A bank requested relief from
certain recordkeeping, reporting, and public-disclosure requirements
of Regulation O. The bank was organized in 1991 by a national retailer
(“the company”) under the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1991
(CEBA), which amended the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act) to exclude
from the definition of “bank” an institution that—
- engages only in credit card operations;
- does not accept demand deposits, or deposits that
the depositor may withdraw by check or similar means for payment to
third parties or others;
- does not accept any savings or time deposits of less
than $100,000;
- maintains only one office that accepts deposits; and
- does not engage in the business of making commercial
loans.
The bank’s articles of association set forth these restrictions
and provide that they may not be eliminated or amended without the
prior written consent of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC).
The legislative history of CEBA clarifies that a CEBA
credit card bank may make extensions of credit only to individuals.
The bank has confirmed that it extends credit only through the issuance
of credit cards and issues credit cards only to individuals for use
in company stores. The bank is a member bank, however, for purposes
of the Federal Reserve Act, and is subject to the requirements of
Regulation O.
Section 215.8 of Regulation O requires a member bank annually
to request each executive officer, director, and principal shareholder
(insider) of the bank, any holding company of the bank, and all other
subsidiaries of any holding company of the bank to provide the bank
with a list of his or her related interests. As defined in section
215.2, a “related interest” is either a “company” controlled by an
insider or a “political or campaign committee” controlled by or benefitting
an insider. The bank notes that, by making loans only to individuals,
which excludes loans to a company or a political or campaign committee,
it is prevented from making loans to an insider’s related interests.
Therefore, the bank suggests, it is not necessary for it to request
its insiders to identify their related interests in order to ensure
compliance with the insider-lending restrictions.
The purpose of section 215.8 is to ensure that
banks maintain records necessary to ensure their compliance with the
insider-lending restrictions. In view of the fact that the bank may
not extend credit to companies, it is not necessary for it to request
its insiders to identify their related interests or to maintain records
of loans to its insiders’ related interests in order to ensure compliance
with Regulation O.
Sections 215.9 and 215.10 of Regulation O impose reporting
requirements, and section 215.11(b) imposes a public-disclosure requirement
for executive officers of a member bank. Section 215.9 implements
section 22(g)(7) of the Federal Reserve Act, and sections 215.10 and
215.11 implement section 7(k) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act.
Both of these statutory provisions refer solely to executive officers
of a bank. Unlike their treatment under section 22(h) of the Federal
Reserve Act (see paragraph (8), 12 USC 375b(8)), executive officers
of affiliates of the bank are not deemed to be executive officers
of the bank. The reporting and public-disclosure requirements of sections
215.9, 215.10, and 215.11(b) therefore do not apply to executive officers
of the company or of any other subsidiary of the company, unless,
of course, they are in fact also executive officers of the bank.
Section 215.9 of Regulation O requires each executive
officer of a bank to report to the bank’s board of directors all extensions
of credit from other banks that in the aggregate exceed the lending
limit for extensions of credit to him or her by the bank. The bank
contends that this reporting requirement is unnecessary because the
bank engages only in credit card operations. Section 215.9 implements
section 22(g)(7) of the Federal Reserve Act, which does not grant
the Board any exemptive rulemaking authority with respect to its requirements.
Accordingly, the bank’s executive officers are required to comply
with section 215.9. STAFF OP. of July 26, 1993.Authority: 12 CFR 215.8-215.11; FRA § 22(g)(7), 12 USC 375a(7);
FDIA § 7(k), 12 USC 1817(k).