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Board Rulings and Staff Opinions Interpreting Regulation L

3-837

“DEPOSITORY HOLDING COMPANY”—Spin-Off of Savings and Loan Subsidiary

After spinning off its savings and loan association subsidiary, a company requested confirmation that by terminating its status as a “depository holding company” within the meaning of section 202(2) of the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act (Interlocks Act) and section 212.2(e) of Regulation L, its management officials were no longer required to terminate their management official positions with various depository institutions. The Federal Home Loan Bank Board had confirmed that the company was released from registration as a savings and loan holding company within the meaning of that agency’s regulations. Staff concluded that the company was no longer subject to the requirements of the Interlocks Act or the Board’s Regulation L. STAFF OP. of Nov. 1, 1982.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 202(2), 12 USC 3201(2); 12 CFR 212.2(e).

3-838

“DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION”—Industrial Loan Company

The Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act and Regulation L do not specifically include industrial loan companies in their definition of depository institutions. To determine the applicability of management interlock restrictions to institutions not clearly subject thereto, the Board generally looks at whether the institution is engaged in taking deposits. California industrial loan companies should be regarded as depository institutions for purposes of the Interlocks Act since they offer investment certificates that are the functional equivalent of savings deposits; make consumer, commercial, and real estate loans; and are examined annually for safety and soundness. STAFF OP. of March 24, 1983.
Authority: 12 CFR 212.3.

3-840

GRANDFATHERED INTERLOCKS—Transfer of Rights

An individual has been a director of a bank holding company and of a savings and loan association since before November 10, 1978. His position is therefore grandfathered under section 206 of the Interlocks Act. The holding company’s subsidiary bank is located in the same SMSA as the savings and loan association, and the individual involved now seeks permission to serve as director of the subsidiary bank, which has assets of over $20 million. The interlock would be prohibited unless the individual’s grandfather rights are interpreted to extend to his service at the subsidiary bank. The individual involved is also president and a trustee of the bank holding company. He already exercises significant management responsibilities with respect to the subsidiary bank, which comprises over 98 percent of the holding company’s assets. He is a member of the bank holding company’s finance committee, which has direct oversight of the bank. Two of the bank holding company’s directors also are directors of the bank. Based on these facts, it is staff’s opinion that the individual’s election as a director of the subsidiary bank would not violate the Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of July 22, 1980.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 206, 12 USC 3205; 12 CFR 212.

3-840.1

GRANDFATHERED INTERLOCKS—Transfer of Rights

A management official of a bank holding company and its subsidiary bank, which are depository institutions with assets exceeding $1 billion each, is also a director of a savings and loan holding company, whose savings and loan subsidiary has assets exceeding $500 million, and a director of one of its nonbanking subsidiaries. The management official became a director of the bank holding company in 1969, of the bank in 1964, of the savings and loan holding company in 1979, and of its nondepository institution subsidiary before November 10, 1978. The director’s interlock between the bank holding company and the bank on the one hand, and the savings and loan holding company on the other violates section 204 of the Interlocks Act, which prohibits interlocks between depository institutions or their affiliates if their assets exceed $1 billion and $500 million, respectively, and the interlock is not grandfathered as existing prior to November 10, 1978.
The director’s service with the non-depository institution subsidiary of the savings and loan holding company is grandfathered, however, since it existed before November 10, 1978. The act does not provide for the automatic transfer of grandfather rights to affiliates, especially if the transfer is from a nondepository institution to a depository institution. Since the management official would move from a position with no direct management responsibilities with respect to a depository organization to a position with direct management responsibilities related to the organization, the transfer of grandfather rights in this case would undermine the purposes of the act. Therefore, the director’s grandfather privilege with respect to the non-depository institution subsidiary does not extend to the savings and loan holding company. STAFF OP. of July 22, 1980.
Authority: Interlocks Act §§ 202, 204, and 205, 12 USC 3201, 3203, and 3204; 12 CFR 202.5.

3-840.2

GRANDFATHERED INTERLOCKS—Change in Corporate Form

A director of a bank subsidiary of a bank holding company and a mutual savings and loan association has been a director of both financial institutions since before November 10, 1978. Both depository organizations have offices in the same city. The interlocking relationship thus is grandfathered under the Interlocks Act. The question is whether the director’s grandfather rights would be terminated if the savings and loan association converts from a mutual association to a stock association. Such a conversion is essentially a change in corporate form that Congress did not intend to affect grandfather rights under the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 17, 1980.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 206, 12 USC 3205; 12 CFR 212.5 and 212.6(a)(1).

3-840.3

GRANDFATHERED INTERLOCKS—Substantial Identity Between Bank and Holding Company

An individual’s service as a management official of a bank and another depository institution is grandfathered under the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act and Regulation L. The individual wants to know whether he may also serve as director of the bank’s parent holding company (“corporation”).
The corporation is a one-bank holding company and its primary asset is the bank. With one exception, the directors of the bank and the corporation are identical. The corporation has four nonbank subsidiaries, each designed to supplement the bank’s agricultural loan, mortgage loan, leasing, and trust activities. In 1979, the bank provided 86.5 percent of the gross revenue of the corporation, while two of the nonbank subsidiaries provided an additional 7.4 percent and 6.1 percent each.
In this situation, the majority of the corporation’s activities are those of the bank or those engaged in to augment the bank’s operations, but are conducted through separate subsidiaries for administrative convenience. In view of the substantial identity between the bank and the corporation, it does not appear that service by the individual involved on the board of the corporation would have any effect on competition among depository institutions. Therefore, the individual’s service on the corporation’s board of directors may be viewed as equivalent to his service on the bank’s board for the grandfather period. STAFF OP. of Feb. 13, 1981.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 206, 12 USC 3205; 12 CFR 212.1(b) and 212.5.

3-840.4

GRANDFATHERED INTERLOCKS—Regulatory Exception

The Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act was enacted on November 10, 1978, and superseded section 8 of the Clayton Act. It included a grandfather clause allowing a management official whose service was not in violation of section 8 of the Clayton Act at the time of enactment to continue to serve in that position for 10 years. On March 22, 1978, the Board granted an exception to the prohibitions of section 8 of the Clayton Act based on the Regulation L provision providing for exceptions in the case of member banks located in low-income or economically depressed areas. The exception was for a period of no more than five years. It was asked whether the interlock permitted under the five-year exception could be regarded as having been grandfathered by the Interlocks Act.
The grandfather provision of the Interlocks Act does not apply to an interlocking relationship that would have been prohibited under section 8 of the Clayton Act and that was permitted only by virtue of a regulatory exception. The purpose of the grandfather provision was to avoid undue disruption to the management of depository institutions and to provide a phase-out period for the orderly termination of interlocks that became prohibited under the Act. In the situation presented, the termination of the temporary interlock would not be disruptive as a result of enactment of the Interlocks Act; therefore the grandfather provision does not apply. STAFF OP. of Aug. 22, 1983.
Authority: Clayton Act § 8, 15 USC 19; Interlocks Act § 206, 12 USC 3205; 12 CFR 212.

3-845

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Honorary Director

For several years, a director of a bank holding company and its subsidiary bank was director of a mutual savings and loan association (“S &L”). At age 65, the director resigned from the board of directors of the S&L and was designated a director emeritus by the board of the S& L. As a director emeritus, he (a) is permitted to attend board of directors meetings and to speak on any matter before the meetings (the director does not, however, actually attend any of the meetings); (b) is prohibited from voting on any matter before the meetings; and (c) receives the same director’s fee as regular directors. The question is whether the director’s position with the S&L would be analogous to that of an honorary director, which would make him a management official subject to the prohibitions of the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act. The director’s position with the S&L is similar to that of an honorary director. Even though he does not in fact attend meetings of the S&L’s board of directors, the fact that he may do so renders his position comparable to that of an honorary director. The fact that the director may not vote at the S&L’s directors’ meetings does not make him any less an honorary director since honorary directors frequently are excluded from voting at directors’ meetings. Accordingly, in view of the broad definition of the term “management official” in section 202(4) of the Interlocks Act to include as management officials honorary as well as advisory directors, the director would be a management official for purposes of the act.
If the director did not have power to attend or vote at directors’ meetings but received a director’s fee in the nature of a retirement fee, his ability to influence the affairs or policies of the S&L would be sufficiently circumscribed that including him within the definition of “management official” would serve no purpose under the Interlocks Act. Without the ability to attend or vote at directors’ meetings or otherwise to exercise influence over the conduct of the S&L’s business, the director is not a management official of the S&L for purposes of the Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 17, 1980.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 202(4), 12 USC 3201(4); 12 CFR 212.2(h).

3-845.1

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Law Firm Partners as Directors

A member of a law firm is a director of two depository organizations: X, with more than $1 billion in assets, and Y, with more than $500 million in assets. The director was a director of both X and Y before November 10, 1978. On June 30, 1980, the director resigned from the board of directors of Y. After the director’s resignation, one of his partners in the law firm (“partner”), was elected to the board of directors of Y. The director and partner do not have any agreement, express or implied, to act for, or on behalf of, each other or the law firm with respect to management responsibilities over Y. The question is whether the director and partner may serve simultaneously as directors of X and Y without violating the prohibitions of the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act.
Whether or not the service of the director and partner as directors of X and Y is permissible under the Interlocks Act depends on whether their law firm is considered to be a “management official” for purposes of the act and whether they are considered to be “representatives or nominees” of the law firm. Section 202(4) of the Interlocks Act defines “management official” to mean “an employee or officer with management functions, a director (including an advisory or honorary director) . . . or any person who has a representative or nominee serving in any such capacity.” “Person” is defined by Regulation L to mean “a natural person, corporation or other business.” The definition of “representative or nominee” in the regulation, however, effectively excludes corporations or other businesses from inclusion as management officials under the act. “Representative or nominee” is defined to mean “a person who serves as a management official and has an express or implied obligation to act on behalf of another person with respect to management responsibilities.” For purposes of the definition, “person” includes only natural persons. Thus, a law firm whose partners serve as directors of depository organizations located in the same city is not deemed to have representatives or nominees serving such organizations and thus is not a management official subject to the prohibitions of the Interlocks Act. As long as the director and partner are not acting as representatives or nominees of each other, their service as management officials of depository organizations in the same city would not violate the Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of Oct. 17, 1980.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 202(4), 12 USC 3201(4); 12 CFR 212.2(h), (j), and (k); 12 CFR 212.6(a).

3-845.2

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Director of Manufacturing Company That Is Bank Holding Company

A director of a diversified manufacturing company, which is also a bank holding company by virtue of section 4(d) of the Bank Holding Company Act, seeks to become a director of other unaffiliated depository institutions. The company’s bank subsidiary has assets of less than $47 million, representing 3 percent of the company’s assets and less than 1 percent of commercial bank deposits in the relevant banking market. If the director’s management functions relate exclusively to the business of retailing, merchandising, or manufacturing for the company and in no way relate to the subsidiary bank, the director would not be a management official for the purposes of section 204 of the Interlocks Act. Section 212.2(h) of Regulation L defines “management official” to exclude persons whose management functions relate exclusively to the business of retail merchandising or manufacturing. To ensure compliance with this exemption, the company’s board of directors should provide a resolution stating that the director in question does not or will not exercise management functions with respect to the subsidiary bank and does not attend any meeting where affairs of the subsidiary bank are discussed or voted upon. The director in question should provide affidavits representing the same. A management official of another depository organization could become a director of the company on the same conditions. STAFF OP. of Oct. 17, 1980 and March 10, 1981.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 204, 12 USC 3203; BHCA § 4(d), 12 USC 1843(d); 12 CFR 212(h).

3-845.3

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Service Corporation Director

The question has arisen whether a director of a service corporation wholly owned by a savings and loan association should be considered an honorary or advisory director, and thus a management official, of the parent savings and loan association for purposes of the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act.
A service corporation director should not be considered to be a management official of the parent on the basis of the service corporation’s powers alone. In the absence of ability to attend board of directors meetings of the parent or some other formal or informal relationship with the parent, the Board would be reluctant to establish as a general rule that a service corporation director is a management official of the parent simply because the business of the service corporation influences the policies and affairs of the parent. Of course, if it is demonstrated in a specific situation that a service corporation director in fact exercises management functions with respect to the parent organization, that director would be regarded as a management official of the parent for purposes of the act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 16, 1981.
Authority: Interlocks Act, 12 USC 3201 et seq.; 12 CFR 212.2(h).

3-845.4

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Advisory Director

The Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act of 1978 defines “management official” to include advisory directors. However, if these officials do not have the power to attend or vote at board of directors meetings or otherwise influence depository institutions’ management or operating policies, then they are not covered by the act. Consequently, a member of an advisory board who advises a depository institution about the general economic and political aspects of world events but who has no power to vote on any issues affecting the institution or to attend meetings of the board of directors would not be within the purview of the act. STAFF OP. of Dec. 14, 1981.
Authority: Interlocks Act, 12 USC 3201 et seq.

3-845.5

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Functions Related to Financial-Service Activities

The Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act and Regulation L prohibit a management official of a depository holding company from serving as a management official of any unaffiliated depository holding company if offices of depository institution affiliates of both are located in the same or adjacent communities. The definition of “management official” in Regulation L excludes “a person whose management functions relate exclusively to the business of retail merchandising or manufacturing.” This exclusion is limited to only those persons whose management functions relate exclusively to the business of retail merchandising or manufacturing and was not intended to be available to persons whose functions relate to financial-service activities. STAFF OP. of Dec. 9, 1985.
Authority: Interlocks Act, 12 USC 3201 et seq.; 12 CFR 212.2(h)(2)(i).

3-845.6

“MANAGEMENT OFFICIAL”—Vice Chairman as Chairman’s Representative

A bank holding company wants to nominate the vice chairman of a nonbanking company for election to its board of directors. The nonbanking company is wholly owned by the chairman and chief executive officer of that company, who is also a director of a bank holding company that has a $20 million depository institution affiliate located in the same metropolitan statistical area as a $20 million depository institution affiliate of the holding company. The chairman of the nonbanking company also owns 5.5 percent of the common stock of the holding company and is that company’s largest single shareholder. Because the chairman would be prevented by the Interlocks Act from serving on the board of directors of the holding company, the holding company wants to nominate the vice chairman of his company.
The Interlocks Act prohibits interlocking service by management officials between unaffiliated depository organizations that have offices, or offices of affiliates, located in the same community or metropolitan statistical area. The definition of “management official” includes a person who has a representative or nominee serving as a management official.
Regulation L defines “representative or nominee” as a person who serves as a management official and has an express or implied obligation to act on behalf of another person with respect to management responsibilities. Employment relationships may be evidence of the existence of such an obligation.
The vice chairman of the nonbanking company would have at least an implied obligation to act on behalf of the company’s chairman and thus would be serving as the chairman’s representative or nominee on the board of the holding company in violation of the Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of Nov. 15, 1988.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 202(4), 12 USC 3201(4); 12 CFR 212.2(h)(1)(iv) and (k).

3-850

PERMISSIBLE INTERLOCKS—Organization in Low-Income Area

The Board has concluded that the appointment of vice presidents of two New York City banks as vice president and director of a third New York City bank qualifies as an exception to section 8 of the Clayton Act and Regulation L prohibitions against interlocking relationships because (a) the third bank is in Harlem, a “low-income or economically depressed area,” (b) the Board has determined that the appointment is necessary and desirable to provide management or operating expertise, and (c) the interlocking relationship will continue for less than five years. BD. RULING of May 11, 1979.
Authority: Clayton Act § 8, 15 USC 19; Interlocks Act, 12 USC 3201 et seq.; 12 CFR 212.4(b)(1) (1979).

3-850.1

PERMISSIBLE INTERLOCKS—Failed- or Failing-Bank Exception

Section 205 of the recently amended Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act excepts from that act’s prohibitions, for five years, interlocking service by a management official of a depository institution or a depository holding company that is closed or is in danger of closing and is acquired by another depository institution or depository holding company.
To address the failing-bank situation at a bank holding company, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation created a bridge bank to acquire the assets and assume the deposits and liabilities of all of that company’s subsidiary banks. The successor to the bridge bank was then acquired by Company A, which is a subsidiary of another bank holding company. Company A is covered by the failed- or failing-institution exception in the Interlocks Act. STAFF OP. of Jan. 17, 1989.
Authority: Interlocks Act, § 205(7), 12 USC 3204(7).

3-850.2

PERMISSIBLE INTERLOCKS—Exception for Diversified Savings and Loan Holding Companies

The Board decided not to disapprove a diversified savings and loan holding company’s request to allow a director to continue to serve on the board of directors of a non-depository institution subsidiary of the diversified company while also serving on the board of directors of a bank holding company. Section 205 of the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act provides for a limited exception from the prohibitions of the act for diversified savings and loan holding companies under certain circumstances.
The Board believes that the diversified savings and loan holding company exception should be read to limit the exception as applying solely to directors of the parent holding company or to directors of the company’s subsidiaries that are not depository institutions. BD. RULING of April 16, 1990.
Authority: Interlocks Act § 205, 12 USC 3204.

3-855

PROHIBITED INTERLOCKS—Bank Holding Companies and Trust Companies

A bank holding company director served as president of a trust company. The holding company asserted that because the trust company’s charter prohibited it from conducting a commercial banking business, the only competition between the trust company and the holding company’s subsidiary bank would be for trust activities, which was not the type of competition the Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act was meant to foster.
The purpose of the Interlocks Act is to foster competition among all depository institutions, not just commercial banks, and the competition provided by trust companies is specifically acknowledged in the act by including trust companies in the definition of depository institutions. Since the activities of trust companies are generally limited to fiduciary services and related deposit taking, it should be presumed that by specifically naming trust companies in the Interlocks Act, Congress intended the Interlocks Act to cover these types of institutions. Staff did not believe the Board should waive the prohibitions of the Interlocks Act and Regulation L with respect to the proposed interlock. STAFF OP. of Jan. 11, 1983.
Authority: Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act, 12 USC 3201 et seq.; 12 CFR 212.

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