The Monetary Control Act of 1980
(title I of Pub. L. 96-221) (“act”) provides that any bank that was
a member bank on July 1, 1979, and which withdraws from membership
in the Federal Reserve System during the period beginning on July
1, 1979, and ending on March 30, 1980, is required to maintain reserves in
an amount equal to the amount of reserves it would have been required
to maintain if it had been a member bank on March 31, 1980. The act
further provides that any bank that withdraws from membership in the
Federal Reserve System on or after March 31, 1980, shall maintain reserves in
the same amount as member banks. The Board of Governors has established
certain policies and procedures to implement these provisions.
1. Determination of date
of withdrawal from membership. Any bank that was a member bank,
but which withdrew from membership in the Federal Reserve System prior
to July 1, 1979, as determined below, will be subject to federal reserve
requirements on September 1, 1980, the effective date of the remaining
provisions of the Monetary Control Act. Such banks will be entitled
to an eight-year phase-in of reserve requirements. A bank that is
determined to have withdrawn from membership on July 1, 1979, or thereafter,
is subject to federal reserve requirements pursuant to Regulation
D in the same manner as a member bank.
The date of withdrawal from membership in the System for
a state member bank will be determined by the date on which the Federal
Reserve Bank received notice of the decision of the bank’s board of
directors (and shareholders where state law requires) to withdraw
from membership.
1 With regard to a
national bank, the date of withdrawal is the date on which such national
bank received a state charter whether by conversion, merger, or consolidation.
In recognition of the fact that there may have been individual
bank circumstances that delayed an individual bank’s withdrawal or
acquisition of a state charter, the Board, consistent with the legislative
history of section 103 of the act, will consider evidence from a former
member bank that it made an unambiguous irrevocable decision to withdraw
from membership before July 1, 1979, and, thus, is entitled to an
eight-year phase-in of required reserves. A bank that was a state
member bank whose directors (and shareholders where state law requires)
voted to leave the System prior to July 1, 1979, or a bank that was
a national bank whose shareholders voted to convert to a state charter
(including conversion by merger or consolidation) prior to July 1,
1979, and was not a member bank on March 31, 1980, may present the
Board with clear, unambiguous documentation of such actions. Upon
review of such information, the Board may then determine that the
date that an individual bank made such an irrevocable decision is
its date of withdrawal from membership. Any bank that believes that
it meets these criteria, should submit full documentation to the Board
as soon as possible, but in any event, no later than June 16, 1980.
Such submissions should be addressed to Secretary of the Board, Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution
Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20551.
2.
Reserve requirements of former member banks. The Board has determined, with respect to banks that withdrew from
the System (other than by merger or consolidation) on or after July
1, 1979, and ceased maintaining reserves pursuant to Regulation D
prior to March 31, 1980, to waive all federal reserve requirements
for the period from March 31, 1980, through the maintenance period
ending August 27, 1980.
2 Such banks will be required to maintain currently prescribed
levels of federal reserves commencing with the reserve maintenance
period that begins on August 28, 1980. A former member bank may commence
maintaining reserves with a Federal Reserve Bank beginning on or after
June 5, 1980, in order to have sufficient balances available for Federal
reserve requirement purposes for the August 28-September 3 maintenance
period. A former member bank that maintains full reserve balances
on or after June 5, 1980, will receive access to all System services.
The Board recognizes that certain former member banks
may experience hardships by being subjected to federal reserve requirements
in the same manner as a member bank, notwithstanding the delayed effective
date that has been established. In order to accommodate former member
banks that may incur significant hardship by maintaining full reserve
balances by the
maintenance period beginning August 28, the Board will consider granting
limited extensions beyond that date in extraordinary circumstances.
A former member bank that placed its federal reserve balances, prior
to March 31, 1980, in assets that have declined significantly in value
and that cannot be converted to cash before August 28, 1980, without
incurring significant losses may be granted a limited extension of
time by the Board to maintain full federal reserve requirements. A
former member bank requesting such an extension should submit information
concerning such placements of reserve balances withdrawn by July 15,
1980. Such submissions should be addressed to Secretary of the Board,
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20551.
Any bank that maintained federal reserves pursuant
to Regulation D during the maintenance period that included March
31, 1980, and any member bank that withdraws from the System (other
than by merger or consolidation) on or after March 31, 1980, is required
to maintain federal reserves against its deposits in the same manner
as a member bank.
3. Mergers. Banks that withdraw from membership due to mergers
or consolidations on or after July 1, 1979, will be required to maintain
federal reserves in the same manner as a member bank on the proportion
of their deposits attributable to former member banks. The date of
a merger will be determined in accordance with the procedures established
in item 1 above.
Where a nonmember bank merges or consolidates on or after
July 1, 1979, with a member bank and the surviving bank is a nonmember
bank, the bank is required to maintain federal reserves in the same
manner as a member bank on a proportion of its deposits attributable
to the absorbed member bank. This proportion will be the ratio that
daily average deposits of the absorbed member bank were to the daily
average deposits of the combined banks during the reserve computation
period immediately preceding the date of the merger. For example,
if during the last full computation period before the date of a merger
or consolidation between a member bank and a nonmember bank, the ratio
of member bank daily average deposits to the daily average total deposits
of the merged entity is 25 percent, then the surviving nonmember bank
will maintain federal reserve requirements in the same manner as a
member bank on 25 percent of its deposits. The portion of the surviving
bank’s deposits representing nonmember bank deposits, that is, 75
percent, will be subject to federal reserve requirements on an eight-year
phase-in schedule under the Act.
A ratio also will be computed for vault cash, and only
the proportion of the vault cash attributable to the absorbed member
bank will be permitted to be used in determining the amount of reserve
balances required to be held at the Federal Reserve. For example,
if during the last full computation period before the date of a merger
or consolidation between a member bank and a nonmember bank, the ratio
of member bank daily average vault cash to the daily average total
vault cash of the merged entity is 35 percent, then the surviving
nonmember bank will take that proportion of its vault cash into account
in computing the reserve balance required to be maintained against
its deposits attributable to the absorbed member bank.
For mergers or consolidations taking
place between July 1, 1979, and August 27, 1980, where the surviving
bank is a nonmember bank, federal reserves will be required to be
maintained on that portion of the bank’s deposits representing member
bank deposits during the maintenance period beginning August 28, 1980.
Mergers and consolidations that take place on or after
March 31, 1980, between a member and nonmember bank that was engaged
in business on July 1, 1979, where a member bank is the surviving
bank will be treated on a proportionate basis for reserve purposes.
However, only the amount of deposits and vault cash of the nonmember
bank outstanding on a daily average basis during the computation period
immediately preceding the date of the merger will be eligible for
an eight-year phase-in
of reserves. The balance of the deposits of the surviving member bank
will continue to be subject to member bank reserve requirements.
Mergers and consolidations involving two member banks
will continue to be subject to the Board’s current policy of a two-year
transitional phase-in of increased reserve requirements.
4. Access to services. Any bank maintaining full federal reserves pursuant to the above
policies will be permitted access to all Federal Reserve services,
except that Federal Reserve Banks may require satisfactory clearing
balances. However, a nonmember bank that is maintaining reserves due
to the acquisition of a member bank will have access to services if
it maintains federal reserves pursuant to Regulation D against all
of its deposits. 1980 Fed. Res. Bull. 414.