Credit Union Service Organizations (CUSOs), 59289-59302 [2021-23322]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 205 / Wednesday, October 27, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
PART 713—FIDELITY BOND AND
INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR
FEDERALLY INSURED CREDIT
UNIONS
11. The authority citation for part 713
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1761a, 1761b, 1766(a),
1766(h), 1789(a)(11).
§ 713.6
[Amended]
12. Amend § 713.6, wherever it
appears in the table in paragraph (a)(1)
and paragraph (c), by removing the
word ‘‘CAMEL’’ and adding in its place
the word ‘‘CAMELS’’.
■
[FR Doc. 2021–23332 Filed 10–26–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 712
RIN 3133–AE95
Credit Union Service Organizations
(CUSOs)
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The NCUA Board (Board) is
issuing a final rule that amends the
NCUA’s credit union service
organization (CUSO) regulation. The
final rule accomplishes two objectives:
expanding the list of permissible
activities and services for CUSOs to
include the origination of any type of
loan that a Federal credit union (FCU)
may originate; and granting the Board
additional flexibility to approve
permissible activities and services.
DATES: This final rule is effective
November 26, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Frank Kressman, Office of General
Counsel, (703) 518–6540; or by mail at
National Credit Union Administration,
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314.
SUMMARY:
regulations governing both FCUs and
FICUs. Section 120 of the FCU Act is a
general grant of regulatory authority and
authorizes the Board to prescribe
regulations for the administration of the
FCU Act.2 Section 209 of the FCU Act
is a plenary grant of regulatory authority
to the NCUA to issue regulations
necessary or appropriate to carry out its
role as share insurer for all FICUs.3
Accordingly, the FCU Act grants the
Board broad rulemaking authority to
ensure that the credit union industry
and the National Credit Union Share
Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) remain safe
and sound.
Under the FCU Act, FCUs have the
authority to lend up to one percent of
their paid-in and unimpaired capital
and surplus, and to invest an equivalent
amount, in CUSOs.4 The NCUA
regulates FCUs’ lending to, and
investment in, CUSOs in part 712 of its
regulations (CUSO rule).5 In general, a
CUSO is an organization: (1) In which
a FICU has an ownership interest or to
which a FICU has extended a loan; (2)
is engaged primarily in providing
products and services to credit unions,
their membership, or the membership of
credit unions contracting with the
CUSO; and (3) whose business relates to
the routine daily operations of the credit
unions it serves.6 The CUSO rule
provides a list of preapproved activities
and services related to the routine daily
operations of credit unions.7
The list of preapproved activities and
services in the CUSO rule has not been
substantively revised since 2008.8 The
2008 final rule added two new
categories of permissible CUSO
activities: (1) Credit card loan
origination and (2) payroll processing
services. The 2008 final rule also added
new examples of permissible CUSO
activities and clarified that FCUs may
invest in, and loan to, CUSOs that buy
and sell participations in loans they are
authorized to originate. In the 2008 final
rule, commenters requested that FCUs
be permitted to lend to or invest in
CUSOs involved in broader types of
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Introduction
Legal Authority and Background
The Board is issuing this rule
pursuant to its authority under the
Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act).1
Under the FCU Act, the NCUA is the
chartering and supervisory authority for
FCUs and the federal supervisory
authority for federally insured credit
unions (FICUs). The FCU Act grants the
NCUA a broad mandate to issue
1 12
U.S.C. 1751 et seq.
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U.S.C. 1766(a).
U.S.C. 1789.
4 12 U.S.C. 1757.
5 12 CFR part 712. All sections of part 712 apply
to FCUs. Sections 712.2(d)(2)(ii), 712.3(d), 712.4,
and 712.11(b) and (c) apply to federally insured,
state-chartered credit unions (FISCUs), as provided
in § 741.222 of the chapter. FISCUs must follow the
law in the state in which they are chartered with
respect to the sections in part 712 that only apply
to FCUs. Corporate credit union CUSOs are subject
to part 704. Any amendments to part 704 would
occur through a separate rulemaking and are not
included in this final rule.
6 See 12 CFR 712.1(d), 712.3(b), and 712.5.
7 12 CFR 712.5.
8 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
3 12
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lending; specifically, car loans,
including direct lending and the
purchase of retail installment sales
contracts from vehicle dealerships, and
payday lending. The NCUA, however,
declined to provide such authority at
that time.9
II. Proposed Rule
At its January 14, 2021 meeting, the
Board issued the proposed rule to
amend the NCUA’s CUSO regulation.10
The proposed rule would accomplish
two objectives: Expanding the list of
permissible activities and services for
CUSOs that FCUs may lend to or invest
in to include origination of any type of
loan that an FCU may originate; and
granting the Board additional flexibility
to approve permissible activities and
services. The NCUA also sought
comment on broadening general FCU
investment authority in CUSOs based
on the FCU Act’s provision that
authorizes FCUs to invest in
organizations providing services
associated with the routine operations
of credit unions, which is codified in a
separate provision from the authority for
FCUs to lend to ‘‘credit union
organizations.’’ The proposed rule
provided for a 30-day comment period
that closed on March 29, 2021. To allow
interested persons more time to
consider and submit comments, the
Board extended the comment period for
an additional 30 days. The extended
comment period closed on April 30,
2021.11
The Board received over 1,000
comments on the proposed rule.
Comments were received from credit
unions, both state and federal, CUSOs,
credit union leagues and trade
associations, banking trade
organizations, individuals, consumer
organizations, and an association of
state credit union supervisors. In
general, consumer organizations,
banking trade organizations, and
individuals who participated in a form
letter writing campaign were opposed to
the proposed rule. Credit unions were
not unanimous, with some credit unions
supporting the rule and others opposing
it. CUSOs, credit union leagues, and
trade organizations were generally in
favor of the proposed rule.
III. Final Rule
The final rule adopts the proposed
rule without any substantive change.
Under the final rule, therefore, CUSOs
are permitted to originate any type of
9 The NCUA’s rationale for not extending CUSO
lending authority more broadly is discussed in
detail in Section III, Final Rule.
10 86 FR 11645 (Feb. 26, 2001).
11 86 FR 16679 (Mar. 31, 2021).
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loan that an FCU may originate and
grants the Board additional flexibility to
approve permissible CUSO activities
and services outside of notice and
comment rulemaking.12 The final rule
and a discussion of the Board’s
responses to the comments are
discussed in detail subsequently. First,
however, the Board explains the general
principles and approach it has taken to
examine and reconcile the competing
viewpoints of commenters as well as
past statements by the NCUA and
individual Board Members on risks
relating to CUSO activity.
As detailed in response to
commenters’ different points, which are
grouped by subject matter in the
following sections, the Board has reexamined several key statutory and
policy principles to engage in a
thorough, balanced review of the
comments. These points include the
following:
1. The Board’s views regarding safety
and soundness and risk to the NCUSIF.
On this critical issue, the Board has
considered key reference points,
including the statutory definition of a
‘‘material loss’’ to the NCUSIF and
requirements for NCUA insurance of
member accounts. These authorities do
not define all losses as material or
involving undue risk to the NCUSIF.
This preamble elaborates on these
reference points in considering the
degree of risk the rule may pose.
2. The need to balance predicted risks
against predicted benefits. Many
commenters opposing the proposed rule
made, for the most part, generalized
predictions of harm to the NCUSIF, to
consumers, or to the reputation of credit
unions. While the Board recognizes the
need to consider these concerns, it also
finds that they do not account for the
potential benefits that the regulatory
changes may bring to FCUs by
enhancing efficiency and supporting
innovation, and to consumers by
expanding lending options and access
through credit union-affiliated lenders.
The Board also finds this expansion in
FCU authority appropriate for parity
purposes because the Board currently
does not restrict the activity of CUSOs
in which only FISCUs lend or invest.
3. Some of the policy concerns
invoked by commenters, as well as the
Board at times in the past, have been
both qualified and conditional. Most
notably, some commenters and the
Board in past CUSO rulemakings have
considered the potential for FCUs
12 Originate
means to fund or make loans. This is
separate from the already permissible activity for
FCUs to lend to or invest in CUSOs that engage in
loan support services that include loan processing
and servicing under § 712.5(j).
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lending to or investing in CUSOs with
expanded authorities to dilute the FCU
common bond and introduce more
competition to small credit unions. The
Board continues to recognize that these
issues raise concerns for some parties,
but has found that neither rests on clear
statutory authority in the FCU Act. That
is to say, nothing in the FCU Act binds
CUSOs to FCU field of membership
common bond provisions, and the
Board itself has invoked this concern
only conditionally in past rulemakings,
allowing it to yield to the needs of credit
unions to avail themselves of expanded
CUSO lending activity. Further, the FCU
Act does not require a CUSO to serve
credit unions and members exclusively,
but rather primarily, which balances a
focus on credit union members while
expressly authorizing CUSOs to serve
others. Similarly, the Board does not
believe it is prudent to allow concerns
over legitimate competition in the
marketplace to restrain regulatory
changes that may benefit many credit
unions and the system as a whole.
Accordingly, to the extent these factors
are appropriate regulatory
considerations, the Board believes they
must yield to the benefits of expanded
FCU authority about CUSO activity and
other factors.
4. Application of the Board’s
judgment to reconcile differing
viewpoints. Commenters opposing the
rule raised several concerns, and in a
few cases, cited past examples or
incidents. But the Board does not
believe that commenters opposing the
rule provided substantial evidence to
support their predictions that adopting
the proposed rule would result in
various harm. Commenters supporting
the rule provided reasons they believe
the rule would be beneficial. In
considering these competing
viewpoints, the vast majority of which
are general policy views, the Board has
applied its own judgment to make the
best conclusions it can about the
potential benefits and risks of the
proposed rule. Throughout this review,
the Board has concluded that limiting
expansion and innovation indefinitely
based only on generalized concerns
would result in regulatory stagnation,
which may harm the credit union
system in the long term.
After considering the mixed
viewpoints, the Board has determined
that the overall weight of the factors in
the record favor moving forward to
enhance opportunities for FCUs CUSOs
to engage in all types of lending
permitted for FCUs.
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Expansion of Permissible FCU Lending
and Investment in CUSOs Engaged in
Lending Activity
The Board has reconsidered its 2008
position on permitting FCUs to invest in
or lend to CUSOs that engage in all
types of lending. The Board now
believes that permitting FCUs to invest
in or lend to CUSOs that originate any
type of loan that an FCU may originate
may better enable FCUs to compete
effectively in today’s marketplace and
better serve their members.
As discussed in the preceding section,
the FCU Act permits an FCU to lend to
or invest in a CUSO that provides
services associated with the routine and
daily operations of credit unions. The
NCUA has interpreted this statutory
authority broadly to permit an FCU to
lend to, and invest in, a CUSO that does
most of the same activities and services
permissible for an FCU.13 To date,
however, FCUs have not been permitted
to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs that
originate certain kinds of loans.14
As discussed in the proposed rule, the
NCUA historically has been reluctant to
grant FCUs authority to invest in or lend
to CUSOs with broad lending authority.
First, the NCUA has been hesitant
because CUSOs may serve those who
are not members of a member credit
union. The NCUA has been concerned
about FCUs benefiting from CUSO
profits generated from non-members.15
Second, the NCUA has also expressed
concern that if member loans were being
made by CUSOs, the NCUA would have
a duty to examine such loans and that
would necessitate greater NCUA
examination authority over CUSOs.16
Finally, the NCUA has also had
concerns that permitting CUSOs to
engage in a core credit union function
could negatively affect affiliated credit
union services.17
Due to these concerns, the NCUA has
previously found compelling
justification for permitting FCUs to
invest in or lend to CUSOs engaged in
only four types of loans: (1) Business;
(2) consumer mortgage; (3) student; and
(4) credit cards.18 In permitting these
types of lending, the NCUA has
considered factors specific to each type
of lending, such as whether these
activities require specialized staff or
economies of scale, and, as discussed
subsequently, whether loan aggregation
13 12
CFR 712.5.
62 FR 11779 (Mar. 13, 1997).
14 See,
15 Id.
16 Id.
17 68
18 Id.
E:\FR\FM\27OCR1.SGM
FR 16450 (Apr. 4, 2003).
See also, 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
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was prevalent in the marketplace for the
particular type of lending.
Upon reexamination, the Board now
believes it is appropriate to permit FCUs
to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs that
engage in all types of lending permitted
for FCUs. As discussed previously, the
Board received extensive comments on
the proposed rule. The commenters,
including credit union commenters,
were split on whether permitting
CUSOs to originate any loan that an
FCU can originate would be ultimately
beneficial to credit unions, particularly
small credit unions, or detrimental to
the long-run interests of credit unions.
Comments are discussed in detail in the
following paragraphs.
Safety and Soundness
Some commenters who supported the
proposed rule generally stated that the
rule would not cause safety and
soundness concerns and that the current
CUSO regulatory framework sufficiently
protects FCUs and the NCUSIF.
Commenters pointed to several existing
authorities to manage the potential risk
from CUSO lending. First, commenters
noted that under the current regulation,
the NCUA may at any time, based upon
supervisory, legal, or safety and
soundness reasons, limit any CUSO
activities or services, or refuse to permit
any CUSO activities or services.
Commenters further stated that the
NCUA can exert pressure on FCUs if
CUSOs engaged in unsafe or unsound
behavior. Second, an FCU may invest
in, loan to, and/or contract with only
those CUSOs that are sufficiently
bonded or insured for their specific
operations and engaged in preapproved
activities and services. Third, FCUs are
bound by an aggregate limit of loans and
investments in CUSOs to two percent of
paid-in and unimpaired capital and
surplus. Fourth, FCUs (as well as
FISCUs) are required to include
provisions in contracts with CUSOs in
which they lend or invest to give the
NCUA complete access to any books
and records of the CUSO and the ability
to review the CUSO’s internal controls.
Finally, other commenters noted that
CUSOs are subject to state lending laws
and federal consumer protection laws.
In addition, some CUSOs may be subject
to supervision at the state level by way
of state licensing requirements or thirdparty oversight authority.
Some commenters discussed that
CUSOs currently have extensive lending
authority and there have not been any
extraordinary losses.
A few commenters also discussed that
the bigger safety and soundness risk
may arise from not adopting the
proposed rule as it permits FCUs to
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remain competitive and build capital.
Commenters also discussed that FCUs
could be subject to reputational harm if
they cannot provide members the
necessary services.
In response to a question in the
proposed rule about potential safety and
soundness conditions, one commenter
urged caution on the potential to apply
risk retention requirements to
participation loans originated by wholly
owned CUSOs. The commenter stated
that, since the balance sheets of the
CUSO and its parent are consolidated,
the participation becomes effectively
nonexistent, so a risk retention
requirement becomes unnecessary.19
In contrast, some of the commenters
who opposed the proposed rule
believed that the proposal would have
substantial unintended consequences
and affect the safety and soundness of
FCUs and the NCUSIF. Commenters
primarily focused on the NCUA’s lack of
examination or oversight authority and
the systemic risk that arises from a few
CUSOs providing services to a large
portion of credit unions.
Commenters generally discussed that
the NCUA has no examination or
oversight authority over CUSOs. One
commenter noted that several federal
agencies, including the Government
Accountability Office and the Financial
Stability Oversight Council, have
recommended that the NCUA be given
supervisory oversight of CUSOs and that
the Chairs of every NCUA Board over
the past decade, as well as the NCUA’s
Inspector General, have called for
vendor authority. These commenters
believed expanding CUSO lending
authority at the same time the NCUA
has acknowledged an existing risk
related to CUSOs would exacerbate the
current problems that arise from the
inability to supervise CUSOs. One
commenter questioned why the NCUA
would propose providing CUSOs with
all the powers of FCUs, but with none
of the commensurate prudential
supervision or consumer safeguards to
mitigate the risk. One commenter
recommended a hybrid approach that
would enable the NCUA to review a
CUSO’s loan origination activities, but
not permit a complete NCUA
examination.
The Board does not believe that the
limited expansion of FCUs’ ability to
lend to, or invest in, CUSOs engaged in
lending permissible for an FCU
contradicts its long-stated need for
additional examination and
enforcement authority of CUSOs and
other third-party vendors.20 It is the
Board’s continuing policy to seek thirdparty vendor authority for the agency
from Congress. The Board does not
believe this rule undermines its request
for such authority as the rule provides
only a modest expansion of FCU
authority to lend to, and invest in,
CUSOs and results in only an
incremental amount of additional risk to
the NCUSIF.
The Board also believes there are
several factors that may mitigate the risk
to the NCUSIF, though the Board
acknowledges that despite these
mitigating factors CUSOs have caused
more than $500 million in losses to
FICUs since 2008. First, as commenters
in favor of the rule discussed, even
though the NCUA does not have
examination or enforcement authority
over CUSOs, FCUs only have the
authority to lend up to one percent of
their paid-in and unimpaired capital
and surplus, and to invest an equivalent
amount, in total to CUSOs. These
investment and lending limits mitigate
risk to the NCUSIF. Additionally,
§ 712.3(d) requires all FICUs that obtain
an ownership interest in a CUSO to
ensure by contract that the NCUA has
access to the CUSO’s books and records
and other information and reports.
CUSOs are also subject to state lending
laws and federal consumer protection
laws. These and the other regulatory
requirements discussed above mitigate
the potential risk to the NCUSIF due to
the modest expansion of FCU authority
to lend to and invest in CUSOs engaged
in all lending activities.
The Board also notes that it has broad
investigative subpoena authority that
agency staff can use to obtain records
and testimony in certain extraordinary
circumstances.21 This broad authority is
not limited to credit unions and may
permit NCUA staff to obtain information
from third parties in connection with
the agency’s examinations of credit
unions.22 The Board does not currently
19 Note that a CUSO’s balance sheet would be
consolidated with a credit union’s if required by
applicable accounting principles. Generally, the
NCUA requires credit unions to consolidate a
CUSO’s balance sheet with the credit union’s when
the credit union wholly owns or owns a controlling
interest in the CUSO. See NCUA Call Report Form
5300 Instructions, Statement of Financial
Condition, at 2, effective Sept. 2021, available at
https://www.ncua.gov/files/publications/
regulations/call-report-instructions-september2021.pdf.
20 The Board also notes that its request for thirdparty vendor authority is more expansive than
examination and enforcement authority over
CUSOs. The term third-party vendors include any
third-party service provider regardless of credit
union ownership, a larger category of institutions
than just CUSOs. The NCUA currently has very
limited oversight of non-CUSO third-party vendors.
21 12 U.S.C 1784(a), 1786(p).
22 12 U.S.C. 1784(a); see United States v. Inst. for
Coll. Access & Success, 27 F. Supp. 3d 106, 112
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use this authority broadly to obtain
information from CUSOs, but the Board
could potentially instruct NCUA staff to
employ these oversight tools to their full
potential to guard against risks to the
NCUSIF associated with CUSO activity
in the absence of direct statutory
examination and enforcement authority
over CUSOs.
Further, regarding its enforcement
authority, the Board also notes that it
may have statutory enforcement
authority in certain cases over CUSOs
that commit misconduct. Specifically,
an insured credit union’s independent
contractor may be subject to the Board’s
enforcement powers under the FCU Act
if it knowingly or recklessly participates
in certain violations that cause or are
likely to cause more than a minimal
financial loss to, or a significant adverse
effect on, the insured credit union.23
Thus, the Board may have greater power
in certain circumstances than opposing
commenters acknowledge.
The Board also believes that the risk
to the NCUSIF is mitigated because in
its experience most CUSO loans are sold
to credit unions, which are subject to
NCUA enforcement and examination
authority. In addition, the Board also
believes that the additional risk is
mitigated because most CUSOs are
wholly owned by the parent credit
union (as of the end of 2020, for
instance, approximately 72 percent of
natural person CUSOs were wholly
owned by credit unions),24 which
provides the NCUA additional leverage
if a CUSO is engaging in unsafe or
unsound lending practices. In both
situations, the NCUA would likely have
additional insight into the risk of the
CUSO’s lending. The Board
acknowledges, however, that there may
be gaps in its jurisdiction for certain
CUSOs that may retain its loans, sell
them to third parties, or are not wholly
owned by credit unions.25 It is the
Board’s belief that this risk is limited
and is outweighed by the potential
benefits of the final rule.
As some commenters supporting the
proposed rule observed, the expanding
lending authority may be beneficial to
(D.D.C. 2014) (an agency Inspector General’s
administrative subpoena to third party in an
investigation was enforceable even though third
party was not an entity subject to agency’s
regulatory jurisdiction).
23 12 U.S.C. 1786(r).
24 CUSOs at a Glance (2020), available at https://
www.ncua.gov/analysis/cuso-economic-data/cusosglance.
25 The Board notes that such risk is already
present in the credit union system as the NCUA
insures FISCUs that may be subject to substantially
less restrictive CUSO requirements. For example,
many states do not restrict, or have higher limits
for, FISCU investments in CUSOs.
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FCUs by enhancing their
competitiveness and ability to generate
capital. Increased credit union capital
would strengthen the NCUSIF by
reducing the potential for losses due to
credit union failures. The Board
believes that the potential benefits of the
expanded authority for FCUs to lend to
or invest in CUSOs engaged in all
lending activities may outweigh the
potential costs of the rule including
additional risk to the NCUSIF,
decreased credit union lending due to
increased competition, and increased
consolidation, particularly among
smaller credit unions. In any event, the
Board considers the potential benefit to
credit unions and the NCUSIF to be at
least a partial mitigating factor against
the potential incremental risks.
Other commenters expressed
concerns about systemic risk. For
example, one commenter quoted former
NCUA Board Chair Mark McWatters to
highlight how CUSOs contribute to
systemic risk: ‘‘Since 2008, CUSOs have
caused more than $500 million in losses
to federally insured credit unions, and
they have contributed to the failure of
11 credit unions . . . more than half of
the NCUA’s institutions hold less than
$33 million in assets and average
approximately three to four full-time
employees per institution. These
institutions are heavily dependent on
third-party outsourced services and do
not possess the resources to
independently perform full due
diligence on all of their critical services
providers.’’ Another commenter stated
that a large CUSO operating as a loan
originator and selling participations or
whole loans could produce systemic
risks within the industry as evidenced
by prior events caused by single
originators, a concentrated group of
originators, or by overconcentration
within a sector.
As discussed in its responses to other
comments in the preceding section, the
Board has considered the potential
benefits and risks of FCUs lending to or
investing in CUSOs engaged in broader
types of lending. The Board recognizes
that several present and prior Board
Members, the Inspector General, and
other government bodies have found
that the NCUA needs statutory
enforcement authority over third-party
vendors, including CUSOs, to manage
the associated risks appropriately. The
NCUA has also documented significant
previous losses to the NCUSIF that were
attributed to CUSOs, particularly
between 2008 and 2015.
The Board, however, does not find it
necessary to continue to limit FCUs’
authority to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs
engaged in lending activities
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permissible for FCUs until the FCU Act
is amended to add enforcement
authority over CUSOs. Such a response
is disproportionate to the modest
expansion permitted in this final rule.
The Board also finds that prior
statements about losses to the NCUSIF
do not support any firm prediction that
similar losses will occur in the future
because of this final rule (or even with
a mere continuation of the current
authorities).26 For example, the Board
considers what has occurred since 2015,
as reflected in the Inspector General’s
regular reports. Under the FCU Act, the
Inspector General must submit a written
report to the Board, the Comptroller
General of the United States, and other
parties when the NCUSIF incurs a
‘‘material loss’’ an insured credit union,
with material loss defined as one
exceeding $25 million and 10 percent of
total assets of the credit union.27 These
reports must include a description of
the reasons that the problems of the
credit union resulted in a material loss
to the NCUSIF and recommendations
for preventing any such loss in the
future.28 For losses that are not material
as defined in this section of the FCU
Act, the Inspector General must identify
losses occurring in each 6-month period
and report semi-annually to the Board
and Congress on whether any of those
losses warrant an in-depth review.29
Since 2015, the NCUA’s Inspector
General has not issued any Material
Loss Review reports in which CUSO
activity was cited as the reason, or part
of the reason, for the losses. The NCUA
also looked at the total losses due to
CUSOs in failed FICUs from 2015 to
June 30, 2021. The Board found that
failed FICUs lost approximately $4
million due to CUSOs during this
period. And, the NCUSIF lost only an
amount estimated to be under $1
million due to CUSOs during this
period as most of the failed FICUs with
CUSO-related losses were merged into
other institutions without substantial
loss to the NCUSIF.
26 The Board also notes that there have been
significant changes to laws, regulations, and
industry practices for loan underwriting and credit
administration since the 2008 financial crisis.
Therefore, the Board also believes that the historical
losses attributed to CUSOs that were discussed in
the comments are not reflective of the current
standards and practices, so the referenced historical
losses may not necessarily be predictive of future
losses.
27 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(1), (2).
28 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(1).
29 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(4). This discussion provides
only a general description of these requirements
and the Inspector General’s duties and activities.
More information is available on the Inspector
General website and in its Semi-Annual Reports to
Congress.
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The Board finds the absence of
material CUSO-related losses during
this period noteworthy; however, the
Board acknowledges it excluded losses
that occurred during the 2008 banking
crisis and looked at data that occurred
during a relatively robust economy. This
absence does not guarantee that material
losses will not occur in the future, but
it illustrates the uncertainty associated
with predictions by some commenters.
A past pattern of material losses is not,
in the Board’s opinion, sufficient
evidence that the pattern will continue.
In reconciling these competing
perspectives, the Board also has
considered the general principles
discussed in the introduction to this
preamble. Neither the FCU Act nor the
NCUA’s regulations or policies require
the agency to ensure all potential losses
to the NCUSIF are avoided. The FCU
Act requires the Board to consider
whether a credit union applying for
insurance of member accounts poses
‘‘undue risk’’ to the NCUSIF and to
deny the application if the financial
conditions and policies are unsafe and
unsound or if the applicant poses undue
risk to the NCUSIF.30 In its regulations
in § 741.204(d), the Board has further
defined ‘‘undue risk’’ to the NCUSIF as
a condition that creates a probability of
loss in excess of that normally found in
a credit union and which indicates a
reasonably foreseeable possibility of
insolvency and a resulting claim against
the NCUSIF. Similarly, in considering
whether a credit union’s practices are
unsafe and unsound for chartering and
field of membership purposes, the
Board considers whether the action or
lack of action would result in an
‘‘abnormal risk of loss’’ to the credit
union, its members, or the NCUSIF.31
The Board also notes that the ongoing
trend of credit union consolidation is
already increasing systemic risk. On an
aggregate basis, the total number of
credit unions has been cut in half over
the prior two decades as smaller credit
unions have merged or consolidated.
There were over 5,000 fewer credit
unions with less than $1.0 billion in
total assets in 2020 than there were in
2000. As the number of credit unions
has declined, loan portfolios have
become increasingly concentrated
within the largest credit unions.
Expanding FCUs’ authority to lend or
invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending
activities may allow smaller credit
unions to combine their resources to
remain more competitive within the
changing lending landscape, which
32 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Title X, Subtitle C, § 1036; Public
Law 111–203 (July 21, 2010).
30 12
U.S.C. 1781(c).
31 12 CFR 701, App. B, Glossary.
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could result in a reduction of systemic
risk.
Separately, the Board already insures
FISCUs that may, depending on state
law, lend or invest in CUSOs that
engage in all lending activities. In its
role as insurer, the Board finds it would
be unreasonable to decline to expand
FCU authority on a risk basis when it
currently allows the activity for FISCUs.
Based on these standards and
principles, the Board does not find that
the expanded FCU authority to lend to
or invest in CUSOs engaged in all
lending activities provided by this rule
are likely or more likely than not to
result in material losses to the NCUSIF
or unsafe and unsound practices posing
an undue risk to the NCUSIF.
Regarding the concern over
concentration risk, the Board believes
that existing limitations in §§ 701.22
and 701.23 on the amount of eligible
obligations that FCUs may purchase and
on the amount of loan participations
that all federally insured credit unions
may purchase from a single source will
provide significant protection against
this concern. Additionally, the Board
believes there is some potential benefit
to small credit unions buying loans from
CUSOs. In such a case, many credit
unions may be purchasing loans from
the same entity leading collectively to
enhanced due diligence on the CUSO.
Commenters also discussed the risk
for reputational harm. For example, the
ownership structure of CUSOs may
result in the public’s linking any
aggressive or improper CUSO lending
activity with the lending activity of
FCUs themselves.
The Board agrees that confusion over
the status of CUSOs or mistaken belief
that they are federally insured and
subject to the NCUA’s full oversight
would be problematic. The Board notes
that certain FCU practices related to the
promotion of CUSO services or CUSOs
with names related to their FCU parents
may raise unfair, deceptive, or abusive
acts or practices issues.32 FCUs should
pay particular attention to their
marketing and ensure that members are
informed and understand the legal
significance between FCU-originated
loans and CUSO-originated loans. For
example, FCUs should ensure that
members clearly understand that the
NCUA may have a more limited ability
to address member complaints related to
CUSO-originated loans. The Board notes
that standardized disclaimers in loan
origination documentation may be
insufficient to address this concern. The
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Board, however, finds that the current
regulations, including the prohibition
on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or
practices, reasonably guard against the
concern about member confusion. First,
§ 712.4(a) specifies that an insured
credit union must take several steps to
ensure corporate separateness from a
CUSO, including that each is held out
to the public as separate enterprises.
Adherence to this requirement, and
proper enforcement of it by the NCUA,
is likely to mitigate much or all of the
concern regarding confusion. Second,
and similarly, the NCUA’s advertising
regulation in § 740.2 requires, among
other matters, that an insured credit
union using a trade name in advertising
must use its official name in loan
agreements and account statements.
This requirement may further safeguard
against the risk of confusing a credit
union with an associated CUSO with a
similar name because the official loan
documentation would disclose which
entity or entities are involved. Each of
these provisions on their own, therefore,
and when considered in concert, may
work to address this concern.
Commenters also noted that CUSO
lending activities are currently
considered complex or high risk. The
Board acknowledges that CUSO lending
activity has the potential to create
material financial risk. This is why
lending CUSOs are currently subject to
additional reporting requirements in
§ 712.3(d). As discussed above,
however, the Board does not believe this
rule represents an undue safety and
soundness risk; rather, the Board
believes it only represents an
incremental risk to credit unions and
the NCUSIF. This relatively modest,
incremental risk is further mitigated, as
discussed above, by the existing
regulatory and supervisory controls and
standards in place.
Finally, one commenter
recommended that loans purchased
from a CUSO be subject to the same
limitations as loans purchased from
other credit unions and recommended
that the NCUA have a process to ensure
the quality of CUSO loans.
The Board has considered this
recommendation and declines to adopt
it. First, regarding new limitations on
loans, the Board underscores that
currently, §§ 701.22 and 701.23 of the
Board’s regulations restrict loan and
loan participation purchases by credit
unions. Subject to various exceptions,
including those provided in the
temporary COVID rule in effect through
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December 31, 2021,33 FCUs may
purchase only eligible obligations of its
members for loans the FCU would itself
be empowered to grant.34 Section
701.22, most of which applies to FISCUs
as well as to FCUs, restricts the types of
loan participations that a credit union
may purchase to those the credit union
is empowered to grant and also requires
the originating lender, including a
CUSO, to retain at least five percent of
the outstanding balance of the loan
through the life of the loan (10 percent
is required if the originating lender is an
FCU).35
The Board believes that these existing
restrictions are sufficient to ensure that
the loans or loan interests purchased by
credit unions from CUSOs will have
reasonable terms. At the same time, the
Board acknowledges that CUSOs may
originate loans that parties other than
credit unions purchase. In turn, this
would make the restrictions discussed
in the preceding paragraph inapplicable.
This is, however, the current situation
for loans originated by CUSOs. The
commenter who recommended this new
restriction did not present persuasive
evidence that this new restriction is
necessary and further provided no
analysis or evidence regarding how the
restrictions might hamper CUSO
activities and thus decrease the value of
credit union interests in CUSOs.
Accordingly, the Board declines to
adopt this recommendation.
Second, regarding the quality of loans,
the Board believes that credit unions
and other parties who purchase CUSOoriginated loans can perform due
diligence and ensure that loans are
underwritten and documented
appropriately. Further, as part of the
examination process, NCUA examiners
can continue to request documentation
on credit unions’ due diligence and
other policies and procedures associated
with their investment, lending, and
other interaction with CUSOs. As with
the recommendation on the terms of
loans, the Board finds no persuasive
evidence or analysis of the benefits and
risks of such new oversight and declines
to adopt the recommendation.
Consumer Protection
Commenters who supported the rule
did not extensively discuss consumer
protection issues. Several commenters
stated that CUSOs would likely only
issue loans that comply with the
NCUA’s loan origination rules as
generally CUSO-originated loans would
33 85
FR 22010 (Apr. 21, 2020); 85 FR 83405 (Dec.
22, 2020).
34 12 CFR 701.23(b).
35 12 CFR 701.22(b)(3).
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be sold to the parent credit unions.
Another commenter stated that the
proposed rule would expand financial
inclusion due to the potential for
collaboration to develop new
technologies. Finally, commenters noted
that CUSOs are subject to state lending
laws and federal consumer protection
laws.
In contrast, commenters who were
against the proposed rule generally
expressed concerns that the proposed
rule would create risk to consumers.
Several commenters expressed concerns
that CUSO-originated loans are not
subject to the same restrictions as loans
originated by FCUs. For instance, the
FCU Act limits interest rate, maturity,
and prepayment terms for FCUoriginated loans. Commenters were
concerned that this rule change would
enable an FCU to circumvent statutory
lending restrictions through a CUSO
subsidiary. Commenters were especially
concerned about abuses because the
proposed rule would principally allow
payday and auto lending, which may be
more likely targeted towards members
in low-to-moderate-income
communities and underserved areas.
Furthermore, several commenters stated
that CUSOs have been responsible for
abusive lending in the past. One
commenter noted that CUSOs were
marketing payday loan products to
state-chartered credit unions with triple
digit interest rates in Texas until
restrictions were implemented on the
state level. One noted a 2010 National
Consumer Law Center report, which
documented that over 40 credit unions
were involved with payday lending
through CUSOs. This prompted the
NCUA to issue a letter to credit unions.
Another commenter stated that the
proposal will disproportionately harm
communities of color and exacerbate
financial exclusion, even as the Board
elsewhere emphasizes racial equity and
financial inclusion. Another commenter
stated that investing in CUSOs that
violate the FCU Act usury ceiling
creates not only reputation risk, but
compliance and legal risk as loans that
exceed the usury cap in the FCU Act
should not be considered part of the
routine operations of credit unions.
Commenters raised several potential
solutions to potential consumer harm.
One commenter stated that any
expansion of CUSO lending activity
should be limited to loans FCUs are
themselves empowered to make.
Another commenter recommended
changes to the Payday Alternative Loans
(PALs) program if the goal is to
encourage more small-dollar lending
and included ideas on how to increase
credit unions’ adoption of PALs.
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Another commenter suggested
requesting examination findings from
the Consumer Financial Protection
Bureau, which has requisite authority to
examine CUSOs to determine whether
consumer protection laws are being
followed.
The Board has considered the
comments on this point and finds that
overall, they provide support for
proceeding with adopting the regulatory
change to CUSO lending authorities as
proposed.
As commenters in support of the
expansion of FCU authority with respect
to loans to and investments in CUSOs
engaged in all lending activities stated,
more collaboration and use of financial
services technology may positively
affect financial inclusion. By
authorizing more parties to offer an
array of consumer loans, the Board may
increase beneficial competition and
expand consumer choice. The Board
also believes that CUSOs would likely
adhere to the statutory and regulatory
restrictions on loans that FCUs are
empowered to grant in order to be able
to sell these loans to FCUs (though the
Board notes that the purchasing
authority provisions may vary for
FISCUs because the Board’s eligible
obligation purchase regulation in
§ 701.23 applies to FCUs only) and that
CUSOs may not be under the same
liquidity pressure for auto and payday
loans as other types of loans currently
authorized by the CUSO rule. The Board
also notes that it recently relaxed some
of these protections in light of the
COVID–19 pandemic.36 As a whole,
however, it is the Board’s belief that the
current authorities governing FCU
purchases of loans would likely result
in a substantial amount of CUSO loans
being issued on terms equivalent to
those in the FCU Act, or what is already
permitted for FISCUs.
The Board is, of course, concerned
about the risk of unfavorable terms for
consumers. As one commenter noted, in
2009, the NCUA Chairman issued a
letter to all FCUs on consumer lending,
including consumer protection issues.37
The Board has also established two
payday alternative loans (PALs)
programs for FCUs to promote shortterm, small-dollar loans for FCUs and
their members that can serve as an
alternative to loans with less favorable
terms. The Board’s concerns are
partially mitigated, however, by state
usury laws and other consumer
36 85
FR 83405 (Dec. 22, 2020).
Lending, 09–FCU–05, July 2009,
available at https://www.ncua.gov/regulationsupervision/letters-credit-unions-other-guidance/
payday-lending.
37 Payday
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protection laws that may be enough to
curtail the risk of predatory lending by
CUSOs. The Board acknowledges,
however, that the majority of states
permit payday lending and therefore
state laws only provide some mitigation
relating to the concern of CUSOs
offering loans at excessive interest
rates.38 The Board plans to monitor new
practices closely and take aggressive
action when it can to protect consumers
from abusive terms that are contrary to
law. When the Board lacks direct
authority, it can partner with other
federal agencies, such as the CFPB, or
state authorities to address any such
situations. Ultimately, the Board and
other parties, in combination, have tools
available to protect consumers and curb
abusive practices.
At the same time, the Board disagrees
with commenters who believe that the
expanded FCU authority to lend to or
invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending
activities would open up a new area of
lending above the FCU interest rate cap
and that such activity is contrary to the
FCU Act.
First, the Board finds greater
competition in the consumer loan
market from FCU-owned entities is
likely to introduce better consumer
options and greater choice. If the Board
decides to limit innovation and
expansion out of concern for potential
consumer harm, it may actually
perpetuate a lack of consumer choice
and access. Regardless of what action
the Board takes, other parties will
continue to lend in the marketplace and
may lack the same grounding in the
credit union mission and industry that
would tend to mitigate the risk of
abusive lending practices. Confronted
with this choice, the Board’s judgment
is that CUSOs will be more likely than
other lenders to offer only reasonable
terms to consumers and be held
accountable by the NCUA, other federal
agencies, or state authorities. Second,
regarding one commenter’s opinion
about the ‘‘daily operations of credit
unions’’ not including lending above the
FCU interest rate ceiling, the Board
finds that the FCU Act’s broad wording
should not be read so narrowly. Reading
this limitation into the phrase would, if
applied to other areas of CUSO activity,
such as trustee and fiduciary activity
that is not generally within the power of
an FCU, limit CUSOs to only those
activities that FCUs may perform within
all limitations of the FCU Act. CUSOs
have long been permitted to engage in
activities that are not specifically bound
38 See the CFPB final rule, Payday, Vehicle Title,
and Certain High-Cost Installment Loans, 85 FR
44382, 44383 (July 22, 2020).
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by these limitations. In particular, since
originally authorizing CUSOs to engage
in limited lending activity, the Board
has not imposed the interest rate ceiling
or other restrictions applicable to FCUmade loans to CUSO-made loans. The
concern, therefore, that some
commenters raise is not specific to this
rulemaking and has long stood as the
agency’s position on CUSO activities,
including lending.
Ultimately, when faced with the
choice between limiting or proceeding
with this expansion of FCU authority to
lend to, or invest in, CUSOs engaged in
all lending activities, the Board finds in
its judgment that the regulatory changes
carry the potential to benefit consumers
and FCUs through greater choice. At the
same time, the Board will closely
monitor the expanded activity given the
importance of consumer protection.
In addition, the Board notes that
amending the PALs program is beyond
the scope of the CUSO rulemaking but
will take commenters’ input on that
program into account in any future
action on that program.
Innovation
Some of the commenters who
supported the proposed rule generally
stated that CUSOs enable necessary
innovation. Many commenters
discussed how CUSOs can pool
resources for various projects each
credit union could not afford to embark
on individually, especially smaller
credit unions. With innovation and
technology continuously evolving at a
significant pace, giving FCUs the option
to start or partner with a CUSO to
advance their technology capabilities
would help FCUs remain competitive as
they often lack the resources to build
and maintain the technology
infrastructure. Commenters stated that
CUSOs are currently helping credit
unions survive in the rapidly changing
financial industry and several credit
unions credited CUSOs with assisting
them in reaching members, including
low-to-moderate income members.
Many commenters mentioned fintechs
and that CUSOs are enabling credit
unions to compete with fintechs and
large banking organizations that have
the resources to develop new
technologies. Several commenters stated
that credit unions must continue to
innovate, reduce costs, and generate
income, especially as traditional sources
of income, like net interest margins, are
no longer sufficient.
Some of the commenters who were
opposed to the proposed rule stated that
CUSOs are already able to facilitate
FCUs’ collective investment in
technology without having their lending
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powers broadened. CUSOs’ permissible
activities include ‘‘loan support
services, including loan processing,
servicing, and sales,’’ which means
CUSOs can currently play a support role
in FCU lending according to one
commenter.
When discussing current CUSO
authorities to do indirect lending,
another commenter stated that small
FCUs struggle to engage in indirect
lending, which requires significant
investment and oversight. The
commenter further stated that managing
relationships with dealers and
monitoring the quality of loans an FCU
receives is paramount to the success of
an indirect lending program. As a result,
the indirect lending channel is often
closed to small FCUs.
The Board has considered the wide
variety of viewpoints on this issue. As
several commenters noted, broadening
the permissible CUSO lending
categories may foster innovation and
partnerships. Conversely, some
commenters contended that the rule
change is not needed for this purpose
because credit unions already partner
effectively with CUSOs to develop
technology to support FCU lending. The
Board views this difference of opinion
and predictions similarly to how it
views other general predictions about
the risks and benefits of the rule change.
The Board recognizes that the expanded
FCU authority to lend to or invest in
CUSOs engaged in all lending activities
may not result in enhanced partnerships
and cooperation with CUSOs and other
credit unions because it is not possible
to predict the future of the marketplace
with certainty. Alternatively, the
regulatory changes may enhance this
collaboration for some credit unions in
some type of lending but not in all.
However, the Board in its judgment
also finds that expanded areas of
activity and investment would naturally
tend to increase collaboration and
cooperation. Affording greater
opportunities for FCUs to lend to and
invest in CUSOs engaged in a broader
range of lending may facilitate more
partnerships that position FCUs better
to work with new entities and
technologies in financial services. For
this reason, the Board continues to find
this a good basis to proceed with the
regulatory changes.39
39 The Board also notes that innovation and
collaboration were not the sole basis for the
proposed rule. As discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule, another basis for the rule was to
enable FCUs to better serve their members. The
Board views the various bases in the proposed rule
as independently sufficient to support the rule. 86
FR 11645, 11646 (Feb. 26, 2001).
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Credit Union Mission
Some of the commenters in favor of
the proposed rule broadly stated that
CUSOs enable FCUs to fulfill their
mission by enhancing their ability to
serve members. Several commenters
stated there is no evidence that the
proposed rule would hurt the industry,
members, or the NCUSIF.
In contrast, some of the commenters
opposed to the proposed rule stated that
the proposed rule undermines
fundamental principles of the FCU Act.
Principally, in their view, the proposed
rule would dilute the common bond by
permitting lending outside of FCUs’
fields of membership. These
commenters stated that allowing FCUs
to directly profit from loans that are
originated to non-members is contrary
to the intent of the FCU Act. Many
commenters generally stated that the
profit FCUs would derive from nonmembers calls into question the
rationale for the exclusion from federal
income taxation.
The Board finds that concerns about
diluting the FCU common bond do not
warrant modifying or declining to adopt
the proposed rule.
First, the Board does not agree with
commenters who believe the FCU Act
requires consideration of this factor in
evaluating proposed CUSO activities.
The FCU Act’s field of membership and
common bond provisions apply to
FCUs, not to CUSOs.40 The loan
authority for CUSOs in the FCU Act
specifically defines a ‘‘credit union
organization’’ in part as an organization
‘‘established primarily to serve the
needs of its member credit unions, and
whose business relates to the daily
operations of the credit unions they
serve.’’ 41 Thus, the FCU Act does not
require that CUSOs be established
exclusively to serve credit union
members or credit unions. Accordingly,
any objection based on a claim that
expanded FCU authority to lend to or
invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending
activities violates the FCU Act is
unfounded.
Second, apart from the statutory
provisions, in this rulemaking the Board
has re-examined its prior policy-based
concern regarding dilution of the
common bond through CUSO lending
authorities. As the proposed rule
recounted, historically the Board has
been hesitant in granting CUSOs
authority to make consumer loans
because it may be perceived as diluting
40 12 U.S.C. 1759 and the NCUA’s Chartering and
Field of Membership Manual, 12 CFR 701, App. B.,
set forth common bond definitions and
requirements for FCUs.
41 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(D).
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the common bond. In a 1998 final rule
in which it granted CUSOs authority to
make student loans, but not other types
of consumer loans, the Board elaborated
that it limited the expansion because
Congress and the public may perceive it
as a dilution of the common bond.42 In
the same discussion, the Board
explained that it would grant authority
to CUSOs to make student loans because
they required more specialized staff and
experience, whereas general consumer
loans did not.43
The 1998 final rule is, therefore, best
read as relying on two bases for limited
expansion at that time: Perception of
dilution of the common bond and the
need for credit unions to partner with
CUSOs for certain types of loans. And
in that rule, the determination that one
type of new loan authority would be
beneficial to credit unions overcame the
generalized concern about perceived
dilution. In fact, in the same final rule,
the Board refuted in detail the
contention by a commenter that CUSOs
are subject to the statutory common
bond requirement,44 demonstrating
further that the perceived dilution
concern was not viewed as an absolute
or particularly strong counterweight to
other policy rationales. That is to say,
incremental expansion of FCU authority
about CUSO lending authorities based
on the Board’s judgment and experience
have in the past outweighed this
concern. Based on this re-examination,
the Board concludes that the concern
over perceived dilution of the common
bond is relatively weak and has not
historically been given great weight or
decisiveness in evaluating the reasons
for and against an expansion of FCU
authority related to this activity.
Given this background and context for
the perceived common bond dilution
concern, the Board finds that it does not
warrant refraining from adopting this
final rule. The commenters who cited
this concern provided only generalized
predictions or policy arguments that
lack specific evidence even to predict
with any certainty that the regulatory
changes would appear to dilute the
common bond. Other commenters
predicted that the expanded authority
might instead bring credit union
membership to more people. The Board
believes this result is at least as likely
as one in which the common bond is
perceived by some subjectively as being
diluted. For example, non-credit union
members who are eligible for
membership may decide to join a credit
union after obtaining a loan from an
42 63
FR 10743, 10752 (Mar. 5, 1998).
43 Id.
44 Id.
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affiliated CUSO. And in any event, a
CUSO engaging in this type of lending
would still be required to primarily
serve credit unions, its membership, or
the membership of credit unions
contracting with the CUSO.45
Accordingly, based on this reexamination of the perceived dilution
concern and the limited support offered
by commenters opposing the rule on
this basis, the Board concludes that this
concern does not weigh against
adopting the rule as proposed.
Another commenter stated that FCUs
would profit from loans exceeding
usury caps in the FCU Act, and this is
against the spirit of the FCU Act.
The Board does not find this
generalized concern persuasive.
Currently, CUSOs are not subject to the
interest rate ceiling in the FCU Act.46
This provision applies to loans made by
an FCU. By regulation, subject to some
exceptions, an FCU may not buy a loan
it is not empowered to grant.47
However, the Board recognizes that an
FCU investing in a CUSO may receive
revenue derived from loans the CUSO
makes but does not sell to an FCU. This
is true under the current regulation, but
the customer base requirement
discussed in the preceding section tends
to limit this effect by requiring that
CUSOs primarily serve credit unions,
CUSO members, and members of credit
unions contracting with the CUSO. The
same requirement will apply to CUSOs
engaged in new types of consumer
loans. For this reason, the Board finds
this concern lacks sufficient support
and weight to warrant not adopting the
rule as proposed.
Growth or Competition
Some of the commenters who
supported the proposed rule generally
stated that the CUSOs would not
compete with credit unions because
CUSOs do not have enough liquidity to
originate and hold loans. These
commenters stated that CUSOs will
originate loans only as a mechanism to
secure more loans for their lending
partners and will then sell the loans to
credit unions. Several commenters
pointed to credit union loan growth in
mortgages, student loans, credit cards,
and business lending. One credit union
trade organization acknowledged credit
unions and CUSOs would likely
compete for loans; however, it believed
the greater threat comes from fintech
and banks.
Several commenters also stated that
the proposed rule would help FCUs
45 12
CFR 712.3(b).
U.S.C. 1757(5)(A)(vi).
47 12 CFR 701.23(b).
46 12
at 10745.
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because it would result in increased
lending opportunities. One of the
reasons for increased lending discussed
was CUSOs’ potential to lower costs
through economies of scale. Several
commenters stated that CUSOs enable
FCUs to share costs, distribute risk, and
provide scale. A few commenters
specifically stated that the proposed
rule would enable smaller FCUs to
continue their lending activities but,
instead of keeping their lending
operations in-house, utilize the services
of a CUSO to generate loans.
In contrast, several commenters who
opposed the proposed rule believed that
CUSOs would bring unnecessary
competition, particularly for smaller
credit unions. Some commenters stated
that the proposed rule could benefit
certain, larger FCUs, but it could hurt
other, smaller credit unions as wellfunded CUSOs could capture
potentially significant market share.
One commenter noted that past NCUA
Boards have been concerned that
CUSOs only benefit large credit unions
and once noted that smaller credit
unions have been unable to meet
minimum eligibility requirements in
order to partake of CUSO services. One
commenter noted there is no evidence
FCUs need help with non-complex
consumer loans or auto loans. Other
commenters stated that the proposed
rule would not result in increased
lending and that CUSO-originated loans
sold to credit unions do not drive credit
union loan growth.
A few other commenters believed that
the rule could be anti-competitive as it
may result in additional industry
consolidation because small credit
unions could lose market share.
The Board has considered the
differing viewpoints on this issue and
determined that this concern does not
warrant refraining from adopting the
rule as proposed. As discussed in the
introduction to this preamble, the Board
has re-examined its historical stance on
competition as it relates to CUSO
activity and small credit unions.
First, it is not clear that the Board
should, as a matter of principle,
consider shielding credit unions from
competition as an important
consideration in its rulemaking.48 Doing
so may result in stagnation and could
produce overall negative results for the
credit union system and the NCUSIF
over time.
Second, the NCUA currently does and
will continue to provide significant
48 See Fed. Comm’cns Comm’n et al. v.
Prometheus Radio Project et al., No. 19–1231 (Apr.
1, 2021), Thomas, J., concurring (discussing
whether the FCC should have considered a nonstatutory factor in its rulemaking).
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support and flexibility to small credit
unions through various regulatory and
supervisory programs. These efforts
recognize the challenges that these
small credit unions face by reducing
regulatory burdens. For example, the
NCUA has a small credit union
examination program that streamlines
the examination process for small FCUs
with a record of solid performance.49
The Board believes the final rule
presents an opportunity for all credit
unions to work collaboratively. It is the
Board’s belief that the final rule has the
potential to benefit all credit unions,
especially smaller credit unions, if they
can effectively pool their resources to
form new technology. The Board also
believes the final rule would likely be
a net benefit to the entire system. The
Board acknowledges there would likely
be additional competition for credit
unions, particularly certain smaller
credit unions, but this rule provides
additional flexibilities to permit the
credit union system to offer enhanced
lending products. The Board believes
that under the final rule, credit unions
will have an enhanced ability to
collaborate and create better lending
products for their members.
For each of these reasons on their
own, and in their totality, the Board
finds that it is prudent to proceed with
this final rule despite this objection.
Types of Loans
Some of the commenters who favor
the rule encouraged the NCUA to
finalize expansive lending authorities
for CUSOs as lending opportunities are
always evolving. Several commenters
stated that there are currently
companies looking for FCU partners that
originate solar, renovation, boat, and
airplane loans. One commenter
expressed concern that these types of
loans might cause credit unions to focus
on loans for luxury items to the
detriment of low- and moderate-income
members.
The Board has not limited the types
of loans a CUSO can originate provided
that the loans are the type of loan an
FCU is able to originate. Contrary to the
concern of one commenter, the Board
does not believe that focused CUSO
activity would detract from individual
credit unions’ focus on providing
financial services to all their members,
as required by fair lending laws.
Auto Loans and National Lending
Several commenters who support the
proposed rule stated that the proposal is
necessary for FCUs to remain
competitive as lending becomes more
49 See,
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59297
standardized and consumers move
online for more of their financial
services. Many commenters discussed a
recent trend to point of sale financing.
According to these commenters,
consumers are acquiring credit at the
point of sale, instead of acquiring credit
through a credit union first.
Commenters were particularly
concerned about this trend for auto
loans. These commenters expressed
concerns that point of sale sellers are
not interested in working with credit
unions. The challenge, according to
some commenters, is that a large,
nationally focused seller is unlikely to
secure relationships with thousands of
individual credit unions. This presents
an opportunity for CUSOs to help the
credit union industry with their
collaborative business model. Some
commenters believed credit unions risk
diminishing market share if CUSOs are
not permitted to contract with national
lenders. One CUSO commenter stated
that CUSOs could easily use a common
platform and participate out loans to
credit unions within the geographic area
in which members are located.
A few of the commenters who
opposed the rule highlighted the
established relationships some credit
unions have with local dealers. These
commenters were concerned that
national lending CUSOs would threaten
these existing relationships.
The Board finds that the comments on
this issue generally support the
regulatory changes. The Board agrees
that expanding CUSO lending authority
to cover auto loans may help credit
unions compete at the point of sale.
Existing data also supports the Board’s
belief that small credit unions are
struggling to compete in auto lending
and that the final rule may support
small credit union auto lending efforts.
The largest 150 credit unions have seen
significant expansion of their auto
lending market share over the prior two
decades, while smaller credit unions
have lost market share almost every
year.50 The data indicates that smaller
credit unions are becoming increasingly
less competitive in the auto lending
space.
The Board also recognizes that,
despite the stated intent of the proposal,
some credit union relationships with
local dealers could be displaced by this
rule, as they equally could be by other
market forces. As discussed previously
in response to concerns regarding
additional competition for some small
50 The Board notes, however, that during this
period, the number of credit unions with less than
$1 billion in assets also decreased by over fifty
percent.
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credit unions, the Board believes it
would be inappropriate for the Board to
attempt to restrain competition. The
Board also believes that in the longterm, the benefits to the entire credit
union system through this enhanced
authority and competition will exceed
costs associated with disruption to
existing credit union-dealer
relationships. Indeed, these costs are not
certain or inevitable to occur.
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Impact Analysis
Several commenters who were
opposed to the proposed rule requested
that the NCUA conduct an independent
economic analysis to weigh the
advantages and disadvantages of the
proposal. Other commenters
recommended an impact analysis
specifically to determine the impact on
small credit unions.
The Board is aware of the challenges
that face small credit unions. As
discussed previously regarding growth
and competition, the Board does not
believe it is prudent or necessary to
adopt rules that prevent market-based
competition. In response to this specific
recommendation for an impact study,
the Board also notes that the
Administrative Procedure Act does not
require agencies to engage in studies
before adopting regulatory changes.51
The Board also believes an impact
analysis is unnecessary. The Board
believes the final rule will likely benefit
credit unions. In the Board’s experience,
CUSOs generally benefit credit unions
through additional capital and the sale
of CUSO-originated loans to credit
unions. For these reasons, the Board
will proceed with the proposed changes
without delaying them further to
conduct a general impact study. As a
separate reason to decline taking this
step now, the Board observes that the
commenters did not provide any
specific studies of their own that would
give the Board empirical evidence to
support delaying these regulatory
changes now.
Loan Pools, Aggregation, and
Securitization
A few commenters discussed the
issue of securitization and whether the
proposed rule would facilitate credit
union securitizations. A few
commenters asked for the NCUA to
specifically permit CUSOs to aggregate
credit union loans and issue securities
on the secondary market as many credit
51 Fed. Comm’cns Comm’n et al. v. Prometheus
Radio Project et al., No. 19–1231 (Apr. 1, 2021), slip
op. at 12 (holding that the Administrative
Procedure Act imposes no general obligation on
agencies to conduct or commission their own
empirical or statistical studies).
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unions do not have the available
resources and volume necessary to
originate the requisite amount of loans
to securitize assets on their own. The
Board will take this comment into
consideration for future action.
Another commenter expressed
concerns about CUSOs aggregating loans
for sale to credit unions. The commenter
stated that CUSO-generated loan pools
may increase short-term operational
efficiency; however, it also transfers the
credit risk to smaller credit unions
while the ancillary income is generated
and retained by the CUSO. This
commenter stated that the low margin
and credit risk would be passed to the
credit union with the higher margin
income retained at the CUSO and
ultimately benefit the largest credit
union equity partners of the CUSO. This
commenter added that historically,
when there is market disintermediation,
risk and credit losses are passed back to
the passive participants with a
disproportionate impact. The Board
does not believe it is good policymaking
to restrict credit union authorities on
the potential for credit unions to enter
unfavorable business deals. The Board
does not believe that a few examples of
unfavorable contracts with CUSOs
sufficiently justify reducing the
flexibilities afforded to the credit union
system as a whole. Each credit union is
responsible for its own due diligence
prior to purchasing assets and entering
into a contractual arrangement. Credit
unions should exercise business
judgment before making purchases and
entering any contractual arrangement,
even for counterparties that are part of
the credit union industry. As part of
good governance, credit unions with
ownership in a CUSO are encouraged to
monitor the length of time all loans
remain on the books of the CUSO.
Accordingly, for the reasons
discussed in the proposed rule and this
final rule, the final rule is adopting the
proposed rule without substantive
change. Under the final rule, CUSOs are
permitted to originate, purchase, sell,
and hold any type of loan permissible
for FCUs to originate, purchase, sell,
and hold. CUSOs, therefore, could
originate types of loans previously
prohibited by the CUSO rule, including
general consumer loans, direct auto
loans, and unsecured loans and lines of
credit. CUSOs could also purchase
vehicle-secured retail installment sales
contracts (RICs) from vehicle dealers.
Under the final rule, CUSO originated
loans are not subject to the same
restrictions as loans originated by FCUs.
For example, part 701 of the NCUA’s
regulations imposes conditions on FCU
lending relating to loan terms such as
PO 00000
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interest rate, maturity, and
prepayment.52 These restrictions would
not apply to CUSO-originated loans
because CUSOs, even wholly owned
CUSOs, are separate entities from FCUs
and are not subject to direct NCUA
supervision. However, an FCU may not
purchase a loan from a CUSO unless the
loan meets the requirements of the
NCUA’s eligible obligations rule.53
Similarly, an FCU may not purchase a
loan participation from a CUSO unless
it complies with the NCUA’s loan
participations rule.54
Loan Participations
Besides specifically permitting
CUSOs to engage in consumer mortgage,
business, and student loan origination,
the current CUSO rule also permits
CUSOs to buy and sell participation
interests in such loans. The inclusion of
this authority to buy and sell
participation interests in such loans
stems from the FCU Act and the
NCUA’s loan participation rule, which
classifies a CUSO as a ‘‘credit union
organization’’ authorized to engage in
the purchase and sale of loan
participations.55 The NCUA’s loan
participation rule, however, does not
permit the sale to FCUs of participation
interests in open-end, revolving
credit.56 Therefore, the current CUSO
rule only permits CUSOs to originate
credit card loans, but not the authority
to buy and sell participation interests in
credit card loans. To remain consistent
with the NCUA’s loan participation
rule, this final rule grants CUSOs the
authority to only purchase and sell
participation interests that are
permissible for FCUs to purchase and
sell. There were no comments
specifically objecting to this provision,
and the Board adopts it without change.
CUSO Registry
Under the current CUSO rule, a FICU
must obtain a written agreement from a
CUSO the FCU loans to or invests in
that the CUSO will annually submit to
the NCUA a report containing basic
registration information for inclusion in
the NCUA’s CUSO registry (CUSO
Registry).57 CUSOs that are engaged in
complex or high-risk activities have
additional obligations with respect to
the CUSO Registry.58 Under the current
52 12
CFR part 701.
12 CFR 701.23(b).
54 12 CFR 701.22.
55 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(E); 12 CFR 701.22(a).
56 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
57 12 CFR 712.3(d).
58 Id. Complex or high-risk CUSOs must agree to
include in their report: (1) A list of services
provided to certain credit unions, and (2) the
investment amount, loan amount, or level of
53 See,
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CUSO rule, complex or high-risk
activities are defined to include credit
and lending, including business loan
origination, consumer mortgage loan
origination, loan support services,
student loan origination, and credit card
loan origination.59 For consistency, the
final rule removes the specific
subcategories of lending and instead
refers to all loan originations as complex
or high risk. Lending activities are
considered complex or high risk
because they can present a high degree
of operational or financial risk.60
Specifically, FICUs making loans to and
investments in CUSOs engaged in credit
and lending activities may be exposed
to significant levels of credit, strategic,
and reputation risks.61
Commenters also noted that the CUSO
Registry requires all CUSOs to provide
data to the NCUA. Several commenters
stated that the current reporting
requirements are sufficient and the
NCUA should not expand reporting
requirements, as proposed. The Board is
not expanding what must be reported by
CUSOs engaging in complex or high-risk
activities, but as proposed is
incorporating all types of lending in the
definition of complex or high-risk
activities.
An association of state credit union
supervisors expressed concern that state
CUSOs with authority to engage in all
forms of lending would be required to
report additional information under the
proposed rule. The organization
requested that the NCUA consult with
state regulators. The Board notes that
when it adopted this provision in 2013,
it broadly described credit and lending
activities as complex or high-risk and
applied this requirement to FICUs.62
Further, some FISCU-owned CUSOs are
reporting the number and dollar amount
of their lending activities, even if those
lending activities are not explicitly
listed in § 712.3(d). The Board,
therefore, does not believe the effect of
this rule on CUSOs in which only
FISCUs have an ownership interest
represents a policy change from that
final rule.
activity of certain credit unions. Complex or highrisk CUSOs must also agree to provide the CUSO’s
most recent year-end audited financial statements
to the NCUA. CUSOs engaged in credit and lending
services are also required to report the total dollar
amount of loans outstanding, the total number of
loans outstanding, the total dollar amount of loans
granted year-to-date, and the total number of loans
granted year-to-date.
59 12 CFR 712.3(d)(5)(i).
60 78 FR 72537 (Dec. 3, 2013).
61 Id.
62 78 FR 72537, 72542 (Dec. 3, 2013).
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Expansion of Permissible CUSO
Activities to Other Activities as
Approved by the Board in Writing
Currently, the list of permissible
CUSO activities in § 712.5 includes
many of the core services and activities
associated with the daily and routine
operations of credit unions. The list,
however, does not provide the Board
flexibility to consider additional
activities and services without engaging
in notice and comment rulemaking. In
contrast, part 704 permits corporate
CUSOs to engage in any category of
activity as approved in writing by the
NCUA and published on the NCUA’s
website.63 Amending part 712 to be
similar to part 704 has the potential to
reduce regulatory burden by allowing
the rule to expand as technology shapes
the routine and daily operations of
credit unions.
Several commenters supported the
proposed change to permit the NCUA to
approve of new activities outside of
notice-and-comment rulemaking.
Commenters mentioned the current
authority in part 704 for corporate
CUSOs. Other commenters generally
stated that the proposed process would
be more efficient and that the
advantages outweigh the public input
received through notice-and-comment
rulemaking. One commenter stated that
the change would allow the Board to be
more responsive to shifting market
dynamics. Another commenter
encouraged the NCUA to periodically
review the list for updates and to post
any additional activities on its website.
A few commenters noted that a
technical change is necessary in the
regulatory text.
A few commenters who opposed the
proposed rule generally discussed that
enabling the Board to approve new
activities without notice-and-comment
rulemaking would eliminate regulatory
transparency and opportunity for the
public to review and comment on newly
proposed CUSO activities. One banking
trade organization stated that the
authority to approve rules without
notice and comment is exacerbated by
requiring formal rulemaking to revoke
or reform the approved activity, but not
adding the same activity. The
commenter stated that this policy places
a regulatory obstacle to address
potentially unsafe and unsound
activities, or activities that may be
harming consumers, members, and
underserved areas and low-to-moderate
63 12
CFR 704.11(d)(3)(ii). Approved activities are
listed on the NCUA’s website at: https://
www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/corporatecredit-unions/corporate-cuso-activities/approvedcorporate-cuso-activities.
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59299
income communities. One credit union
trade organization that supported the
rule overall nonetheless encouraged the
NCUA to do notice-and-comment
rulemaking to add approved activities
and suggested limiting the comment
period to thirty days as a balance
between speed and transparency.
Another consumer stated that emerging
technologies often pose risks to
members and other consumers that
should be evaluated through the public
notice and comment process.
The Board has considered the
comments on this issue and is finalizing
the changes to the approval process as
proposed. As commenters supporting
the change observed, a streamlined
process may help CUSOs keep pace
with innovation. The Board has
considered the opposing comments and
notes that its intent is to use this
authority only for approving activities
that are related to the existing
authorities in § 712.5. If the Board
believes a new authority is sufficiently
novel, and that notice and comment is
advisable or required under the
Administrative Procedures Act, then the
Board would use notice and comment
rulemaking.
The Board also believes it is
reasonable to add new approved
activities without issuing the matters for
public comment but to solicit public
comment before removing activities.
The Board has had this process in place
in part 704 for corporate credit unions
since 2011 without any indication that
the process is unworkable or leads to
inadequately considered policy choices.
Using notice-and-comment procedures
when removing an approved activity is
sound policy to ensure that the Board
considers parties’ serious reliance
interests when changing a policy.64
While the removal of any given
approved activity may not rise to the
level requiring an in-depth analysis of
reliance interests before removing it, the
general policy of following this process
will help the Board ensure it conducts
this analysis in appropriate cases.
Second, the Board has considered, but
disagrees with, the suggestion to use a
30-day comment period when adding
new activities as a blanket policy. While
a 30-day comment period would
naturally tend to lead to a prompter
conclusion than a 60-day comment
period, it would still generally result in
several months or more from the time
the activity is proposed until it is
64 See Dep’t of Homeland Sec. v. Regents of the
Univ. of Calif. et al., 591 U.S. ll( (2020), slip. op.
at 23 (holding that, when an agency changes course,
it must recognize that longstanding policies may
have engendered serious reliance interests that
must be taken into account).
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approved by the Board when taking into
account the need to review and respond
to public comments and prepare a final
Board action in response. The Board,
therefore, finds this suggestion would
not implement the proposal as it was
intended. Regarding the commenter’s
transparency concern, the Board notes
that it would have discretion to take
action to add activities in a public
forum, such as open Board meetings, or
alternatively, undertake notice-andcomment proceedings if it deems them
appropriate or desirable under the
circumstances of any particular request
to approve a new activity.
Accordingly, under the final rule, the
list of permissible activities in § 712.5
includes a catchall category for other
activities as approved in writing by the
NCUA and published on the NCUA’s
website. The final rule also provides
that once the NCUA has approved an
activity and published that activity on
its website, the NCUA would not
remove that particular activity from the
approved list, or make substantial
changes to the content or description of
that approved activity, except through
formal rulemaking procedures.
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IV. Investment Authority
An FCU’s authority to lend to and
invest in a credit union organization is
provided for in two separate provisions
of the FCU Act. The NCUA has
historically interpreted the lending and
investment authority under the FCU Act
as referring to the same types of
organizations.65 The Board solicited
comment about adopting separate
definitions for the types of organizations
that an FCU may invest in or lend to,
which potentially would expand the
types of organizations eligible for FCU
investment. Several commenters
supported the Board’s decision to
reconsider its longstanding
interpretation of FCU investment and
lending authority. Commenters in
support of the reinterpretation generally
discussed the benefit of broadly
permitting FCUs to invest in financial
technology companies. Several
commenters stated that FCUs can get
left out of the development of new
financial technology because of the
requirement to primarily serve
members. Some commenters stated that
additional investment authority would
ensure the industry has better leverage,
control, and influence in the
development of new technologies. Three
commenters provided sample safety and
soundness conditions that could be
applied to these lending authorities.
65 12
U.S.C. 1757(5)(D).
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One commenter recommended that
certain de minimis investments be
exempt from CUSO requirements. This
commenter recommended that the
NCUA permit FCUs to make a 25
percent investment in CUSOs of FISCUs
without those CUSOs being subject to
part 712. Currently, the preapproved
activities and most other requirements
of part 712 do not apply to CUSOs with
only FISCU investment. Accordingly, if
the only credit unions that have an
ownership in a CUSO are statechartered, then the CUSO may be able
to engage in activities beyond those that
are preapproved in § 712.5. Thus, any
investment in, or loan to, a CUSO
(which § 712.1 generally describes as
ownership interests) from an FCU
subjects the CUSO to all of part 712’s
requirements. The commenter’s
suggestion is that some amount of such
investment should be allowed without
invoking those requirements. The Board
appreciates this recommendation and
will take it into consideration when
evaluating future action on the
investment issue. The Board observes,
however, that any future expansion of
FCU investment authority would need
to be in organizations providing services
associated with the routine operations
of credit unions, which could vary from
some types of entities in which statechartered credit unions may invest.
Another commenter recommended
that the proposed interpretation be
adopted and extended to corporate
credit unions.
In contrast, one banking trade
organization stated that expanding FCU
investment authority in CUSOs would
be outside the routine operations of
credit unions, which are statutorily
confined to serving their fields of
membership. The commenter stated that
the NCUA’s position would exceed the
agency’s legal authority under the FCU
Act.
The Board will consider these
comments in determining whether to
propose any change to its existing
interpretation and regulatory definition
of a CUSO. The Board notes, however,
that it does not find persuasive the
contention that the possible
reinterpretation is inconsistent with the
FCU Act. As set forth in the preamble
to the proposed rule, the investment
provision of the FCU Act contains
distinct wording from the loan
provision. The preamble discussion in
the proposed rule discussed the
statutory wording and possible
interpretation in careful detail. The
Board, therefore, declines to withdraw
this portion of the proposed rule, as
recommended by the commenter, and
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will consider this issue for potential
future action.
V. Other Comments
The Board also received other
comments outside the scope of the
proposed rule, which are discussed
briefly in this section.
One commenter recommended that
where a CUSO is making a loan that
involves tax credits the CUSO should be
permitted to acquire and syndicate the
tax credits, whether among taxable
(non-credit union) members of the
CUSO and/or third-party investors. The
Board will consider this issue for
potential future action for CUSO
investment authorities but notes that
these authorities have historically been
narrow.66 The NCUA has, however,
previously found a CUSO’s proposed
acquisition and sale of tax credits in
connection with approved lending
activity to be permissible.67
One commenter asked that CUSOs be
permitted to engage in both debt and
equity aspects of financing saleleaseback transactions for credit unions,
whether those credit unions are
members of the CUSO or not. The Board
will consider this request in connection
with future action on CUSO authorities.
One commenter suggested the NCUA
offer periodic dialogue sessions akin to
those recently launched by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and
recommended a CUSO compliance
guide. The Board will consider these
suggestions as part of its ongoing
supervisory program.
VI. Regulatory Procedures
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
generally requires that, in connection
with a final rulemaking, an agency
prepare and make available for public
comment a final regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of a
rule on small entities (defined for
purposes of the RFA to include credit
unions with assets less than $100
million).68 A regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required, however, if the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
and publishes its certification and a
short, explanatory statement in the
Federal Register together with the rule.
66 See
12 CFR 712.5(r), 712.6.
Op. Ltr. 03–0647, FCU and CUSO
Participation in New Markets Tax Credit Program
(July 2003), available at https://www.ncua.gov/
regulation-supervision/legal-opinions/2003/federalcredit-union-and-credit-union-service-organizationparticipation-newmarkets-tax-credits.
68 See 80 FR 57512 (Sept. 24, 2015).
67 OGC
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This rule does not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The rule
imposes no requirement or costs on
small entities and only expands the list
of permissible activities for CUSOs. The
rule expands the list of activities that
are considered complex or high risk for
purposes of the CUSO Registry,
however, the Board does not expect the
additional reporting requirements to
entail substantial regulatory burden.
Accordingly, the NCUA certifies that the
final rule does not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small FICUs.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) requires
that the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approve all collections of
information by a Federal agency from
the public before they can be
implemented. Respondents are not
required to respond to any collection of
information unless it displays a current,
valid OMB control number.
Consistent with the PRA, the
information collection requirements
included in this final rule has been
submitted to OMB for approval under
control number 3133–0149.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
state and local interests. Per
fundamental federalism principles, the
NCUA, an independent regulatory
agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5),
voluntarily complies with the principles
of the Executive order. This rulemaking
will not have a substantial direct effect
on the states, on the connection between
the National Government and the states,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. The NCUA has
determined that this rule does not
constitute a policy that has federalism
implications for purposes of the
Executive order.
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Assessment of Federal Regulations and
Policies on Families
The NCUA has determined that this
rule will not affect family well-being
within the meaning of section 654 of the
Treasury and General Government
Appropriations Act, 1999, Public Law
105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).69
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA) generally provides for
congressional review of agency rules.70
A reporting requirement is triggered in
instances where the NCUA issues a final
rule as defined in the Administrative
Procedure Act.71 An agency rule,
besides being subject to congressional
oversight, may also be subject to a
delayed effective date if the rule is a
‘‘major rule.’’ The NCUA does not
believe this rule is a ‘‘major rule’’ within
the meaning of the relevant sections of
SBREFA. As required by SBREFA, the
NCUA will submit this final rule to
OMB for it to determine if the final rule
is a ‘‘major rule’’ for purposes of
SBREFA. The NCUA also will file
appropriate reports with Congress and
the Government Accountability Office
so this rule may be reviewed.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 712
Administrative practices and
procedure, Credit, Credit unions,
Insurance, Investments, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on October 21, 2021.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
part 712 as follows:
PART 712—CREDIT UNION SERVICE
ORGANIZATIONS (CUSOs)
1. Amend the authority for part 712 by
revising the citation to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1756, 1757(5)(D) and
(7)(I), 1766, 1782, 1784, 1785, 1786, and
1789(a)(11).
2. Amend § 712.3 by revising
paragraphs (d)(5)(i), (d)(5)(ii)
introductory text, and (d)(5)(iii) to read
as follows:
■
§ 712.3 What are the characteristics of and
what requirements apply to CUSOs?
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) Credit and lending:
(A) Loan support services, including
servicing; and
(B) Loan origination, including
originating, purchasing, selling, and
holding any loan as described in
§ 712.5(q).
(ii) Information technology:
*
*
*
*
*
70 5
69 Public
Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
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59301
(iii) Custody, safekeeping, and
investment management services for
credit unions.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 712.5 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraph (a) introductory
text;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(4), add a semicolon
at the end of the paragraph;
■ c. Revise paragraph (b) introductory
text;
■ d. In paragraph (b)(11), remove the
period and add a semicolon in its place;
■ e. Remove paragraphs (c), (d), (n), and
(s);
■ f. Redesignate paragraphs (e) through
(t) as paragraphs (c) through (p);
■ g. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (c) introductory text, (d)
introductory text, (e) introductory text,
(f) introductory text, (g) introductory
text, and (h) introductory text;
■ h. In newly redesignated paragraph
(h)(3), remove the word ‘‘and’’;
■ i. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (i) introductory text, (j), (k),
(l), and (m) introductory text;
■ j. In newly redesignated paragraph
(m)(3), remove the period and add a
semicolon in its place;
■ k. Revise newly redesignated
paragraph (n);
■ l. In newly redesignated paragraph (o),
remove ‘‘CUSO investments in nonCUSO service providers:’’ and remove
the last period and add a semicolon in
its place;
■ m. In newly redesignated paragraph
(p), remove the period and add a
semicolon in its place; and
■ n. Add new paragraphs (q) and (r).
The additions read as follows:
§ 712.5 What activities and services are
preapproved for CUSOs?
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Checking and currency services:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Clerical, professional and
management services:
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Electronic transaction services:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Financial counseling services:
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Fixed asset services:
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Insurance brokerage or agency:
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Leasing:
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Loan support services:
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Record retention, security and
disaster recovery services:
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Securities brokerage services;
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(k) Shared credit union branch
(service center) operations;
(l) Travel agency services;
(m) Trust and trust-related services:
*
*
*
*
*
(n) Real estate brokerage services;
*
*
*
*
*
(q) Loan origination, including
originating, purchasing, selling, and
holding any type of loan permissible for
Federal credit unions to originate,
purchase, sell, and hold, including the
authority to purchase and sell
participation interests that are
permissible for Federal credit unions to
purchase and sell; and
(r) Other categories of activities as
approved in writing by the NCUA and
published on the NCUA’s website. Once
the NCUA has approved an activity and
published that activity on its website,
the NCUA will not remove that
particular activity from the approved
list or make substantial changes to the
content or description of that approved
activity, except through formal
rulemaking procedures.
[FR Doc. 2021–23322 Filed 10–26–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 570
[FR–6290–N–01]
Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program:
Announcement of Fee To Cover Credit
Subsidy Costs for FY 2022
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD).
ACTION: Announcement of fee.
AGENCY:
This document announces the
fee that HUD will collect from
borrowers of loans guaranteed under
HUD’s Section 108 Loan Guarantee
Program (Section 108 Program) to offset
the credit subsidy costs of the
guaranteed loans pursuant to
commitments awarded in Fiscal Year
2022 in the event HUD is required or
authorized by statute to do so,
notwithstanding subsection (m) of
section 108 of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974.
DATES: Applicability date: November 26,
2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul
Webster, Director, Financial
Management Division, Office of Block
Grant Assistance, Office of Community
Planning and Development, U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
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SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 256001
Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room
7282, Washington, DC 20410; telephone
number 202–402–4563 (this is not a tollfree number). Individuals with speech
or hearing impairments may access this
number through TTY by calling the tollfree Federal Relay Service at 800–877–
8339. FAX inquiries (but not comments)
may be sent to Mr. Webster at 202–708–
1798 (this is not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Transportation, Housing and
Urban Development, and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 2015
(division K of Pub. L. 113–235,
approved December 16, 2014) (2015
Appropriations Act) provided that ‘‘the
Secretary shall collect fees from
borrowers, notwithstanding subsection
(m) of such section 108, to result in a
credit subsidy cost of zero for
guaranteeing . . .’’ Section 108 loans.
Section 108(m) of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974
states that ‘‘No fee or charge may be
imposed by the Secretary or any other
Federal agency on or with respect to a
guarantee made by the Secretary under
this section after February 5, 1988.’’
Identical language was continued or
included in the Department’s
continuing resolutions and
appropriations acts authorizing HUD to
issue Section 108 loan guarantees
during Fiscal Years (FYs) 2016, 2017,
2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021. The Fiscal
Year (FY) 2022 HUD appropriations bill
under consideration 1 also has identical
language suspending the prohibition
against charging fees for loans issued
with Section 108 guarantees after
February 5, 1988, and requiring that the
Secretary collect fees from borrowers to
result in a credit subsidy cost of zero for
the Section 108 Program.
On November 3, 2015, HUD
published a final rule (80 FR 67626) that
amended the Section 108 Program
regulations at 24 CFR part 570 to
establish additional procedures,
including procedures for announcing
the amount of the fee each fiscal year
when HUD is required to offset the
credit subsidy costs to the Federal
Government to guarantee Section 108
loans. For FYs 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019,
2020, and 2021 HUD published
notifications to set the fees.2
1 Division G, Title II of H.R. 4502, 117th Cong.,
under the heading ‘‘Community Development Loan
Guarantees Program Account.’’
2 80 FR 67634 (November 3, 2015), 81 FR 68297
(October 4, 2016), 82 FR 44518 (September 25,
2017), 83 FR 50257 (October 5, 2018), 84 FR 35299
(July 23, 2019), and 85 FR 52479 (August 26, 2020),
respectively.
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
II. FY 2022 Fee: 2.00 Percent of the
Principal Amount of the Loan
If authorized by statute, this
document sets the fee for Section 108
loan disbursements under loan
guarantee commitments awarded for FY
2022 at 2.00 percent of the principal
amount of the loan. HUD will collect
this fee from borrowers of loans
guaranteed under the Section 108
Program to offset the credit subsidy
costs of the guaranteed loans pursuant
to commitments awarded in FY 2022 if
the FY 2022 HUD appropriations bill
under consideration is enacted, or if
HUD is otherwise required or
authorized by statute to collect fees from
borrowers to offset the credit subsidy
costs of the guaranteed loans,
notwithstanding subsection (m) of
section 108 of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974
(42 U.S.C. 5308(m)). For this fee
announcement, HUD is not changing the
underlying assumptions or creating new
considerations for borrowers. The
calculation of the FY 2022 fee uses a
similar calculation model as the FY
2016, FY 2017, FY 2018, FY 2019, FY
2020, and FY 2021 fee notifications, but
incorporates updated information
regarding the composition of the Section
108 portfolio and the timing of the
estimated future cash flows for defaults
and recoveries. The calculation of the
fee is also affected by the discount rates
required to be used by HUD when
calculating the present value of the
future cash flows as part of the Federal
budget process.
As described in 24 CFR 570.712(b),
HUD’s credit subsidy calculation is
based on the amount required to reduce
the credit subsidy cost to the Federal
Government associated with making a
Section 108 loan guarantee to the
amount established by applicable
appropriation acts. As a result, HUD’s
credit subsidy cost calculations
incorporated assumptions based on: (1)
Data on default frequency for municipal
debt where such debt is comparable to
loans in the Section 108 loan portfolio;
(2) data on recovery rates on collateral
security for comparable municipal debt;
(3) the expected composition of the
Section 108 portfolio by end users of the
guaranteed loan funds (e.g., third-party
borrowers and public entities); and (4)
other factors that HUD determined were
relevant to this calculation (e.g.,
assumptions as to loan disbursement
and repayment patterns).
Taking these factors into
consideration, HUD determined that the
fee for disbursements made under loan
guarantee commitments awarded in FY
2022 will be 2.00 percent, which will be
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 205 (Wednesday, October 27, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 59289-59302]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-23322]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 712
RIN 3133-AE95
Credit Union Service Organizations (CUSOs)
AGENCY: National Credit Union Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The NCUA Board (Board) is issuing a final rule that amends the
NCUA's credit union service organization (CUSO) regulation. The final
rule accomplishes two objectives: expanding the list of permissible
activities and services for CUSOs to include the origination of any
type of loan that a Federal credit union (FCU) may originate; and
granting the Board additional flexibility to approve permissible
activities and services.
DATES: This final rule is effective November 26, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Frank Kressman, Office of General
Counsel, (703) 518-6540; or by mail at National Credit Union
Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
Legal Authority and Background
The Board is issuing this rule pursuant to its authority under the
Federal Credit Union Act (FCU Act).\1\ Under the FCU Act, the NCUA is
the chartering and supervisory authority for FCUs and the federal
supervisory authority for federally insured credit unions (FICUs). The
FCU Act grants the NCUA a broad mandate to issue regulations governing
both FCUs and FICUs. Section 120 of the FCU Act is a general grant of
regulatory authority and authorizes the Board to prescribe regulations
for the administration of the FCU Act.\2\ Section 209 of the FCU Act is
a plenary grant of regulatory authority to the NCUA to issue
regulations necessary or appropriate to carry out its role as share
insurer for all FICUs.\3\ Accordingly, the FCU Act grants the Board
broad rulemaking authority to ensure that the credit union industry and
the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) remain safe and
sound.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1751 et seq.
\2\ 12 U.S.C. 1766(a).
\3\ 12 U.S.C. 1789.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the FCU Act, FCUs have the authority to lend up to one
percent of their paid-in and unimpaired capital and surplus, and to
invest an equivalent amount, in CUSOs.\4\ The NCUA regulates FCUs'
lending to, and investment in, CUSOs in part 712 of its regulations
(CUSO rule).\5\ In general, a CUSO is an organization: (1) In which a
FICU has an ownership interest or to which a FICU has extended a loan;
(2) is engaged primarily in providing products and services to credit
unions, their membership, or the membership of credit unions
contracting with the CUSO; and (3) whose business relates to the
routine daily operations of the credit unions it serves.\6\ The CUSO
rule provides a list of preapproved activities and services related to
the routine daily operations of credit unions.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 12 U.S.C. 1757.
\5\ 12 CFR part 712. All sections of part 712 apply to FCUs.
Sections 712.2(d)(2)(ii), 712.3(d), 712.4, and 712.11(b) and (c)
apply to federally insured, state-chartered credit unions (FISCUs),
as provided in Sec. 741.222 of the chapter. FISCUs must follow the
law in the state in which they are chartered with respect to the
sections in part 712 that only apply to FCUs. Corporate credit union
CUSOs are subject to part 704. Any amendments to part 704 would
occur through a separate rulemaking and are not included in this
final rule.
\6\ See 12 CFR 712.1(d), 712.3(b), and 712.5.
\7\ 12 CFR 712.5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The list of preapproved activities and services in the CUSO rule
has not been substantively revised since 2008.\8\ The 2008 final rule
added two new categories of permissible CUSO activities: (1) Credit
card loan origination and (2) payroll processing services. The 2008
final rule also added new examples of permissible CUSO activities and
clarified that FCUs may invest in, and loan to, CUSOs that buy and sell
participations in loans they are authorized to originate. In the 2008
final rule, commenters requested that FCUs be permitted to lend to or
invest in CUSOs involved in broader types of lending; specifically, car
loans, including direct lending and the purchase of retail installment
sales contracts from vehicle dealerships, and payday lending. The NCUA,
however, declined to provide such authority at that time.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
\9\ The NCUA's rationale for not extending CUSO lending
authority more broadly is discussed in detail in Section III, Final
Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Proposed Rule
At its January 14, 2021 meeting, the Board issued the proposed rule
to amend the NCUA's CUSO regulation.\10\ The proposed rule would
accomplish two objectives: Expanding the list of permissible activities
and services for CUSOs that FCUs may lend to or invest in to include
origination of any type of loan that an FCU may originate; and granting
the Board additional flexibility to approve permissible activities and
services. The NCUA also sought comment on broadening general FCU
investment authority in CUSOs based on the FCU Act's provision that
authorizes FCUs to invest in organizations providing services
associated with the routine operations of credit unions, which is
codified in a separate provision from the authority for FCUs to lend to
``credit union organizations.'' The proposed rule provided for a 30-day
comment period that closed on March 29, 2021. To allow interested
persons more time to consider and submit comments, the Board extended
the comment period for an additional 30 days. The extended comment
period closed on April 30, 2021.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 86 FR 11645 (Feb. 26, 2001).
\11\ 86 FR 16679 (Mar. 31, 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board received over 1,000 comments on the proposed rule.
Comments were received from credit unions, both state and federal,
CUSOs, credit union leagues and trade associations, banking trade
organizations, individuals, consumer organizations, and an association
of state credit union supervisors. In general, consumer organizations,
banking trade organizations, and individuals who participated in a form
letter writing campaign were opposed to the proposed rule. Credit
unions were not unanimous, with some credit unions supporting the rule
and others opposing it. CUSOs, credit union leagues, and trade
organizations were generally in favor of the proposed rule.
III. Final Rule
The final rule adopts the proposed rule without any substantive
change. Under the final rule, therefore, CUSOs are permitted to
originate any type of
[[Page 59290]]
loan that an FCU may originate and grants the Board additional
flexibility to approve permissible CUSO activities and services outside
of notice and comment rulemaking.\12\ The final rule and a discussion
of the Board's responses to the comments are discussed in detail
subsequently. First, however, the Board explains the general principles
and approach it has taken to examine and reconcile the competing
viewpoints of commenters as well as past statements by the NCUA and
individual Board Members on risks relating to CUSO activity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Originate means to fund or make loans. This is separate
from the already permissible activity for FCUs to lend to or invest
in CUSOs that engage in loan support services that include loan
processing and servicing under Sec. 712.5(j).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As detailed in response to commenters' different points, which are
grouped by subject matter in the following sections, the Board has re-
examined several key statutory and policy principles to engage in a
thorough, balanced review of the comments. These points include the
following:
1. The Board's views regarding safety and soundness and risk to the
NCUSIF. On this critical issue, the Board has considered key reference
points, including the statutory definition of a ``material loss'' to
the NCUSIF and requirements for NCUA insurance of member accounts.
These authorities do not define all losses as material or involving
undue risk to the NCUSIF. This preamble elaborates on these reference
points in considering the degree of risk the rule may pose.
2. The need to balance predicted risks against predicted benefits.
Many commenters opposing the proposed rule made, for the most part,
generalized predictions of harm to the NCUSIF, to consumers, or to the
reputation of credit unions. While the Board recognizes the need to
consider these concerns, it also finds that they do not account for the
potential benefits that the regulatory changes may bring to FCUs by
enhancing efficiency and supporting innovation, and to consumers by
expanding lending options and access through credit union-affiliated
lenders. The Board also finds this expansion in FCU authority
appropriate for parity purposes because the Board currently does not
restrict the activity of CUSOs in which only FISCUs lend or invest.
3. Some of the policy concerns invoked by commenters, as well as
the Board at times in the past, have been both qualified and
conditional. Most notably, some commenters and the Board in past CUSO
rulemakings have considered the potential for FCUs lending to or
investing in CUSOs with expanded authorities to dilute the FCU common
bond and introduce more competition to small credit unions. The Board
continues to recognize that these issues raise concerns for some
parties, but has found that neither rests on clear statutory authority
in the FCU Act. That is to say, nothing in the FCU Act binds CUSOs to
FCU field of membership common bond provisions, and the Board itself
has invoked this concern only conditionally in past rulemakings,
allowing it to yield to the needs of credit unions to avail themselves
of expanded CUSO lending activity. Further, the FCU Act does not
require a CUSO to serve credit unions and members exclusively, but
rather primarily, which balances a focus on credit union members while
expressly authorizing CUSOs to serve others. Similarly, the Board does
not believe it is prudent to allow concerns over legitimate competition
in the marketplace to restrain regulatory changes that may benefit many
credit unions and the system as a whole. Accordingly, to the extent
these factors are appropriate regulatory considerations, the Board
believes they must yield to the benefits of expanded FCU authority
about CUSO activity and other factors.
4. Application of the Board's judgment to reconcile differing
viewpoints. Commenters opposing the rule raised several concerns, and
in a few cases, cited past examples or incidents. But the Board does
not believe that commenters opposing the rule provided substantial
evidence to support their predictions that adopting the proposed rule
would result in various harm. Commenters supporting the rule provided
reasons they believe the rule would be beneficial. In considering these
competing viewpoints, the vast majority of which are general policy
views, the Board has applied its own judgment to make the best
conclusions it can about the potential benefits and risks of the
proposed rule. Throughout this review, the Board has concluded that
limiting expansion and innovation indefinitely based only on
generalized concerns would result in regulatory stagnation, which may
harm the credit union system in the long term.
After considering the mixed viewpoints, the Board has determined
that the overall weight of the factors in the record favor moving
forward to enhance opportunities for FCUs CUSOs to engage in all types
of lending permitted for FCUs.
Expansion of Permissible FCU Lending and Investment in CUSOs Engaged in
Lending Activity
The Board has reconsidered its 2008 position on permitting FCUs to
invest in or lend to CUSOs that engage in all types of lending. The
Board now believes that permitting FCUs to invest in or lend to CUSOs
that originate any type of loan that an FCU may originate may better
enable FCUs to compete effectively in today's marketplace and better
serve their members.
As discussed in the preceding section, the FCU Act permits an FCU
to lend to or invest in a CUSO that provides services associated with
the routine and daily operations of credit unions. The NCUA has
interpreted this statutory authority broadly to permit an FCU to lend
to, and invest in, a CUSO that does most of the same activities and
services permissible for an FCU.\13\ To date, however, FCUs have not
been permitted to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs that originate certain
kinds of loans.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 12 CFR 712.5.
\14\ See, 62 FR 11779 (Mar. 13, 1997).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in the proposed rule, the NCUA historically has been
reluctant to grant FCUs authority to invest in or lend to CUSOs with
broad lending authority. First, the NCUA has been hesitant because
CUSOs may serve those who are not members of a member credit union. The
NCUA has been concerned about FCUs benefiting from CUSO profits
generated from non-members.\15\ Second, the NCUA has also expressed
concern that if member loans were being made by CUSOs, the NCUA would
have a duty to examine such loans and that would necessitate greater
NCUA examination authority over CUSOs.\16\ Finally, the NCUA has also
had concerns that permitting CUSOs to engage in a core credit union
function could negatively affect affiliated credit union services.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Id.
\16\ Id.
\17\ 68 FR 16450 (Apr. 4, 2003).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Due to these concerns, the NCUA has previously found compelling
justification for permitting FCUs to invest in or lend to CUSOs engaged
in only four types of loans: (1) Business; (2) consumer mortgage; (3)
student; and (4) credit cards.\18\ In permitting these types of
lending, the NCUA has considered factors specific to each type of
lending, such as whether these activities require specialized staff or
economies of scale, and, as discussed subsequently, whether loan
aggregation
[[Page 59291]]
was prevalent in the marketplace for the particular type of lending.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Id. See also, 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Upon reexamination, the Board now believes it is appropriate to
permit FCUs to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs that engage in all types of
lending permitted for FCUs. As discussed previously, the Board received
extensive comments on the proposed rule. The commenters, including
credit union commenters, were split on whether permitting CUSOs to
originate any loan that an FCU can originate would be ultimately
beneficial to credit unions, particularly small credit unions, or
detrimental to the long-run interests of credit unions. Comments are
discussed in detail in the following paragraphs.
Safety and Soundness
Some commenters who supported the proposed rule generally stated
that the rule would not cause safety and soundness concerns and that
the current CUSO regulatory framework sufficiently protects FCUs and
the NCUSIF. Commenters pointed to several existing authorities to
manage the potential risk from CUSO lending. First, commenters noted
that under the current regulation, the NCUA may at any time, based upon
supervisory, legal, or safety and soundness reasons, limit any CUSO
activities or services, or refuse to permit any CUSO activities or
services. Commenters further stated that the NCUA can exert pressure on
FCUs if CUSOs engaged in unsafe or unsound behavior. Second, an FCU may
invest in, loan to, and/or contract with only those CUSOs that are
sufficiently bonded or insured for their specific operations and
engaged in preapproved activities and services. Third, FCUs are bound
by an aggregate limit of loans and investments in CUSOs to two percent
of paid-in and unimpaired capital and surplus. Fourth, FCUs (as well as
FISCUs) are required to include provisions in contracts with CUSOs in
which they lend or invest to give the NCUA complete access to any books
and records of the CUSO and the ability to review the CUSO's internal
controls. Finally, other commenters noted that CUSOs are subject to
state lending laws and federal consumer protection laws. In addition,
some CUSOs may be subject to supervision at the state level by way of
state licensing requirements or third-party oversight authority.
Some commenters discussed that CUSOs currently have extensive
lending authority and there have not been any extraordinary losses.
A few commenters also discussed that the bigger safety and
soundness risk may arise from not adopting the proposed rule as it
permits FCUs to remain competitive and build capital. Commenters also
discussed that FCUs could be subject to reputational harm if they
cannot provide members the necessary services.
In response to a question in the proposed rule about potential
safety and soundness conditions, one commenter urged caution on the
potential to apply risk retention requirements to participation loans
originated by wholly owned CUSOs. The commenter stated that, since the
balance sheets of the CUSO and its parent are consolidated, the
participation becomes effectively nonexistent, so a risk retention
requirement becomes unnecessary.\19\
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\19\ Note that a CUSO's balance sheet would be consolidated with
a credit union's if required by applicable accounting principles.
Generally, the NCUA requires credit unions to consolidate a CUSO's
balance sheet with the credit union's when the credit union wholly
owns or owns a controlling interest in the CUSO. See NCUA Call
Report Form 5300 Instructions, Statement of Financial Condition, at
2, effective Sept. 2021, available at https://www.ncua.gov/files/publications/regulations/call-report-instructions-september-2021.pdf.
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In contrast, some of the commenters who opposed the proposed rule
believed that the proposal would have substantial unintended
consequences and affect the safety and soundness of FCUs and the
NCUSIF. Commenters primarily focused on the NCUA's lack of examination
or oversight authority and the systemic risk that arises from a few
CUSOs providing services to a large portion of credit unions.
Commenters generally discussed that the NCUA has no examination or
oversight authority over CUSOs. One commenter noted that several
federal agencies, including the Government Accountability Office and
the Financial Stability Oversight Council, have recommended that the
NCUA be given supervisory oversight of CUSOs and that the Chairs of
every NCUA Board over the past decade, as well as the NCUA's Inspector
General, have called for vendor authority. These commenters believed
expanding CUSO lending authority at the same time the NCUA has
acknowledged an existing risk related to CUSOs would exacerbate the
current problems that arise from the inability to supervise CUSOs. One
commenter questioned why the NCUA would propose providing CUSOs with
all the powers of FCUs, but with none of the commensurate prudential
supervision or consumer safeguards to mitigate the risk. One commenter
recommended a hybrid approach that would enable the NCUA to review a
CUSO's loan origination activities, but not permit a complete NCUA
examination.
The Board does not believe that the limited expansion of FCUs'
ability to lend to, or invest in, CUSOs engaged in lending permissible
for an FCU contradicts its long-stated need for additional examination
and enforcement authority of CUSOs and other third-party vendors.\20\
It is the Board's continuing policy to seek third-party vendor
authority for the agency from Congress. The Board does not believe this
rule undermines its request for such authority as the rule provides
only a modest expansion of FCU authority to lend to, and invest in,
CUSOs and results in only an incremental amount of additional risk to
the NCUSIF.
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\20\ The Board also notes that its request for third-party
vendor authority is more expansive than examination and enforcement
authority over CUSOs. The term third-party vendors include any
third-party service provider regardless of credit union ownership, a
larger category of institutions than just CUSOs. The NCUA currently
has very limited oversight of non-CUSO third-party vendors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also believes there are several factors that may mitigate
the risk to the NCUSIF, though the Board acknowledges that despite
these mitigating factors CUSOs have caused more than $500 million in
losses to FICUs since 2008. First, as commenters in favor of the rule
discussed, even though the NCUA does not have examination or
enforcement authority over CUSOs, FCUs only have the authority to lend
up to one percent of their paid-in and unimpaired capital and surplus,
and to invest an equivalent amount, in total to CUSOs. These investment
and lending limits mitigate risk to the NCUSIF. Additionally, Sec.
712.3(d) requires all FICUs that obtain an ownership interest in a CUSO
to ensure by contract that the NCUA has access to the CUSO's books and
records and other information and reports. CUSOs are also subject to
state lending laws and federal consumer protection laws. These and the
other regulatory requirements discussed above mitigate the potential
risk to the NCUSIF due to the modest expansion of FCU authority to lend
to and invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending activities.
The Board also notes that it has broad investigative subpoena
authority that agency staff can use to obtain records and testimony in
certain extraordinary circumstances.\21\ This broad authority is not
limited to credit unions and may permit NCUA staff to obtain
information from third parties in connection with the agency's
examinations of credit unions.\22\ The Board does not currently
[[Page 59292]]
use this authority broadly to obtain information from CUSOs, but the
Board could potentially instruct NCUA staff to employ these oversight
tools to their full potential to guard against risks to the NCUSIF
associated with CUSO activity in the absence of direct statutory
examination and enforcement authority over CUSOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 12 U.S.C 1784(a), 1786(p).
\22\ 12 U.S.C. 1784(a); see United States v. Inst. for Coll.
Access & Success, 27 F. Supp. 3d 106, 112 (D.D.C. 2014) (an agency
Inspector General's administrative subpoena to third party in an
investigation was enforceable even though third party was not an
entity subject to agency's regulatory jurisdiction).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, regarding its enforcement authority, the Board also notes
that it may have statutory enforcement authority in certain cases over
CUSOs that commit misconduct. Specifically, an insured credit union's
independent contractor may be subject to the Board's enforcement powers
under the FCU Act if it knowingly or recklessly participates in certain
violations that cause or are likely to cause more than a minimal
financial loss to, or a significant adverse effect on, the insured
credit union.\23\ Thus, the Board may have greater power in certain
circumstances than opposing commenters acknowledge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 12 U.S.C. 1786(r).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also believes that the risk to the NCUSIF is mitigated
because in its experience most CUSO loans are sold to credit unions,
which are subject to NCUA enforcement and examination authority. In
addition, the Board also believes that the additional risk is mitigated
because most CUSOs are wholly owned by the parent credit union (as of
the end of 2020, for instance, approximately 72 percent of natural
person CUSOs were wholly owned by credit unions),\24\ which provides
the NCUA additional leverage if a CUSO is engaging in unsafe or unsound
lending practices. In both situations, the NCUA would likely have
additional insight into the risk of the CUSO's lending. The Board
acknowledges, however, that there may be gaps in its jurisdiction for
certain CUSOs that may retain its loans, sell them to third parties, or
are not wholly owned by credit unions.\25\ It is the Board's belief
that this risk is limited and is outweighed by the potential benefits
of the final rule.
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\24\ CUSOs at a Glance (2020), available at https://www.ncua.gov/analysis/cuso-economic-data/cusos-glance.
\25\ The Board notes that such risk is already present in the
credit union system as the NCUA insures FISCUs that may be subject
to substantially less restrictive CUSO requirements. For example,
many states do not restrict, or have higher limits for, FISCU
investments in CUSOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As some commenters supporting the proposed rule observed, the
expanding lending authority may be beneficial to FCUs by enhancing
their competitiveness and ability to generate capital. Increased credit
union capital would strengthen the NCUSIF by reducing the potential for
losses due to credit union failures. The Board believes that the
potential benefits of the expanded authority for FCUs to lend to or
invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending activities may outweigh the
potential costs of the rule including additional risk to the NCUSIF,
decreased credit union lending due to increased competition, and
increased consolidation, particularly among smaller credit unions. In
any event, the Board considers the potential benefit to credit unions
and the NCUSIF to be at least a partial mitigating factor against the
potential incremental risks.
Other commenters expressed concerns about systemic risk. For
example, one commenter quoted former NCUA Board Chair Mark McWatters to
highlight how CUSOs contribute to systemic risk: ``Since 2008, CUSOs
have caused more than $500 million in losses to federally insured
credit unions, and they have contributed to the failure of 11 credit
unions . . . more than half of the NCUA's institutions hold less than
$33 million in assets and average approximately three to four full-time
employees per institution. These institutions are heavily dependent on
third-party outsourced services and do not possess the resources to
independently perform full due diligence on all of their critical
services providers.'' Another commenter stated that a large CUSO
operating as a loan originator and selling participations or whole
loans could produce systemic risks within the industry as evidenced by
prior events caused by single originators, a concentrated group of
originators, or by overconcentration within a sector.
As discussed in its responses to other comments in the preceding
section, the Board has considered the potential benefits and risks of
FCUs lending to or investing in CUSOs engaged in broader types of
lending. The Board recognizes that several present and prior Board
Members, the Inspector General, and other government bodies have found
that the NCUA needs statutory enforcement authority over third-party
vendors, including CUSOs, to manage the associated risks appropriately.
The NCUA has also documented significant previous losses to the NCUSIF
that were attributed to CUSOs, particularly between 2008 and 2015.
The Board, however, does not find it necessary to continue to limit
FCUs' authority to invest in, or lend to, CUSOs engaged in lending
activities permissible for FCUs until the FCU Act is amended to add
enforcement authority over CUSOs. Such a response is disproportionate
to the modest expansion permitted in this final rule.
The Board also finds that prior statements about losses to the
NCUSIF do not support any firm prediction that similar losses will
occur in the future because of this final rule (or even with a mere
continuation of the current authorities).\26\ For example, the Board
considers what has occurred since 2015, as reflected in the Inspector
General's regular reports. Under the FCU Act, the Inspector General
must submit a written report to the Board, the Comptroller General of
the United States, and other parties when the NCUSIF incurs a
``material loss'' an insured credit union, with material loss defined
as one exceeding $25 million and 10 percent of total assets of the
credit union.\27\ These reports must include a description of the
reasons that the problems of the credit union resulted in a material
loss to the NCUSIF and recommendations for preventing any such loss in
the future.\28\ For losses that are not material as defined in this
section of the FCU Act, the Inspector General must identify losses
occurring in each 6-month period and report semi-annually to the Board
and Congress on whether any of those losses warrant an in-depth
review.\29\ Since 2015, the NCUA's Inspector General has not issued any
Material Loss Review reports in which CUSO activity was cited as the
reason, or part of the reason, for the losses. The NCUA also looked at
the total losses due to CUSOs in failed FICUs from 2015 to June 30,
2021. The Board found that failed FICUs lost approximately $4 million
due to CUSOs during this period. And, the NCUSIF lost only an amount
estimated to be under $1 million due to CUSOs during this period as
most of the failed FICUs with CUSO-related losses were merged into
other institutions without substantial loss to the NCUSIF.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The Board also notes that there have been significant
changes to laws, regulations, and industry practices for loan
underwriting and credit administration since the 2008 financial
crisis. Therefore, the Board also believes that the historical
losses attributed to CUSOs that were discussed in the comments are
not reflective of the current standards and practices, so the
referenced historical losses may not necessarily be predictive of
future losses.
\27\ 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(1), (2).
\28\ 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(1).
\29\ 12 U.S.C. 1790d(j)(4). This discussion provides only a
general description of these requirements and the Inspector
General's duties and activities. More information is available on
the Inspector General website and in its Semi-Annual Reports to
Congress.
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[[Page 59293]]
The Board finds the absence of material CUSO-related losses during
this period noteworthy; however, the Board acknowledges it excluded
losses that occurred during the 2008 banking crisis and looked at data
that occurred during a relatively robust economy. This absence does not
guarantee that material losses will not occur in the future, but it
illustrates the uncertainty associated with predictions by some
commenters. A past pattern of material losses is not, in the Board's
opinion, sufficient evidence that the pattern will continue.
In reconciling these competing perspectives, the Board also has
considered the general principles discussed in the introduction to this
preamble. Neither the FCU Act nor the NCUA's regulations or policies
require the agency to ensure all potential losses to the NCUSIF are
avoided. The FCU Act requires the Board to consider whether a credit
union applying for insurance of member accounts poses ``undue risk'' to
the NCUSIF and to deny the application if the financial conditions and
policies are unsafe and unsound or if the applicant poses undue risk to
the NCUSIF.\30\ In its regulations in Sec. 741.204(d), the Board has
further defined ``undue risk'' to the NCUSIF as a condition that
creates a probability of loss in excess of that normally found in a
credit union and which indicates a reasonably foreseeable possibility
of insolvency and a resulting claim against the NCUSIF. Similarly, in
considering whether a credit union's practices are unsafe and unsound
for chartering and field of membership purposes, the Board considers
whether the action or lack of action would result in an ``abnormal risk
of loss'' to the credit union, its members, or the NCUSIF.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ 12 U.S.C. 1781(c).
\31\ 12 CFR 701, App. B, Glossary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also notes that the ongoing trend of credit union
consolidation is already increasing systemic risk. On an aggregate
basis, the total number of credit unions has been cut in half over the
prior two decades as smaller credit unions have merged or consolidated.
There were over 5,000 fewer credit unions with less than $1.0 billion
in total assets in 2020 than there were in 2000. As the number of
credit unions has declined, loan portfolios have become increasingly
concentrated within the largest credit unions. Expanding FCUs'
authority to lend or invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending activities
may allow smaller credit unions to combine their resources to remain
more competitive within the changing lending landscape, which could
result in a reduction of systemic risk.
Separately, the Board already insures FISCUs that may, depending on
state law, lend or invest in CUSOs that engage in all lending
activities. In its role as insurer, the Board finds it would be
unreasonable to decline to expand FCU authority on a risk basis when it
currently allows the activity for FISCUs.
Based on these standards and principles, the Board does not find
that the expanded FCU authority to lend to or invest in CUSOs engaged
in all lending activities provided by this rule are likely or more
likely than not to result in material losses to the NCUSIF or unsafe
and unsound practices posing an undue risk to the NCUSIF.
Regarding the concern over concentration risk, the Board believes
that existing limitations in Sec. Sec. 701.22 and 701.23 on the amount
of eligible obligations that FCUs may purchase and on the amount of
loan participations that all federally insured credit unions may
purchase from a single source will provide significant protection
against this concern. Additionally, the Board believes there is some
potential benefit to small credit unions buying loans from CUSOs. In
such a case, many credit unions may be purchasing loans from the same
entity leading collectively to enhanced due diligence on the CUSO.
Commenters also discussed the risk for reputational harm. For
example, the ownership structure of CUSOs may result in the public's
linking any aggressive or improper CUSO lending activity with the
lending activity of FCUs themselves.
The Board agrees that confusion over the status of CUSOs or
mistaken belief that they are federally insured and subject to the
NCUA's full oversight would be problematic. The Board notes that
certain FCU practices related to the promotion of CUSO services or
CUSOs with names related to their FCU parents may raise unfair,
deceptive, or abusive acts or practices issues.\32\ FCUs should pay
particular attention to their marketing and ensure that members are
informed and understand the legal significance between FCU-originated
loans and CUSO-originated loans. For example, FCUs should ensure that
members clearly understand that the NCUA may have a more limited
ability to address member complaints related to CUSO-originated loans.
The Board notes that standardized disclaimers in loan origination
documentation may be insufficient to address this concern. The Board,
however, finds that the current regulations, including the prohibition
on unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices, reasonably guard
against the concern about member confusion. First, Sec. 712.4(a)
specifies that an insured credit union must take several steps to
ensure corporate separateness from a CUSO, including that each is held
out to the public as separate enterprises. Adherence to this
requirement, and proper enforcement of it by the NCUA, is likely to
mitigate much or all of the concern regarding confusion. Second, and
similarly, the NCUA's advertising regulation in Sec. 740.2 requires,
among other matters, that an insured credit union using a trade name in
advertising must use its official name in loan agreements and account
statements. This requirement may further safeguard against the risk of
confusing a credit union with an associated CUSO with a similar name
because the official loan documentation would disclose which entity or
entities are involved. Each of these provisions on their own,
therefore, and when considered in concert, may work to address this
concern.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Title X, Subtitle C, Sec. 1036; Public Law 111-203 (July 21, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also noted that CUSO lending activities are currently
considered complex or high risk. The Board acknowledges that CUSO
lending activity has the potential to create material financial risk.
This is why lending CUSOs are currently subject to additional reporting
requirements in Sec. 712.3(d). As discussed above, however, the Board
does not believe this rule represents an undue safety and soundness
risk; rather, the Board believes it only represents an incremental risk
to credit unions and the NCUSIF. This relatively modest, incremental
risk is further mitigated, as discussed above, by the existing
regulatory and supervisory controls and standards in place.
Finally, one commenter recommended that loans purchased from a CUSO
be subject to the same limitations as loans purchased from other credit
unions and recommended that the NCUA have a process to ensure the
quality of CUSO loans.
The Board has considered this recommendation and declines to adopt
it. First, regarding new limitations on loans, the Board underscores
that currently, Sec. Sec. 701.22 and 701.23 of the Board's regulations
restrict loan and loan participation purchases by credit unions.
Subject to various exceptions, including those provided in the
temporary COVID rule in effect through
[[Page 59294]]
December 31, 2021,\33\ FCUs may purchase only eligible obligations of
its members for loans the FCU would itself be empowered to grant.\34\
Section 701.22, most of which applies to FISCUs as well as to FCUs,
restricts the types of loan participations that a credit union may
purchase to those the credit union is empowered to grant and also
requires the originating lender, including a CUSO, to retain at least
five percent of the outstanding balance of the loan through the life of
the loan (10 percent is required if the originating lender is an
FCU).\35\
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\33\ 85 FR 22010 (Apr. 21, 2020); 85 FR 83405 (Dec. 22, 2020).
\34\ 12 CFR 701.23(b).
\35\ 12 CFR 701.22(b)(3).
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The Board believes that these existing restrictions are sufficient
to ensure that the loans or loan interests purchased by credit unions
from CUSOs will have reasonable terms. At the same time, the Board
acknowledges that CUSOs may originate loans that parties other than
credit unions purchase. In turn, this would make the restrictions
discussed in the preceding paragraph inapplicable. This is, however,
the current situation for loans originated by CUSOs. The commenter who
recommended this new restriction did not present persuasive evidence
that this new restriction is necessary and further provided no analysis
or evidence regarding how the restrictions might hamper CUSO activities
and thus decrease the value of credit union interests in CUSOs.
Accordingly, the Board declines to adopt this recommendation.
Second, regarding the quality of loans, the Board believes that
credit unions and other parties who purchase CUSO-originated loans can
perform due diligence and ensure that loans are underwritten and
documented appropriately. Further, as part of the examination process,
NCUA examiners can continue to request documentation on credit unions'
due diligence and other policies and procedures associated with their
investment, lending, and other interaction with CUSOs. As with the
recommendation on the terms of loans, the Board finds no persuasive
evidence or analysis of the benefits and risks of such new oversight
and declines to adopt the recommendation.
Consumer Protection
Commenters who supported the rule did not extensively discuss
consumer protection issues. Several commenters stated that CUSOs would
likely only issue loans that comply with the NCUA's loan origination
rules as generally CUSO-originated loans would be sold to the parent
credit unions. Another commenter stated that the proposed rule would
expand financial inclusion due to the potential for collaboration to
develop new technologies. Finally, commenters noted that CUSOs are
subject to state lending laws and federal consumer protection laws.
In contrast, commenters who were against the proposed rule
generally expressed concerns that the proposed rule would create risk
to consumers. Several commenters expressed concerns that CUSO-
originated loans are not subject to the same restrictions as loans
originated by FCUs. For instance, the FCU Act limits interest rate,
maturity, and prepayment terms for FCU-originated loans. Commenters
were concerned that this rule change would enable an FCU to circumvent
statutory lending restrictions through a CUSO subsidiary. Commenters
were especially concerned about abuses because the proposed rule would
principally allow payday and auto lending, which may be more likely
targeted towards members in low-to-moderate-income communities and
underserved areas. Furthermore, several commenters stated that CUSOs
have been responsible for abusive lending in the past. One commenter
noted that CUSOs were marketing payday loan products to state-chartered
credit unions with triple digit interest rates in Texas until
restrictions were implemented on the state level. One noted a 2010
National Consumer Law Center report, which documented that over 40
credit unions were involved with payday lending through CUSOs. This
prompted the NCUA to issue a letter to credit unions. Another commenter
stated that the proposal will disproportionately harm communities of
color and exacerbate financial exclusion, even as the Board elsewhere
emphasizes racial equity and financial inclusion. Another commenter
stated that investing in CUSOs that violate the FCU Act usury ceiling
creates not only reputation risk, but compliance and legal risk as
loans that exceed the usury cap in the FCU Act should not be considered
part of the routine operations of credit unions.
Commenters raised several potential solutions to potential consumer
harm. One commenter stated that any expansion of CUSO lending activity
should be limited to loans FCUs are themselves empowered to make.
Another commenter recommended changes to the Payday Alternative Loans
(PALs) program if the goal is to encourage more small-dollar lending
and included ideas on how to increase credit unions' adoption of PALs.
Another commenter suggested requesting examination findings from the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has requisite authority to
examine CUSOs to determine whether consumer protection laws are being
followed.
The Board has considered the comments on this point and finds that
overall, they provide support for proceeding with adopting the
regulatory change to CUSO lending authorities as proposed.
As commenters in support of the expansion of FCU authority with
respect to loans to and investments in CUSOs engaged in all lending
activities stated, more collaboration and use of financial services
technology may positively affect financial inclusion. By authorizing
more parties to offer an array of consumer loans, the Board may
increase beneficial competition and expand consumer choice. The Board
also believes that CUSOs would likely adhere to the statutory and
regulatory restrictions on loans that FCUs are empowered to grant in
order to be able to sell these loans to FCUs (though the Board notes
that the purchasing authority provisions may vary for FISCUs because
the Board's eligible obligation purchase regulation in Sec. 701.23
applies to FCUs only) and that CUSOs may not be under the same
liquidity pressure for auto and payday loans as other types of loans
currently authorized by the CUSO rule. The Board also notes that it
recently relaxed some of these protections in light of the COVID-19
pandemic.\36\ As a whole, however, it is the Board's belief that the
current authorities governing FCU purchases of loans would likely
result in a substantial amount of CUSO loans being issued on terms
equivalent to those in the FCU Act, or what is already permitted for
FISCUs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 85 FR 83405 (Dec. 22, 2020).
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The Board is, of course, concerned about the risk of unfavorable
terms for consumers. As one commenter noted, in 2009, the NCUA Chairman
issued a letter to all FCUs on consumer lending, including consumer
protection issues.\37\ The Board has also established two payday
alternative loans (PALs) programs for FCUs to promote short-term,
small-dollar loans for FCUs and their members that can serve as an
alternative to loans with less favorable terms. The Board's concerns
are partially mitigated, however, by state usury laws and other
consumer
[[Page 59295]]
protection laws that may be enough to curtail the risk of predatory
lending by CUSOs. The Board acknowledges, however, that the majority of
states permit payday lending and therefore state laws only provide some
mitigation relating to the concern of CUSOs offering loans at excessive
interest rates.\38\ The Board plans to monitor new practices closely
and take aggressive action when it can to protect consumers from
abusive terms that are contrary to law. When the Board lacks direct
authority, it can partner with other federal agencies, such as the
CFPB, or state authorities to address any such situations. Ultimately,
the Board and other parties, in combination, have tools available to
protect consumers and curb abusive practices.
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\37\ Payday Lending, 09-FCU-05, July 2009, available at https://www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/letters-credit-unions-other-guidance/payday-lending.
\38\ See the CFPB final rule, Payday, Vehicle Title, and Certain
High-Cost Installment Loans, 85 FR 44382, 44383 (July 22, 2020).
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At the same time, the Board disagrees with commenters who believe
that the expanded FCU authority to lend to or invest in CUSOs engaged
in all lending activities would open up a new area of lending above the
FCU interest rate cap and that such activity is contrary to the FCU
Act.
First, the Board finds greater competition in the consumer loan
market from FCU-owned entities is likely to introduce better consumer
options and greater choice. If the Board decides to limit innovation
and expansion out of concern for potential consumer harm, it may
actually perpetuate a lack of consumer choice and access. Regardless of
what action the Board takes, other parties will continue to lend in the
marketplace and may lack the same grounding in the credit union mission
and industry that would tend to mitigate the risk of abusive lending
practices. Confronted with this choice, the Board's judgment is that
CUSOs will be more likely than other lenders to offer only reasonable
terms to consumers and be held accountable by the NCUA, other federal
agencies, or state authorities. Second, regarding one commenter's
opinion about the ``daily operations of credit unions'' not including
lending above the FCU interest rate ceiling, the Board finds that the
FCU Act's broad wording should not be read so narrowly. Reading this
limitation into the phrase would, if applied to other areas of CUSO
activity, such as trustee and fiduciary activity that is not generally
within the power of an FCU, limit CUSOs to only those activities that
FCUs may perform within all limitations of the FCU Act. CUSOs have long
been permitted to engage in activities that are not specifically bound
by these limitations. In particular, since originally authorizing CUSOs
to engage in limited lending activity, the Board has not imposed the
interest rate ceiling or other restrictions applicable to FCU-made
loans to CUSO-made loans. The concern, therefore, that some commenters
raise is not specific to this rulemaking and has long stood as the
agency's position on CUSO activities, including lending.
Ultimately, when faced with the choice between limiting or
proceeding with this expansion of FCU authority to lend to, or invest
in, CUSOs engaged in all lending activities, the Board finds in its
judgment that the regulatory changes carry the potential to benefit
consumers and FCUs through greater choice. At the same time, the Board
will closely monitor the expanded activity given the importance of
consumer protection.
In addition, the Board notes that amending the PALs program is
beyond the scope of the CUSO rulemaking but will take commenters' input
on that program into account in any future action on that program.
Innovation
Some of the commenters who supported the proposed rule generally
stated that CUSOs enable necessary innovation. Many commenters
discussed how CUSOs can pool resources for various projects each credit
union could not afford to embark on individually, especially smaller
credit unions. With innovation and technology continuously evolving at
a significant pace, giving FCUs the option to start or partner with a
CUSO to advance their technology capabilities would help FCUs remain
competitive as they often lack the resources to build and maintain the
technology infrastructure. Commenters stated that CUSOs are currently
helping credit unions survive in the rapidly changing financial
industry and several credit unions credited CUSOs with assisting them
in reaching members, including low-to-moderate income members. Many
commenters mentioned fintechs and that CUSOs are enabling credit unions
to compete with fintechs and large banking organizations that have the
resources to develop new technologies. Several commenters stated that
credit unions must continue to innovate, reduce costs, and generate
income, especially as traditional sources of income, like net interest
margins, are no longer sufficient.
Some of the commenters who were opposed to the proposed rule stated
that CUSOs are already able to facilitate FCUs' collective investment
in technology without having their lending powers broadened. CUSOs'
permissible activities include ``loan support services, including loan
processing, servicing, and sales,'' which means CUSOs can currently
play a support role in FCU lending according to one commenter.
When discussing current CUSO authorities to do indirect lending,
another commenter stated that small FCUs struggle to engage in indirect
lending, which requires significant investment and oversight. The
commenter further stated that managing relationships with dealers and
monitoring the quality of loans an FCU receives is paramount to the
success of an indirect lending program. As a result, the indirect
lending channel is often closed to small FCUs.
The Board has considered the wide variety of viewpoints on this
issue. As several commenters noted, broadening the permissible CUSO
lending categories may foster innovation and partnerships. Conversely,
some commenters contended that the rule change is not needed for this
purpose because credit unions already partner effectively with CUSOs to
develop technology to support FCU lending. The Board views this
difference of opinion and predictions similarly to how it views other
general predictions about the risks and benefits of the rule change.
The Board recognizes that the expanded FCU authority to lend to or
invest in CUSOs engaged in all lending activities may not result in
enhanced partnerships and cooperation with CUSOs and other credit
unions because it is not possible to predict the future of the
marketplace with certainty. Alternatively, the regulatory changes may
enhance this collaboration for some credit unions in some type of
lending but not in all.
However, the Board in its judgment also finds that expanded areas
of activity and investment would naturally tend to increase
collaboration and cooperation. Affording greater opportunities for FCUs
to lend to and invest in CUSOs engaged in a broader range of lending
may facilitate more partnerships that position FCUs better to work with
new entities and technologies in financial services. For this reason,
the Board continues to find this a good basis to proceed with the
regulatory changes.\39\
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\39\ The Board also notes that innovation and collaboration were
not the sole basis for the proposed rule. As discussed in the
preamble to the proposed rule, another basis for the rule was to
enable FCUs to better serve their members. The Board views the
various bases in the proposed rule as independently sufficient to
support the rule. 86 FR 11645, 11646 (Feb. 26, 2001).
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[[Page 59296]]
Credit Union Mission
Some of the commenters in favor of the proposed rule broadly stated
that CUSOs enable FCUs to fulfill their mission by enhancing their
ability to serve members. Several commenters stated there is no
evidence that the proposed rule would hurt the industry, members, or
the NCUSIF.
In contrast, some of the commenters opposed to the proposed rule
stated that the proposed rule undermines fundamental principles of the
FCU Act. Principally, in their view, the proposed rule would dilute the
common bond by permitting lending outside of FCUs' fields of
membership. These commenters stated that allowing FCUs to directly
profit from loans that are originated to non-members is contrary to the
intent of the FCU Act. Many commenters generally stated that the profit
FCUs would derive from non-members calls into question the rationale
for the exclusion from federal income taxation.
The Board finds that concerns about diluting the FCU common bond do
not warrant modifying or declining to adopt the proposed rule.
First, the Board does not agree with commenters who believe the FCU
Act requires consideration of this factor in evaluating proposed CUSO
activities. The FCU Act's field of membership and common bond
provisions apply to FCUs, not to CUSOs.\40\ The loan authority for
CUSOs in the FCU Act specifically defines a ``credit union
organization'' in part as an organization ``established primarily to
serve the needs of its member credit unions, and whose business relates
to the daily operations of the credit unions they serve.'' \41\ Thus,
the FCU Act does not require that CUSOs be established exclusively to
serve credit union members or credit unions. Accordingly, any objection
based on a claim that expanded FCU authority to lend to or invest in
CUSOs engaged in all lending activities violates the FCU Act is
unfounded.
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\40\ 12 U.S.C. 1759 and the NCUA's Chartering and Field of
Membership Manual, 12 CFR 701, App. B., set forth common bond
definitions and requirements for FCUs.
\41\ 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, apart from the statutory provisions, in this rulemaking the
Board has re-examined its prior policy-based concern regarding dilution
of the common bond through CUSO lending authorities. As the proposed
rule recounted, historically the Board has been hesitant in granting
CUSOs authority to make consumer loans because it may be perceived as
diluting the common bond. In a 1998 final rule in which it granted
CUSOs authority to make student loans, but not other types of consumer
loans, the Board elaborated that it limited the expansion because
Congress and the public may perceive it as a dilution of the common
bond.\42\ In the same discussion, the Board explained that it would
grant authority to CUSOs to make student loans because they required
more specialized staff and experience, whereas general consumer loans
did not.\43\
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\42\ 63 FR 10743, 10752 (Mar. 5, 1998).
\43\ Id.
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The 1998 final rule is, therefore, best read as relying on two
bases for limited expansion at that time: Perception of dilution of the
common bond and the need for credit unions to partner with CUSOs for
certain types of loans. And in that rule, the determination that one
type of new loan authority would be beneficial to credit unions
overcame the generalized concern about perceived dilution. In fact, in
the same final rule, the Board refuted in detail the contention by a
commenter that CUSOs are subject to the statutory common bond
requirement,\44\ demonstrating further that the perceived dilution
concern was not viewed as an absolute or particularly strong
counterweight to other policy rationales. That is to say, incremental
expansion of FCU authority about CUSO lending authorities based on the
Board's judgment and experience have in the past outweighed this
concern. Based on this re-examination, the Board concludes that the
concern over perceived dilution of the common bond is relatively weak
and has not historically been given great weight or decisiveness in
evaluating the reasons for and against an expansion of FCU authority
related to this activity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ Id. at 10745.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given this background and context for the perceived common bond
dilution concern, the Board finds that it does not warrant refraining
from adopting this final rule. The commenters who cited this concern
provided only generalized predictions or policy arguments that lack
specific evidence even to predict with any certainty that the
regulatory changes would appear to dilute the common bond. Other
commenters predicted that the expanded authority might instead bring
credit union membership to more people. The Board believes this result
is at least as likely as one in which the common bond is perceived by
some subjectively as being diluted. For example, non-credit union
members who are eligible for membership may decide to join a credit
union after obtaining a loan from an affiliated CUSO. And in any event,
a CUSO engaging in this type of lending would still be required to
primarily serve credit unions, its membership, or the membership of
credit unions contracting with the CUSO.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ 12 CFR 712.3(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, based on this re-examination of the perceived dilution
concern and the limited support offered by commenters opposing the rule
on this basis, the Board concludes that this concern does not weigh
against adopting the rule as proposed.
Another commenter stated that FCUs would profit from loans
exceeding usury caps in the FCU Act, and this is against the spirit of
the FCU Act.
The Board does not find this generalized concern persuasive.
Currently, CUSOs are not subject to the interest rate ceiling in the
FCU Act.\46\ This provision applies to loans made by an FCU. By
regulation, subject to some exceptions, an FCU may not buy a loan it is
not empowered to grant.\47\ However, the Board recognizes that an FCU
investing in a CUSO may receive revenue derived from loans the CUSO
makes but does not sell to an FCU. This is true under the current
regulation, but the customer base requirement discussed in the
preceding section tends to limit this effect by requiring that CUSOs
primarily serve credit unions, CUSO members, and members of credit
unions contracting with the CUSO. The same requirement will apply to
CUSOs engaged in new types of consumer loans. For this reason, the
Board finds this concern lacks sufficient support and weight to warrant
not adopting the rule as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(A)(vi).
\47\ 12 CFR 701.23(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Growth or Competition
Some of the commenters who supported the proposed rule generally
stated that the CUSOs would not compete with credit unions because
CUSOs do not have enough liquidity to originate and hold loans. These
commenters stated that CUSOs will originate loans only as a mechanism
to secure more loans for their lending partners and will then sell the
loans to credit unions. Several commenters pointed to credit union loan
growth in mortgages, student loans, credit cards, and business lending.
One credit union trade organization acknowledged credit unions and
CUSOs would likely compete for loans; however, it believed the greater
threat comes from fintech and banks.
Several commenters also stated that the proposed rule would help
FCUs
[[Page 59297]]
because it would result in increased lending opportunities. One of the
reasons for increased lending discussed was CUSOs' potential to lower
costs through economies of scale. Several commenters stated that CUSOs
enable FCUs to share costs, distribute risk, and provide scale. A few
commenters specifically stated that the proposed rule would enable
smaller FCUs to continue their lending activities but, instead of
keeping their lending operations in-house, utilize the services of a
CUSO to generate loans.
In contrast, several commenters who opposed the proposed rule
believed that CUSOs would bring unnecessary competition, particularly
for smaller credit unions. Some commenters stated that the proposed
rule could benefit certain, larger FCUs, but it could hurt other,
smaller credit unions as well-funded CUSOs could capture potentially
significant market share. One commenter noted that past NCUA Boards
have been concerned that CUSOs only benefit large credit unions and
once noted that smaller credit unions have been unable to meet minimum
eligibility requirements in order to partake of CUSO services. One
commenter noted there is no evidence FCUs need help with non-complex
consumer loans or auto loans. Other commenters stated that the proposed
rule would not result in increased lending and that CUSO-originated
loans sold to credit unions do not drive credit union loan growth.
A few other commenters believed that the rule could be anti-
competitive as it may result in additional industry consolidation
because small credit unions could lose market share.
The Board has considered the differing viewpoints on this issue and
determined that this concern does not warrant refraining from adopting
the rule as proposed. As discussed in the introduction to this
preamble, the Board has re-examined its historical stance on
competition as it relates to CUSO activity and small credit unions.
First, it is not clear that the Board should, as a matter of
principle, consider shielding credit unions from competition as an
important consideration in its rulemaking.\48\ Doing so may result in
stagnation and could produce overall negative results for the credit
union system and the NCUSIF over time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ See Fed. Comm'cns Comm'n et al. v. Prometheus Radio Project
et al., No. 19-1231 (Apr. 1, 2021), Thomas, J., concurring
(discussing whether the FCC should have considered a non-statutory
factor in its rulemaking).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the NCUA currently does and will continue to provide
significant support and flexibility to small credit unions through
various regulatory and supervisory programs. These efforts recognize
the challenges that these small credit unions face by reducing
regulatory burdens. For example, the NCUA has a small credit union
examination program that streamlines the examination process for small
FCUs with a record of solid performance.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ See, 12-FCU-03 (2012).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board believes the final rule presents an opportunity for all
credit unions to work collaboratively. It is the Board's belief that
the final rule has the potential to benefit all credit unions,
especially smaller credit unions, if they can effectively pool their
resources to form new technology. The Board also believes the final
rule would likely be a net benefit to the entire system. The Board
acknowledges there would likely be additional competition for credit
unions, particularly certain smaller credit unions, but this rule
provides additional flexibilities to permit the credit union system to
offer enhanced lending products. The Board believes that under the
final rule, credit unions will have an enhanced ability to collaborate
and create better lending products for their members.
For each of these reasons on their own, and in their totality, the
Board finds that it is prudent to proceed with this final rule despite
this objection.
Types of Loans
Some of the commenters who favor the rule encouraged the NCUA to
finalize expansive lending authorities for CUSOs as lending
opportunities are always evolving. Several commenters stated that there
are currently companies looking for FCU partners that originate solar,
renovation, boat, and airplane loans. One commenter expressed concern
that these types of loans might cause credit unions to focus on loans
for luxury items to the detriment of low- and moderate-income members.
The Board has not limited the types of loans a CUSO can originate
provided that the loans are the type of loan an FCU is able to
originate. Contrary to the concern of one commenter, the Board does not
believe that focused CUSO activity would detract from individual credit
unions' focus on providing financial services to all their members, as
required by fair lending laws.
Auto Loans and National Lending
Several commenters who support the proposed rule stated that the
proposal is necessary for FCUs to remain competitive as lending becomes
more standardized and consumers move online for more of their financial
services. Many commenters discussed a recent trend to point of sale
financing. According to these commenters, consumers are acquiring
credit at the point of sale, instead of acquiring credit through a
credit union first. Commenters were particularly concerned about this
trend for auto loans. These commenters expressed concerns that point of
sale sellers are not interested in working with credit unions. The
challenge, according to some commenters, is that a large, nationally
focused seller is unlikely to secure relationships with thousands of
individual credit unions. This presents an opportunity for CUSOs to
help the credit union industry with their collaborative business model.
Some commenters believed credit unions risk diminishing market share if
CUSOs are not permitted to contract with national lenders. One CUSO
commenter stated that CUSOs could easily use a common platform and
participate out loans to credit unions within the geographic area in
which members are located.
A few of the commenters who opposed the rule highlighted the
established relationships some credit unions have with local dealers.
These commenters were concerned that national lending CUSOs would
threaten these existing relationships.
The Board finds that the comments on this issue generally support
the regulatory changes. The Board agrees that expanding CUSO lending
authority to cover auto loans may help credit unions compete at the
point of sale. Existing data also supports the Board's belief that
small credit unions are struggling to compete in auto lending and that
the final rule may support small credit union auto lending efforts. The
largest 150 credit unions have seen significant expansion of their auto
lending market share over the prior two decades, while smaller credit
unions have lost market share almost every year.\50\ The data indicates
that smaller credit unions are becoming increasingly less competitive
in the auto lending space.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ The Board notes, however, that during this period, the
number of credit unions with less than $1 billion in assets also
decreased by over fifty percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also recognizes that, despite the stated intent of the
proposal, some credit union relationships with local dealers could be
displaced by this rule, as they equally could be by other market
forces. As discussed previously in response to concerns regarding
additional competition for some small
[[Page 59298]]
credit unions, the Board believes it would be inappropriate for the
Board to attempt to restrain competition. The Board also believes that
in the long-term, the benefits to the entire credit union system
through this enhanced authority and competition will exceed costs
associated with disruption to existing credit union-dealer
relationships. Indeed, these costs are not certain or inevitable to
occur.
Impact Analysis
Several commenters who were opposed to the proposed rule requested
that the NCUA conduct an independent economic analysis to weigh the
advantages and disadvantages of the proposal. Other commenters
recommended an impact analysis specifically to determine the impact on
small credit unions.
The Board is aware of the challenges that face small credit unions.
As discussed previously regarding growth and competition, the Board
does not believe it is prudent or necessary to adopt rules that prevent
market-based competition. In response to this specific recommendation
for an impact study, the Board also notes that the Administrative
Procedure Act does not require agencies to engage in studies before
adopting regulatory changes.\51\ The Board also believes an impact
analysis is unnecessary. The Board believes the final rule will likely
benefit credit unions. In the Board's experience, CUSOs generally
benefit credit unions through additional capital and the sale of CUSO-
originated loans to credit unions. For these reasons, the Board will
proceed with the proposed changes without delaying them further to
conduct a general impact study. As a separate reason to decline taking
this step now, the Board observes that the commenters did not provide
any specific studies of their own that would give the Board empirical
evidence to support delaying these regulatory changes now.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Fed. Comm'cns Comm'n et al. v. Prometheus Radio Project et
al., No. 19-1231 (Apr. 1, 2021), slip op. at 12 (holding that the
Administrative Procedure Act imposes no general obligation on
agencies to conduct or commission their own empirical or statistical
studies).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loan Pools, Aggregation, and Securitization
A few commenters discussed the issue of securitization and whether
the proposed rule would facilitate credit union securitizations. A few
commenters asked for the NCUA to specifically permit CUSOs to aggregate
credit union loans and issue securities on the secondary market as many
credit unions do not have the available resources and volume necessary
to originate the requisite amount of loans to securitize assets on
their own. The Board will take this comment into consideration for
future action.
Another commenter expressed concerns about CUSOs aggregating loans
for sale to credit unions. The commenter stated that CUSO-generated
loan pools may increase short-term operational efficiency; however, it
also transfers the credit risk to smaller credit unions while the
ancillary income is generated and retained by the CUSO. This commenter
stated that the low margin and credit risk would be passed to the
credit union with the higher margin income retained at the CUSO and
ultimately benefit the largest credit union equity partners of the
CUSO. This commenter added that historically, when there is market
disintermediation, risk and credit losses are passed back to the
passive participants with a disproportionate impact. The Board does not
believe it is good policymaking to restrict credit union authorities on
the potential for credit unions to enter unfavorable business deals.
The Board does not believe that a few examples of unfavorable contracts
with CUSOs sufficiently justify reducing the flexibilities afforded to
the credit union system as a whole. Each credit union is responsible
for its own due diligence prior to purchasing assets and entering into
a contractual arrangement. Credit unions should exercise business
judgment before making purchases and entering any contractual
arrangement, even for counterparties that are part of the credit union
industry. As part of good governance, credit unions with ownership in a
CUSO are encouraged to monitor the length of time all loans remain on
the books of the CUSO.
Accordingly, for the reasons discussed in the proposed rule and
this final rule, the final rule is adopting the proposed rule without
substantive change. Under the final rule, CUSOs are permitted to
originate, purchase, sell, and hold any type of loan permissible for
FCUs to originate, purchase, sell, and hold. CUSOs, therefore, could
originate types of loans previously prohibited by the CUSO rule,
including general consumer loans, direct auto loans, and unsecured
loans and lines of credit. CUSOs could also purchase vehicle-secured
retail installment sales contracts (RICs) from vehicle dealers.
Under the final rule, CUSO originated loans are not subject to the
same restrictions as loans originated by FCUs. For example, part 701 of
the NCUA's regulations imposes conditions on FCU lending relating to
loan terms such as interest rate, maturity, and prepayment.\52\ These
restrictions would not apply to CUSO-originated loans because CUSOs,
even wholly owned CUSOs, are separate entities from FCUs and are not
subject to direct NCUA supervision. However, an FCU may not purchase a
loan from a CUSO unless the loan meets the requirements of the NCUA's
eligible obligations rule.\53\ Similarly, an FCU may not purchase a
loan participation from a CUSO unless it complies with the NCUA's loan
participations rule.\54\
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\52\ 12 CFR part 701.
\53\ See, 12 CFR 701.23(b).
\54\ 12 CFR 701.22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loan Participations
Besides specifically permitting CUSOs to engage in consumer
mortgage, business, and student loan origination, the current CUSO rule
also permits CUSOs to buy and sell participation interests in such
loans. The inclusion of this authority to buy and sell participation
interests in such loans stems from the FCU Act and the NCUA's loan
participation rule, which classifies a CUSO as a ``credit union
organization'' authorized to engage in the purchase and sale of loan
participations.\55\ The NCUA's loan participation rule, however, does
not permit the sale to FCUs of participation interests in open-end,
revolving credit.\56\ Therefore, the current CUSO rule only permits
CUSOs to originate credit card loans, but not the authority to buy and
sell participation interests in credit card loans. To remain consistent
with the NCUA's loan participation rule, this final rule grants CUSOs
the authority to only purchase and sell participation interests that
are permissible for FCUs to purchase and sell. There were no comments
specifically objecting to this provision, and the Board adopts it
without change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(E); 12 CFR 701.22(a).
\56\ 73 FR 79307 (Dec. 29, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CUSO Registry
Under the current CUSO rule, a FICU must obtain a written agreement
from a CUSO the FCU loans to or invests in that the CUSO will annually
submit to the NCUA a report containing basic registration information
for inclusion in the NCUA's CUSO registry (CUSO Registry).\57\ CUSOs
that are engaged in complex or high-risk activities have additional
obligations with respect to the CUSO Registry.\58\ Under the current
[[Page 59299]]
CUSO rule, complex or high-risk activities are defined to include
credit and lending, including business loan origination, consumer
mortgage loan origination, loan support services, student loan
origination, and credit card loan origination.\59\ For consistency, the
final rule removes the specific subcategories of lending and instead
refers to all loan originations as complex or high risk. Lending
activities are considered complex or high risk because they can present
a high degree of operational or financial risk.\60\ Specifically, FICUs
making loans to and investments in CUSOs engaged in credit and lending
activities may be exposed to significant levels of credit, strategic,
and reputation risks.\61\
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\57\ 12 CFR 712.3(d).
\58\ Id. Complex or high-risk CUSOs must agree to include in
their report: (1) A list of services provided to certain credit
unions, and (2) the investment amount, loan amount, or level of
activity of certain credit unions. Complex or high-risk CUSOs must
also agree to provide the CUSO's most recent year-end audited
financial statements to the NCUA. CUSOs engaged in credit and
lending services are also required to report the total dollar amount
of loans outstanding, the total number of loans outstanding, the
total dollar amount of loans granted year-to-date, and the total
number of loans granted year-to-date.
\59\ 12 CFR 712.3(d)(5)(i).
\60\ 78 FR 72537 (Dec. 3, 2013).
\61\ Id.
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Commenters also noted that the CUSO Registry requires all CUSOs to
provide data to the NCUA. Several commenters stated that the current
reporting requirements are sufficient and the NCUA should not expand
reporting requirements, as proposed. The Board is not expanding what
must be reported by CUSOs engaging in complex or high-risk activities,
but as proposed is incorporating all types of lending in the definition
of complex or high-risk activities.
An association of state credit union supervisors expressed concern
that state CUSOs with authority to engage in all forms of lending would
be required to report additional information under the proposed rule.
The organization requested that the NCUA consult with state regulators.
The Board notes that when it adopted this provision in 2013, it broadly
described credit and lending activities as complex or high-risk and
applied this requirement to FICUs.\62\ Further, some FISCU-owned CUSOs
are reporting the number and dollar amount of their lending activities,
even if those lending activities are not explicitly listed in Sec.
712.3(d). The Board, therefore, does not believe the effect of this
rule on CUSOs in which only FISCUs have an ownership interest
represents a policy change from that final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ 78 FR 72537, 72542 (Dec. 3, 2013).
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Expansion of Permissible CUSO Activities to Other Activities as
Approved by the Board in Writing
Currently, the list of permissible CUSO activities in Sec. 712.5
includes many of the core services and activities associated with the
daily and routine operations of credit unions. The list, however, does
not provide the Board flexibility to consider additional activities and
services without engaging in notice and comment rulemaking. In
contrast, part 704 permits corporate CUSOs to engage in any category of
activity as approved in writing by the NCUA and published on the NCUA's
website.\63\ Amending part 712 to be similar to part 704 has the
potential to reduce regulatory burden by allowing the rule to expand as
technology shapes the routine and daily operations of credit unions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ 12 CFR 704.11(d)(3)(ii). Approved activities are listed on
the NCUA's website at: https://www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/corporate-credit-unions/corporate-cuso-activities/approved-corporate-cuso-activities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters supported the proposed change to permit the NCUA
to approve of new activities outside of notice-and-comment rulemaking.
Commenters mentioned the current authority in part 704 for corporate
CUSOs. Other commenters generally stated that the proposed process
would be more efficient and that the advantages outweigh the public
input received through notice-and-comment rulemaking. One commenter
stated that the change would allow the Board to be more responsive to
shifting market dynamics. Another commenter encouraged the NCUA to
periodically review the list for updates and to post any additional
activities on its website. A few commenters noted that a technical
change is necessary in the regulatory text.
A few commenters who opposed the proposed rule generally discussed
that enabling the Board to approve new activities without notice-and-
comment rulemaking would eliminate regulatory transparency and
opportunity for the public to review and comment on newly proposed CUSO
activities. One banking trade organization stated that the authority to
approve rules without notice and comment is exacerbated by requiring
formal rulemaking to revoke or reform the approved activity, but not
adding the same activity. The commenter stated that this policy places
a regulatory obstacle to address potentially unsafe and unsound
activities, or activities that may be harming consumers, members, and
underserved areas and low-to-moderate income communities. One credit
union trade organization that supported the rule overall nonetheless
encouraged the NCUA to do notice-and-comment rulemaking to add approved
activities and suggested limiting the comment period to thirty days as
a balance between speed and transparency. Another consumer stated that
emerging technologies often pose risks to members and other consumers
that should be evaluated through the public notice and comment process.
The Board has considered the comments on this issue and is
finalizing the changes to the approval process as proposed. As
commenters supporting the change observed, a streamlined process may
help CUSOs keep pace with innovation. The Board has considered the
opposing comments and notes that its intent is to use this authority
only for approving activities that are related to the existing
authorities in Sec. 712.5. If the Board believes a new authority is
sufficiently novel, and that notice and comment is advisable or
required under the Administrative Procedures Act, then the Board would
use notice and comment rulemaking.
The Board also believes it is reasonable to add new approved
activities without issuing the matters for public comment but to
solicit public comment before removing activities. The Board has had
this process in place in part 704 for corporate credit unions since
2011 without any indication that the process is unworkable or leads to
inadequately considered policy choices. Using notice-and-comment
procedures when removing an approved activity is sound policy to ensure
that the Board considers parties' serious reliance interests when
changing a policy.\64\ While the removal of any given approved activity
may not rise to the level requiring an in-depth analysis of reliance
interests before removing it, the general policy of following this
process will help the Board ensure it conducts this analysis in
appropriate cases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See Dep't of Homeland Sec. v. Regents of the Univ. of
Calif. et al., 591 U.S. __ (2020), slip. op. at 23 (holding that,
when an agency changes course, it must recognize that longstanding
policies may have engendered serious reliance interests that must be
taken into account).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, the Board has considered, but disagrees with, the
suggestion to use a 30-day comment period when adding new activities as
a blanket policy. While a 30-day comment period would naturally tend to
lead to a prompter conclusion than a 60-day comment period, it would
still generally result in several months or more from the time the
activity is proposed until it is
[[Page 59300]]
approved by the Board when taking into account the need to review and
respond to public comments and prepare a final Board action in
response. The Board, therefore, finds this suggestion would not
implement the proposal as it was intended. Regarding the commenter's
transparency concern, the Board notes that it would have discretion to
take action to add activities in a public forum, such as open Board
meetings, or alternatively, undertake notice-and-comment proceedings if
it deems them appropriate or desirable under the circumstances of any
particular request to approve a new activity.
Accordingly, under the final rule, the list of permissible
activities in Sec. 712.5 includes a catchall category for other
activities as approved in writing by the NCUA and published on the
NCUA's website. The final rule also provides that once the NCUA has
approved an activity and published that activity on its website, the
NCUA would not remove that particular activity from the approved list,
or make substantial changes to the content or description of that
approved activity, except through formal rulemaking procedures.
IV. Investment Authority
An FCU's authority to lend to and invest in a credit union
organization is provided for in two separate provisions of the FCU Act.
The NCUA has historically interpreted the lending and investment
authority under the FCU Act as referring to the same types of
organizations.\65\ The Board solicited comment about adopting separate
definitions for the types of organizations that an FCU may invest in or
lend to, which potentially would expand the types of organizations
eligible for FCU investment. Several commenters supported the Board's
decision to reconsider its longstanding interpretation of FCU
investment and lending authority. Commenters in support of the
reinterpretation generally discussed the benefit of broadly permitting
FCUs to invest in financial technology companies. Several commenters
stated that FCUs can get left out of the development of new financial
technology because of the requirement to primarily serve members. Some
commenters stated that additional investment authority would ensure the
industry has better leverage, control, and influence in the development
of new technologies. Three commenters provided sample safety and
soundness conditions that could be applied to these lending
authorities.
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\65\ 12 U.S.C. 1757(5)(D).
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One commenter recommended that certain de minimis investments be
exempt from CUSO requirements. This commenter recommended that the NCUA
permit FCUs to make a 25 percent investment in CUSOs of FISCUs without
those CUSOs being subject to part 712. Currently, the preapproved
activities and most other requirements of part 712 do not apply to
CUSOs with only FISCU investment. Accordingly, if the only credit
unions that have an ownership in a CUSO are state-chartered, then the
CUSO may be able to engage in activities beyond those that are
preapproved in Sec. 712.5. Thus, any investment in, or loan to, a CUSO
(which Sec. 712.1 generally describes as ownership interests) from an
FCU subjects the CUSO to all of part 712's requirements. The
commenter's suggestion is that some amount of such investment should be
allowed without invoking those requirements. The Board appreciates this
recommendation and will take it into consideration when evaluating
future action on the investment issue. The Board observes, however,
that any future expansion of FCU investment authority would need to be
in organizations providing services associated with the routine
operations of credit unions, which could vary from some types of
entities in which state-chartered credit unions may invest.
Another commenter recommended that the proposed interpretation be
adopted and extended to corporate credit unions.
In contrast, one banking trade organization stated that expanding
FCU investment authority in CUSOs would be outside the routine
operations of credit unions, which are statutorily confined to serving
their fields of membership. The commenter stated that the NCUA's
position would exceed the agency's legal authority under the FCU Act.
The Board will consider these comments in determining whether to
propose any change to its existing interpretation and regulatory
definition of a CUSO. The Board notes, however, that it does not find
persuasive the contention that the possible reinterpretation is
inconsistent with the FCU Act. As set forth in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the investment provision of the FCU Act contains
distinct wording from the loan provision. The preamble discussion in
the proposed rule discussed the statutory wording and possible
interpretation in careful detail. The Board, therefore, declines to
withdraw this portion of the proposed rule, as recommended by the
commenter, and will consider this issue for potential future action.
V. Other Comments
The Board also received other comments outside the scope of the
proposed rule, which are discussed briefly in this section.
One commenter recommended that where a CUSO is making a loan that
involves tax credits the CUSO should be permitted to acquire and
syndicate the tax credits, whether among taxable (non-credit union)
members of the CUSO and/or third-party investors. The Board will
consider this issue for potential future action for CUSO investment
authorities but notes that these authorities have historically been
narrow.\66\ The NCUA has, however, previously found a CUSO's proposed
acquisition and sale of tax credits in connection with approved lending
activity to be permissible.\67\
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\66\ See 12 CFR 712.5(r), 712.6.
\67\ OGC Op. Ltr. 03-0647, FCU and CUSO Participation in New
Markets Tax Credit Program (July 2003), available at https://www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/legal-opinions/2003/federal-credit-union-and-credit-union-service-organization-participation-newmarkets-tax-credits.
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One commenter asked that CUSOs be permitted to engage in both debt
and equity aspects of financing sale-leaseback transactions for credit
unions, whether those credit unions are members of the CUSO or not. The
Board will consider this request in connection with future action on
CUSO authorities.
One commenter suggested the NCUA offer periodic dialogue sessions
akin to those recently launched by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, and recommended a CUSO compliance guide. The Board will
consider these suggestions as part of its ongoing supervisory program.
VI. Regulatory Procedures
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires that, in
connection with a final rulemaking, an agency prepare and make
available for public comment a final regulatory flexibility analysis
that describes the impact of a rule on small entities (defined for
purposes of the RFA to include credit unions with assets less than $100
million).\68\ A regulatory flexibility analysis is not required,
however, if the agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
and publishes its certification and a short, explanatory statement in
the Federal Register together with the rule.
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\68\ See 80 FR 57512 (Sept. 24, 2015).
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[[Page 59301]]
This rule does not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. The rule imposes no requirement
or costs on small entities and only expands the list of permissible
activities for CUSOs. The rule expands the list of activities that are
considered complex or high risk for purposes of the CUSO Registry,
however, the Board does not expect the additional reporting
requirements to entail substantial regulatory burden. Accordingly, the
NCUA certifies that the final rule does not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small FICUs.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
requires that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approve all
collections of information by a Federal agency from the public before
they can be implemented. Respondents are not required to respond to any
collection of information unless it displays a current, valid OMB
control number.
Consistent with the PRA, the information collection requirements
included in this final rule has been submitted to OMB for approval
under control number 3133-0149.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 encourages independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on state and local interests. Per
fundamental federalism principles, the NCUA, an independent regulatory
agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5), voluntarily complies with the
principles of the Executive order. This rulemaking will not have a
substantial direct effect on the states, on the connection between the
National Government and the states, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government. The NCUA has
determined that this rule does not constitute a policy that has
federalism implications for purposes of the Executive order.
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
The NCUA has determined that this rule will not affect family well-
being within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999, Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998).\69\
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\69\ Public Law 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681 (1998).
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Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA) generally provides for congressional review of agency
rules.\70\ A reporting requirement is triggered in instances where the
NCUA issues a final rule as defined in the Administrative Procedure
Act.\71\ An agency rule, besides being subject to congressional
oversight, may also be subject to a delayed effective date if the rule
is a ``major rule.'' The NCUA does not believe this rule is a ``major
rule'' within the meaning of the relevant sections of SBREFA. As
required by SBREFA, the NCUA will submit this final rule to OMB for it
to determine if the final rule is a ``major rule'' for purposes of
SBREFA. The NCUA also will file appropriate reports with Congress and
the Government Accountability Office so this rule may be reviewed.
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\70\ 5 U.S.C. 551.
\71\ Id.
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List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 712
Administrative practices and procedure, Credit, Credit unions,
Insurance, Investments, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
By the National Credit Union Administration Board on October 21,
2021.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
part 712 as follows:
PART 712--CREDIT UNION SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS (CUSOs)
0
1. Amend the authority for part 712 by revising the citation to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1756, 1757(5)(D) and (7)(I), 1766, 1782,
1784, 1785, 1786, and 1789(a)(11).
0
2. Amend Sec. 712.3 by revising paragraphs (d)(5)(i), (d)(5)(ii)
introductory text, and (d)(5)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 712.3 What are the characteristics of and what requirements
apply to CUSOs?
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(5) * * *
(i) Credit and lending:
(A) Loan support services, including servicing; and
(B) Loan origination, including originating, purchasing, selling,
and holding any loan as described in Sec. 712.5(q).
(ii) Information technology:
* * * * *
(iii) Custody, safekeeping, and investment management services for
credit unions.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 712.5 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (a) introductory text;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(4), add a semicolon at the end of the paragraph;
0
c. Revise paragraph (b) introductory text;
0
d. In paragraph (b)(11), remove the period and add a semicolon in its
place;
0
e. Remove paragraphs (c), (d), (n), and (s);
0
f. Redesignate paragraphs (e) through (t) as paragraphs (c) through
(p);
0
g. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (c) introductory text, (d)
introductory text, (e) introductory text, (f) introductory text, (g)
introductory text, and (h) introductory text;
0
h. In newly redesignated paragraph (h)(3), remove the word ``and'';
0
i. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (i) introductory text, (j),
(k), (l), and (m) introductory text;
0
j. In newly redesignated paragraph (m)(3), remove the period and add a
semicolon in its place;
0
k. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (n);
0
l. In newly redesignated paragraph (o), remove ``CUSO investments in
non-CUSO service providers:'' and remove the last period and add a
semicolon in its place;
0
m. In newly redesignated paragraph (p), remove the period and add a
semicolon in its place; and
0
n. Add new paragraphs (q) and (r).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 712.5 What activities and services are preapproved for CUSOs?
* * * * *
(a) Checking and currency services:
* * * * *
(b) Clerical, professional and management services:
* * * * *
(c) Electronic transaction services:
* * * * *
(d) Financial counseling services:
* * * * *
(e) Fixed asset services:
* * * * *
(f) Insurance brokerage or agency:
* * * * *
(g) Leasing:
* * * * *
(h) Loan support services:
* * * * *
(i) Record retention, security and disaster recovery services:
* * * * *
(j) Securities brokerage services;
[[Page 59302]]
(k) Shared credit union branch (service center) operations;
(l) Travel agency services;
(m) Trust and trust-related services:
* * * * *
(n) Real estate brokerage services;
* * * * *
(q) Loan origination, including originating, purchasing, selling,
and holding any type of loan permissible for Federal credit unions to
originate, purchase, sell, and hold, including the authority to
purchase and sell participation interests that are permissible for
Federal credit unions to purchase and sell; and
(r) Other categories of activities as approved in writing by the
NCUA and published on the NCUA's website. Once the NCUA has approved an
activity and published that activity on its website, the NCUA will not
remove that particular activity from the approved list or make
substantial changes to the content or description of that approved
activity, except through formal rulemaking procedures.
[FR Doc. 2021-23322 Filed 10-26-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7535-01-P