business impacts and costs associated
with operationalizing the proposed
changes to the trust rules may vary
significantly across IDIs, the FDIC
would welcome industry comments in
this regard.
Prompt Payment of Deposit Insurance
The FDIC also expects that
simplification of the trust rules would
promote the timely payment of deposit
insurance in the event of an IDI’s
failure. The FDIC’s experience has been
that the current trust rules often require
detailed, time-consuming, and resourceintensive review of trust documentation
to obtain the information that is
necessary to calculate deposit insurance
coverage. This information is often not
found in an IDI’s records and must be
obtained from depositors after the IDI’s
failure. The proposed rule would
ameliorate the operational challenge of
calculating deposit insurance coverage,
which could be particularly acute in the
case of a failure of a large IDI with a
large number of trust accounts. The
proposed rule would streamline the
review of trust documents required to
make a deposit insurance
determination, promoting more prompt
payment of deposit insurance. Timely
payment of deposit insurance also can
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help to facilitate the transfer of
depositor relationships to a failed bank’s
acquirer, potentially expand resolution
options, potentially reduce the FDIC’s
resolution costs, and support greater
confidence in the banking system.
Deposit Insurance Fund Impact
As discussed above, the proposed rule
is expected to have mixed effects on the
level of insurance coverage provided for
trust deposits. Coverage for some
irrevocable trust deposits would be
expected to increase, but in the FDIC’s
experience, irrevocable trust deposits
are not nearly as common as revocable
trust deposits. The level of coverage for
some trust deposits would be expected
to decrease due to the proposed rule’s
simplified calculation of coverage and
its aggregation of revocable and
irrevocable trust deposits. As noted
above, the FDIC does not have detailed
data on depositors’ trust arrangements
to allow it to precisely project the
quantitative effects of the proposed rule
on deposit insurance coverage.
Indirect Effects
A change in the level of deposit
insurance coverage does not necessarily
result in a direct economic impact, as
deposit insurance is only paid to
depositors in the event of an IDI’s
failure. However, changes in deposit
insurance coverage may prompt
depositors to take actions with respect
to their deposits. In response to changes
in the level of coverage under the
proposed rules, trust depositors could
maximize coverage relative to the
coverage under the current rule by
transferring some of their trust deposits
to other types of accounts that provide
similar or higher amounts of coverage or
by amending the terms of their trusts.
Parties affected could include IDIs,
depositors, and other firms in the
financial services marketplace (e.g.,
deposit brokers). Any costs borne by the
depositor in moving a portion of the
funds to a different IDI to stay under the
insurance limit would be accompanied
by benefits, such as more prompt
deposit insurance determinations, and
quicker access to insured deposits for
depositors during the resolution
process. The FDIC cannot estimate these
effects because it does not have
information on the individual costs of
each action that confronts each
depositor, their ability to amend their
trust structure or move funds, and their
subjective risk preference with respect
to holding insured and uninsured
deposits.
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Part 370 Covered Institutions
As discussed previously, institutions
covered by part 370 must maintain
deposit account records and systems
capable of applying the deposit
insurance rules in an automated
manner. The proposed rule would
change certain aspects of how coverage
is determined for trust deposits. This
could require covered institutions to
reprogram certain systems to ensure that
they continue to be capable of applying
the deposit insurance rules as part 370
requires. A covered institution is not
considered to be in violation of part 370
as a result of a change in law that alters
the availability or calculation of deposit
insurance for such period as specified
by the FDIC following the effective date
of such change.76
The FDIC expects that the proposed
rule would make the deposit insurance
status of a trust account generally
clearer. Moreover, since part 370
requires covered institutions to develop
and maintain the capacity to calculate
deposit insurance for its deposits, the
proposed rule could make compliance
with part 370 relatively less
burdensome. This is because the
underlying rules that would be applied
to most trust deposits would be
simplified. In particular, the proposed
rule would require the aggregation of
revocable and irrevocable trust deposits,
categories that are currently separated
for purposes of part 370’s recordkeeping
provisions. The FDIC does not expect
that the proposed rule would require
significant changes with respect to
covered institutions’ treatment of
informal revocable trust deposits.
Moreover, many deposits of formal
revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts
currently fall within the scope of part
370’s alternative recordkeeping
provisions, meaning that covered
institutions are not required to maintain
all of the records necessary to calculate
the maximum amount of deposit
insurance coverage available for these
deposits. These factors may diminish
the impact of the proposed rule on the
part 370 covered institutions, but the
FDIC does not have sufficient
information on covered institutions’
systems and records to quantify this.
Although the FDIC does not have
sufficient information to determine the
time that might be required to
reprogram systems, it believes that a
two-year period of time may be
reasonable. The FDIC requests comment
on this proposal, including any
information that commenters may be
able to provide to support their views
76 See
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on the time necessary to attain
compliance with part 370 if the
proposed rule is adopted.
Other Potential Effects
Although the FDIC expects that
coverage for most trust depositors
would be unchanged under the
proposal, and that the proposed changes
simplify the FDIC’s insurance rules for
trust accounts, the proposal may have
other potential effects. For example, the
institutions affected by the proposal
may rely on third-party IT service
providers to perform insurance coverage
estimates for their trust depositors. The
proposal may lead such IT service
providers to revise their systems to
account for the proposal’s changes.
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2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
The proposed rule would affect the
deposit insurance coverage for certain
principal and interest payments within
MSA deposits maintained at IDIs by
mortgage servicers. According to the
March 31, 2021 Call Report data, the
FDIC insures 4,987 IDIs.77 Of the 4,987
IDIs, 1,167 IDIs (23.4 percent) report
holding mortgage servicing assets,
which indicates that they service
mortgage loans and could thus be
affected by the proposed rule. In
addition, mortgage servicing accounts
may be maintained at IDIs that do not
themselves service mortgage loans. The
FDIC does not know how many IDIs are
recipients of mortgage servicing account
deposits, but believes that most IDIs are
not. Therefore, the FDIC estimates that
the number of IDIs potentially affected
by the proposed rule, if adopted, would
be greater than 1,167 and substantially
less than 4,987.
The FDIC does not have detailed data
on MSAs that would allow the FDIC to
reliably estimate the number of MSAs
maintained at IDIs that would be
affected by the proposed rule, or any
potential change in the total amount of
insured deposits. Thus, the potential
effects of the proposed amendments
regarding governing deposit insurance
coverage for MSAs are outlined
qualitatively below.
The proposed rule would directly
affect the level of deposit insurance
coverage provided for some MSAs.
Under the proposed rule, the
composition of an MSA attributable to
mortgage servicers’ advances of
principal and interest funds on behalf of
delinquent borrowers and collections
such as foreclosure proceeds would be
77 The count of institutions includes FDICinsured U.S. branches of institutions headquartered
in foreign countries.
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insured up to the SMDIA per mortgagor,
consistent with the coverage for
payments of principal and interest
collected directly from borrowers.
Under the current rules, principal and
interest funds advanced by a servicer to
cover delinquencies, and foreclosure
proceeds collected by servicers, are not
be insured under the rules for MSA
deposits, but instead are insured to the
servicer as corporate funds up to the
SMDIA. Therefore, the proposed rule
would expand deposit insurance
coverage in instances where an account
maintained by a mortgage servicer
contains principal and interest funds
advanced by the servicer in order to
satisfy the obligations of delinquent
borrowers to the lender, or foreclosure
proceeds collected by the servicers; and
where the funds in such instances
exceed the mortgage servicer’s SMDIA.
If enacted, the proposed rule is likely
to benefit a servicer compelled by the
terms of a pooling and servicing
agreement to advance principal and
interest funds to note holders when a
borrower is delinquent, and therefore
the servicer has not received such funds
from the borrower. In the event that the
IDI hosting the MSA for the servicer
fails, the proposal reduces the
likelihood that the funds advanced by
the servicer are uninsured, and thereby
facilitates access to, and helps avoids
losses of, those funds. As previously
discussed, the FDIC does not have
detailed data on MSAs held at IDIs,
pooling and servicing agreements for
outstanding mortgage loans, or servicer
payments into MSAs that would allow
the FDIC to reliably estimate the number
of, and volume of funds within, MSAs
maintained at IDIs that would be
affected by the proposed rule.
Further, the proposed rule is likely to
benefit an IDI who is hosting an MSA
for a servicer that is compelled by the
terms of a pooling and servicing
agreement to advance principal and
interest funds to note holders on behalf
of delinquent borrowers by increasing
the volume of insured funds. In the
event that the IDI enters into a troubled
condition, the proposed rule could
marginally increase the stability of MSA
deposits from such servicers, thereby
increasing the general stability of
funding.
Finally, the FDIC believes that the
proposed rule, if enacted, would pose
general benefits to parties that provide
or utilize financial services related to
mortgage products by amending an
inconsistency in the deposit insurance
treatment for principal and interest
payments made by the borrower and
such payments made by the servicer on
behalf of the borrower.
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Effects on Part 370 Covered Institutions
Institutions subject to the enhanced
requirements of part 370 may bear some
costs in recognizing the expanded
coverage for servicer advances and
foreclosure proceeds. However,
institutions subject to the requirements
of part 370 already are responsible for
determining coverage for MSA accounts
based on each borrower’s payments.
Therefore, the FDIC does not believe the
impact of the proposal on part 370
covered IDIs will be significant.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
requires that, in connection with a
notice of proposed rulemaking, an
agency prepare and make available for
public comment an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis that describes the
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.78 However, a 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
and publishes its certification and a
short explanatory statement in the
Federal Register together with the rule.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has defined ‘‘small entities’’ to
include banking organizations with total
assets of less than or equal to $600
million.79 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 believes
that effects in excess of these thresholds
typically represent significant effects for
small entities. The FDIC does not
believe that the proposed rule, if
adopted, will have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities. However, some
expected effects of the proposed rule are
difficult to assess or accurately quantify
given current information, therefore the
FDIC has included an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Act Analysis in this section.
78 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $600 million or less in assets, where ‘‘a
financial institution’s assets are determined by
averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.’’ See 13
CFR 121.201 (as amended by 84 FR 34261, effective
August 19, 2019). ‘‘SBA counts the receipts,
employees, or other measure of size of the concern
whose size is at issue and all of its domestic and
foreign affiliates.’’ See 13 CFR 121.103. Following
these regulations, the FDIC uses a covered entity’s
affiliated and acquired assets, averaged over the
preceding four quarters, to determine whether the
FDIC-supervised institution is ‘‘small’’ for the
purposes of RFA.
79 The
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1. Simplification of Trust Rules
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Reasons Why This Action Is Being
Considered
As previously discussed, the rules
governing deposit insurance coverage
for trust deposits have been amended on
several occasions, but still frequently
cause confusion for depositors. Under
the current regulations, there are
distinct and separate sets of rules
applicable to deposits of revocable
trusts and irrevocable trusts. Each set of
rules has its own criteria for coverage
and methods by which coverage is
calculated. Despite the FDIC’s efforts to
simplify the revocable trust rules in
2008,80 over the last 10 years, FDIC
deposit insurance specialists have
responded to approximately 20,000
complex insurance inquiries per year on
average. More than 50 percent pertain to
deposit insurance coverage for trust
accounts (revocable or irrevocable). The
consistently high volume of complex
inquiries about trust accounts over an
extended period of time suggests
continued confusion about insurance
limits.
The FDI Act requires the FDIC to pay
depositors ‘‘as soon as possible’’ after a
bank failure. However, the insurance
determination and subsequent payment
for many trust deposits can be delayed
while FDIC staff reviews complex trust
agreements and apply the rules for
determining deposit insurance coverage.
Moreover, in many of these instances,
deposit insurance coverage for trust
deposits is based upon information that
is not maintained in the failed IDI’s
deposit account records. This requires
FDIC staff to work with depositors,
trustees, and other parties to obtain trust
documentation following an IDI’s failure
in order to complete deposit insurance
determinations. The difficulties
associated with this are exacerbated by
the substantial growth in the use of
formal trusts in recent decades. For
example, following the 2008 failure of
IndyMac Federal Bank, FSB (IndyMac),
FDIC claims personnel contacted more
than 10,500 IndyMac depositors to
obtain the trust documentation
necessary to complete deposit insurance
determinations for their revocable trust
and irrevocable trust deposits. As noted
previously, delays in the payment of
deposit insurance could be
consequential, as revocable trust
deposits in particular can be used by
depositors to satisfy their daily financial
obligations.
80 See
73 FR 56706 (Sep. 30, 2008).
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Policy Objectives
As discussed previously, the
proposed amendments are intended to
provide depositors and bankers with a
rule for trust account coverage that is
easy to understand, and also to facilitate
the prompt payment of deposit
insurance in accordance with the FDI
Act. The FDIC believes that
accomplishing these objectives also
would further the agency’s mission in
other respects. Specifically, the
proposed amendments would promote
depositor confidence and further the
FDIC’s mission to maintain stability and
promote public confidence in the U.S.
financial system by assisting depositors
to more readily and accurately
determine their insurance limits. The
proposed changes will also facilitate the
resolution of failed IDIs in a least costly
manner. The proposed amendments
could reduce the FDIC’s reliance on
trust documentation (which could be
difficult to obtain in a timely manner
during resolutions of IDI failures) and
provide greater flexibility to automate
deposit insurance determinations,
thereby reducing potential delays in the
completion of deposit insurance
determinations and payments. Finally,
in proposing amendments to the trust
rules, the FDIC’s intent is that the
changes would generally be neutral with
respect to the DIF.
Legal Basis
The FDIC’s deposit insurance
categories have been defined through
both statute and regulation. Certain
categories, such as the government
deposit category, have been expressly
defined by Congress.81 Other categories,
such as joint deposits and corporate
deposits, have been based on statutory
interpretation and recognized through
regulations issued in 12 CFR part 330
pursuant to the FDIC’s rulemaking
authority. In addition to defining the
insurance categories, the deposit
insurance regulations in part 330
provide the criteria used to determine
insurance coverage for deposits in each
category. The FDIC proposes to amend
§ 330.10 of its regulations, which
currently applies only to revocable trust
deposits, to establish a new ‘‘trust
accounts’’ category that would include
both revocable and irrevocable trust
deposits. For a more detailed discussion
of the proposal’s legal basis please refer
to Section I.C entitled ‘‘Description of
Proposed Rule.’’
The Proposed Rule
The FDIC is proposing to amend the
rules governing deposit insurance
81 12
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coverage for trust deposits. Generally,
the proposed amendments would:
Merge the revocable and irrevocable
trust categories into one category; apply
a simpler, common calculation method
to determine insurance coverage for
deposits held by revocable and
irrevocable trusts; eliminate certain
requirements found in the current rules
for revocable and irrevocable trusts; and
amend certain recordkeeping
requirements for trust accounts. For a
more detailed discussion of the
proposed rule please refer to Section I.C
entitled ‘‘Description of Proposed Rule.’’
Small Entities Affected
Based on the March 31, 2021 Call
Report data, the FDIC insures 4,987
depository institutions,82 of which
3,431 are considered small entities for
the purposes of RFA.83 Of the 3,431
small IDIs, 826 have powers granted by
a state or national regulatory authority
to administer accounts in a fiduciary
capacity and 567 exercise those powers,
comprising 24.1 percent and 16.5
percent, respectively, of small IDIs.84
However, individuals may establish
trust accounts at an IDI even if that IDI
does not itself have or exercise authority
to administer accounts in a fiduciary
capacity, and in fact, as noted earlier, 99
percent of a sample of failed banks had
trust accounts. Therefore, the FDIC
estimates that the proposed rule, if
adopted, could affect between 567 and
3,431 small, FDIC-insured institutions.
As noted in the Aggregation subsection of Section I.C ‘‘Description of
Proposed Rule,’’ the FDIC does not have
detailed data on depositors’ trust
arrangements for trust accounts held at
small FDIC-insured institutions.
Therefore, it is difficult to accurately
estimate the number of small IDIs that
would be potentially affected by the
proposed rule. However, the FDIC
believes that the number of small IDIs
that will be directly affected by the
proposal is likely to be small, given that
in the agency’s resolution experience
only a small number of trust accounts
have balances above the proposed
coverage limit of $1,250,000 per grantor,
per IDI for trust deposits. For example,
data obtained from a sample of 249 IDIs
that failed between 2010 and 2020 show
that only 100 depositors out of 250,139
(or 0.04 percent) had trust account
balances greater than $1.25 million; at
small IDIs, 18 out of 34,304 depositors
(or 0.05 percent) had trust account
82 The count of institutions includes FDICinsured U.S. branches of institutions headquartered
in foreign countries.
83 FDIC Call Report data, March 31, 2021.
84 Id.
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balances greater than $1.25 million.85
The data from failed banks suggest small
IDIs could be affected by the proposal
roughly in proportion to the share of
trust depositors with account balances
greater than $1.25 million at IDIs of all
sizes which failed between 2010 and
2020.
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Expected Effects
The proposed simplification of the
deposit insurance rules for trust
deposits is expected to have a variety of
effects. The proposed amendments
would directly affect the level of deposit
insurance coverage provided to some
depositors with trust deposits. In
addition, simplification of the rules is
expected to have benefits in terms of
promoting the timely payment of
deposit insurance following a small
IDI’s failure, facilitating the transfer of
deposit relationships to failed bank
acquirers with consequent potential
reductions to the FDIC’s resolution
costs, and addressing differences in the
treatment of revocable trust deposits
and irrevocable trust deposits contained
in the current rules. The FDIC has also
considered the impact of any changes in
the deposit insurance rules on the DIF
and other potential effects.86 These
effects are discussed in greater detail in
Section III.A entitled ‘‘Expected
Effects.’’
Overall, due to the fact that the FDIC
expects most small IDIs to have only a
small number of trust accounts with
balances above the proposed coverage
limit of $1,250,000 per grantor, per IDI
for trust deposits, effects on the deposit
insurance coverage of small entities’
customers are likely to be small. There
also may be some initial cost for small
entities to become familiar with the
proposed changes to the trust insurance
coverage rules in order to be able to
explain them to potential trust
customers, counterbalanced to some
extent by the fact that the proposed
rules should be simpler to understand
and explain going forward. As the
business impacts and costs associated
with operationalizing the proposed
changes to the trust rules may vary
significantly across IDIs, the FDIC
would welcome industry comments in
this regard.
85 Whether a failed IDI is considered small is
based on data from its four quarterly Call Reports
prior to failure.
86 The FDIC has also considered the impact of any
changes in the deposit insurance rules on the
covered institutions that are subject to part 370. As
described previously, part 370 affects IDIs with two
million or more deposit accounts. Based on Call
Report data as of March 31, 2021, the FDIC does not
insure any institutions with two million or more
deposit accounts that are also considered small
entities.
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Alternatives Considered
The FDIC has considered a number of
alternatives to the proposed rule that
could meet its objectives in this
rulemaking. However, for reasons
previously stated in Section I.E
‘‘Alternatives Considered,’’ the FDIC
considers the proposed rule to be a more
appropriate alternative.
The FDIC also considered the status
quo alternative to not amend the
existing trust rules. However, for
reasons previously stated in Section I.E
‘‘Alternatives Considered,’’ the FDIC
considers the proposed rule to be a more
appropriate alternative.
Other Statutes and Federal Rules
The FDIC has not identified any likely
duplication, overlap, and/or potential
conflict between this proposal and any
other federal rule.
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of the supporting information
provided in this RFA section. In
particular, would the proposal have any
significant effects on small entities that
the FDIC has not identified?
2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing
Account Rule
Reasons Why This Action Is Being
Considered
As previously discussed, the FDIC
provides coverage, up to the SMDIA for
each borrower, for principal and interest
funds in MSAs only to the extent ‘‘paid
into the account by the mortgagors,’’
and does not provide coverage for funds
paid into the account from other
sources, such as the servicer’s own
operating funds, even if those funds
satisfy mortgagors’ principal and
interest payments under the current
rules. The advances are aggregated and
insured to the servicer as corporate
funds for a total of $250,000. Under
some servicing arrangements, however,
mortgage servicers may be required to
advance their own funds to make
payments of principal and interest on
behalf of delinquent borrowers to the
lenders in certain circumstances. Thus,
under the current rules, such advances
are not provided the same level of
coverage as other deposits in a mortgage
servicing account comprised of
principal and interest payments directly
from the borrower. This could result in
delayed access to certain funds in an
MSA, or to the extent that aggregated
advances insured to the servicer exceed
the insurance limit, loss of such funds,
in the event of an IDI’s failure. The FDIC
is therefore proposing to amend its rules
governing coverage for deposits in
mortgage servicing accounts to address
this inconsistency.
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41783
Policy Objectives
As discussed previously, the FDIC’s
regulations governing deposit insurance
coverage include specific rules on
deposits maintained at IDIs by mortgage
servicers. With the proposed
amendments, the FDIC seeks to address
an inconsistency concerning the extent
of deposit insurance coverage for such
deposits, as in the event of an IDI’s
failure the current rules could result in
delayed access to certain funds in a
mortgage servicing account (MSA) that
have been aggregated and insured to a
mortgage servicer, or to the extent that
aggregated funds insured to a servicer
exceed the insurance limit, loss of such
funds.
The proposed rule is intended to
address a servicing arrangement that is
not specifically addressed in the current
rules. Specifically, some servicing
arrangements may permit or require
servicers to advance their own funds to
the lenders when mortgagors are
delinquent in making principal and
interest payments, and servicers might
commingle such advances in the MSA
with principal and interest payments
collected directly from mortgagors. This
may be required, for example, under
certain mortgage securitizations. The
FDIC believes that the factors that
motivated the FDIC to establish its
current rules for MSAs, described
previously, argue for treating funds
advanced by a mortgage servicer in
order to satisfy mortgagors’ principal
and interest obligations to the lender as
if such funds were collected directly
from borrowers.
Legal Basis
The FDIC’s deposit insurance
categories have been defined through
both statute and regulation. Certain
categories, such as the government
deposit category, have been expressly
defined by Congress. Other categories,
such as joint deposits and corporate
deposits, have been based on statutory
interpretation and recognized through
regulations issued in 12 CFR part 330
pursuant to the FDIC’s rulemaking
authority. In addition to defining the
insurance categories, the deposit
insurance regulations in part 330
provide the criteria used to determine
insurance coverage for deposits in each
category. The FDIC proposes to amend
§ 330.7(d) of its regulations, which
currently applies only to cumulative
balance paid by the mortgagors into an
MSA maintained by a mortgage servicer,
to include balances paid in to the
account to satisfy mortgagors’ principal
or interest obligations to the lender. For
a more detailed discussion of the
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proposal’s legal basis please refer to
Section II.C, entitled ‘‘Proposed Rule.’’
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The Proposed Rule
The FDIC is proposing to amend the
rules governing deposit insurance
coverage for deposits maintained at IDIs
by mortgage servicers. Generally, the
proposed amendment would provide
consistent deposit insurance treatment
for all MSA deposit balances held to
satisfy principal and interest obligations
to a lender, regardless of whether those
funds are paid into the account by
borrowers, or paid into the account by
another party (such as the servicer) in
order to satisfy a periodic obligation to
remit principal and interest due to the
lender. The composition of an MSA
attributable to principal and interest
payments would include mortgage
servicers’ advances of principal and
interest funds on behalf of delinquent
borrowers, and collections by a servicer
such as foreclosure proceeds. The
proposed rule would make no change to
the deposit insurance coverage provided
for mortgage servicing accounts
comprised of payments from mortgagors
of taxes and insurance premiums. For a
more detailed discussion of the
proposed rule please refer to Section
II.C, entitled ‘‘Proposed Rule.’’
Small Entities Affected
Based on the March 31, 2021 Call
Report data, the FDIC insures 4,987
depository institutions, of which 3,431
are considered small entities for the
purposes of RFA. Of the 3,431 small
IDIs, 491 IDIs (14.3 percent) report
holding mortgage servicing assets,
which indicates that they service
mortgage loans and could thus be
affected by the proposed rule. However,
mortgage servicing accounts may be
maintained at small IDIs that do not
themselves service mortgage loans. The
FDIC does not know how many IDIs that
are small entities are recipients of
mortgage servicing account deposits, but
believes that most such entities are not
because there are relatively few
mortgage servicers.87 Therefore, the
FDIC estimates that the number of small
IDIs potentially affected by the proposed
rule, if adopted, would be between 491
and 3,431, but believes that the number
is close to the lower end of the range.
As noted in Section III.A, titled
‘‘Expected Effects,’’ the FDIC does not
have detailed data on MSAs that would
87 According to the U.S. Census Bureau within
the ‘‘Other Activities Related to Credit
Intermediation’’ (NAICS 522390) national industry
where mortgage servicers are captured there were
3,595 firms in 2018, relative to the 37,627 firms in
the Credit Intermediation and Related Activities
subsector (NAICS 522).
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allow the FDIC to reliably estimate the
number of MSAs maintained at IDIs that
would be affected by the proposed rule,
or any potential change in the total
amount of insured deposits. Therefore,
it is difficult to accurately estimate the
number of small IDIs that would be
potentially affected by the proposed
rule.
alternative. Were the FDIC to not
propose the revisions, then in the event
of an IDI’s failure the current rules
could result in delayed access to certain
funds in an MSA that have been
aggregated and insured to a mortgage
servicer, or to the extent that aggregated
funds insured to a servicer exceed the
insurance limit, loss of such funds.
Expected Effects
The proposed rule would directly
affect the level of deposit insurance
coverage for certain funds within MSAs.
If enacted, the proposed rule is likely to
benefit a servicer compelled by the
terms of a pooling and servicing
agreement to advance principal and
interest funds to note holders when a
borrower is delinquent, and therefore
the servicer has not received such funds
from the borrower. In the event that the
IDI hosting the MSA for the servicer
fails, the proposal reduces the
likelihood that the funds advanced by
the servicer are uninsured, and thereby
facilitates access to, and helps avoids
losses of, those funds. As previously
discussed, the FDIC does not have
detailed data on MSAs held at IDIs,
pooling and servicing agreements for
outstanding mortgage loans, or servicer
payments into MSAs that would allow
the FDIC to reliably estimate the number
of, and volume of funds within, MSAs
maintained at IDIs that would be
affected by the proposed rule.
Further, the proposed rule is likely to
benefit a small IDI who is hosting an
MSA for a servicer that is compelled by
the terms of a pooling and servicing
agreement to advance principal and
interest funds to note holders on behalf
of delinquent borrowers by increasing
the volume of insured funds. In the
event that the small IDI enters into a
troubled condition, the proposed rule
could marginally increase the stability
of MSA deposits from such servicers,
thereby increasing the general stability
of funding.
Based on the preceding information
the FDIC believes that the proposed
rule, if enacted, is unlikely to have a
significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities.
Other Statutes and Federal Rules
The FDIC has not identified any likely
duplication, overlap, and/or potential
conflict between this proposal and any
other federal rule.
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of the supporting information
provided in this RFA section. In
particular, would the proposal have any
significant effects on small entities that
the FDIC has not identified?
Alternatives Considered
The FDIC is proposing revisions to the
deposit insurance rules for MSAs to
advance the objectives discussed above.
The FDIC considered the status quo
alternative to not revise the existing
rules for MSAs and not propose the
revisions. However, for reasons
previously stated in Section II.B,
entitled ‘‘Background and Need for
Rulemaking,’’ the FDIC considers the
proposed rule to be a more appropriate
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C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) states that no
agency may conduct or sponsor, nor is
the respondent required to respond to,
an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The FDIC has determined that
this proposed rule does not create any
new, or revise any existing, collections
of information under section 3504(h) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).
Consequently, no information collection
request will be submitted to the OMB
for review. The FDIC invites comment
on its PRA determination.
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
Section 302 of the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (RCDRIA)
requires that the Federal banking
agencies, including the FDIC, in
determining the effective date and
administrative compliance requirements
of new regulations that impose
additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository
institutions, consider, consistent with
principles of safety and soundness and
the public interest, any administrative
burdens that such regulations would
place on depository institutions,
including small depository institutions,
and customers of depository
institutions, as well as the benefits of
such regulations.88 Subject to certain
exceptions, new regulations and
amendments to regulations prescribed
by a Federal banking agency which
impose additional reporting,
disclosures, or other new requirements
on insured depository institutions shall
88 12
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take effect on the first day of a calendar
quarter which begins on or after the date
on which the regulations are published
in final form.89
The proposed rule would not impose
additional reporting or disclosure
requirements on insured depository
institutions, including small depository
institutions, or on the customers of
depository institutions. Accordingly,
section 302 of RCDRIA does not apply.
Nevertheless, the requirements of
RCDRIA will be considered as part of
the overall rulemaking process, and the
FDIC invites comments that will further
inform its consideration of RCDRIA.
E. Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999—Assessment
of Federal Regulations and Policies on
Families
The FDIC has determined that the
proposed rule will not affect family
well-being within the meaning of
section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act,
enacted as part of the Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act of
1999.90
F. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act 91 requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language
in all proposed and final rulemakings
published in the Federal Register after
January 1, 2000. The FDIC invites your
comments on how to make this proposal
easier to understand. For example:
• Has the FDIC organized the material
to suit your needs? If not, how could the
material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the
proposed regulation clearly stated? If
not, how could the regulation be stated
more clearly?
• Does the proposed regulation
contain language or jargon that is
unclear? If so, which language requires
clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand?
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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 330
Bank deposit insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Savings associations.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated above, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
89 12
U.S.C. 4802(b).
Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (Oct. 21,
90 Public
1998).
91 Public Law 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov.
12, 1999).
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proposes to amend part 330 of title 12
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 330—DEPOSIT INSURANCE
COVERAGE
1. The authority citation for part 330
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813(l), 1813(m),
1817(i), 1818(q), 1819(a)(Tenth), 1820(f),
1820(g), 1821(a), 1821(d), 1822(c).
§ 330.1
[Amended]
2. Amend § 330.1 by removing and
reserving paragraphs (m) and (r).
■ 3. Revise § 330.7(d) to read as follows:
■
§ 330.7 Accounts held by an agent,
nominee, guardian, custodian or
conservator.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Mortgage servicing accounts.
Accounts maintained by a mortgage
servicer, in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity, which are comprised
of payments of principal and interest,
shall be insured for the cumulative
balance paid into the account by
mortgagors, or in order to satisfy
mortgagors’ principal or interest
obligations to the lender, up to the limit
of the SMDIA per mortgagor. Accounts
maintained by a mortgage servicer, in a
custodial or other fiduciary capacity,
which are comprised of payments by
mortgagors of taxes and insurance
premiums shall be added together and
insured in accordance with paragraph
(a) of this section for the ownership
interest of each mortgagor in such
accounts.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Revise § 330.10 to read as follows:
§ 330.10
Trust accounts.
(a) Scope and definitions. This section
governs coverage for deposits held in
connection with informal revocable
trusts, formal revocable trusts, and
irrevocable trusts not covered by
§ 330.12 (‘‘trust accounts’’). For
purposes of this section:
(1) Informal revocable trust means a
trust under which a deposit passes
directly to one or more beneficiaries
upon the depositor’s death without a
written trust agreement, commonly
referred to as a payable-on-death
account, in-trust-for account, or Totten
trust account.
(2) Formal revocable trust means a
revocable trust established by a written
trust agreement under which a deposit
passes to one or more beneficiaries upon
the grantor’s death.
(3) Irrevocable trust means an
irrevocable trust established by statute
or a written trust agreement and not
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
41785
otherwise insured as described in
§ 330.12.
(b) Calculation of coverage—(1)
General calculation. Each grantor’s trust
deposits are insured in an amount up to
the SMDIA multiplied by the total
number of beneficiaries identified by
the grantor, up to a maximum of 5
beneficiaries.
(2) Aggregation for purposes of
insurance limit. Trust deposits that pass
from the same grantor to beneficiaries
are aggregated for purposes of
determining coverage under this
section, regardless of whether those
deposits are held in connection with an
informal revocable trust, formal
revocable trust, or irrevocable trust.
(3) Separate insurance coverage. The
deposit insurance coverage provided
under this section is separate from
coverage provided for other deposits at
the same insured depository institution.
(4) Equal allocation presumed. Unless
otherwise specified in the deposit
account records of the insured
depository institution, a deposit held in
connection with a trust established by
multiple grantors is presumed to have
been owned or funded by the grantors
in equal shares.
(c) Number of beneficiaries. For
purposes only of determining the total
number of beneficiaries for a trust
deposit under paragraph (b) of this
section:
(1) Eligible beneficiaries. Subject to
paragraph (c)(2) of this section,
beneficiaries include natural persons, as
well as charitable organizations and
other non-profit entities recognized as
such under the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended.
(2) Ineligible beneficiaries.
Beneficiaries do not include:
(i) The grantor of a trust; or
(ii) A person or entity that would only
obtain an interest in the deposit if one
or more named beneficiaries are
deceased.
(3) Future trust(s) named as
beneficiaries. If a trust agreement
provides that trust funds will pass into
one or more new trusts upon the death
of the grantor(s), the future trust(s) are
not treated as beneficiaries of the trust;
rather, the future trust(s) are viewed as
mechanisms for distributing trust funds,
and the beneficiaries are the natural
persons or organizations that shall
receive the trust funds through the
future trusts.
(4) Informal trust account payable to
depositor’s formal trust. If an informal
revocable trust designates the
depositor’s formal trust as its
beneficiary, the informal revocable trust
account will be treated as if titled in the
name of the formal trust.
E:\FR\FM\03AUP1.SGM
03AUP1
41786
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 146 / Tuesday, August 3, 2021 / Proposed Rules
(d) Deposit account records—(1)
Informal revocable trusts. The
beneficiaries of an informal revocable
trust must be specifically named in the
deposit account records of the insured
depository institution.
(2) Formal revocable trusts. The title
of a formal trust account must include
terminology sufficient to identify the
account as a trust account, such as
‘‘family trust’’ or ‘‘living trust,’’ or must
otherwise be identified as a
testamentary trust in the account
records of the insured depository
institution. If eligible beneficiaries of
such formal revocable trust are
specifically named in the deposit
account records of the insured
depository institution, the FDIC shall
presume the continued validity of the
named beneficiary’s interest in the trust
consistent with § 330.5(a).
(e) Commingled deposits of
bankruptcy trustees. If a bankruptcy
trustee appointed under title 11 of the
United States Code commingles the
funds of various bankruptcy estates in
the same account at an insured
depository institution, the funds of each
title 11 bankruptcy estate will be added
together and insured up to the SMDIA,
separately from the funds of any other
such estate.
(f) Deposits excluded from coverage
under this section—(1) Revocable trust
co-owners that are sole beneficiaries of
a trust. If the co-owners of an informal
or formal revocable trust are the trust’s
sole beneficiaries, deposits held in
connection with the trust are treated as
joint ownership deposits under § 330.9.
(2) Employee benefit plan deposits.
Deposits of employee benefit plans,
even if held in connection with a trust,
are treated as employee benefit plan
deposits under § 330.14.
(3) Investment company deposits.
This section shall not apply to deposits
of trust funds belonging to a trust
classified as a corporation under
§ 330.11(a)(2).
(4) Insured depository institution as
trustee of an irrevocable trust. Deposits
held by an insured depository
institution in its capacity as trustee of
an irrevocable trust are insured as
provided in § 330.12.
§ 330.13
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
■
[Removed and Reserved]
5. Remove and reserve § 330.13.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on July 20, 2021.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2021–15732 Filed 8–2–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:59 Aug 02, 2021
Jkt 253001
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2021–0602; Project
Identifier 2019–CE–022–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Diamond
Aircraft Industries GmbH Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
The FAA proposes to adopt a
new airworthiness directive (AD) for all
Diamond Aircraft Industries GmbH
Models DA 42, DA 42 NG, and DA 42
M–NG airplanes. This proposed AD was
prompted by mandatory continuing
airworthiness information (MCAI)
originated by an aviation authority of
another country to identify and correct
an unsafe condition on an aviation
product. The MCAI describes the unsafe
condition as failure of the nose landing
gear (NLG) actuator attachment lever
and detachment from the NLG leg. This
proposed AD would require repetitively
inspecting the NLG actuator attachment
lever for cracks and damage and taking
any necessary corrective actions. The
FAA is proposing this AD to address the
unsafe condition on these products.
DATES: The FAA must receive comments
on this NPRM by September 17, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
using the procedures found in 14 CFR
11.43 and 11.45, by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: Deliver to Mail
address above between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this AD, contact Diamond Aircraft
Industries GmbH, N.A. Otto-Stra+e 5,
A–2700 Wiener Neustadt, Austria;
phone: +43 2622 26700; fax: +43 2622
26780; email: office@diamond-air.at;
website: https://
www.diamondaircraft.com. You may
view this service information at the
FAA, Airworthiness Products Section,
Operational Safety Branch, 901 Locust
St, Kansas City, MO 64106. For
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
information on the availability of this
material at the FAA, call (816) 329–
4148.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket at
https://www.regulations.gov by
searching for and locating Docket No.
FAA–2021–0602; or in person at Docket
Operations between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. The AD docket contains this
NPRM, the MCAI, any comments
received, and other information. The
street address for Docket Operations is
listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Penelope Trease, Aviation Safety
Engineer, General Aviation & Rotorcraft
Section, International Validation
Branch, FAA, 26805 E. 68th Avenue,
Denver, CO 80249; phone: (303) 342–
1094; email: penelope.trease@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
The FAA invites you to send any
written relevant data, views, or
arguments about this proposal. Send
your comments to an address listed
under ADDRESSES. Include ‘‘Docket No.
FAA–2021–0602; Project Identifier
2019–CE–022–AD’’ at the beginning of
your comments. The most helpful
comments reference a specific portion of
the proposal, explain the reason for any
recommended change, and include
supporting data. The FAA will consider
all comments received by the closing
date and may amend this proposal
because of those comments.
Except for Confidential Business
Information (CBI) as described in the
following paragraph, and other
information as described in 14 CFR
11.35, the FAA will post all comments
received, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. The
agency will also post a report
summarizing each substantive verbal
contact received about this NPRM.
Confidential Business Information
CBI is commercial or financial
information that is both customarily and
actually treated as private by its owner.
Under the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552), CBI is exempt
from public disclosure. If your
comments responsive to this NPRM
contain commercial or financial
information that is customarily treated
as private, that you actually treat as
private, and that is relevant or
responsive to this NPRM, it is important
that you clearly designate the submitted
comments as CBI. Please mark each
page of your submission containing CBI
E:\FR\FM\03AUP1.SGM
03AUP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 146 (Tuesday, August 3, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 41766-41786]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-15732]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 330
RIN 3064-AF27
Simplification of Deposit Insurance Rules
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is seeking comment
on proposed amendments to its regulations governing deposit insurance
coverage. The proposed rule would simplify the deposit insurance
regulations by establishing a ``trust accounts'' category that would
provide for coverage of deposits of both revocable trusts and
irrevocable trusts, and provide consistent deposit insurance treatment
for all mortgage servicing account balances held to satisfy principal
and interest obligations to a lender.
DATES: Comments will be accepted until October 4, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on the notice of proposed rulemaking
using any of the following methods:
Agency Website: https://www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/federal-register-publications/. Follow the instructions for
submitting comments on the agency website.
Email: [email protected]. Include RIN 3064-AF27 on the
subject line of the message.
Mail: James P. Sheesley, Assistant Executive Secretary,
Attention: Comments-RIN 3064-AF27, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street NW building (located on F
Street) on business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments received, including any
personal information provided, will be posted generally without change
to https://www.fdic.gov/resources/regulations/federal-register-publications/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James Watts, Counsel, Legal Division,
(202) 898-6678, [email protected]; Kathryn Marks, Counsel, Legal
Division, (202) 898-3896, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Simplification of Deposit Insurance Trust Rules
A. Policy Objectives
[[Page 41767]]
B. Background
1. Deposit Insurance and the FDIC's Statutory and Regulatory
Authority
2. Evolution of Insurance Coverage of Trust Deposits
3. Current Rules for Coverage of Trust Deposits
4. Part 370 and Recordkeeping at the Largest IDIs
5. Need for Further Rulemaking
C. Description of Proposed Rule
D. Examples Demonstrating Coverage Under Current and Proposed
Rules
E. Alternatives Considered
F. Request for Comment
II. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing Account Rule
A. Policy Objectives
B. Background and Need for Rulemaking
C. Proposed Rule
D. Request for Comment
III. Regulatory Analysis
A. Expected Effects
1. Simplification of Trust Rules
2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing Account Rule
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
1. Simplification of Trust Rules
2. Amendments to Mortgage Servicing Account Rule
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act
E. Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999--
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
F. Plain Language
I. Simplification of Deposit Insurance Trust Rules
A. Policy Objectives
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is seeking comment
on proposed amendments to its regulations governing deposit insurance
coverage for deposits held in connection with trusts.\1\ The proposed
amendments are intended to (1) provide depositors and bankers with a
rule for trust account coverage that is easy to understand and (2) to
facilitate the prompt payment of deposit insurance in accordance with
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act), among other objectives.
Accomplishing these objectives also would further the FDIC's mission in
other respects, as discussed in greater detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Trusts include informal revocable trusts (commonly referred
to as payable-on-death accounts, in-trust-for accounts, or Totten
trusts), formal revocable trusts, and irrevocable trusts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Clarifying Insurance Coverage for Trust Deposits
The proposed amendments would clarify for depositors, bankers, and
other interested parties the insurance rules and limits for trust
accounts. The proposal both reduces the number of rules governing
coverage for trust accounts and establishes a straightforward
calculation to determine coverage. The deposit insurance trust rules
have evolved over time and can be difficult to apply in some
circumstances. The proposed amendments are intended to alleviate some
of the confusion that depositors and bankers may experience with
respect to insurance coverage and limits. Under the current
regulations, there are distinct and separate sets of rules applicable
to deposits of revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts. Each set of
rules has its own criteria for coverage and methods by which coverage
is calculated. Despite the FDIC's efforts to simplify the revocable
trust rules in 2008,\2\ over the last 13 years FDIC deposit insurance
specialists have responded to approximately 20,000 complex insurance
inquiries per year on average. More than 50 percent of inquiries
pertain to deposit insurance coverage for trust accounts (revocable or
irrevocable). The consistently high volume of complex inquiries about
trust accounts over an extended period of time suggests continued
confusion about insurance limits. To help clarify insurance limits, the
proposed amendments would further simplify insurance coverage of trust
accounts (revocable and irrevocable) by harmonizing the coverage
criteria for certain types of trust accounts and by establishing a
simplified formula for calculating coverage that would apply to these
deposits. The FDIC proposes using the calculation that the FDIC first
adopted in 2008 for revocable trust accounts with five or fewer
beneficiaries. This formula is straightforward and is already generally
familiar to bankers and depositors.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See 73 FR 56706 (Sep. 30, 2008).
\3\ In 2008, the FDIC adopted an insurance calculation for
revocable trusts that have five or fewer beneficiaries. Under this
rule, 12 CFR 330.10(a), each trust grantor is insured up to $250,000
per beneficiary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prompt Payment of Deposit Insurance
The FDI Act requires the FDIC to pay depositors ``as soon as
possible'' after a bank failure. However, the insurance determination
and subsequent payment for many trust deposits can be delayed when FDIC
staff must review complex trust agreements and apply various rules for
determining deposit insurance coverage. The proposed amendments are
intended to facilitate more timely deposit insurance determinations for
trust accounts by reducing the amount of time needed to review trust
agreements and determine coverage. These amendments should promote the
FDIC's ability to pay insurance to depositors promptly following the
failure of an insured depository institution (IDI), enabling depositors
to meet their financial needs and obligations.
Facilitating Resolutions
The proposed changes will also facilitate the resolution of failed
IDIs. The FDIC is routinely required to make deposit insurance
determinations in connection with IDI failures. In many of these
instances, however, deposit insurance coverage for trust deposits is
based upon information that is not maintained in the failed IDI's
deposit account records. As a result, FDIC staff work with depositors,
trustees, and other parties to obtain trust documentation following an
IDI's failure in order to complete deposit insurance determinations.
The difficulties associated with completing such a determination are
exacerbated by the substantial growth in the use of formal trusts in
recent decades. The proposed amendments could reduce the time spent
reviewing such information and provide greater flexibility to automate
deposit insurance determinations, thereby reducing potential delays in
the completion of deposit insurance determinations and payments. Timely
payment of deposit insurance also helps to avoid reductions in the
franchise value of failed IDIs, expanding resolution options and
mitigating losses.
Effects on the Deposit Insurance Fund
The FDIC is also mindful of the effect that the proposed changes to
the deposit insurance regulations could have on deposit insurance
coverage and generally on the Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF), which is
used to pay deposit insurance in the event of an IDI's failure. The
FDIC manages the DIF according to parameters established by Congress
and continually evaluates the adequacy of the DIF to protect insured
depositors. The FDIC's general intent is that proposed amendments to
the trust rules be neutral with respect to the DIF.
B. Background
1. Deposit Insurance and the FDIC's Statutory and Regulatory Authority
The FDIC is an independent agency that maintains stability and
public confidence in the nation's financial system by: Insuring
deposits; examining and supervising IDIs for safety and soundness and
compliance with consumer financial protection laws; and resolving IDIs,
including large and complex financial institutions, and managing
receiverships. The FDIC has helped to maintain public confidence in
[[Page 41768]]
times of financial turmoil, including the period from 2008 to 2013,
when the United States experienced a severe financial crisis, and more
recently in 2020 during the financial stress associated with the COVID-
19 pandemic. During the more than 88 years since the FDIC was
established, no depositor has lost a penny of FDIC-insured funds.
The FDI Act establishes the key parameters of deposit insurance
coverage, including the standard maximum deposit insurance amount
(SMDIA), currently $250,000.\4\ In addition to providing deposit
insurance coverage up to the SMDIA at each IDI where a depositor
maintains deposits, the FDI Act also provides separate insurance
coverage for deposits that a depositor maintains in different rights
and capacities (also known as insurance categories) at the same IDI.\5\
For example, deposits in the single ownership category are separately
insured from deposits in the joint ownership category at the same IDI.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(E).
\5\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(C) (deposits ``maintained by a
depositor in the same capacity and the same right'' at the same IDI
are aggregated for purposes of the deposit insurance limit).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC's deposit insurance categories have been defined through
both statute and regulation. Certain categories, such as the government
deposit category, have been expressly defined by Congress.\6\ Other
categories, such as joint deposits and corporate deposits, have been
based on statutory interpretation and recognized through regulations
issued in 12 CFR part 330 pursuant to the FDIC's rulemaking authority.
In addition to defining the insurance categories, the deposit insurance
regulations in part 330 provide the criteria used to determine
insurance coverage for deposits in each category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Evolution of Insurance Coverage of Trust Deposits
Over the years, deposit insurance coverage has evolved to reflect
both the FDIC's experience and changes in the banking industry. The FDI
Act includes provisions defining the coverage for certain trust
deposits,\7\ while coverage for other trust deposits has been defined
by regulation.\8\ The following review of historical coverage for trust
deposits provides context for the FDIC's proposed amendments to the
trust rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See 12 U.S.C. 1817(i), 1821(a).
\8\ See 12 CFR 330.10, 330.13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the FDIC's earliest years, deposit insurance coverage for trust
deposits depended upon whether the beneficiaries of the trust were
named in the bank's records. If the beneficiaries were named in the
bank's records, the trust deposit was insured according to the
beneficiaries' respective interests because the deposit was held in
trust for the beneficiaries. If beneficiaries were not named in the
bank's records, the grantor trustee was treated as the depositor
instead and insured to the applicable limit (then $5,000); however, the
trust deposit was insured separately from the trustee's other deposits,
if any, at the same bank.\9\ If the bank itself was designated as
trustee of the trust, deposits of the trust were insured up to the
$5,000 limit for each trust estate pursuant to statute.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 1934 FDIC Annual Report at 143.
\10\ See Banking Act of 1935, Public Law 74-305 (Aug. 23, 1935),
section 101 (``Trust funds held by an insured bank in a fiduciary
capacity whether held in its trust or deposited in any other
department or in another bank shall be insured in an amount not to
exceed $5,000 for each trust estate, and when deposited by the
fiduciary bank in another insured bank such trust funds shall be
similarly insured to the fiduciary bank according to the trust
estates represented.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over time, some states began recognizing the existence of a trust
based on a designation in the bank's records that a deposit was held in
trust for another person--even in the absence of a written trust
agreement. In 1955, the FDIC's then-General Counsel concluded that if
relevant state law recognized these ``Totten trusts'' \11\ and the
depositor complied with the law in establishing the trust, the FDIC
would insure these deposits separately from the depositor's other
deposit accounts.\12\ This was the first time the FDIC insured informal
trusts as trust deposits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The name ``Totten trust'' is derived from an early New York
court decision recognizing this form of trust, Matter of Totten, 179
N.Y. 112 (N.Y. 1904). Many other states have recognized similar
types of accounts, commonly known as ``payable-on-death'' accounts
or tentative trust accounts.
\12\ Separate Insurability of ``Totten Trust'' Accounts (June 1,
1955), Federal Banking Law Reporter ] 92,583.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC further clarified insurance coverage for trust deposits in
1967 when it issued rules defining the deposit insurance categories
that the FDIC had recognized.\13\ These rules defined a ``testamentary
accounts'' category that included revocable trust accounts, tentative
or Totten trust accounts, and payable-on-death accounts and similar
accounts evidencing an intention that the funds shall belong to another
person upon the depositor's death. Testamentary deposits were insured
up to the applicable limit (which Congress had raised to $15,000) for
each named beneficiary who was the depositor's spouse, child, or
grandchild. If the named beneficiary did not satisfy this kinship
requirement, the deposit was aggregated with the depositor's individual
accounts for purposes of deposit insurance coverage. The rules also
included a separate ``trust accounts'' category for irrevocable trusts
with coverage of up to $15,000 for each beneficiary's trust interests
in deposit accounts established by the same grantor pursuant to a trust
agreement. Irrevocable trust accounts were insured separately from
other deposit accounts of the trustee, grantor, or beneficiary,
including testamentary accounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 32 FR 10408 (July 14, 1967).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1989, Congress transferred responsibility for insuring deposits
of savings associations from the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation (FSLIC) to the FDIC. As part of this transition, the FDIC
issued uniform deposit insurance rules for the deposits of banks and
savings associations, reconciling the differences between the FDIC and
FSLIC insurance rules.\14\ These uniform rules redesignated the
``testamentary accounts'' category as ``revocable trust accounts,'' and
continued to require beneficiaries for revocable trust deposits to be
named, but added the requirement that these beneficiaries be named in
the failed IDI's deposit account records in order for per-beneficiary
coverage to apply. In the notice of proposed rulemaking discussing this
change, the FDIC explained that the change was expected to simplify the
deposit insurance determination process for revocable trust deposits
and expedite the payment of deposit insurance.\15\ These rules also
redesignated the ``trust accounts'' category as ``irrevocable trust
accounts'' and introduced a distinction between contingent interests
and non-contingent interests in irrevocable trusts that would affect
deposit insurance coverage. Non-contingent interests were each insured
up to the applicable limit (then $100,000), while contingent interests
were aggregated and insured up to $100,000 in total.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 55 FR 20111 (May 15, 1990).
\15\ 54 FR 52399, 52408 (Dec. 21, 1989) (notice of proposed
rulemaking).
\16\ 55 FR 20126 (May 15, 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As revocable trusts increased in popularity during the late 1980s
and early 1990s as an estate planning tool, the FDIC began receiving
more inquiries about the revocable trust rules. Many of these inquiries
were prompted by complex trust agreements that included numerous
conditions prescribing whether, when, or how a named beneficiary would
receive trust assets. FDIC staff generally interpreted the revocable
trust rules to require
[[Page 41769]]
beneficiaries' interests in formal and informal revocable trusts to be
vested in order to qualify for separate insurance coverage, meaning
that, after a grantor's death, there was no condition attached to the
beneficiary's interest that would make the interest contingent
(referred to as a ``defeating contingency'').\17\ Staff reasoned that
only a vested trust interest could establish a reasonable expectation
that the revocable trust deposit ``shall belong to'' the beneficiary,
as the regulation required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 94-32, Guidelines for Insurance
Coverage of Revocable Trust Accounts (Including ``Living Trust''
Accounts), (May 18, 1994). While the vested interest requirement
applied to both formal and informal trusts, interests in informal
trusts were generally considered to be vested because they
automatically passed to the designated beneficiaries upon the death
of the last grantor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1996, the FDIC sought public comment on potential simplification
of the deposit insurance rules, noting that its experience with bank
and savings association failures and a steady volume of inquiries on
deposit insurance coverage suggested that simplification could be
beneficial.\18\ Among other changes, the FDIC proposed specific
amendments to the rules for revocable trust deposits. Certain of these
changes were finalized in 1998, when a provision was added to the rules
defining the conditions that would constitute a defeating
contingency.\19\ Soon afterward, the FDIC expanded the list of
beneficiaries that would qualify for per-beneficiary coverage to
include siblings and parents, noting that some depositors had lost
money in bank failures because they had named non-qualifying
beneficiaries.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 61 FR 25596 (May 22, 1996).
\19\ 63 FR 25750 (May 11, 1998).
\20\ 64 FR 15653 (Apr. 1, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2003, the FDIC proposed amending the revocable trust rules,
pointing to continued confusion about the coverage for revocable trust
deposits.\21\ Specifically, the FDIC proposed to eliminate the
defeating contingency provisions of the rules, with the result that
coverage would be based on the interests of qualifying beneficiaries,
irrespective of any defeating contingencies in the trust agreement. The
FDIC subsequently adopted this change, noting that it more closely
aligned coverage for living trust accounts with payable-on-death
accounts.\22\ Defeating contingency provisions were not eliminated for
irrevocable trusts. At the same time, the FDIC also eliminated the
requirement to name the beneficiaries of a formal revocable trust in
the IDI's deposit account records.\23\ Because the FDIC had to obtain
and review trust agreements from depositors following an IDI's failure
to determine the eligibility of the beneficiaries and allocation of
funds to each beneficiary, eliminating this requirement was based on
the conclusion that also requiring IDIs to maintain records of trust
beneficiaries, or requiring grantors to inform IDIs of changes in their
trust agreements, was unnecessary and burdensome. Though the additional
information might expedite deposit insurance payments, the FDIC
determined that removing this recordkeeping requirement would support
ongoing efforts under the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act to eliminate unnecessary regulatory requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 68 FR 38645 (June 30, 2003).
\22\ 69 FR 2825 (Jan. 21, 2004).
\23\ 69 FR 2825, 2828 (Jan. 21, 2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC's experience with making deposit insurance determinations
during the early stages of the most recent financial crisis suggested
that further changes to the trust rules were necessary. In 2008, the
FDIC simplified the rules in several respects.\24\ First, it eliminated
the kinship requirement for revocable trust beneficiaries, instead
allowing any natural person, charitable organization, or non-profit, to
qualify for per-beneficiary coverage. Second, a simplified calculation
was established if a revocable trust named five or fewer beneficiaries;
coverage would be determined without regard to the allocation of
interests among the beneficiaries. This eliminated the need to discern
and consider beneficial interests in many cases.
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\24\ 73 FR 56706 (Sep. 30, 2008).
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A different insurance calculation applied to revocable trusts with
more than five beneficiaries. Specifically, at that time, the SMDIA was
$100,000 and thus if more than five beneficiaries were named in a
revocable trust, coverage would be the greater of: (1) $500,000; or (2)
the aggregate amount of all beneficiaries' interests in the trust(s),
limited to $100,000 per beneficiary. When the SMDIA was increased to
$250,000, a similar adjustment was made from $100,000 to $250,000 for
the calculation of per beneficiary coverage.
3. Current Rules for Coverage of Trust Deposits
The FDIC currently recognizes three different insurance categories
for deposits held in connection with trusts: (1) Revocable trusts; (2)
irrevocable trusts; and (3) irrevocable trusts with an IDI as trustee.
The current rules for determining insurance coverage for deposits in
each of these categories are described below.
Revocable Trust Deposits
The revocable trust category applies to deposits for which the
depositor has evidenced an intention that the deposit shall belong to
one or more beneficiaries upon his or her death. This category includes
deposits held in connection with formal revocable trusts--that is,
revocable trusts established through a written trust agreement. It also
includes deposits that are not subject to a formal trust agreement,
where the IDI makes payment to the beneficiaries identified in the
IDI's records upon the depositor's death based on account titling and
applicable state law. The FDIC refers to these types of deposits,
including Totten trust accounts, payable-on-death accounts, and similar
accounts, as ``informal revocable trusts.'' Deposits associated with
formal and informal revocable trusts are aggregated for purposes of the
deposit insurance rules; thus, deposits that will pass from the same
grantor to beneficiaries are aggregated and insured up to the SMDIA,
currently $250,000, per beneficiary, regardless of whether the transfer
would be accomplished through a written revocable trust or an informal
revocable trust.\25\
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\25\ 12 CFR 330.10(a).
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Under the current revocable trust rules, beneficiaries include
natural persons, charitable organizations, and non-profit entities
recognized as such under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.\26\ If a
named beneficiary does not satisfy this requirement, funds held in
trust for that beneficiary are treated as single ownership funds of the
grantor and aggregated with any other single ownership accounts that
the grantor maintains at the same IDI.\27\
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\26\ 12 CFR 330.10(c).
\27\ 12 CFR 330.10(d).
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Certain requirements also must be satisfied for a deposit to be
insured in the revocable trust category. The required intention that
the funds shall belong to the beneficiaries upon the depositor's death
must be manifested in the ``title'' of the account using commonly
accepted terms such as ``in trust for,'' ``as trustee for,'' ``payable-
on-death to,'' or any acronym for these terms. For purposes of this
requirement, ``title'' includes the IDI's electronic deposit account
records. For example, an IDI's electronic deposit account records could
identify the account as a revocable trust account through coding or a
similar mechanism.\28\ In addition,
[[Page 41770]]
the beneficiaries of informal trusts (i.e., payable-on-death accounts)
must be named in the IDI's deposit account records.\29\ Since 2004, the
requirement to name beneficiaries in the IDI's deposit account records
has not applied to formal revocable trusts; the FDIC generally obtains
information on beneficiaries of such trusts from depositors following
an IDI's failure. Therefore, if a formal revocable trust deposit
exceeds $250,000 and the depositor's IDI were to fail, this will likely
result in a hold being placed on the deposit until the FDIC can review
the trust agreement and verify that the beneficiary rules are
satisfied, thereby delaying insurance determinations and payments to
insured depositors.
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\28\ 12 CFR 330.10(b)(1).
\29\ 12 CFR 330.10(b)(2).
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The calculation of deposit insurance coverage for revocable trust
deposits depends upon the number of unique beneficiaries named by a
depositor. If five or fewer beneficiaries have been named, the
depositor is insured in an amount up to the total number of named
beneficiaries multiplied by the SMDIA, and the specific allocation of
interests among the beneficiaries is not considered.\30\ If more than
five beneficiaries have been named, the depositor is insured up to the
greater of: (1) Five times the SMDIA; or (2) the total of the interests
of each beneficiary, with each such interest limited to the SMDIA.\31\
For purposes of this calculation, a life estate interest is valued at
the SMDIA.\32\
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\30\ 12 CFR 330.10(a).
\31\ 12 CFR 330.10(e).
\32\ 12 CFR 330.10(g). For example, if a revocable trust
provides a life estate for the depositor's spouse and remainder
interests for six other beneficiaries, the spouse's life estate
interest would be valued at $250,000 for purposes of the deposit
insurance calculation.
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Where a revocable trust deposit is jointly owned by multiple co-
owners, the interests of each account owner are separately insured up
to the SMDIA per beneficiary.\33\ However, if the co-owners are the
only beneficiaries of the trust, the account is instead insured under
the FDIC's joint account rule.\34\
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\33\ 12 CFR 330.10(f)(1).
\34\ 12 CFR 330.10(f)(2).
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The current revocable trust rule also contains a provision that was
intended to reduce confusion and the potential for a decrease in
deposit insurance coverage in the case of the death of a grantor.
Specifically, if a revocable trust becomes irrevocable due to the death
of the grantor, the trust's deposit may continue to be insured under
the revocable trust rules.\35\ Absent this provision, the irrevocable
trust rules would apply following the grantor's death, as the revocable
trust becomes irrevocable at that time, which could result in a
reduction in coverage.\36\
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\35\ 12 CFR 330.10(h).
\36\ The revocable trust rules tend to provide greater coverage
than the irrevocable trust rules because contingencies are not
considered for revocable trusts. In addition, where five or fewer
beneficiaries are named by a revocable trust, specific allocations
to beneficiaries also are not considered.
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Irrevocable Trust Deposits
Deposits held by an irrevocable trust that has been established
either by written agreement or by statute are insured in the
irrevocable trust deposit insurance category. Calculating coverage for
deposits insured in this category requires a determination of whether
beneficiaries' interests in the trust are contingent or non-contingent.
Non-contingent interests are interests that may be determined without
evaluation of any contingencies, except for those covered by the
present worth and life expectancy tables and the rules for their use
set forth in the IRS Federal Estate Tax Regulations.\37\ Funds held for
non-contingent trust interests are insured up to the SMDIA for each
such beneficiary.\38\ Funds held for contingent trust interests are
aggregated and insured up to the SMDIA in total.\39\
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\37\ 12 CFR 330.1(m). For example, a life estate interest is
generally non-contingent, as it may be valued using the life
expectancy tables. However, where a trustee has discretion to divert
funds from one beneficiary to another to provide for the second
beneficiary's medical needs, the first beneficiary's interest is
contingent upon the trustee's discretion.
\38\ 12 CFR 330.13(a).
\39\ 12 CFR 330.13(b).
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The irrevocable trust rules do not apply to deposits held for a
grantor's retained interest in an irrevocable trust.\40\ Such deposits
are aggregated with the grantor's other single ownership deposits for
purposes of applying the deposit insurance limit.
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\40\ See 12 CFR 330.1(r) (definition of ``trust interest'' does
not include any interest retained by the settlor).
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Deposits Held by an IDI as Trustee of an Irrevocable Trust
For deposits held by an IDI in its capacity as trustee of an
irrevocable trust, deposit insurance coverage is governed by section
7(i) of the FDI Act, a provision rooted in the Banking Act of 1935.
Section 7(i) provides that ``trust funds held on deposit by an insured
depository institution in a fiduciary capacity as trustee pursuant to
any irrevocable trust established pursuant to any statute or written
trust agreement shall be insured in an amount not to exceed the
standard maximum deposit insurance amount . . . for each trust
estate.'' \41\
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\41\ 12 U.S.C. 1817(i).
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The FDIC's regulations governing coverage for deposits held by an
IDI in its capacity as trustee of an irrevocable trust are found in
Sec. 330.12. The rule provides that ``trust funds'' held by an IDI in
its capacity as trustee of an irrevocable trust, whether held in the
IDI's trust department or another department, or deposited by the
fiduciary institution in another IDI, are insured up to the SMDIA for
each owner or beneficiary represented.\42\ This coverage is separate
from the coverage provided for other deposits of the owners or the
beneficiaries,\43\ and deposits held for a grantor's retained interest
are not aggregated with the grantor's single ownership deposits. Given
the statutory basis for coverage, the FDIC is not proposing any changes
to Sec. 330.12.
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\42\ Part 330 defines ``trust funds'' as ``funds held by an
insured depository institution as trustee pursuant to any
irrevocable trust established pursuant to any statute or written
trust agreement.'' 12 CFR 330.1(q).
\43\ 12 CFR 330.12(a).
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4. Part 370 and Recordkeeping at the Largest IDIs
Simplification of the deposit insurance rules would make deposit
insurance coverage easier to understand and improve the FDIC's ability
to resolve insurance claims in a timely manner, broadly benefiting the
public and IDIs, and it would have particular significance for the
large IDIs that are subject to part 370 of the FDIC's regulations. Part
370 was adopted in 2016 to promote the timely payment of deposit
insurance in the event of the failure of a large IDI.\44\ Its
development was prompted by the FDIC's goal of ensuring a timely
insurance determination in the event a large IDI with a high volume of
deposit accounts fails. Part 370 requires ``covered institutions,''
which generally include IDIs with two million or more deposit accounts,
to maintain complete and accurate depositor information and to
configure their information technology systems so as to permit the FDIC
to calculate deposit insurance coverage
[[Page 41771]]
promptly in the event of the IDI's failure. To implement part 370,
covered institutions are updating their deposit account records and
developing systems capable of applying the deposit insurance rules in
an automated manner.
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\44\ 81 FR 87734 (Dec. 5, 2016).
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In addition to broadly benefiting the public and all IDIs,
simplification of the deposit insurance rules complements part 370 in
that it would further promote the timely payment of deposit insurance
for depositors of the largest IDIs. For instance, neither part 370 nor
any other rule requires covered institutions to maintain certain
records necessary to make an insurance determination for formal trust
deposits, meaning that the FDIC would need to obtain and review
revocable and irrevocable trust agreements following a covered
institution's failure. Analysis of data from part 370 covered
institutions suggest the number of revocable trusts is significant and,
if a covered institution were to fail, processing of deposit insurance
for formal revocable trusts would likely extend well beyond normal FDIC
payment timeframes. Simplification of the deposit insurance rules would
streamline insurance determinations for trust accounts. The FDIC
expects that capabilities developed in accordance with part 370 will be
helpful in addressing many of the challenges involved in making deposit
insurance determinations in connection with a very large IDI's failure.
Simplification of the deposit insurance rules would provide additional
benefits by reducing the amount of time needed to collect and process
trust information after failure in order to make use of a covered
institution's part 370 deposit insurance calculation capabilities. With
less time needed to calculate insurance coverage, the FDIC would be
able to make more timely insurance payments to insured depositors.
5. Need for Further Rulemaking
The rules governing deposit insurance coverage for trust deposits
have been simplified on several occasions, but are still frequently
misunderstood, and can present some implementation challenges. For
example, the current trust rules often require detailed, time-
consuming, and resource-intensive review of trust documentation to
obtain the information that is necessary to calculate deposit insurance
coverage. This information is often not found in an IDI's records and
must be obtained from depositors after an IDI's failure. For example,
the FDIC's deposit insurance determinations for depositors of IndyMac
Bank, F.S.B. (IndyMac) following its failure in 2008 were challenging
in part because IndyMac had a large number of trust accounts for which
deposit insurance coverage was governed by complex deposit insurance
rules.\45\ FDIC claims personnel contacted more than 10,500 IndyMac
depositors to obtain the trust documentation necessary to complete
deposit insurance determinations for their revocable trust and
irrevocable trust deposits. In some cases, this process took several
months. Revision of the deposit insurance coverage rules for trust
deposits along the lines proposed would reduce the amount of
information that must be provided by trust depositors, as well as the
complexity of the FDIC's review. This revision should enable the FDIC
to complete deposit insurance determinations more rapidly if another
IDI with a large number of trust accounts were to fail in the future.
Delays in the payment of deposit insurance can be consequential, as
revocable trust deposits in particular are often used by depositors to
satisfy their daily financial obligations, and the proposal would help
to mitigate those delays.
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\45\ See Crisis and Response: An FDIC History, 2008-2013 at 197,
FN 48, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 2017.
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Several factors contribute to the challenges of making insurance
determinations for trust deposits. First, there are three different
sets of rules governing deposit insurance coverage for trust deposits.
Understanding the coverage for a particular deposit requires a
threshold inquiry to determine which set of rules to apply--the
revocable trust rules, the irrevocable trust rules, or the rules for
deposits held by an IDI as trustee of an irrevocable trust. This
requires review of the trust agreement to determine the type of trust
(revocable or irrevocable), and the inquiry may be complicated by
innovations in state trust law that are intended to increase the
flexibility and utility of trusts. In some cases, this threshold
inquiry is also complicated by the provision of the revocable trust
rules that allows for continued coverage under those rules where a
trust becomes irrevocable upon the grantor's death. The result of an
irrevocable trust deposit being insured under the revocable trust rules
has proven confusing for both depositors and bankers.
Second, even after determining which set of rules applies to a
particular deposit, it may be challenging to apply the rules. For
example, the revocable trust rules include unique titling requirements
and beneficiary requirements. These rules also provide for two separate
calculations to determine insurance coverage, depending in part upon
whether there are five or fewer trust beneficiaries or at least six
beneficiaries. In addition, for revocable trusts that provide benefits
to multiple generations of potential beneficiaries, the FDIC needs to
evaluate the trust agreement to determine whether a beneficiary is a
primary beneficiary (immediately entitled to funds when a grantor
dies), contingent beneficiary, or remainder beneficiary. Only
``eligible'' primary beneficiaries and remainder beneficiaries are
considered in calculating FDIC deposit insurance coverage. The
irrevocable trust rules may require detailed review of trust agreements
to determine whether beneficiaries' interests are contingent and may
also require actuarial or present value calculations. These types of
requirements complicate the determination of insurance coverage for
trust deposits, have proven confusing for depositors, and extend the
amount of time needed to complete a deposit insurance determination and
insurance payment.
Third, the complexity and variety of depositors' trust arrangements
adds to the difficulty of determining deposit insurance coverage. For
example, trust interests are sometimes defined through numerous
conditions and formulas, and a careful analysis of these provisions may
be necessary in order to calculate deposit insurance coverage under the
current rules. Arrangements involving multiple trusts where the same
beneficiaries are named by the same grantor(s) in different trusts add
to the difficulty of applying the trust rules.
The FDIC believes that simplification of the deposit insurance
rules also presents an opportunity to more closely align the coverage
provided for different types of trust deposits. For example, the
revocable trust rules generally provide for a greater amount of
coverage than the irrevocable trust rules. This outcome occurs because
contingent interests for irrevocable trusts are aggregated and insured
up to the SMDIA rather than being insured up to the SMDIA per
beneficiary, while contingencies are not considered and therefore do
not limit coverage in the same manner for revocable trusts.
C. Description of Proposed Rule
The FDIC is proposing to amend the rules governing deposit
insurance coverage for trust deposits. Generally, the proposed
amendments would: Merge the revocable and irrevocable trust categories
into one category; apply a simpler, common calculation method
[[Page 41772]]
to determine insurance coverage for deposits held by revocable and
irrevocable trusts; and eliminate certain requirements found in the
current rules for revocable and irrevocable trusts.
Merger of Revocable and Irrevocable Trust Categories
As discussed above, the FDIC historically has insured revocable
trust deposits and irrevocable trust deposits under two separate
insurance categories. Staff's experience has been that this bifurcation
often confuses depositors and bankers, as it requires a threshold
inquiry to determine which set of rules to apply to a trust deposit.
Moreover, each trust deposit must be categorized before the aggregation
of trust deposits within each category can be completed.
The FDIC believes that trust deposits held in connection with
revocable and irrevocable trusts are sufficiently similar, for purposes
of deposit insurance coverage, to warrant the merger of these two
categories into one category. Under the FDIC's current rules, deposit
insurance coverage is provided because the trustee maintains the
deposit for the benefit of the beneficiaries. This is true regardless
of whether the trust is revocable or irrevocable. Merger of the
revocable and irrevocable trust categories would better conform deposit
insurance coverage to the substance--rather than the legal form--of the
trust arrangement. This underlying principle of the deposit insurance
rules is particularly important in the context of trusts, as state law
often provides flexibility to structure arrangements in different ways
to accomplish a given purpose.\46\ Depositors may have a variety of
reasons for selecting a particular legal arrangement, but that decision
should not significantly affect deposit insurance coverage.
Importantly, the proposed merger of the revocable trust and irrevocable
trust categories into one category for deposit insurance purposes would
not affect the application or operation of state trust law; this only
would affect the determination of deposit insurance coverage for these
types of trust deposits in the event of an IDI's failure.
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\46\ For example, the FDIC currently aggregates deposits in
payable-on-death accounts and deposits of written revocable trusts
for purposes of deposit insurance coverage, despite their separate
and distinct legal mechanisms. Also, where the co-owners of a
revocable trust are also that trust's sole beneficiaries, the FDIC
instead insures the trust's deposits as joint deposits, reflecting
the arrangement's substance rather than its legal form.
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Accordingly, the FDIC is proposing to amend Sec. 330.10 of its
regulations, which currently applies only to revocable trust deposits,
to establish a new ``trust accounts'' category that would include both
revocable and irrevocable trust deposits. The proposed rule defines the
deposits that would be included in this category: (1) Informal
revocable trust deposits, such as payable-on-death accounts, in-trust-
for accounts, and Totten trust accounts; (2) formal revocable trust
deposits, defined to mean deposits held pursuant to a written revocable
trust agreement under which a deposit passes to one or more
beneficiaries upon the grantor's death; and (3) irrevocable trust
deposits, meaning deposits held pursuant to an irrevocable trust
established by written agreement or by statute. Section 330.10 would
not apply to deposits maintained by an IDI in its capacity as trustee
of an irrevocable trust; these deposits would continue to be insured
separately pursuant to section 7(i) of the FDI Act and Sec. 330.12 of
the deposit insurance regulations.
In addition, the merger of the revocable trust and irrevocable
trust categories eliminates the need for Sec. 330.10(h)-(i) of the
current revocable trust rules, which provides that the revocable trust
rules may continue to apply to a deposit where a revocable trust
becomes irrevocable due to the death of one or more of the trust's
grantors. These provisions were intended to benefit depositors, who
sometimes were unaware that a trust owner's death could also trigger a
significant decrease in insurance coverage as a revocable trust becomes
irrevocable. However, in the FDIC's experience, this rule has proven
complex in part because it results in some irrevocable trusts being
insured per the revocable trust rules, while other irrevocable trusts
are insured under the irrevocable trust rules.\47\ As a result, a
depositor could know a trust was irrevocable but not know which deposit
insurance rules to apply. The proposed rule would insure deposits of
revocable trusts and irrevocable trusts according to a common set of
rules, eliminating the need for these provisions (Sec. 330.10(h)-(i))
and simplifying coverage for depositors. Accordingly, the death of a
revocable trust owner would not result in a decrease in deposit
insurance coverage for the trust. Coverage for irrevocable and
revocable trusts would fall under the same category and deposit
insurance coverage would remain the same, even after the expiration of
the six-month grace period following the death of a deposit owner.\48\
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\47\ As noted above, if a revocable trust becomes irrevocable
due to the death of the grantor, the trust's deposit continues to be
insured under the revocable trust rules. 12 CFR 330.10(h).
\48\ The death of an account owner can affect deposit insurance
coverage, often reducing the amount of coverage that applies to a
family's accounts. To ensure that families dealing with the death of
a family member have adequate time to review and restructure
accounts if necessary, the FDIC insures a deceased owner's accounts
as if he or she were still alive for a period of six months after
his or her death. 12 CFR 330.3(j).
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Calculation of Coverage
The FDIC is proposing to use one streamlined calculation to
determine the amount of deposit insurance coverage for deposits of
revocable and irrevocable trusts. This method is already utilized by
the FDIC to calculate coverage for revocable trusts that have five or
fewer beneficiaries and it is an aspect of the rules that is generally
well-understood by bankers and trust depositors.
The proposed rule would provide that a grantor's trust deposits are
insured in an amount up to the SMDIA (currently $250,000) multiplied by
the number of trust beneficiaries, not to exceed five beneficiaries.
The FDIC would presume that, for deposit insurance purposes, the trust
provides for equal treatment of beneficiaries such that specific
allocation of the funds to the respective beneficiaries will not be
relevant, consistent with the FDIC's current treatment of revocable
trusts with five or fewer beneficiaries. This would, in effect, limit
coverage for a grantor's trust deposits at each IDI to a total of
$1,250,000; in other words, maximum coverage would be equivalent to
$250,000 per beneficiary up to five beneficiaries. In determining
deposit insurance coverage, the FDIC would continue to only consider
beneficiaries that are expected to receive the deposit held by the
trust in the IDI; the FDIC would not consider beneficiaries who are
expected to receive only non-deposit assets of the trust.
The FDIC is proposing to calculate coverage in this manner based on
its experience with the revocable trust rules after the most recent
modifications to these rules in 2008. The FDIC has found that the
deposit insurance calculation method for revocable trusts with five or
fewer beneficiaries has been the most straightforward and is easy for
bankers and the public to understand. This calculation provides for
insurance in an amount up to the total number of unique grantor-
beneficiary trust relationships (i.e., the number of grantors,
multiplied by the total number of beneficiaries, multiplied by the
SMDIA).\49\ In addition to being simpler,
[[Page 41773]]
this calculation has proven beneficial in resolutions, as it leads to
more prompt deposit insurance determinations and quicker access to
insured deposits for depositors. Accordingly, the FDIC proposes to
calculate deposit insurance coverage for trust deposits based on the
simpler calculation currently used for revocable trusts with five or
fewer beneficiaries.
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\49\ For example, two co-grantors that designate five
beneficiaries are insured for up to $2,500,000 (2 x 5 x $250,000).
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The streamlined calculation that would be used to determine
coverage for revocable trust deposits and irrevocable trust deposits
includes a limit on the total amount of deposit insurance coverage for
all of a depositor's funds in the trust category at the same IDI. The
proposed rule would provide coverage for trust deposits at each IDI up
to a total of $1,250,000 per grantor; in other words, each grantor's
insurance limit would be $250,000 per beneficiary up to a maximum of
five beneficiaries. The level of five beneficiaries is an important
threshold in the current revocable trust rules, as it defines whether a
grantor's coverage is determined using the simpler calculation of the
number of beneficiaries multiplied by the SMDIA, rather than the more
complex calculation involving the consideration of the amount of each
beneficiary's specific interest (which applies when there are six or
more beneficiaries). The trust rules currently limit coverage by tying
coverage to the specific interests of each beneficiary of an
irrevocable trust or of each beneficiary of a revocable trust with more
than five beneficiaries. The proposed rule's $1,250,000 per-grantor,
per-IDI limit is more straightforward and balances the objectives of
simplifying the trust rules, promoting timely payment of deposit
insurance, facilitating resolutions, ensuring consistency with the FDI
Act, and limiting risk to the DIF.
The FDIC anticipates that limiting coverage to $1,250,000 per
grantor, per IDI, for trust deposits would affect very few depositors,
as most trust deposits in past IDI failures have had balances well
below this level. For example, data obtained from a sample of IDI
failures from 2010-2020 suggests that only about 0.085 percent of
depositors maintaining trust deposits might be affected by the proposed
$1,250,000 limit.\50\ The FDIC does not possess sufficient information,
however, to enable it to project the effects of the proposed limit on
current depositors, and requests that commenters provide information
that might be helpful in this regard.
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\50\ Data from 2,550,001 depositors, including 249,257 trust
account depositors, at 246 failed banks from September 17, 2010-
April 3, 2020. A total of 212 out of 249,257 (.085 percent) trust
account depositors had more than $1.25 million in deposits across
all of their trust accounts. Of these depositors, only 24 had more
than five beneficiaries named in the bank's records. However, not
all trust accounts in the sample maintained beneficiary records at
the bank, so this likely underestimates the number of affected
depositors.
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Under the proposed rule, to determine the level of insurance
coverage that would apply to trust deposits, depositors would still
need to identify the grantors and the eligible beneficiaries of the
trust. The level of coverage that applies to trust deposits would no
longer be affected by the specific allocation of trust funds to each of
the beneficiaries of the trust or by contingencies outlined in the
trust agreement. Instead, the proposed rule would provide that a
grantor's trust deposits are insured up to a total of $1,250,000 per
grantor, or an amount up to the SMDIA multiplied by the number of
eligible beneficiaries, with a limit of no more than five
beneficiaries.
Aggregation
The proposed rule also provides for the aggregation of revocable
and irrevocable trust deposits for purposes of applying the deposit
insurance limit. Under the current rules, deposits of informal
revocable trusts and formal revocable trusts are aggregated for this
purpose.\51\ The proposed rule would aggregate a grantor's informal and
formal revocable trust deposits, as well as irrevocable trust deposits.
For example, all informal revocable trusts, formal revocable trusts and
irrevocable trusts held for the same grantor, at the same IDI would be
aggregated and the grantor's insurance limit would be determined by how
many eligible and unique beneficiaries were identified between all of
their trust accounts.\52\ The deposit insurance coverage provided in
the ``trust accounts'' category would continue to remain separate from
the coverage provided for other deposits held in a different right and
capacity at the same IDI. However, a small number of depositors that
currently maintain both revocable trust and irrevocable trust deposits
at the same IDI may have deposits in excess of the insurance limit if
these separate categories are combined. The FDIC does not have data on
depositors' trust arrangements that would allow it to estimate the
number of depositors that might be affected in this manner, and
requests that commenters provide information that might be helpful in
this regard.
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\51\ See 12 CFR 330.10(a) (``all funds that a depositor holds in
both living trust accounts and payable-on-death accounts, at the
same FDIC-insured institution and naming the same beneficiaries, are
aggregated for insurance purposes'').
\52\ For example, if a grantor maintained both an informal
revocable trust account with three beneficiaries and a formal
revocable trust account with three separate and unique
beneficiaries, the two accounts would be aggregated and the maximum
deposit insurance available would be $1.25 million (1 grantor x
SMDIA x number of unique beneficiaries, limited to 5). However, if
the same three people were the beneficiaries of both accounts, the
maximum deposit insurance available would be $750,000 (1 grantor x
SMDIA x 3 unique beneficiaries).
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Eligible Beneficiaries
Currently, the revocable trust rules provide that beneficiaries
include natural persons, charitable organizations, and non-profit
entities recognized as such under the Internal Revenue Code of
1986,\53\ while the irrevocable trust rules do not establish criteria
for beneficiaries. The FDIC believes that a single definition should be
used to determine whether an entity is an ``eligible'' beneficiary for
all trust deposits, and proposes to use the current revocable trust
rule's definition. The FDIC believes that this will result in a change
in deposit insurance coverage only in very rare cases.
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\53\ 12 CFR 330.10(c).
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The proposed rule also would exclude from the calculation of
deposit insurance coverage beneficiaries that only would obtain an
interest in a trust if one or more named beneficiaries are deceased
(often referred to as contingent beneficiaries). In this respect, the
proposed rule would codify existing practice to include only primary,
unique beneficiaries in the deposit insurance calculation.\54\ This
would not represent a substantive change in coverage. Consistent with
treatment under the current trust rules, naming a chain of contingent
beneficiaries that would obtain trust interests only in event of a
beneficiary's death would not increase deposit insurance coverage.
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\54\ See FDIC Financial Institution Employee's Guide to Deposit
Insurance at 51 (``Sometimes the trust agreement will provide that
if a primary beneficiary predeceases the owner, the deceased
beneficiary's share will pass to an alternative or contingent
beneficiary. Regardless of such language, if the primary beneficiary
is alive at the time of an IDI's failure, only the primary
beneficiary, and not the alternative or contingent beneficiary, is
taken into account in calculating deposit insurance coverage.'').
Including only unique beneficiaries means that when an owner names
the same beneficiary on multiple trust accounts, the beneficiary
will only be counted once in calculating trust coverage. For
example, if a grantor has two trust deposit accounts and names the
same beneficiary in both trust documents, the total deposit
insurance coverage associated with that beneficiary is limited to
$250,000 in total.
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Finally, the proposed rule would codify a longstanding
interpretation of the trust rules where an informal
[[Page 41774]]
revocable trust designates the depositor's formal trust as its
beneficiary. A formal trust generally does not meet the definition of
an eligible beneficiary for deposit insurance purposes, but the FDIC
has treated such accounts as revocable trust accounts under the trust
rules, insuring the account as if it were titled in the name of the
formal trust.\55\
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\55\ See FDIC Financial Institution Employee's Guide to Deposit
Insurance at 71.
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Retained Interests and Ineligible Beneficiaries' Interests
The current trust rules provide that in some instances, funds
corresponding to specific beneficiaries are aggregated with a grantor's
single ownership deposits at the same IDI for purposes of the deposit
insurance calculation. These instances include a grantor's retained
interest in an irrevocable trust \56\ and interests of beneficiaries
that do not satisfy the definition of ``beneficiary.'' \57\ This adds
complexity to the deposit insurance calculation, as detailed review of
a trust agreement may be required to value such interests in order to
aggregate them with a grantor's other funds. In order to implement the
streamlined calculation for trust deposits, the FDIC is proposing to
eliminate these provisions. Under the proposed rules, the grantor and
other beneficiaries that do not satisfy the definition of ``eligible
beneficiary'' would not be included for purposes of the deposit
insurance calculation.\58\ Importantly, this would not in any way limit
a grantor's ability to establish such trust interests under State law.
These interests simply would not factor into the calculation of deposit
insurance coverage.
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\56\ See 12 CFR 330.1(r); see also FDIC Financial Institution
Employee's Guide to Deposit Insurance at 87.
\57\ 12 CFR 330.10(d).
\58\ In the unlikely event a trust does not name any eligible
beneficiaries, the FDIC would treat the trust's deposits as single
ownership deposits. Such deposits would be aggregated with any other
single ownership deposits that the grantor maintains at the same IDI
and insured up to the SMDIA of $250,000.
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Future Trusts Named as Beneficiaries
Trusts often contain provisions for the establishment of one or
more new trusts upon the grantor's death, and the proposed rule also
would clarify deposit insurance coverage in these situations.
Specifically, if a trust agreement provides that trust funds will pass
into one or more new trusts upon the