As primary supervisory agency
for bank holding companies and state member banks, the Federal Reserve
is concerned with the whole range of fees and payments assessed by
parent holding companies on their commercial bank subsidiaries. Of
primary concern are excessive, unjustifiable management or service
fees and any other unwarranted payments or practices that, by diverting
bank resources to the parent company or a nonbank affiliate, may have
an adverse financial impact on the subsidiary (paying) bank. The activities
in question come under the broad heading of “diversion-of-bank-income
practices.”
In general, diversion-of-income practices include, but
are not limited to, the following:
- management or service fees, or other payments assessed
by the parent company or any affiliated entity and paid by the bank,
that bear no reasonable relationship to the fair market value, cost,
volume or quality of services rendered by the affiliate to the subsidiary
bank
- balances maintained by the subsidiary bank primarily
in support of parent borrowings without appropriate compensation to
the bank
- prepayment of fees to the parent or other nonbank
affiliates for services that have not yet been rendered
- non-reimbursed expenses incurred by the bank that
primarily support a nonbank activity
Such practices are considered inappropriate
and, potentially, unsafe and unsound. In determining the specific
supervisory response to diversion-of-income practices, materiality,
management cooperation and willingness to correct the practices, and
overall impact on bank condition must be taken into consideration.
If the practices are having a serious impact on the bank’s financial
condition, or, if the practices, in light of current bank weaknesses,
are deemed material and likely to have an adverse impact on the bank’s
condition, then formal supervisory actions (i.e., written agreements
and cease-and-desist orders) should be considered to terminate practices
and require restitution or affirmative remedial action. When practices
are considered less severe, examiners are to criticize the diversion
activities in the Examiner’s Comments section of the bank examination
and/or holding company inspection report. Such practices should be
addressed and eliminated in an appropriate manner as part of the follow-up
supervisory process.
To determine the appropriateness of management or service
fees, the volume, quality, and market value of the services performed
for or provided to the subsidiary bank are to be carefully reviewed.
The principal criterion for assessing reasonableness of fees is the
relationship of the payments to the fair market value of the services
provided. In practice, fair market value may be estimated by analyzing
how the marketplace prices similar services in arm’s-length transactions
in other business contexts and adjusting, if necessary, for any circumstances
that are unique to the bank or holding company under examination.
If fair market value cannot readily be determined or estimated, the
analysis may focus on the cost to the parent of providing a service
plus a reasonable profit margin as a proxy for fair market value.
While determination of the market value or cost of services rendered
may, in actuality, be a complicated and difficult process, the evaluation
is necessary to appraise the reasonableness and appropriateness of
the fees assessed by the parent company and paid by the bank.
In addition to service fees, the
maintenance of bank balances as compensation for holding company borrowings
also provides an avenue for the diversion of bank income. In general,
this practice is inappropriate unless the bank is being compensated
at an appropriate rate of interest. If the bank is not being reimbursed,
action should be taken to insure that the bank is compensated for
the use of its funds or that the practice is terminated.
The prepayment of service fees to
the parent company and bank payment of expenses primarily incurred
in conjunction with non-bank holding company activities also are causes
for supervisory concern. Prepayment of sums for services that are
not to be provided in the immediate future can have an adverse impact
on the bank, as can the bank’s incurring large expenses on behalf
of a holding company affiliate. These practices are addressed by requiring
timely and reasonable payments for services and reimbursement to the
banks for what are essentially holding company expenses. If bank expenses
are substantially incurred in support of a holding company activity,
then the bank should be reimbursed for the portion of its cash outlay
that benefits the holding company. This is necessary to ensure the
bank resources are not diverted to a holding company affiliate with
little or no benefit to the bank.
Aside from reasonable and timely fees for services
rendered, the most appropriate way, from a supervisory standpoint,
for funds to be paid to the parent company is through bank dividends.
This applies, in general, to bank payment of funds to service holding
company debt, even when the debt is initially incurred to raise equity
capital for the subsidiary bank. It is not considered an appropriate
banking practice for the subsidiary bank to pay management fees for
the purpose of servicing holding company debt. Funds for servicing
holding company debt should, as a general rule, be upstreamed in the
form of dividends. SR-533; March 19, 1979.