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FDIC Federal Register Citations

From: Richard Donovan [mailto:rdonovan@stonesav.com]
Sent: Friday, April 14, 2006 4:55 PM
To: Comments
Subject: CRE Guidance, Docket Numbers: 06-01, OP-1248, 2006-1

Richard Donovan
359 Main Street
Stoneham, MA 02180-3513

April 14, 2006

Comments to FDIC

As a community banker, I would like to share with you my thoughts on the proposed guidance, Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate Lending, Sound Risk Management Practices.

Most community banks are underwriting their CRE loans conservatively. They carefully inspect collateral and monitor loan performance and the borrower’s financial condition. Community bankers lend in their
communities and are close to their customers. Thus they are positioned well to know the condition of their local economy and their borrowers.

Community banks have generally increased staff and risk management practices and capital levels since previous downturns in commercial real estate lending and are now better equipped to handle future downturns.

We utilize an outside firm on an annual basis to review our portfolio and point out weaknesses in any of our policies or procedures. We have been commended time and again by our regulators and auditors about the
thoroughness of the program.

There already exists a body of real estate lending standards, regulations and guidelines. Examiners have the necessary tools to enforce them and address unsafe and unsound practices; the proposed guidance is
unnecessary. Regulators should address CRE management problems bank by bank, not by broad brush across the banking industry.

The proposed threshold limits of CRE loans to capital are too restrictive and do not take into account the lending and risk management practices of individual institutions. They also do not recognize that different
segments of the CRE markets have different levels of risk. Thus, the thresholds may not give an accurate picture of the risk in an institution.

Community banks already hold capital at levels above minimum standards and should not need to raise additional capital because their CRE loans exceed the proposed thresholds. Regulators should consider the bank’s allowance for loan losses and current capital levels along with risk management
practices.

The proposed guidance is unfairly burdensome for community banks that do not have opportunities to raise capital or diversify their portfolio to the extent that larger regional banks can. The CRE portfolios of many
community banks have grown in response to the needs of their community. If community banks are pressured to lower their CRE exposures, their ability to generate income and more capital will be constrained and they will lose good loans to larger competitors.

The proposal’s recommendations regarding management information system reports will be particularly costly and burdensome to community banks; the costs will most likely out weigh the benefits for smaller banks.

We already generate numerous management reports for internal staff and our board.

For these reasons, I urge you not go forward with the guidance as it has been proposed. Instead, regulators should use the regulatory tools already in place to identify and address CRE lending risks where they truly exist and abandon the proposed thresholds that are too restrictive and misleading.

Sincerely,
Richard Donovan
 


Last Updated 04/18/2006 Regs@fdic.gov

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