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Federal Register Citations

Joint Report: Differences in Accounting and Capital Standards Among the Federal Banking Agencies; Report to Congressional Committees.

    [Federal Register: March 25, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 57)]
   [Notices]              
   
   [Page 15379-15382]
   From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
   [DOCID:fr25mr05-104]                        
   
   
   =======================================================================
   
   DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
   
   Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
   
   [Docket No. 05-05]
   
   FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
   
   FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
   
   DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
   
   Office of Thrift Supervision
   
   [No. 2005-12]

   Joint Report: Differences in Accounting and Capital Standards
   Among the Federal Banking Agencies; Report to Congressional Committees
   
   AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Treasury; 
   Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal 
   Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); and Office of Thrift Supervision 
   (OTS), Treasury.
   
   ACTION: Report to the Committee on Financial Services of the United 
   States House of Representatives and to the Committee on Banking, 
   Housing, and Urban Affairs of the United States Senate regarding 
   differences in accounting and capital standards among the federal 
   banking agencies.
   
   -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, and OTS (the Agencies) have prepared 
   this report pursuant to section 37(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance 
   Act (12 U.S.C. 1831n(c)). Section 37(c) requires the Agencies to 
   jointly submit an annual report to the Committee on Financial Services 
   of the United States House of Representatives and to the Committee on 
   Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the United States Senate 
   describing differences between the capital and accounting standards 
   used by the Agencies. The report must be published in the Federal 
   Register.
   
   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: OCC: Nancy Hunt, Risk Expert (202-874-
   4923), Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., 
   Washington, DC 20219.
   Board: John F. Connolly, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst 
   (202-
   452-3621), Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation, Board of 
   Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution 
   Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20551.
   FDIC: Robert F. Storch, Chief Accountant (202-898-8906), 
   Division 
   of Supervision and Consumer Protection, Federal Deposit Insurance 
   Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
   OTS: Michael D. Solomon, Senior Program Manager for Capital 
   Policy 
   (202-906-5654), Supervision Policy, Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 
   G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
   
   SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The text of the report follows:
   
   Report to the Committee on Financial Services of the United States 
   House of Representatives and to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and 
   Urban Affairs of the United States Senate Regarding Differences in 
   Accounting and Capital Standards Among the Federal Banking Agencies
   
   Introduction
   
   The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the 
   Board of 
   Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), the Federal Deposit 
   Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Office of Thrift Supervision 
   (OTS) (the federal banking agencies or the agencies) must jointly 
   submit an annual report to the Committee on Financial Services of the 
   U.S. House of Representatives and the Committee on Banking, Housing, 
   and Urban Affairs of the U.S. Senate describing differences between the 
   accounting and capital standards used by the agencies. The report must 
   be published in the Federal Register.
   This report, which covers differences existing as of December 
   31, 
   2004, is the third joint annual report on differences in accounting and 
   capital standards to be submitted pursuant to Section 37(c) of the 
   Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1831n(c)), as amended. Prior 
   to the agencies' first joint annual report, Section 37(c) required a 
   separate report from each agency.
   Since the agencies filed their first reports on accounting 
   and 
   capital differences in 1990, the agencies have acted in concert to 
   harmonize their accounting and capital standards and eliminate as many 
   differences as possible. Section 303 of the Riegle Community 
   Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (12 U.S.C. 4803) 
   also directs the agencies to work jointly to make uniform all 
   regulations and guidelines implementing common statutory or supervisory 
   policies. The results of these efforts must be ``consistent with the 
   principles of safety and soundness, statutory law and policy, and the 
   public interest.'' During the past decade, the agencies have revised 
   their capital standards to address changes in credit and certain other 
   risk exposures within the banking system and to align the amount of 
   capital institutions are
   
   [[Page 15380]]
   
   required to hold more closely with the credit risks and certain other 
   risks to which they are exposed. These revisions have been made in a 
   uniform manner whenever possible and practicable to minimize 
   interagency differences.
   While the differences in capital standards have diminished 
   over 
   time, a few differences remain. Some of the remaining capital 
   differences are statutorily mandated. Others were significant 
   historically but now no longer affect in a measurable way, either 
   individually or in the aggregate, institutions supervised by the 
   federal banking agencies. In addition to the specific differences noted 
   below, the agencies may have differences in how they apply certain 
   aspects of their rules. These differences usually arise as a result of 
   case-specific inquiries that have only been presented to one agency. 
   Agency staffs seek to minimize these occurrences by coordinating 
   responses to the fullest extent reasonably practicable.
   The federal banking agencies have substantially similar 
   capital 
   adequacy standards. These standards employ a common regulatory 
   framework that establishes minimum leverage and risk-based capital 
   ratios for all banking organizations (banks, bank holding companies, 
   and savings associations). The agencies view the leverage and risk-
   based capital requirements as minimum standards and most institutions 
   are expected to operate with capital levels well above the minimums, 
   particularly those institutions that are expanding or experiencing 
   unusual or high levels of risk.
   The OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC, under the auspices of the 
   Federal 
   Financial Institutions Examination Council, have developed uniform 
   Reports of Condition and Income (Call Reports) for all insured 
   commercial banks and state-chartered savings banks. The OTS requires 
   each OTS-supervised savings association to file the Thrift Financial 
   Report (TFR). The reporting standards for recognition and measurement 
   in the Call Reports and the TFR are consistent with generally accepted 
   accounting principles (GAAP). Thus, there are no significant 
   differences in regulatory accounting standards for regulatory reports 
   filed with the federal banking agencies. Only one minor difference 
   remains between the accounting standards of the OTS and those of the 
   other federal banking agencies, and that difference relates to push-
   down accounting, as more fully explained below.
   
   Differences in Capital Standards Among the Federal Banking Agencies
   
   Financial Subsidiaries
   The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) establishes the framework 
   for 
   financial subsidiaries of banks.\1\ GLBA amends the National Bank Act 
   to permit national banks to conduct certain expanded financial 
   activities through financial subsidiaries. Section 121(a) of the GLBA 
   (12 U.S.C. 24a) imposes a number of conditions and requirements upon 
   national banks that have financial subsidiaries, including specifying 
   the treatment that applies for regulatory capital purposes. The statute 
   requires that a national bank deduct from assets and tangible equity 
   the aggregate amount of its equity investments in financial 
   subsidiaries. The statute further requires that the financial 
   subsidiary's assets and liabilities not be consolidated with those of 
   the parent national bank for applicable capital purposes.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \1\ A national bank that has a financial subsidiary must 
   satisfy 
   a number of statutory requirements in addition to the capital 
   deduction and deconsolidation requirements described in the text. 
   The bank (and each of its depository institution affiliates) must be 
   well capitalized and well managed. Asset size restrictions apply to 
   the aggregate amount of assets of all of the bank's financial 
   subsidiaries. Certain debt rating requirements apply, depending on 
   the size of the national bank. The national bank is required to 
   maintain policies and procedures to protect the bank from financial 
   and operational risks presented by the financial subsidiary. It is 
   also required to have policies and procedures to preserve the 
   corporate separateness of the financial subsidiary and the bank's 
   limited liability. Finally, transactions between the bank and its 
   financial subsidiary generally must comply with the Federal Reserve 
   Act's (FRA) restrictions on affiliate transactions and the financial 
   subsidiary is considered an affiliate of the bank for purposes of 
   the anti-tying provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act. See 12 
   U.S.C. 5136A.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   State member banks may have financial subsidiaries subject to 
   all 
   of the same restrictions that apply to national banks.\2\ State 
   nonmember banks may also have financial subsidiaries, but they are 
   subject only to a subset of the statutory requirements that apply to 
   national banks and state member banks.\3\ Finally, national banks, 
   state member banks, and state nonmember banks may not establish or 
   acquire a financial subsidiary or commence a new activity in a 
   financial subsidiary if the bank, or any of its insured depository 
   institution affiliates, has received a less than satisfactory rating as 
   of its most recent examination under the Community Reinvestment Act.\4\
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \2\ See 12 U.S.C. 335 (state member banks subject to the 
   ``same 
   conditions and limitations'' that apply to national banks that hold 
   financial subsidiaries).
   \3\ The applicable statutory requirements for state nonmember
   
   banks are as follows. The bank (and each of its insured depository 
   institution affiliates) must be well capitalized. The bank must 
   comply with the capital deduction and deconsolidation requirements. 
   It must also satisfy the requirements for policies and procedures to 
   protect the bank from financial and operational risks and to 
   preserve corporate separateness and limited liability for the bank. 
   Further, transactions between the bank and a subsidiary that would 
   be classified as a financial subsidiary generally are subject to the 
   affiliate transactions restrictions of the FRA. See 12 U.S.C. 1831w.
   \4\ See 12 U.S.C. 1841(l)(2).
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   The OCC, the FDIC, and the FRB adopted final rules 
   implementing 
   their respective provisions of Section 121 of GLBA for national banks 
   in March 2000, for state nonmember banks in January 2001, and for state 
   member banks in August 2001. GLBA did not provide new authority to OTS-
   supervised savings associations to own, hold, or operate financial 
   subsidiaries, as defined.
   Subordinate Organizations Other Than Financial Subsidiaries
   Banks supervised by the OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC generally
   
   consolidate all significant majority-owned subsidiaries other than 
   financial subsidiaries for regulatory capital purposes. This practice 
   assures that capital requirements are related to the aggregate credit 
   (and, where applicable, market) risks to which the banking organization 
   is exposed. For subsidiaries other than financial subsidiaries that are 
   not consolidated on a line-for-line basis for financial reporting 
   purposes, joint ventures, and associated companies, the parent banking 
   organization's investment in each such subordinate organization is, for 
   risk-based capital purposes, deducted from capital or assigned to the 
   100 percent risk-weight category, depending upon the circumstances. The 
   FRB's and the FDIC's rules also permit the banking organization to 
   consolidate the investment on a pro rata basis in appropriate 
   circumstances. These options for handling unconsolidated subsidiaries, 
   joint ventures, and associated companies for purposes of determining 
   the capital adequacy of the parent banking organization provide the 
   agencies with the flexibility necessary to ensure that institutions 
   maintain capital levels that are commensurate with the actual risks 
   involved.
   Under the OTS's capital regulations, a statutorily mandated
   
   distinction is drawn between subsidiaries, which generally are 
   majority-owned, that are engaged in activities that are permissible for 
   national banks and those that are engaged in activities 
   ``impermissible'' for national banks. Where subsidiaries engage in 
   activities
   
   [[Page 15381]]
   
   that are impermissible for national banks, the OTS requires the 
   deduction of the parent's investment in these subsidiaries from the 
   parent's assets and capital. If a subsidiary's activities are 
   permissible for a national bank, that subsidiary's assets are generally 
   consolidated with those of the parent on a line-for-line basis. If a 
   subordinate organization, other than a subsidiary, engages in 
   impermissible activities, the OTS will generally deduct investments in 
   and loans to that organization.\5\ If such a subordinate organization 
   engages solely in permissible activities, the OTS may, depending upon 
   the nature and risk of the activity, either assign investments in and 
   loans to that organization to the 100 percent risk-weight category or 
   require full deduction of the investments and loans.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   \5\ See 12 CFR 559.2 for the OTS's definition of subordinate
   
   organization.
   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
   
   Collateralized Transactions
   The FRB and the OCC assign a zero percent risk weight to 
   claims 
   collateralized by cash on deposit in the institution or by securities 
   issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, U.S. Government agencies, 
   or the central governments of other countries that are members of the 
   Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The OCC 
   and the FRB rules require the collateral to be marked to market daily 
   and a positive margin of collateral protection to be maintained daily. 
   The FRB requires qualifying claims to be fully collateralized, while 
   the OCC rule permits partial collateralization.
   The FDIC and the OTS assign a zero percent risk weight to 
   claims on 
   qualifying securities firms that are collateralized by cash on deposit 
   in the institution or by securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. 
   Government, U.S. Government agencies, or other OECD central 
   governments. The FDIC and the OTS accord a 20 percent risk weight to 
   such claims on other parties.
   Noncumulative Perpetual Preferred Stock
   Under the federal banking agencies' capital standards, 
   noncumulative perpetual preferred stock is a component of Tier 1 
   capital. The capital standards of the OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC 
   require noncumulative perpetual preferred stock to give the issuer the 
   option to waive the payment of dividends and to provide that waived 
   dividends neither accumulate to future periods nor represent a 
   contingent claim on the issuer.
   As a result of these requirements, if a bank supervised by 
   the OCC, 
   the FRB, or the FDIC issues perpetual preferred stock and is required 
   to pay dividends in a form other than cash, e.g., stock, when cash 
   dividends are not or cannot be paid, the bank does not have the option 
   to waive or eliminate dividends, and the stock would not qualify as 
   noncumulative. If an OTS-supervised savings association issues 
   perpetual preferred stock that requires the payment of dividends in the 
   form of stock when cash dividends are not paid, the stock may, subject 
   to supervisory approval, qualify as noncumulative.
   Equity Securities of Government-Sponsored Enterprises
   The FRB, the FDIC, and the OTS apply a 100 percent risk 
   weight to 
   equity securities of government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), other 
   than the 20 percent risk weighting of Federal Home Loan Bank stock held 
   by banking organizations as a condition of membership. The OCC applies 
   a 20 percent risk weight to all GSE equity securities.
   Limitation on Subordinated Debt and Limited-Life Preferred Stock
   The OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC limit the amount of 
   subordinated 
   debt and intermediate-term preferred stock that may be treated as part 
   of Tier 2 capital to 50 percent of Tier 1 capital. The OTS does not 
   prescribe such a restriction. The OTS does, however, limit the amount 
   of Tier 2 capital to 100 percent of Tier 1 capital, as do the other 
   agencies.
   In addition, for banking organizations supervised by the OCC, 
   the 
   FRB, and the FDIC, at the beginning of each of the last five years of 
   the life of a subordinated debt or limited-life preferred stock 
   instrument, the amount that is eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 capital 
   is reduced by 20 percent of the original amount of that instrument (net 
   of redemptions). The OTS provides thrifts the option of using either 
   the discounting approach used by the other federal banking agencies, or 
   an approach which, during the last seven years of the instrument's 
   life, allows for the full inclusion of all such instruments, provided 
   that the aggregate amount of such instruments maturing in any one year 
   does not exceed 20 percent of the thrift's total capital.
   Pledged Deposits, Nonwithdrawable Accounts, and Certain Certificates
   The OTS capital regulations permit mutual savings 
   associations to 
   include in Tier 1 capital pledged deposits and nonwithdrawable accounts 
   to the extent that such accounts or deposits have no fixed maturity 
   date, cannot be withdrawn at the option of the accountholder, and do 
   not earn interest that carries over to subsequent periods. The OTS also 
   permits the inclusion of net worth certificates, mutual capital 
   certificates, and income capital certificates complying with applicable 
   OTS regulations in savings associations' Tier 2 capital. In the 
   aggregate, however, these deposits, accounts, and certificates are only 
   a negligible amount of the Tier 1 capital of OTS-supervised savings 
   associations. The OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC do not expressly address 
   these instruments in their regulatory capital standards, and they 
   generally are not recognized as Tier 1 or Tier 2 capital components.
   Covered Assets
   The OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC generally place assets subject 
   to 
   guarantee arrangements by the FDIC or the former Federal Savings and 
   Loan Insurance Corporation in the 20 percent risk-weight category. The 
   OTS places these ``covered assets'' in the zero percent risk-weight 
   category.
   Tangible Capital Requirement
   Savings associations supervised by the OTS, by statute, must
   
   satisfy a 1.5 percent minimum tangible capital requirement. Other 
   subsequent statutory and regulatory changes, however, imposed higher 
   capital standards rendering it unlikely, if not impossible, for the 1.5 
   percent tangible capital requirement to function as a meaningful 
   regulatory trigger. This statutory tangible capital requirement does 
   not apply to institutions supervised by the OCC, the FRB, or the FDIC.
   
   Differences in Accounting Standards Among the Federal Banking Agencies
   
   Push-Down Accounting
   Push-down accounting is the establishment of a new accounting 
   basis 
   for a depository institution in its separate financial statements as a 
   result of a substantive change in control. Under push-down accounting, 
   when a depository institution is acquired in a purchase, yet retains 
   its separate corporate existence, the assets and liabilities of the 
   acquired institution are restated to their fair values as of the 
   acquisition date. These values, including any goodwill, are reflected 
   in the separate financial statements of the acquired institution, as 
   well as in any consolidated financial statements of the institution's 
   parent.
   The OCC, the FRB, and the FDIC require the use of push-down
   
   [[Page 15382]]
   
   accounting for regulatory reporting purposes when there is at least a 
   95 percent change in ownership. This approach is generally consistent 
   with accounting interpretations issued by the staff of the Securities 
   and Exchange Commission. The OTS requires the use of push-down 
   accounting when there is at least a 90 percent change in ownership.
   
   Dated: March 15, 2005.
   Julie L. Williams,
   Acting Comptroller of the Currency.
   By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
   System, March 17, 2005.
   Jennifer J. Johnson,
   Secretary of the Board.
   Dated in Washington, DC, this 14th day of March, 2005.
   
   Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
   Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
   Dated: March 14, 2005.
   
   By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
   James Gilleran,
   Director.
   [FR Doc. 05-5931 Filed 3-24-05; 8:45 am]
   
   BILLING CODE 4810-33-P
 

Last Updated: February 28, 2006