Section 23A limits the risks
to a member bank from transactions with affiliates and limits a member
bank’s ability to transfer its federal subsidy to affiliates. It achieves
these goals in four ways. First, it limits a member bank’s covered
transactions with any single affiliate to no more than 10 percent
of the bank’s capital stock and surplus, and transactions with all
affiliates combined to no more than 20 percent of the bank’s capital
stock and surplus. Covered transactions include—
- purchases of assets from an affiliate,
- loans or extensions of credit to an affiliate,
- purchases of or investments in securities issued
by an affiliate,
- guarantees on behalf of an affiliate, and
- certain other transactions that expose the member
bank to an affiliate’s credit or investment risk, including the acceptance
of securities issued by an affiliate as collateral and of certain
derivative transactions.
A member bank’s affiliates include, among other
companies—
- any companies that control the bank,
- any companies under common control with the bank,
- certain investment funds that are advised by the bank
or an affiliate of the bank, and
- financial subsidiaries of a member bank.
Second, the statute requires all transactions between
a member bank and its affiliates to be on terms and conditions that
are consistent with safe and sound banking practices. Third, the statute
prohibits a member bank from purchasing low-quality assets from its
affiliates. Finally, section 23A requires that a member bank’s extensions
of credit to affiliates and guarantees on behalf of affiliates be
appropriately secured by a statutorily defined amount of collateral.