[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 212 (Wednesday, November 3, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67731-67748]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-27697]
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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
[Docket No. OP 1396]
Federal Reserve Bank Services
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board)
has approved the private sector adjustment factor (PSAF) for 2011 of
$39.5 million and the 2011 fee schedules for Federal Reserve priced
services and electronic access. These actions were taken in accordance
with the requirements of the Monetary Control Act of 1980, which
requires that, over the long run, fees for Federal Reserve priced
services be established on the basis of all direct and indirect costs,
including the PSAF. The Board has also approved maintaining the current
earnings credit rate on clearing balances.
DATES: The new fee schedules and earnings credit rate become effective
January 3, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions regarding the fee
schedules: Jeffrey C. Marquardt, Deputy Director, (202/452-2360);
Jeffrey S.H. Yeganeh, Manager, Retail Payments, (202/728-5801); Linda
S. Healey, Senior Financial Services Analyst, (202/452-5274), Division
of Reserve Bank Operations and Payment Systems. For questions regarding
the PSAF and earnings credits on clearing balances: Gregory L. Evans,
Deputy Associate Director, (202/452-3945); Brenda L. Richards, Manager,
Financial Accounting, (202/452-2753); or Jonathan C. Mueller, Senior
Financial Analyst, (202/530-6291), Division of Reserve Bank Operations
and Payment Systems. For users of Telecommunications Device for the
Deaf (TDD) only, please call 202/263-4869. Copies of the 2011 fee
schedules for the check service are available from the Board, the
Federal Reserve Banks, or the Reserve Banks' financial services web
site at http://www.frbservices.org.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Private Sector Adjustment Factor And Priced Services
A. Overview--Each year, as required by the Monetary Control Act of
1980, the Reserve Banks set fees for priced services provided to
depository institutions. These fees are set to recover, over the long
run, all direct and indirect costs and imputed costs, including
financing costs, taxes, and certain other expenses, as well as the
return on equity (profit) that would have been earned if a private
business firm provided the services. The imputed costs and imputed
profit are collectively referred to as the PSAF. Similarly, investment
income is imputed and netted with related direct costs associated with
clearing balances to estimate net income on clearing balances (NICB).
From 2000 through 2009, the Reserve Banks recovered 97.8 percent of
their total expenses (including imputed costs) and targeted after-tax
profits or return on equity (ROE) for providing priced services.\1\
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\1\ The ten-year recovery rate is based on the pro forma income
statement for Federal Reserve priced services published in the
Board's Annual Report.
Effective December 31, 2006, the Reserve Banks implemented
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 158:
Employers' Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other
Postretirement Plans [Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 715
Compensation--Retirement Benefits], which resulted in recognizing a
reduction in equity related to the priced services' benefit plans.
Including this reduction in equity results in cost recovery of 93.0
percent for the ten-year period. This measure of long-run cost
recovery is also published in the Board's Annual Report.
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Table 1 summarizes 2009, 2010 estimated, and 2011 budgeted cost-
recovery rates for all priced services. Cost recovery is estimated to
be 102.9 percent in 2010 and budgeted to be 102.0 percent in 2011. The
check service accounts for slightly over half of the total cost of
priced services and thus
[[Page 67732]]
significantly influences the aggregate cost-recovery rate.
Table 1--Aggregate Priced Services Pro Forma Cost and Revenue Performance \a\
[$ Millions]
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5 \e\ Recovery
2 \c\ Total 3 Net income 4 \d\ Targeted rate after
Year 1 \b\ Revenue expense (ROE) [1-2] ROE targeted ROE
[1/(2+4)]
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2009............................ 675.4 707.5 -32.1 19.9 92.8%
2010 (estimate)................. 572.7 543.3 29.4 13.3 102.9%
2011 (budget)................... 497.6 470.9 26.7 16.8 102.0%
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\a\ Calculations in this table and subsequent pro forma cost and revenue tables may be affected by rounding.
\b\ Revenue includes net income on clearing balances. Clearing balances are assumed to be invested in a broad
portfolio of investments, such as short-term Treasury securities, government agency securities, federal funds,
commercial paper, long-term corporate bonds, and money market funds. To impute income, a constant spread is
determined from the historical average return on this portfolio and applied to the rate used to determine the
cost of clearing balances. For 2011, investments are limited to short-term Treasury securities and federal
funds with no constant spread imputed. NICB equals the imputed income from these investments less earnings
credits granted to holders of clearing balances. The cost of earnings credits is based on the discounted three-
month Treasury bill rate.
\c\ The calculation of total expense includes operating, imputed, and other expenses. Imputed and other expenses
include taxes, FDIC insurance, Board of Governors' priced services expenses, the cost of float, and interest
on imputed debt, if any. Credits or debits related to the accounting for pension plans under FAS 158 [ASC 715]
are also included.
\d\ Targeted ROE is the after-tax ROE included in the PSAF. For the 2010 estimate, the targeted ROE reflects
average actual clearing balance levels through July 2010.
\e\ The recovery rates in this and subsequent tables do not reflect the unamortized gains or losses that must be
recognized in accordance with FAS 158 [ASC 715]. Future gains or losses, and their effect on cost recovery,
cannot be projected.
Table 2 portrays an overview of cost-recovery performance for the
ten-year period from 2000 to 2009, 2009, 2010 budget, 2010 estimate,
and 2011 budget by priced service.
Table 2--Priced Services Cost Recovery
[Percent]
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2011 Budget
Priced service 2000-2009 2009 2010 Budget 2010 Estimate \a\
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All services.................... 97.8 92.8 96.9 102.9 102.0
Check........................... 96.8 92.8 94.7 103.7 102.8
FedACH.......................... 102.6 93.4 99.9 101.9 100.4
Fedwire Funds and NSS........... 101.5 92.1 100.2 100.2 101.0
Fedwire Securities.............. 101.0 93.8 103.1 104.3 103.8
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\a\ 2011 budget figures reflect the latest data from the Reserve Banks. The Reserve Banks will transmit final
budget data to the Board in November 2010, for Board consideration in December 2010.
1. 2010 Estimated Performance--The Reserve Banks estimate that they
will recover 102.9 percent of the costs of providing priced services in
2010, including imputed costs and targeted ROE, compared with a
budgeted recovery rate of 96.9 percent, as shown in table 2. The
Reserve Banks estimate that all services will achieve full cost
recovery. Overall, the Reserve Banks estimate that they will fully
recover actual and imputed costs and earn net income of $29.4 million,
compared with the target of $13.3 million. The greater-than-targeted
net income is driven largely by the performance of the check service,
which had greater-than-expected operational cost savings and revenue.
2. 2011 Private Sector Adjustment Factor--The 2011 PSAF for Reserve
Bank priced services is $39.5 million. This amount represents a
decrease of $2.4 million from the estimated 2010 revised PSAF of $41.9
million. Although the estimated imputed cost of equity is expected to
increase, it is offset by a decrease in other required PSAF costs.\2\
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\2\ In October 2009, the Board approved a budgeted 2010 PSAF of
$50.2 million, which was based on the July 2009 clearing balance
level of $4,831.5 million. Since that time, clearing balances have
declined, which affects the 2010 PSAF and NICB. The 2010 estimated
PSAF of $41.9 million, which is based on actual average clearing
balances of $2,772.2 million through July 2010, reflects the lower
equity costs resulting from the decrease in clearing balances. The
2010 final PSAF will be adjusted to reflect average clearing balance
levels through the end of 2010.
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3. 2011 Projected Performance--The Reserve Banks project a priced
services cost recovery rate of 102.0 percent in 2011. The 2011 fees for
priced services are projected to result in a net income of $26.7
million compared with the target ROE of $16.8 million.
The primary risks to the Reserve Banks' ability to achieve their
targeted cost recovery rates are unanticipated volume and revenue
reductions and the potential for cost overruns or delays with
technological upgrades. In light of these risks, the Reserve Banks will
continue to refine their business and operational strategies to
aggressively manage operating costs, take advantage of efficiencies
gained from technological upgrades, and increase value-added product
revenue.
4. 2011 Pricing--The following summarizes the Reserve Banks'
changes in fee schedules for priced services in 2011:
Check
The Reserve Banks will decrease FedForward fees 8 percent
for checks presented electronically and increase FedForward fees 50
percent for checks presented as substitute checks.\3\ The
[[Page 67733]]
average fee paid by FedForward depositors will decline 14 percent from
the average 2010 fee as the number of depository institutions that
accept their presentments electronically increases. The Reserve Banks
will retain FedReturn fees for checks returned electronically through
FedLine at the current level, decrease fees 30 percent for checks
returned electronically in PDF files, and increase fees 14 percent for
endpoints that receive substitute checks.\4\ The average fee paid by
FedReturn depositors will decrease 20 percent as the number of
institutions that accept their returns electronically increases.\5\
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\3\ FedForward is the electronic forward check collection
product. A substitute check is a paper reproduction of an original
check that contains an image of the front and back of the original
check and is suitable for automated processing in the same manner as
the original check.
\4\ FedReturn is the electronic check return product.
\5\ The Reserve Bank's Check 21 service fees include separate
and substantially different fees for the delivery of checks to
electronic endpoints and substitute check endpoints. Therefore, the
average effective fee paid by depository institutions that use Check
21 services is dependent on the proportion of institutions that
accept checks electronically. The Reserve Banks are decreasing
FedForward fees for the presentment of checks to electronic
endpoints and raising fees for the presentment of checks to
substitute check endpoints, the effective fee paid by depository
institutions will decline by 14 percent in 2011 due to the expected
increase in the number of institutions that accept checks
electronically. The Reserve Banks are also retaining FedReturn fees
for checks delivered electronically through FedLine, decreasing fees
for checks delivered electronically via PDF files, and increasing
fees for checks delivered as substitute checks. However, the
effective fee paid by depository institutions will decrease 20
percent in 2011 as an increasing proportion of checks are returned
to electronic endpoints and PDF receivers, which are subject to
relatively lower fees than checks returned to paper endpoints.
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The Reserve Banks will increase traditional paper forward
collection fees 181 percent and traditional paper return service fees
81 percent.
With the 2011 fees, the price index for the total check
service will have increased 80 percent since 2001. In comparison, since
2005, the first full year in which the Reserve Banks offered Check 21
services, the price index for Check 21 services will have decreased 60
percent.
FedACH
The Reserve Banks will raise the addenda record fees for
originations and receipts from $0.0013 to $0.0015 and increase the
information extract file fee from $50 to $75.
With the 2011 fees, the price index for the FedACH service
will have decreased 32 percent since 2001.
Fedwire Funds and National Settlement
The Reserve Banks will implement a per-item surcharge of
$0.18 on the sender of Fedwire Funds transfers processed by the Reserve
Banks after 5 p.m. ET.
The Reserve Banks will introduce a $10 monthly fee for the
usage of the import/export feature of the FedLine Advantage electronic
access package for the Fedwire Funds Service. This feature allows
FedLine Advantage customers to import (export) an external file with
multiple transactions into (from) the Fedwire Funds Service.
The Reserve Banks will increase the National Settlement
Service's settlement file fee from $18 to $20, and the settlement entry
fee from $0.80 to $0.90.
The Reserve Banks will change the Fedwire Funds Service's
volume-based transfer fee structure to include incentive discounts
based on customers' historic volume. This change will increase the base
price of transfers but will provide substantial discounts from these
fees for a portion of customers' expected volumes. The change will be
implemented in two parts. First, the existing fees for all volume tiers
will increase by as much as 73 percent. Second, customers will receive
an 80 percent discount on these higher fees for the portion of a
customer's monthly online volume that exceeds 50 percent of their
historic benchmark volume, calculated as an average monthly volume of
activity over the previous five calendar years. The change will produce
a more stable stream of revenue for the Fedwire Funds service, for the
first 50 percent of their customers' historic benchmark volume.
Further, the Reserve Banks expect the incentive discounts to improve
their ability to retain business and attract additional volume by
decreasing the marginal price of transfers to a fee closer to the
Reserve Banks' marginal cost. The decrease in the marginal price of
transfers is consistent with the Federal Reserve's objectives to foster
efficiency in the payment systems and to improve the efficiency of
Reserve Bank services.
With the 2011 fees, the price index for the Fedwire Funds
and National Settlement Services will have increased 28 percent since
2001.
Fedwire Securities
The Reserve Banks will retain fees at their current
levels.
With the 2011 fees, the price index for the Fedwire
Securities Service will have decreased 14 percent since 2001.
5. 2011 Price Index--Figure 1 compares indexes of fees for the
Reserve Banks' priced services with the GDP price index. Compared with
the price index for 2010, the price index for all Reserve Bank priced
services is projected to decrease 3 percent in 2011. The price index
for total check services is projected to decrease approximately 8
percent. The price index for Check 21 services is projected to decrease
approximately 17 percent, reflecting the rapid increase in the number
of depository institutions accepting checks electronically and the
resulting reductions in the effective prices paid to collect and return
checks using Check 21 services. The price index for all other check
services is projected to increase 46 percent. The price index for
electronic payment services, which include the FedACH Service, Fedwire
Funds and National Settlement Services, and Fedwire Securities Service,
is projected to increase approximately 3 percent. For the period 2001
to 2011, the price index for all priced services is expected to
increase 68 percent. In comparison, for the period 2001 to 2009, the
GDP price index increased 21 percent.
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN03NO10.000
B. Private Sector Adjustment Factor--In March 2009, the Board
requested comment on proposed changes to the methodology for
calculating the PSAF.\6\ The Board proposed replacing the current
correspondent bank model with a ``publicly traded firm model'' in which
the key components used to determine the priced-services balance sheet
and the PSAF costs would be based on data for the market of U.S.
publicly traded firms. Specifically, these components include the
capitalization ratio used to determine financing on the priced-services
balance sheet and the effective tax rate, return on equity rate, and
debt financing rates. The proposed changes were prompted by the
implementation of the payment of interest on reserve balances held by
depository institutions at the Reserve Banks and the anticipated
consequent decline in balances held by depository institutions at
Reserve Banks for clearing priced-services transactions (clearing
balances).
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\6\ 74 FR 15481-15491 (Apr. 6, 2009).
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Since the implementation of the payment of interest on reserve
balances, clearing balances have not declined as rapidly as originally
anticipated and remain significant. Between the October 2008
implementation of the payment of interest on reserve balances and
January 2009, the total level of clearing balances held by depository
institutions decreased approximately $2 billion, from $6.5 billion to
$4.5 billion. During the first half of 2009, clearing balance levels
were nearly flat at approximately $4.5 billion. Since mid-2009,
clearing balances have declined moderately each month, and as of the
end of July 2010, clearing balances were $2.6 billion. As a result of
the relative significance of the remaining balances, the Board
continued to use the correspondent bank model for the 2010 PSAF, and
will continue using the correspondent bank model for the 2011 PSAF.\7\
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\7\ The Board is currently analyzing further the proposed
publicly traded firm model.
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The method for calculating the financing and equity costs in the
PSAF requires determining the appropriate imputed levels of debt and
equity and then applying the applicable financing rates. In this
process, a pro forma balance sheet using estimated assets and
liabilities associated with the Reserve Banks' priced services is
developed, and the remaining elements that would exist if these priced
services were provided by a private business firm are imputed. The same
generally accepted accounting principles that apply to commercial-
entity financial statements apply to the relevant elements in the
priced services pro forma financial statements.
The portion of Federal Reserve assets that will be used to provide
priced services during the coming year is determined using information
on actual assets and projected disposals and acquisitions. The priced
portion of these assets is determined based on the allocation of the
related depreciation expense. The priced portion of actual Federal
Reserve liabilities consists of clearing balances and other liabilities
such as accounts payable and accrued expenses.
Long-term debt is imputed only when core clearing balances, other
long-term liabilities, and equity are not sufficient to fund long-term
assets.\8\ Short-term debt is imputed only when other short-term
liabilities and clearing balances not used to finance long-term assets
are insufficient to fund short-term assets. A portion of clearing
balances is used as a funding source for short-term priced services
assets. Long-term assets may be
[[Page 67735]]
partially funded from core clearing balances.
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\8\ Core clearing balances, currently $1 billion, are considered
the portion of the balances that has remained stable over time
without regard to the magnitude of actual clearing balances.
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Imputed equity is set to meet the FDIC requirements for a well-
capitalized institution for insurance premium purposes and represents
the market capitalization, or shareholder value, for Reserve Bank
priced services.\9\ The equity financing rate is the targeted ROE rate
produced by the capital asset pricing model (CAPM). In the CAPM, the
required rate of return on a firm's equity is equal to the return on a
risk-free asset plus a risk premium. To implement the CAPM, the risk-
free rate is based on the three-month Treasury bill; the beta is
assumed to equal 1.0, which approximates the risk of the market as a
whole; and the monthly returns in excess of the risk-free rate over the
most recent 40 years are used as the market risk premium. The resulting
ROE influences the dollar level of the PSAF because this is the return
a shareholder would require in order to invest in a private business
firm.
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\9\ As shown in table 7, the FDIC requirements for a well-
capitalized depository institution are (1) a ratio of total capital
to risk-weighted assets of 10 percent or greater, (2) a ratio of
Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets of 6 percent or greater, and
(3) a leverage ratio of Tier 1 capital to total assets of 5 percent
or greater. The priced services balance sheet has no components of
Tier 1 or total capital other than equity; therefore, requirements 1
and 2 are essentially the same measurement.
As used in this context, the term ``shareholder'' does not refer
to the member banks of the Federal Reserve System, but rather to the
implied shareholders that would have an ownership interest if the
Reserve Banks' priced services were provided by a private firm.
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For simplicity, given that federal corporate income tax rates are
graduated, state income tax rates vary, and various credits and
deductions can apply, an actual income tax expense is not calculated
for Reserve Bank priced services. Instead, the Board targets a pretax
ROE that would provide sufficient income to fulfill the priced
services' imputed income tax obligations. To the extent that actual
performance results are greater or less than the targeted ROE, income
taxes are adjusted using an imputed income tax rate that is the median
of the rates paid by the top 50 bank holding companies based on deposit
balances over the past five years, adjusted to the extent that they
invested in tax-free municipal bonds.
The PSAF also includes the estimated priced-services-related
expenses of the Board of Governors and imputed sales taxes based on
Reserve Bank estimated expenditures. An assessment for FDIC insurance
is imputed based on current FDIC rates and projected clearing balances
held with the Reserve Banks.
1. Net Income on Clearing Balances--The NICB calculation is
performed each year along with the PSAF calculation and is based on the
assumption that the Reserve Banks invest clearing balances net of an
imputed reserve requirement and balances used to finance priced
services assets.\10\ The Reserve Banks impute a constant spread,
determined by the return on a portfolio of investments, over the three-
month Treasury bill rate and apply this investment rate to the net
level of clearing balances.\11\ A return on the imputed reserve
requirement, which is based on the level of clearing balances on the
pro forma balance sheet, is imputed to reflect the return that would be
earned on a required reserve balance held at a Reserve Bank.
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\10\ Reserve requirements are the amount of funds that a
depository institution must hold, in the form of vault cash or
deposits with Federal Reserve Banks, in reserve against specified
deposit liabilities. The dollar amount of a depository institution's
reserve requirement is determined by applying the reserve ratios
specified in the Board's Regulation D to the institution's
reservable liabilities. The Reserve Banks' priced services impute a
reserve requirement of 10 percent, which is applied to the amount of
clearing balances held with the Reserve Banks.
\11\ The allowed portfolio of investments is comparable to a
bank holding company's investment holdings, such as short-term
Treasury securities, government agency securities, federal funds,
commercial paper, long-term corporate bonds, and money market funds.
As shown in table 7, the investments imputed for 2011 are three-
month Treasury bills and federal funds.
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The calculation also involves determining the priced services cost
of earnings credits (amounts available to offset service fees) on
contracted clearing balances held, net of expired earnings credits,
based on a discounted Treasury bill rate. Rates and clearing balance
levels used in the 2011 projected NICB are based on July 2010 rates and
clearing balance levels. Because clearing balances are held for
clearing priced services transactions or offsetting priced-services
fees, they are directly related to priced services. The net earnings or
expense attributed to the investments and the cost associated with
holding clearing balances, therefore, are considered net income for
priced services.
NICB is projected to be $1.2 million for 2011, including earnings
on imputed reserve requirements.\12\ The imputed rate is equal to the
three-month Treasury bill rate with no constant spread due to the
results of the interest rate sensitivity analysis. See the ``Analysis
of the 2011 PSAF'' section for more information on the interest rate
sensitivity analysis results and the effect on the 2011 NICB.
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\12\ The 2010 NICB was initially budgeted to be $14.5 million
and is now estimated at $8.0 million. The decrease in NICB is due to
a decrease in clearing balance levels.
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2. Calculating Cost Recovery--The PSAF and NICB are incorporated
into the projected and actual annual cost-recovery calculations for
Reserve Bank priced services. Each year, the Board projects the PSAF
for the following year using July clearing balance and rate data during
the process of establishing priced services fees. When calculating
actual cost recovery for the priced services at the end of each year,
the Board historically has used the PSAF derived during the price-
setting process with only minimal adjustments for actual rates or
balance levels.\13\ Beginning in 2009, in light of the uncertainty
about the long-term effect that the payment of interest on reserve
balances would have on the level of clearing balances, the Board
adjusts the PSAF used in the actual cost-recovery calculation to
reflect the actual clearing balance levels maintained throughout the
year. NICB is also projected in the fall of each year using July data
and is recalculated to reflect actual interest rates and clearing
balance levels during the year when calculating actual priced services
cost recovery.
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\13\ The largest portion of the PSAF, the target ROE,
historically has been fixed. Imputed sales tax, income tax, and the
FDIC assessment are recalculated at the end of each year to adjust
for actual expenditures, net income, and clearing balance levels.
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3. Analysis of the 2011 PSAF--The decrease in the 2011 PSAF is due
primarily to a reduction in the level of imputed equity associated with
a decrease in assets and clearing balances.
Projected 2011 Federal Reserve priced-services assets, reflected in
table 3, have decreased $1,844.0 million, mainly due to a decline in
imputed investments in marketable securities of $1,496.1 million. This
reduction stems from the decline in clearing balances held by
depository institutions at Reserve Banks.
The priced services balance sheet includes projected clearing
balances of $2,600.3 million for 2011, which represents a decrease of
$2,231.2 million from the amount of clearing balances on the balance
sheet for the budgeted 2010 PSAF. Because of the continued uncertainty
regarding the level of clearing balances in an interest-on-reserves
environment, the actual PSAF costs used in cost-recovery calculations
will continue to be based on the actual levels of clearing balances
held throughout 2011.
Credit float, which represents the difference between items in
process of collection and deferred credit items, increased from
$1,200.0 million in 2010
[[Page 67736]]
to $1,800.0 million in 2011.\14\ The increase is primarily a result of
credit float generated by a greater use of Check 21 deferred-
availability products.
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\14\ Credit float occurs when the Reserve Banks present
transactions to the paying bank prior to providing credit to the
depositing bank.
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As previously mentioned, clearing balances are available as a
funding source for priced-services assets. As shown in table 4, in
2011, $15.5 million in clearing balances is used as a funding source
for short-term assets. Long-term liabilities and equity exceed long-
term assets by $23.8 million; therefore, no core clearing balances are
used to fund long-term assets.
The Board uses an interest rate sensitivity analysis to ensure that
the interest rate risk of the priced services balance sheet, and its
effect on cost recovery, are appropriately managed and that the priced
services long-term assets are appropriately funded with long-term
liabilities and equity. The interest rate sensitivity analysis measures
the relationship between rate sensitive assets and liabilities when
they reprice as a result of a change in interest rates.\15\ If a 200
basis point increase or decrease in interest rates changes priced
services cost recovery by more than 2 percentage points, rather than
using core clearing balances to fund long-term assets, long-term debt
is imputed.
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\15\ Interest rate sensitive assets and liabilities are defined
as those balances that will reprice in a year.
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The interest rate sensitivity analysis shown in table 5 indicates
that a 200 basis point decrease in rates decreases cost recovery 5.1
percentage points, while an increase of 200 basis points in rates
increases cost recovery 4.9 percentage points. The greater-than-two-
percentage-point effect on cost recovery is the result of a large gap
between rate-sensitive assets and liabilities, and the relationship to
priced services net income. The gap is caused by an increase in rate
sensitive assets, specifically, the imputed federal funds investment
needed to offset projected level of credit float in 2011. The results
of the analysis have the following effects on the 2011 PSAF and NICB:
Generally, the results of the interest rate sensitivity
analysis indicate when long-term debt should be imputed rather than
using core clearing balances to fund long-term assets. The requirement
to impute debt remedies an asset mismatch when too many clearing
balances (rate sensitive liabilities) are being used to fund long-term
assets and there is a need for another funding source (i.e. long-term
debt). For the 2011 PSAF, however, the mismatch arises from the level
of credit float rather than the use of clearing balances to fund long-
term assets. If debt were to be imputed for the 2011 PSAF, clearing
balances now used to finance assets would be invested in rate sensitive
assets. Therefore, imputing debt would cause the gap between interest-
rate-sensitive assets and liabilities to widen further, resulting in an
even greater effect on cost recovery than shown in table 5.
Accordingly, the Board will not impute debt for the 2011 PSAF. Going
forward, imputed debt will be limited to the amount of clearing
balances used to finance long-term assets. (See table 4 for the portion
of clearing balances used to fund priced-services assets.)
Because of the heightened cost recovery sensitivity to
interest rate fluctuations, the investment of clearing balances is
limited to three-month Treasury bills (with no additional imputed
constant spread).
As shown in table 3, the amount of equity imputed for the 2011 PSAF
is $277.2 million, a decrease of $92.2 million from the imputed equity
for 2010. In accordance with FAS 158 [ASC 715], this amount includes an
accumulated other comprehensive loss of $343.2 million. Both the
capital-to-total-assets ratio and the capital-to-risk-weighted-assets
ratio meet or exceed the regulatory requirements for a well-capitalized
depository institution. Equity is calculated as 5 percent of total
assets, and the ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets exceeds 10
percent.\16\ The Reserve Banks imputed an FDIC assessment for the
priced services based on the FDIC's proposed assessment rates and the
level of clearing balances held at Reserve Banks.\17\ For 2011, the
FDIC assessment is imputed at $5.3 million, compared with an FDIC
assessment of $9.6 million in 2010.
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\16\ In December 2006, the Board, the FDIC, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, and the Office of Thrift Supervision
announced an interim ruling that excludes FAS 158 [ASC 715]-related
accumulated other comprehensive income or losses from the
calculation of regulatory capital. The Reserve Banks, however,
elected to impute total equity at 5 percent of assets, as indicated
previously, until the regulators announce a final ruling.
\17\ For information on the proposed FDIC assessment rates, see
http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2010/pr10229.html.
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Table 6 shows the imputed PSAF elements, including the pretax ROE
and other required PSAF costs, for 2010 and 2011. The $3.4 million
decrease in ROE is caused by a lower amount of imputed equity, slightly
offset by a higher target ROE rate. Imputed sales taxes decreased from
$5.2 million in 2010 to $4.2 million in 2011. The effective income tax
rate used in 2011 decreased to 32.4 percent from 33.1 percent in 2010.
The priced services portion of the Board's expenses decreased $2.0
million, from $7.2 million in 2010 to $5.2 million in 2011.
Table 3--Comparison of Pro Forma Balance Sheets for Federal Reserve
Priced Services \18\
[Millions of dollars--projected average for year]
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2011 2010 Change
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Short-term assets:
Imputed reserve requirement on $440.0 $603.1 $(163.1)
clearing balances.................
Receivables........................ 41.4 45.9 (4.5)
Materials and supplies............. 1.5 0.9 0.6
Prepaid expenses................... 7.6 23.2 (15.6)
Items in process of collection \19\ 300.0 520.0 (220.0)
--------------------------------
Total short-term assets........ 790.7 1,193.1 (402.6)
Imputed investments.................... 3,968.6 5,464.7 (1,496.1)
Long-term assets:
Premises \20\...................... 173.1 235.4 (62.3)
Furniture and equipment............ 43.2 62.1 (18.9)
Leasehold improvements and long- 68.2 60.3 7.9
term prepayments..................
Prepaid pension costs.............. 299.8 148.9 150.9
Prepaid FDIC asset................. 10.9 24.6 (13.7)
[[Page 67737]]
Deferred tax asset................. 189.7 198.9 (9.2)
--------------------------------
Total long-term assets......... 784.9 730.2 54.7
--------------------------------
Total assets............... 5,544.0 7,388.0 (1,844.0)
--------------------------------
Short-term liabilities \21\:
Clearing balances.................. 2,600.3 4,831.5 (2,231.2)
Deferred credit items \19\......... 2,100.0 1,720.0 380.0
Short-term payables................ 35.0 59.8 (24.8)
--------------------------------
Total short-term liabilities... 4,735.3 6,611.3 (1,876.0)
Long-term liabilities \21\
Postemployment/postretirement 531.5 407.3 124.2
benefits liability \22\...........
--------------------------------
Total liabilities.............. 5,266.8 7,018.6 (1,751.8)
Equity \23\............................ 277.2 369.4 (92.2)
--------------------------------
Total liabilities and equity....... 5,544.0 7,388.0 (1,844.0)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ The 2010 PSAF values in tables 3, 4, and 6 reflect the budgeted
2010 PSAF of $50.2 million approved by the Board in October 2009.
\19\ Represents float that is directly estimated at the service level.
\20\ Includes the allocation of Board of Governors assets to priced
services of $0.7 million for 2011 and $0.9 million for 2010.
\21\ No debt is imputed because clearing balances are a funding source.
\22\ Includes the allocation of Board of Governors liabilities to priced
services of $0.5 million for 2011 and $0.4 million for 2010.
\23\ Includes an accumulated other comprehensive loss of $407.7 million
for 2010 and $343.2 million for 2011, which reflects the ongoing
amortization of the accumulated loss in accordance with FAS 158 [ASC
715]. Future gains or losses, and their effects on the pro forma
balance sheet, cannot be projected.
Table 4--Portion of Clearing Balances Used to Fund Priced-Services Assets
[Millions of dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Short-term asset financing
Short-term assets to be financed:
Receivables............................. $41.4 .............. $45.9 ..............
Materials and supplies.................. 1.5 .............. 0.9 ..............
Prepaid expenses........................ 7.6 .............. 23.2 ..............
---------------- ----------------
Total short-term assets to be 50.5 .............. 70.0 ..............
financed...........................
Short-term funding sources..................
Short-term payables..................... 35.0 .............. 59.8 ..............
Portion of short-term assets funded with .............. 15.5 .............. 10.2
clearing balances \24\.................
B. Long-term asset financing
Long-term assets to be financed:
Premises................................ 173.1 .............. 235.4 ..............
Furniture and equipment................. 43.2 .............. 62.1 ..............
Leasehold improvements and long-term 68.2 .............. 60.3 ..............
prepayments............................
Prepaid pension costs................... 299.8 .............. 148.9 ..............
Prepaid FDIC asset...................... 10.9 .............. 24.6 ..............
Deferred tax asset...................... 189.7 .............. 198.9 ..............
---------------- ----------------
Total long-term assets to be 784.9 .............. 730.2 ..............
financed...........................
Long-term funding sources:
Postemployment/postretirement benefits 531.5 .............. 407.3 ..............
liability..............................
Imputed equity \25\..................... 277.2 .............. 369.4 ..............
---------------- ----------------
Total long-term funding sources..... 808.7 .............. 776.7 ..............
Portion of long-term assets funded with core .............. 0.0 .............. 0.0
clearing balances \24\.....................
---------------- ----------------
C. Total clearing balances used for funding .............. 15.5 .............. 10.2
priced-services assets.........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Clearing balances shown in table 3 are available for financing priced-services assets. Using these balances
reduces the amount available for investment in the NICB calculation. Long-term assets are financed with long-
term liabilities, equity, and core clearing balances; a total of $1 billion in clearing balances is available
for this purpose in 2010 and 2011, respectively. Short-term assets are financed with short-term payables and
clearing balances not used to finance long-term assets. No short- or long-term debt is imputed.
\25\ See table 6 for calculation of required imputed equity amount.
[[Page 67738]]
Table 5--2011 Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis \26\
[Millions of dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rate
Rate sensitive insensitive Total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assets:
Imputed reserve requirement on clearing balances............ $440.0 .............. $440.0
Imputed investments......................................... 3,968.6 .............. 3,968.6
Receivables................................................. .............. $41.4 41.4
Materials and supplies...................................... .............. 1.5 1.5
Prepaid expenses............................................ .............. 7.6 7.6
Items in process of collection.............................. .............. 300.0 300.0
Long-term assets............................................ .............. 784.9 784.9
-----------------------------------------------
Total assets............................................ 4,408.6 1,135.4 5,544.0
================================================================================================================
Liabilities:
Clearing balances........................................... 2,600.3 .............. 2,600.3
Deferred credit items....................................... .............. 2,100.0 2,100.0
Short-term payables......................................... .............. 35.0 35.0
Long-term liabilities....................................... .............. 531.5 531.5
-----------------------------------------------
Total liabilities....................................... 2,600.3 2,666.5 5,266.8
===============================================
Rate change results: .............. 200 basis 200 basis
point decrease point increase
in rates in rates
-----------------------------------------------
Asset yield ($4,408.6 x rate change)........................ .............. $(88.2) $88.2
Liability cost ($2,600.3 x rate change)..................... .............. (52.0) 52.0
-------------------------------
Effect of 200 basis point change........................ .............. (36.2) 36.2
===============================
2011 budgeted revenue....................................... .............. 497.6 497.6
Effect of change............................................ .............. (36.2) 36.2
-------------------------------
Revenue adjusted for effect of interest rate change..... .............. 461.4 533.8
===============================
2011 budgeted total expenses................................ .............. 443.4 443.4
2011 budgeted PSAF.......................................... .............. 44.3 44.3
Tax effect of interest rate change ($ change x 32.4%)....... .............. (11.7) 11.7
-------------------------------
Total recovery amounts.................................. .............. 476.0 499.4
===============================
Recovery rate before interest rate change................... .............. 102.0% 102.0%
Recovery rate after interest rate change.................... .............. 96.9% 106.9%
Effect of interest rate change on cost recovery \27\........ .............. (5.1)% 4.9%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The interest rate sensitivity analysis evaluates the level of interest rate risk presented by the
difference between rate-sensitive assets and rate-sensitive liabilities. The analysis reviews the ratio of
rate-sensitive assets to rate-sensitive liabilities and the effect on cost recovery of a change in interest
rates of up to 200 basis points.
\27\ The effect of a potential change in rates is greater than a two percentage point change in cost recovery;
however, no long-term debt is imputed for 2011 because the priced services have adequate funding sources. See
the ``Analysis of the 2011 PSAF'' section for more information on the interest rate sensitivity analysis
results and its effect on the 2011 PSAF and NICB.
Table 6--Derivation of the 2011 and 2010 PSAF
[Millions of dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011 2010
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Imputed elements
Short-term debt \28\.......... ........... $0.0 ........... ........... $0.0
Long-term debt \29\........... ........... 0.0 ........... ........... 0.0
Equity
Total assets from table 3. $5,544.0 ........... ........... $7,388.0
Required capital ratio 5% ........... ........... 5%
\30\.....................
------------- --------------------------------------
Total equity.......... ........... $277.2 ........... ........... $369.4
B. Cost of capital
1. Financing rates/costs
Short-term debt........... ........... N/A ........... ........... N/A
Long-term debt............ ........... N/A ........... ........... N/A
[[Page 67739]]
Pretax return on equity ........... 8.9% ........... ........... 7.6%
\31\.....................
2. Elements of capital costs
Short-term debt........... ........... ........... $0.0 ........... ........... $0.0
Long-term debt............ ........... ........... 0.0 ........... ........... 0.0
Equity.................... $277.2x8.9% = 24.8 $369.4x7.6% = 28.2
------------- ------------
........... ........... $24.8 ........... ........... $28.2
C. Other required PSAF costs
Sales taxes................... ........... $4.2 ........... ........... $5.2
FDIC assessment............... ........... 5.3 ........... ........... 9.6
Board of Governors expenses... ........... 5.2 ........... ........... 7.2
------------- -------------------------
........... ........... 14.7 ........... ........... 22.0
------------- ------------
D. Total PSAF..................... ........... ........... $39.5 ........... ........... $50.2
============= ============
As a percent of assets........ ........... ........... 0.7% ........... ........... 0.7%
As a percent of expenses \32\. ........... ........... 8.9% ........... ........... 9.6%
E. Tax rates...................... ........... ........... 32.4% ........... ........... 33.1%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ No short-term debt is imputed because clearing balances are a funding source for those assets that are not
financed with short-term payables.
\29\ No long-term debt is imputed because core clearing balances are a funding source.
\30\ Based on the regulatory requirements for a well-capitalized institution for the purpose of assessing
insurance premiums.
\31\ The 2011 ROE is equal to a risk-free rate plus a risk premium (beta * market risk premium). The 2011 after-
tax CAPM ROE is calculated as 0.16% + (1 * 5.88%) = 6.04%. Using a tax rate of 32.4%, the after-tax ROE is
converted into a pretax ROE, which results in a pretax ROE of (6.04%/(1-32.4%)) = 8.9%.
\32\ System 2011 budgeted priced services expenses less shipping and float are $441.7 million.
Table 7--Computation of 2011 Capital Adequacy for Federal Reserve Priced Services
[Millions of dollars]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Weighted
Assets Risk weight assets
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Imputed reserve requirement on clearing balances................ $440.0 0.0 $0.0
Imputed investments:
3-month Treasury bills \33\................................. 2,168.6 0.0 0.0
Federal funds \34\.......................................... 1,800.0 0.2 360.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total imputed investments............................... 3,968.6 .............. 360.0
Receivables..................................................... 41.4 0.2 8.3
Materials and supplies.......................................... 1.5 1.0 1.5
Prepaid expenses................................................ 7.6 1.0 7.6
Items in process of collection.................................. 300.0 0.2 60.0
Premises........................................................ 173.1 1.0 173.1
Furniture and equipment......................................... 43.2 1.0 43.2
Leasehold improvements and long-term prepayments................ 68.2 1.0 68.2
Prepaid pension costs........................................... 299.8 1.0 299.8
Prepaid FDIC asset.............................................. 10.9 1.0 10.9
Deferred tax asset.............................................. 189.7 1.0 189.7
-----------------------------------------------
Total....................................................... 5,544.0 .............. 1,222.3
===============================================
Imputed equity for 2011......................................... $277.2
Capital to risk-weighted assets................................. 22.7%
Capital to total assets......................................... 5.0%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ The imputed investments are similar to those for which rates are available on the Federal Reserve's H.15
statistical release, which can be located at http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/data.htm.
\34\ The investments are computed from the amounts arising from the collection of items prior to providing
credit according to established availability schedules. These imputed amounts are invested in federal funds.
C. Earnings Credits on Clearing Balances--The Reserve Banks will
maintain the current rate of 80 percent of the three-month Treasury
bill rate to calculate earnings credits on clearing balances.
Clearing balances were introduced in 1981, as part of the Board's
implementation of the Monetary Control Act, to facilitate access to
Federal Reserve priced services by institutions that did not have
sufficient reserve balances to support the settlement of their payment
transactions. The
[[Page 67740]]
earnings credit calculation uses a percentage discount on a rolling 13-
week average of the annualized coupon equivalent yield of three-month
Treasury bills in the secondary market. Earnings credits, which are
calculated monthly, can be used only to offset charges for priced
services and expire if not used within one year.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ A band is established around the contracted clearing
balance to determine the maximum balance on which credits are earned
as well as any deficiency charges. The clearing balance allowance is
2 percent of the contracted amount or $25,000, whichever is greater.
Earnings credits are based on the period-average balance maintained
up to a maximum of the contracted amount plus the clearing balance
allowance. Deficiency charges apply when the average balance falls
below the contracted amount less the allowance, although credits are
still earned on the average maintained balance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Check Service--Table 8 shows the 2009, 2010 estimated, and 2011
budgeted cost recovery performance for the commercial check service.
Table 8--Check Service Pro Forma Cost and Revenue Performance
[$ millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 Recovery
rate after
Year 1 Revenue 2 Total 3 Net income 4 Targeted ROE targeted ROE
expense (ROE) [1-2] [1/(2+4)]
(percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009............................ 490.9 514.6 -23.7 14.4 92.8
2010 (estimate)................. 358.7 337.6 21.1 8.2 103.7
2011 (budget)................... 279.2 262.2 17.0 9.3 102.8
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. 2010 Estimate--For 2010, the Reserve Banks estimate that the
check service will recover 103.7 percent of total expenses and targeted
ROE, compared with the budgeted recovery rate of 94.7 percent. The
Reserve Banks expect to recover all actual and imputed costs of
providing check services and earn a net income of $21.1 million (see
table 8).
The higher-than-budgeted cost recovery is the result of higher
projected revenue of $13.3 million. In paper services, revenue is
higher than expected because of mid-year price increases and higher-
than-budgeted exception item volume. In electronic services, the higher
revenue is due to greater use of products with later deposit deadlines
and volume destined to higher-priced paper endpoints. Expenses are
projected to be $16.1 million lower than expected due primarily to the
full-year effects of cost savings associated with the earlier-than-
expected elimination of transportation for paper checks among Reserve
Bank offices, the transition from courier service to overnight delivery
service for paper check presentments, and the accelerated restructuring
of the Reserve Banks' check processing infrastructure.
The general decline in the number of checks written continues to
influence the decline in checks collected by the Reserve Banks. Through
August, total forward check volume and return check volume is 9 percent
and 16 percent lower, respectively, than the same period last year. For
full-year 2010, the Reserve Banks estimate that their total forward
check collection volume will decline nearly 10 percent and return check
volume will decline 15 percent from 2009 levels.\36\ The proportion of
checks deposited and presented electronically has grown steadily in
2010 (see table 9). The Reserve Banks expect that year-end 2010
FedForward deposit and FedReceipt presentment penetration rates will
reach 99.7 percent and 98.9 percent, respectively. The Reserve Banks
also expect that year-end 2010 FedReturn and FedReceipt Return
penetration rates will reach 96.2 percent and 80.0 percent,
respectively. FedReturn and FedReturn Receipt penetration rates have
lagged those of FedForward and FedReceipt because initial efforts by
the Reserve Banks and depository institutions to apply electronics to
the check clearing process focused on the relatively higher volume
forward collection process. Moreover, the recent economic environment
has limited depository institutions' back-office investments to apply
electronics to the check return process. To increase the adoption of
FedReceipt Return, the Reserve Banks have introduced a PDF delivery
option for lower-volume receivers of returned checks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Total Reserve Bank forward check volumes are expected to
drop from roughly 8.6 billion in 2009 to 7.8 billion in 2010. Total
Reserve Bank return check volumes are expected to drop from roughly
87.6 million in 2009 to 74.4 million in 2010.
Table 9--Check 21 Product Penetration Rates a
[percent] b
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forward deposit volume Return volume c
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedForward FedReceipt FedReturn FedReceipt return
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Full-year Year-end Full-year Year-end Full-year Year-end Full-year Year-end
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005............................................................ 1.9 5.0 <0.1 0.1 4.0 6.9 N/A N/A
2006............................................................ 14.4 26.0 1.0 3.5 19.7 30.5 <0.1 <0.1
2007............................................................ 42.6 57.9 12.5 22.7 37.8 45.4 0.5 1.1
2008............................................................ 76.8 91.8 41.5 60.7 58.4 72.0 6.4 13.2
2009............................................................ 96.5 98.6 80.4 91.7 81.2 91.2 34.1 50.8
2010 (estimate)................................................. 99.4 99.7 95.8 98.9 94.3 96.2 65.4 80.0
2011 (budget)................................................... 99.7 99.8 99.7 99.7 97.3 98.2 95.0 99.7
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a FedForward is the electronic forward check collection product; FedReceipt is electronic presentment with accompanying images; FedReturn is the
electronic check return product; and FedReceipt Return is the electronic delivery of returned checks with accompanying images.
[[Page 67741]]
b Deposit and presentment statistics are calculated as a percentage of total forward collection volume. Return statistics are calculated as a percentage
of total return volume.
c The Reserve Banks began offering PDF delivery of returned checks in 2009. For 2011 budget, volume associated with the delivery of returned checks in
PDF files is included in FedReceipt Return volume.
Paper forward-collection volume is expected to decline nearly 85
percent and paper return-check volume is expected to decline 74 percent
for the full year (see table 10).
Table 10--Paper Check Product Volume Changes
[Percent]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Budgeted 2010 change Estimated 2010 change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Forward Collection.......................................... -84 -85
Returns..................................................... -76 -74
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. 2011 Pricing--In 2011, the Reserve Banks project that the check
service will recover 102.8 percent of total expenses and targeted ROE.
Revenue is projected to be $279.2 million, a decline of $79.5 million
from 2010. This decline is driven largely by an increasing proportion
of checks being deposited and presented electronically and by projected
reductions in both forward check collection and return check volume.
Total expenses for the check service are projected to be $262.2
million, a decline of $75.2 million from 2010. The reduction in check
costs is driven primarily by the full-year effects of cost savings
associated with the consolidation of Reserve Bank check-processing
sites, associated staff reductions, and reductions in transportation
costs, as well as indirect support and overhead cost savings.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ In response to both the decline in check volume and the
electronic check-clearing methods enabled by Check 21, the Reserve
Banks fundamentally restructured their check-processing operations
and reduced the number of sites at which they process paper checks--
from 45 in late 2003 to one in 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For 2011, the Reserve Banks estimate that their total forward check
volume will decline nearly 10 percent (see table 11). FedForward and
traditional paper check volumes are expected to decline 10 percent and
60 percent, respectively. The decline in Reserve Bank check volume can
be attributed to increased competition, increased use of direct
exchanges, and the continued decline in check use nationwide. The
Reserve Banks also expect that total return volume will decline 14
percent, as FedReturn volume declines 11 percent and traditional paper
returns decline 59 percent.
Table 11--Check Volumes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011 Budgeted volume Growth from 2010
(millions of items) estimate (percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedForward.................................................... 6,960 -10
Traditional paper forward..................................... 18 -60
-------------------------------------------------
Total forward............................................. 6,978 -10
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedReturn..................................................... 62 -11
Traditional paper return...................................... 2 -59
-------------------------------------------------
Total return.............................................. 64 -14
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Reserve Banks will reduce FedForward fees, on average, 8
percent for checks presented electronically and increase fees 50
percent for checks presented as substitute checks (see table 12). The
average fee paid by FedForward depositors will decline by 14 percent
from the average 2010 fee, as the number of depository institutions
that accept their presentments electronically increases. FedReturn
fees, on average, will remain flat for checks returned electronically
through FedLine, decrease 30 percent for checks returned electronically
via PDF, and increase 14 percent for substitute check endpoints. The
average fee paid by depository institutions using FedReturn will
decrease 20 percent as the number of institutions that accept their
returns electronically increases.
The Reserve Banks project that less than 1 percent of check forward
deposit volume will be in traditional paper-based products.
Accordingly, for the traditional paper check products, the Reserve
Banks will increase forward paper check collection fees 181 percent and
increase paper return fees 81 percent (see table 12). These increases
reflect the high costs of handling the small remaining paper volume and
are designed to encourage the continued adoption of Check 21 services.
[[Page 67742]]
Table 12--2011 Fee Changes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2010 Average fee 2011 Average fee Fee change (percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedForward
Cash letter fee........................... $3.09 $3.18 3
Electronic endpoints...................... 0.0204 0.0189 -8
Substitute check endpoints................ 0.1013 0.1514 50
Weighted average fee \a,b\............ 0.0252 0.0216 -14
FedReturn
Cash letter fee........................... 3.51 3.51 0
Electronic endpoints......................
FedLine............................... 0.4282 0.4296 <1
PDF................................... 1.2151 0.85 -30
Substitute check endpoints................ 1.2151 1.39 14
Weighted average fee \a,b\............ 0.8183 0.6515 -20
Paper
Forward collection........................ 0.4111 1.1537 181
Returns................................... 5.7180 10.3651 81
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a The weighted average fees in this table represent combined cash letter and per-item fees for each product
type, whereas the electronic and substitute check endpoints reflect only per item fees.
b The weighted average fees for FedForward and FedReturn products are dependent on electronic receipt
penetration rates. In this table, the weighted average fees are based on electronic receipt penetration rates
estimated for full-year 2010 and projected for full-year 2011.
Risks to the Reserve Banks' ability to achieve budgeted 2011 cost
recovery for the check service include greater-than-expected check
volume losses to correspondent banks, aggregators, and direct
exchanges, which would result in lower-than-anticipated revenue, and
cost overruns associated with unanticipated problems with the Reserve
Banks' Check 21 platform.
E. FedACH Service--Table 13 shows the 2009, 2010 estimate, and 2011
budgeted cost-recovery performance for the commercial FedACH service.
Table 13--FedACH Service Pro Forma Cost and Revenue Performance
[$ millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 Recovery rate
2 Total expense 3 Net income 4 Targeted ROE after targeted
Year 1 Revenue (ROE) [1-2] ROE [1/(2+4)]
(percent)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009......................... 94.7 98.6 -3.8 2.9 93.4
2010 (estimate).............. 110.6 105.9 4.7 2.7 101.9
2011 (budget)................ 110.4 106.1 4.3 3.8 100.4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. 2010 Estimate--The Reserve Banks estimate that the FedACH
service will recover 101.9 percent of total expenses and targeted ROE,
compared with the budgeted recovery rate of 99.9 percent. The Reserve
Banks expect to recover all actual and imputed costs of providing
FedACH services and earn net income of $4.7 million. Through August,
FedACH commercial origination volume is 3 percent higher than it was
during the same period last year. For the full year, the Reserve Banks
estimate that volume will grow nearly 3 percent.
2. 2011 Pricing--The Reserve Banks project that the FedACH service
will recover 100.4 percent of total expenses and targeted ROE in 2011.
Total revenue is budgeted to decrease $0.2 million from the 2010
estimate, primarily as a result of reductions in net income on clearing
balances and electronic connection revenue, which is offset in part by
an increase in product revenue. Total expenses are budgeted to increase
$0.2 million from the 2010 estimate.
The Reserve Banks expect both FedACH commercial origination and
receipt volume to grow approximately 3 percent in 2011, consistent with
2010 volume trends. Moreover, the sustained growth of direct exchanges,
bank merger activity, and competition from the private-sector ACH
operator, Electronic Payments Network (EPN), is expected to limit
FedACH volume growth.
The Reserve Banks will maintain processing and service fees at
current levels with two exceptions. The Reserve Banks will increase the
addenda record fees for origination and receipt transactions from
$0.0013 to $0.0015 and the monthly information extract file fee from
$50 to $75.
Risks to meeting the Reserve Banks' budgeted 2011 cost recovery
include lower-than-anticipated volume growth due to competition from
EPN, increases in direct ACH exchanges, increased on-us volume due to
bank mergers, and unanticipated problems with technology upgrades that
result in cost overruns.
F. Fedwire Funds and National Settlement Services--Table 14 shows
the 2009, 2010 estimate, and 2011 budgeted cost-recovery performance
for the Fedwire Funds and National Settlement Services.
[[Page 67743]]
Table 14--Fedwire Funds and National Settlement Services Pro Forma Cost and Revenue Performance
[$ millions]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 Recovery rate
2 Total expense 3 Net income after targeted
Year 1 Revenue (ROE) [1-2] 4 Targeted ROE ROE [1/(2+4)]
(percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009.............................................................. 65.6 69.3 -3.6 2.0 92.1
2010 (estimate)................................................... 79.1 77.1 2.0 1.9 100.2
2011 (budget)..................................................... 84.0 80.3 3.7 2.9 101.0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. 2010 Estimate--The Reserve Banks estimate that the Fedwire Funds
and National Settlement Services will recover 100.2 percent of total
expenses and targeted ROE, compared with a 2010 budgeted recovery rate
of 100.9 percent. The lower-than-expected recovery rate is attributed
to lower-than-expected revenues from transaction volume and NICB.
Through August, online Fedwire Funds volume was down 2 percent from the
same period in 2009. For full-year 2010, the Reserve Banks estimate
that online Fedwire Funds volume will decline 2 percent, compared to a
budgeted decline of less than 1 percent. With respect to the National
Settlement Service, the Reserve Banks estimate that the volume of
settlement files will decrease 32 percent and the volume of settlement
file entries will increase 11 percent for full-year 2010. The decline
in settlement files and increase in entries is due primarily to the
continued attrition and consolidation of local check clearinghouse
arrangements.
2. 2011 Pricing--The Reserve Banks expect the Fedwire Funds and
National Settlement Services to recover 101.0 percent of total expenses
and targeted ROE in 2011. The Reserve Banks project total expenses to
increase $3.3 million from the 2010 estimate. This increase is
primarily due to pension costs and increasing amortization costs of the
Fedwire technology migration. The Reserve Banks project total revenue
to increase $4.9 million from the 2010 estimate due to increases in
electronic connection revenue and the implementation of new fees and a
new volume-based transfer fee structure for the Fedwire Funds Service,
in addition to fee increases for the National Settlement Service.
The Reserve Banks will implement two new fees for the Fedwire Funds
Service. First, an end-of-day per-item surcharge of $0.18 will apply to
the sender of Fedwire Funds transfers processed by the Reserve Banks
after 5 p.m. ET.\38\ Second, a $10 monthly fee will be charged for the
usage of the import/export feature of the FedLine Advantage electronic
access package for the Fedwire Funds Service.\39\ This feature,
currently provided by the Reserve Banks for no additional charge,
allows FedLine Advantage customers to import (export) an external file
with multiple transactions into (from) the Fedwire Funds Service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ This fee is consistent with the Federal Reserve's policy to
discourage the concentration of payments late in the business day.
\39\ This fee is applied to customers that originate transfers
through the FedLine Advantage electronic access channel and have
activated the import/export feature for the Fedwire Funds Service at
any point during a given calendar month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Reserve Banks will change the Fedwire Funds Service's volume-
based transfer fee structure to include incentive discounts based on
customers' historic volume. This change will increase the base price of
transfers but will provide substantial discounts on these prices for a
portion of customers' expected volume. The change will be implemented
in two parts. First, the existing fees for all volume tiers will
increase by as much as 73 percent.\40\ Second, the Reserve Banks will
apply an 80 percent discount on these new fees for the portion of a
customer's monthly online volume that exceeds 50 percent of its
historic benchmark volume.\41\ The Reserve Banks expect online volumes
for the Fedwire Funds Service to increase 1 percent in 2011 from 2010
estimates in response to this new fee structure and general
expectations for improved economic conditions.
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\40\ The fee for the first 14,000 transfers will increase to
$0.52 from $0.30. The fee for the next 76,000 transfers will
increase to $0.23 from $0.19. The fee for any additional transfers
will increase to $0.13 from $0.09.
\41\ Historic benchmark volume will be based on a customer's
average daily activity over the previous five full calendar years,
adjusted for the number of business days in the current month. If a
customer has less than five full calendar years of previous
activity, then the historic benchmark volume will be based on the
daily activity for as many full calendar years of available data. If
a customer has less than one full calendar year's worth of prior
activity, historic benchmark volume will be set retroactively at
actual volume for the current month.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The change in the volume-based transfer fees for the Fedwire Funds
Service is consistent with the Reserve Banks' objectives to identify
stable sources of revenue to recover the high fixed costs of operating
the service and to improve the service's competitiveness in the
wholesale payments market. The fee increases will produce more revenue
from the relatively stable portion of a customer's monthly online
volume (i.e., the first 50 percent of a customer's historic benchmark
volume). The Reserve Banks expect these changes to improve their
ability to retain existing business and attract new volume by aligning
the marginal price of transfers for customers closer to the marginal
cost of providing the service. The decrease in the marginal price of
transfers is consistent with the Federal Reserve's objective to foster
efficiency in the payment systems and to improve the efficiency of
Reserve Bank provided services. With respect to the National Settlement
Service, the Reserve Banks will increase the settlement file fee from
$18 to $20, and the settlement entry fee from $0.80 to $0.90.\42\
Settlement file and settlement entry volumes for the National
Settlement Service are budgeted to decrease slightly in 2011 from 2010
estimates.
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\42\ The settlement file fee was last increased in 2010, from
$14.00 to $18.00. The settlement entry fee was last changed in 2002,
lowered from $0.95 to $0.80.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Fedwire Securities Service--Table 15 shows the 2009, 2010
estimate, and 2011 budgeted cost recovery performance for the Fedwire
Securities Service.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ The Reserve Banks provide transfer services for securities
issued by the U.S. Treasury, federal government agencies,
government-sponsored enterprises, and certain international
institutions. The priced component of this service, reflected in
this notice, consists of revenues, expenses, and volumes associated
with the transfer of all non-Treasury securities. For Treasury
securities, the U.S. Treasury assesses fees for the securities
transfer component of the service. The Reserve Banks assess a fee
for the funds settlement component of a Treasury securities
transfer; this component is not treated as a priced service.
[[Page 67744]]
Table 15--Fedwire Securities Service Pro Forma Cost and Revenue Performance
[$ millions]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 Recovery rate
2 Total expense 3 Net income after targeted
Year 1 Revenue (ROE) [1-2] 4 Targeted ROE ROE [1/(2+4)]
(percent)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009.............................................................. 24.2 25.1 -0.9 0.7 93.8
2010 (estimate)................................................... 24.2 22.7 1.6 0.6 104.3
2011 (budget)..................................................... 24.0 22.3 1.7 0.8 103.8
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. 2010 Estimate--The Reserve Banks estimate that the Fedwire
Securities Service will recover 104.3 percent of total expenses and
targeted ROE, compared with a 2010 budgeted recovery rate of 103.9
percent. The higher-than-budgeted recovery rate is primarily
attributable to lower-than-expected pension costs and higher-than-
expected volume for Treasury securities.\44\ Through August, online
securities volume is down almost 31 percent from the same period in
2009, due primarily to lower volume for agency securities.
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\44\ Total operating costs are allocated between the U.S.
Treasury and the Reserve Banks according to the volume of transfers
for Treasury securities relative to non-Treasury securities. Through
August, Treasury securities volume is 17 percent higher than
budgeted and non-Treasury securities volume is 28 percent lower than
budgeted, resulting in a greater-than-expected share of operating
costs allocated to the U.S. Treasury.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. 2011 Pricing--The Reserve Banks project that the Fedwire
Securities Service will recover 103.8 percent of total expenses and
targeted ROE in 2011. The Reserve Banks project that 2011 revenue and
expense will decrease slightly from the 2010 estimate. For 2011, online
securities volume is projected to remain flat from current 2010
estimates.
The fees for the Fedwire Securities Service will remain unchanged
from 2010.
H. Electronic Access--The Reserve Banks allocate the costs and
revenues associated with electronic access to the Reserve Banks' priced
services. There are currently six electronic access channels through
which customers can access the Reserve Banks' priced services: FedLine
Direct [reg], FedLine Command [reg], FedLine
Advantage [reg], FedLine Web [reg], FedMail
[reg], and FedPhone [reg].\45\ The Reserve Banks
package these channels into nine electronic access packages that are
supplemented by a number of premium (or [agrave] la carte) access and
accounting information options.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ FedLine Direct, FedLine Command, FedLine Advantage, FedLine
Web, FedMail, and FedPhone are registered trademarks of the Federal
Reserve Banks. These connections may also be used to access
nonpriced services provided by the Reserve Banks. FedPhone is a
free-access option.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Attended access packages offer access to critical payment and
information services via a web-based interface. The FedMail e-mail
package provides access to basic information services via fax or e-
mail, while the FedLine Web packages offer FedMail e-mail and online
attended access to a broad range of informational services, including
cash services, FedACH services, and check services. The FedLine
Advantage packages expand upon the FedLine Web informational service
packages and offer attended access to transactional services: FedACH,
Fedwire Funds, and Fedwire Securities.
Unattended access packages are computer-to-computer, IP-based
interfaces designed for medium- to high-volume customers. The FedLine
Command package offers an unattended connection to FedACH, as well as
most accounting information services. The final three packages are
FedLine Direct packages that allow for unattended connections at one of
three connection speeds to FedACH, Fedwire Funds, and Fedwire
Securities transactional and information services and to most
accounting information services.
For 2011, the Reserve Banks will restructure their FedLine packages
to better meet their customers' needs for access options, delivery
solutions, and information services. The Reserve Banks will offer
redesigned versions of most FedLine packages. The more-robust versions
will include access to certain value-added services with moderate price
increases. The Reserve Banks will also increase fees for most of the
FedLine Direct electronic access packages to improve the alignment of
revenues and costs. In addition, the Reserve Banks will raise fees on
various premium option services.
II. Analysis of Competitive Effect
All operational and legal changes considered by the Board that have
a substantial effect on payments system participants are subject to the
competitive impact analysis described in the March 1990 policy, ``The
Federal Reserve in the Payments System.'' \46\ Under this policy, the
Board assesses whether proposed changes would have a direct and
material adverse effect on the ability of other service providers to
compete effectively with the Federal Reserve in providing similar
services because of differing legal powers or constraints or because of
a dominant market position deriving from such legal differences. If any
proposed changes create such an effect, the Board must further evaluate
the changes to assess whether the associated benefits -- such as
contributions to payment system efficiency, payment system integrity,
or other Board objectives--can be achieved while minimizing the adverse
effect on competition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Federal Reserve Regulatory Service (FRRS) 9-1558.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board projects that the 2011 fees, fee structures, and changes
in service will not have a direct and material adverse effect on the
ability of other service providers to compete effectively with the
Reserve Banks in providing
[[Page 67745]]
similar services. The fees should permit the Reserve Banks to earn a
ROE that is comparable to overall market returns and provide for full
cost recovery over the long run.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ An ODFI is subject to a $25 minimum fee on its origination
volume; an RDFI that does not originate forward items is subject to
a $15 minimum fee on its receipt volume.
\48\ Small files contain fewer than 2,500 items and large files
contain 2,500 or more items. These origination fees do not apply to
items that the Reserve Banks receive from EPN.
\49\ Receipt fees do not apply to items that the Reserve Banks
send to EPN.
\50\ This per-item surcharge is in addition to the standard
origination and input file processing fees for forward items.
\51\ This per-item discount is a reduction to the standard
origination and input file processing fees for return items.
\52\ This per-item discount is a reduction to the standard
receipt fees.
\53\ There is no fee for the first set of monitoring criteria
for RTN or one company ID.
\54\ The account-servicing fee applies to routing numbers that
have received or originated FedACH transactions. Institutions that
receive only U.S. government transactions or that elect to use the
other operator exclusively are not assessed the account servicing
fee.
\55\ The FedACH settlement fee is applied to any routing number
with activity during a month. This fee does not apply to routing
numbers that use the Reserve Banks for U.S. government transactions
only.
\56\ The fee includes the transaction and addenda fees in
addition to the conversion fee.
\57\ The fee includes the transaction and addenda fees in
addition to the voice response fee.
\58\ The fee includes the notification of change processing fee.
\59\ Limited services are offered in contingency situations.
\60\ The fee includes the transaction fee in addition to the
conversion fee.
\61\ This per-item surcharge is in addition to the standard
domestic origination and input file processing fees.
\62\ This per-item surcharge is in addition to the standard
domestic receipt fees.
FedACH Service 2011 Fee Schedule
[Effective January 3, 2011. Bold indicates changes from 2010 prices.]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedACH minimum monthly fee
\47\
ODFI..................... $25.00.
RDFI..................... 15.00.
Origination (per item or
record): \48\
Forward or return items 0.0030.
in small files.
Forward or return items 0.0025.
in large files.
Addenda record........... 0.0015.
Receipt (per item or record):
\49\
Forward item fees with
volume-based discount
(excluding FedACH
SameDay service items)
For the first 0.0025.
1,000,000 items per
month.
For 1,000,001 to 0.0018.
25,000,000 items per
month.
For more than 0.0016 (all items).
25,000,000 items per
month.
Return items............. 0.0025.
Addenda record........... 0.0015.
FedACH SameDay Service
Origination 50 51
Forward item in a 0.0030.
small file.
Forward item in a 0.0035.
large file.
Addenda record....... 0.0015.
Return item in a 0.0030.
small file.
Return item in a 0.0025.
large file.
Return addenda record 0.0015.
Receipt \52\
Forward item......... 0.0025.
Addenda record/return 0.0015.
addenda record.
Return item.......... 0.0025.
Risk Product:
Risk origination
monitoring criteria \53\
Tier 1 (2-20 sets)... 8.00/set of criteria/month.
Tier 2 (21-150 sets). 4.00/set of criteria/month.
Tier 3 (more than 150 1.00/set of criteria/month.
sets).
Risk origination 0.0025/batch.
monitoring batch.
FedEDI Plus:
Defined report generated. 0.20.
On demand report 0.75.
generated.
Monthly premier report... 10.00.
Daily premier report..... 0.50.
Secure delivery via e- 0.20.
mail.
Delivery via FedLine file 0.30.
access solution.
Monthly fee (per routing
number):
Account servicing fee 37.00.
\54\.
FedACH settlement \55\... 45.00.
Information extract file. 75.00.
IAT Output File Sort..... 35.00.
FedLine Web origination 0.30.
returns and notification of
change (NOC) fee: \56\.
Voice response returns/NOC 3.00.
fee: \57\.
Automated NOC fee: \58\...... 0.15.
Non-electronic input/output
fee: \59\
CD or DVD input/output... 50.00.
Paper input/output....... 50.00.
Facsimile exception 30.00.
returns/NOC \60\.
Canadian cross-border fee:
Item originated to Canada 0.62.
\61\.
Return received from 0.99.
Canada \62\.
Trace of item at 5.50.
receiving gateway.
Trace of item not at 7.00.
receiving gateway.
Mexico service fee:
Item originated to Mexico 0.67.
\61\.
[[Page 67746]]
Return received from 0.91.
Mexico \62\.
Item trace............... 13.50.
A2R item originated to 3.45.
Mexico.
F3X item originated to 0.67.
Mexico.
Panama service fee:
Item originated to Panama 0.72.
\61\.
Return received from 1.00.
Panama \62\.
Item trace............... 7.00.
NOC...................... 0.72.
Latin America (MFIC) service
fee:
Item originated to MFIC 4.40.
\61\.
Return received from MFIC 0.72.
\62\.
Item trace............... 5.00.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fedwire Funds and National Settlement Services 2011 Fee Schedule
[Effective January 3, 2011. Bold indicates changes from 2010 Fee
Schedule.]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fedwire Funds Service
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monthly participation fee............................... $75.00
Basic volume-based transfer fee (originations and
receipts)
Per transfer for the first 14,000 transfers per 0.52
month..............................................
Per transfer for additional transfers up to 90,000 0.23
per month..........................................
Per transfer for every transfer over 90,000 per 0.13
month..............................................
Volume-based transfer fee with the incentive discount
(originations and receipts) 63
Per eligible transfer for the first 14,000 transfers 0.104
per month..........................................
Per eligible transfer for additional transfers up to 0.046
90,000 per month...................................
Per eligible transfer for every transfer over 90,000 0.026
per month..........................................
Surcharge for offline transfers (originations and 40.00
receipts)..............................................
Surcharge for end-of-day transfers originations \64\.... 0.18
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monthly import/export fee 65............................ 10.00
National Settlement Service
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basic
Settlement entry fee................................ 0.90
Settlement file fee................................. 20.00
Surcharge for offline file origination.................. 40.00
Minimum monthly charge (account maintenance) \66\....... 60.00
Special settlement arrangements \67\
Fee per day......................................... 150.00
Basic transfer fee
Transfer or reversal originated or received......... 0.35
Surcharge
Offline transfer or reversal originated or received. 60.00
Monthly maintenance fees
Account maintenance (per account)................... 36.00
Issues maintained (per issue/per account)........... 0.40
Claim adjustment fee.................................... 0.60
Joint custody fee....................................... 40.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ The incentive discounts are applicable on the portion of a
customer's volume that exceeds 50 percent of their historic benchmark
volume. Historic benchmark volume would be based on a customer's
average daily activity over the previous five full calendar years,
adjusted for the number of business days in the current month. If a
customer has less than five full calendar years of previous activity,
then the historic benchmark volume would be based on the daily
activity for as many full calendar years of available data. If a
customer has less than one full year calendar year's worth of prior
activity, historic benchmark volume would be set retroactively at
actual volume for the current month.
\64\ This surcharge will apply to originators of transfers that are
processed by the Reserve Banks after 5:00 p.m. ET.
\65\ This fee is applied to customers that originate transfers through
the FedLine Advantage electronic access channel and have activated the
import/export feature for the Fedwire Funds Service at any point
during a given calendar month.
\66\ This minimum monthly charge will only be assessed if total
settlement charges during a calendar month are less than $60.
\67\ Special settlement arrangements use Fedwire Funds transfers to
effect settlement. Participants in arrangements and settlement agents
are also charged the applicable Fedwire Funds transfer fee for each
transfer into and out of the settlement account.
[[Page 67747]]
Electronic Access 2011 Fee Schedule
[Effective January 3, 2011. Bold prices indicate changes from 2010 Fee
Schedule.]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Electronic Access Packages (monthly) Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FedMail E-mail.......................................... $30.00.
FedLine Web (W3) Traditional............................ 110.00.
Includes: FedMail e-mail
FedLine Web with three individual subscriptions
FedACH information services (includes RDFI file
alert service)
Check 21 services \68\
Check 21 duplicate notification
Cash management system basic--own report only
Service charge information
Account management information \69\
End of day accounting file (PDF)
FedLine Web (W5) Enhanced............................... 140.00.
Includes: FedLine Web (W3) traditional package
FedLine Web with five individual subscriptions
FedACH risk management services
FedACH EDI plus service via secure e-mail
Check payor bank services
Account management information
FedLine Advantage (A5) Traditional...................... 380.00.
Includes: FedLine Web (W3) traditional package
FedLine Web with five individual subscriptions
FedACH transactions
Fedwire funds transactions
Fedwire securities transactions
Fedwire cover payments
Check payor bank services
Account management information with intra-day search
FedLine Advantage (A5) Enhanced......................... 405.00.
Includes: FedLine Advantage A5 traditional package
FedLine Advantage with five individual subscriptions
FedACH risk management services
FedACH EDI via secure e-mail
FedLine Command Enhanced................................ 700.00.
Includes: FedLine Advantage enhanced package
FedLine Advantage with five individual subscriptions
FedLine Command with two certificates
ACTS Report <20 subaccounts
Statement of account spreadsheet file (SASF)
FedLine Direct Traditional (D56)........................ 3,000.00.
Includes:
FedLine Advantage A5 traditional package with 56K
line speed
FedLine Advantage with five individual subscriptions
FedLine Command with two certificates
FedLine Direct with two certificates
Intra-day file
Statement of account spreadsheet file
End of day (machine readable) file
Service charge information
Billing data format file
FedLine Direct Enhanced (D256).......................... 3,500.00.
Includes: FedLine Direct traditional (D56) package with
256K line speed
FedACH risk management services
FedACH EDI via secure e-mail
FedLine Direct Premier (DT1)............................ 6,000.00.
Includes: FedLine Direct enhanced package with T1 line
speed
One dedicated unattended wide area network
connection for FedLine Direct
Premium Options (monthly) \70\
Electronic Access
Additional subscribers package (each package 80.00
contains 5 additional subscribers).................
Additional FedLine Command certificate \71\......... 80.00
Additional FedLine Direct certificate \72\.......... 80.00
Maintenance of additional virtual private network... 60.00
FedLine Advantage 800 Usage (per hour)..... 2.00
Additional dedicated connections \73\
56K................................................. 2,000.00
256K................................................ 2,450.00
T1.................................................. 3,000.00
Dial Only VPN surcharge................................. 25.00.
Expedited VPN........................................... 500.00
FedLine international setup (one-time fee).............. 1,000.00
Transparent contingency \74\............................ 1,000.00
[[Page 67748]]
FedImage/large file delivery............................ Various.
FedMail fax (monthly per routing number)................ 40.00
Accounting Information Services
Cash Management System \75\
Basic--Respondent and/or sub-account reports 10.00
(per report/month).............................
Basic--Respondent/sub-account recap report (per 40.00
month).........................................
Plus--Own report up to six times a day (per 60.00
month).........................................
Plus--Less than 10 respondent and/or sub- 125.00
accounts.......................................
Plus--10-50 respondent and/or sub-accounts...... 225.00
Plus--51-100 respondents and/or sub-accounts.... 400.00
Plus--101-500 respondents and/or sub-accounts... 750.00
Plus-->500 respondents and/or sub-accounts...... 1,000.00
End of day reconcilement file (per month) \76\.......... 150.00
Statement of account spreadsheet file (per month) \77\.. 150.00
Intra-day file (per month) \78\......................... 150.00
ACTS Report--< 20 sub-accounts.......................... 250.00
ACTS Report--21-40 sub-accounts......................... 500.00
ACTS Report--41-60 sub-accounts......................... 750.00
ACTS Report-->60 sub-accounts........................... 1,000.00
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, October 27, 2010.
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\68\ Check 21 services can be accessed via three options:
FedLine Web, an Internet connection with Axway Secure Transport
Client, or a dedicated connection using Connect:Direct.
\69\ Daylight Overdraft Report, Ex-Post Activity Snapshot, and
Integrated Accounting Statement of Account are available via
FedMail.
\70\ Premium options for FedLine Web Traditional are limited to
FedMail Fax.
\71\ Additional FedLine Command Certificates available for
FedLine Command and Direct Packages only.
\72\ Additional FedLine Direct Certificates available for
FedLine Direct Packages only.
\73\ Network diversity supplemental charge of $2,000 a month may
apply in addition to these fees.
\74\ Transparent contingency is available only for FedLine
Direct Packages.
\75\ Cash Management System options are limited to Enhanced and
Premier Packages.
\76\ End of Day Reconcilement File option is available to
FedLine Web Enhanced and FedLine Advantage Enhanced Packages.
\77\ Statement of Account Spreadsheet File option is available
to FedLine Web Enhanced and FedLine Advantage Enhanced packages.
\78\ ACTS Report options are limited to FedLine Command Enhanced
and FedLine Direct Enhanced and Premier packages.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2010-27697 Filed 11-2-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210-01-P