In general, when a member bank
or a corporation organized under section 25(a) of the Federal Reserve
Act (an “Edge” corporation), or operating pursuant to an agreement
with the Board under section 25 thereof (an “agreement” corporation),
or a bank holding company requests the Board’s specific consent to
acquire the stock or other certificates of
ownership of a foreign corporation
that will be jointly owned by the U.S. banking organization and other
foreign or domestic participants (hereinafter referred to as a “foreign
joint venture”
1), the Board considers, among other factors,
the degree of legal and practical business responsibility the U.S.
banking organization will bear for the financial condition and operations
of the foreign joint venture in foreign and international financial
markets. In the Board’s judgment, this factor, among others, is relevant
in assessing what effects the proposed investment may have on the
financial and managerial resources of the applying U.S. banking organization.
Based on the recent experience of certain foreign joint
ventures in foreign and international financial markets, the Board
has found that a U.S. banking organization may, in certain circumstances,
feel impelled for business reasons to provide financial support
2 to a foreign joint venture
in which it has an equity interest in the event the venture has liquidity
or other financial needs. This support may be substantially in excess
of the U.S. banking organization’s original equity investment and
may, in some situations, be well in excess of its pro rata share.
This has seemed most likely to occur in situations where (1) the foreign
joint venture has included in its name a reference to the U.S. banking
organization, (2) the U.S. banking organization or its affiliates
have consistently provided financial support to the foreign corporation
in amounts significantly beyond the usual commercial limits or significantly
disproportionate to its pro rata stock interest, or (3) as the result
of substantial managerial support furnished by the U.S. banking organization
under a contract or other arrangement, the foreign corporation has
been publicly identified as or considered to be, sometimes with the
active encouragement of the U.S. banking organization, an integral
part of the U.S. banking organization’s international operations.
Accordingly, the Board, in considering applications by
U.S. banking organizations to invest in foreign joint ventures, will,
as a matter of policy, take into account the possibility that the
applicant may feel impelled for business reasons to provide financial
support for such foreign joint venture in the event the venture has
liquidity or other financial needs, and that such support could be
significantly greater than the amount of its proposed equity investment.
The Board will, therefore, consider such application in light of the
relative ability of the applicant to meet the demands that such potential
support could place on its financial and managerial resources. In
doing so, the Board will take into consideration the risks associated
with the total assets and liabilities of the foreign joint venture
and its projected expansion, and not merely the size of the proposed
equity investment by the applicant. In particular, the Board will
give great weight to these potential risks and their implications
for the applicant in cases where the applicant proposes (1) to include
a reference to its name in that of the foreign joint venture, (2)
to provide general funding support to the foreign joint venture in
amounts disproportionate to its pro rata stock interest, or (3) to
provide virtually all of the management for such foreign joint venture.
If, however, in the case of any such proposed joint venture
investment, the U.S. banking organization can establish in the record
of its application that it has reached an agreement or arrangement
whereby its support of the proposed joint venture in the event of
liquidity or other financial needs will be limited to its initial
equity investment or to some fixed amount, or will be shared pro rata
or otherwise with the other shareholders, or will otherwise be limited,
the Board will consider the application and the risks associated therewith
on the basis of this additional information. In this regard, the Board
will also consider the identity and financial strength of other partners
and investors in the venture and their respective ability to provide
support to the venture, if needed.
This statement of policy is not intended to prohibit or
discourage investments by U.S. banking organizations in foreign joint
ventures, which can be a useful form of corporate organization in
appropriate circumstances; rather, due to the difficulty of ascertaining
the precise risks undertaken in joint venture investments, its primary
purpose is to clarify for all parties concerned the probable dimensions
of risks assumed in any particular investment. Thus, even if an applicant
proposes to assume a disproportionate share of the risks in any joint
venture, e.g., agrees to stand behind more than its pro rata share
of the joint venture’s obligations, the Board might be willing to
approve the investment if the applicant’s financial and managerial
resources could bear this additional risk and if other factors indicated
that approval would be consistent with the public interest.
The Board further notes that any
action that it might take on an application should not be viewed or
relied upon by the applying U.S. banking organization, other participants
in the venture, or any third party as constituting approval or disapproval,
or ratification or rejection of any agreement or arrangement that
may have been entered into by the shareholders of a foreign joint
venture; specifically, any Board action should not be viewed as constituting
any expression of judgment as to the validity or enforceability of
any such agreement or arrangement. Any agreement or arrangement will,
rather, be merely one among many factors considered by the Board in
deciding on an application.
This statement is intended to apply primarily to proposed
investments by U.S. banking organizations in the stock of foreign
corporations in which they do not already have an equity investment.
Applications involving an additional investment in an ongoing foreign
joint venture will continue to be considered by the Board on the basis
of outstanding facts and circumstances. In the case of any ongoing
foreign joint venture the Board will, of course, continue to consider
carefully the amount of support, if any, that is being provided by
the application to the venture and any agreement or arrangement among
the joint ventures for the provision of any future support. 1976 Fed. Res. Bull. 249; formerly designated 12 CFR 211.52.