Skip to main content

Board Rulings and Staff Opinions Interpreting Regulation Y


1
These headings cover both acquisitions and retentions.
2
This heading covers all section 4 exemptions except exemptions under sections 4(a)(2)(i) and (ii), 4(c)(ii), 4(c)(1)(C), 4(c)(2), 4(c)(8), 4(c)(9), 4(c)(12), 4(c)(13), and 4(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which are individually listed.
3
This heading covers activities that have been found to be closely related to banking but that are not on the list of permissible activities in Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.25). Activities on the list of permissible activities are individually listed.
4
See also “Control” and “Controlling Influence.”
5
See also Guidance, beginning at 4-867.
4-250

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Acquisition of Out-of-State Bank by Bank Subsidiary

Section 3(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act forbids Board approval of a bank holding company’s application to acquire a bank outside of the state in which it conducts its principal banking operation unless the acquisition is specifically authorized by the laws of the state in which the sought-after bank is located. That section does not apply if no application for prior Board approval is necessary under section 3(a)(4) of the act, which exempts a subsidiary bank’s acquisitions of the assets of another bank from the requirement for prior Board approval. BD. RULING of Oct. 18, 1956.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a)(4) and (d), 12 USC 1842(a)(4) and (d).

4-251

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Bank Merger

The Board will not assert jurisdiction available to it over mergers between bank subsidiaries or a bank subsidiary and a nonsubsidiary bank if prior approval by another federal banking agency is necessary under the Bank Merger Act. STAFF OP. of Sept. 12, 1967, Aug. 29, 1977, Sept. 1, 1978, and Oct. 3, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a), 12 USC 1842(a); Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828.

4-252

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Factors Considered

When acting on a bank holding company’s application to acquire stock of a bank, the Board of Governors considers those factors set forth in section 3(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The Board will consider bank management’s opposition to the proposed acquisition only if it bears upon the specific standards provided by the act (i.e., managerial resources or future prospects of the bank and the bank holding company). STAFF OP. of Nov. 20, 1968.
Authority: BHCA § 3(c), 12 USC 1842(c).

4-253

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Formation of Holding Company by Merger

It is proposed that an existing bank, with grandfathered branches in three states but with principal operations in one state, be merged into a newly created bank to assist the formation of a bank holding company. The principal operations of the bank will be conducted in the same state. Such a transaction is not prohibited by section 3(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of Nov. 12, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 9 and 3(a)(1) and (d), 12 USC 1848 and 1842(a)(1) and (d).

4-254

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Additional Shares

A bank holding company, the majority of which is owned by one family, holds less than majority control of a bank. However, in a trust for the benefit of the family, the family owns enough additional shares of the bank to give the holding company majority control. The family-owned trusteed shares are deemed to be controlled by the holding company so that the holding company controls a majority of the bank’s shares. In this situation, acquisition of additional shares of bank does not require prior Board approval. STAFF OP. of May 23, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a)(3) and (a)(B), 12 USC 1842(a)(3) and (a)(B).

4-255

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Additional Shares

A company that became a bank holding company by virtue of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 owned less than majority control of a bank prior to 1970 but prior to the enactment of 1970 amendments had entered a legally binding contract in which the selling party agreed to vote shares as the bank holding company directed. Any dividends and salary payments by the bank to the selling party would reduce the purchase price of the bank shares. The bank holding company controlled the bank shares covered by the contract prior to 1970 and could purchase such shares after enactment of the 1970 amendments without prior Board approval, without violating the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of April 22, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a)(3) and (a)(B), 12 USC 1842(a)(3) and (a)(B).

4-256

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Majority Ownership

A family-owned bank holding company that controlled 68.3 percent of the shares of a bank transferred 24.97 percent of the shares of the bank to another company owned by its controlling family. Simultaneously, all the bank shares owned by both corporations were placed in a voting trust under a pledge agreement until a loan made to the first company was paid off, and the sole trustee of the voting trust was a family member and a director of both companies. The mergers of the two family-owned companies and the reacquisition by the first company of the 24.97 percent of bank shares transferred to the second company did not require prior Board approval pursuant to section 3(a)(B) of the Bank Holding Company Act, because the first company retained a beneficial interest in the transferred shares. Staff noted the overall legislative intent of the act to afford a more liberal treatment to family-owned corporations. STAFF OP. of Nov. 27, 1974.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(a)(B) and 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1842(a)(B) and 1843(c)(ii).

4-257

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—By Bank in Fiduciary Capacity

The subsidiary bank of a bank holding company acquires more than 5 percent of the voting shares of another bank holding company in a fiduciary capacity, with sole discretionary authority to vote those shares. The bank holding company must apply to retain the shares acquired by its subsidiary bank in a fiduciary capacity. STAFF OP. of Nov. 25, 1975.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(5)(A) and 3(a)(3), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(A) and 1842(a)(3); 12 CFR 225.4(b)(1) and (2).

4-258

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Debt Previously Contracted; Divestiture Period

A bank holding company bank subsidiary made a loan to a party offering bank stock as collateral. Later, the bank required that the pledged stock be registered in the name of the nominee of the bank to prevent the borrower from transferring the shares. When the borrower subsequently defaulted, the two-year divestiture period for shares of a bank acquired in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted began on the date the bank acquired the shares through foreclosure, and not on the date the shares were registered in the name of the bank’s nominee. STAFF OP. of June 28, 1976.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(5)(D) and 3(a)(A)(ii), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(D) and 1842(a)(A)(ii).
See also Divestiture.

4-259

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Mergers by Subsidiary Banks Across State Lines

Through a series of mergers by its subsidiary banks, a bank holding company located in one state proposes to relocate into another state that does not permit an out-of-state bank holding company to acquire shares or assets of a bank in that state. The relocation scheme would amount to an evasion of section 3(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The Board has not asserted jurisdiction under section 3(a) of that act over acquisition of control of banks by bank holding companies through mergers with existing bank subsidiaries; however, the relocation proposal would prompt a recommendation to the Board to reexamine this policy. STAFF OP. of March 28, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a) and (d), 12 USC 1842(a) and (d).

4-260

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Vertical Mergers of Bank Holding Companies

The top-tier bank holding company of a threetier conglomerate proposes to merge with its wholly owned bank holding company subsidiaries, which are the bottom two tiers of the conglomerate. The merger does not require prior Board approval. Since the top-tier bank holding company will engage directly in activities it previously engaged in indirectly, its “successor” status in relation to the bottom two tiers is irrelevant. Also, under this proposed merger, the bottom two tiers will cease to be bank holding companies. STAFF OP. of May 3, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c), 3(a)(5), and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(c), 1842(a)(5), 1843(a)(2).

4-261

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Less-Than-Majority Interest

An application must be filed for acquisitions of additional shares of any bank, both subsidiary and nonsubsidiary, in which the holding company owns less than a majority interest. STAFF OP. of July 18, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a)(3) and (a)(B), 12 USC 1842(a)(3) and (a)(B).

4-262

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—To Effectuate Divestiture

A bank holding company is required to divest shares of its less-than-majority-owned bank subsidiary and proposes to do so by having the bank redeem and retire enough shares that the holding company will then hold 80 percent of the bank’s shares, which will then be spun off to the holding company’s shareholders. The holding company must apply for the Board’s prior approval of this proposal and for a section 2(g)(3) determination on the effectiveness of the divestiture. STAFF OP. of Dec. 6, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 3(a)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1842(a)(3).

4-263

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Conversion of Bank from National Charter to State Charter

Prior Board approval is not required for the conversion of a subsidiary bank of a bank holding company from a national charter to a state charter if the holding company already owns a majority of the bank’s voting shares or if no change in the holding company’s ownership or control of the bank’s shares will result either before or after the conversion. STAFF OP. July 12, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a), 12 USC 1842(a); Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828(c); 12 USC 214 -214c; FRA §9, 12 USC 321.

4-264

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—By Bank as Corporate Trustee

A bank acting as corporate trustee for five irrevocable trusts established for minor children, with sole discretionary authority to vote and exercise all rights and powers regarding stock in another bank, is a bank holding company that must obtain prior Board approval to act as trustee. Staff Op. of March 6, 1979.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(5)(A) and 3(a)(5)(A)(i), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(A) and 1842(a)(5)(A)(i); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(1) and 225.3(c).

4-265

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Transfer Prior to Control Determination

A partnership that became a bank holding company by virtue of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 transferred its bank shares to its partners, two of whom were officers and directors of the bank. The partnership later transferred its remaining assets to a new corporation and dissolved, without obtaining a Board determination under section 2(g)(3) of the Bank Holding Company Act. No purpose would be served by a determination that the bank holding company, which no longer exists, does not control the bank; however, the bank holding company should have secured a control determination to eliminate the risk that its successor corporation may have acquired control of a bank without the Board’s prior approval, in violation of section 3(a)(1). STAFF OP. of Dec. 28, 1979.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 3(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1842(a)(1).

4-266

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—“Phantom Bank” Mergers

A bank holding company seeks to increase its ownership of a subsidiary bank by merging it into a “phantom” national bank, subject to the approval of the Comptroller of the Currency. The question arises whether the bank holding company must obtain the Board’s prior approval, under section 3(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act, to acquire the phantom bank.
Under the Bank Holding Company Act, the Board may have jurisdiction over a merger involving subsidiaries of a bank holding company; however, it has declined to assert its jurisdiction, and the bank holding company need not obtain the Board’s prior approval if the transaction involves an existing subsidiary of the bank holding company and requires prior approval of the Comptroller of the Currency under the Bank Merger Act. This opinion is based on the understanding that the acquisition of the phantom bank will not take place unless the proposed merger is consummated immediately afterward. STAFF OP. of Jan. 15, 1981.
Authority: Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828; BHCA § 3(a), 12 USC § 1842(a); 12 CFR 225.3(a).

4-267

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Complaints of Minority Shareholders

There are limits to the Board’s authority under the Bank Holding Company Act to entertain the complaints of minority shareholders regarding mergers subject to Board approval, particularly in view of Western Bancshares, Inc. v. Board of Governors, which held that the Board may not deny applications under the act solely because of an applicant’s failure to extend substantially equal purchase offers to minority shareholders. However, an applicant’s dealing with minority shareholders in a grossly unfair or unjust manner reflects adversely on management and may warrant denial of the application. STAFF OP. of March 20, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a) and (c), 12 USC 1842(a) and (c); 12 CFR 265.3.
See also Western Bancshares, Inc. v. Board of Governors, 480 F.2d 749 (10th Cir. 1973).

4-268

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Reconsideration of Board Action

The Board is not required to consider untimely request for reconsideration of a Board action approving a bank holding company application if no evidence of extraordinary circumstances has been presented that might lead the Board to reconsider the case. Certain technical violations of securities laws do not constitute extraordinary circumstances. STAFF OP. of April 9, 1981.
Authority: 12 CFR 262.3(k) and 265.2(b)(7).

4-269

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Factors Considered; Chain Situations

An applicant seeking Board approval to become a bank holding company objected to the Board’s repeated requests for additional information to supplement its application and challenged the relevancy of the information requested, claiming the requests had delayed processing of the application. Section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act requires the Board to consider the financial and managerial resources and future prospects of the company or companies and banks concerned as well as the convenience and needs of the community to be served. The Board has consistently taken the position that when principals of an applicant are engaged in operating a chain of banking organizations (as they are in this case) it should, in addition to analyzing the bank holding company proposal before it, also consider the financial and managerial resources and future prospects of the total chain within the context of the Board’s multibank holding company standards. Therefore, requests for information regarding the chain operated by the applicant’s principals is relevant to the application. Requests for personal financial statements and cash-flow projections for principals who retain personal indebtedness in connection with this acquisition is relevant unless it can be shown that these principals have the financial resources to repay the debt incurred, because it is assumed that income generated by the bank and the applicant will be transferred to these principals for debt repayment. However, the fact that the principals have been able to service personal debt without an undue burden on the banks involved in connection with a prior proposal does not negate the need for this consideration, because each proposal must be determined by analysis of the particular circumstances involved. STAFF OP. of July 7, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a) and (c), 12 USC 1842(a) and (c); 12 CFR 225.3 and 262.3.
See also Board of Governors v. First Lincolnwood Corp., 439 U.S. 234 (1978); Mid-Nebraska Bancshares v. Board of Governors, 627 F.2d 266 (D.C. Cir. 1980).

4-270

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Merging of Subsidiary Banks

The question has arisen whether an application is required, pursuant to section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act, if one bank acquires substantially all the stock of a second bank and, shortly thereafter, merges with the second bank. The Board does not require an application under the Bank Holding Company Act for bank mergers subject to approval of a federal bank regulatory agency. In this case, the merger transaction is subject to approval under the Bank Merger Act. Therefore, the first bank is not required to file an application to become a bank holding company as long as its acquisition of the second bank’s shares and the merger occur virtually simultaneously. STAFF OP. of Nov. 3, 1981.
Authority: Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828; BHCA § 3(a), 12 USC 1842(a); 12 CFR 225.3(a).

4-270.1

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Holding Shares Acquired DPC Beyond Two-Year Limit

A bank acquired 65 percent of the voting shares of a bank holding company in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted. The bank voted the shares to elect a new board of directors. The new board voted to place the bank holding company in bankruptcy. The bank argued that it did not control the shares it had voted. Section 2(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act provides that a company has control over a bank or other company if it has power to vote 25 percent of any class of voting securities of the bank or company. Under section 2(a)(5)(D) of the Bank Holding Company Act, no company is a bank holding company by virtue of shares acquired through a debt previously contracted until two years after the date of acquisition. Upon application to the Board, this time may be extended up to three years in one-year intervals. The bank was advised to apply for an extension. STAFF OP. of Sept. 30, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a), 12 USC 1841(a).

4-270.2

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—By Bank Subsidiary of Foreign Holding Company

A foreign bank holding company whose principal state of banking operations is New York currently owns more than 25 percent of the voting shares of a foreign bank that has a branch in New York. The foreign bank is interested in expanding its banking operations in the United States outside the state of New York. Because the foreign bank is a subsidiary of the holding company, it may not acquire more than 5 percent of the voting shares of any bank outside New York. Based on the voting structure of the foreign bank, the holding company’s voting power is significantly less than the percentage of voting shares held. The holding company proposes that it sell a sufficient amount of stock to reduce its voting power (but not its voting shares) to less than 25 percent. The foreign bank argues that Congress intended that a subsidiary relationship be determined by voting power. The bank was informed that section 2(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act provides that a company is deemed to have control over a second company if it owns or controls 25 percent or more of any voting securities of the second company. The holding company’s ownership of more than 25 percent of the voting shares of the foreign bank creates a conclusive presumption of control that precludes the bank from acquiring a bank outside New York State.
Further, if a subsidiary relationship has existed between a bank holding company and another company and the bank holding company will retain a substantial economic interest in the company, the bank holding company may be required to reduce its shareholding to 5 percent or less in order for the divestiture to be effective.
Even if the holding company divested a sufficient number of shares of the foreign bank to dissolve the subsidiary relationship, section 3(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act would prohibit the holding company from retaining any interest in the foreign bank if the foreign bank were to acquire a bank outside New York. Section 3(d) prohibits the Board from approving any application under section 3 that would result in a bank holding company’s acquiring an interest in an additional bank outside its principal state of banking operations. This prohibition also applies to foreign bank holding companies (see Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.124(e) at 4-190). Although the holding company would not be making the acquisition itself, the result of the transaction would be that it would retain its interest in a company that has acquired control of a bank in another state. The Board’s prohibition of an acquisition of less than a controlling interest in another bank holding company by a foreign bank holding company would logically extend to the retention of shares in that bank holding company. The foreign bank cannot expand its banking presence in the United States under the terms outlined. STAFF OP. of Oct. 8, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A) and 3, 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and 1842; 12 CFR 225.124(e).

4-270.3

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—By Corporation That Manages Mutual Funds

A corporation that manages a group of mutual funds (“investment advisory firm”) applied to the Comptroller of the Currency for a charter for a new national bank. In 1971, the Board ruled that a bank holding company’s management of a mutual fund would violate section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act because (1) a mutual fund, which issues its own securities continuously, is engaged principally in the issuance of securities within the meaning of section 20; (2) the bank holding company managing the mutual fund would control such fund; and (3) as a result of such control, any member bank that is a subsidiary of the holding company would be an affiliate of the mutual fund in violation of section 20 (see Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.125(f) at 4-177). The investment advisory firm here established the mutual funds it manages, directs their operations, and exercises a pervasive and dominant influence over the funds and thus controls them for purposes of section 20. It is also clear that if the charter were granted, the national bank would be a member bank. This acquisition would be in direct contravention of section 20 as interpreted by the Board in its 1971 interpretation.
With respect to section 32 of the act, the Board has ruled that an investment advisory firm that manages a mutual fund constitutes a single entity with the mutual fund. Accordingly, the investment advisory firm, as well as the mutual fund itself, would be prohibited from establishing any management interlocks with the new national member bank.
The investment advisory firm’s argument that the firm and its wholly owned subsidiary, engaged solely in distributing the shares issued by the mutual funds managed by the firm, should be considered together as a single entity for purposes of section 20 supports the Board’s conclusion that the investment advisory firm controls the mutual funds it manages, since the rationale for using the single-entity approach is premised on the fact that the securities distributed by the subsidiary were issued by an affiliated company.
Because the new national bank would be a “bank” for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act, the proposed acquisition would require prior Board approval. The Board therefore requested that the Comptroller of the Currency condition the issuance of a charter upon such approval. BD. RULING of Dec. 14, 1982.
Authority: Glass-Steagall Act §§ 20 and 32, 12 USC 377 and 78; 12 CFR 225.125(f).
See also 4-363.2, regarding the same proposal.

4-270.4

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

A bank holding company proposes to purchase 4.99 percent of voting common stock and 100 percent of a new issue of nonvoting preferred stock from another bank holding company. Detachable warrants to purchase an additional 20 percent of voting common stock would accompany the preferred stock. The warrants would be exercisable only if interstate banking becomes permissible, and would be transferable only in a widely dispersed public offering and subject to the right of first refusal by the selling holding company. The selling company agrees to limit the dividends paid on common stock to a certain percentage after a specified date; however, the selling company has the right to call the preferred stock investments to release itself from the covenant. The agreement places no restrictions on the selling company’s activities or ability to make acquisitions. The proposed investment is consistent with the Bank Holding Company Act, Regulation Y, and the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (at 4-172.1). BD. RULING OF Dec. 16, 1982.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-270.41

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

An out-of-state bank holding company (A) proposes to purchase shares of nonvoting preferred stock and warrants convertible into approximately 20 percent of the outstanding voting common stock of another bank holding company (B). In addition, A proposes to purchase shares of newly issued voting common stock that represents approximately 4.9 percent of B’s outstanding voting stock. The agreement provides that the warrants (1) may be exercised only after appropriate regulatory approval has been obtained and (2) are transferable only in a widely dispersed public offering except in certain limited circumstances. In these circumstances, which relate to a change in control of B, the warrants may be sold in a private placement to parties unrelated to A or each other, provided that no purchaser acquires, individually or in concert with others, more than 2 percent of the voting shares of B. In any event, B retains the right of first refusal before A may transfer the warrants. In addition, A and B have agreed to merge if interstate banking becomes permissible. B may unilaterally terminate the merger agreement at any time by redeeming the preferred stock held by A. In addition, B may determine to accept a third-party merger bid that is in excess of the final offer made by A, at which time the merger agreement would be terminated and A’s investment must be redeemed.
The agreement does not contain any restrictions on the management or policies of B, or on B’s ability to engage in banking and permissible nonbanking activities. The agreement does contain a covenant restricting B’s ability to sell more than 20 percent of the voting shares or substantially all of the assets of either of its two banking subsidiaries, but this covenant does not restrict B’s ability to acquire additional banks. Moreover, B has the right to call the preferred stock investment by A, without penalty or extraordinary cost, and thereby be released from this covenant. A has also committed that it will not acquire control of B or exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of B without prior Board approval. This proposed investment is therefore consistent with the Bank Holding Company Act, Regulation Y, and the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1). BD. RULING of June 1, 1983.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-270.5

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

An out-of-state bank holding company (A) proposes to purchase 120,000 shares of nonvoting preferred stock and warrants convertible into approximately 2.3 million shares of common stock of another bank holding company (B). An individual investor has proposed to acquire 54 percent of the total outstanding voting shares of B as well as options and warrants for an additional 1.8 million voting common shares of B. The investor would control a clear majority of the voting shares of B, serve as chief executive officer of B, and have options and warrants sufficient to maintain control of B. A may exercise the warrants, however, only if interstate banking becomes permissible. Prior to interstate banking, A may transfer warrants convertible into no more than 24.9 percent of the voting shares of B. Should interstate banking become permissible, the total of all warrants exercised or transferred by A could never be more than the lesser of 49 percent or 1 percent less than the voting rights actually exercised by the controlling individual. Subject to a right of first refusal in B, A may transfer the warrants only in a widely dispersed public offering, in a private sale to independent and unrelated parties with no investor acquiring more than 2 percent of B, or in a method approved by the Board prior to the transfer.
The proposed agreement does not contain any significant restrictions on the management or policies of B or on the ability of B to engage in banking or permissible nonbanking activities. The agreement does contain certain restrictions on dividends and on the sale of a majority of the voting shares of B’s subsidiary bank similar to provisions previously permitted by the Board. These provisions do not significantly restrict the management of B or B’s policies of acquiring additional banks and otherwise engaging in permissible banking and nonbanking activities. In addition, a majority of the voting shares of B is owned and controlled by a single individual unrelated to A. Moreover, B has the right at any time to call the preferred stock investment by A, without penalty or extraordinary cost, and thereby to obtain release from these covenants. The proposed investment is consistent with the Bank Holding Company Act, Regulation Y, and the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1). BD. RULING of July 8, 1983.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-270.6

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

An out-of-state bank holding company (A) proposes to acquire the shares of another bank holding company (B), if interstate banking becomes permissible, at a formal price with a floor of approximately 1.85 times the book value of B. Under the terms of the agreement B may terminate the merger agreement at any time by accepting an offer to merge with a third party, subject to a right of first refusal in A if it is legally permissible for A to effect a merger at the time the third-party offer is made; A may terminate the merger agreement if the financial condition of B changes or if a third party acquires or makes a bona fide tender to acquire control of 50 percent or more of the voting stock of B.
In addition, A has, for $1,000,000, purchased 625,000 warrants convertible into approximately 16.5 percent of the outstanding voting stock of B. These warrants are exercisable at any time and are transferable only in a widely dispersed public offering, in public sales to independent and unrelated parties in which no single purchaser or group of purchasers acting in concert acquires more than 2 percent of the outstanding voting shares of B, or in any other method agreed upon by the parties and approved by the Board prior to the time of transfer. A also stands ready to purchase up to $25,000,000 of nonvoting preferred stock of B. The stock would be perpetual in duration and at B’s option will be redeemable any time after five years from the date of issue.
The agreement does not contain any covenants or restrictions on the management or policies of B and does not limit B’s ability to engage in banking and permissible nonbanking activities or to acquire or merge with other banks. This proposed investment is therefore consistent with the Bank Holding Act and the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1). STAFF OP. of Aug. 23, 1983.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-270.7

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Bank Holding Company Merger Application

A bank holding company (BHC 1) proposes to acquire another bank holding company (BHC 2) and its subsidiary bank (Bank 2) through a merger of a bank owned by BHC 1 (Bank 1) into Bank 2. Simultaneously with this merger, BHC 1’s shares of Bank 1 will be cancelled and replaced with newly issued voting shares of Bank 2. At the same time, BHC 2’s shares of Bank 2 will be cancelled, thereby giving BHC 1 control of Bank 2 (which, at this point, has absorbed Bank 1 by merger). In addition, BHC 2 will merge into BHC 1. Shareholders of BHC 2 will receive stock of BHC 1 or cash for their shares.
The proposed transaction may not be consummated without the Board’s prior approval under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act. The exception to the prior-approval requirements of section 3(a)(4) of the act for the acquisition of all or substantially all of the assets of another bank by a subsidiary bank of a bank holding company was found to be inapplicable, because that provision relates only to asset acquisitions and does not exempt from the application requirement of section 3 the other types of transactions specified in sections 3(a)(2), (3), and (5). The proposal involves the cancellation of shares of Bank 1 and acquisition by BHC 1 of voting shares of Bank 2, which requires an application under section 3(a)(3). (See 12 CFR 225.12(d)).
Because the proposal also involves the merger of bank holding companies, the transaction requires an application under section 3(a)(5). The Board does not believe that BHC 2 will have ceased to be a bank holding company at the time it merges with BHC 1 in view of section 2(g)(3) and the Board’s interpretation thereof (12 CFR 225.139 at 4-191), and, in any event, the proposed bank merger and the holding company merger are part of a single, integrated transaction. Under the proposal, neither the bank merger nor the bank holding company merger will occur without the other. The fact that the bank merger is scheduled to occur first, followed immediately by the bank holding company merger, does not remove the bank holding company merger from scrutiny under the standards of the act.
The Board believes that an application is required in this case. If the Board were to determine otherwise, evasion of the policies of the act would be possible. BD. RULING of Feb. 27, 1984.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 3, 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1842; 12 CFR 225.12(d) and 225.139.

4-270.8

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

A holding Company (A) has acquired shares of preferred stock of another holding company (B). The preferred shares are nonvoting and represent approximately 14.2 percent of the total shareholders’ equity of B.
The preferred shares were not convertible into voting shares at the time of purchase but could be declared convertible by the board of directors of B upon the occurrence of a “conversion event.” The directors may take this action only if a third party has acquired, or initiated a tender or similar offer to acquire, 25 percent or more of the outstanding voting shares of B. Moreover, the current directors of B may rescind the declaration of a conversion event, thereby rescinding the convertibility features of the preferred stock. B may redeem the shares of preferred stock without penalty at any time prior to the board of directors’ declaration of a conversion event.
Once B’s directors have declared a conversion event, A may convert the preferred shares into common shares, provided interstate banking is permissible and all necessary regulatory approvals have been obtained. In no event will A be able to convert the preferred shares into an amount that, when combined with any voting common stock that Bancorp has otherwise acquired, will equal or exceed 25 percent of the outstanding voting shares of B.
While a conversion event is pending, A may require B to redeem its shares of preferred stock at the higher of (1) the original purchase price for the preferred shares plus any accrued dividends or (2) the product of the highest price offered in a tender or exchange offer times the number of shares into which the stock is convertible, plus any accrued dividends. A has modified its agreement to provide that this redemption is without penalty, added cost, or interest-rate subvention.
The purchase agreement provides that A may transfer the preferred shares it has acquired to third parties, before, during, or after termination of a conversion event, only in a widely dispersed public or private sale in which no person or group of related persons acquires shares convertible into 2 percent or more of the outstanding voting shares of B. If B is acquired by a third party through merger, consolidation, or purchase of substantially all of its assets, then the preferred shares may be exchanged on a pro rata basis for shares, with substantially similar terms, of the third party. In this regard, A has eliminated the provisions for a detachable warrant that would have increased the number of shares of an acquiring third party into which A’s investment could be exchanged.
The purchase agreement does not include any significant covenants or restrictions on the management or policies of B, and A and B have not entered into a merger, asset acquisition, or similar agreement. Moreover, A has committed that it will not exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of B.
This investment was proposed in the context of a franchise agreement entered into between A and B in 1984, under which B had, for a fee, obtained a license to use the name and marks of the A organization. B has also become part of A’s automatic teller machine network and has agreed to honor checks and credit cards drawn on A’s bank subsidiaries and its other franchise participants. B is not required to purchase any other services from A or its subsidiaries.
The franchise agreement does not include provisions restricting the management or policies of B, which remains an independently operated bank holding company. B also retains the right to terminate the franchise agreement at any time, without cause and without penalty, after the second anniversary of the agreement. A may terminate the franchise agreement either with the consent of B, after a change in control of B, if the financial condition of B changes, or if B breaches the provisions of the agreement.
The termination of the franchise agreement does not trigger any obligation on the part of B under the stock-purchase agreement, and, in particular, has been modified to eliminate any obligation on the part of B to redeem the preferred stock acquired by A in the event the franchise agreement is terminated for any reason.
As part of the franchise agreement, B has the option to sell to A a single branch office of B’s choosing of any bank subsidiary of B for a price equal to fair market value plus a 10 percent premium, if such a sale is legally permissible. This option may be terminated by B or by A at any time, without cause and without penalty or fee.
A will not control B for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act by virtue of the structure of the proposed investment by A or the terms of the franchise agreement. STAFF OP. of Aug. 26, 1985.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-270.9

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Mergers

A proposal involved the expansion by an existing bank holding company subsidiary bank through merger with another bank, followed immediately by a merger of the parent holding companies. No regulatory issue was raised under the Bank Holding Company Act, and the competitive effects of the proposal were evaluated under the Bank Merger Act. The staff did not require an application under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act after the applicant submitted sufficient information to determine the effect of the proposal on the financial and managerial resources of the holding company and whether the proposal presented other issues over which the Board has exclusive or primary jurisdiction. STAFF OP. of Sept. 25, 1985.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(a)(3) and (5) and 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1842(a)(3) and (5) and 1843(c)(1)(A); Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828; 12 CFR 225.12(d).

4-271

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

Board staff previously expressed its opinion that a proposal by two bank holding companies to execute an agreement to merge if interstate banking becomes permissible and to acquire warrants convertible into voting shares of one of the companies, without an accompanying equity investment, was consistent with the Bank Holding Company Act, the Board’s regulations, the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments by bank holding companies (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1), or the Board’s decisions thereunder. One of the holding companies now requests the staff’s opinion regarding the addition of a nonvoting equity investment to the previous agreement.
Holding Company A proposes to acquire shares of nonvoting class B common stock of Holding Company B, representing approximately 18 percent of the total equity of Holding Company B. The class B shares that Holding Company A proposes to acquire would be convertible into voting shares of Holding Company B. In this regard, the terms of the warrants currently held by Holding Company A will be modified to provide that the warrants may be exercised only by the exchange of class B nonvoting common stock. Any shares of class B stock that remain after the exercise of the warrants may be converted by Holding Company A into voting common stock of Holding Company B on a one-for-one basis, provided that the aggregate total of voting shares acquired through exercise of the warrants and conversion of the class B stock, when combined with any voting shares acquired directly by Holding Company A or its subsidiaries, will not equal or exceed 25 percent of the outstanding voting shares of Holding Company B.
Similarly, Holding Company A has committed that it will not transfer voting shares or rights to voting shares (in any combination of warrants and convertible class B stock) that in total will, upon conversion, equal or exceed 25 percent of the voting shares of Holding Company B. If the class B shares that Holding Company A proposes to acquire permit conversion into a number of shares greater than 25 percent of the voting shares of Holding Company B, Holding Company A has committed that it will convert these shares only into nonvoting stock of Holding Company B. In addition, the agreement will not contain any covenants or restrictions on the management or policies of Holding Company B, and Holding Company A will not exercise or attempt to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of Holding Company B.
The investment in class B shares of Holding Company B proposed by Holding Company A is, in the context of the agreement previously reviewed by the staff, consistent with the control provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act, Regulation Y, and the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting investments by bank holding companies. STAFF OP. of Nov. 19, 1985.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-271.1

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Interim Company to Hold Shares Acquired Through Merger

The creation of an interim bank holding company (interim company) wholly owned by another bank holding company (A) to hold all of the voting shares of a bank holding company acquired by A through its merger with another bank holding company (B) is subject to the prior approval of the Board under sections 3(a)(1) and 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. In limited circumstances, however, the Board may determine that such an application is not required.
Ordinarily, the interim company would be required to file an application under section 3(a)(1) of the act because, after the proposed formation, it would acquire more than 25 percent of the voting shares of a bank. In this case, however, A itself has already applied for and obtained the Board’s approval to acquire the voting shares of B. The interim company would be a shell holding company and would have no purpose and engage in no activity other than holding the shares of B’s banking and nonbanking subsidiaries on behalf of A. A will own all of the shares of the interim company, the three officers of the interim company would be officers of A, and A’s chairman would act as the interim company’s sole director. A would supply the interim company’s capital. The interim company would incur no indebtedness, and its formation would have no effect on A’s capital position or other aspects of its financial condition.
The formation of the interim company involves the acquisition of shares of an existing bank and nonbank subsidiaries for which A has previously obtained Board approval, and all considerations regarding the formation of the interim company are identical to those considered by the Board in its decision to approve A’s acquisition of B.
On the basis of detailed information filed with the Board concerning this proposal and the applicability of the Bank Holding Company Act, A would not be required to file an application to form the interim company through acquisition of B, because of the absence of any issue under the act and the connection between B and the interim company. However, if such detailed information had not been filed, an application would be required under section 3(a)(1) of the act. STAFF OP. of Dec. 12, 1985.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(a)(1) and 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1842(a)(1) and 1843(c)(8).

4-271.2

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Leveraged Corporate Acquisition Fund

A question was raised about the permissibility of an investment in a leveraged corporate acquisition fund that is being organized and managed by a private merchant bank. A bank holding company proposes to purchase up to 24.9 percent of the total equity of the fund in the form of a nonvoting limited partnership interest. The bank holding company will have no voting rights, will not be an advisor to or have any role in the management of the fund, and will not be able to withdraw its investment from the fund.
In addition to the investment in the fund, the bank holding company may provide senior debt financing to companies involved in leveraged-buyout transactions in which the fund is a participant. The bank holding company will not provide funding to the private merchant bank or the fund. In addition, it will not invest in the equity of any company involved in leveraged-buyout transactions in which the fund is a participant, other than through its participation in the fund, and will not retain debt in any such company amounting to more than 10 percent of the total amount of debt and equity combined of any single leveraged buyout transaction. The bank holding company may occasionally provide general advice to the private merchant bank regarding the investment climate in Japan, identify potential Japanese providers of debt and equity financing for the private merchant bank, and introduce to the merchant bank clients with a need for the bank’s services or expertise. Any such transaction would be conducted on an arm’s-length, nonexclusive basis.
The bank holding company will not be an investment advisor to the fund or the private merchant bank and will not advise the fund or the private merchant bank on the formulation, structuring, or negotiation of, or any matters related to, investments or transactions that the private merchant bank, as general partner, may propose for the fund.
The Board found that the proposal was consistent with the control provisions of its policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1). BD. RULING of Dec. 7, 1989.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.

4-271.3

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Source of Strength

Bank Holding Company A applied for the Board’s approval to acquire Bank Holding Company B under section 3(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Pursuant to the terms of the proposed agreements, A will purchase a 15-year subordinated capital note, amounting to approximately 26 percent of B’s total capital, with an option to acquire all of B’s outstanding stock, exercisable any time during the fourth or fifth year after the effective date of the option. B may cancel the option only upon A’s giving notice of their intent to exercise the option and only upon paying a substantial cancellation fee and accelerating the repayment of the capital note. The agreements between A and B place significant restrictions on the operations of B, including its ability to redeem stock, make investments or acquisitions, incur indebtedness, engage in a merger, or sell its bank subsidiary. In addition, B is required to designate representatives to confer with A regularly and frequently. In light of the option and other restrictions placed on B, A applied to acquire control of B within the meaning of the Bank Holding Company Act.
In connection with this application, A has requested that the Board waive any requirement that A serve as a source of financial strength to B’s subsidiary bank until A exercises the option and acquires actual ownership of all of the shares of B. The Board determined that it is not appropriate to waive this requirement given the facts of this case. The option agreement and capital-note agreement together provide a mechanism for A to exert control over the future ownership of B and many of the most important management decisions of B. In addition, the option agreement has been structured to permit A to benefit from the continued improved performance of B’s bank while prohibiting the acquisition of B by other parties without a substantial penalty. On the other hand, the option agreement permits A to terminate the option if B’s bank experiences difficulties in the future. Because of the significant involvement A would have in the management and policies of B under the agreements and the manner in which the option preserves solely for A the benefits of this involvement, it would not be appropriate to relieve A of the responsibility to serve as a source of financial strength to B’s bank. BD. RULING of December 23, 1991.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1).

4-271.4

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Majority Ownership

A parent bank holding company that controls 54.7 percent of a subsidiary bank holding company’s total voting power, including 96.6 percent of a separate class of voting securities of the subsidiary, proposed to sell shares of the subsidiary back to the subsidiary. After the sellback, the parent would control 48.9 percent of the subsidiary, including 95.8 percent of a separate class of voting securities of the subsidiary. In connection with the sellback, the parent would grant to the subsidiary an option to put the sold shares back to the parent at the subsidiary’s discretion.
The parent bank holding company may repurchase the sellback shares pursuant to the put without filing an application pursuant to section 3(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The parent holds options exercisable at its discretion that, if exercised, would result in the parent controlling shares representing more than 90 percent of the total voting power of the subsidiary. In addition, the parent agreed to supply financial information to the Board prior to any repurchase of shares pursuant to the put, and to defer such repurchase until advised that Board staff does not object to the repurchase. The put would expire less than one year after the Board’s approval of the parent’s original acquisition of shares of the subsidiary. STAFF OP. of Feb. 11, 2002.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.31(d)(1)(i) and 225.12(c).

ACQUISITION OF BANK INTERESTS—Bank in Process of Liquidation

See 4-363.

4-280

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Shares Held by Trustees

Use of trustees to acquire shares of nonbank companies for the benefit of shareholders of a bank holding company does not remove such transactions from the prohibition of section 4(a)(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of July 31, 1957 and Sept. 19, 1958.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(2) and 4(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(g)(2) and 1843(a)(2).

4-281

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—To Maintain Percentage Ownership

A bank holding company and its subsidiary own shares of a company acquired before the enactment of the Bank Holding Company Act. A bank holding company’s proposal to exercise stock rights to acquire additional shares of the company in order to maintain its existing percentage of ownership of a company after the passage of the act was found to be an acquisition of additional ownership of shares requiring Board approval. BD. RULING of July 31, 1957 and Sept. 19, 1958.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a) and (c)(10), 12 USC 1843(a) and (c)(10).

4-282

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Through National Bank Subsidiary

A bank holding company may retain its indirect interest in two nonbanking organizations through its national bank subsidiary if the investments are permissible for the national bank subsidiary under section 24A of the Federal Reserve Act, because section 4(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act exempts such “eligible” investments from the section 4 prohibitions. BD. RULING of Dec. 16, 1957.
Authority: FRA § 24A, 12 USC 371d; BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); 12 CFR 225.4(e).

4-283

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Subsidiary to Perform Trust Functions

Section 4(c)(5) authorizes retention of the shares of a wholly owned company engaged solely in furnishing fiduciary services of the type that a national bank may furnish from premises of the bank holding company’s subsidiary bank. STAFF OP. of June 30, 1969.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); RS § 5136, 12 USC 24.

4-284

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Authority over Licensing of Insurance Agents

No provision of the Bank Holding Company Act pertaining to bank holding company interests in nonbanking organizations, nor any provisions of Regulation Y, specifically or by implication preempt, supplant, or override any North Carolina statutory provisions relating to requirements imposed by the state for the licensing of insurance agents. Regulation Y should be read as presuming compliance with all state statutory and regulatory requirements pertaining to a particular proposed activity. STAFF OP. of Oct. 5, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; 12 CFR 225.4(a)(9).

4-285

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Labor Union Exemption

Formation of a company that would be a subsidiary of a labor union exempt from the prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act and whose shares will be distributed to shareholders of the bank will not cause the labor union to lose its exemptions under section 4(c)(i) if the subsidiary will not be a bank holding company and will engage only in permissible nonbank activities. STAFF OP. of Jan. 6, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(i), 12 USC 1843(c)(i).

4-286

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Nonbank Subsidiary Premise Company

The exception in section 4(c)(1)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which allows bank holding companies to own shares in a corporation involved in property management activities if the properties are wholly or substantially used by banking subsidiaries, does not extend to property used in the operations of nonbanking subsidiaries. STAFF OP. of Feb. 15, 1973.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(A).

4-287

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Mortgage Company Subsidiary

A state-chartered bank proposes to acquire a mortgage company subsidiary engaged in arranging and servicing mortgages and sale-and-lease-back transactions for institutional investors. Such an acquisition is authorized by Regulation Y, which permits a state-chartered bank to acquire all the shares of a company that engages solely in activities in which the parent bank may engage, at locations at which the bank may engage in the activities. STAFF OP. of May 7, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); RS § 5136, 12 USC 24; 12 CFR 225.4(e).

4-288

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—By State-Chartered Banks

State-chartered banking subsidiaries of bank holding companies may acquire all of the shares of a company that engages in activities in which the parent bank may engage, subject to the same limitations the parent bank would be subject to if it were engaged in the activity. The Board, however, has refrained from utilizing its authority to regulate the nonbanking activities of state-chartered banks that are bank holding company subsidiaries, because these activities are under the primary supervision of state banking authorities. STAFF OP. of July 3, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5) and (8), 12 USC 1843(c)(5) and (8); RS 5136, 12 USC 24; 12 CFR 225.4(e).
Similar opinion expressed in staff opinions of April 26, 1973, Aug. 21, 1974, Sept. 29, 1975, May 17, 1976, and July 23, 1976.

4-289

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Through Management; Debt Previously Contracted

A bank holding company proposes to join other lenders in a partnership to operate, manage, and sell certain real property acquired in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted in good faith in order to realize their equity interest in the real property. The Board has no objection to the bank holding company entering the partnership provided that best efforts are made to see the real property sold at an early date, the bank holding company reports every six months to its Federal Reserve Bank concerning those efforts, and the bank holding company’s involvement in the partnership terminates within five years. BD. RULING of Sept. 9, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(2) and (c)(8).
See also Divestiture.

4-290

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Property Management; Debt Previously Contracted

A bank holding company’s wholly owned subsidiary may create a subsidiary to hold title to, operate, and manage property received as a result of default on its loans, without Board approval, as long as the assets are liquidated within a reasonable amount of time—usually the time period applicable to such property acquired by banks in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted. If properties of this kind are held longer, they may constitute an impermissible nonbanking activity. STAFF OP. of Oct. 10, 1975.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(D) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(D) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(b)(1).
See also Divestiture.

4-291

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Sale of Debt Securities

A foreign banking organization, with a U.S. subsidiary bank, proposes to offer $20 million of its capital notes for sale to the public at its U.S. offices and agencies, but not at its bank subsidiary. The Board applies the spirit and purpose of the Glass-Steagall Act to the U.S. activities of all registered bank holding companies whether they are domestic or foreign companies. The foreign bank holding company’s proposal does not violate sections 20 and 32 of the Glass-Steagall Act in that sale of the capital notes would not cause the company to be primarily engaged or to engage principally in the issue, floatation, underwriting, public sale, or distribution of securities within the meaning of these sections. This opinion is based on the understanding that (1) the notes would be offered for sale only during a three-month period; (2) the notes will be subject to designated maturities and specific limitations on denomination and aggregate amounts; (3) there are no plans for renewal or substitute offerings; and (4) such offerings are not to be an integral part of the company’s operations. STAFF OP. of May 25, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; Glass-Steagall Act §§ 20 and 32, 12 USC 377 and 78; 12 CFR 225.125 and 250.221.
See also 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 149 and 940, and 1974 Fed. Res. Bull. 36.

4-292

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Bank Premise Company

A state-chartered bank (“bank”) organized a holding compay (“Company A”) to acquire a de novo bank and later created a limited partnership to build, own, and manage a building for the de novo bank. (The bank’s interest in the limited partnership is permissible under state law.) It then assigned its interest in the limited partnership to a wholly owned subsidiary. Because of passage of the 1970 Amendments to the Bank Holding Company Act, the bank and Company A became bank holding companies. Thereafter, the bank merged with Company A, with the surviving bank holding company controlling both the bank and the bank premise company.
The surviving bank holding company is not the successor to Company A, because the bank cannot be both the bank and the bank holding company within the definition of “successor” in section 2(e) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Therefore, the surviving bank holding company does not qualify for grandfather rights in connection with the bank premise company. Since the bank premise company is indirectly held by the surviving bank holding company through the bank, the surviving bank holding company cannot hold the bank premise company under section 4(c)(1)(A) of the act, which provides an exemption for a holding company’s direct investment in a company that holds the premises of a banking subsidiary. However, the surviving bank holding company can retain the bank premise company pursuant to section 4(c)(5), as interpreted by section 225.4(e) of Regulation Y, which permits a state-chartered bank to hold shares of a company that engages solely in activities in which the bank may engage, at locations at which the bank may engage in the activities. Since the bank’s holding of the bank premise company is permissible under state law, the bank holding company’s indirect interest in that company is permissible under section 225.4(e) of Regulation Y. STAFF OP. of Sept. 1, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(e), 4(a)(2), 4(c)(1)(A), and 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1841(e), 1843(a)(2), 1843(c)(1)(A), and 1843(c)(5); 12 CFR 225.4(e).

4-293

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Subsidiary to Assist in Sale of Debt Securities

A bank holding company organized a nonbank subsidiary to assist it in the sale of its debt securities. The nonbank subsidiary’s activities consist solely of placing advertisements, discussing terms of the debt securities with customers, and reviewing and transmitting purchase contracts for the debt securities to the bank holding company.
Section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act prohibits member banks from being affiliated with any entity primarily engaged in the issue, floatation, underwriting, or distributions of stocks, bonds, debentures, notes and other securities, and the Board expects nonbank activities of bank holding companies to be consistent with the Glass-Steagall Act. The nonbank subsidiary was determined not to be principally engaged in section 20 activities but rather in providing administrative and clerical services for the parent bank holding company in its sale of its own debt securities. Moreover, even if the nonbank subsidiary was engaged in section 20 activities, the Board did not believe that section 20 would be violated, since for the purposes of section 20 both the parent bank holding company and its subsidiary are viewed as a single entity that could not be deemed to be engaged principally in section 20 activities. The Board has previously applied the single-entity rule in its interpretation of section 32 of the Glass-Steagall Act, which prohibits interlocking relationships between a member bank and an entity primarily engaged in the activities prohibited in section 20. BD. RULING of Dec. 27, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; Glass-Steagall Act §§ 20 and 32, 12 USC 377 and 78; 12 CFR 225.125.
See also Investment Company Institute v. Camp, 401 U.S. 617 (1971).

4-294

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Convertible Securities; Debt Previously Contracted

Unless the Board initiates control proceedings, section 4(c)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, requiring disposition of shares acquired in satisfaction of debts previously contracted, would be inapplicable to the acquisition, by a bank holding company’s banking subsidiary, of warrants that are immediately convertible into voting shares of a mortgage and realty company. Section 4(c)(2) would apply to the unconverted warrants if the Board issued a final determination of control relating to the warrants. STAFF OP. of Jan. 11, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(2), 12 USC 1843(c)(2); 12 CFR 225.2(b) and (c).
See also Divestiture.

4-295

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—SBICs

Bank holding companies may invest in small business investment companies under section 4(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act to the extent allowed by the 1976 amendment to the Small Business Investment Act, which permits national banks to own 100 percent of the voting stock of a small business investment company rather than to the extent allowed by the Board’s 1968 interpretation (at 4-175), which prohibited ownership or control of 50 percent or more of the voting stock. STAFF OP. of June 27, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); 12 CFR 225.111.

4-296

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Investment Company

A bank holding company may own an investment company subsidiary, pursuant to section 4(c)(7) of the Bank Holding Company Act, if the subsidiary makes certain equity investments in other corporations and those investments do not exceed 5 percent of the voting shares in each corporation. The bank holding company may hold the investment indirectly through the subsidiary pursuant to section 4(c)(6). For the purpose of computing the percentage of outstanding voting shares held by the bank holding company and subsidiary pursuant to sections 4(c)(6) and 4(c)(7), the bank holding company and subsidiary need not aggregate with the investment shares any shares of the companies invested in that were acquired by the bank holding company’s subsidiary banks in satisfaction of debts previously contracted, pursuant to section 4(c)(2), nor any shares held in a fiduciary capacity under section 4(c)(4). STAFF OP. of Sept. 20, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(2), (4), (6), and (7), 12 USC 1843(c)(2), (4), (6), and (7).

4-297

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Investment Advice Partnership

Acquisition of a one-third interest in a partnership engaged in providing investment advice is not permissible under section 4(c)(5), which exempts investments in companies in which national banks may invest, because (1) a one-third interest in such a company is not a permissible investment for a national bank under the Comptroller’s regulations requiring 80 percent ownership of subsidiaries engaged in approved activities and (2) the partnership shares are not the kind of securities explicitly eligible by federal statute for investment by a national bank. Therefore, a bank holding company must apply to retain these shares under section 4(c)(8). STAFF OP. of Sept. 22, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5) and (8); 12 USC 1843(c)(5) and (8); RS § 5136, 12 USC 24; 12 CFR 225.4(e) and (a)(5).

4-298

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Subsidiary to Issue Commercial Paper and Purchase Loans

The establishment by a bank holding company of a nonbank subsidiary to issue commercial paper and purchase loans from an affiliated member bank within the limits set by the Board does not violate section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act. STAFF OP. of Dec. 15, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 377; 12 CFR 250.221.

4-299

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Bank Service Corporations

The authority of national banks to invest in bank service corporations is not derived from the Bank Holding Company Act but from the Bank Service Corporation Act. Such investments are permissible for national banks that are holding company subsidiaries. STAFF OP. of Aug. 2, 1979.
Authority: Bank Service Corporation Act, 12 USC 1861 et seq.; BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); RS § 5136, 12 USC 24, 12 CFR 225.4(e).
See also 4-174.1.

4-300

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Investment Company

Under the Glass-Steagall Act and section 4(c)(7) of the Bank Holding Company Act, it is lawful for a bank holding company and its affiliate to elect a majority of the directors of a publicly held closed-end investment company, registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, in which the bank holding company owns an equity interest. STAFF OP. of Oct. 4, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(7); 12 USC 1841(c)(7); Glass-Steagall Act, 12 USC 21 et seq.; Investment Company Act, 15 USC 80a-1, et seq.
See also Investment Company Institute v. Board of Governors, 606 F.2d 1004 (D.C. Cir. 1979).

4-301

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Bank Service Corporations

A bank holding company’s subsidiary bank and an unaffiliated bank own shares in a corporation engaged in operating an electronic fund transfer network for the banks. The corporation provides EFT services to the banks through automated teller machines (ATMs) and electronic computers. The bank holding company proposes to acquire shares of the corporation. A corporation offering EFT services to banks is a “bank service corporation” within the meaning of section 1 of the Bank Service Corporation Act. Therefore, the corporation’s shares could be purchased by a national bank and also by a bank holding company under section 4(c)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act.
The Bank Service Corporation Act was intended primarily to permit small banks to pool their financial resources in order to acquire automated equipment to handle the clerical work required by banks. Because small banks are not able to purchase such high-cost equipment by themselves, Congress permitted joint ventures so that small banks would not be at a competitive disadvantage with large banks. The EFT facilities provided by the corporation in this case appear to be the type of automated equipment contemplated by Congress to be purchased by bank service corporations. Also, the principal functions of the ATMs and the computers involved appear to be the type of “clerical” and “bookkeeping” work referred to in the Bank Service Corporation Act’s definition of “bank services.”
An EFT network raises other issues under different statutes, however. ATMs may constitute branches of banks that establish them. It has been suggested that an ATM that is not owned or rented by a given bank is not “established” by that bank and, therefore, is not a branch bank, if the bank merely pays a transaction fee to use the ATM. However, an agreement among several banking subsidiaries of a bank holding company to establish an EFT could represent branch banking by indirect means, particularly if the network is organized in such a way that third-party banks are prevented or discouraged from using the network. An EFT network that allows any bank to participate appears to be significantly less susceptible to a charge of unlawful branch banking.
An EFT network that prevents or discourages other banks or thrift institutions from using the network may also violate antitrust law; therefore, the corporation should carefully adhere to those provisions of the Bank Service Corporation Act that require bank service corporations to provide competing institutions access to their facilities. Banks that wish to participate in an EFT system should also realize, however, that participation of more banks than is necessary to insure cost-efficient operation may also result in an antitrust violation, because it would involve unnecessary cooperation among competitors. STAFF OP. of Aug. 11, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5), 12 USC 1843(c)(5); Bank Service Corporation Act, 12 USC 1861 -1865; 12 CFR 225.4(e).
See also 1962 U.S. Code Cong. Ad. News 3878, 3879, 3882; Independent Bankers Association v. Smith, 534 F.2d 521 (D.C. Cir. 1976); Michigan National Corporation, 1978 Fed. Res. Bull. 127; Jackson v. First National Bank of Gainesville, 430 F.2d 1200 (5th Cir. 1970); Associated Press v. United States, 326 U.S. 1 (1945); United States v. Penn-Olin Chemical Co., 378 U.S. 158 (1964); Parker v. Brown, 317 U.S. 341 (1943).
See also 4-174.1.

4-302

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Sale of Notes

A question has arisen about the characteristics of notes that bank holding companies may offer for sale to the public without obtaining prior Board approval through the application process. The Board has stated that prior approval is not required for a bank holding company’s sale of notes that have an initial maturity of 14 days, after which the notes may be redeemed on demand. Such notes may not be sold or redeemed at or through any banking offices of subsidiaries of the bank holding company. Proceeds of the notes should not automatically or by prearrangement be deposited in the investor’s checking account at a bank, and purchases and redemptions should not function through a checking account. A bank holding company should not offer notes that have any third-party payment capabilities without the Board’s prior approval. STAFF OP. of March 20, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1843(a)(2).
See also Orbanco Financial Services Corporation, 1982 Fed. Res. Bull. 198.

4-303

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Selling Demand Notes

A bank holding company proposes to issue demand notes as a means of funding its subsidiaries’ consumer finance activities. The demand noted would bear a market rate of interest and would be available in denominations of $2,000 to $5,000. Subsequent purchases could be made in amounts of $500 or more. The holding company would advertise the notes for sale to the general public. Sales of and information about the notes could be obtained only through registered representatives of the holding company at offices located in one city. The holding company’s consumer finance subsidiaries would not sell the demand notes. Purchasers of the notes would receive a nonnegotiable “custodial receipt” as evidence of ownership of the note. A negotiable note certificate would be sent only upon request. The notes would be redeemable in part at any time, provided that at least $2,000 in principal remains outstanding, or in full. To redeem a note, a note holder would be required to deliver the custodial receipt to the sales offices. Those offices would advise the paying agent in another city of the amount to be paid. The requested redemption would be sent by mail to the note holder by the paying agent. The notes could not be redeemed at any offices of the holding company’s subsidiaries.
Two questions regarding this proposal were raised. First, must the bank holding company obtain the Board’s prior approval through an application under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act? Second, would the issuance of demand notes mean that the holding company is principally engaged in the business of issuing securities under section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act?
In reviewing the proposed issuance of these demand notes, the Board determined that an application under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act would not be required if the holding company structured the demand note to have an initial maturity of at least 14 days. Thereafter, the notes could be redeemed on demand. Additional investments would be subject to the initial 14-day maturity. All other details of the plan would remain the same.
Finally, the Board has stated as a general rule that a company will not be deemed to be principally engaged in the business of issuing securities within the meaning of section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act by virtue of issuing short-term notes provided that the aggregate principal amount of such notes does not exceed 25 percent of the issuer’s total consolidated assets. Since the issuance and sale of the obligations of the holding company and its consolidated subsidiaries redeemable within one year would not exceed the 25 percent ceiling, the holding company would not be principally engaged in the business of issuing securities. STAFF OP. of April 2, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8); Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 377.
See also Financial Services Corporation of the Midwest (Federal Discount Corp.), 1977 Fed. Res. Bull. 948.

4-304

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Stock of Reinsurance Company

The purchase or acquisition, either direct or indirect, of 1.0 percent of the class B nonvoting stock of a reinsurance company by various bank holding companies or their nonbanking subsidiaries does not require prior Board approval. Moreover, the limitations of section 4(c)(6) do not apply, since that section applies only to the acquisition or purchase of voting shares of a company by a bank holding company. STAFF OP. of April 29, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(6), 12 USC 1843(c)(6).

4-305

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Royalties as Compensation

A bank holding company requested an opinion on the permissibility of its subsidiary’s receiving limited overriding royalty interests in oil, gas, and other hydrocarbon leasehold interests as partial compensation for investment advisory services in connection with those properties. The bank holding company would not acquire more than 5 percent interest in any project. The subsidiary would place the assigned royalties in a compensation plan for assignment to certain professional employees. Neither the subsidiary nor any affiliate would acquire, hold, locate, sponsor, develop, organize, or manage any other energy property investment or in any other manner control the investment. The subsidiary would hold interest in energy properties only if the interest had not yet been reassigned to an employee, or if an employee terminates service with the subsidiary and is required to reassign his or her energy properties to the subsidiary. The bank holding company’s proposal is consistent with section 4(c)(6) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which exempts passive investments of 5 percent or less from the prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of May 3, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(6), 12 USC 1843(c)(6).

4-305.1

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Nonvoting Equity Investments

A bank holding company proposes to acquire 4.9 percent of the voting stock and 100 percent of the class B floating-market-rate nonvoting preferred stock of an insurance holding company (the company) that would own all of the voting stock of several newly formed insurance companies, each of which would underwrite life insurance, as well as annuities in various states. The bank holding company agreed that its holdings in the company would, under all circumstances, remain below 25 percent of the total shareholders’ equity.
Attached to the preferred stock would be warrants for 310,000 shares of common stock of the company. The bank holding company could exercise the warrants by tendering the class B preferred shares at stated value in payment of the exercise price. It could transfer the warrants only in a widely disbursed public offering to the existing management group, or to a third party who acquires a majority of the voting shares of the company prior to the bank holding company’s sale of shares or warrants.
A group would acquire 951,000 shares of voting stock of the company, representing approximately 95 percent of the outstanding voting shares. This group would be responsible for the formation, management, and operation of the company and its eventual subsidiaries. The group would not be related to the bank holding company and would finance their acquisition of voting shares of the company from internal funds or borrowings from institutions unaffiliated with the bank holding company.
The bank holding company has entered into an agreement with the group under which the bank holding company could purchase up to 700,000 of the group’s shares of common stock of the company (representing approximately 70 percent of its total outstanding voting shares). This purchase agreement has a term of 14 years and contains a formula to establish a purchase price based on the book value of the company and its future earnings. The agreement allows the group to accept from a third party any offer to acquire the common stock of the holding company owned by the group. However, if the group sells 300,000 or more shares of the company, thereby making performance under the purchase agreement impossible, the bank holding company may require that all of its preferred stock of the company be redeemed at par plus a 20 percent premium and any accrued and unpaid dividends.
When reviewing investments in nonbanking companies, the staff considers the following, in addition to compliance with the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments by bank holding companies (12 CFR 225.143 at 4-172.1):
  • Would the investment involve any significant convenants, restrictions, or requirements affecting the management, policies, or operations of the nonbanking company?
  • Would the total investment represent more than 25 percent of the total shareholders’ equity of the nonbanking company?
  • Is the bank holding company more than a passive investor, assuming the role of an entrepreneur in the organization, promotion, or operation of the nonbanking company or entering into profit-sharing or similar arrangements with, or agreements to acquire, the nonbanking company?
  • Does the investing company have any significant ties to the nonbanking company that suggest that its nonbanking activities are being conducted by, or sponsored on behalf of, the investing bank holding company (for example, use of common names; sharing of facilities, personnel, or advertising; or provision of integral services to, or solicitation of business for, either company)?
  • Does the investing bank holding company propose to establish interlocking directors or management officials with the nonbanking company, or extend credit to the nonbanking company on other than an arm’s-length basis or on terms and conditions other than those that would be required in transactions in the ordinary course of business with totally unaffiliated companies?
  • Are prudential measures, such as additional capital, appropriate in view of the risks involved and the fact that the requirements of the Bank Holding Company Act may prevent the investor from taking action to protect its investment in the company, thus placing the holding company’s resources at risk and limiting its ability to serve as a source of strength to its subsidiary banks?
The Board reviews the facts and circumstances of each case within the context of these questions and considers, in addition, the existence and number of other substantial investors and the size of the investment in relation to the holding company’s capital. The number and size of a bank holding company’s nonvoting equity investments in relation to its total and primary capital and overall financial condition may raise concern even though an individual investment does not. All bank holding companies contemplating nonvoting investments in nonbanking companies should solicit the Board’s views on each investment.
The proposed investment raises a number of concerns. The group’s inability to transfer their shares freely without being forced to redeem the bank holding company’s shares at a substantial premium suggests a degree of control over the group and the company that appears to be inconsistent with the Board’s policy statement. The provision imposing a substantial premium in the event of redemption of the bank holding company’s shares, which already earn a market dividend rate, further raises the potential of the bank holding company’s controlling the company’s activities by restricting the shareholders’ ability to sell their shares. The stock-acquisition agreement and the restrictive effect of the premium together serve to tie the particular management group to the bank holding company in a manner that allows the bank holding company a significant voice in any new management of the company. The stock-acquisition agreement appears to give the bank holding company an entrepreneurial, rather than passive, interest in the long-term success and operation of the company. The size and terms of the bank holding company’s investment, along with the fact that the bank holding company is the first and largest institutional investor, will give it a position and influence over the affairs of the company that would not be fully consistent with section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act.
This proposal differs in significant respects from other recent nonvoting equity investments in nonbanking companies. In the other cases, each of several other investors with significant financial interests also held very large blocks of voting shares of the nonbanking concern, there were no agreements for the eventual acquisition of control of the nonbanking company, and those agreements did not require the redemption of the investor’s shares in the event of any of the other shareholders’ sale of their interest in the company.
The proposed investment, as structured, would not be consistent with the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of Nov. 5, 1984.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; 12 CFR 225.143.

4-305.2

ACQUISITION OF NONBANK INTERESTS—Fiduciary Exemption

Two asset-management subsidiaries of a qualifying foreign banking organization proposed to serve as trustee for foreign-based investment trusts that would invest in U.S. real estate. As part of this asset-management activity, the two subsidiaries would take title to U.S. real estate on behalf of the investment trusts and for the benefit of the investors in the trusts. The law of the foreign jurisdiction requires the two subsidiaries to obtain a banking license to serve as trustee for the investment trusts, and the two subsidiaries are subject to supervision and regulation by the bank supervisory authority in the foreign jurisdiction. Under the arrangement, the two subsidiaries are subject to fiduciary duties that closely resemble those of a trustee in the United States. Moreover, under the law of the foreign jurisdiction, the investment trusts would not be legal entities separate from the two subsidiaries. In addition, the foreign banking organization committed that neither it nor its subsidiaries or employee benefit plans would own any beneficial interests in the investment trusts.
The fiduciary exemptions in the Board’s Regulations K and Y (12 CFR 211.23(f)(4) and 225.22(d)(3)) would permit the two subsidiaries to take title to U.S. real estate on behalf of the investment trusts and for the benefit of the investors in the trusts. STAFF OP. of Nov. 24, 2004.
Authority: BHCA §§ 4(c)(4) and 4(c)(9), 12 USC 1843(c)(4) and 1843(c)(9); 12 CFR 211.23(f)(4) and 225.22(d)(3).

4-315

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Acquisition of Assets and Liabilities of Rhode Island Mutual Savings Bank

A commercial bank subsidiary of a bank holding company owned by a Rhode Island mutual savings bank proposes to acquire only the assets and liabilities of its parent mutual savings bank. Prior Board approval is not necessary under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act since the commercial bank will continue to engage only in commercial banking as permitted under section 4(a)(2) of the act and will not acquire the license or charter of the mutual savings bank, assume any additional activities permitted savings banks in Rhode Island, take advantage of lower reserve requirements allowed by Rhode Island law to a mutual savings bank, or expand the scope or nature of its activities in any way. Staff took note of the unique relationship enjoyed by Rhode Island mutual savings banks and commercial banks, which may even operate from the same office and advertise as one bank. This relationship has been recognized by the Board in its orders allowing some Rhode Island thrift institutions to become bank holding companies while maintaining their thrift institution activities. STAFF OP. of Aug. 29, 1973.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8).
See also Newport Savings and Loan Association, 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 313.

4-316

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Transfer of Activity or Subsidiary to Subsidiary Bank

A bank holding company may shift an activity or subsidiary authorized under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act to a subsidiary bank without filing an application with the Board. After the transfer, the parent company may rely upon section 4(c)(5) as authority for its indirect holding of shares in the subsidiary, and the restrictions and benefits of section 4(c)(8) would not longer apply. STAFF OP. of July 8, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5) and (8), 12 USC 1843(c)(5) and (8); 12 CFR 225.4(a) and 225.123(c).

4-317

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Purchasing Silver Under Repurchase Agreement

A bank holding company engaged in the grandfathered activity of selling commercial paper commenced, without prior Board approval, the activity of buying silver in transactions in which the seller had the right to repurchase the silver. The company contended that the silver transactions are essentially a financing transaction within the scope of the company’s grandfathered activity. Although the Board had previously found buying and selling gold and silver to be closely related to banking, the finding does not make that activity essentially the equivalent of a financing transaction. Moreover, even if such activity is the equivalent of a financing transaction, it is not within the scope of the activity of selling commercial paper in that purchase of silver under a repurchase agreement can be considered the functional equivalent of a loan (with the silver as collateral), while the seller of commercial paper is more appropriately characterized as a borrower. STAFF OP. of Sept. 20, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8).

4-318

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Demand Thrift Notes

The Board has determined that when a bank holding company and its nonbank subsidiaries offer demand thrift notes involving the acceptance by a nonbank financial organization of non-FDIC-insured funds in small amounts from consumers with access on demand, such activities raise issues concerning competitive balance and monetary policy that should be considered in the context of an application filed under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of July 1, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8).

4-318.1

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Commercial-Paper Sweep Arrangement

A bank holding company proposes a commercial-paper sweep arrangement whereby its subsidiary bank would automatically invest amounts of $25,000 or more from a customer’s checking account in the bank holding company’s commercial paper at the close of each business day. The commercial paper would have a maturity of one day. Proceeds of the commercial paper would be invested in large-denomination certificates of deposit or loan participations of the subsidiary bank. A minimum balance, based on the customer’s checking activity, would have to be maintained in the checking account in order to qualify it for the investment service. Only amounts of $25,000 or more in excess of the minimum balance would be invested. The plan is aimed at the bank’s commercial and affluent individual customers, and the bank holding company would not advertise the service to the general public.
The Board determined that this activity may be regarded as related to the activity of managing or controlling banks permissible under section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, so long as the proceeds of the proposed sweep plan are invested only in certificates of deposit of the bank. Investment in these CDs would provide a greater degree of protection and liquidity than investment in nonbanking operations. The Board also indicated that the funds should not be used to purchase loans or loan participations made by the bank, because they would not provide the same degree of diversification as certificates of deposit, would provide a means of circumventing a bank’s lending limits, would result in a potential concentration of credit, and would create off-balance-sheet risk. Because the arrangement is limited principally to commercial customers, the Board did not think that the proposed arrangement had significant potential for undermining the orderly transition to market rates that Congress mandated in the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 (DIDMCA). The Board will, however, monitor the impact of such proposal on the orderly transition process. Since the maturity of the commercial paper is less than 14 days, the funds will be subject to the transaction account reserve requirements of the DIDMCA. BD. RULING of Nov. 4, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1843(a)(2); 12 CFR 204.2(a)(1)(v).

4-318.11

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Career Counseling Services

A company has applied to offer career counseling services to unaffiliated parties through its wholly owned subsidiary. The subsidiary currently provides career counseling services for the company and its affiliates, and the company proposes to expand these services to unaffiliated companies and individuals in a wide array of industries nationwide. The Board has not previously determined that providing career counseling services to unaffiliated parties is closely related to banking under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act and permissible for bank holding companies.
The company proposes to assist individuals who are employed and seek career advancement and individuals who are unemployed and seek new employment. The subsidiary would provide these services directly to companies and advise them on effective methods of providing career counseling services to their employees. The subsidiary would advise unaffiliated organizations on the advantages of including career counseling services as part of a comprehensive employee benefits plan and would help them establish their own facilities to implement career counseling services for their current or former employees. If an organization does not want to operate its own career counseling facility, the subsidiary would provide the services directly to the organization’s current or former employees at the subsidiary’s career assistance center.
The proposed services include (1) assessing an individual’s education, prior business experience, salary history, interests, and skills for purposes of finding employment or evaluating opportunities for career development; (2) assisting in the preparation of resumes and cover letters; (3) contacting employers regarding employment opportunities and making this information available to its clients; (4) conducting general workshops on the financial aspects of unemployment, current economic trends, the process of finding a job, and alternative career options; and (5) providing individual counseling on setting and obtaining employment goals.
The courts have developed a test used to determine if an activity is closely related to banking for purposes of section 4(c)(8) (National Courier Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 516 F.2d 1229, 1237 (D.C. Cir. 1975)). Under the National Courier test the Board may conclude that an activity is closely related to banking if banks generally (1) conduct the proposed activity; (2) provide services that are operationally or functionally so similar to the proposed activity as to equip them particularly well to provide the proposed services; or (3) provide services that are so integrally related to the proposed service as to require their provision in a specialized form. The Board also may consider any other factor that an applicant may advance to demonstrate a reasonable or close connection or relationship to banking (49 Fed. Reg. 794, 806 (1984); Securities Industry Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 468 U.S. 207, 210-11, n.5 (1984)).
The Board separated the proposal into four parts: providing career counseling services for (1) financial organizations (including banks, bank holding companies and their subsidiaries, thrift institutions, and thrift holding companies and their subsidiaries) and employees of financial organizations; (2) individuals who are unemployed or employed outside the banking industry and who seek employment at banks and other financial organizations; (3) individuals seeking financial positions (such as chief financial officer, cash-management positions, and accounting and auditing personnel) at any company; and (4) any individual seeking any type of employment at any type of company.
The Board concluded that parts 1 through 3 of the proposal met the National Courier test. Employment positions at financial organizations are largely financial in nature. The expertise that a bank holding company has acquired in providing career counseling for its own employees in financial positions, and its ability to evaluate the qualifications of individuals seeking employment in these positions, are readily transferable to providing these same services for other financial organizations and individuals seeking employment at financial organizations. Because banks generally engage in activities that are operationally and functionally similar to the proposed career counseling activities, the Board determined that the provision of career counseling services for financial organizations and individuals currently employed by, recently displaced from, or seeking employment in financial organizations is closely related to banking.
The Board also determined that bank holding companies have the expertise required to provide career counseling services for individuals in, or seeking, financial positions at any company. Because evaluation of the experience and qualifications of employees in financial positions at nonfinancial companies, and of individuals seeking career opportunities in these financial positions, is within the expertise of bank holding companies, the Board concluded that it is closely related to banking.
The Board determined, however, that part 4 of the proposal— providing career counseling services generally for any individual seeking any type of employment at any type of company—is not closely related to banking. Banks and bank holding companies are not particularly well equipped to provide career counseling services to skilled or unskilled personnel with no connection to banking or finance. BD. RULING of Nov. 8, 1993.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.23(a). National Courier Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 516 F.2d 1229 (D.C. Cir. 1975); Securities Industry Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 468 U.S. 207 (1984).
See 1994 Fed. Res. Bull. 51 for the full text of this order.

4-318.2

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Remarketing Aircraft for Nonaffiliated Third Parties

A bank holding company that is a large lessor of aircraft employs a staff to sell the aircraft at the conclusion of the lease term or when aircraft are acquired by virtue of a borrower’s default, as permitted by sections 225.22(a) and 225.25(b)(5)(vii) of Regulation Y. The number of aircraft to be sold varies considerably over time. The company inquires whether the occasional sale of aircraft for third parties in order to recover some of the expense of maintaining its aircraft brokerage staff would be incidental to its leasing activities. Activities that are incidental to activities closely related to banking are permitted under section 225.21(a)(2) of Regulation Y. The courts also have recognized the authority of bank holding companies to engage in incidental activities reasonably necessary to the carrying on of closely related activities.*
In view of the predictable yet uneven need of a subsidiary to remarket aircraft, and the need to maintain professional staff and market contacts in order to provide adequate service during peak periods, remarketing a limited number of aircraft for unaffiliated persons is permissible as an activity incidental to the bank holding company’s authorized leasing activities. The subsidiary proposed to limit such activities by restricting the aggregate value of aircraft remarketed for third parties to 15 percent of the aggregate value of all aircraft remarketed by the subsidiary for the bank holding company (approximately two aircraft per year). However, to ensure that aircraft brokerage for third parties remains a purely incidental activity and because this activity can be authorized only on an incidental basis, such activities should be limited to a specific number. Therefore, based on the information regarding the number of aircraft the holding company predicts it will remarket for itself over the next several years, staff stated that if the holding company remarketed no more than two additional aircraft for unaffiliated parties each year, this would be a permissible incidental activity. STAFF OP. of June 12, 1984.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.25(b)(5) and 225.21(a)(2).
[The staff opinion previously at 4-318.3, dealing with discount brokerage, has been redesignated 4-655.1.]

*
National Courier Association v. Board of Governors, 516 F.2d 1229 (D.C. Cir. 1975). Alabama Association of Insurance Agents v. Board of Governors, 533 F.2d 224 (5th Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 435 U.S. 904 (1978).
4-318.3

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Conducting Training Seminars

Training seminars conducted by a bank holding company on a fee basis through a joint venture would be within the scope of activities related to extending credit under section 225.28(b)(2) of Regulation Y. The training seminars would be provided to officers and employees of banks and consumer lending institutions and would cover the business and legal aspects of consumer lending, such as loan-customer solicitation, loan processing and documentation, credit insurance products, loan servicing, and specialty lending. STAFF OP. of Sept. 3, 1998.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.28(b)(2).

4-318.4

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Flood Zone-Determination Services

Providing certain flood zone-determination services is within the scope of permissible activities related to extending credit under section 225.28(b)(2) of Regulation Y. Permissible services include determining whether particular parcels of real estate are in designated flood zones, preparing standard FEMA flood zone-determination forms, and communicating flood zone determinations to customers. STAFF OP. of July 9, 2002.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.28(b)(2).

4-318.5

ACTIVITIES CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Title Abstracting Activities for Aircraft

Title abstracting activities for U.S.-registered aircraft conducted by a bank holding company would be within the scope of title abstracting activities authorized by the Board in The First National Company, 81 Federal Reserve Bulletin 805, 806 (1995). Title abstracting services are limited to performing a title search of aircraft records and reporting factual information concerning the ownership history of the relevant aircraft and the existence of liens or encumbrances affecting title to the aircraft. The title abstracting services would be provided to affiliated and unaffiliated lenders and other parties in connection with aircraft financing and sales transactions and would not include providing insurance against title defects or providing a guarantee or certification with respect to aircraft title. STAFF OP. of Oct. 7, 2002.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8); 12 USC 1843(c)(8).

4-330

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Electronic Equipment Manufacturing

An electronic equipment manufacturing company proposes indirectly to acquire a bank through a subsidiary. Shares held by a subsidiary are considered to be indirectly owned by the parent company under section 2(g)(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Therefore, if the subsidiary became a bank holding company, the parent electronic equipment manufacturing company would also become a bank holding company and would be subject to the provisions of section 4 of the act. In particular, the electronic equipment manufacturing company would be required to divest, within two years of the date it became a bank holding company, all nonbanking activities not specifically authorized by the act or by Board order or regulation. It is staff’s opinion that the Board’s discretion under section 4(c)(8) of the act is not so broad as to permit a determination that electronic equipment manufacturing is closely related to banking. STAFF OP. of July 1, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(1), 4(a)(2), and 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1841(g)(1), 1843(a)(2), and 1843(c)(8).

4-331

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Equity Funding

“Equity funding” is defined as the financing of sales of mutual fund shares and life insurance policies as a package. Based upon the policies of sections 20, 21, and 32 of the Glass-Steagall Act, which are incorporated into the Bank Holding Company Act, the Board determined that the activity of equity funding is not one that is considered to be closely related to banking under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of Nov. 9, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); Glass-Steagall Act §§ 20, 21, and 32, 12 USC 377, 378, and 78.

4-332

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Real Estate Syndication

A bank holding company proposes to form a subsidiary that would sell limited partnerships interests in real estate syndication in which it would have the role of general partner and in which it would organize, structure, place, manage, and supervise the syndications. Such real estate syndication is not closely related to banking. Also, such activities go beyond the functions performed by an advisory company to a real estate investment trust, which are permitted by Regulation Y. Moreover, such activities are not in keeping with the policies of sections 20 and 32 of the Glass-Steagall Act, which have been incorporated into section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of April 4, 1972.
Authority: Glass-Steagall Act §§ 20 and 32, 12 USC 377 and 78; BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(5) and 225.126.
See also Investment Company Institute v. Camp, 401 U.S. 617 (1971).

4-333

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Selling Auto Club Memberships

The selling of auto club memberships is not a permissible activity for bank holding companies and their subsidiaries, since the Board has not found that activity to be closely related to banking. Also, while the Board has authorized the activity of acting as agent or broker for credit-related insurance, such activity does not encompass the type of insurance services offered by an auto club. Also, the types of insurance offered by the auto club are not related to extension of credit and do not serve to protect the lender from damage to the collateral securing loans. Many of the services offered by an auto club are not insurance related. Therefore, the sale of auto club memberships and accompanying insurance do not fall within the boundaries of permitted sales of credit-related insurance. STAFF OP. of May 31, 1974 and June 8, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(c)(9).

4-334

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Supermarket Credit Card

A bank holding company subsidiary proposes to provide a credit card service for check-cashing purposes at a supermarket. The subsidiary would purchase any checks cashed with the credit card. This activity is not encompassed by the permissible activity of extending credit. Also, while this activity may be closely related to banking, the Board has not made a determination on this issue. BD. RULING of Aug. 5, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1).

4-335

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Tax Return Preparation

The preparation of tax returns has not been determined by the Board to be closely related to banking and consequently is an impermissible activity for bank holding companies. Whether a state-chartered bank may engage in this activity, however, is a matter of state law. STAFF OP. of Aug. 20, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8).

4-336

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Property Management

The Board has determined that providing property management services is not closely related to banking or managing or controlling banks and therefore is an impermissible activity for bank holding companies and their subsidiaries. However, bank holding companies may provide such services for properties held in a fiduciary capacity, properties owned by the bank holding company or its subsidiaries for conducting its own bank or bank-related operations, or properties acquired by the bank holding company or its subsidiaries as a result of a default on a loan (dpc).
It also has been determined that providing property management services is not incidental to the activities of extending credit and providing investment and financial advisory services when the provision of property management services is not necessary to the conduct of those activities. Providing property management services for property acquired dpc by an unaffiliated institution when there is no legal obligation other than to obtain property management services for the third party is not necessary to the performance of either lending or advisory activities. However, obtaining independent property managers to manage defaulted property for a third party because of contractual obligations is permissible. In no case is providing property management services over an extended period on property acquired dpc by the bank holding company or its subsidiaries incidental to either lending or advisory activities. However, limited property management services may be performed for a limited duration as incident to permissible activities if such services are necessary to an orderly transition of the management of the defaulted property and are provided for a relatively short period, such as six months or less. STAFF OPs. of Jan. 23, 1975, Aug. 12, 1977, May 31, 1978, and Sept. 17, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), (c)(2), and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2), (c)(2), and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1), (2), (3), and (5), and 225.126.
See also Fidelity Corp., 39 Fed. Reg. 16930 (1974).

4-337

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Insurance for Debtor’s Spouse

A bank holding company proposes either to include automatically or, for an additional premium, to extend credit-related insurance coverage to a debtor’s spouse. If the spouse is not obligated to repay the credit extended by the holding company system, the proposed insurance is not closely related to banking, because it is not related to the extension of credit. It is also not incidental to a permissible activity, because coverage of the spouse is not necessary to conduct the activity. STAFF OP. of Dec. 8, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a).

4-338

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Credit-Bureau Activities

In 1979, the Board approved a bank holding company’s acquisition of the check-authorization subsidiary pursuant to Section 225.4(b)(2) of Regulation Y. The subsidiary acquires and compiles in its computer banks certain negative financial information on individuals and, on the basis of that information, determines whether or not it should authorize subscribing merchants’ acceptance of personal checks tendered by customers in payment for goods and services. The subsidiary will purchase a validly authorized check for the subscribing merchant if the presented check is subsequently dishonored.
The subsidiary would now like to offer a computer-based service giving subscribing customers on-line access to certain background information on prospective employees. The information would consist primarily of signed statements, arrest records, records of case disposition, and other negative background information permitted to be accumulated, stored, and disseminated under federal and state law. The information would be provided primarily to employers who cannot afford to make extensive, independent background investigations of all employees.
The proposed activity is one that encompasses the accumulation of information that would be furnished to a client by a credit reporting agency or credit bureau, an activity quite distinct from that of check verification. Moreover, it is also not an activity incidental to that of check authorization. A credit bureau function was clearly not contemplated or presented to the Board in the context of the holding company’s application to acquire the subsidiary in question.
The bank holding company is not precluded from filing an application under the procedures of the Board’s Regulation Y and seeking the Board’s determination whether such an activity should be deemed permissible for bank holding companies. STAFF OP. of April 9, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(b)(2).
See also Barnett Banks of Florida, Inc., 1979 Fed. Res. Bull. 263.

4-338.1

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Deposit Account Linked to Credit Card Account

A bank holding company proposes to establish a plan that would permit holders of the credit card offered by a consumer finance subsidiary of the bank holding company to place funds in an account for future use. A minimum balance of $25 would be required to open an account under the plan, and additional contributions could be made in any amount. Funds placed in the plan would earn interest at a rate to be determined by the consumer finance subsidiary, depending on market conditions. The plan would allow a cardholder to direct that plan funds be transferred in whole or in part to reduce the cardholder’s current balance due on the card. The cardholder also could have funds returned upon written request or on demand at any of the consumer finance subsidiary’s offices, some of which would be equipped with electronic terminals providing access to plan accounts.
The funds under the plan would be supported by an irrevocable letter of credit issued by a subsidiary bank of the bank holding company, which in turn would be secured dollar for dollar by a deposit by the bank holding company with the subsidiary bank.
The Board determined that because of the demand nature of the account balances and the ability to use the plan’s accounts in the manner of a transaction account, the proposed plan is not permissible as a funding activity under section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, and, consequently, prior approval to engage in the activity is required under section 4(c)(8) of the act. The Board also stated that the demand nature of the account and the letter-of-credit arrangement with a subsidiary bank raise concerns about (1) consumer confusion over the nature of the obligation received by the customer and (2) the undesirable concentration of risk involved in backing the plan’s balances with a letter of credit of a subsidiary bank of the sponsoring bank holding company (see Orbanco Financial Services Corporation, 1982 Fed. Res. Bull. 198).
The Board ruled that if the plan were revised so that (1) the funds in the plan could be withdrawn (or used to reduce the debit balance of the credit card account) only at the close of the monthly billing cycle and (2) the letter of credit guaranteeing the plan funds were obtained from a third-party bank rather than a bank affiliated with the sponsoring bank holding company, the plan would resemble a traditional funding activity. The plan, as originally proposed, could well constitute unregulated deposit taking of the type prohibited by section 21(a)(2) of the Glass-Steagall Act (Banking Act of 1933). BD. RULING of Nov. 4, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8); Banking Act of 1933 § 21(a)(2), 12 USC 378(a)(2).

4-338.2

ACTIVITIES NOT CLOSELY RELATED TO BANKING—Mutual Insurance Company

A group of bank holding companies proposes to establish a mutual insurance company to provide directors’ and officers’ responsibility coverage and bankers’ blanket bond coverage for the participating holding companies and their subsidiaries. The group would form a not-for-profit mutual insurance company that would be chartered in Bermuda. The insurance company would have at least 20 participating bank holding companies at all times, and no individual bank holding company would control 5 percent or more of the mutual insurance company. Membership in the mutual association would be open to any bank holding company that meets the company’s underwriting standards. Each participating bank holding company would have one vote regarding the direction of the company’s affairs. The company would be managed by an unrelated management company. The company would not provide any insurance other than directors’ and officers’ insurance and blanket bond coverage and would not insure any entity, directly or through reinsurance, other than a participating bank holding company and its subsidiaries.
Section 4(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act prohibits a bank holding company from engaging in any activity other than banking or activities closely related to banking or acquiring shares of any company other than a bank unless the acquisition falls within one of the act’s enumerated exceptions. The interests in the proposed mutual insurance company would be voting shares because they carry the right to appoint directors and otherwise direct the management of the insurance company (12 CFR 225.2(l)(1)). Accordingly, the proposed investments may not be made unless they fall within one of the exemptions in section 4 of the act.
Section 4(c)(6) provides an exemption from the nonbanking prohibition for the acquisition by a bank holding company of up to 5 percent of the outstanding voting shares of any company. The Board has previously determined that investments made in reliance on section 4(c)(6) must be essentially passive and that section 4(c)(6) is not an unqualified grant of permission for a bank holding company to acquire or retain a 5 percent voting interest in any company. It is the Board’s view that the prohibition against bank holding companies’ engaging in nonbanking activities extends to joint ventures or concerted action by a group of bank holding companies in a nonbanking activity as entrepreneurs.
In this instance, the Board considers that the company is being formed as a result of the severe contraction of banking organizations’ access to directors’ and officers’ insurance, and to a lesser extent, bankers’ blanket bond coverage. The proposed mutual insurance company would provide services solely to the participating bank holding companies and their subsidiaries and not to the public. The Board has therefore determined that the proposed formation of the mutual insurance company would be permissible if (1) the mutual insurance company’s investment of its capital and reserves is of the type and in amounts permissible for bank holding companies and (2) the insurance company does not purchase the securities or obligations of, or assets from, any participating bank holding company or affiliate. The mutual insurance company must file with the Board the annual financial statements required under Bermuda law and any other reports the Board may from time to time require. The company is also subject to inspection by the Board. BD. RULING of Jan. 22, 1986.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a) and (c)(6), 12 USC 1843(a) and (b)(6); 12 CFR 225.22(c)(5) and 225.137.

4-350

“BANK”—Private Bank

A private (that is, unincorporated) bank is a bank, for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act. Consequently, ownership of a one-half interest in such a bank constitutes ownership of 25 percent or more of the voting shares of the bank. BD. RULINGS of Nov. 2, 1966 and Aug. 18, 1967.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and (c), 12 USC 1841(a)(1) and (c).

4-351

“BANK”—Subsidiary of Edge Corporation

A subsidiary of a corporation organized under section 25(a) of the Federal Reserve Act is exempt from the definition of “bank” under section 2(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act provided the subsidiary’s activities are restricted to those permitted by the Edge corporation. STAFF OP. of March 3, 1970.
Authority: FRA § 25(a), 12 USC 611-631; BHCA §2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-352

“BANK”—Commercial Loans

The term “commercial loan” includes all loans to a company or individual, secured or unsecured, other than a loan the proceeds of which are used to acquire property or services used by the borrower for her or his own personal, family, or household purposes, or for charitable purposes. BD. RULING of July 1, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-353

“BANK”—Commercial Loans

An industrial bank that seeks to terminate its status as a bank by ceasing to engage in the making of commercial loans must neither channel deposits to any affiliated institution that does make commercial loans nor supply or maintain the availability of funds (except through dividends) to any affiliate that makes commercial loans. These restrictions are given broad application and apply to any and all funds from whatever source derived. STAFF OP. of July 29, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-354

“BANK”—Domestic Branch of Foreign Bank

A branch licensed by state banking authorities for a foreign bank is not a “bank” for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act, since such a branch has no corporate identity separate from the foreign bank’s. STAFF OP. of March 3, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-355

“BANK”—Trust Company Making Commercial Loans

Making occasional commercial loans as an accommodation to its trust customers is not sufficient to convey bank status to a trust company. An entity that is principally engaged in the trust business is not deemed to be engaged in the business of making commercial loans under the Bank Holding Company Act if it makes occasional commercial loans for the accommodation of trust customers only, and all loans total less than 2 percent of assets. BD. RULING of May 18, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-356

“BANK”—Trust Company Not Accepting Demand Deposits

A trust company that makes commercial loans is not considered a bank for the purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act so long as the bank does not also accept demand deposits. STAFF OP. of Sept. 25, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-357

“BANK”—Trust Company

A company that restricts its activities to those permissible for a nonbanking trust company subsidiary of a bank holding company would not be a “bank” as defined by the Bank Holding Company Act. Under section 225.4(a)(4)(iii) of Regulation Y, a trust company may engage in the making of broker call loans as long as those loans are made as “passive investments” for the temporary investment of idle funds. The trust company may also give advance credit to a selling broker on a draft on the buyer’s bank, because the advance credit does not constitute a “commercial loan” within the meaning of the act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 26, 1976.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c) and 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1841(c) and 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(4).

4-358

“BANK”—Bank Engaged in Limited Activities

A national bank that has executed an agreement with the Comptroller of the Currency that it will only engage in providing trust services and that is barred from receiving deposits (other than trust funds) and making commercial loans is not a “bank” as defined by the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of March 4, 1976.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-359

“BANK”—Industrial Bank Affiliated with Commercial Lenders

The term “commercial loans” does not encompass consumer loans, generally, but would, however, include the purchase of retail installment contracts covering consumer purchases. An industrial bank that is affiliated with entities that do make commercial loans must not channel demand deposit funds to any of its commercial lending affiliates nor share common offices with any such affiliates. STAFF OP. of May 13, 1976.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-360

“BANK”—Commercial Loans

The Bank Holding Company Act defines a “bank” as an institution that both accepts demand deposits and engages in the business of making commercial loans. A trust company proposes to offer its customers personal banking services, including personal unsecured lines of credit. The trust company will not be a bank as long as the loans are of a personal nature, are limited in most cases to a maximum amount of $5,000, and are not used for any commercial obligations of the borrower. STAFF OP. of May 19, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-361

“BANK”—National Bank Not Making Commercial Loans

A national bank that accepts demand deposits but does not engage in the business of making commercial loans is not a “bank” within the meaning of section 2(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act.1 Therefore, a corporation is not required to obtain the Board’s prior approval before acquiring such a bank. Because a bank holding company is defined under the act as any company that controls a “bank,” a corporation would have to obtain the Board’s prior approval to become a bank holding company before acquiring a national bank that is a “bank” under the act.
The national bank divested itself of all of its commercial loans before its acquisition by the corporation. The corporation committed that the bank will make no commercial loans, and in its management policy statement for the bank indicated that the bank will strictly limit its lending to loans for personal, family, household, or charitable purposes. The bank intends to document its compliance with these commitments by requiring a statement from each loan applicant acknowledging the purpose of the loans. If there is any question about a borrower’s purpose, the loan will not be made without the prior approval of the bank’s board of directors.
To separate completely its deposit-taking activities from any commerical lending activities of the corporation or any of its affiliates, the bank will in no way supply or maintain the availability of funds to the corporation or its affiliates except in the form of dividends payable to the corporation (as well as certain transactions between the bank and affiliates pertaining primarily to payroll and employee benefits completed monthly on a fee basis). The corporation will not permit any of its nonbanking affiliates to enter into any extensions of credit, lending or deposit relation ships, joint ventures, or activities performed for a fee that involve the bank, unless permitted by applicable statutes, rules, or regulation. In addition, no commercial loan inquiries, opportunities, or referrals will be directed by the bank to any affiliates of the corporation, and no deposits of the bank will be loaned to or used for the benefit of any activity of the corporation or its commercial operating subsidiary or any other corporate activity that could be construed to involve commercial loans. The national bank has charged its officers and management with the responsibility for implementing its management policies and has adopted a number of procedures to monitor compliance internally.
The Board concluded that the national bank is not a “bank” within the definition of the Bank Holding Company Act and that the corporation was not, therefore, required to obtain the Board’s prior approval before acquiring the bank. BD. RULING of March 11, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c) and 3(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(c) and 1842(a)(1).

1
The term “bank” is defined in section 2(c) of the act to mean “any institution . . . which (1) accepts deposits that the depositor has a legal right to withdraw on demand, and (2) engages in the business of making commercial loans.”
4-362

“BANK”—Minnesota Savings Bank

The Board would not regard a Minnesota savings bank as a “bank” under the Bank Holding Company Act if two conditions are satisfied:
1. The savings bank and its successor agree not to make any additional commercial and agricultural loans (except commercial real estate loans permissible for state savings banks in Minnesota). In addition, the savings bank and its successor agree not to renew or extend existing commercial and agricultural loans (except commercial real estate loans permissible for state savings banks in Minnesota) and to limit any other lending to individuals for personal, household, family, or charitable purposes.
2. The savings bank or its successor agrees not to offer non-interest-bearing transaction accounts to additional customers and agrees to terminate its current non-interest-bearing transaction accounts, except those directly related to existing commercial loans, within six months from the date the application is acted upon by the Board. Moreover, transaction accounts directly related to commercial loans will be terminated when the related commercial loan is repaid. In this connection, the savings bank may offer only transaction accounts permitted under the Consumer Checking Account Equity Act of 1980.
If these conditions are met, an application by a bank holding company to acquire the savings bank or its successor may be processed under section 4 of the act rather than under section 3. STAFF OP. of Jan. 22, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c), 3, and 4, 12 USC 1841(c), 1842, and 1843.
See also the Consumer Checking Account Equity Act (title III of P.L. 96-221).

4-363

“BANK”—Bank in Process of Liquidation

A bank in liquidation is not a bank for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act. Because the bank in question had been closed by a court order, and had not accepted deposits nor made loans since that time, it was not a bank for purposes of the act.
Acquisition of shares of the bank by a bonding company as a result of the company’s payment on a fidelity bond does not require the Board’s prior approval. However, if the bank were to renew its operations, the Board’s prior approval would be necessary before commencement of business. STAFF OP. of May 6, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c), 12 USC 1841(c).

4-363.1

“BANK”—Savings Bank; Exemption for Thrift Institutions

Under section 4(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act, the Board ordered a bank holding company to terminate its status as a bank holding company by divesting its subsidiary bank or by divesting its impermissible nonbanking activities. The Board rejected the holding company’s proposal to direct its subsidiary to notify all demand deposit customers that the subsidiary reserved the right to require 14 days’ advance notice of withdrawal from their accounts. The holding company argued that this reservation converted its subsidiary from a bank to a nonbank under the Bank Holding Company Act because it would no longer be accepting demand deposits. Following the holding company’s insistence that its proposal would meet the divestiture requirements, the Board imposed a civil money penalty and ordered the holding company to cease and desist from its violation of the Bank Holding Company Act.
The holding company then proposed that it convert its subsidiary from an insured commercial bank to an insured stock savings bank and limit commercial lending activities to those permitted by statute to a federal thrift association, thereby terminating the savings bank’s status as a bank. The Board determined that the exemption from the Bank Holding Company Act for certain types of thrift institutions, enacted in the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, does not warrant an exemption as proposed by the holding company. In support of its proposal, the holding company relied on Board decisions rendered before enactment of the Garn-St Germain Act and the legislative history of amendments to the Bank Holding Company Act. The Board rejected these arguments because of the significant changes in the powers of federal thrift institutions and the enactment of the Garn-St Germain Act. BD. RULING of Dec. 3, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c) and 4(a), 12 USC 1841(c) and 1843(a).

4-363.2

“BANK”—Institution Making “Commercial Loans”

A firm engaged in managing and controlling mutual funds (“securities firm”) filed a notice of change in bank control with the FDIC regarding its proposed acquisition of an insured nonmember bank. By its express terms, the Change in Bank Control Act is not applicable to a transaction that requires the Board’s prior approval under section 3(a)(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act, and the proposed acquisition would require the Board’s approval under the Bank Holding Company Act. Section 2(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act defines the term “bank” as any institution that both accepts demand deposits and engages in the business of making commercial loans. The securities firm contends that the Bank Holding Company Act is not applicable because the bank to be acquired will divest its commercial loan portfolio before the acquisition, thereby converting the bank to a nonbank.
For purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act, a commercial loan is any loan other than a loan the proceeds of which are used to acquire property or services used by the borrower for personal, family, household, or charitable purposes. This definition is broad and includes the purchase of such instruments as commercial paper, banker’s acceptances, and certificates of deposit; the extension of broker call loans; the sale of federal funds; the deposit of interest-bearing funds; and similar lending vehicles. These transactions, both in law and in substance, establish a debtor-creditor relationship between business enterprises for purposes that are not personal, family, household, or charitable. The Bank Holding Company Act requires the securities firm to obtain prior approval from the Board. BD. RULINGS of Dec. 10 and 16, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(c) and 3, 12 USC 1841(c) and 1842; Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j)(16).
See also 4-270.3, regarding the Glass-Steagall implications of this proposed acquisition.

4-363.3

“BANK”—Trust-Company Exemption Under CEBA

A bank holding company sought clarification of the status of its trust company subsidiary as a result of the enactment of the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA). Prior to the enactment of CEBA, the subsidiary was not a “bank” as then defined in section 2(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act) but instead functioned as a trust company, a nonbank subsidiary authorized to conduct business under section 4(c)(8) of the BHC Act and section 225.25(b)(3) of Regulation Y.
Section 101(a) of CEBA amended section 2(c) of the BHC Act, redefining the term “bank” for purposes of the BHC Act to include any bank insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Because the subsidiary had been insured by the FDIC prior to the enactment of CEBA, the subsidiary falls within the definition of “bank” for purposes of the BHC Act. However, CEBA provides an exception for institutions that function solely in a trust or fiduciary capacity if they meet certain requirements, including a requirement that the trust company not “obtain payment or payment related services from any Federal Reserve Bank, including any service referred to in section 11A of the Federal Reserve Act.”
The subsidiary obtained various payment and payment-related services from a Reserve Bank, and it had done so prior to the effective date of CEBA. Therefore, the subsidiary did not fall within the exception established by section 2(c)(2)(D) of the BHC Act, as amended by CEBA, and it did not do so on the date of the enactment of CEBA. Accordingly, the status of the subsidiary changed from that of a nonbanking company subject to section 4 of the BHC Act to a “bank” subject to section 3 of the BHC Act. STAFF OP. of Sept. 19, 1988.
Authority: BHCA § 2(c)(2)(D), 12 USC 1841 (c)(2)(D).

4-395

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—10 Percent Rule

A company acquiring more than 10 percent of the outstanding voting shares of a bank holding company or a member bank without giving the Board prior notice may be in violation of Regulation Y and the Change in Bank Control Act. Any person (or corporation) who acquires ownership, control, or the power to vote 10 percent or more of a class of voting securities of a member bank or a bank holding company must give the Board prior notice of the proposed acquisition if (1) the bank or holding company has issued any class of securities subject to registration under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or (2) immediately after the transaction no other person will own a greater proportion of that class of voting securities. If, under the circumstances, the Board finds that no regulatory or supervisory purpose would be served by taking any enforcement action, however, it may then decide to forego such action, particularly if the offender has acted promptly to reduce its share interest to less than 10 percent. STAFF OP. of Feb. 12, 1981.
Authority: Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j); 12 CFR 225.7.

4-396

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—Notice Requirement

Eight members of the A and B family (A/B family) and the C family (consisting of two family trusts and a family partnership) seek to acquire 13 percent of the voting shares of a bank holding company. The A/B family will purchase 11 percent of the holding company’s stock, while the C family will purchase about 2 percent. The question has arisen whether the A/B family and the C family must file a change-in-control notice with the appropriate Reserve Bank.
The bank holding company was formed April 1, 1980, when it acquired the successor by merger with Bank 1. Bank 1 was created through the 1969 merger of three banks, one of which was Bank 2. Members of the A/B family were principal shareholders and management officials of Bank 2 and its successor, Bank 1, for over 50 years.
On March 9, 1979, the eight above-mentioned members of the A/B family and a ninth member of that family (the father of one of the eight) owned 26.7 percent of Bank 1’s voting shares. On March 18, 1979, the father died, leaving his son the 2.5 percent of bank held by the father. The members of the A/B family have continuously voted their shares in concert since well before March 9, 1979 and have not sold any shares since that date. The C family, however, has no formal or informal agreement to vote in favor of the A/B family interests.
The bank holding company has urged that the purchasing group be required to file a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act, because the purchasers will acquire more than 10 percent of the bank holding company and become its largest shareholders. Under Regulation Y, such an acquisition is presumed to represent an acquisition of control requiring a notice under the act. However, Regulation Y also exempts from the act’s notice requirements the acquisition of additional shares when the purchaser has held 25 percent or more of an institution’s outstanding voting shares continuously since March 9, 1979.
The bank holding company argues that the A/B family is not exempt (or grandfathered) because (1) the family members executed no formal agreement to act in concert prior to March 9, 1979; (2) the holding company did not exist on March 9, 1979, and thus no grandfather rights can attach to it; and (3) the trust instrument that the family claims allows one family member to vote 6 percent of the holding company in fact refers to shares of Bank 2, which is the predecessor of Bank 1 and the holding company.
These contentions are not persuasive, because they involve the elevation of form over substance. For example, the practical effect of action in concert is the same whether or not a formal agreement exists. Similarly, the creation of the bank holding company in 1980 in no way altered the substance of the relationship between the A/B family and Bank 1 and thus should have no effect on the grandfathered status of that family. It is also unlikely that a court would conclude that the merger of Bank 2 with Bank 1 and the subsequent creation of the holding company should terminate the voting rights under the trust mentioned above simply because Bank 2 has technically ceased to exist.
Thus, it appears that the A/B family is grandfathered under Regulation Y and may acquire additional shares of the holding company without filing a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act. The transfer of 2.5 percent of the shares from a member of the A/B family to his son after March 9, 1979 does not undermine this conclusion, because both of these individuals were members of the grandfathered group on that date. It appears, however, that although the C family is now acting in concert with the A/B family to acquire 13 percent of the holding company, the C family has not previously acted with the A/B family group and should not be regarded as grandfathered along with the A/B family. Thus, the C family should file a notice with the Reserve Bank. STAFF OP. of Feb. 19, 1981.
Authority: Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j); 12 CFR 225.7(a)(2) and (c)(1).

4-397

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—Indirect Acquisitions

A nonbanking corporation (Corporation A) proposes to make a tender offer for all the shares of another nonbanking corporation (Corporation B). Through a wholly owned nonbanking subsidiary, Corporation B owns 14 percent of the voting shares of a one-bank holding company. Corporation A does not intend to acquire directly any shares of the one-bank holding company or its subsidiary bank. Neither Corporation B nor its wholly owned nonbanking subsidiary is registered with the Board as a bank holding company. The question has arisen whether Corporation A is required to file a change in control notice with the Board pursuant to the Change in Bank Control Act.
Because the one-bank holding company in this case has issued securities subject to registration under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, a person directly acquiring 14 percent of the bank holding company’s shares would be presumed under Board regulations to have acquired control of the bank holding company and would therefore be required to file a change-in-control notice. Section 225.7(a) of Regulation Y does not mention indirect acquisition. Because Corporation A would be indirectly acquiring 14 percent of the bank holding company’s shares, the proposed transaction would not require the filing of a change-in-control notice. The Change in Bank Control Act and its implementing regulations are not intended to cover every transaction that might shift control of a bank or bank holding company. STAFF OP. of Aug. 5, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a), 12 USC 1842(a); Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j); 12 CFR 225.7.

4-397.1

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—Enforcement of Commitments

When the Board decides not to disapprove a notice of change in bank control in reliance on commitments made by the party filing the notice, compliance with these commitments may be enforced through the following mechanisms: (1) under the civil money penalty provisions of the Change in Bank Control Act; (2) through the institution of a control proceeding under the Bank Holding Company Act that could result in the Board’s prescribing a divestiture plan to be followed by the violators; or (3) by the Board’s cease-and-desist authority under section 8(b)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act as either a bank holding company or as “other persons participating in the conduct of the affairs” of a bank. STAFF OP. of Oct. 7, 1982.
Authority: Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j)(15); Federal Deposit Insurance Act § 8(b)(1), 12 USC 1818(b)(1).

4-397.2

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—Convertible Securities

A person (holder) acquired convertible nonvoting preferred stock of a bank holding company representing 18 percent of the voting share of the company. This acquisition made the holder the largest single shareholder of the company.
The rebuttable presumption of control contained in section 225.31(d)(1)(i) of Regulation Y is applicable to a person or persons acting in concert. The stock in this case is considered to be immediately convertible at the option of the holder; therefore, the holder is presumed to control a sufficient percentage of the voting shares of the company to direct its management or policies. Accordingly, the holder must file a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act (Control Act), rebut the presumption of control, or divest the stock.
In response to the holder’s assertion that the rebuttable presumptions in section 225.31(d) of Regulation Y are not applicable to proceedings under the Control Act, staff noted that the presumptions apply to both controlling influence determinations and determinations of what constitute voting securities. It is clear that the Board has the authority to determine what constitutes voting securities for the purposes of the Control Act, and the presumption in section 225.31(d)(1)(i) was validly promulgated under the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act. Therefore, acquirors cannot reasonably assert that they were unaware that the Board considers immediately convertible securities to be voting securities.
In addition, the holder argued that the stock acquired is not “immediately” convertible because the resolution creating the stock required the holder (and presumably any purchaser of the stock from the holder) to comply with all applicable laws, including, but not limited to the Control Act, before the stock could be converted. In support of its position, the holder cited merely the inclusion in the resolution of a legal requirement that would apply notwithstanding its inclusion. Staff did not consider this condition sufficient to defeat the immediately convertible feature of the stock. When the Board considered the “immediately convertible” presumption in Regulation Y, the question was raised whether a requirement to comply with applicable law would defeat the “immediately convertible” aspects of the stock, and the Board declined to interpret “immediately convertible” to exclude stock issues that require compliance with applicable law.
The interpretation that the stock is equivalent to voting securities is consistent with the purposes of the Control Act, which is concerned with whether the acquiring person will have the power to direct the management or policies of the acquiree and not whether it will in fact do so. The possibility of converting the stock places the holder in a position to exert significant pressure to influence the company’s management or policies. The company has no ability to delay the holder’s conversion of his stock, nor can the company hinder him from converting his stock by, for example, redeeming the stock. Thus, the holder has the power to direct the management or policies of the company under section 224.41 of Regulation Y.
A previous staff opinion indicating that the Control Act does not apply to the acquisition of warrants giving the holder a right to purchase voting securities of a bank or bank holding company in the future has been superseded by the Board’s policy statement on nonvoting equity investments (at 4-172.1).
In summary, the acquisition of the stock gives the holder the power to direct the management or policies of the company. In reaching this decision, in addition to relying on the terms of the preferred stock issue, staff considered the fact that the holder is both chairman of the board of directors of the company and senior vice chairman of the company’s subsidiary bank. Unless the terms of the stock are altered so that it is no longer immediately convertible, the holder must either file a notice under the Control Act, rebut the presumption that the stock constitutes voting securities, or divest the stock. STAFF OP. of May 14, 1984.
Authority: Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j); 12 CFR 225.31(d)(1)(i), 225.41(a), and 225.143.

4-397.3

CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL—Acquisition of Nonvoting Convertible Preferred Stock and Warrants

A nonbanking corporation (“corporation”) and the investors advised by the corporation filed a notice pursuant to the Change in Bank Control Act (CIBC Act) regarding a proposed investment in shares of a bank holding company (Company A). This investment has been proposed in connection with Company A’s acquisition from the FDIC of three bridge banks formed from banks that had been subsidiaries of a second bank holding company (Company B). The corporation proposes to call on invesment commitments made by a number of investors it advises, and to invite several other investors who typically invest with the corporation to purchase approximately $283 million of nonvoting convertible preferred stock and warrants of Company A. The investment would be made through two investment partnerships (partnerships) in which the corporation is the sole general partner. The partnerships will have a total of approximately 70 unrelated limited partners.
The preferred shares and warrants that would be acquired and held by the partnerships are nonvoting. These shares, and the accompanying warrants, may be converted by the partnerships into approximately 16 percent of the voting common stock of Company A after one year following consummation of this proposal. The preferred shares are also, under certain limited circumstances, convertible into an aggregate of 50 percent of the common shares of a third bank holding company (Company C) that is the intermediate subsidiary of Company A and that will directly own two of the bridge banks. This feature is available only after the preferred shares have been distributed to the investors in the partnerships. Neither the partnerhips nor the corporation, acting through or on behalf of the partnerships, may exercise this conversion right under any circumstances. This conversion feature expires in the event that the preferred shares are converted into common stock of Company A under the first conversion feature. The preferred shares must be distributed to the investors on the sixth anniversary of the investment and may be distributed to the investors at an earlier date only with the prior approval of the Board under the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act), or in the event that the leverage ratio for Company A falls below 3 percent. Neither the corporation nor the partnerships may transfer the preferred shares other than through the distribution of the shares to the investors, or in the event the partnerships receive prior Board approval under the BHC Act.
The second convertibility feature of the preferred shares cannot be exercised by the individual investors until an appraisal process has taken place in which Company A has an opportunity to redeem the shares. A number of features have been included in the terms of the shares to make redemption of the shares by Company A attractive to Company A, and to increase the expense to the investors of any decision to convert the shares into shares of Company C. For example, Company A may redeem the shares by issuing its own common stock to the investors in exchange for the preferred shares. The investors, on the other hand, must pay a portion of Company A’s tax liability on the conversion of the preferred shares. If Company A chooses not to redeem the shares, they may be converted into shares of Company C only if a majority of the individual investors vote for the conversion. If this conversion occurs, no investor would own or have the power to vote as much as 5 percent of the voting shares of Company C, and Company A would continue to own and have power to vote 50 percent of the shares of Company C. The corporation has committed to refrain from participating in any decision-making or advisory role at any time in connection with this option to convert the preferred shares into Company C stock and not to communicate in any manner with the investors regarding any matter related to Company A or the preferred shares once the shares have been distributed to the investors.
The corporation and the partnerships have stated that the proposed investment will at all times be passive and noncontrolling. Neither the corporation nor the partnerships will have any representation on the board of directors of Company A, Company C, or any subsidiary of either company, and neither will have any officers or employees in common with these companies. Moreover, the corporation and each of the partnerships have made a series of additional commitments designed to ensure that they will not, either together or separately, exercise or attempt to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of Company A, Company C, or any subsidiary of either of these companies. (These commitments are substantially similar to the commitments made by United Counties Bancorporation, Cranford, New Jersey, in its application pursuant to section 3(a)(3) of the BHC Act to acquire a noncontrolling interest in Central Jersey Bancorp, Freehold, New Jersey. The Board approved this application on August 28, 1989 (75 Fed. Res. Bull. 714).) The commitments include a commitment that neither the corporation, nor any of the companies acquired by the corporation through its other investment activities, will enter into any new banking or nonbanking relationships with Company A or the bridge banks, or increase any existing business relationships with these companies. The corporation states that, at this time, it has no business relationship with Company A or the bridge banks, and that companies controlled by the corporation and its various investment partnerships have no outstanding borrowings from Company A and have outstanding borrowings from the bridge banks of approximately $8 million. The corporation has agreed to provide a list of its related interests to Company A in order to ensure compliance with this commitment.
From the date on which the preferred shares are distributed by the partnerships to the partners therein, the corporation and the partnerships will sever all relationships any of them may have with Company A and Company C (except as otherwise permitted by the commitments referenced above and listed below). To achieve this separation, the corporation further commits that, from the date on which the preferred shares are distributed by the partnerships to the partners therein, the corporation and the partnerships will not—in addition to the foregoing commitments, which will continue in effect thereafter with respect to Company C as well as Company A—directly or indirectly—
(1) communicate in any manner with (i) Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) or any officer, director, employee or agent of Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) regarding the management, policies or operations of Company A or such subsidiary, or (ii) any holder of preferred shares (or of shares of Company C stock issued upon conversion of preferred shares) with respect to any matter that to the best of the corporation’s knowledge involves Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) or the preferred shares (or shares of Company C common stock issued upon conversion of preferred shares), except as provided below and except that the corporation and the partnerships may communicate and otherwise effect transactions in preferred shares owned by the corporation or any of its affiliates (or shares of Company C stock issued upon conversion of such preferred shares) with any securities broker or dealer, provided that such broker or dealer was not a limited partner in the partnerships; or
(2) arrange for or solicit the merger or acquisition of Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) by any other organization, or make a market in shares of stock of Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) or solicit or arrange for the purchase or sale of shares of stock of Company A or any of its subsidiaries (including Company C) for any person, except that the corporation may effect the placement or other sale of additional securities for Company A, at Company A’s request, subject to all of the requirements of these undertakings, and in connection therewith and for such purpose may communicate with persons who are holders of preferred shares (or shares of Company C stock issued upon conversion of preferred shares).
The corporation and the partnerships also commit, in connection with the purchase of the preferred shares, that the corporation and the partnerships—
(1) will annually, beginning one year after the date on which the preferred shares are distributed by the partnerships to the partners therein, file with the Board statements of their compliance with the commitments listed above; (2) solely for the purposes of enforcing or determining compliance with the commitments listed above shall be treated as though they were bank holding companies for purposes of the Financial Institutions Supervisory Act of 1966 (12 USC 1818(b) through (n)), including the subpoena provisions of 12 USC 1818 (n); and (3) in the event of a breach of this arrangement by the corporation or its individual partners or employees, the corporation or such persons will, upon the direction of the Board, divest any and all equity interest it or they may have in Company A or Company C as soon as practicable (and in any event within six months).
The Board believes that the investment, as currently structured, is consistent with the provisions of the BHC Act and the Board’s prior decisions. The Board also reviewed the notice in light of the standards applicable under the CIBC Act, which included evaluations of the competitive effects of the proposal, and the financial resources, competence, experience, and integrity of the notificants. For these reasons, the Board did not disapprove the proposed acquisition under the CIBC Act. BD. RULING of July 12, 1991.
Authority: Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j); BHCA § 3(a)(3), 12 USC 1842 (a)(3); BHC Act § 8, 12 USC 1847; Financial Institutions Supervisory Act of 1966, 12 USC 1818 (b)-(n).
See also 75 Fed. Res. Bull. 714.

4-410

COMMUNITY WELFARE PROJECTS—Administration of Funds Under CETA

Because, in staff’s opinion, the activity of administering funds under the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act may promote community welfare, a subsidiary designed primarily to participate in such a payment system may be a corporation “designed primarily to promote community welfare” for purposes of Regulation Y and is therefore permissible as an activity closely related to banking. STAFF OP. of Nov. 26, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(7) and 225.127.

4-411

COMMUNITY WELFARE PROJECTS—Low- and Moderate-Income Housing

A subsidiary of a bank holding company received from a Federal Reserve Bank, under delegated authority, authorization to construct low- and moderate-income housing units under several federal housing programs. After the termination of one of the programs, the subsidiary continued to engage in these activities.
The subsidiary may continue construction and sales activities as long as the housing is built in low- and moderate-income areas, does not displace low-income families, is owner occupied, and is affordable to low- and moderate-income families. Also, the housing must be priced so as to preserve the not-for-profit character of the subsidiary. STAFF OP. of Oct. 17, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(7).

4-411.1

COMMUNITY WELFARE PROJECTS—Contribution to Nonprofit Corporation

A community development corporation asked whether, under section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act, a bank holding company must obtain the Board’s permission before investing in a nonprofit community development corporation aimed at economic revitalization of a certain area. The corporation was informed that the purely contributory and relatively passive nature of the bank holding company participation proposed demonstrated that no “activity” or “investment” requiring prior Board approval was involved. STAFF OP. of Jan. 27, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (3), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (3); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(7).

4-411.2

COMMUNITY WELFARE PROJECTS—Debt and Equity Investments; Advisory Services

A bank holding company proposes to engage in community development activities pursuant to section 225.25(b) (6) of the Board’s Regulation Y through a corporation (Corporation A), a newly chartered business and industrial development corporation (BIDCO) licensed under Michigan law. Michigan BIDCOs are state-regulated private corporations established to promote economic development through the provision of moderate-risk growth capital and management assistance to small businesses.
Corporation A’s activities will be conducted in conjunction with the Michigan Strategic Fund (MSF) under Michigan’s Rural BIDCO Program. The MSF is a state-funded entity that will provide approximately half of the amount required to capitalize Corporation A in the form of a loan that converts into a grant under a formula based on the number of new jobs and increased sales resulting from Corporation A’s activities in designated rural communities. This program encourages the creation of BIDCOs in rural areas, and Corporation A will conduct its activities in the upper peninsula of Michigan, which consists of 15 economically depressed counties. Corporation A will make moderate-risk equity, subordinated-debt, and long-term seed investments in new and expanding small businesses on a for-profit basis. These investments will generally provide “gap” financing for the nonbankable portion of financing packages offered by conventional lenders in the upper peninsula.
The bank holding company also proposes to engage in technical assistance and advice on measures to increase employment opportunities for small business in low- and moderate-income areas through an economic-initiatives corporation (Corporation B). Corporation B will be organized as a nonprofit community development corporation and will be the successor to a department of Northern Michigan University that has engaged in these activities for the last seven years.
The Board has recognized the benefit of allowing bank holding companies to participate in community development activities, given bank holding companies’ unique role in the community, and has adopted a regulation permitting them to make debt and equity investments in community development corporations or projects. To give bank holding companies flexibility in approaching community problems, the Board has not limited the scope of investments that may be made through community development corporations.
The Board’s regulations permit investments in projects that are designed primarily to promote community welfare, including investments in projects designed explicitly to create improved job opportunities for low- and moderate-income groups. In this regard, the bank holding company has committed to limit the activities of Corporation A to providing financial assistance to small-business projects that are designed explicitly to create improved job opportunities for low-income individuals in the upper peninsula. The Board has also previously approved the provision of advisory and related services to programs designed to promote community development, and the activities of Corporation B do not differ materially from the activities previously approved by the Board. Accordingly, the proposed activities appear consistent with the Board’s regulations and precedents and are permissible for bank holding companies. BD. RULING of May 28, 1992.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.25(b)(6) and 225.127(d)(3).
See also 1989 Fed. Res. Bull. 576 and 1988 Fed. Res. Bull. 140.

4-415

“COMPANY”—Group of Individual and Corporate Owners

An investing group consisting of individuals and organizations, although acting in concert for the acquisition of operating control of a company, lacks the structural characteristics required to be considered an association, or similar organization under the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of Aug. 19, 1966.
Authority: BHCA § 2(b), 12 USC 1841(b).

4-416

“COMPANY”—Individual

The ownership or control of 25 percent or more of the voting shares of a bank by an individual does not by itself bring an individual within coverage of the Bank Holding Company Act, since the definition of “company” does not include an individual. STAFF OP. of Oct. 6, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and 2(b), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and 1841(b).

4-417

“COMPANY”—Ownership of Shares in Connection with Underwriting of Securities

A religious association purchased more than 25 percent of the shares of a newly formed bank for the purpose of resale to association members and the general community within one year. The association is not a bank holding company, despite its control of more than 25 percent of the voting stock of a bank, because the shares are owned in connection with an underwriting and will be held only long enough to permit their sale on a reasonable basis. This determination was based on the understanding that the association will sell its shareholdings within one year and will not vote those shares while they are in its possession. BD. RULING of Aug. 15, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(5)(B), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(B).

4-418

“COMPANY”—Preexisting Family-Owned Association

A family formed an association to create a company and has wholly owned that company since the company’s establishment. A member of that family, representing himself as an agent of the company, purchased 84 percent of the outstanding voting shares of a bank for the company prior to June 30, 1968. The articles of incorporation were drawn up and signed by June 30, 1968 but not formally filed until July 3, 1968.
Because it appears that the incorporation of the company on July 3, 1968 constituted the legal formalization of the preexisting association and resulted in a substantial change in the ownership or control of the bank, the staff believes that the company is entitled to the section 4(c)(ii) exemption of the act. The members of the family were, before the formal chartering of the company, an association or similar organization within the meaning of “company,” as defined in section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act, and the association owned more than 25 percent of the voting shares of the bank prior to June 30, 1968. STAFF OP. of Dec. 10, 1975.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1843(c)(ii).

4-419

“COMPANY”—Consortium Bank

A shareholder agreement requires each shareholder to provide financial support in addition to the initial share subscription, imposes certain restrictions on transferability of shares, and provides for designation of directors on other than a strict voting share basis. The Board determined that, standing alone, such an agreement would support a determination that a company exists under the Bank Holding Company Act. However, the fact that the agreement serves legitimate supervisory and regulatory purposes (that is, to ensure that the relevant bank will have financially agreeable commitments to protect its ability to meet its financial obligations) and is not intended to create a distinct entity, permits the Board to determine that a company does not exist. BD. RULING of Jan. 26, 1976.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 3(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1842(a)(1).

4-420

“COMPANY”—Individual Shareholders Not Constituting “Association”

Three individuals own combined shareholdings of 25 percent or more in each of three banks, and each of the three shareholders serves as an executive officer and/or director of all three banks. Unless a formalized or structured relationship through an agreement of some kind between the individuals, the individuals do not constitute an association and are not a “company” within the meaning of section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of Sept. 13, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b), 3(a)(1), and 3(b), 12 USC 1841(b), 1842(a)(1), and 1842(b); 12 CFR 225.2.

4-421

“COMPANY”—Short-Term Trust

A partnership holds shares of a bank, but the partners in the trust are the minor children of a single family. Trustees manage the assets of the partnership, which serves as a vehicle to provide for the education of the children and is intended to last only until the end of their minority. The partnership appears, in substance, to be a short-term trust exempt from the Bank Holding Company Act’s definition of “company.” STAFF OP. of Jan. 9, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 2(b), 12 USC 1841(b).

4-422

“COMPANY”—Indian Tribe

The question has arisen whether an Indian tribe is a company for the purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act, which excludes from the definition of “company” any corporation the majority of the shares of which are owned by the United States or by any state. It appears that in many respects the tribe’s powers and functions resemble state governments’ and represent a unique aggregation possessing attributes of sovereignty over both its numbers and its territory. Because of its status under federal law, the tribe is more closely analogous to a state than to any other entities enumerated and defined in the act as a “company.” Thus, the tribe should not be regarded as a “company”; therefore, would not be a bank holding company. STAFF OP. of June 9, 1978 and July 10, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 2(b), 12 USC 1841(b).
See also United States v. Mazurie, 419 U.S. 544 (1975).

4-423

“COMPANY”—Liquidating Trust

A bank holding company proposes to divest itself of all assets, including its subsidiary bank, transfer its assets to a liquidating trust with a limited existence of 10 years. The liquidating trust is not a company, and prior Board approval of the transaction is not necessary. Because the bank holding company will dissolve after transfer of assets to trust, the rebuttable presumptions of control in section 2(g) of the Bank Holding Company Act are not applicable. However, the proposed trustee, which is a bank, and its parent bank holding company would constitute bank holding companies of the divested bank and would have to apply for prior Board approval to act as trustee for the liquidating trust. STAFF OP. of Nov. 7, 1978.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2), (b), and (g), and 3(a)(1) and (3), 12 USC 1841(a)(2), (b), and (g), and 1842(a)(1) and (3).

4-424

“COMPANY”—Affiliated Holding Companies in Joint Action

A group of six registered bank holding companies, acting with a single purpose with common ownership and under common control, participating in a tender offer, is a de facto company under the Bank Holding Company Act. Moreover, the company is a bank holding company, because its constituent elements own banks and therefore could not purchase 5 percent or more of the shares of a bank located in another state. BD. RULING of Nov. 17, 1978.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2) and 3, 12 USC 1841(b) and 1842.

4-425

“COMPANY”—Individuals with Common Investments

A group composed of six individuals owns common investments, including two banks and other nonbanking investments held for the members of the group under a nominee agreement. The group is a company for purposes of the Bank Holding Company Act.
The nominee agreement covers the shares of two banks, as well as nonbanking property, and has no fixed date of termination. The principals of the group have other common investments. The nominee agreement appears to facilitate common management of the banks and other interests, and common management is not a temporary expedient to further legitimate nonbusiness purposes. STAFF OP. of Oct. 11, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 2(b), 12 USC 1841(b).
See also the Board interpretation at 4-185.5.

4-426

“COMPANY”—Control by Common Shareholder Family

Two bank holding companies, which are both majority-owned by a single family, propose to each acquire 4.99 percent of the voting shares of a third corporation, which proposes to become a bank holding company. Members of the controlling shareholder family propose to purchase directly 25 percent of the third corporation. Staff concluded that there is sufficient evidence to support the opinion that the two bank holding companies together are associated in the acquisition of the third corporation and, therefore, constitute a “company” within the meaning of section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The two bank holding companies must gain the prior approval of the Board before making this stock acquisition. STAFF OP. of March 24, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 3(a)(1) and (3), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1842(a)(1) and (3).
See also WISCOB, 1979 Fed. Res. Bull. 778; Commerce Bank Corporation, 1980 Fed. Res. Bull. 506.

4-426.1

“COMPANY”—Employee Stock Ownership Plan

Section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act defines “company” as any corporation, partnership, business trust, association, or similar organization or other trust unless by its terms it must terminate within the period set by the statute. Section 3 of the act requires any company that proposes to take action that would make it a bank holding company to obtain prior Board approval for that action. A one-bank holding company controls 85 percent of the voting shares of a bank and is in turn controlled by a limited partnership. The question was raised whether an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) of the holding company must file an application with the Board pursuant to section 3 before acquiring more than 25 percent of the holding company. The trustees of the ESOP are senior officers of the holding company and the bank, and the individuals who control the limited partnership are all currently registered bank holding companies subject to the Board’s supervision and regulation.
One of the factors considered by the Board in acting on a section 3 application is the effect the proposed transaction has on the financial resources of the holding company and the bank (12 USC 1842(c)). Because the ESOP would incur substantial debt in connection with the acquisition and the bank would be the primary source of funds for repayment of this debt, the ESOP must file an application under section 3 of the act before acquiring the holding company’s shares. STAFF OP. of Aug. 25, 1983.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 3, 12 USC 1841(b) and 1842.

4-426.2

“COMPANY”—Companies Acting in Concert

Three bank holding companies each propose to acquire 5 percent of the voting shares of a proposed bank holding company. The sole business of each of the three holding companies is ownership of their respective subsidiary banks. None of these three holding companies owns shares in the other.
One individual is the largest shareholder in each of the three holding companies and owns 35, 39, and 49 percent, respectively, of the voting shares of these companies. This shareholder is the president and a director of each of the three holding companies, and the chairman of the board and a director in their respective subsidiary banks. This shareholder is to be chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the proposed bank holding company and its proposed subsidiary. The shareholder’s wife is a director of two of the holding companies and their subsidiary banks. She does not own any shares of any of the three holding companies.
It is the staff’s opinion that the three holding companies are controlled by the individual who is the largest shareholder, president, and a director and that the three holding companies are acting in concert in seeking to acquire shares in the proposed bank holding company. Accordingly, the three holding companies would be a company within the meaning of section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act (and a bank holding company by virtue of their indirect control of the subsidiary banks of the three holding companies), and the shares of the proposed bank holding company to be held by the three holding companies should be aggregated. An application is required under section 3(a)(3) of the act to acquire 15 percent of the voting shares of the proposed bank holding company. STAFF OP. of Aug. 19, 1985.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 3(a)(3), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1842(a)(3).

4-435

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Over 25 Percent Held by Trustees

When more than 25 percent of the voting shares in a bank are held by trustees for the members of a union, the shares are deemed to be held for the union. Therefore, the union is a bank holding company and is required to register as such. BD. RULING of April 30, 1959.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A), and 2(g)(2)(A) and (B), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A), and 1841(g)(2)(A) and (B).

4-436

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Multi-Tiered Bank Holding Company

Company A controls 86.89 percent of the voting shares of Company B; Company B controls 42.1 percent of the voting shares of Company C; Company C controls 71.77 percent of the voting shares of Company D; and Company D controls 88 percent of the voting shares of Bank E. Company A controls Companies B, C, and D and Bank E by virtue of its control of more than 25 percent of the voting shares of Company B and each of Company B’s, C’s, and D’s control of more than 25 percent of the voting shares of the next-lowest subsidiary. Shares held by a directly or indirectly controlled subsidiary are attributed to the parent corporation. Therefore, because of Company A’s indirect control of Company D, Company D’s direct control of 88 percent of Bank E is attributed to Company A. Company A is therefore a bank holding company. BD. RULING of Sept. 16, 1959.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A), 2(d), 2(g)(1), and 3(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(c)(2)(A), (d), and (g)(1) and 1842(a)(1).
See also 1959 Fed. Res. Bull. 257.

4-437

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Shares Held by Individual to Qualify as Director

Shares of a bank that are held in the name of an individual solely to enable that individual to qualify as a director of a subsidiary bank and that the individual and the bank holding company acknowledge are owned by the bank holding company are deemed to be controlled by the bank holding company. Consequently, these shares are included in determining whether a bank holding company holds a majority of shares in a bank and can thus acquire additional shares of the bank without prior Board approval under section 3(a) (B) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 26, 1961.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(C) and 3(a)(B), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C) and 1842(a)(B).

4-438

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Indirect Through Subsidiary

A company is found to own or control more than 25 percent of the voting stock of a bank indirectly both through the company’s ownership of shares of a second company, which holds 65 percent of the voting stock of the bank, and through a wholly owned subsidiary’s ownership of 33⅓ percent of the voting stock of that bank. The parent company is deemed to control the bank by either line, because control by a subsidiary is attributed to its parent. STAFF OP. of Nov. 13, 1968 and Aug. 14, 1967.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and (g)(1), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (g)(1).

4-439

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Shares Held by Trustees for Benefit of Shareholders

A proposed reorganization of stockholdings involving four banks and a newly organized holding company would give the holding company 25 percent or more of the shares of Bank A, the largest of the four banks, and 24.9 percent of the shares of each of the three other banks. Trustees of trusts for the benefit of the shareholders of Bank A would own 20 percent of the shares of the bank holding company and 24.9 percent of the shares of each of the other three banks, all in trust for the stockholders of Bank A.
The holding company would become a multibank holding company, because it directly owned 25 percent or more of the stock of Bank A and 24.9 percent of the stock of each of the other three banks, and controlled an additional 24.9 percent of the stock of each of the three banks by virtue of the subsidiary status of Bank A, which controlled 24.9 percent of the stock of each of the three banks through the trust relationship. STAFF OP. of April 16, 1969.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(1) and (g)(2)(B), 12 USC 1841(g)(1) and (g)(2)(B). (Similar opinions expressed in Board rulings of June 17, 1957, Jan. 14, 1958, and Feb. 1, 1961.)

4-440

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Bank as Sole Trustee

A bank is the sole remaining trustee of a trust containing shares of another bank. The beneficiaries have sole discretion to appoint new trustees but are not inclined to do so, and the bank cannot delegate its voting power to anyone but a co-trustee appointed by the beneficiaries.
Under section 2(a)(5)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, the bank is not a bank holding company, because its fiduciary capacity does not give it control of the bank stock through its voting power. However, if new trustees were appointed and the bank accepted delegated sole discretionary voting power, it would be deemed to control the shares. STAFF OP. of April 7, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(5), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(A).

4-441

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Combined Individual and Corporate Control

The Bank Holding Company Act is concerned with control of a bank by a company rather than by individuals. As a general rule, when a company controls less than 25 percent of the shares of a bank but individuals controlling the company own more than 25 percent of the shares of the bank in their individual capacities, the bank is considered to be controlled by the individuals rather than the companies. When two or more companies that are controlled by a common group of individuals collectively own more than 25 percent of the shares of a bank, staff concluded that unless there is another bond beyond that of common individual shareholders, the shares are not controlled by a company within the meaning of the act. STAFF OP. of April 15, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2, 3, and 4, 12 USC 1841, 1842, and 1843.
But see also Change in Bank Control Act (12 USC 1828).
Similar finding expressed in Board ruling of Feb. 16, 1973.

4-442

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Perpetual Trust Voting Less Than 25 Percent

A perpetual trust owns 49 percent of the outstanding shares of a bank but, by virtue of a complicated vote-weighing procedure, is entitled to vote only less than 25 percent of the shares. The trust is not a “bank holding company” within the meaning of section 2(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which provides that, regardless of the nature of the trust or who votes the trust’s stock holdings, the perpetual trust is a bank holding company if it directly or indirectly, or acting through one or more persons, owns, controls, or has power to vote 25 percent or more of any class of voting securities of a bank. STAFF OP. of Sept. 13, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and (c), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (c).

4-443

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Control Through Voting Trust

A general business corporation became a bank holding company by virtue of its power to vote 25 percent or more of the outstanding shares of a bank, notwithstanding that the corporation’s control is through a voting trust that will terminate within 25 years. A general business corporation is a “company” within the meaning of section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 22, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A), 2(b), 5(a), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A), 1841(b), and 1844(a).
See also 4-185.5.

4-444

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Bank Shares Held by Directors and Their Families

A company holds more than 5 percent but less than 25 percent of the shares of a bank, and the company is owned by members of one family, who also hold shares of bank. The shares held by the family members may be attributed to the company if the family holdings were mere subterfuge to disguise the company’s actual control of these shares. Shares held by family members are not attributable per se to the company, but shares held by the family combined with the company’s greater-than-5-percent share holding raises a rebuttable presumption of control over bank. In the absence of an adequate rebuttal of the presumption, the Board may determine that the company exercises a controlling influence over the bank.
If there is no evidence that the company exercises control over bank and if family members control their share holdings as individuals, the company is not a bank holding company and may acquire up to 25 percent of the bank shares from family members without prior Board approval. STAFF OP. of Dec. 21, 1972.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A), 2(a)(2)(C), 3(a), and 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A), 1841 (a)(2)(C), 1842(a), and 1843(c)(ii); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(2).

4-445

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Rebuttable Presumption of Corporate Control

Four individuals own 25 percent of the voting stock of a company, which is organized solely for the purpose of acquiring 13.6 percent of the outstanding voting shares of a bank. After the acquisition, three directors of the company would individually own an aggregate of 25 percent or more of the bank’s voting securities. Also, members of the immediate families of two of the company’s officers control approximately 40 percent of the bank’s outstanding voting shares. Although the company’s relationship with the bank gives rise to the rebuttable presumption of control under section 225.2(b)(2) of Regulation Y, the individuals rather than the company would control the bank, because a majority (54.85 percent) of the voting shares of the bank would be subject to the control of individual members of two families after the 13.6 percent acquisition. Therefore, prior Board approval under section 3(a)(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act for the acquisition is not required. STAFF OP. of Jan. 17, 1973.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(C) and 3(a)(1), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C) and 1842(a)(1); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(2).

4-446

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Family Ownership

A company engaged in nonbank activities that are impermissible for a bank holding company is 75 percent owned by members or trusts for members of one family and will later be 58 percent owned by that family because of public share offerings. The company owns 7.42 percent of a bank and members of that family own another 1.31 percent. A family member is president of the company and a director and a member of the bank’s executive committee, and the chairman of the board of directors of the company is on the advisory board of the bank.
Despite the fact that no other shareholder of the bank owns, controls, or has the power to vote more than 5 percent of the bank’s outstanding voting shares, the Board issued a no-action letter with respect to making a determination that the company exercises a controlling influence over the bank provided that (1) no additional shares will be acquired by the trusts or family members and (2) no officer or director interlocks will be created between the company, the trusts, and family members. The company also does not qualify for exemption from the prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act pursuant to sections 4(c)(ii) and 4(d) of that act. BD. RULING of April 10, 1974.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(C), 4(c)(ii), and 4(d), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C), 1843(c)(ii), and 1843(d); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(2).

4-447

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Rebuttable Presumption of Corporate Control

An individual owned 100 percent of the shares of Corporation A, which wholly owned, except for qualifying shares, Corporation B. Corporation B and the individual owned an aggregate total of 24.9 percent of the voting shares of a bank holding company. The Board decided to take no action regarding determination of whether Corporation B controlled the bank holding company. The Board also declared it would take no action if the aggregate total owned by Corporation B and the individual were to exceed 25 percent. The Board’s decision was based on its understanding that actual control rests with the individual as an individual and not with the corporations and was conditioned on the following: (1) that neither corporation will at any time directly or indirectly own, control, or have power to vote 25 percent or more of the outstanding voting shares of the bank holding company or its subsidiary bank; (2) that the combined direct or indirect shareholdings of the corporations, and of any other companies in which the individual or members of his immediate family have a controlling stock interest or hold the position of director or officer, shall at no time aggregate 25 percent or more of the outstanding voting shares of the bank holding company or its bank subsidiary. BD. RULING of Dec. 16, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A), (a)(2)(C), and (g)(1), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A), (a)(2)(C), and (g)(1); 12 CFR 225.2.

4-448

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Stock Stapling

Prior to 1955, the transfer of the shares of a one-bank holding company was conditioned upon the similar transfer of shares of a nonsubsidiary bank. This stock-stapling agreement was terminated in 1955. The stock-stapling control provision of section 225.3(a) of Regulation Y was premised on the expanded authority granted by the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 and is not susceptible to retroactive application. Accordingly, because the formal stock-stapling transfer restriction was eliminated before passage of the 1970 amendments, no violation of the act resulted. Section 225.3(a) provides that restrictions on the transferability of 25 percent or more of any class of voting securities of a company in any manner will lead to a finding of control of that company. However, the form of the restriction on transferability of shares must be legally binding. If they are not legally binding, informal restrictions on transferability of shares do not come under section 225.2(b)(4). Therefore, the bank holding company does not “control” the bank within the meaning of section 225.2(a). STAFF OP. of March 28, 1975.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2 and 3, 12 USC 1841 and 1842; 12 CFR 225.2(a) and (b)(4).
See also American Security & Trust and American Security Corporation, 1974 Fed. Res. Bull. 875.

4-449

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Preferred Stock

The language of section 2(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, concerning when a company is deemed to control a bank or another company, is clear and unambiguous. Therefore, staff did not agree with the contention of a real estate investment trust that the section should not be read literally and that control should be determined on the basis of ownership of common voting stock rather than preferred voting stock. Although preferred stockholders can act only in concert with the common stockholders, staff concluded that ownership of 35.1 percent of preferred voting stock constituted control for the purposes of section 2(a)(2)(A). STAFF OP. of Nov. 14, 1975.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A).

4-450

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Individual Control

Corporation A holds 18.78 percent of the voting shares of Corporation B, which intends to buy 35 percent of the shares of Bank C. Seventy-five percent of the voting shares of Corporation A is owned by a husband and wife, who also own 35.56 percent of Corporation B. These individuals and one other person serve as either directors or officers of both Corporations A and B, and several other officers and directors of Corporation A own voting shares of Corporation B. If Corporation B were to become a bank holding company, a rebuttable presumption that Corporation A controls the bank holding company would exist under section 225.2(b)(2) of Regulation Y, by virtue of (1) Corporation A’s ownership of 18.78 percent of the voting shares of Corporation B and (2) the fact that the additional voting shares of Corporation B that are owned by an individual who is either a director or officer of Corporation A total more than 25 percent of the voting shares of Corporation B.
The individuals argued that because they directly own 35.56 percent of Corporation B and through Corporation A control or own more than 50 percent of Corporation B, they, rather than Corporation A, actually control Corporation B. However, Corporation A was not founded by the individuals for the sole purpose of holding voting shares of Corporation B, is not entirely owned by the individuals, and could continue to engage in activities other than holding shares of Corporation B. Also, various other individuals serve as officers and directors of both Corporations A and B, and several other officers and directors of Corporation A hold voting stock in Corporation B. Thus, Corporation A is not merely an alter ego of the individuals but is a separate and distinct corporate entity that has extensive connections with Corporation B.
Even if the individuals own and control a majority of the shares of Corporation B, that fact would not rebut the presumption of Corporation A’s control of Corporation B, because a company could in fact have a smaller voting share interest than another shareholder and still exert a controlling influence. STAFF OP. of Sept. 10, 1976.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(C), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(2) and (c).

4-451

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Preferred Shares

A bank holding company proposes to acquire 100 percent of the voting preferred shares of a nonbanking company. Although the preferred shares amount to only 4.76 percent of all voting shares, the acquisition is not exempt from the nonbanking prohibitions in section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act pursuant to section 4(c)(6) of that act. Section 4(c)(6) must be read in conjunction with section 2(a)(2)(A), which defines control as acquisition of 25 percent or more of any class of voting stock. STAFF OP. of March 17, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A), 4(a), and 4(c)(6), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A), 1843(a), and 1843(c)(6).
See also Board policy statement at 4-172.1.

4-452

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Bank Shares as Collateral for Loan

Shareholders of Bank A propose an interim loan from Bank B in order to purchase Bank A’s loan receivables. A bank holding company, of which the lead bank is Bank B, is negotiating to acquire shares of Bank A. Staff concluded that the bank holding company had not acquired indirect control of the voting shares of Bank A, because (1) none of Bank A’s shares were submitted as collateral to secure the loan, and (2) there were no agreements or understandings between the borrower and lender or the holding company involving voting rights, control, influence, or management of Bank A or the conduct of its business. STAFF OP. of June 13, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(C), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C).

4-453

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Purchase by Employee Stock Ownership Plan

A principal of a bank holding company owns 40 percent of the shares of a bank in which the bank holding company has a 38.5 percent interest. The bank maintains an employee stock ownership plan and proposes to acquire approximately 25 percent of the bank’s stock from the principal over the next 15 to 18 years. The bank is deemed to control both the shares held by the trustees of the employee stock ownership plan, pursuant to section 2(g)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, and those held by the principal of the bank holding company, pursuant to section 2(g)(3). Prior Board approval of the purchases from the principal by the employee stock ownership plan is not required, because the bank holding company would not be acquiring ownership or control of any shares that it is not already deemed to control. STAFF OP. of July 13, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(2) and (3), 12 USC 1841(g)(2) and (3).

4-454

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Transfer to Parent

When a bank holding company transfers all of its shares of a bank to its parent company, which is itself a bank holding company, section 2(g)(3) of the Bank Holding Company Act raises a presumption that the transferor retains indirect control of the bank. However, since the company would continue to be subject to Board jurisdiction by virtue of being the subsidiary of a bank holding company the transfer would not result in the Board’s loss of regulatory control. STAFF OP. of Sept. 8, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1843(a)(2); 12 CFR 225.2(b).

4-455

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Individual Control

Two individuals have a 60.1 percent stock interest in a bank and are the only two stockholders of a corporation that has a 16.4 percent stock interest in the bank. This wholly owned corporation is not considered to be a bank holding company, because it does not control the bank through the individuals; rather, the individuals themselves are the controlling factor. BD. RULING of Nov. 15, 1977. STAFF OP. of June 16, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(C), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C).
See also Vickars-Henry Corp. v. Board of Governors, 629 F.2d 629 (9th Cir., 1980).

4-457

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Convertible Preferred Securities

A bank holding company seeks to invest in corporate convertible preferred securities issued by an insurance holding company engaged in the general insurance business. Solely at the option of the holder, the preferred securities involved are convertible at any time into voting common stock of the insurance holding company. A question arises about the extent to which the Bank Holding Company Act and Board regulations permit bank holding companies to invest in such corporate convertible preferred securities.
Section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act generally prohibits bank holding companies from acquiring more than 5 percent of the shares of any nonbanking company unless the company is engaged in activities closely related to banking and a proper incident thereto. Because the general insurance business has been found by the Board to be an impermissible nonbanking activity, a bank holding company would be prohibited from acquiring more than 5 percent of an insurance holding company’s shares. Further, section 225.2(b)(5) of Regulation Y specifies securities convertible into voting shares at the option of the holder or owner at any time are considered to be voting shares owned or controlled by the holder. Therefore, assuming that an insurance holding company is engaged in the general insurance business, a bank holding company may not acquire more than 5 percent of the insurance holding company’s convertible preferred securities. STAFF OP. of April 9, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(3) and (4), and 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1841(a)(3) and (4), and 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(8) and 225.2(b)(5).

4-458

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Rebuttable Presumption of Control

The Board issued a preliminary determination that a member bank holding company exercises a controlling influence over the management or policies of another bank, pursuant to the rebuttable presumptions of control in section 225.2(b)(1) of Regulation Y. The Board’s determination was based upon (1) the bank holding company’s ownership of 13.7 percent of the voting shares of another bank; (2) the fact that no other person owned, controlled, or had powers to vote as much as 5 percent of any class of voting securities of the second bank; and (3) the existence of at least three interlocking management positions.
As a result of the control determination, the second bank will have to be reported as a subsidiary in accordance with section 225.2(c)(1)(ii) of Regulation Y, but since this relationship existed continuously beginning prior to December 31, 1970, the bank holding company was not required to seek Board approval to retain this control relationship. The bank holding company was informed that it was required under the Bank Holding Company Act to seek the Board’s approval for the acquisition of any additional voting shares in the second bank, whether or not the proposed acquisition would increase its share interest. However, no opinion was expressed on whether an increased stock interest would be considered an acquisition of an “additional bank” for purposes of the interstate acquisition prohibitions of section 3(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of June 9, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(C) and 3(d), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C) and 1842(d); 12 CFR 225.2(b)(1) and (c)(1)(ii).

4-459

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Section 2(g)(3) Determinations

No 2(g)(3) noncontrol determination is necessary when shares of a divested subsidiary are distributed pro rata to shareholders of the bank holding company. The fact that certain directors and officers of the transferor received shares of the divested subsidiary was a predictable result of the distribution. Moreover, the indebtedness of certain shareholders to banking subsidiaries of the transferor is not of concern, since no individual holds in excess of 5 percent of the divested subsidiary’s shares. Lastly, at the time of the divestiture, the Board had not established its policy of applying section 2(g)(3) presumptions to such situations. STAFF OP. of June 30, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2(b) and 225.139.

4-460

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Correspondent Banks

A bank holding company and its subsidiary bank had long-standing relationships with 16 correspondent banks, and although the bank holding company directly owned no stock in the correspondent associates, many of its present directors and former officers, directors, and employees purchased stock of the correspondent associates with the expectation that the banks would be organized and operated under the guidance of the bank holding company and would eventually be part of the bank holding company as subsidiary banks. Staff concluded that shares of the correspondent associates would not be attributed to the company so long as it did not finance the purchase of the shares.
The Board investigated the relationship to determine whether the bank holding company exercises controlling influence over the correspondent banks. In determining whether the holding company exercises a controlling influence over the correspondent associates within the meaning of section 2(a)(2)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act, the Board had to consider whether the holding organization has the power, directly or indirectly, to exercise a controlling influence over the correspondent associate banks. The relationship between the holding company and the correspondent associate banks has the following general features:
  • The holding company makes available a number of correspondent banking services to correspondent associates, including management consultation, branch-site selection and consultation, central purchasing, credit review, operations system analysis, data processing and accounting systems and services, check clearing, personnel-training programs.
  • The holding company helps correspondent associates locate and train personnel.
  • Officers of the holding company attend meetings of the boards of directors of the correspondent associates, but only upon invitation of the correspondent associate.
  • The holding company develops various advertising and promotional programs and generally makes program information available to the correspondent associates.
  • The holding company owns subordinated capital debentures in the correspondent associates, certain of which are convertible into stock of the issuing correspondent associate.
  • A majority of the correspondent associate banks have elected to use the name of the holding company and its logo, including the name of their own city or county.
 Under ordinary circumstances, a combination of the above factors would result in the Board’s instituting a control proceeding under section 2 (a)(2)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act. However, staff concluded that a finding of controlling influence would be inappropriate, because the bank holding company’s relationship with the correspondent banks began well before the passage of the controlling-influence standard in the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970. STAFF OP. of Sept. 21, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(C), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C).
See also Patagonia Corporation, 1977 Fed. Res. Bull. 288.

4-461

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Control of Ultimate Disposition of Shares

A company owns 9.9 percent of the voting securities of a bank holding company and holds options to purchase an additional 22.5 percent. It filed a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act proposing (1) to exercise options for its own account sufficient to bring its share ownership up to 24.9 percent of the shares of the bank holding company and (2) to sell to third parties, either as options or as shares, the remaining 7.5 percent of the voting shares held under option. The company has granted to a second bank holding company an option to purchase the entire block of 32.4 percent of shares owned or under option to the company and has agreed to bind third parties who would purchase the excess 7.5 percent to the escrow arrangements included in the agreement with the second bank holding company and to grant the second bank holding company the right to approve any third-party purchasers of the excess 7.5 percent. The company will receive an option price based on total number of shares placed in escrow by the company and third parties who purchase shares from the company only if the company places its 24.9 percent in escrow and arranges for placement in escrow of a majority of the excess 7.5 percent sold to third parties.
The Board concluded that, through the option granted the second bank holding company and the various contractual commitments and economic incentives associated with that option, the company would retain control of the ultimate disposition of, and the economic benefits accruing from, ownership of the 7.5 percent of shares in spite of the sale of those shares to third parties. As a result, the Board found that, under the proposal, the company would own or control the full 32.4 percent of shares of the first bank holding company for the purposes of section 2(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act and was required to file a bank holding company application before consummating the proposed transaction.
The company later amended its proposal to retain 24.99 percent of voting shares and transfer the remaining 7.5 percent to an independent third party. It agreed to modify the option to the second bank holding company so that the 7.5 percent sold to the independent third party was not subject to that option. The Board determined that under this arrangement the company would not own or control the full 32.4 percent for the purposes of section 2(a)(2)(A).
The Board then considered whether ownership of 24.99 percent of the voting stock of the first bank holding company would allow the company to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of the first bank holding company for purposes of section 2(a)(2)(C). In considering this matter, the Board noted the following:
  • The company had committed not to seek representation on the first bank holding company board of directors.
  • The management of the first bank holding company was supported by a block of stock at least equal to the amount of shares the company proposed to acquire.
  • The management of the first bank holding company had approved a merger that would increase the shares supporting management and substantially dilute the block the company proposed to acquire.
  • The first bank holding company had allied itself with a third-party bank holding company in a merger agreement giving that bank holding company rights over substantial blocks of warrants and options on voting shares of the first bank holding company.
  • In the single matter in which the company had sought to influence the management of the first bank holding company, the company had been unable to exert any influence as a shareholder and was forced to resort to ultimately futile litigation.
Based on these and other facts, the Board concluded that the company would not exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of the first bank holding company. As a result, the Board found that the Bank Holding Company Act did not apply to the company at this time and determined that a notice under the Change in Bank Control Act was appropriate for the proposed transaction. BD. RULINGS of March 18 and April 5, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A) and (C), and 3(a), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (C), and 1842(a); Change in Bank Control Act, 12 USC 1817(j).

4-462

“CONTROL” AND “CONTROLLING INFLUENCE”—Nonvoting Equity Investments

A bank holding company that is controlled by a group of individuals purchased nonvoting stock equal to 25 percent of the total equity of another bank that is owned by the same group. The bank holding company did not have to file an application under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act, because the bank was controlled by the group of individuals and not by the company. Moreover, the group of individuals was not deemed to be a bank holding company, because no formalized structure was found. BD. RULING of May 25, 1983.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143 (policy statement at 4-172.1).

4-472

DATA PROCESSING—Pilot Program

A bank holding company proposed a pilot research program that would offer banking services as well as nonbanking informational services such as home shopping, travel planning, and general news and information. These services would be offered through general-purpose hardware provided to 100 household customers for 12 months. The purpose of the pilot program is to determine if banking, financial, and economic data are viable components in a home information system and to test consumer willingness to pay for such services by charging a nominal fee of approximately $7.50 per month.
With the exception of the offering of general-purpose hardware, which would be generally permissible under section 225.25(b)(7) of Regulation Y permitting data processing services, none of the nonbanking services would be permissible. Nevertheless, the holding company need not file a notice for a new “activity” to participate in the limited pilot program, because the program is for research purposes and not for the purpose of establishing a permanent, profit-making home banking system. If in the future the holding company wants to offer home banking services on other than an experimental basis, it would be required to file a notice or an application under section 225.23 of Regulation Y. STAFF OP. of Aug. 31, 1984.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.23 and 225.25(b)(7).

4-472.1

DATA PROCESSING—Design and Assembly

A bank holding company requested that its data processing subsidiary be permitted to continue certain design and assembly activities associated with providing a data services package. In approving the acquisition of the subsidiary, the Board had ordered the divestiture of these operations unless the bank holding company could demonstrate that they were necessary to ensure the availability and reliability of its computer components.
The request raised the issue of whether the subsidiary’s assembly activities were incidental to providing the approved data services package. Under Board precedent, the provision of computer hardware in a data processing package is a permissible incidental activity if the hardware is (1) reasonably necessary to providing the data processing services; (2) not the predominant part of the package; and (3) offered only in conjunction with the permissible activity to which it is incidental. By analogy, the Board concluded that it was economically necessary for the subsidiary to continue the activities, because of their specialized nature and because the subsidiary had demonstrated operational difficulties in procuring these operations from outside vendors. Furthermore, the scope of the subsidiary’s assembly operations was limited to activities necessary to meet the quality-control standards and specialized requirements of its data services package, and the assembly activities did not constitute a predominant part of the package. Finally, the subsidiary performed assembly operations only on hardware used exclusively in providing the subsidiary’s data services package.
The Board noted, however, that the request was granted under the limited circumstances of determining that design and assembly constituted an incidental activity necessary to the provision of a permissible data services package, and that no determination had been made on whether the activities were closely related to banking. BD. RULING of June 19, 1989.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.25(b)(7).

4-472.2

DATA PROCESSING—Medical-Payments Services

A bank holding company (“the applicant”) applied for Board approval under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act to acquire all the voting shares of a company (“the company”) and to engage through the company in certain data processing and data transmission activities pursuant to section 225.25(b)(7) of Regulation Y.
Through the company, the applicant intends to operate a network for the processing and transmission of medical-payment data between health care providers (“providers”) and entities responsible for providing medical benefits (“payers”). In general, providers would enter claims information into the network with a request for payment, and payers would authorize electronic fund transfers in full or partial payment of the claims. The company also would furnish providers and payers with software for use in the medical-payments network, including claims-adjudication software that would automate a payer’s determination of which claims should be paid and the amount to be paid. The company also intends to provide by-products of its data processing activities, including statistical information derived from the data transmitted through the payment network, and to furnish additional related services that may result from its research and development efforts.
Basic Network Services
The company’s primary activities would include routing and processing medical-payment transactions through direct connections between the company’s computer switch and payer and provider terminals. The company also would perform the accounting functions necessary to settle the payments processed through the network and would provide electronic transaction and settlement reports to participating financial institutions, providers, and payers. In addition, it would provide other services analogous to functions performed by the operator of an automated teller machine or point-of-sale network, including switching, gateway, and terminal-driving services. These functions represent the processing of banking, financial, and economic data of the type previously approved for bank holding companies.
In addition to processing banking, financial, and economic information, however, the company would process and transmit medical-treatment data sufficient to allow payers to make decisions regarding the legitimacy of a claim and the appropriate degree of coverage. Similarly, when providers obtain access to the coverage-information database, the company would transmit data relating to the terms of a particular payer’s medical-coverage contract and the extent to which specific medical treatments would be covered by the patient’s insurance policy.
The Board determined that the company’s processing and transmission of medical and coverage data in connection with its operation of a payments network are permissible as incidental activities.
Adjudication Software
In addition to the software used in the basic operation of the medical-payments network, the company proposes to provide claims-adjudication software to payers. This software would represent an electronic version of the basic rules of a payer’s coverage contract and would be designed for the processing of routine claims.
The claims-adjudication process essentially involves the interaction of financial and banking data (the amount of a submitted claim and a request for an electronic funds transfer) and medical and coverage data (treatment information and the basic rules of a payer’s coverage contract). Claims adjudication is a central aspect of the authorization function in the proposed network and is necessary to the consummation of an electronic funds transfer.
The Board determined that the processing of medical and coverage data involved in claims adjudication is an integral part of, and therefore necessary to, the processing of related financial and banking information and the company’s processing of the underlying payment transactions. Hence, the Board concluded that the company’s providing claims-adjudication software that processes such medical and coverage data is permissible as an activity incidental to its provision of software for the processing of banking and financial data and to its operation of a medical-payments network.
Electronic Data Interchange
The company also proposes to furnish participants in the medical-payments system with statistical and other data derived from the information contained in its database. It expects that, in most instances, raw data will be transmitted to a customer from the network’s central computer upon the customer’s electronic request, without any intervention by company personnel. In some cases, however, pursuant to a customer’s instructions, the company may perform limited selection, combination, and similar functions upon raw data so that it can be transmitted to the customer in a reorganized and more usable form. It would not, however, render advisory or consulting services in connection with the provision or use of these capabilities and would not engage in any scientific, actuarial, or clinical research or analysis of the information contained in the database. Moreover, it would not, under any circumstances, make data available to the general public.
The Board concluded that the proposed electronic data interchange services would constitute permissible by-products of the company’s primary data processing activities and that such services are, therefore, permissible as an incidental activity. BD. RULING of Dec. 22, 1993.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.23(a).
See also 12 CFR 225.25(b)(7), 225.21(a)(2), and 225.123(e)(2); National Courier Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 516 F.2d 1229 (D.C. Cir. 1975); Securities Industry Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 468 U.S. 207 (1984).

4-475

DIVESTITURE—Shares Acquired in Violation of Bank Holding Company Act

With respect to the divestiture of bank stock acquired by a bank holding company in violation of the Bank Holding Company Act, the purchasers do not hold any stock in, nor are they indebted to, the holding company; the sales of the shares were not financed by the holding company or its subsidiaries; and none of the divested shares will be held or controlled, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of the holding company or any of its subsidiaries or for the benefit of the shareholders or employees of the holding company or any of its subsidiaries. On this basis, the Board found that the bank shares had been disposed of in such a manner as to rebut any presumption of control under section 2(g)(3) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The facts relating to the transaction, including the prompt divestiture of the shares, indicated that the violation was not willful. BD. RULING of Dec. 30, 1969.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 3(a)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1842(a)(3); 12 CFR 225.2(b).

4-476

DIVESTITURE—Interlocking Directorates

The existence of interlocking directorships between a bank holding company and its wholly owned subsidiary, which is to be divested by spin-off, creates a presumption of continued control of the transferred shares and precludes certification, for the purpose of obtaining tax benefits for the spin-off divestiture, that the distribution to the company’s shareholders is necessary to effectuate section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of Sept. 28, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(g)(3) and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(g)(3) and 1843(a)(2); 12 CFR 225.2.

4-477

DIVESTITURE—Transfer of Stock for Indebtedness

Section 2(g)(3) of the Bank Holding Company Act provides a rebuttable presumption that when a bank holding company, or any company that would be one but for the transfer, directly or indirectly transfers stock to a transferee who is indebted to the transferor, the transferred stock is indirectly controlled by the transferor. If, instead of accepting a debt of the transferee, the transferor accepts nonvoting preferred stock, the presumption of section 2(g)(3) would not apply, unless there is an interlocking relationship of officers, directors, and beneficiaries of the transferor and transferee, or unless the transferee is subject to the control of the transferor. Also, the transferor may be found to control the transferee under section 2(a) of the act or under section 225.2 of Regulation Y. STAFF OP. of Nov. 9, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a) and (g)(3), 12 USC 1841(a) and (g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2.

4-478

DIVESTITURE—Transfer of Assets and Liabilities to Nonbank Subsidiary

A bank holding company may acquire shares of a newly organized corporation in order to transfer to it assets and liabilities of its impermissible nonbanking operations, provided it promptly divests itself of the shares of the newly organized company. BD. RULING of Jan. 4, 1973.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(C) and (g)(3), 4(a), and 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(C) and (g)(3), and 1843(a).

4-479

DIVESTITURE—Less-Than-5-Percent Rule

The Board has previously indicated its general position that divestitures down to less than 5 percent of the voting shares of a bank is regarded as an effective means to terminate bank holding company status. This position is supported by the statutory presumption under section 2(a)(4) of the Bank Holding Company Act that any company that controls less than 5 percent of the voting securities of a bank does not have control over that bank. However, in certain cases, the Board has accepted something less than divestiture down to 5 percent or less of the voting shares of a bank as effective divestiture. In these cases, the Board has followed a case-by-case approach and has indicated that convincing evidence must be presented that the company does not and cannot control or exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of the bank. In particular, the Board considers whether the company has divested to well below 25 percent and whether there are any common directors and officers between the divesting and divested firm. STAFF OP. of June 25, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a), 12 USC 1841(a); 12 CFR 225.2 and 225.4(d), footnote 12.
See also Financial Security, 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 832; American General Insurance Co., 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 487.

4-480

DIVESTITURE—Retaining Interlocking Management Officials

A company that originally held 36 percent of the voting shares of a bank retained 23 per cent of the bank’s voting shares. Three officers and directors of the company remained on the board of directors of bank, and no other individual or organization controlled more than 9 percent of the bank’s voting shares. The Board found that company’s attempt to divest control of bank was ineffective. BD. RULING of June 25, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a), 12 USC 1841(a); 12 CFR 225.2.
See also American General Insurance Co., 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 487; Financial Securities Corp., 1972 Fed. Res. Bull. 832.

4-481

DIVESTITURE—Extension of Period

In the absence of statutory authority, the Board may not extend the divestiture period for a bank holding company, even if the extension is requested to make the sale more economically feasible. BD. RULING of Aug. 30, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843.

4-482

DIVESTITURE—Interlocking Directorates

A company that sought to terminate its status as a bank holding company divested its interests in a number of banks but continued to hold 16.5 percent of Bank A and 4.94 percent of Bank B. No directors, officers, or employees of the company served in any policy-making capacity with Bank A; a director of the holding company was chairman and chief executive officer of Bank B. This individual directly, and through his family, owned or controlled over 50 percent of Bank B. The rebuttable presumptions of control found in section 225.2(b) of Regulation Y would not apply in this case, because neither the individual in question nor his family would fall within the definition of the term “company.” Thus, the bank holding company status of the company that owned the bank shares was terminated. STAFF OP. of Aug. 9, 1976.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2(b).

4-483

DIVESTITURE—Interlocking Management and Indebted Transferee

To divest itself of sufficient interests to be deemed a one-bank holding company, a bank holding company transferred stock in a bank to a number of individuals. Among these transactions was a 60 percent transfer to an individual who is indebted to a wholly owned insurance subsidiary of the bank holding company, and a 14.6 percent purchase by three directors of the bank holding company who also became custodians of 15.6 percent of the stock for six purchasers under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act. The divestiture is not sufficient, because the bank holding company is presumed to continue to control these shares by virtue of section 2(g)(3) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of June 16, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(2), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2.
See also 40 Fed. Reg. 28 676 (1975); staff opinion at 4-489.

4-484

DIVESTITURE—Limited Exemption for Bank Subsidiaries of Thrift Institutions

The Bank Holding Company Act exempts certain savings banks insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation from bank holding company status. To remain eligible for this exemption, the savings bank must divest a wholly owned direct subsidiary engaged in nonbanking activities that are not permissible for national banks. Alternatively, it could transfer the nonbanking subsidiary to another subsidiary that is a registered bank holding company after that company has obtained the Board’s prior approval under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act to acquire the nonbanking subsidiary. STAFF OP. of Dec. 14, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(5)(F), 12 USC 1841(a)(5)(F); RS 5136, 12 USC 24.

4-485

DIVESTITURE—Request to Reestablish Interlocking Relationships

An order requiring termination of interlocking relationships to ensure termination of a control relationship between a bank and company that is in violation of the Bank Holding Company Act does not operate in perpetuity. Therefore, an application by one of the companies for permission to reestablish an interlocking relationship is not prohibited. In determining whether to allow the interlock, the Board will consider the likelihood that the prior relationship will be reestablished; the length of time that has elapsed between the termination of holding company status and filing of the request for permission to establish an interlock; changes in management; the identity, background, and prior involvement of the individual involved; and the business reasons for wanting to establish the interlock. STAFF OP. of Jan. 6, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 2, 12 USC 1841.
See also Board order of Nov. 25, 1977, International Bank, 1977 Fed. Res. Bull. 1106.

4-486

DIVESTITURE—Transfer to Officer and Trustee

To resolve an apparent violation of the Bank Holding Company Act, a nonbank company and its profit-sharing plan transferred shares of a bank to one of the two principal shareholders, who is also an officer of one of the two transferring organizations and a trustee of the other. Because there are no common officers or directors between the principal and nonbank company and there is no debt outstanding between the bank and the nonbank company, the divestiture does not appear to have been a means to perpetuate control. Also, the nonbank company agreed that it would not attempt to control the transferee or bank in question. Therefore, the nonbank company and its profit-sharing plan are not deemed to be bank holding companies. STAFF OP. of April 25, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2(b).

4-487

DIVESTITURE—Transferee Indebted to Transferor

When a bank holding company divested impermissible assets and provided financing to the purchasers of these assets, a presumption of continued control of the assets by the bank holding company existed. This presumption was rebutted, however, by the submission of a corporate resolution stating that the bank holding company would not attempt to control the property and that the holding company would dispose of property held as collateral within six months if the holding company reacquired this property. In addition, the purchasers signed affidavits stating that they would not be influenced or controlled by the holding company. STAFF OP. of May 9, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.2(b).

4-488

DIVESTITURE—Pro Rata Spin-Off

A bank holding company proposes to divest a nonbanking subsidiary through a pro rata spin-off of nonbank subsidiary’s shares to its shareholders. As a result of the pro rata spin-off, directors and officers of bank holding will acquire more than 25 percent of the shares of the divested company. This alone does not make the divestiture ineffective, since it is a predictable result of a pro rata spin-off. STAFF OP. of Oct. 9, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a) and (g), 12 USC 1841(a) and (g); 12 CFR 225.2 and 224.139.

4-489

DIVESTITURE—Section 2(g)(3) Determination

A bank holding company sold a nonbank company in exchange for cash and a note. Because the transferee was indebted to the bank holding company, a presumption arose under section 2(g)(3) that the company controlled the transferred property. The company then sold the note to its principal shareholder. It was found that the Board need not make a determination pursuant to section 2(g)(3) that the bank holding company does not control the sold property, because the principal shareholder paid the bank holding company the fair value of the note at the time of sale. Moreover, since the principal shareholder and members of his family own all of the stock of the bank holding company and serve as its only directors and officers, it does not appear that the principal shareholder is controlled by the bank holding company. STAFF OP. of Oct. 11, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g) (3), 12 USC 1841(g) (3).

4-490

DIVESTITURE—Distribution of Two Corporations

A separation of bank and nonbanking interests by a bank holding company and distribution of each to separate new corporations is adequate divestiture if there will be no indebtedness or officer/director interlocks between the corporations and if the facts do not give rise to any rebuttable presumptions of control. STAFF OP. of Jan. 3, 1980.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a) and (g)(3), and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (g)(3), and 1843(a)(2).

4-491

DIVESTITURE—Real Property

A bank holding company committed to the Board to divest its interest in a prohibited real estate (a building). It did not divest this interest in the original two-year divestiture period or in a one-year extension. Under authority delegated from the Board, the director of the Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation denied the request for another extension, since the holding company did not indicate that it will be in any better position in the future to fulfill its commitment. Also, it does not appear that undue hardship would occur if the building were sold immediately at a discount from its value, since at the time of acquisition a portion of the purchase price was put in a reserve fund to cover any losses due to divestiture.
When a bank holding company is required to divest certain prohibited real property, a land contract is not the equivalent of a mortgage, even though the bank holding company has no responsibility for the maintenance and leasing of the real property, does not share in any appreciation in the value of the real property, and does not pay any taxes or expenses on it. When the bank holding company has substantial equity interest in the real property (that is, when it participates in any increase in rental income, holds legal title, and can veto any changes in the use or character of real property), the equity interest is inconsistent with the interest of a mortgagor. STAFF OP. of Nov. 9, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843 (c)(8); 12 CFR 265.2(c)(29).

4-492

DIVESTITURE—Termination of Bank Holding Company Status

A bank holding company submitted a plan of divestiture to the Board’s general counsel to terminate its status as a bank holding company under the Bank Holding Company Act. The proposed divestiture includes a distribution of common stock of its subsidiary to the holding company’s shareholders, retention of the subsidiary’s cumulative preferred stock with a commitment that the holding company will not vote the stock, retention of the subsidiary’s variable subordinated capital note, and employment of the subsidiary’s president and chief executive officer as a consultant with limited duties in operations of the holding company. The Board’s general counsel accepted the plan of divestiture. BD. RULING of Dec. 23, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 2(g)(3), 12 USC 1841(g)(3); 12 CFR 225.139 n. 3.

4-510

EXTENDING CREDIT—Without Board Approval

A bank holding company may not make loans for its own account without prior Board approval pursuant to section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Making two loans within a 15-month period without prior Board approval violates the act. The only other possible provision allowing a holding company to make loans is section 4(a) (2), which generally permits a bank holding company to engage in the activity of banking or of managing or controlling banks. However, the term “banking” applies only when the bank holding company itself is a bank. BD. RULING of Nov. 2, 1973.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1).

4-511

EXTENDING CREDIT—Liquidating Subsidiary of a Mortgage Company

It is proposed to transfer unauthorized and poor-quality assets of a mortgage company subsidiary of a bank holding company to a liquidating subsidiary established under section 4(c)(1)(D) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Those assets cannot be transferred to the liquidating subsidiary, since section 4(c)(1)(D) applies to shares of a company engaged in liquidating assets of the bank holding company itself or its bank subsidiary and not assets of a nonbank subsidiary. It was also noted that section 4(c)(1)(D) provides an exemption from the prohibitions of section 4 of the act for shares of the liquidating company only and not for the assets held by that company. Therefore, transfer of those assets does not relieve a bank holding company from meeting any divestiture deadlines applicable to the assets, and such assets must be divested pursuant to the provisions of 4(a)(2) and 4(c)(2). Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is reasonable to assume that a corporation formed to liquidate the assets lawfully acquired by a mortgage company subsidiary of a bank holding company, a permissible activity under section 4(c)(8), is also permissible pursuant to section 4(c)(8). STAFF OP. of Sept. 20, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), (c)(1)(D), (c)(2), and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2), (c)(1)(D), (c)(2), and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1).

4-512

EXTENDING CREDIT—Placement of Equity Interests

A nonbank subsidiary wishes to arrange placement of equity interest in commercial and industrial developments as a substitute for traditional long-term fixed-rate mortgage financing. The subsidiary does not contemplate acquiring the equity interests on its own behalf, nor would any affiliate of the subsidiary acquire such interests.
The placement of equities is not within the scope of lending activities permitted under section 225.4(a)(1) of Regulation Y. However, when the subsidiary makes or arranges a bridge or construction loan on a development in the ordinary course of its lending activities, the arrangement of permanent financing in the form of an equity could be viewed as incidental to the subsidiary’s short-term lending activities. Thus, under section 225.4(a)(1), the subsidiary may place equities in connection with lending transactions in which it is a participant, or as part of a package in which a permanent mortgage loan is being made in connection with the placement of the equity. For example, an equity interest may be placed when the subsidiary has provided the temporary bridge or construction financing or when the subsidiary has placed the equity interest in conjunction with a permanent mortgage loan for a project. STAFF OP. of Jan. 16, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1).

4-513

EXTENDING CREDIT—Mortgage Company Activities

The question has arisen whether a mortgage banking subsidiary of a bank holding company may participate in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Single Family Coinsurance Program under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act and section 225.4(a)(1) and (3) of Regulation Y. The program operates as follows. Certain HUD-approved mortgagee lenders underwrite and make mortgage loans for the purchase of single-family homes, for which HUD guarantees to assume 90 percent of any loss, while the mortgagee retains 10 percent of the risk of loss. For the assumption of risk, the mortgagee owes HUD an insurance fee equal to one-half of a point on the amount of the mortgage, which the mortgagee collects from the mortgagor as part of the monthly payment.
The program, with its provision that the mortgage retain a portion of the risk of loss on the loan it makes, is a permissible lending function of a mortgage banking subsidiary under the Bank Holding Company Act and section 225.4(a)(1) and (3) of Regulation Y. Moreover, any fees collected by the mortgagee from the mortgagor in excess of the amount due to HUD for its guaranty may be regarded as fees for underwriting and servicing rather than insurance premiums. STAFF OP. of Aug. 12, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(1) and (3); HUD Handbook 4205.1.

4-514

EXTENDING CREDIT—Mortgage Loans

De novo making of mortgage loans, at below market interest rates, to executives of a subsidiary for the purpose of relocation need not be approved by the Board if these loans represent bona fide compensation to the bank’s executive officers such as would be paid by a business competitor. STAFF OP. of Dec. 21, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2)(A) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2)(A) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(b)(1).

4-525

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Scope of Exemption

Family corporations, as defined in section 4(c)(ii) of the Bank Holding Company Act, are exempt only from the prohibitions of section 4 and are required to comply with all other sections of the act. STAFF OP. of April 15, 1971.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3, 4, and 5, 12 USC 1842, 1843, and 1844.

4-526

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Ownership Required

The shares of a bank holding company are owned by two unrelated individuals, who each own 50 percent of the company. One of the individuals holds an option to buy the other’s stock at will, and the other individual is obligated to buy the other’s stock if he wishes to sell or if he dies. The Board concludes that while the first individual may exercise control or controlling influence over the other’s shares, section 4(c)(ii) requires actual ownership before the bank holding company may qualify for that exemption. BD. RULING of Dec. 20, 1973.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1843(c)(ii).

4-527

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Multi-Tiered Holding Company

A family-owned bank holding company that is exempted from the prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act by section 4(c)(ii) also controls a second-tier bank holding company that was 71 percent controlled by the first-tier bank holding company on June 30, 1968. The second-tier bank holding company does not also qualify for the exemption of section 4(c)(ii). Section 4(c)(ii) is to be narrowly construed, and its exemptions do not automatically flow from the parent company to its subsidiary. STAFF OP. of Jan. 4, 1974.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b), and 4(a) and (c)(ii), 12 USC 1841(b), and 1843(a) and (c)(ii).

4-528

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Nonbanking Merger

A family-owned bank holding company qualifying for the exemption in section 4(c)(ii) of the bank holding company merged with a wholly owned nonbanking corporation without prior Board approval. This was not a violation of the act since no prior Board approval was required under that section. STAFF OP. of Nov. 27, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1843(c)(ii).

4-529

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Future Interest

In aggregating a family’s share ownership for the purpose of the 85 percent ownership requirement of section 4(c)(ii) of the bank holding company, future interests in shares of company acquired on or before June 30, 1968, but not realized on that date, do not count toward the 85 percent requirement. STAFF OP. of Aug. 12, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1843(c)(ii).

4-530

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Acquisition of 5 Percent of Bankers’ Bank

Two bank holding companies, one of which is a wholly owned subsidiary of the other, are exempted from the prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank Holding Company Act by the family exemption in section 4(c)(ii). They inquired whether the acquisition by a national bank subsidiary (subsidiary) of up to 5 percent of the voting shares of another bank holding company (BHC A) that controls a bankers’ bank would be considered engaging in the management of banks and therefore disqualify the bank holding companies from the family exemption. In the past, the Board has considered a family-owned bank holding company that acquires a significant ownership interest in an additional bank to be actively engaged in the management of banks and therefore no longer eligible for the exemption from the prohibitions of section 4 because of its ability to exert a significant influence over the bank’s management policy. However, the subsidiary will control only 5 percent of BHC A, no affiliate of the two holding companies or the subsidiary will acquire any additional voting shares or nonvoting equity investments in BHC A or its subsidiary bank, and BHC A’s subsidiary bank is limited by law to serving only banks and other depository institutions. Thus it is unlikely that a bank holding company could misuse or abuse the resources of a bankers’ bank in order to gain an advantage in the operation of its nonbanking activities. The subsidiary may therefore acquire up to 5 percent of BHC A without losing its family exemption. STAFF OP. of Jan. 11, 1985.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1843 (c)(ii); Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act § 404, 96 Stat. 1511; S. Rept. 1084, 91 Cong. 2 Sess. (1970).
See also Multi-Line, Inc., 1981 Fed. Res. Bull. 51.

4-531

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Expansion of Banking Operations by Merger

The question has arisen whether a bank holding company (the company) may retain its exemption under section 4(c)(ii) of the Bank Holding Company Act after its subsidiary bank merges with another bank.
Section 4(c)(ii) of the BHC Act provides that “a company covered in 1970 more than 85 per centum of the voting stock of which was collectively owned on June 30, 1968, and continuously thereafter, directly or indirectly by or for members of the same family, or their spouses, who are lineal descendants of common ancestors” shall not be subject to the BHC Act’s prohibitions regarding impermissible nonbanking activities. This exemption allows a 4(c)(ii) company to engage in any nonbanking activity without the Board’s prior approval and is the broadest exemption in section 4. Because over 85 percent of the shares of the company were owned by members of the same family, the company qualified for the exemption in 1970 and continues to qualify for this exemption.
A review of the purpose and legislative history of the 4(c)(ii) exemption indicates that a grandfathered bank holding company can expand its banking operations by merging its subsidiary bank with another bank and retain its 4(c)(ii) exemption. Congress intended to allow a small number of closely held family corporations that operate a single bank to continue to operate and expand both their nonbanking and banking operations.
Even though a 4(c)(ii) company can expand its banking operations by merger and retain its ability to engage in impermissible nonbanking activities, the Board retains its authority under section 5 of the BHC Act specifically to issue orders under the BHC Act to administer and carry out the purposes of the BHC Act. Also, the Board can terminate control of nonbanking subsidiaries if the operation of the subsidiary is inconsistent with the BHC Act. The Board therefore has the statutory authority to terminate a 4(c)(ii) company’s nonbanking activities if it determines at any time that the activities threaten the safe operations of the bank or if the holding company is not acting consistent with the purposes of the BHC Act. STAFF OP. of Feb. 18, 1993.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(ii), 12 USC 1843(c)(ii).

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Bank Shares Held by Family-Controlled Company

See 4-446.

FAMILY-CONTROL EXEMPTION—Preexisting Family-Owned Association

See 4-418.

4-550

5 PERCENT EXEMPTION—Agreement to Vote No More Than 5 Percent of Shares

A bank holding company holds more than 5 percent of the voting shares of a company. An agreement not to vote more than 5 percent of the voting shares of that company does not qualify those shares as permissible for acquisition, without prior Board approval, under section 4(c)(6) of the Bank Holding Company Act. BD. RULING of Aug. 30, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a) and (c)(6), 12 USC 1843(a) and (c)(6).

4-551

5 PERCENT EXEMPTION—Ownership of Entire Class of Securities

An insurance company proposes to offer to bank holding companies stock interests in a company engaged in underwriting credit insurance. Each participant would hold less than 5 percent of the outstanding voting shares of the company, but each investment would be represented by a separate class of voting security. As a result, each bank holding company investor would own 100 percent of its respective class. Each investor would receive an investment return based upon the profitability of the insurance business it had generated. Prior Board approval is required for a bank holding company to invest in this company, because control would exist by virtue of section 2(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which provides that a bank holding company has control over a company if it owns 25 percent or more of any class of voting securities. Therefore, the exemption provided by section 4(c)(6) of the act is inapplicable. BD. RULING of Dec. 10, 1976.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(2)(A) and 4(c)(6), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and 1843(c)(6).

4-552

5 PERCENT EXEMPTION—Ownership of Entire Class of Securities

A bank holding company proposes to acquire 100 percent of a class of preferred shares of a company that amount to less than 5 percent of the company’s equity. The voting rights attached to those shares are limited to significant changes in corporate structure, and the investment appears to be essentially a passive financing device that does not permit the bank holding company to control the company. This investment would be permissible under section 4(c)(6). If the investment is made through an intermediate company, the transaction would be permissible under section 4(c)(7), which authorizes a bank holding company or its subsidiary to invest in a company organized solely to make investments the holding company could directly make under section 4(c)(6). STAFF OP. of Aug. 24, 1979.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(6) and (7), 12 USC 1843(c)(6) and (7); 12 CFR 225.102 and 225.123.

4-560

FOREIGN ACTIVITIES EXEMPTION—Reorganization of Retained Company

On June 6, 1977, the Board approved the formation of a bank holding company and permitted the holding company to retain a 20 percent interest in a foreign nonbank company pursuant to section 4(c)(13) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Because of foreign tax considerations, the foreign company involved was reorganized into five separate functional components. The holding company proposed to retain a 20 percent interest in each of the new entities. The activities of the foreign company would not change as a result of the reorganization, and the holding company’s interest in the new entities would be acquired for less than $15,000. In addition, the provisions of the joint venture agreement between the bank holding company and the foreign company permitting the bank holding company to terminate the agreement at any time was not affected by the reorganization. Therefore, the acquisition and retention of a 20 percent interest in each of the new entities was consistent with the Board’s 1977 order. STAFF OP. of Jan. 6, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(13), 12 USC 1843(c)(13).
See also 1977 Fed. Res. Bull. 691.

FOREIGN ACTIVITIES EXEMPTION—Foreign Bank

See 3-744.1.

4-565

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Expansion of Activities

A grandfathered bank holding company that controls both a savings and loan holding company and a bank holding company is prohibited from acquiring two additional going savings and loans associations after June 30, 1968. STAFF OP. of Sept. 18, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1843(a)(2).

4-566

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Disposal of Qualifying Interest

The grandfather rights allowed under section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act would not continue if the bank holding company concurrently disposed of the bank interests that qualified it for the exemption and acquired control of another bank. The exemption inures only to the specific relationship that gave rise to the privileges and does not apply to subsequent similar relationships, regardless of the Board’s prior determination that a grandfathered bank holding company may acquire additional banks without forfeiting its grandfather privilege. STAFF OP. of Nov. 23, 1976.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1843(a)(2).
See also Orwig and Company, Inc., 1976 Fed. Res. Bull. 160.

4-567

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Sale and Purchase of Shares of Subsidiary

A company that became a bank holding company because of the enactment of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 did not violate section 4(a)(1) of the act by buying and selling, without prior Board approval, shares of a savings and loan association that it has controlled since June 20, 1968. Even if the company had not maintained majority control of the savings and loan association continuously since June 30, 1968, it may still be entitled to purchase and retain shares of the savings and loan association if it can demonstrate that it has had controlling influence over the savings and loan association at all times. STAFF OP. of April 20, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and (C) and 4(c)(11), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (C), and 1843(c)(11); 12 CFR 225.2.
See also Patagonia Corp. v. Board of Governors, 517 F.2d 803 (9th Cir. 1975).

4-568

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Scope

A company became a bank holding company in 1961 without prior Board approval and at that time was engaged in impermissible nonbank activities. The bank holding company does not qualify for the grandfather privileges of section 4(a)(2) and (c)(ii) of the Bank Holding Company Act. These provisions apply only to companies that became a bank holding company as a result of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970. STAFF OP. of June 16, 1977.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(a)(1), and 4(a)(1), (a)(2), and (c)(ii), 12 USC 1842(a)(1), and 1843(a)(1), (a)(2), and (c)(ii).

4-569

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Real Estate Development and Leasing

A bank holding company with indefinite grandfather rights in connection with certain real estate development and leasing activities may not alter these activities or expand their proportionate size in relation to its other activities. STAFF OP. of July 20, 1979.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1843(a)(2).

4-570

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Scope of Activity

A bank holding company is engaged in permanently grandfathered activities of acting as manager, investment advisor, transfer and dividend-disbursing agent, and principal underwriter of three open-end mutual investment funds that invest primarily in equity forms of investment, but also from time to time invest surplus funds in bonds and in short-term debt obligations such as commercial paper and treasury bills. The bank holding company proposes to form an additional mutual fund for which it would act as manager, investment advisor, transfer and dividend-dispersing agent, and principal underwriter. This mutual fund would invest primarily in money market instruments such as U.S. government securities, instruments of banks and savings and loan associations, corporate debentures, and prime commercial paper as well as instruments secured by such obligations.
The proposed activity is within the scope of the bank holding company’s grandfathered activity. Section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act permits a bank holding company to expand permanently grandfathered activities through internal growth. However, a significant alteration in the nature of grandfathered activities is not allowed. The formation of an additional mutual fund that made equity investments would clearly be permissible; however, since the nature of the bank holding company’s additional mutual funds investments is different, it is less clear that such expansion is permissible. Staff believes that the bank holding company’s permanently grandfathered privileges relate to the activities and services that the company performs for the mutual funds rather than the types of investment made by the mutual funds. Since the holding company proposes to perform the same services for the additional mutual fund that it performs for the present mutual funds, the proposed expansion is within the scope of the grandfathered activity. Further, the fact that the holding company’s present mutual funds make limited investments in money market instruments supports the conclusion that a money market mutual fund is within the range of the holding company’s grandfathered activities. STAFF OP. of July 7, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1843(a)(2).
See also Patagonia Corporation v. Board of Governors, 517 F.2d 803, 815 (9th Cir. 1975); D.H. Baldwin Co., 1973 Fed. Res. Bull. 536, 538.

4-571

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Loss of Exemption Through New Acquisitions

A bank holding company with one subsidiary bank is a “company covered in 1970” as defined in section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The holding company is altogether exempt from the act’s prohibitions on nonbanking activities under the family exemption of section 4(c)(ii) of the act. The holding company’s nonbanking activities are also entitled to indefinite grandfather privileges under section 4(a)(2). The question has arisen whether the holding company will lose its family exemption and grandfather privileges if it acquires a new banking affiliate, either directly as a subsidiary, or as an affiliate through the creation of a new parent company, which would own 100 percent of the existing holding company as well as 100 percent of the new bank.
The Board has taken the position that a family-exempt holding company will lose its exemption if it directly acquires an additional bank, notwithstanding the fact that 85 percent of the holding company’s shares continue to be owned by lineal descendants of the same family. Although the holding company would not necessarily lose its family exemption if a new parent were formed to acquire it, the new parent would be required to divest itself of nonbanking activities under section 4(a)(2) of the act, unless it qualified as a successor to the holding company. Even if the new parent qualified as a successor to the holding company’s family exemption, however, the exemption would be lost if the new parent acquired a new bank.
The Board has indicated that the effect of a direct or indirect acquisition of a new bank on a holding company’s permanent grandfather exemption will be made on a case-by-case basis at the time application is made under section 3(a) of the Bank Holding Company Act. In making such determinations, the Board will take into account the size and nature of the grandfathered nonbanking activities as well as the banking interests, and whether the combination of banking and nonbanking would have an adverse impact on the public interest. STAFF OP. of Oct. 7, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and (c), and 4(a)(2), (c)(ii), and (c)(8), 12 USC 1841(b) and (e), and 1843(a)(2), (c)(ii), and (c)(8).
See also Multi-Line, 1980 Fed. Res. Bull. 349, 1981 Fed. Res. Bull. 51.

4-572

GRANDFATHER RIGHTS—Activities of Nonbank Banks

Company A proposes to make certain loans as a member of a consortium composed of several banks. Company A became a bank upon the enactment of the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (CEBA) and was controlled by a nonbanking company (Company B) on March 5, 1987. Company B may therefore retain its ownership of Company A and not be treated as a bank holding company if both companies observe certain limitations.
Section 4(f)(3)(B)(i) of the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act) prohibits institutions such as Company A from “engaging in any activity in which such bank was not lawfully engaged as of March 5, 1987.” The Board believes it appropriate to apply the activity limitation in section 4(f)(3) as the term “activity” generally applies in other provisions of section 4 of the BHC Act, including the activities of the general type listed in section 225.25(b) of Regulation Y (see Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.145, “Activity Limitation,” fifth paragraph, at 4-190.5).
Company A has joined a consortium of banks that was organized to focus on the needs of towns in a particular area of a state. It proposes to make loans through the consortium to a nonprofit corporation that is exempt from federal income tax pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code as a charitable organization.
Company A currently participates in two loans to the nonprofit corporation—one in the amount of $240,000, in which Company A is one of five participating banks, and another in the amount of $471,000, in which Company A is one of eight participating banks. These loans go toward funding affordable-housing rental properties. Company A funded $48,000 of the first loan at a rate of 8.25 percent and $60,000 of the second loan at a rate of 8.0 percent. Company B represents that these rates are low enough to ensure that the rental prices of the units are low, and also that future loans to the nonprofit organization would be similarly structured.
The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) requires the federal financial supervisory agencies to encourage financial institutions to help meet the credit needs of the local communities in which they operate consistent with the safe and sound operation of the institutions. The Statement of the Federal Financial Supervisory Agencies Regarding the Community Reinvestment Act (agency CRA statement) recognizes that participation in community development programs or projects that provide low- and moderate-income housing is one of the ways in which institutions with the most effective programs meet their CRA responsibilities and ensure that their services reach low- and moderate-income segments of the community. In addition, the Board has recognized the benefit of allowing bank holding companies to participate in community development activities, given their unique role in the community, and has determined that providing community development activities is closely related to banking. Section 225.25(b)(6) of Regulation Y permits bank holding companies to make debt and equity investments in community development corporations or projects, including projects for the construction or rehabilitation of housing for the benefit of persons with low and moderate incomes.
In this instance, the proposed loans would not cause Company A to be impermissibly engaged in community development activities for purposes of the limitation in section 4(f)(3) of the BHC Act. This opinion is based on the facts as set forth above, including the nonprofit corporation’s purpose of providing affordable housing. The opinion is limited to loans to this particular nonprofit corporation that are structured similarly to those in which Company A currently participates, and it does not authorize any other transactions. STAFF OP. of June 11, 1992.
Authority: Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987, 12 USC 1843(f)(1)(A); BHCA § 4 (f)(3)(B)(i), 12 USC 1843 (f)(3)(B)(i); 12 CFR 225.25(b)(6) and 225.145(c)(5); Community Reinvestment Act, 12 USC 2901 et seq.

4-590

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Restrictions

In the sale or brokering of credit-related insurance, (1) the amount of such insurance must be limited to the amount of the extension of credit; (2) the debtor may name a beneficiary for the proceeds of such an insurance policy, but only if the beneficiary is obligated to pay off the loan in the event of the borrower’s death; (3) the proceeds of the insurance policy cannot exceed the amount of the loan; and (4) such insurance can be sold to cover both husband and wife co-debtors in an amount not exceeding the amount of the loan. STAFF OP. of Oct. 16, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(9)(ii)(a).

4-591

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Federal Regulation of Rates

An individual suggests that the rates charged for single-interest coverage insurance on items financed by a bank are too high and should be limited by federal law.
A bank’s authority to sell insurance is derived from the bank’s charter. A bank’s charter, and consequently a bank’s power to conduct business, is granted and regulated by the bank’s chartering authority, either the Comptroller of the Currency in the case of a national bank or the state banking authority in the case of a state bank. Thus, the Board generally does not have authority to regulate or grant approval for the sale of insurance by a bank, even though the bank may be a subsidiary of a bank holding company.
The Board, as the agency designated by Congress to administer the Bank Holding Company Act, does regulate the sale of insurance by bank holding companies or their nonbank subsidiaries. In this regard, the Board has authorized the sale of single-interest insurance by nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies pursuant to Regulation Y.
Rates for all insurance coverages, including single-interest insurance, are calculated by insurance underwriters (which in this case cannot be either a bank or a bank holding company subsidiary) and are approved by the various state insurance commissioners. Moreover, federal regulation of insurance rates is prohibited by the McCarran-Ferguson Act, which exempts the business of insurance from federal regulation to the extent that it is regulated by the states. Accordingly, the appropriate state insurance commissioner should be contacted regarding the setting of rates on single-interest insurance. STAFF OP. of Jan. 12, 1982.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); McCarran-Ferguson Act, 15 USC 1101 et seq.; 12 CFR 225.4(a)(9)(i).

4-591.1

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Insurance Related to IRAs

A bank holding company proposes to act as agent for the sale of life and accident and health insurance related to individual retirement accounts offered by the holding company’s subsidiary banks. Title VI of the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 amended section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act generally to restrict bank holding companies from engaging in insurance activities. The Garn Act provides a number of exceptions, including the sale of insurance that is functionally equivalent to coverages sold, or approved to be sold, on or before May 1, 1982. In 1972, the holding company received Board approval to act as agent for the sale of insurance directly related to the provision of a financial service as authorized by section 225.4(a)(9)(i)(b) of Regulation Y. The proposed insurance activity is permissible because (1) the offering of IRAs is a financial service within the meaning of section 225.4(a)(9)(i)(b) and (2) the proposed insurance is related to the provision of this financial service. Thus, the sale of such insurance is permissible under section 4(c)(8)(D)(ii) of the Bank Holding Company Act as insurance functionally similar to insurance activities the Board previously approved for the holding company. STAFF OP. of Feb. 26, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8)(D)(ii), 12 USC 1843(c)(8)(D)(ii); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(9).

4-591.2

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Property and Casualty Insurance Agency

A bank holding company proposes to purchase, through its insurance subsidiary, substantially all the assets and 50 percent of the capital stock of a property and casualty insurance agency upon giving notice to the Board, but without submitting an application for prior approval. The holding company cites section 4(c)(8)(G) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which is the codification of title VI of the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 (96 Stat. 1469, 1536-38). The legislative history of title VI clearly indicates that Congress intended to preserve the applicability of the net-public-benefits test to particular insurance proposals. Further, the legislative history of title VI requires the Board to examine proposals to engage in insurance activities in light of the financial stability and soundness of bank holding companies making use of title VI exemptions. Moreover, the legislative history offers no evidence to support the claim that Congress intended to eliminate the net-public-benefits test under the section 4(c)(8)(G) exemption. The holding company therefore may not purchase a property and casualty agency without submitting an application for the Board’s prior approval and satisfying both the “closely related” and “net public benefits” tests of section 4(c)(8) of the act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 3, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8)(G), 12 USC 1843(c)(8)(G); H. Rept. 845, 96 Cong. 2 Sess. (1980), pp. 15-16; S. Rept. 536, 99 Cong. 2 Sess. (1982), pp. 41- 42; S. Rept. 923, 96 Cong. 2 Sess. (1980), pp. 9-10. See also Whitewater Bancorporation, 1983 Fed. Res. Bull. 815.

4-591.3

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Prior Approval Requirement

A bank holding company asked whether it could take the following actions without having to apply for the Board’s prior approval under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act): (1) open a de novo insurance agency (new agency) in its home state which would be a subsidiary engaging in general insurance agency activities and (2) transfer an existing general insurance agency subsidiary of one of its subsidiary banks to an existing nonbank insurance subsidiary. The activities of the new agency and the transferred agency are of the type authorized by the Board for the insurance subsidiary.
Under the Board’s recently amended Regulation Y, the bank holding company may establish a de novo office or form a subsidiary to engage de novo in the approved insurance agency activities without filing an application for the Board’s prior approval if the new agency engages only in the insurance activities approved by the Board for the insurance subsidiary, and the agency is located on the premises of or near a banking subsidiary of the bank holding company. Title VI of the Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 would not prevent the bank holding company from opening the new office because it authorizes a subsidiary of a bank holding company to continue to engage in any insurance agency activity engaged in by the subsidiary on May 1, 1982, and to open new offices of that subsidiary in the home state of the bank holding company or in adjacent states, as well as in certain other locations.
In response to the second question, staff considered 12 CFR 225.123(c), which states that activities of a company that have been authorized by the Board under section 4(c)(8) may be shifted in a corporate reorganization to another company within the holding company system without obtaining prior Board approval. The section is inapplicable to the bank holding company because the authorization to engage in insurance activities was based on section 4(c)(5) of the BHC Act and section 225.4(e) of the Board’s Regulation Y, not section 4(c)(8). Under section 4(c)(8) of the BHC Act, an application is required for the bank holding company to transfer the general insurance agency from the bank to the nonbank subsidiary, but the application would be processed under subparagraph (D) of section 4(c)(8) because the transfer location is within the area allowed by the Garn Act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 30, 1984.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(5) and 4(c)(8); Garn-St Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, Title VI; 12 USC 1843(c)(5) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(e) and 225.123(c).

4-591.4

INSURANCE AGENT OR BROKER—Insurance Marketing Program

A Maryland bank holding company proposes to participate in an insurance marketing program wherein it would provide its subsidiary bank’s customer list to an unrelated insurance underwriter, which will prepare and bear the cost of distributing promotional materials for insurance plans. The holding company’s insurance agency subsidiary will include a “benign” cover letter announcing the availability of the insurance, receive the orders for insurance, account for and remit premiums to the underwriter, and receive a percentage of the premium income. Under Maryland law, the insurance agency subsidiary will have to be licensed as an agent in order to engage in the activity of “influencing the purchase of insurance.” This marketing program involves property and other types of insurance that may not be sold or underwritten by bank holding companies.
Such a program would likely be viewed as an insurance agency activity that is impermissible under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The bank holding company would solicit business from its own customers on behalf of a single underwriter pursuant to a contract with that underwriter. Like an agent, the bank holding company would be compensated on the basis of the success of the solicitation made in its name by receiving a percentage of the premiums. The bank holding company would administer the insurance program, receiving the replies to its solicitation, transmitting premiums, and generally processing the orders for insurance. Moreover, the state would require the bank holding company to be licensed as an agent to conduct this activity.
Although the scope of agency activity may be reexamined in the context of the Board’s pending insurance rulemaking, at this time staff would view these activities as impermissible agency activities. STAFF OP. of July 17, 1985.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8).

4-598

INSURANCE UNDERWRITING—Investment in Real Estate Mortgages

The Board has not considered whether investment in real estate mortgages in an activity incidental to the activity of underwriting credit life and accident and health insurance. If a bank holding company wants to conduct this activity, it must demonstrate that real estate mortgage investment is necessary to the underwriting business. STAFF OP. of March 23, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(10).
See also National Courier Association v. Board of Governors, 516 F.2d 1229 (D.C. Cir. 1976).

4-600.1

INSURANCE UNDERWRITING—Investment in Nonbank Company

An insurance company requested an opinion concerning the permissibility of bank holding companies’ investing in a company (the company) that would engage in the underwriting of credit life and health insurance generated by bank holding companies or their affiliates. Under the proposal, no bank holding company, holding company affiliate or subsidiary, nor any officer, director, or employee with management functions of any holding company or holding company subsidiary would own any voting stock of the company. No one holding company would acquire more than 1 percent of the nonvoting stock. There would be no agreements or understandings among the nonvoting stockholders regarding the disposition of their shares or any other aspect of their relationship with the company. No representative nor any officer or director of a holding company would serve on the board of directors of the company or otherwise be involved in the management of the company; however, a separate account would be maintained on the company’s books for each holding company, and the return to each holding company stockholder would be based primarily on the underlying profitability of the insurance placed by that stockholder.
The proposed activities of the company are permissible under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act, and a bank holding company could purchase 1 percent of the nonvoting stock of the company without prior Board approval. The method by which each holding company stockholder’s investment return would be calculated raised some doubt whether these investments would be truly passive; however, because each holding company would own a minimal percentage of the company, would own no voting stock, and would have no voice in the company’s management or policies, the proposed investment was significantly different from the one discussed in Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.137 (at 4-189). That proposal involved the formation of a reinsurance company by 20 bank holding companies, with each holding company owning 5 percent of the total shares and 100 percent of a class of voting shares. In that case, the Board concluded that section 4(c)(6) was inapplicable to the proposal and that a bank holding company would be required to obtain prior Board approval to participate in the proposal. STAFF OP. of Jan. 4, 1984.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(6) and (8), 12 USC 1843(c)(6) and (8); 12 CFR 225.137.

INSURANCE UNDERWRITING—By Subsidiary, for Parent’s Employee Benefits Plan

See 4-675.

4-610

INVESTMENT OR FINANCIAL ADVISOR—Property Management

Although the Board prohibits bank holding companies and their subsidiaries from providing property management services for nonaffiliated third parties, it has sanctioned the use of property managers to fulfill a contractual obligation of a bank holding company or its subsidiary to manage properties owned by a third party. The Board in one case required a bank holding company to retain a property manager to fulfill a contractual obligation to manage a defaulted property when the bank holding company, with Board approval, acquired a firm engaged in negotiating, acquiring, and servicing mortgage loans on behalf of institutional investors.
While receiving rentals and inspecting investment properties may be viewed as property management when considered individually, these activities may also be related to providing financial and portfolio investment advice and may be regarded as integral to that activity when the advisor provides such services as part of its management of the investments and when it charges no fees or costs except an advisory fee. If any functions performed were to require more active involvement than managing a client’s cash position or inspecting investment properties, subject to a “net lease,” the holding company or its subsidiary could be considered to be engaging in an impermissible nonbanking activity. STAFF OP. of Feb. 7, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(5) and 225.126.
See also Fidelity Corp., 39 Fed. Reg. 16930 (1974).

4-611

INVESTMENT OR FINANCIAL ADVISOR—To Open-End Investment Company

A bank holding company does not violate provisions of Regulation Y, related interpretive ruling or the Glass-Steagall Act by operating and sponsoring an open-end investment company that does not continuously issue its shares in this country. The investment company makes a single-day offering of shares under which shares of the fund would be purchased on only one business day, 30 days after the initial solicitation of shares. No other share offering has been made in the past 10 years, and no future offering of shares is contemplated. Shares would not be distributed publicly, but only to a limited class of persons with some connection to the holding company. Provided that no list of customers of the subsidiary bank is made available to the fund or its adviser and bank employees express no opinions about purchase of fund shares the holding company has not violated Regulation Y, Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.125 (at 4-177), or the Glass-Steagall Act. STAFF OP. of Dec. 15, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8) and Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 1843(c)(8) and 377; 12 CFR 225.4(a)(5)(ii), and 225.125.

4-612

INVESTMENT OR FINANCIAL ADVISOR—Seed Money for Open-End Investment Companies

For a limited period of time, a bank holding company that acts as an investment advisor to mutual funds may provide initial capitalization to newly formed mutual funds that it advises. As a result of providing this initial capitalization, the holding company would own all or a significant percentage of the shares of these funds for some period of time after they begin operations to enable the funds to establish a performance record prior to soliciting public investors. The holding company has committed to reduce its ownership of voting shares in each of these funds to no more than 24.9 percent within six months of the funds’ organization. The holding company’s objective in providing initial capitalization to the new mutual funds is not to obtain control over and manage an entity that continuously is marketing securities, but to facilitate the holding company’s primary activity of providing investment advice and other services to the mutual funds, which is a permissible activity for bank affiliates under the Glass-Steagall Act. In addition, the holding company has committed to certain other limitations regarding ownership or control of the mutual funds. STAFF OP. of June 24, 1999.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(7), 12 USC 1843(c)(7); Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 377; 12 CFR 225.22(d)(6) and 225.125(f).

4-615

LEASING—Agent, Broker, or Advisor

By virtue of section 225.4(a)(6) of Regulation Y, a bank holding company may serve as an agent, broker, or advisor only in connection with a full-payout lease. STAFF OP. of March 24, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(6).

4-616

LEASING—Unconditional Guarantee by Lessee

The term “unconditional guarantee by a lessee, independent third party or manufactor” as it relates to the leasing of personal property does not require a “guarantee” as defined by state law. Rather, the term is intended to require that the lessee’s obligation to provide the additional amount is without qualification and that the lessee is absolutely liable for the amount guaranteed. This additional amount may be included in the full payout formula for purposes of the Board’s leasing regulation (Regulation M, 12 CFR 213). STAFF OP. of June 13, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(6)(i)(d)(4).

4-617

LEASING—Insurance for Benefit of Holding Company

A bank holding company’s automobile leasing subsidiary may not purchase automobile insurance for the benefit of the lessee. It may, however, purchase damage insurance for its own benefit and pass the cost on to the lessee. Such a purchase may be viewed as an incidental activity necessary to carry out the permissible activity of automobile leasing. STAFF OP. of Aug. 5, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a), (a)(6)(i), and footnote 4.

4-618

LEASING—Leasing Partnerships

A wholly owned bank holding company subsidiary, authorized under Regulation Y to engage in full-payout leasing of personal property and equipment, may form special-purpose leasing partnerships to engage in syndicated leasing transactions without prior Board approval.
Although under section 2(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act a partnership falls within the definition of “company,” acquisition of an interest in such a partnership does not require specific prior Board approval. The Board addressed a similar issue when it approved the application of Girard Company of Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, indirectly to acquire Omnilease Corporation of San Diego, California. As part of that proposal, the Board permitted Omnilease and its parent to establish limited partnerships to serve as vehicles to facilitate the leasing of personal property without prior Board approval. It is therefore staff’s opinion that the leasing subsidiary need not receive prior Board approval to engage in syndicated leasing transactions through the formation of special-purpose partnerships. STAFF OP. of June 19, 1981.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b) and 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1841(b) and 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a).
See also Girard Company, 39 Fed. Reg. 33411 (1974).

4-625

MANAGEMENT CONSULTING—Limits on Foreign Activities

Management consulting is neither a general banking activity nor an activity deemed by the Board to be permissible abroad. Therefore, foreign branches of member banks may not provide such services. Although the Board has granted its consent for Edge corporations and bank holding companies to acquire shares of companies that engage in management consulting at locations outside the United States, management consulting services offered outside the United States by foreign subsidiaries and affiliates of U.S. banking organizations relating to the U.S. market and to the activities of a client company in the United States must be confined to advice concerning the initial entry of foreign companies into the U.S. market. STAFF OP. of Jan. 14, 1975.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8) and (13), 12 USC 1843(c)(8) and (13); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(5)(iv), footnote 3, 225.4(a)(12), 225.126(f), and 213.3(b).

4-635

PROCEDURE—Shares Held in Nominee’s Name

For purposes of the registration and reporting requirements of the Bank Holding Company Act, an individual’s being named pursuant to an oral agreement as merely the nominee of a bank holding company for stock purchases should be disregarded, and the bank holding company should be listed as the owner of the stock. BD. RULING of Jan. 30, 1961.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.5.

4-636

PROCEDURE—Request for Board Approval Prior to Filing of Application

When a bank holding company submitted a list of banks it proposed to acquire and a list of banks it proposed to divest over a period of time, the Board concluded that it could not lawfully approve the bank holding company’s plan, because it would, in effect, be approving the acquisition of banks before applications are filed without properly evaluating the facts. The Board instead uses such lists as guides to bank holding companies’ intentions, and each application is judged and acted upon on the merits, after it has been filed. BD. RULING of Oct. 25, 1973.
Authority: BHCA § 3(a) and (c), 12 USC 1842(a) and (c).

4-637

PROCEDURE—Merger of Wholly Owned Nonbank Subsidiaries

A bank holding company proposes to merge two legally acquired and wholly owned nonbank subsidiaries engaging in the same permissible activity. Because the bank holding company will not be engaging in any new activity or acquiring shares of any new company, the merger may take place without any prior notice or application. STAFF OP. of Dec. 19, 1973.

4-638

PROCEDURE—Acquisition of Going Concern

A bank holding company with a nonbanking subsidiary that must be divested pursuant to section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act proposes to transfer that nonbanking subsidiary’s business and offices to another nonbanking subsidiary of the bank holding company by having that subsidiary establish de novo offices at the locations of the first subsidiary’s offices and closing the first subsidiary’s offices. The bank holding company’s proposal is for acquisition of a going concern and does not qualify for the de novo acquisition notice procedure of Regulation Y. The bank holding company must apply for the Board’s prior approval to acquire a going concern. STAFF OP. of Sept. 12, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(b)(1) and (2).

4-639

PROCEDURE—91-Day Rule

By submitting a request in accordance with section 262.3(a) of the Board’s Rules of Procedure (at 8-020), an applicant may obtain a Board determination on whether its pending application should be deemed to have been granted by operation of the 91-day rule of section 3(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The Board will issue a decision within 10 business days of receiving a request conforming to the requirements of the Rules of Procedure. STAFF OP. of May 17, 1982.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(b) and 4(c), 12 USC 1842(b) and 1843(c); 12 CFR 263.3(a).

4-639.1

PROCEDURE—Merger of Two Insured Banks

An application need not be filed under the Bank Holding Company Act in the case of a merger of two insured banks when the merger is subject to the prior approval of a federal banking agency under the Bank Merger Act and the proposal does not involve formation of a bank holding company or a bank holding company’s acquisition of an additional subsidiary bank. STAFF OP. of Nov. 19, 1982.
Authority: Bank Holding Company Act, 12 USC 1841 et seq.; Bank Merger Act, 12 USC 1828.

4-639.2

PROCEDURE—Bank Subsidiary Merger Followed by Merger of Parent Holding Companies

A bank holding company (Company A) inquired whether its proposed merger with an in-state bank holding company (Company B) is subject to the prior approval of the Board under section 3(a)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act. This proposed merger would immediately follow the merger of Company B’s subsidiary banks into Company A’s existing subsidiary national bank. Company A’s national bank is in the process of filing an application under the Bank Merger Act with the Comptroller of the Currency because the bank that resulted from the bank merger transaction would be a national bank.
Section 3(a)(5) of the Bank Holding Company Act requires a bank holding company to file an application with the Board before merging or consolidating with another bank holding company. The Board noted that the holding company merger in this case is an integral part of the proposed acquisition, that both mergers are dependent upon one another, and that under the act Company B would be presumed to continue to be a bank holding company after the merger of its subsidiary banks into Company A’s national bank. Moreover, section 5(b) of the act authorizes the Board to look to the substance of a proposal in order to carry out the purposes of the act.
For the following reasons, the Board determined that the proposed merger does not require an application. The indebtedness assumed by Company A is not material in the context of Company A’s overall financial condition. The debt would increase Company A’s debt-to-equity ratio by only one percentage point to a level that is well within levels that the Board considers satisfactory for Company A. Company A’s tangible primary capital would be well above the minimum level specified in the Board’s capital adequacy guidelines. Company A’s total capital would be materially above the zone 1 level of both the proposed and current capital adequacy guidelines. The merger will not affect Company A’s cash flow or other financial or managerial resources. The competitive effects of the proposal will be evaluated under the Bank Merger Act, and the proposal involves no issue under the Douglas Amendment.
Company A filed with the Board detailed information demonstrating that the proposal raised no significant issue regarding the financial effect on the holding company or other factors over which the Board has exclusive or primary jurisdiction. Without such information, the Board would have required an application under section 3(a) of the act. BD. RULING of Sept. 5, 1984.
Authority: BHCA §§ 3(a)(5) and 5(b), 12 USC 1842(a)(5) and 1844(b).
See also 2-325.23; Indiana Bancorp, 1983 Fed. Res. Bull. 913; and 12 CFR 225.12(d).

4-650

REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL—Appraisals of Single-Family Residences

A bank holding company subsidiary seeks to perform appraisals of real estate in connection with a loan application under consideration by an affiliated bank. The holding company subsidiary also seeks to perform appraisals of single-family residences.
Effective December 31, 1980, the Board amended Regulation Y to add the performance of real estate appraisals to the list of nonbanking activities determined by the Board to be permissible for bank holding companies. Appraisals of single-family residences are listed as a permissible activity.
In adopting the final rule, the Board did not place any condition on the performance of real estate appraisals that would prohibit a bank holding company authorized to engage in such activity from performing an appraisal in connection with an extension of credit by an affiliated bank. However, a bank holding company subsidiary engaged in performing real estate appraisals would be subject to section 106 of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970, which prohibits certain tie-in arrangements. For example, section 106 would prohibit a bank from extending credit subject to a condition that the borrower obtain an appraisal from the affiliate.
In addition, appraisals by a bank holding company subsidiary in connection with extensions of credit by an affiliated bank should be performed in good faith and in conformance with industry standards. Otherwise, the bank holding company or its bank affiliate could be found by the Board or by the bank’s primary supervisor to be engaging in unsafe or unsound banking practices. STAFF OP. of March 26, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8) and BHCA Amendments § 106, 12 USC 1843(c)(8) and 1972; 12 CFR 225.4(a)(14) and (c).

4-651

REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL—Construction-Analysis Services

A bank holding company was informed that the activity of providing construction-analysis services including appraisal of construction projects at various stages of development and disbursal of construction loan funds in accordance with the terms of a loan agreement is included within the permissible activities of real estate appraising and loan servicing. Therefore, if a bank holding company has received permission to engage in real estate appraisals and loan servicing, a separate application need not be filed for construction analysis services. STAFF OP. of June 10, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4.

4-655.1

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES—Discount Brokerage Services

A bank holding company nonbank subsidiary engaged in discount securities brokerage (the broker) has presented a proposal regarding the sale of shares of a proposed newly organized closed-end investment company (the fund). An underwriter not affiliated with the broker would make an initial public offering of the shares of the fund, which is a load fund. The broker would sell its customer list to the fund’s underwriter in return for a fixed fee. The underwriter would mail prospectus-related offering material to the broker’s customers and would inform retail customers that the broker would serve as the customer’s agent in purchasing shares of the fund. If customers purchase shares of the fund through the broker, the customer would pay the broker a transaction-related fee. Neither the bank holding company nor any of its subsidiaries would serve as investment advisor to the fund.
The broker would not advertise or otherwise promote the shares of the fund, would receive no fee from the fund’s underwriter, and would not enter into any formal agreement with the underwriter relating to the sale of the fund’s shares, other than as described. If the broker receives any inquiry from its customers that is not related to how to order shares of the fund, the inquiries would be directed to the underwriter. The broker would also require that the promotional material distributed by the underwriter expressly state that the broker makes no recommendation on the advisability of the purchase of shares.
Regulation Y allows a bank holding company to provide discount securities brokerage services if the services do not include securities underwriting or dealing, investment advice, or research services. In addition, section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act prohibits a member bank from being affiliated with a firm engaged principally in, among other things, the underwriting, public sale, or distribution of securities.
The broker would not be engaged in underwriting or dealing in the shares of the fund for purposes of Regulation Y or section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act. STAFF OP. of June 5, 1986.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.25(b)(15); Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 377.

4-655.2

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES—Underwriting and Dealing in Debt and Equity Securities

A bank holding company asked for confirmation that three types of transactions currently engaged in by its subsidiary bank and section 20 subsidiary would be consistent with the conditions in the Board’s January 1989 order approving debt and equity underwriting for bank holding companies (1989 Fed. Res. Bull. 192). First, the section 20 subsidiary engages in repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements involving U.S. Treasury securities with certain indirect foreign subsidiaries of the bank, in order to accommodate operational needs of the foreign subsidiaries. Second, the section 20 subsidiary engages in certain swap and options transactions, including interestrate and foreign-currency swaps and foreign-exchange spot, forward, and futures contracts with the bank. The sole purpose of these transactions is to hedge the exposure of the section 20 subsidiary, and not to fund the subsidiary. The Board determined that the section 20 subsidiary may continue to engage in the two types of transactions with its bank affiliate as long as the Bank Holding Company provides a guarantee indemnifying the bank for any losses that might arise from the section 20 subsidiary’s nonperformance.
Third, the section 20 subsidiary sought a Board determination that certificates of deposit and banker’s acceptances could be used to collateralize extensions of credit from the affiliated bank in amounts equal to 100 percent of the value of the loans. The Board found that, under the circumstances described, the use of these instruments as full collateral would be consistent with the requirements of the order. BD. RULING of June 19, 1989.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; Banking Act of 1933 § 20, 12 USC 377.

4-655.3

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES—Dealing in Debt and Equity Securities

In connection with a bank holding company’s application to engage in debt and equity underwriting activities through a section 20 subsidiary, the Board stated that to ensure that any perpetual preferred stock issued in connection with a bank holding company’s capital plan meets the permanence requirement for tier 1 capital, any redemption of the preferred shares may be only at the bank holding company’s option and only with prior Federal Reserve approval.
The bank holding company also asked whether the grantor-trust exemption in condition 20 of the Board’s January 1989 order (1989 Fed. Res. Bull. 192) is limited to situations involving mortgage-backed securities. The grantor-trust exemption is not limited to residential mortgages originated by a nonaffiliated lender but includes any and all assets originated by an unaffiliated lender, including consumer receivables.
A question was also raised about the Commodity Futures Trading Commission rule requiring a futures commission merchant to match by an internal accounting entry what are essentially offsetting transactions. The effect of the trader’s action would be to book a futures position to each of the entities. When the entities are a bank and its affiliated section 20 subsidiary, a question could arise regarding the prohibition against a bank’s extending credit to an affiliated section 20 subsidiary. The Board decided, however, that under the circumstances this transaction is consistent with the intent of the order prohibiting a bank from extending credit to, purchasing assets from, or selling assets to a section 20 affiliate.
Another question involved the fact that the Open Market Desk of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York enters into transactions with a primary dealer only on a principal basis, even though the primary dealer might be acting as agent for its customer, which might be an affiliated bank. Although the January 1989 order permitted section 20 subsidiaries to act as agent for their affiliate banks in the purchase or sale of financial assets, it generally prohibited banks and section 20 affiliates from purchasing and selling assets between themselves. The Board believes that section 20 subsidiaries may engage in the proposed transactions on behalf of an affiliated bank because the relationship is functionally and substantially one of agent, even though technically it is a principal relationship. This determination is limited to transactions that are initiated with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. BD. RULING of July 26, 1989.
Authority: BHCA § 4, 12 USC 1843; Banking Act of 1933 § 20, 12 USC 377.

4-655.4

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES—Asset Sales and Interest-Rate Swaps

A bank holding company that received Board approval to commence to underwrite and deal in debt securities received the following interpretations of conditions included in the Board order:
(1) Asset sales at fair market value from a bank holding company or its nonbank subsidiaries to a section 20 subsidiary would not be inconsistent with the condition in the Board order requiring prior notice to and approval by the Board for all provisions of funds, including transfers of assets, by a bank holding company to its section 20 subsidiary. The condition was intended to cover those transactions that directly or indirectly represent a capital injection. Accordingly, asset sales by the bank holding company to its section 20 subsidiary at fair market value would not be prohibited.
(2) Interest-rate or foreign-currency swaps, and any derivative agreements, entered into between the bank and a customer of the subsidiary would not be deemed impermissible extensions of credit or similar transactions that might be viewed as enhancing creditworthiness or marketability of ineligible securities underwritten by the section 20 subsidiary. The condition in the Board order on extensions of credit was intended to restrict activities that have the effect of placing the bank’s credit behind the securities, such as extensions of credit, standby letters of credit, asset purchase agreements, indemnification, guarantees, and insurance.
It was noted that the transactions between the bank and the customer would be subject to section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act, which would require that the swap transaction between the bank and the customer be on nonpreferential terms, and the anti-tying provision of section 106 of the Bank Holding Company Act, which would prohibit the section 20 subsidiary from requiring that the customer enter into the swap agreement with the affiliated bank and the bank from reducing its price for that service. STAFF OP. of Oct. 3, 1989.
Authority: Banking Act of 1933 § 20, 12 USC 377.

4-655.5

SECURITIES ACTIVITIES—Dealing in Proprietary Strips; Compliance with 10 Percent Limitation

The staff received a request from a bank holding company for a determination that revenues earned from dealing in or holding certain custodial receipts known as proprietary strips are bank-eligible for purposes of determining compliance with the Board’s 10 percent limitation on the amount of bank-ineligible revenue earned by section 20 companies. Under the Board’s prior precedent, in order to ensure compliance with the Glass-Steagall Act, a section 20 company may not derive more than 10 percent of its total revenue from underwriting and dealing in securities that a national bank may not underwrite and deal in (bank-ineligible securities). Proprietary strips result from the practice of certain investment banks of stripping coupons from U.S. Treasury bonds and notes and selling the individual coupons to the public at a present value discount of their face value. In this instance, “proprietary strips” shall refer only to those receipts evidencing interests in U.S. Treasury bonds or notes.
The proprietary strips in question are receipts entitling the holder to the entire interest in a single, discrete interest or principal payment on a U.S. Treasury bond or note deposited with a custodian. The holding company represented that the holders of these proprietary strips have all the rights and privileges of owners of the underlying coupon obligations or principal obligations. These holders therefore have the right upon default on the underlying obligations to proceed directly and individually against the United States of America without being required to act in concert with other proprietary strip holders or the custodian of the underlying obligation. According to the holding company, although investment banks have virtually ceased issuing proprietary strips since the U.S. Treasury introduced its STRIPS program in 1985, a considerable volume of proprietary strips continue to be traded in the secondary market.
Section 16 of the Glass-Steagall Act does not address instruments such as proprietary strips. The OCC has never issued any ruling, opinion, or regulation on whether proprietary strips are bank-eligible for purposes of the Glass-Steagall Act’s restrictions on underwriting and dealing in securities by national banks.
The SEC has relied on a number of criteria to determine that proprietary strips based on municipal securities are exempt from registration under federal securities laws:
  • The owners of the proprietary municipal strips will have all the rights and privileges of owners of the underlying securities.
  • Each receipt holder, as a real party in interest, will have the right, upon default of the underlying securities, to proceed directly and individually against the issuer of the securities.
  • The receipt holder will not be required to act in concert with other receipt holders or the custodian.
  • Each proprietary strip represents the entire interest in a discrete, identified interest payment or principal payment on the underlying security.
The SEC also relied on the following representations made by Merrill Lynch:
  • The custodian bank performs only clerical or ministerial services on behalf of the proprietary strip holders.
  • Neither the custodian nor sponsor additionally will guarantee or otherwise enhance the creditworthiness of the underlying security or the proprietary strip.
  • An opinion of counsel is provided indicating that the underlying securities will not be considered assets of either the sponsoring firm or the custodian bank.
  • Other factors are not present, such as remarketing agreements, that would require the investors in the proprietary strips to rely upon the sponsor to obtain the benefit of their investment.
 Based on the foregoing and other facts of record, particularly the holding company’s representations that the proprietary strips in question would meet the eight conditions enumerated above, it appears that a holder of or dealer in the type of proprietary strip described is, for virtually all purposes, a holder of or dealer in an interest in the U.S. Treasury bond or note underlying the strip.
Therefore, it does not appear necessary to determine at this time whether proprietary strips should be treated as instruments that are not “securities” for purposes of the Glass-Steagall Act. Furthermore, this opinion is limited to a determination of the appropriate treatment of proprietary strips for purposes of section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 10, 1994.
Authority: Glass-Steagall Act § 20, 12 USC 377. See also J.P. Morgan & Co. Inc., 75 Fed. Res. Bull. 192 (1989), aff’d sub nom. Securities Industries Ass’n v. Board of Governors, 900 F.2d 360 (D.C. Cir. 1990), as modified by orders approving modifications to the section 20 orders, 75 Fed. Res. Bull. 751 (1989), 79 Fed. Res. Bull. 226 (1993), 79 Fed. Res. Bull. 360 (1993).

4-660

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Managing Bank Premises

A bank holding company proposed to acquire a company formed to acquire a leasehold covering an entire building, only 2.5 percent of which was then occupied by a subsidiary bank. The bank holding company did, however, commit to dispose of the leasehold interest if the building was not substantially occupied by the bank within five years. The acquisition was permissible as holding of property for future substantial use by the bank. The Board reserved the right to reexamine this question at the end of the five-year period. BD. RULING of Dec. 22, 1960.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(A).

4-661

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Installment Loan Servicing

A bank holding company proposes to establish a nonbank subsidiary to perform certain functions in relation to installment loans being generated by the bank holding company’s subsidiary banks (investigating the credit standings of prospective borrowers, inspecting documents executed incident to the loan, and collecting delinquent paper or delinquent installments). If these activities could have been carried out by the banks themselves, the performance of these “services” by the subsidiary is permissible. STAFF OP. of Feb. 19, 1964.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C); 12 CFR 225.104.
See also 1958 Fed. Res. Bull. 431.

4-662

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Permissible Services

A bank service corporation may provide only those services that a bank itself can provide for its customer. Whether a bank may render a particular service depends on state laws and regulations and interpretations thereunder (for a state-chartered bank) and on federal laws and regulations and interpretations thereunder (for a national bank). BD. RULING of Aug. 19, 1964.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C).
See also 4-192.

4-663

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Mortgage Loan Agent and Servicer

A bank holding company proposes to acquire a mortgage company subsidiary that would act as agent for the national bank subsidiaries of the bank holding company and as such would solicit applications for mortgage loans, assemble credit information, make property inspections and appraisals, secure title information, solicit investors’ purchases of the mortgage loans made by subsidiary banks, and service the loans after they have been made. The mortgage company would not acquire loans for its own account. Such an acquisition is permissible under section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 23, 1967.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C); 12 CFR 225.122.
Similar opinion expressed in staff opinion of Jan. 6, 1969.

4-664

SERVICING EXEMPTION—In-House Advertising Department

A bank holding company proposes to maintain an in-house advertising department to perform advertising services for only the bank holding company and its subsidiaries. This activity can be conducted directly by the bank holding company under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act or indirectly by a subsidiary under section 4(c)(1)(C). STAFF OP. of Feb. 17, 1971.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843 (c)(1)(C) and (c)(8).

4-665

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Building and Leasing Bank Premises

A bank holding company may build branch bank facilities and lease them to a subsidiary bank without prior Board approval. The activity is permissible as a performance of services for a subsidiary under section 4(a)(2)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which permits a bank holding company, without prior Board approval, to acquire a company engaged in holding or operating properties used wholly or substantially by any banking subsidiary. STAFF OP. of Nov. 6, 1972.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2)(A) and (c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(a)(2)(A) and (c)(1)(A).

4-666

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Management of Bank Premises

A bank holding company proposes to invest in a company constructing and owning two seven-story buildings in which a subsidiary bank will occupy one floor. Such use does not qualify as substantial use within the meaning of section 4(c)(1)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act and is not a permissible investment. However, if the bank plans to occupy increased space in the near future and can make reasonably precise projections of use, the investment may qualify under that section. STAFF OP. of Jan. 4, 1973.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(A).

4-667

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Managing Bank Premises

A bank holding company proposes to acquire a leasehold interest in a small shopping center where a subsidiary bank would occupy 7,200 square feet of approximately 36,000 square feet of rentable space. Normally, there is no objection to such investment when the bank immediately occupies 25 percent of the rentable space and there is a substantial likelihood that the balance of the rentable space will be used by the bank in the future. However, if there is a considerable question about whether the balance of the property is usable by the bank, the property is not a proper investment under section 4(c)(1)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of May 28, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(A).

4-668

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Managing Bank Premises

A bank holding company proposes to manage a building that is 40 percent occupied by a bank subsidiary, with the possibility of future expansion. The building is used substantially by the subsidiary bank. This proposed property management activity is permissible under section 4(c)(1)(A) of the Bank Holding Company Act. STAFF OP. of July 15, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(A).
Similar opinion expressed staff opinion of March 10, 1971.

4-669

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Subsidiary That Is Member of CEMCA

A registered bank holding company proposed to establish a wholly owned subsidiary that would serve to execute transactions for the sale and purchase of gold and silver bullion and would be a member of the Commodity Exchange Metal Clearing Association (CEMCA). The subsidiary would have been involved only in transactions in which its parent holding companies or their subsidiaries had a beneficial interest.
The Board concluded that ownership of this subsidiary would not fall within the servicing exemption of section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act, since it had not been established that the Comptroller of the Currency would permit national banks to be members of the CEMCA. Thus, it had not been established that the subject nonbank subsidiary would be carrying on only servicing operations that the subsidiary bank could carry on. In addition, the Board noted that the assessment provisions of the CEMCA Guaranty Fund, an open-ended liability, raises serious problems under the unsafe or unsound practices standard of section 8(b) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act. BD. RULING of Dec. 13, 1974.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(A), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C); FDIA § 8(b), 12 USC 1818(b); 12 CFR 225.104.

4-670

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Nonbank Subsidiaries

The servicing exemption of section 4(c)(1)(C) provides an exemption from the prohibitions of section 4 for shares of a company engaged solely in furnishing or providing services for the bank holding company and its banking subsidiaries. This exemption does not extend to providing services for nonbank subsidiaries. This conclusion is supported by the fact that section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act provides an exemption from the general prohibition of that section for “stocks, bonds, debentures or other obligations of any company of the kind described in section 4(c)(1) of the Bank Holding Company Act.” To extend the exemption of section 4(c)(1) to a company providing services for nonbank subsidiaries would allow subsidiary banks to invest indirectly in the operations of their nonbank affiliates, contrary to the policy established by section 23A. STAFF OP. of April 5, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C); and FRA § 23A, 12 USC 371c.

4-671

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Edge Act Subsidiaries of Bank

The servicing exemption of section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act applies to servicing the wholly owned bank subsidiaries as well as nonbank subsidiaries of a bank, including Edge Act corporations. A servicing corporation for a wholly owned Edge Act corporation should be a domestic company incorporated in the United States, and the appropriate Reserve Bank should satisfy itself that the company is providing only those services that a servicing company may provide. STAFF OP. of May 11, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C); 12 CFR 225.104.

4-672

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Servicing Nonbank Subsidiaries

A bank holding company organized a second-tier nonbank subsidiary, whose activities are limited exclusively to placing advertising, discussing terms with customers, and reviewing and transmitting purchase contracts to the parent bank holding company, in order to assist in the holding company’s sale of its debt securities. The proceeds of the sale will go to two nonbank subsidiaries of the parent bank holding company. Acquisition of the second-tier subsidiary is permissible under section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act, since the subsidiary’s activities are exclusively administrative and clerical tasks for the holding company and related to the holding company’s sale of its own notes. The exemption of section 4(c)(1)(C) is not limited to performing services for bank subsidiaries but also encompasses certain activities that a parent bank holding company may lawfully engage in directly. BD. RULING of Dec. 27, 1977.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C).

4-673

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Subsidiary Holding Shares That Could Be Held Directly

A bank holding company has a subsidiary engaged solely in holding shares of the holding company’s subsidiaries that have been approved by the Board pursuant to section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act. The bank holding company may retain the subsidiary pursuant to the servicing exemption in section 4(c)(1)(C), since the subsidiary is engaged solely in holding shares of subsidiaries that the bank holding company could hold directly. STAFF OP. of Sept. 20, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8).

4-674

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Scope of Exemption

The servicing exemption provided by section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act should be read literally, and consequently applies to bank holding companies or their banking subsidiaries and not to nonbank subsidiaries. STAFF OP. of Sept. 27, 1978.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C).

4-675

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Underwriting Insurance for Parent’s Employee Benefits Plan

A bank holding company proposes that its insurance underwriting subsidiaries underwrite and/or reinsure the group life insurance, optional group life insurance, accidential death and dismemberment insurance, retirement life insurance, and retirement annuity policies that the bank holding company provides to its employees and former employees only. Staff believes that the holding company’s insurance underwriting subsidiary could engage in those activities under section 4(a)(2) and (c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act. Section 4(a)(2) permits a bank holding company to engage in “furnishing services to or performing services for its subsidiary.” Section 4(c)(1)(C) permits a bank holding company to acquire shares of a subsidiary engaged in “furnishing services to or performing services for such bank holding company or its banking subsidiaries.” Moreover, the Board has previously stated that it regards section 4(c)(2) and (c)(1)(C) as authorizing bank holding companies to act as agents for the sale of insurance for themselves and their subsidiaries. Finally, staff concluded that the employee benefit plans involved here represent a form of compensation for employees, and it is clear that bank holding companies possess inherent authority to provide compensation to their employees. STAFF OP. of Aug. 19, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(1)(C), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(1)(C); 12 CFR 225.141.
See also S. Rept. 1095, 84 Cong. 2 Sess. (GPO, 1956), p. 2.

4-676

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Leasing

A bank holding company seeks to form a de novo subsidiary that would act as a servicing company for the holding company’s subsidiary bank. The new subsidiary would dispose of property for which the bank is the lessor in a commercial equipment lease. Formation of this servicing subsidiary is permissible under section 4(c)(1)(C) of the Bank Holding Company Act, which permits bank holding companies to acquire shares of any company engaged solely in “furnishing services to or performing services for [a] bank holding company or its bank subsidiaries.” Prior Board approval is not required under section 4(c)(1)(C).
The holding company anticipates expanding the activities of the new subsidiary to provide advisory services to unaffiliated banks and other equipment lessors regarding the disposal of leased equipment. The new subsidiary may also act as a finder to bring this client/lessor together with a prospective purchaser or lessee of the equipment.
These activities appear permissible under the leasing provisions of Regulation Y. Those provisions allow bank holding companies, after receiving the Board’s prior approval under section 4(c)(8) of the act, to lease personal property when the lease is the functional equivalent of an extension of credit and to act as “agency, broker or advisor” in connection with such leases. The proposed activity appears to involve acting as an advisor in connection with personal property leases.
The subsidiary would, however, have to limit its clients to those engaged in leasing that otherwise complies with each of the regulation’s requirements. Thus, under the leasing provisions, the subsidiary can act as advisor only in connecton with full-payout leases that serve as a substitute for an extension of credit. With regard to bank clients, the subsidiary may also rely on the bank management consulting portion of Regulation Y to provide advice regarding leasing. This provision of Regulation Y does not, however, represent a broader grant of authority than the leasing provisions in view of the fact that many banks can engage only in full-payout leasing. STAFF OP. of Oct. 22, 1981.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(6) and (12).
See also S. Rept. 1095, 84 Cong. 2 Sess. (GPO, 1970), p. 3.

4-676.1

SERVICING EXEMPTION—Organizational Costs

Bank holding companies are not prohibited from incurring and paying necessary organizational expenses that are incidental to the formation of a company that would engage in permissible nonbanking activities. Section 4(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act authorizes a bank holding company to manage and control banks and other subsidiaries permitted under the act and to furnish services to its subsidiaries. It is reasonable to conclude that encompassed within this authority is the authority to pay reasonable organizational expenses that may be incurred in the process of organizing a company to engage in permissible nonbanking activities. Of course, if the applications are denied or the bank holding company investors later decide not to pursue the venture, any funds held in escrow would have to be returned. STAFF OP. of Jan. 20, 1983.
Authority: BHCA § 4(a)(2) and (c)(8), 12 USC 1843(a)(2) and (c)(8).

4-685

SERVICING EXTENSIONS OF CREDIT—Debt Collection Services

The offering of debt collection services by a bank holding company or its nonbank subsidiaries to other lenders in connection with loans made by the other lenders but not serviced by the bank holding company or its subsidiaries prior to default is not within the scope of the permitted nonbank activity of servicing loans and other extensions of credit. STAFF OP. of Feb. 24, 1975.
Authority: BHCA § 4(c)(8), 12 USC 1843(c)(8); 12 CFR 225.4(a)(3).

4-690

“SUBSIDIARY”


4-700

“SUCCESSOR”—Transferor Not a Bank Holding Company Until After the Transfer

A bank holding company acquired shares of its subsidiary bank in December of 1968 from a company that became a bank holding company in December of 1970. The transferee cannot claim grandfather privileges as successor to the transferor, since the transferor was not a bank holding company at the time of the transfer. Also, a transfer that was effected in a transaction in which the transferor acquired 40 percent of the transferee in exchange for 40 percent of the shares of the bank does not satisfy the requirement that no substantial change in the control of the bank or beneficial ownership of the bank shares occur. BD. RULING of Jan. 2, 1973.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(1), (a)(6), (b), and (e), and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(a)(1), (a)(6), (b), and (e), and 1843(a)(2).
See also Testimony of William McChesney Martin, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Hearings Before the Senate Committee on Banking and Currency on S. 76 and S. 1113, 83 Cong. 1 Sess. (GPO, 1953), p. 15; Testimony of J.L. Robertson, member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Hearings Before the House Committee on Banking and Currency on H.R. 6504, 82 Cong. 2 Sess. (GPO, 1952), p. 22.

4-701

“SUCCESSOR”—Grandfather Rights Accruing

A company proposes to become a bank holding company by acquiring the successor, by merger, of a national bank that is also a bank holding company because of its control of a second bank. The company would be the successor to the bank holding company status of the national bank if the transaction did not effect a substantial change in the control of the second bank or a substantial change in beneficial ownership of the shares of that bank. The company will not be the successor to the national bank, however, because (1) control by a national bank is different from control by a company, because of differing restrictions on permissible activities; (2) the second bank will become part of a multibank holding company system where previously it was part of a one-bank holding company system; (3) the second bank will have two parents, the company and the national bank, with the company the sole shareholder of the national bank, and the company’s shareholders may not be the same as the bank’s previous shareholders because of a related merger transaction; and (4) the company is not a substitute for the national bank, since direct control of the second bank stays with the national bank. Thus, the company would not qualify for any grandfather rights that the national bank may have had, since it is not a successor to the national bank. Also, even if it were a successor to the national bank, it would not qualify as a company covered in 1970, because it would have been a two-bank holding company on June 30, 1968 and would not have been affected by the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970. BD. RULING of Sept. 10, 1973.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(a)(6) and (e), and 4(a)(2), 12 USC 1841(a)(6) and (e), and 1843(a)(2).

4-702

“SUCCESSOR”—Substantial Change in Beneficial Ownership

It is proposed that a new corporation be formed to merge with an existing bank holding company in order to reduce the number of shareholders of the existing holding company from 3,430 to 9. Such a merger would represent a substantial change in the beneficial ownership of the holding company’s banking subsidiary. Therefore, the new corporation would not be regarded as a “successor” to the existing holding company and would not be entitled to the grandfather privileges of the existing holding company. Also, the new corporation would become a bank holding company and therefore must apply for the Board’s prior approval of the merger. STAFF OP. of Nov. 18, 1974.
Authority: BHCA §§ 2(b), 2(e), 3(a)(1), and 4(a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(B)(ii), and 4(c)(11), 12 USC 1841(b), 1841(e), 1842(a)(1), and 1843 (a)(2)(B)(i), (a)(2)(B)(ii), and (c)(11).

4-705

TAX CERTIFICATION—Eligibility

Company A requested a prior tax certification under the Bank Holding Company Tax Act for a proposed spin-off of certain bank holding company stock. Company A owned less than 25 percent of the voting shares of a bank up until August 1982, when the bank became a wholly owned subsidiary of Company B and Company A exchanged its shares in the bank for the same percent of shares in Company B. In December 1982, as a result of Company B’s redemption of stock, Company A’s percentage ownership in the bank increased to 36 percent and Company A became a bank holding company. At the time Company A became a bank holding company it was in violation of the Bank Holding Company Act because it owned nonbanking assets that the act prohibits a bank holding company from owning. Company A proposed to divest all of its Company B stock by transferring the shares to a new bank holding company subsidiary, and then to its shareholders on a pro rata basis.
The requested tax certification could not be granted because Company A is not a “qualified bank holding corporation,” since on July 7, 1970, it owned less than 25 percent of a bank and therefore would not have become a bank holding company as a result of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970. In addition, Company A does not meet the second test for the qualified bank holding corporation—the Board’s determination that a company is a bank holding company by virtue of its having had a controlling influence over a bank on July 7, 1970. The Board has never determined that Company A exerted a controlling influence over the bank, nor would it do so based on the information available.
Company A’s request for tax relief was untimely. Congress enacted the Bank Holding Company Tax Act to provide tax relief only for divestitures that the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 require to be made by December 31, 1980, Senate Report at 9. (Congress has provided for a limited exception for divestitures of certain real estate.) STAFF OP. of Aug. 6, 1984.
Authority: BHC Tax Act, 26 USC 1103(b); BHCA § 2(a)(2)(A) and (g)(3), 12 USC 1841(a)(2)(A) and (g)(3); S. Rep. 1192, 94 Cong. 2d Sess. (1976), p. 9.

4-710

TIE-IN ARRANGEMENTS—Between Subsidiary Banks

A bank holding company requested that the Board determine that tie-in arrangements for loans, discounts, deposits or trust services between all of its wholly owned subsidiary banks be deemed permissible pursuant to section 106(b) of the Bank Holding Company Amendments of 1970. Section 106(b) generally prohibits any practice whereby a bank requires its customers to accept or provide some service or product or refrain from dealing with other parties in order to obtain a desired bank service or product. Such tie-in practices are permissible either when the two tied products or services are loans, discounts, deposits, or trust services available from the same bank or when the Board has determined by order or regulation that a particular tying relationship is not contrary to the purposes of section 106(b).
The language of section 106(b) clearly prohibits tie-in arrangements between bank products and services and the products and services from the parent bank holding company or “any other subsidiary” of such bank holding company. There is no statutory exception for tie-ins between loans, discounts, deposits, or trust services of affiliated banks, nor does the provision distinguish between products and services offered by bank and nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding companies. Accordingly, the literal language of section 106(b) prohibits the proposed tie-in practices between banking subsidiaries. Furthermore, the legislative history of section 106(b) does not support the exercise of the Board’s authority to exempt classes of organizations from the prohibitions of section 106(b). The Board is charged by Congress only with the task of exempting the limited banking practices mentioned in the statute. An exemption of the type proposed would override the express language of the statute. STAFF OP. of Dec. 17, 1982.
Authority: BHCA Amendments § 106(b), 12 USC 1972(b).

4-711

TIE-IN ARRANGEMENTS—Treatment of Insurance Products

A bank holding company requested confirmation that insurance products may be included among the products offered by a bank as part of a combined-balance discount program (“eligible products”) operated pursuant to the Board’s safe harbor for such programs from the restrictions of the anti-tying prohibitions of section 106 of the Bank Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970. The bank and its affiliates wished to offer incentives to their credit card, mortgage, or loan customers who maintained a combined minimum balance in a package of products and services that included annuities, auto, homeowner’s, life, and/or long-term care insurance from insurance affiliates of the bank.
In order for a combined-balance discount program to qualify for the Board’s safe harbor, all deposits must be eligible products under the program, and deposit balances must be weighed at least as much as nondeposit products towards the minimum balance. Eligible products under the safe harbor are those “products specified by the bank” as part of the combined-balance discount program (12 CFR 225.7(b)(2)). All financial products offered by a bank or its affiliates, including insurance products, may be included in a combined-balance discount program that satisfies the requirements of the Board’s safe harbor.
For purposes of weighting, the principal amount of an annuity may be counted in determining the size of a customer’s balance in eligible products, as may the premiums paid on non-annuity insurance products. In this case, the bank indicated that in its proposed combined-balance discount program, deposits, credit card balances, and insurance premiums would count equally, dollar for dollar, towards the minimum balance. STAFF OP. of May 16, 2001.
Authority: BHCA Amendments § 106(b), 12 USC 1972(b); 12 CFR 225.7(b)(2).

4-740

VIOLATIONS—Expanding Nonbanking Activities Without Board Approval

A bank holding company and its subsidiary bank holding company own a subsidiary engaged in providing data processing services to both bank holding companies and their bank subsidiaries under the servicing exemption. An application to begin de novo activities was filed twice in order to acquire Board approval for the data processing subsidiary to expand activities to provide services to nonsubsidiary banks. Both times, the de novo application was returned because of material deficiencies. The data processing subsidiary began the expanded services to nonsubsidiary banks without Board approval and in violation of the Bank Holding Company Act and Regulation Y. Both bank holding companies disclaimed responsibility for the violation, alleging that the activity was begun on counsel’s advice that proper submissions were made and the prior approval granted. However, prior to receipt of counsel’s advice, the data processing subsidiary had been in violation of the Bank Holding Company Act for providing data processing services to correspondent banks of the subsidiary bank of the two bank holding companies beyond the limits of permissibility of Board interpretation 12 CFR 225.118 (at 4-195). In view of the bank holding companies’ two previous violations of the Bank Holding Company Act and Regulation Y and their failure to abide by previous commitments to prevent further violations, staff considered these violations extremely serious and recommended Board enforcement action. STAFF OP. of June 26, 1979.
Authority: BHCA §§ 4(c)(1)(C), 4(c)(8), and 8, 12 USC 1843(c)(1)(C) and (c)(8), and 1847, 12 CFR 225.4(a)(8) and (b)(1), and 225.118.

VIOLATIONS—Technical Violations Not Basis for Reconsideration of Board Action

See 4-268.

Back to top