[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 29 (Tuesday, February 12, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 8009-8018]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-2558]
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Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 12, 2008 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 8009]]
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 204 and 209
[Regulations D and I; Docket No. R-1307]
Reserve Requirements of Depository Institutions; Issue and
Cancellation of Federal Reserve Bank Capital Stock
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking; request for public comment.
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SUMMARY: The Board is publishing for comment proposed amendments to
Regulation D (Reserve Requirements of Depository Institutions) and
Regulation I (Issue and Cancellation of Federal Reserve Bank Capital
Stock). Of these, only two are intended to represent substantive
changes from existing law, while the remaining amendments are intended
principally as clarifications. The first of the proposed substantive
amendments would amend Regulation D to implement Section 603 of the
Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 by authorizing member
banks of the Federal Reserve System to enter into pass-through
arrangements. Previously, member banks were statutorily prohibited from
passing required reserve balances through a correspondent institution.
The second of the proposed substantive amendments would eliminate the
provision in the ``savings deposit'' definition of Regulation D
limiting certain kinds of transfers from savings deposits to not more
than three per month. As a result, all kinds of transfers and
withdrawals from a savings deposit that must be limited in number per
month would be subject to the same numeric limitation of not more than
six per month. The remaining proposed amendments, intended as
clarifications, would reorganize the provisions relating to deposit
reporting and the calculation and maintenance of required reserves,
clarify the definitions of ``time deposit'' and ``vault cash,'' and
make other minor editorial changes.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 28, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. R-1307, by
any of the following methods:
Agency Web Site: http://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: [email protected]. Include the
docket number in the subject line of the message.
FAX: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will
not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public
comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP-500
of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Heatherun Sophia Allison, Senior
Counsel (202/452-3565), or Kara Handzlik, Attorney (202/452-3852),
Legal Division, Seth Carpenter, Assistant Director and Section Chief
(202/452-2385), or Margaret Gillis DeBoer, Financial Analyst (202/452-
3139), Division of Monetary Affairs; for users of Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf (TDD) only, contact (202/263-4869); Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Statutory Background
Section 19 of the Federal Reserve Act (the ``Act'') imposes reserve
requirements for monetary policy purposes only on certain types of
deposits and other liabilities of depository institutions. Section 19
also authorizes the Board to define by regulation the terms used in the
section. Currently, reserve requirement ratios for ``transaction
accounts'' (accounts used to make payments to third parties, such as
checking accounts) are graduated between three and ten percent. Reserve
requirement ratios for ``nonpersonal time deposits'' and ``Eurocurrency
liabilities'' are currently zero percent. Although Section 19 expressly
defines accounts with certain transfer characteristics as ``transaction
accounts,'' Section 19 also authorizes the Board ``to determine, by
regulation or order, that an account or deposit is a transaction
account if such account or deposit may be used to provide funds
directly or indirectly for the purpose of making payments or transfers
to third persons or others.'' \1\ The provisions of Section 19 are
implemented by the Board's Regulation D.
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\1\ Section 19(b)(1)(F) of the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C.
461(b)(1)(F).
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Section 11(a)(2) of the Act authorizes the Board to require any
depository institution ``to make, at such intervals as the Board may
prescribe, such reports of its liabilities and assets as the Board may
determine to be necessary or desirable to enable the Board to discharge
its responsibility to monitor and control monetary and credit
aggregates.'' \2\ These provisions are specifically implemented in the
computation and maintenance provisions of Regulation D (12 CFR 204.3).
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\2\ 12 U.S.C. 248(a).
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II. Pass-Through Accounts
Section 19(c)(1) of the Act provides that depository institutions
shall maintain required reserves in the form of a balance maintained
for such purposes by a depository institution in an account at a
Federal Reserve Bank or in the form of vault cash. Prior to 2006,
Section 19(c)(1)(B) of the Act provided that non-member banks could
maintain required reserves in an account at a depository institution
that itself maintained required reserve balances at a Federal Reserve
Bank, known as a ``pass-through account.'' The Financial Services
Regulatory Relief Act of 2006, Public Law 109-351 (Oct. 13, 2006),
amended Section 19(c)(1)(B) of the Act to remove the language
restricting pass-through arrangements to non-member banks. Accordingly,
all depository institutions may if they choose maintain required
reserves in a pass-through
[[Page 8010]]
account with a correspondent depository institution.
To implement the pass-through provisions of the Financial Services
Regulatory Relief Act of 2006, the Board proposes to amend the
definition of ``pass-through account'' in Sec. 204.2(l ) and the rules
for pass-through arrangements in Sec. 204.3(i) to remove references
limiting such arrangements to non-member banks.
III. Transfers From Savings Deposits
A. Six-Three Distinction
The Board has established the criteria for distinguishing between
``transaction accounts'' and ``savings deposits'' \3\ in Regulation D
based on the ease with which the depositor may make transfers (payments
to third parties) or withdrawals (payments directly to the depositor)
from the account. Generally speaking, the more convenient it is to make
withdrawals or transfers from an account, the more likely it is that
the account will be used for making payments or transfers to third
parties as opposed to holding savings. Accordingly, Regulation D limits
the number of certain convenient kinds of transfers or withdrawals that
may be made in a single month from an account if that account is to be
classified as a ``savings deposit.'' \4\ ``Convenient'' transfers or
withdrawals for this purpose include preauthorized or automatic
transfers (such as overdraft protection transfers or arranging to have
bill payments deducted directly from the depositor's savings account),
telephonic transfers (made by the depositor telephoning or sending a
fax or online instruction to the bank and instructing the transfer to
be made), and transfers by check, debit card, or similar order payable
to third parties.
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\3\ The Board has by regulation included ``savings deposits''
held by nonnatural persons (i.e., anyone other than individuals) in
the Regulation D definition of ``nonpersonal time deposits.''
Accordingly, such deposits are subject to a zero percent reserve
requirement. Savings deposits held by natural persons (individuals),
on the other hand, are not subject to reserve requirements at all.
As a practical matter, therefore, ``savings deposits'' of all kinds
are not reservable; the distinction between personal and nonpersonal
savings deposits is significant for deposit reporting purposes only.
\4\ 12 CFR 204.2(d)(2) (definition of ``savings deposit'').
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Regulation D currently limits the number of ``convenient''
transfers and withdrawals from savings deposits (i.e., preauthorized,
automatic, or telephonic transfers or withdrawals) to not more than six
per month. Within this overall limit of six, not more than three
transfers or withdrawals may be made by check, debit card, or similar
order made by the depositor and payable to third parties. Transfers and
withdrawals from savings deposits that are less convenient are not
limited in number by the ``savings deposit'' definition in Regulation
D. For example, transfers or withdrawals made ``by mail, messenger,
automated teller machine, or in person or * * * made by telephone (via
check mailed to the depositor)'' may be made from savings deposits
without numerical limit.
The distinction between different types of limited transfers or
withdrawals from savings deposits may be referred to as the ``six-three
distinction'' (i.e., six convenient transfers or withdrawals, of which
up to three may be by check, debit card, or similar order). The six-
three distinction in the Regulation D definition of ``savings deposit''
is derived from the ``money market deposit account'' or ``MMDA''
created by the Garn-St.Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 (the
``1982 Act''). In the 1982 Act, Congress sought to create an account to
meet the perceived market need for an interest-bearing deposit account
that was both directly competitive with money market mutual funds and
not the functional equivalent of a reservable transaction account. The
definition of ``transaction account'' in Regulation D at that time
included any account from which more than three preauthorized,
automatic or telephonic transfers or withdrawals per month were
permitted. Congress therefore specified in the 1982 Act that the MMDA
was not to be considered a ``transaction account'' (and, therefore, not
subject to reserve requirements) even though it permitted ``three
preauthorized or automatic transfers and three third-party transfers''
per month.
The legislative history of the 1982 Act did not clarify whether
this authorization was intended to allow ``three preauthorized or
automatic transfers'' and a separate set of ``three third-party
transfers.'' It simply noted that ``third-party transfers'' were
intended to include checks. The existing provisions of Regulation D,
however, considered ``preauthorized or automatic'' transfers to include
transfers to third parties as well. To harmonize the legislative
history of the 1982 Act with the existing provisions of Regulation D,
the MMDA was regulatorily defined to permit a depositor who did not
write any checks in a particular month to make up to six preauthorized
or automatic transfers per month. In no event, however, would more than
three checks per month be permitted.
In 1986, the statutory provisions that authorized the MMDA and that
exempted the MMDA from the ``transaction account'' definition expired.
In subsequent rulemakings, however, the Board preserved the transfer
and withdrawal characteristics of the MMDA in Regulation D by merging
the definition of ``MMDA'' into the definition of ``savings deposit.''
Thus, any deposit that permitted up to six preauthorized, automatic, or
telephonic transfers or withdrawals, including not more than three
transfers made by check, debit card, or similar third-party order, was
classified under Regulation D as a ``savings deposit.''
B. Proposed Amendment Eliminating ``Three'' Limit
Depository institutions have identified the six-three distinction
in Regulation D as a regulatory burden in various contexts, as
distinctions that have historically been drawn between ``six'' or
``three'' transfers or withdrawals are overtaken by developments in
payments technology. In light of the foregoing, the Board believes it
would now be appropriate to amend Regulation D to do away with the
sublimit of three that applies to checks and drafts and simply limit
all ``convenient'' transfers to not more than six per month.\5\
Eliminating the ``six-three distinction'' and replacing it with a
simpler ``six-per-month'' rule for all types of ``convenient''
transfers or withdrawals from savings deposits would reduce some
aspects of the current limitations that are burdensome to the private
sector and that may interfere with the broader use and acceptance of
developing electronic payments technologies.
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\5\ 12 CFR 204.2(d)(2) (definition of ``savings deposit'').
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A ``six-per-month'' rule could result in a slight decrease in
aggregate transaction account balances, as those accounts that permit
more than three but less than six transfers by check or debit card per
month would shift from their current classification as ``transaction
accounts'' to ``savings deposits.'' The extent of such a decrease, if
any, is difficult to predict given the lack of data on the distribution
of frequency of withdrawals and transfers from various accounts. The
net effects, however, seem unlikely to be large.
IV. Other Proposed Amendments
A. Harmonization With Existing Usage or Staff Guidance
Certain proposed amendments would amend definitions of existing
terms to harmonize them with existing usage, practice, or staff
guidance. For example,
[[Page 8011]]
the proposed amendments would add new provisions to the definition of
``vault cash'' in Sec. 204.2(k) in order to incorporate the substance
of numerous staff opinions that explain the circumstances under which
vault cash held at ATMs and in other arrangements can qualify as
``vault cash'' for purposes of meeting reserve requirements. Also, the
proposed amendments would also clarify the definition of ``time
deposit'' in Sec. 204.2(c) to incorporate staff guidance that has been
issued over the years in response to numerous inquiries about the
meaning of ``additional'' early withdrawal penalties and when such
penalties must be imposed.
B. Reorganization of Reporting, Computation, and Maintenance Provisions
The remaining proposed amendments would reorganize the existing
provisions of Regulation D relating to deposit reporting and to the
computation and maintenance of required reserves. These proposed
amendments would split the existing provisions on these subjects in
current Sec. 204.3 into three separate sections. First, the provisions
related to submitting reports of deposits would be set forth in
proposed Sec. 204.3. Second, the provisions relating to computation of
required reserves would be set forth in proposed Sec. 204.4. Third,
the provisions relating to maintenance of required reserves would be
set forth in proposed Sec. 204.5. In addition, the proposed amendments
would move the reserve requirement ratio provisions of current Sec.
204.9 into the proposed separate section relating to computation of
required reserves (proposed Sec. 204.4). Finally, the proposed
amendments re-number the provisions of the regulation relating to
transitional adjustments, emergency reserves, and supplemental reserves
in order to reflect the creation of three separate sections out of
current Sec. 204.3.
V. Section-By-Section Analysis
Section 204.2(c)(1) Definition of ``Time Deposit''
The Board proposes to amend the definition of ``time deposit'' to
clarify the application of early withdrawal penalties when there has
been more than one partial early withdrawal from a time deposit.
Current Sec. 204.2(c)(1) provides that an early withdrawal penalty
must be charged on any amount withdrawn from a time deposit ``from
within six days after the date of deposit.'' The definition
contemplates that an early withdrawal might be an early withdrawal of
the entire deposit amount or of a partial withdrawal, that is, a
withdrawal of some amount that is not the entire deposit amount. In
either case, if part or all of the time deposit is withdrawn within six
days after the date of the initial deposit, the specified early
withdrawal penalty must be imposed on the amount so withdrawn.
The current definition further states that ``[a] time deposit from
which partial early withdrawals are permitted must impose additional
early withdrawal penalties of at least seven days' simple interest on
amounts withdrawn within six days after each partial withdrawal.'' This
provision has led to numerous inquiries about the meaning of the terms
``additional'' and ``early'' in this provision.\6\ The Board intends to
clarify that withdrawals cannot be made more frequently than every
seven days from a deposit that is classified as a ``time deposit''
unless a penalty of at least seven days'' simple interest is charged on
amounts so withdrawn. Accordingly, the Board proposes to amend the
definition to remove the references to ``early'' and ``additional'' in
the second sentence of the definition and to clarify that ``early''
withdrawals, when made other than in the first six days, are
withdrawals that are within six days of the last withdrawal.
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\6\ E.g., whether two penalties (an ``early withdrawal penalty''
and an ``additional early withdrawal penalty'') must be charged on
any partial early withdrawal; whether one penalty must be charged on
a partial early withdrawal within the first six days of the deposit
but two must be charged on subsequent partial early withdrawals; the
meaning of ``early withdrawal'' as applied to a partial withdrawal
made some time other than within the first six days, etc.
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Section 204.2(d)(2) Definition of ``Savings Deposit''
As explained in III.A.-III.B., supra, The Board proposes to amend
the definition of ``savings deposit'' to eliminate the provision
limiting certain kinds of transfers from savings deposits to not more
than three per month. As a result, all kinds of transfers and
withdrawals from a savings deposit that must be limited in number per
month would be subject to the same numeric limitation of nor more than
six per month.
Section 204.2(k) Definition of ``Vault Cash''
The Board proposes to amend the definition of ``vault cash'' to
incorporate the substance of prior written staff guidance on when
currency and coin that is not held at a physical location of the
depository institution \7\ may count as ``vault cash.'' The proposed
amendments divide the definition of ``vault cash'' into two
subsections: one dealing with vault cash ``held at a physical location
of the depository institution * * * from which the institution's
depositors may make cash withdrawals;'' and the other dealing with
vault cash ``held at an alternate physical location.'' The proposed
amendments expand primarily the second proposed subsection to
incorporate prior guidance.
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\7\ See, e.g., See FRRS ] 2-307.2 (rented vault); Staff Opinion
of Aug. 9, 1982 (ATMs).
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From 1917 to 1959, the Act permitted member banks to satisfy
reserve requirements exclusively with balances in their accounts at
Federal Reserve Banks. In 1959, Congress amended Section 19 of the Act
to provide that the Board, ``under such regulations as it may
prescribe, may permit member banks to count all or part of their
currency and coin as reserves required under this section.'' \8\ The
1959 legislation was intended ``to remove some generally recognized
inequities that now exist in the structure of reserve requirements
applicable to member banks * * *.'' \9\ Specifically, the legislative
history recognized that currency and coin in a member bank's vault and
a balance in a member bank's account at a Federal Reserve Bank were
``interchangeable'' as liabilities of the Reserve Banks.\10\ For
operational reasons, however, ``country banks'' generally found it
necessary to hold more currency and coin in their vaults than did
``reserve city banks'' or ``central reserve city banks.'' \11\ Between
1959 and 1960, the Board promulgated a series of amendments to
Regulation D that phased in the ability of member banks to count all of
their currency and coin in satisfying reserve requirements.
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\8\ Act of July 28, 1959 (73 Stat. 263).
\9\ S. Rep. No. 86-195, at 1 (1959); H. Rep. No. 86-403, at 3
(1959).
\10\ S. Rep. No. 86-195, at 3 (1959); H. Rep. No. 86-403, at 3
(1959).
\11\ S. Rep. No. 86-195, at 3 (1959); H. Rep. No. 86-403, at 3
(1959).
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In 1970, the Board issued an interpretation of Regulation D
relating to the eligibility of currency or coin held principally for
numismatic value to satisfy member bank reserve requirements.\12\ The
Board was concerned that permitting silver coin to count towards
reserve requirements could encourage speculation in silver;
specifically, that the banks were holding either for their own accounts
with the expectation of earning a premium over face value, or were
holding under written or oral agreements with specific customers
whereby the customers retained the right to or an option on
[[Page 8012]]
those coins.\13\ Accordingly, the Board specified in the 1970
interpretation that in order for a member bank to count currency or
coin towards reserve requirements, the member bank must have ``the full
and unrestricted right to use [such currency or coin] at any time to
meet depositors' claims * * *.'' \14\ The 1970 interpretation also
specified that a bank does not have such a ``full and unrestricted
right'' if the bank is prevented, legally or practically * * * from
using the currency or coin at any time to meet customer's demands.''
\15\ The 1970 interpretation further specified that when assessing
arrangements with respect to such currency and coin, ``[a]n agreement
between the bank and its customer that the currency or coin is to be
regarded as `owned' by the bank for purposes of reserve requirements is
not determinative. Whether currency or coin may be counted as reserves
depends on the underlying nature of the transaction * * *.'' \16\
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\12\ Former 12 CFR 204.116 (1979).
\13\ 35 FR 18957 (Dec. 15, 1970).
\14\ Id.
\15\ Id.
\16\ Id.
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The 1980 Regulation D amendments implementing the Monetary Control
Act of 1980 introduced the term ``vault cash'' as a defined term. The
1980 amendments defined ``vault cash'' to mean ``currency and coin
owned and held by a depository institution that may, at any time, be
used to satisfy depositors' claims,'' incorporating into the new
definition the principles of bank ownership and availability at any
time to satisfy depositors' claims from the 1970 interpretation.
Subsequent Board guidance and staff opinions provided additional
clarification of these requirements.
For example, vault cash ``owned and held'' by the depository
institution was further clarified to include the requirements that (A)
the depository institution claiming the currency or coin in question as
``vault cash'' must book the currency or coin as an asset,\17\ and that
(B) no other institution may claim the currency and coin towards
satisfying its reserve requirements.\18\ The ability to use vault cash
``at any time * * * to satisfy depositor's claims'' was initially
viewed as requiring the currency or coin to be ``immediately''
available for that purpose to the bank or a branch of the bank.\19\ For
currency and coin to be ``immediately available,'' subsequent staff
opinions specified that it be ``reasonably nearby'' a physical location
(from which depositors may make cash withdrawals) of the institution
claiming the vault cash towards satisfying reserve requirements.\20\ To
be ``reasonably nearby,'' in turn, staff believed that a depository
institution customer who demanded cash at the beginning of a banking
day should be able to receive that cash in satisfaction of his or her
demand before the close of business on the same calendar day.
Accordingly, staff opined that a depository institution must be able to
recall the currency and coin in question from the remote location by
not later than 4 p.m. if the recall is requested by 10 a.m. on the same
calendar day for the currency and coin to constitute ``vault cash.''
Staff guidance further clarified that depository institutions must
establish the ability to recall ``vault cash'' within the specified
time frame by having in place a written cash delivery plan (together
with written contractual arrangements necessary to implement the plan)
that permits recall of the ``vault cash'' to the depository institution
relying solely on ground transportation.
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\17\ See, e.g., F.R.R.S. ] 2-306.9; Staff Op. of Aug. 9, 1982.
\18\ See, e.g., F.R.R.S. ] 2-307.2; Staff Op. of Aug. 9, 1982.
\19\ See FRRS ] 2-306.9; Staff Opinion of Aug. 9, 1982.
\20\ See FRRS ] 2-307.2.
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The proposed amendments would incorporate all of the foregoing
clarifications and requirements into six new subsections applicable to
``vault cash'' held ``at an alternate physical location'' of the
depository institution claiming the currency or coin in question
towards satisfying its reserve requirements.\21\ Finally, the proposed
amendments re-number current Sec. 204.2(k)(2)-(3) to 204.2(k)(3)-(4),
to take into account the new proposed Sec. Sec. 204.2(k)(1)-(2). The
substance of those provisions, however, is unchanged by the proposed
amendments.
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\21\ The proposed amendments do not include the ``legitimate
business purpose'' specification from written staff guidance on
vault cash held in alternate physical locations (see, e.g., FRRS ]
2-365.2), The Board believes that full compliance with the other
five specifications proposed to be incorporated into the definition
should ordinarily suffice to establish the legitimacy of the
arrangement. The Board requests comment on whether this
specification should be included in the definition of ``vault
cash.''
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Section 204.2(l) Definition of ``Pass-through Account''
The Board proposes to amend the definition of ``pass-through
account'' to eliminate the language restricting pass-through account
arrangements to non-member banks. The proposed amendments would also
move the provisions relating to pass-through accounts currently set
forth in Sec. 204.3(i) to a new Sec. 204.5(d), ``Maintenance of
Required Reserves,'' discussed infra.
Section 204.2(v) Definition of ``Clearing Balance Allowance''
The proposed amendments would add a new definition of ``clearing
balance allowance'' to Regulation D. The term replaces the undefined
term ``required charge-free band'' that appears twice in current Sec.
204.3(h) (concerning carryovers of excess reserves or deficiencies in
reserves) because that term is no longer used in current practice. The
proposed amendments would also move the existing carryover provisions
in current Sec. 204.3(h) to a new paragraph (e) under proposed Sec.
204.5, ``Maintenance of Required Reserves,'' discussed infra.
Section 204.2(w) Definition of ``Contractual Clearing Balance''
The proposed amendments would add a new definition of ``contractual
clearing balance'' to Regulation D. The term replaces the undefined
term ``required clearing balance'' in current Sec. 204.3(h) because
the term ``contractual clearing balance'' is more commonly used and
more accurately describes the relationship created thereby.
Section 204.3 Reporting and Location
Current Sec. 204.3 of Regulation D sets forth the regulatory
provisions governing the calculation of required reserves, the
maintenance of required reserves, and the submission of reports of
deposits (from which required reserves are calculated). The Board
proposes to re-organize these provisions into three separate
subsections that address these issues in their chronological order: the
submission of reports of deposits, the calculation of required reserves
based on those reports of deposits, and the subsequent maintenance of
required reserves based on the calculation of required reserves. The
proposed amendments are not intended to make substantive changes to
these provisions, but rather are intended to re-organize them for
greater ease of reference and to make minor editorial changes for
clarity.
The first of the proposed three new paragraphs, proposed Sec.
204.3, incorporates the existing regulatory provisions relating to
submission of reports of deposits, including provisions on determining
the location of the reporting institution for deposit reporting and
reserves maintenance purposes.\22\ The proposed amendments would also
include in this paragraph
[[Page 8013]]
regulatory provisions regarding the allocation of the low reserve
tranche among related depository institutions \23\ and regarding
overdrafts in related transaction accounts \24\ because these
provisions must be applied in determining the appropriate levels of
deposits to report.
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\22\ Current subsections 204.3(a)(1) last sentence, 204.3(a)(2),
and 204.3(b)(2).
\23\ Current Sec. 204.3(a)(3).
\24\ Current Sec. 204.3(e).
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Proposed Sec. 204.3(a) consists of the text of the first sentence
of current Sec. 204.3(a)(2)(i), with two proposed amendments. The
first proposed amendment would clarify the authority of the Board or a
Federal Reserve Bank to require reports of deposits or any other form
or statement from a depository institution relating to reserve
requirements. The second proposed amendment would clarify where reports
of deposits are to be submitted in light of the account location
provisions of the regulation.
Proposed Sec. 204.3(b) sets forth without change the text of the
second sentence of current Sec. 204.3(a)(2)(i).
Proposed Sec. 204.3(c) sets forth without change the text of the
third (and last) sentence of current Sec. 204.3(a)(1).
Proposed Sec. 204.3(d) sets forth, with one change, the text of
current Sec. 204.3(a)(3). The one change would conform the section
number reference to the reserve requirement ratios that are currently
set forth in Sec. 204.9 but would be moved to proposed Sec. 204.4(f)
in the proposed amendments.
No changes are proposed to current Sec. 204.3(e), dealing with
computation of transaction accounts for deposit reporting purposes.
Proposed Sec. 204.3(g) sets forth, with two amendments, the text
of current Sec. 204.3(b)(2). The first amendment would provide that a
depository institution may be considered to be located at the location
specified in the institution's articles of incorporation or as
specified by the institution's primary regulator. The Board proposes
this amendment in light of the fact that an institution may move its
head office or primary location from that specified in its charter or
organizing certificate, but that the charter or organizing certificate
may not reflect that move. In such cases, the move instead may be
reflected in the institution's revised articles of incorporation or
otherwise as recognized by the institution's primary regulator. The
second amendment would conform the internal references to Sec. Sec.
204.3(b)(2)(i) and 204.3(b)(2)(ii) to Sec. Sec. 204.3(g)(1) and
204.3(g)(2), respectively.
Section 204.4 Computation of Required Reserves
The Board proposes to move the provisions relating to computation
of required reserves from where they appear in current Sec. Sec.
204.3(c), 204.3(d), and 204.3(f) to a new separate paragraph, proposed
Sec. 204.4, ``Computation of Required Reserves.'' No substantive
changes are intended.
Proposed Sec. 204.4(a) sets forth, without change, the text of
current Sec. 204.3(f)(1).
Proposed Sec. 204.4(b) sets forth, without change, the text of
current Sec. 204.3(f)(2).
Proposed Sec. 204.4(c) sets forth, without change, the text of
current Sec. 204.3(f)(3).
Proposed Sec. Sec. 204.4(d) and 204.4(e) set forth the text of
current Sec. 204.3(c)(1) and the first sentence of Sec. 204.3,
respectively, with editorial amendments for clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.4(f) sets forth the text of the second sentence
of current Sec. 204.3(c)(1), with editorial amendments for clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.4(f) also incorporates, with editorial amendments
for clarity, the table of reserve requirements ratios currently set
forth in Sec. 204.9 so that all regulatory provisions relating to
computation of required reserves are located in the same section.
Section 204.5 Maintenance of Required Reserves
The Board proposes to move the existing provisions regarding
maintenance of required reserves, including the provisions on
maintenance of required reserves pursuant to pass-through agreements,
to a new Sec. 204.5, ``Maintenance of Required Reserves.'' No
substantive changes are intended.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(a)(1) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(b)(1) with various amendments. First, the amendments would delete
the reference to ``non-member institutions'' in discussing pass-through
arrangements. Second, the amendments would update the language (e.g.,
``maintain required reserves'' rather than ``hold reserves'') for
consistency with current usage. Third, the amendments would conform the
numeric reference from current Sec. 204.3(i) to proposed Sec.
204.5(d) for the regulatory provisions on pass-through arrangements.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(a)(2) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(i)(3)(i) with editorial amendments for clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(b)(1) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(c)(2) with editorial amendments for clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(b)(2) sets forth the text of the first and
third sentences of current Sec. 204.3(d) with editorial amendments for
clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(c) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(g) with an amendment to conform the name of the Board's
Regulation J (12 CFR Part 210) to the current version of the
regulation.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(d) sets forth the regulatory provisions for
``pass-through accounts'' in current Sec. 204.3(i), dividing them into
four new paragraphs, proposed Sec. Sec. 204.5(d)(1) through
204.5(d)(4). Proposed Sec. 204.5(d)(1) sets forth the text from
current Sec. 204.3(i)(1)(i) with various amendments. First, the
amendments would delete the reference to ``nonmember'' depository
institutions, since pass-through arrangements are no longer statutorily
restricted to nonmember depository institutions. Second, the amendments
would clarify that depository institutions whose required reserve
balances are zero may serve as pass-through correspondents. Third, the
amendments conform the internal references to section numbers and make
other editorial changes for clarity.
Proposed Sec. 204.5(d)(2) sets forth, without change, the text
from current Sec. 204.3(i)(1)(ii).
Proposed Sec. 204.5(d)(3) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(i)(2), with an amendment to delete the obsolete reference to
Reserve Bank permission for alternate account locations. Determination
of account location is addressed in current Sec. 204.3(b) (proposed
Sec. 204.3(g)).
Proposed Sec. 204.5(d)(4) sets forth, in four new subsections, the
text of current Sec. Sec. 204.3(i)(3)(ii)-(v). Proposed Sec.
204.5(d)(4)(A) sets forth the text of current Sec. 204.3(i)(3)(ii)
with an amendment deleting the reference to more than one depository
institution account at a Federal Reserve Bank. Proposed Sec. Sec.
204.5(d)(4)(B) and 204.5(d)(4)(C) set forth, without change, the text
of current Sec. Sec. 204.3(i)(3)(iii) and 204.3(i)(3)(iv),
respectively. Proposed Sec. 204.5(d)(4)(D) sets forth the text of
current Sec. 204.3(i)(3)(v) with an amendment conforming the section
number reference to the supplemental reserves provisions of the
regulation (current Sec. 204.6, proposed Sec. 204.10).
Proposed Sec. 204.5(e) sets forth the text of current Sec.
204.3(h), with amendments deleting obsolete references to ``required
clearing balance'' and to ``required charge-free band.'' Other
editorial amendments are made for clarity.
Section 204.6 Charges for Reserve Deficiencies
The Board proposes to move the existing provisions regarding
charges for reserve deficiencies from current Sec. 204.7 to proposed
Sec. 204.6 and to revise the
[[Page 8014]]
current caption of the section (from ``Penalties'' to ``Charges for
Reserve Deficiencies''). The four proposed sections in proposed Sec.
204.6 set forth the text of current Sec. 204.7, deleting provisions
describing guidelines for waivers by Reserve Banks of small charges.
The Board believes that the deletion of this material is appropriate
because it describes only in part the extent of the discretion of the
Reserve Banks in this regard and to avoid the implication that Reserve
Banks must waive charges in certain of the cases described.
Section 204.7 Transitional Adjustments in Mergers
The Board proposes to re-designate the provision from current Sec.
204.4 to proposed Sec. 204.7. No other changes to the section are
proposed.
Section 204.8 International Banking Facilities
No changes are proposed to Sec. 204.8.
Section 204.9 Emergency Reserve Requirement
The Board proposes to re-designate the provision from current Sec.
204.5 to proposed Sec. 204.9. No other changes to the section are
proposed.
Section 204.10 Supplemental Reserve Requirement
The Board proposes to re-designate the provision from current Sec.
204.6 to proposed Sec. 204.10. No other changes to the section are
proposed.
Regulation I Section 209.2(c)(1) Location of Bank--General Rule
The Board proposes to amend this provision of Regulation I to
conform it to the proposed Sec. 204.3(g) of Regulation D, discussed
supra. Specifically, the amendment would provide that a depository
institution may be considered to be located at the location specified
in the institution's articles of incorporation or as specified by the
institution's primary regulator. The Board proposes this amendment in
light of the fact that an institution may move its head office or
primary location from that specified in its charter or organizing
certificate, but that the charter or organizing certificate may not
reflect that move. In such cases, the move instead may be reflected in
the institution's revised articles of incorporation or otherwise as
recognized by the institution's primary regulator.
VI. Form of Comment Letters
Comment letters should refer to Docket No. R----- and, when
possible, should use a standard typeface with a font size of 10 or 12;
this will enable the Board to convert text submitted in paper form to
machine-readable form through electronic scanning, and will facilitate
automated retrieval of comments for review. Comments may be mailed
electronically to [email protected].
VII. Solicitation of Comments Regarding Use of ``Plain Language''
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 requires the
Board to use ``plain language'' in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The Board invites comments on whether
the proposed rule is clearly stated and effectively organized, and how
the Board might make the proposed text easier to understand.
VIII. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
In accordance with Section 3(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.), the Board has reviewed the proposed
amendments to Regulation D and Regulation I. A final regulatory
flexibility analysis will be conducted after consideration of comments
received during the public comment period.
1. Statement of the objectives of the proposal. The Board is
proposing to amend Regulation D and Regulation I in order to conform
the regulation to the provisions of the Financial Services Regulatory
Relief Act of 2006, to modernize the regulation in light of
technological developments, to reduce regulatory burden, and to
simplify regulatory compliance. Section 19 of the Act was enacted to
impose reserve requirements on certain deposits and other liabilities
of depository institutions for monetary policy purposes. Section 19
also authorizes the Board to promulgate such regulations as it may deem
necessary to effectuate the purposes of the section. The Board believes
that the proposed amendment to Regulation D is within the Congress'
broad grant of authority to the Board to adopt provisions that carry
out the purposes of Section 19 of the Act.
2. Small entities affected by the proposal. The proposal would
affect all depository institutions that are currently subject to
transaction account reserve requirements. The Board estimates that
there are currently approximately 8,195 depository institutions that
are subject to transaction account reserve requirements. The Board
estimates that approximately 3,800 of these institutions could be
considered small entities with assets of $165 million or less. The
proposed rule, if adopted, may reduce the level of reservable
transaction account balances for all depository institutions because
``savings deposits'' that previously permitted more than three but less
than six ``convenient'' transfers would be classified as nonreservable
``savings deposits'' under the proposed rule, but are currently
classified as reservable ``transaction accounts.''
3. Other federal rules. The Board believes that no federal rules
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the proposed revisions to the
Interpretation.
4. Significant alternatives to the proposed revisions. The Board
welcomes comment on any significant alternatives that would minimize
the impact of the proposed rule on small entities.
IX. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3506; 5 CFR part 1320 Appendix A.1), the Board reviewed the
proposed rule under the authority delegated to the Board by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB). The proposed rule contains no
requirements subject to the PRA.
Test of Proposed Revisions
Certain conventions have been used to highlight the proposed
revisions. New language is shown inside arrows while language that
would be deleted is set off with brackets.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 204 and 209
Banks, Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board proposes to
amend 12 CFR parts 204 and 209 as follows:
PART 204--RESERVE REQUIREMENTS OF DEPOSITORY INSTITUTIONS
(REGULATION D)
1. The authority citation for part 204 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 248(c), 371a, 461, 601, 611, and
3105.
2. Section 204.2 is amended by revising paragraphs I(1)(i)
introductory text, (d)(2), (k) and (l), and adding new paragraphs (v)
and (w) to read as follows:
Sec. 204.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) A deposit [that] [rtrif]from which[ltrif] the depositor does
not have a right and is not permitted to make withdrawals [from] within
six days after the date of
[[Page 8015]]
deposit unless the deposit is subject to an early withdrawal penalty of
at least seven days' simple interest on amounts withdrawn within the
first six days after deposit.\1\ A time deposit from which partial
[early] withdrawals are permitted [rtrif]within six days after the date
of the last withdrawal[ltrif] must impose [additional] early withdrawal
penalties of at least seven days' simple interest on amounts
[rtrif]so[ltrif] withdrawn [within six days after each partial
withdrawal]. If [such additional] early withdrawal penalties are not
imposed, the account ceases to be a time deposit. The account may
become a savings deposit if it meets the requirements for a saving
deposit; otherwise it becomes a transaction account. Time deposit
includes funds--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ A time deposit, or a portion thereof, may be paid during the
period when an early withdrawal penalty would otherwise be required
under this part without imposing an early withdrawal penalty
specified by this part:
(a) Where the time deposit is maintained in an individual
retirement account established in accordance with 26 U.S.C. 408 and
is paid within seven days after establishment of the individual
retirement account pursuant to 26 CFR 1.408-6(d)(4), where it is
maintained in a Keogh (H.R. 10) plan, or where it is maintained in a
401(k) plan under 26 U.S.C. 401(k); Provided that the depositor
forfeits an amount at least equal to the simple interest earned on
the amount withdrawn;
(b) Where the depository institution pays all or a portion of a
time deposit representing funds contributed to an individual
retirement account or a Keogh (H.R. 10) plan established pursuant to
26 U.S.C. 408 or 26 U.S.C. 401 or to a 401(k) plan established
pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 401(k) when the individual for whose benefit
the account is maintained attains age 59\1/2\ or is disabled (as
defined in 26 U.S.C. 72(m)(7)) or thereafter;
(c) Where the depository institution pays that portion of a time
deposit on which federal deposit insurance has been lost as a result
of the merger of two or more federally insured banks in which the
depositor previously maintained separate time deposits, for a period
of one year from the date of the merger;
(d) Upon the death of any owner of the time deposit funds;
(e) When any owner of the time deposit is determined to be
legally incompetent by a court or other administrative body of
competent jurisdiction; or
(f) Where a time deposit is withdrawn within 10 days after a
specified maturity date even though the deposit contract provided
for automatic renewal at the maturity date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(2) The term savings deposit also means: A deposit or account, such
as an account commonly known as a passbook savings account, a statement
savings account, or as a money market deposit account (MMDA), that
otherwise meets the requirements of Sec. 204.2(d)(1) and from which,
under the terms of the deposit contract or by practice of the
depository institution, the depositor is permitted or authorized to
make no more than six transfers and withdrawals, or a combination of
such transfers and withdrawals, per calendar month or statement cycle
(or similar period) of at least four weeks, to another account
(including a transaction account) of the depositor at the same
institution or to a third party by means of a preauthorized or
automatic transfer, or telephonic (including data transmission)
agreement, order or instruction, [and no more than three of the six
such transfers may be made] [rtrif]or[ltrif] by check, draft, debit
card, or similar order made by the depositor and payable to third
parties. A preauthorized transfer includes any arrangement by the
depository institution to pay a third party from the account of a
depositor upon written or oral instruction (including an order received
through an automated clearing house (ACH)) or any arrangement by a
depository institution to pay a third party from the account of the
depositor at a predetermined time or on a fixed schedule. Such an
account is not a transaction account by virtue of an arrangement that
permits transfers for the purpose of repaying loans and associated
expenses at the same depository institution (as originator or servicer)
or that permits transfers of funds from this account to another account
of the same depositor at the same institution or permits withdrawals
(payments directly to the depositor) from the account when such
transfers or withdrawals are made by mail, messenger, automated teller
machine, or in person or when such withdrawals are made by telephone
(via check mailed to the depositor) regardless of the number of such
transfers or withdrawals.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In order to ensure that no more than the permitted number of
withdrawals or transfers are made, for an account to come within the
[definitions in paragraph (d)(2) of this section,] [rtrif]definition
of ``savings deposit,''[ltrif] a depository institution must either:
(a) Prevent withdrawals or transfers of funds from this account
that are in excess of the limits established by paragraph (d)(2) of
this section, or
(b) Adopt procedures to monitor those transfers on an ex post
basis and contact customers who exceed the established limits on
more than occasional basis. For customers who continue to violate
those limits after they have been contacted by the depository
institution, the depository institution must either close the
account and place the funds in another account that the depositor is
eligible to maintain or take away the transfer and draft capacities
of the account. An account that authorizes withdrawals or transfers
in excess of the permitted number is a transaction account
regardless of whether the authorized number of transactions are
actually made. For accounts described in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, the institution at its option may use, on a consistent
basis, either the date on the check, draft, or similar item, or the
date the item is paid in applying the limits imposed by that
section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(k)(1) Vault cash means United States currency and coin owned and
[held] [rtrif]booked as an asset[ltrif] by a depository institution
that may, at any time, be used to satisfy [depositors'] claims
[rtrif]of that depository institution's depositors and that meets the
requirements of paragraph (k)(2)(i) or (k)(2)(ii) of this
section[ltrif].
(2) Vault cash [rtrif]must be either:
(i) Held at a physical location of the depository institution
(including the depository institution's proprietary ATMs) from which
the institution's depositors may make cash withdrawals; or
(ii) Held at an alternate physical location if--
(A) The depository institution claiming the currency and coin as
vault cash at all times retains full rights of ownership in and to the
currency and coin held at the alternate physical location;
(B) The depository institution claiming the currency and coin as
vault cash at all times books the currency and coin held at the
alternate physical location as an asset of the depository institution;
(C) No other depository institution claims the currency and coin
held at the alternate physical location as vault cash in satisfaction
of that other depository institution's reserve requirements;
(D) The currency and coin held at the alternate physical location
is reasonably nearby a location of the depository institution claiming
the currency and coin as vault cash at which its depositors may make
cash withdrawals (an alternate physical location is considered
``reasonably nearby'' if the depository institution that claims the
currency and coin as vault cash can recall the currency and coin from
the alternate physical location by 10 a.m. and, relying solely on
ground transportation, receive the currency and coin not later than 4
p.m. on the same calendar day at a location of the depository
institution at which its depositors may make cash withdrawals); and
(E) The depository institution claiming the currency and coin as
vault cash has in place a written cash delivery plan, and written
contractual arrangements necessary to implement that plan, that
demonstrate that the currency and coin can be recalled and received in
accordance with the requirements of paragraph (k)(2)(ii)(D) of this
section at any time. The depository institution shall provide copies of
the written cash delivery plan and written contractual arrangements to
the Federal Reserve Bank that holds its account or to the Board upon
request.
(3) Vault cash[ltrif] includes United States currency and coin in
transit to a
[[Page 8016]]
Federal Reserve Bank or a correspondent depository institution for
which the reporting depository institution has not yet received credit,
and United States currency and coin in transit from a Federal Reserve
Bank or a correspondent depository institution when the reporting
depository institution's account at the Federal Reserve or
correspondent bank has been charged for such shipment.
[(3)] [rtrif](4)[ltrif] Silver and gold coin and other currency and
coin whose numismatic or bullion value is substantially in excess of
face value is not vault cash for purposes of this part.
(l) Pass-through account means a balance maintained by a depository
institution [rtrif]with a correspondent institution under Sec.
204.5(d)[ltrif] [a balance maintained by a depository institution that
is not a member bank, by a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank, or
by an Edge or Agreement Corporation, (1) in an institution that
maintains required reserve balances at a Federal Reserve Bank, (2) in a
Federal Home Loan Bank, (3) in the National Credit Union Administration
Central Liquidity Facility, or (4) in an institution that has been
authorized by the Board to pass through required reserve balances if
the institution, Federal Home Loan Bank, or National Credit Union
Administration Central Liquidity Facility maintains the funds in the
form of a balance in a Federal Reserve Bank of which it is a member or
at which it maintains an account in accordance with rules and
regulations of the Board].
* * * * *
[rtrif](v) Clearing balance allowance means the greater of $25,000
or two percent of an institution's contractual clearing balance.
(w) Contractual clearing balance means an amount that a depository
institution agrees or is required to maintain in its account at a
Federal Reserve Bank in addition to balances the depository institution
may hold to satisfy its required reserve balance. A depository
institution that has a required reserve balance of zero may still hold
a contractual clearing balance.[ltrif]
3. Amend Sec. 204.3 by revising the heading and paragraphs (a)
through (d), (f), and (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 204.3 Reporting and location.
(a) Every depository institution, U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank, and Edge or Agreement corporation shall file a report of
deposits (or any other form or statement that may be required by the
Board or by a Federal Reserve Bank) with the Federal Reserve Bank in
the Federal Reserve District in which it is located, regardless of the
manner in which it chooses to maintain required reserve balances.
(b) A foreign bank's U.S. branches and agencies and an Edge or
Agreement corporation's offices operating within the same state and the
same Federal Reserve District shall prepare and file a report of
deposits on an aggregated basis.
(c) For purposes of this part, the obligations of a majority-owned
(50 percent or more) U.S. subsidiary (except an Edge or agreement
corporation) of a depository institution shall be regarded as
obligations of the parent depository institution.
(d) A depository institution, a foreign bank, or an Edge or
Agreement corporation shall, if possible, assign the low reserve
tranche and reserve requirement exemption prescribed in Sec. 204.4(f)
to only one office or to a group of offices filing a single aggregated
report of deposits. The amount of the reserve requirement exemption
allocated to an office or group of offices may not exceed the amount of
the low reserve tranche allocated to such office or offices. If the low
reserve tranche or reserve requirement exemption cannot be fully
utilized by a single office or by a group of offices filing a single
report of deposits, the unused portion of the tranche or exemption may
be assigned to other offices or groups of offices of the same
institution until the amount of the tranche (or net transaction
accounts) or exemption (or reservable liabilities) is exhausted. The
tranche or exemption may be reallocated each year concurrent with
implementation of the indexed tranche and exemption, or, if necessary
during the course of the year to avoid underutilization of the tranche
or exemption, at the beginning of a reserve computation period.[ltrif]
* * * * *
[rtrif](f) The Board and the Federal Reserve Banks will not hold a
pass-through correspondent responsible for guaranteeing the accuracy of
the reports of deposits submitted by its respondents.
(g)(1) For purposes of this section, a depository institution, a
U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank, or an Edge or Agreement
corporation is located in the Federal Reserve District that contains
the location specified in the institution's charter, organizing
certificate, license, or articles of incorporation, or as specified by
the institution's primary regulator, or if no such location is
specified, the location of its head office, unless otherwise determined
by the Board under paragraph (g)(2) of this section.
(2) If the location specified in paragraph (g)(1) of this section,
in the Board's judgment, is ambiguous, would impede the ability of the
Board or the Federal Reserve Banks to perform their functions under the
Federal Reserve Act, or would impede the ability of the institution to
operate efficiently, the Board will determine the Federal Reserve
District in which the institution is located, after consultation with
the institution and the relevant Federal Reserve Banks. The relevant
Federal Reserve Banks are the Federal Reserve Bank whose District
contains the location specified in paragraph (g)(1) of this section and
the Federal Reserve Bank in whose District the institution is proposed
to be located. In making this determination, the Board will consider
any applicable laws, the business needs of the institution, the
location of the institution's head office, the locations where the
institution performs its business, and the locations that would allow
the institution, the Board, and the Federal Reserve Banks to perform
their functions efficiently and effectively.[ltrif]
* * * * *
4. Section 204.7 is removed, Sec. 204.4 is redesignated as Sec.
204.7, and a new Sec. 204.4 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 204.4 Computation of required reserves.
(a) In determining the reserve balance required under this part,
the amount of cash items in process of collection and balances subject
to immediate withdrawal due from other depository institutions located
in the United States (including such amounts due from United States
branches and agencies of foreign banks and Edge and agreement
corporations) may be deducted from the amount of gross transaction
accounts. The amount that may be deducted may not exceed the amount of
gross transaction accounts.
(b) United States branches and agencies of a foreign bank may not
deduct balances due from another United States branch or agency of the
same foreign bank, and United States offices of an Edge or Agreement
Corporation may not deduct balances due from another United States
office of the same Edge Corporation.
(c) Balances ``due from other depository institutions'' do not
include balances due from Federal Reserve Banks, pass-through accounts,
or balances (payable in dollars or otherwise) due from banking offices
located outside the United States. An institution exercising fiduciary
powers may not include in balances ``due from other depository
institutions'' amounts of trust funds deposited with other
[[Page 8017]]
banks and due to it as a trustee or other fiduciary.
(d) For institutions that file a report of deposits weekly,
required reserves are computed on the basis of the institution's daily
average balances of deposits and Eurocurrency liabilities during a 14-
day computation period ending every second Monday.
(e) For institutions that file a report of deposits quarterly,
required reserves are computed on the basis of the institution's daily
average balances of deposits and Eurocurrency liabilities during the 7-
day computation period that begins on the third Tuesday of March, June,
September, and December.
(f) For all depository institutions, Edge and agreement
corporations, and United States branches and agencies of foreign banks,
required reserves are computed by applying the reserve requirement
ratios below to net transaction accounts, nonpersonal time deposits,
and Eurocurrency liabilities of the institution during the computation
period.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reserve requirement
Reservable liability ratio
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NET TRANSACTION ACCOUNTS: .........................
$0 to reserve requirement exemption 0 percent of amount.
amount ($9.3 million).
Over reserve requirement exemption amount 3 percent of amount.
($9.3 million) and up to low reserve
tranche ($43.9 million).
Over low reserve tranche ($43.9 million). $1,038,000 plus 10
percent of amount over
$43.9 million.
Nonpersonal time deposits.................... 0 percent.
Eurocurrency liabilities..................... 0 percent.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Section 204.9 is removed, Sec. 204.5 is redesignated as Sec.
204.9, and a new Sec. 204.5 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 204.5 Maintenance of required reserves.
(a)(1) A depository institution, a U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank, and an Edge or agreement corporation shall maintain
required reserves in the form of vault cash and, if vault cash does not
fully satisfy the institution's required reserves, in the form of a
balance maintained
(i) directly with the Federal Reserve Bank in the Federal Reserve
District in which the institution is located, or
(ii) with a pass-through correspondent in accordance with Sec.
204.5(d).
(2) Each individual institution subject to this part is responsible
for satisfying its required reserve balance, if any, either directly
with a Federal Reserve Bank or through a pass-through correspondent.
(b)(1) For institutions that file a report of deposits weekly, the
balances that are required to be maintained with the Federal Reserve
shall be maintained during a 14-day maintenance period that begins on
the third Thursday following the end of a given computation period.
(2) For institutions that file a report of deposits quarterly, the
balances that are required to be maintained with the Federal Reserve
shall be maintained during each of the 7-day maintenance periods during
the interval that begins on the fourth Thursday following the end of
the institution's computation period and ends on the fourth Wednesday
after the close of the institution's next computation period.
(c) Cash items forwarded to a Federal Reserve Bank for collection
and credit shall not be counted as part of the reserve balance to be
carried with the Federal Reserve until the expiration of the time
specified in the appropriate time schedule established under Regulation
J, ``Collection of Checks and Other Items by Federal Reserve Banks and
Funds Transfers Through Fedwire'' (12 CFR Part 210). If a depository
institution draws against items before that time, the charge will be
made to its account if the balance is sufficient to pay it; any
resulting impairment of reserve balances will be subject to the
penalties provided by law and to the reserve-deficiency charges
provided by this part. However, the Federal Reserve Bank may, at its
discretion, refuse to permit the withdrawal or other use of credit
given in an account for any time for which the Federal Reserve Bank has
not received payment in actually and finally collected funds.
(d)(1) A depository institution, a U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank, or an Edge or Agreement corporation required to maintain
reserve balances (``respondent'') may select only one pass-through
correspondent institution to pass through its required reserve
balances, unless otherwise permitted by Federal Reserve Bank in whose
District the respondent is located. Eligible pass-through correspondent
institutions are Federal Home Loan Banks, the National Credit Union
Administration Central Liquidity Facility, and depository institutions,
U.S. branches or agencies of foreign banks, and Edge and Agreement
corporations that maintain required reserve balances, which may be
zero, at a Federal Reserve Bank. In addition, the Board reserves the
right to permit other institutions, on a case-by-case basis, to serve
as pass-through correspondents. The correspondent chosen must
subsequently pass through the required reserve balances of its
respondents directly to a Federal Reserve Bank. The correspondent
placing funds with a Federal Reserve Bank on behalf of respondents will
be responsible for account maintenance as described in paragraph (d)(4)
of this section.
(2) Respondents or correspondents may institute, terminate, or
change pass-through agreements for the maintenance of required reserve
balances by providing all documentation required for the establishment
of the new agreement or termination of the existing agreement to the
Federal Reserve Banks involved within the time period provided for such
a change by those Reserve Banks.
(3) A correspondent that passes through required reserve balances
of respondents shall maintain such balances, along with the
correspondent's own required reserve balances (if any), in a single
commingled account at the Federal Reserve Bank in whose District the
correspondent is located. The balances held by the correspondent in an
account at a Reserve Bank are the property of the correspondent and
represent a liability of the Reserve Bank solely to the correspondent,
regardless of whether the funds represent the reserve balances of
another institution that have been passed through the correspondent.
(4)(i) A pass-through correspondent shall be responsible for
assuring the maintenance of the appropriate aggregate level of its
respondents' required reserve balances. A Federal Reserve Bank will
compare the total reserve balance required to be maintained with the
total actual reserve
[[Page 8018]]
balance held in such account for purposes of determining required-
reserve deficiencies, imposing or waiving charges for deficiencies in
required reserves, and for other reserve maintenance purposes. A charge
for a deficiency in the aggregate level of the required reserve balance
will be imposed by the Reserve Bank on the correspondent maintaining
the account.
(ii) Each correspondent is required to maintain detailed records
for each of its respondents in a manner that permits Reserve Banks to
determine whether the respondent has provided a sufficient required
reserve balance to the correspondent. A correspondent passing through a
respondent's required reserve balance shall maintain records and make
such reports as the Board or Reserve Bank requires in order to ensure
the correspondent's compliance with its responsibilities for the
maintenance of a respondent's reserve balance. Such records shall be
available to the Reserve Banks as required.
(iii) The Federal Reserve Bank may terminate any pass-through
agreement under which the correspondent is deficient in its
recordkeeping or other responsibilities.
(iv) Interest paid on supplemental reserves (if such reserves are
required under Sec. 204.10) held by a respondent will be credited to
the account maintained by the correspondent.
(e) Any excess or deficiency in an institution's required reserve
balance shall be carried over and applied against the balance
maintained in the next maintenance period as specified in this
paragraph. The amount of any such excess or deficiency that is carried
over shall not exceed the greater of:
(1) The amount obtained by multiplying .04 times the sum of
depository institution's required reserves and the depository
institution's contractual clearing balance, if any, and then
subtracting from this product the depository institution's clearing
balance allowance, if any; or
(2) $50,000, minus the depository institution's clearing balance
allowance, if any. Any carryover not offset during the next period may
not be carried over to subsequent periods.[rtrif]
6. Section 204.6 is redesignated as Sec. 204.10, and a new Sec.
204.6 is added to read as follows:
[rtrif]Sec. 204.6 Charges for reserve deficiencies.
(a) Deficiencies in a depository institution's required reserve
balance, after application of the carryover provided in Sec. 204.5(e)
are subject reserve-deficiency charges. Federal Reserve Banks are
authorized to assess charges for deficiencies in required reserves at a
rate of 1 percentage point per year above the primary credit rate, as
provided in Sec. 201.51(a) of this chapter, in effect for borrowings
from the Federal Reserve Bank on the first day of the calendar month in
which the deficiencies occurred.--Charges shall be assessed on the
basis of daily average deficiencies during each maintenance period.
Reserve Banks may, as an alternative to levying monetary charges, after
consideration of the circumstances involved, permit a depository
institution to eliminate deficiencies in its required reserve balance
by maintaining additional reserves during subsequent reserve
maintenance periods.
(b) Reserve Banks may waive the charges for reserve deficiencies
except when the deficiency arises out of a depository institution's
gross negligence or conduct that is inconsistent with the principles
and purposes of reserve requirements. If a depository institution has
demonstrated a lack of due regard for the proper maintenance of
required reserves, the Reserve Bank may decline to exercise the waiver
privilege and assess all charges regardless of amount or reason for the
deficiency.
(c) In individual cases, where a federal supervisory authority
waives a liquidity requirement, or waives the penalty for failing to
satisfy a liquidity requirement, the Reserve Bank in the District where
the involved depository institution is located shall waive the reserve
requirement imposed under this part for such depository institution
when requested by the federal supervisory authority involved.
(d) Violations of this part may be subject to assessment of civil
money penalties by the Board under authority of Section 19(1) of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 505) as implemented in 12 CFR part 263.
In addition, the Board and any other Federal financial institution
supervisory authority may enforce this part with respect to depository
institutions subject to their jurisdiction under authority conferred by
law to undertake cease and desist proceedings.[ltrif]
PART 209--ISSUE AND CANCELLATION OF FEDERAL RESERVE BANK CAPITAL
STOCK (REGULATION I)
7. The authority citation for part 209 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 2222, 248, 282, 286-288, 321, 323, 327-328,
333, and 466.
8. Section 209.2 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(1) to read as
follows:
Sec. 209.2 Banks desiring to become member banks.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) General rule. For purposes of this part, a national bank or a
state bank is located in the Federal Reserve District that contains the
location specified in the bank's charter or organizing certificate,
[rtrif]or as specified by the institution's primary regulator,[ltrif]
or if no such location is specified, the location of its head office,
unless otherwise determined by the Board under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
* * * * *
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, February 7, 2008.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. E8-2558 Filed 2-11-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210-01-P