Q1. Are depository institutions
that have zero reserve requirements required to report deposit and
other data to the Federal Reserve?
A. Yes.
All depository institutions, including bankers’ banks, are required
to submit data on Form F.R. 2900 in accordance with Regulation D.
2-305.8
Q2. How are time deposit ratios for old reserve
requirements to be calculated for member banks (and former member
banks) that are involved in mergers subsequent to August 6, 1980?
A. The time deposit ratios for a combination
of member banks (or former member banks) will be calculated as a weighted
average of the individual ratios. The weights are to be based on the
daily average amount of time deposits for each of the institutions
involved over the reserve computation period immediately preceding
the merger.
For example, suppose that two member
banks that had total time deposits of $15 million and $35 million
and ratios of .0325 and .0340, respectively, merge. The required reserve
ratio on time deposits for the merged bank would be (0.0325 × (15/50))
+ (0.0340 × (35/50)) = 0.03355.
2-305.9
Q3. What
is the definition of total deposits to be used to determine whether
quarterly reporters have reached 15 million?
A. Gross deposits, the sum of items 7, 12, and 15 on the F.R. 2900,
will be used to determine the continuing eligibility of quarterly
reporters as set forth in section 204.3(d)(3).
2-306
Q4. Does item 2, “U.S. Government Demand Deposits,” apply only
to those institutions that have been designated as Treasury tax and
loan depositories?
A. No. Regardless of whether
or not an institution has been designated as a depository, any institution
that has deposit accounts subject to withdrawal on demand that are
due to, or subject to control or regulation by the U.S. government
must report such balances in item 2. For example, any institution
that withholds federal income taxes, social security taxes, or other
federal tax payments from the salaries of its employees must report
the unremitted balance of such deposits in item 2. However, TT&L
note balances are not to be reported as deposits in this item
or elsewhere on the report.
2-306.1
Q5. How
should transaction accounts that meet the criteria for more than one
type of account be reported on the F.R. 2900?
A. All demand deposit accounts should be classified as demand deposits
(items 1, 2, or 3) even if preauthorized or telephone transfers or third party payments
through the use of debit cards, ATMs, or RSUs are allowed. Similarly,
all NOW accounts or share draft accounts should be classified as NOW/share
draft accounts (item 6), even if preauthorized or telephone transfers
or third-party payments through the use of debit cards, ATMs, or RSUs
are allowed. Savings or time deposit accounts that meet the criteria
for ATS accounts should be classified as ATS accounts (item 4), even
if telephone or preauthorized transfers or third-party payments through
the use of debit cards, ATMs, or RSUs are allowed. Savings or time
deposit accounts other than NOW, share draft, and ATS accounts that
permit more than three telephone or preauthorized transfers per month
or that permit third-party payments through the use of debit cards,
ATMs, or RSUs should be reported as telephone or preauthorized transfer
accounts (item 5).
2-306.2
Q6. Are time deposits with a
current balance of $100,000 or more reported on line 16 of F.R. 2900,
or does it include only time deposits with an initial deposit of at
least $100,000?
A. All time deposits with balances
of $100,000 or more at the time of reporting must be reported on line
16 of F.R. 2900.
2-306.3
Q7. If a corporation presents
a credit union with a check drawn on another depository institution
for the purpose of depositing in the credit union the corporation
employee’s withheld savings from a payroll but does not provide the
credit union with a listing showing the distribution of such withheld
savings, how should the credit union report this transaction on the
F.R. 2900?
A. The credit union should report
the liability for the deposited payroll savings in item 3 (Other Demand)
of the FR 2900 but this amount may be offset by the deduction for
cash items in process of collection during the time required for the
check to clear.
After the check clears, if the
distribution listing is still not provided to the credit union or
if the credit union does not distribute the lump sum deposit among
the appropriate members, the credit union is not entitled to the cash
items in process of collection deduction from those funds. The payroll
deposit remains in Other Demand and reserves must be held against
the deposit until the funds are distributed to the proper members’
accounts.
2-306.4
Q8. Many banks receive payments from other banks
with unclear information about to whom the funds should be credited.
The practice of many institutions is to credit those funds to a suspense
account. The funds remain in that account until the institution determines
the party to whom the funds are to be credited or transmitted. This
process for each such payment may take several days or weeks. During
that time, how must an institution report that suspense account for
reserve purposes? Many foreign banks find that 90 percent of payments
made to them are to be credited to their parent’s account, and thus
most of these funds should have been subject to Eurocurrency, rather
than domestic, reserves during that period.
A. Institutions must regard the entire amount of funds in suspense
accounts each day as transaction accounts (to be reported as other
demand deposits in item 3 of the FR 2900) unless they determine from
their past experience that a percentage of such funds usually are
to be treated otherwise. For example, if a United States branch of
a foreign bank finds that 90 percent of the funds placed in a suspense
account normally go to its parent, it may treat 90 percent of its
suspense account each day as a balance due to its parent subject to
the Eurocurrency reserve requirement and 10 percent as a transaction
account.
2-306.5
Q9. The instructions to FR 2900 indicate that a
bona fide cash management arrangement must be evidenced by a prior
written agreement between the reporting depository institution and the customer
authorizing transfers between transaction accounts of the customer.
Does this mean that there must actually be a reduction on the books
of the institution in order to reduce the balance by the overdraft
amount for purposes of reserves?
A. An actual transfer on the books of the institution
is not necessarily required. Bona fide cash management purposes can
be demonstrated in a number of situations. The fact that a depository
institution has the ability to offset an overdraft with funds in another
account is sufficient to serve the purposes of Regulation D.
2-306.6
Q10. How are loans in process to be treated for purposes of reporting
on the FR 2900?
A. Loans in process arise in
at least two different contexts.
(1) When a depository
institution issues a cashier’s check representing mortgage or other
loan proceeds and delivers the check to a settlement agent before
the loan closing, the cashier’s check represents a demand deposit
and the amount of the check is reservable from time of issuance as
a transaction account.
(2) Thrift institutions
commonly have a liability “contra” account entitled “loans in process”
that represents unadvanced portions of construction loan commitments.
Such commitments are contingent liabilities of the depository institution
and are not subject to reserves. When a portion of the loan commitment
is advanced, a reservable liability would be created if disbursement
were made by issuance of an officer’s check or by credit to a deposit
account.
2-306.7
Q11. A depository institution (“seller”) sells
money orders on consignment from a second depository institution (“issuer”).
Funds are not remitted to the issuer until it notifies the seller
that the money orders have been received for payment and the funds
are then remitted by the seller. How are the funds representing the
proceeds of the money order sale to be reported?
A. The money order proceeds are a deposit of the selling institution
until remitted to the issuer. If the issuer is a depository institution,
then the unremitted amount held by the seller represents a balance
due to a depository institution.
2-306.8
Q12. The
instructions to FR 2900 for credit unions provides under “Record-keeping”:
“Note: If, according to your standard accounting
practices, closing balances for accounts reported on this report are not available on a daily basis, you may report the same closing
balance for subsequent days provided that your closing
balances for these accounts are updated at least once a week. For
example, a credit union that uses a weekly batch system may have closing
balances only as of each Friday. In this case, the balances for the
preceding Friday should be reported for Thursday of the current computation
week; the balances for Friday of the current computation week should
be reported not only for Friday but also for the following Saturday,
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, and for the first Thursday
of the next computation period.”
Does
this reporting principal apply to other similarly situated depository
institutions?
A. Yes. If a depository institution
posts its general ledger daily or generates a daily balance sheet,
then all amounts reported for reserve requirements purposes
on the FR 2900 must be updated daily. However, as indicated above,
if it is the accepted accounting practice and standard for a particular
segment of the industry to post the general ledger less frequently
than daily, then weekly updating is permitted.