[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3, Parts 220 to 299]
[as of November 1999]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR225.28]
[Pages 86-92]
TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
PART 225--BANK HOLDING COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL (REGULATION Y)--Table of
Contents
Subpart C--Nonbanking Activities and Acquisitions by Bank Holding
Companies
Sec. 225.28 List of permissible nonbanking activities.
(a) Closely related nonbanking activities. The activities listed in paragraph (b) of this
section are so closely related to banking or managing or controlling banks as to be a
proper incident thereto, and may be engaged in by a bank holding company or its subsidiary
in accordance with the requirements of this regulation.
(b) Activities determined by regulation to be permissible--
- (1) Extending credit and servicing loans. Making, acquiring, brokering, or servicing
loans or other extensions of credit (including factoring, issuing letters of credit and
accepting drafts) for the company's account or for the account of others.
-
- (2) Activities related to extending credit. Any activity usual in connection with
making, acquiring, brokering or servicing loans or other extensions of credit, as
determined by the Board. The Board has determined that the following activities are usual
in connection with making, acquiring, brokering or servicing loans or other extensions of
credit:
-
- (i) Real estate and personal property appraising. Performing appraisals of real estate
and tangible and intangible personal property, including securities.
-
- (ii) Arranging commercial real estate equity financing. Acting as intermediary for the
financing of commercial or industrial income-producing real estate by arranging for the
transfer of the title, control, and risk of such a real estate project to one or more
investors, if the bank holding company and its affiliates do not have an interest in, or
participate in managing or developing, a real estate project for which it arranges equity
financing, and do not promote or sponsor the development of the property.
-
- (iii) Check-guaranty services. Authorizing a subscribing merchant to accept personal
checks tendered by the merchant's customers in payment for goods and services, and
purchasing from the merchant validly authorized checks that are subsequently dishonored.
-
- (iv) Collection agency services. Collecting overdue accounts receivable, either retail
or commercial.
-
- (v) Credit bureau services. Maintaining information related to the credit history of
consumers and providing the information to a credit grantor who is considering a
borrower's application for credit or who has extended credit to the borrower.
-
- (vi) Asset management, servicing, and collection activities. Engaging under contract
with a third party in asset management, servicing, and collection \2\ of
assets of a type that an insured depository institution may originate and own, if the
company does not engage in real property management or real estate brokerage services as
part of these services.
(vii) Acquiring debt in default. Acquiring debt that is in default at the time of
acquisition, if the company:
-
- (A) Divests shares or assets securing debt in default that are not permissible
investments for bank holding companies, within the time period required for divestiture of
property acquired in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted under Sec. 225.12(b); \3\
(B) Stands only in the position of a creditor and does not purchase equity of obligors of
debt in default (other than equity that may be collateral for such debt); and
- (C) Does not acquire debt in default secured by shares of a bank or
bank holding company.
- (viii) Real estate settlement servicing. Providing real estate settlement services.\4\
-
- (3) Leasing personal or real property. Leasing personal or real property or acting as
agent, broker, or adviser in leasing such property if:
-
- (i) The lease is on a nonoperating basis; \5\
(ii) The initial term of the lease is at least 90 days;
-
- (iii) In the case of leases involving real property:
-
- (A) At the inception of the initial lease, the effect of the transaction will yield a
return that will compensate the lessor for not less than the lessor's full investment in
the property plus the estimated total cost of financing the property over the term of the
lease from rental payments, estimated tax benefits, and the estimated residual value of
the property at the expiration of the initial lease; and
-
- (B) The estimated residual value of property for purposes of paragraph (b)(3)(iii)(A) of
this section shall not exceed 25 percent of the acquisition cost of the property to the
lessor.
-
- (4) Operating nonbank depository institutions--
-
- (i) Industrial banking. Owning, controlling, or operating an industrial bank, Morris
Plan bank, or industrial loan company, so long as the institution is not a bank.
-
- (ii) Operating savings association. Owning, controlling, or operating a savings
association, if the savings association engages only in deposit-taking activities,
lending, and other activities that are permissible for bank holding companies under this
subpart C.
-
- (5) Trust company functions. Performing functions or activities that may be performed by
a trust company (including activities of a fiduciary, agency, or custodial nature), in the
manner authorized by federal or state law, so long as the company is not a bank for
purposes of section 2(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act.
-
- (6) Financial and investment advisory activities. Acting as investment or financial
advisor to any person, including (without, in any way, limiting the foregoing):
-
- (i) Serving as investment adviser (as defined in section 2(a)(20) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. 80a-2(a)(20)), to an investment company registered under
that act, including sponsoring, organizing, and managing a closed-end investment company;
-
- (ii) Furnishing general economic information and advice, general economic statistical
forecasting services, and industry studies;
-
- (iii) Providing advice in connection with mergers, acquisitions, divestitures,
investments, joint ventures, leveraged buyouts, recapitalizations, capital structurings,
financing transactions and similar transactions, and conducting financial feasibility
studies;\6\
-
- (iv) Providing information, statistical forecasting, and advice with respect to any
transaction in foreign exchange, swaps, and similar transactions, commodities, and any
forward contract, option, future, option on a future, and similar instruments;
(v) Providing educational courses, and instructional materials to consumers on individual
financial management matters; and
- (vi) Providing tax-planning and tax-preparation services to any person.
-
- (7) Agency transactional services for customer investments--
-
- (i) Securities brokerage. Providing securities brokerage services (including securities
clearing and/or securities execution services on an exchange), whether alone or in
combination with investment advisory services, and incidental activities (including
related securities credit activities and custodial services), if the securities brokerage
services are restricted to buying and selling securities solely as agent for the account
of customers and do not include securities underwriting or dealing.
-
- (ii) Riskless principal transactions. Buying and selling in the secondary market all
types of securities on the order of customers as a ``riskless principal'' to the extent of
engaging in a transaction in which the company, after receiving an order to buy (or sell)
a security from a customer, purchases (or sells) the security for its own account to
offset a contemporaneous sale to (or purchase from) the customer. This does not include:
-
- (A) Selling bank-ineligible securities \7\ at the order of a customer
that is the issuer of the securities, or selling bank-ineligible securities in any
transaction where the company has a contractual agreement to place the securities as agent
of the issuer; or
(B) Acting as a riskless principal in any transaction involving a bank-ineligible security
for which the company or any of its affiliates acts as underwriter (during the period of
the underwriting or for 30 days thereafter) or dealer.\8\
-
- (iii) Private placement services. Acting as agent for the private placement of
securities in accordance with the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 (1933 Act)
and the rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission, if the company engaged in the
activity does not purchase or repurchase for its own account the securities being placed,
or hold in inventory unsold portions of issues of these securities.
-
- (iv) Futures commission merchant. Acting as a futures commission merchant (FCM) for
unaffiliated persons in the execution, clearance, or execution and clearance of any
futures contract and option on a futures contract traded on an exchange in the United
States or abroad if:
-
- (A) The activity is conducted through a separately incorporated subsidiary of the bank
holding company, which may engage in activities
other than FCM activities (including, but not limited to, permissible
advisory and trading activities); and
-
- (B) The parent bank holding company does not provide a guarantee or otherwise become
liable to the exchange or clearing association other than for those trades conducted by
the subsidiary for its own account or for the account of any affiliate.
-
- (v) Other transactional services. Providing to customers as agent transactional services
with respect to swaps and similar transactions, any transaction described in paragraph
(b)(8) of this section, any transaction that is permissible for a state member bank, and
any other transaction involving a forward contract, option, futures, option on a futures
or similar contract (whether traded on an exchange or not) relating to a commodity that is
traded on an exchange.
-
- (8) Investment transactions as principal--
-
- (i) Underwriting and dealing in government obligations and money market instruments.
Underwriting and dealing in obligations of the United States, general obligations of
states and their political subdivisions, and other obligations that state member banks of
the Federal Reserve System may be authorized to underwrite and deal in under 12 U.S.C. 24
and 335, including banker's acceptances and certificates of deposit, under the same
limitations as would be applicable if the activity were performed by the bank holding
company's subsidiary member banks or its subsidiary nonmember banks as if they were member
banks.
-
- (ii) Investing and trading activities. Engaging as principal in:
-
- (A) Foreign exchange;
-
- (B) Forward contracts, options, futures, options on futures, swaps, and similar
contracts, whether traded on exchanges or not, based on any rate, price, financial asset
(including gold, silver, platinum, palladium, copper, or any other metal approved by the
Board), nonfinancial asset, or group of assets, other than a bank-ineligible security,\9\ if:
-
- (1) A state member bank is authorized to invest in the asset underlying the contract;
-
- (2) The contract requires cash settlement; or
-
- (3) The contract allows for assignment, termination, or offset prior to delivery or
expiration, and the company makes every reasonable effort to avoid taking or making
delivery; and
-
- (C) Forward contracts, options,\10\ futures, options on futures,
swaps, and similar contracts, whether traded on exchanges or not, based on an index of a
rate, a price, or the value of any financial asset, nonfinancial asset, or group of
assets, if the contract requires cash settlement.
-
- (iii) Buying and selling bullion, and related activities. Buying, selling and storing
bars, rounds, bullion, and coins of gold, silver, platinum, palladium, copper, and any
other metal approved by the Board, for the company's own account and the account of
others, and providing incidental services such as arranging for storage, safe custody,
assaying, and shipment.
-
- (9) Management consulting and counseling activities--
-
- (i) Management consulting.
-
- (A) Providing management consulting advice: \11\
(1) On any matter to unaffiliated depository institutions, including commercial banks,
savings and loan associations, savings banks, credit unions, industrial banks, Morris Plan
banks, cooperative banks, industrial loan companies, trust companies, and branches or
agencies of foreign banks;
-
- (2) On any financial, economic, accounting, or audit matter to any other company
-
- (B) A company conducting management consulting activities under this subparagraph and
any affiliate of such company may not:
-
- (1) Own or control, directly or indirectly, more than 5 percent of the voting securities
of the client institution; and
-
- (2) Allow a management official, as defined in 12 CFR 212.2(h), of the company or any of
its affiliates to serve as a management official of the client institution, except where
such interlocking relationship is permitted pursuant to an exemption granted under 12 CFR
212.4(b) or otherwise permitted by the Board.
-
- (C) A company conducting management consulting activities may provide management
consulting services to customers not described in paragraph (b)(9)(i)(A)(1) of this
section or regarding matters not described in paragraph (b)(9)(i)(A)(2) of this section,
if the total annual revenue derived from those management consulting services does not
exceed 30 percent of the company's total annual revenue derived from management consulting
activities.
-
- (ii) Employee benefits consulting services. Providing consulting services to employee
benefit, compensation and insurance plans, including designing plans, assisting in the
implementation of plans, providing administrative services to plans, and developing
employee communication programs for plans.
-
- (iii) Career counseling services. Providing career counseling services to:
-
- (A) A financial organization \12\ and individuals currently employed
by, or recently displaced from, a financial organization;
-
- (B) Individuals who are seeking employment at a financial organization; and
-
- (C) Individuals who are currently employed in or who seek positions in the finance,
accounting, and audit departments of any company.
-
- (10) Support services--
-
- (i) Courier services. Providing courier services for:
-
- (A) Checks, commercial papers, documents, and written instruments (excluding currency or
bearer-type negotiable instruments) that are exchanged among banks and financial
institutions; and
-
- (B) Audit and accounting media of a banking or financial nature and other business
records and documents used in processing such media.\13\
-
- (ii) Printing and selling MICR-encoded items. Printing and selling checks and related
documents, including corporate image checks, cash tickets, voucher checks, deposit slips,
savings withdrawal packages, and other forms that require Magnetic Ink Character
Recognition (MICR) encoding.
-
- (11) Insurance agency and underwriting--
-
- (i) Credit insurance. Acting as principal, agent, or broker for insurance (including
home mortgage redemption insurance) that is:
-
- (A) Directly related to an extension of credit by the bank holding company or any of its
subsidiaries; and
-
- (B) Limited to ensuring the repayment of the outstanding balance due on the extension of
credit \14\ in the event of the death, disability, or involuntary
unemployment of the debtor.
-
- (ii) Finance company subsidiary. Acting as agent or broker for insurance directly
related to an extension of credit by a finance company \15\ that is a
subsidiary of a bank holding company, if:
-
- (A) The insurance is limited to ensuring repayment of the outstanding balance on such
extension of credit in the event of loss or damage to any property used as collateral for
the extension of credit; and
-
- (B) The extension of credit is not more than $10,000, or $25,000 if it is to finance the
purchase of a residential manufactured home \16\ and the credit is
secured by the home; and
-
- (C) The applicant commits to notify borrowers in writing that:
-
- (1) They are not required to purchase such insurance from the applicant;
-
- (2) Such insurance does not insure any interest of the borrower in the collateral; and
-
- (3) The applicant will accept more comprehensive property insurance in place of such
single-interest insurance.
-
- (iii) Insurance in small towns. Engaging in any insurance agency activity in a place
where the bank holding company or a subsidiary of the bank holding company has a lending
office and that:
-
- (A) Has a population not exceeding 5,000 (as shown in the preceding decennial census);
or
-
- (B) Has inadequate insurance agency facilities, as determined by the Board, after notice
and opportunity for hearing.
-
- (iv) Insurance-agency activities conducted on May 1, 1982. Engaging in any specific
insurance-agency activity \17\ if the bank holding company, or
subsidiary conducting the specific activity, conducted such activity on May 1, 1982, or
received Board approval to conduct such activity on or before May 1, 1982.\18\
A bank holding company or subsidiary engaging in a specific insurance agency activity
under this clause may:
-
- (A) Engage in such specific insurance agency activity only at locations:
-
- (1) In the state in which the bank holding company has its principal place of business
(as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1842(d));
-
- (2) In any state or states immediately adjacent to such state; and
-
- (3) In any state in which the specific insurance-agency activity was conducted (or was
approved to be conducted) by such bank holding company or subsidiary thereof or by any
other subsidiary of such bank holding company on May 1, 1982; and
-
- (B) Provide other insurance coverages that may become available after May 1, 1982, so
long as those coverages insure against the types of risks as (or are otherwise
functionally equivalent to) coverages sold or approved to be sold on May 1, 1982, by the
bank holding company or subsidiary.
-
- (v) Supervision of retail insurance agents. Supervising on behalf of insurance
underwriters the activities of retail insurance agents who sell:
-
- (A) Fidelity insurance and property and casualty insurance on the real and personal
property used in the operations of the bank holding company or its subsidiaries; and
-
- (B) Group insurance that protects the employees of the bank holding company or its
subsidiaries.
-
- (vi) Small bank holding companies. Engaging in any insurance-agency activity if the bank
holding company has total consolidated assets of $50 million or less. A bank holding
company performing insurance-agency activities under this paragraph may not engage in the
sale of life insurance or annuities except as provided in paragraphs (b)(11) (i) and (iii)
of this section, and it may not continue to engage in insurance-agency activities pursuant
to this provision more than 90 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period in
which total assets of the holding company and its subsidiaries exceed $50 million.
-
- (vii) Insurance-agency activities conducted before 1971. Engaging in any
insurance-agency activity performed at any location in the United States directly or
indirectly by a bank holding company that was engaged in insurance-agency activities prior
to January 1, 1971, as a consequence of approval by the Board prior to January 1, 1971.
-
- (12) Community development activities--
-
- (i) Financing and investment activities. Making equity and debt investments in
corporations or projects designed primarily to promote community welfare, such as the
economic rehabilitation and development of low-income areas by providing housing,
services, or jobs for residents.
-
- (ii) Advisory activities. Providing advisory and related services for programs designed
primarily to promote community welfare.
-
- (13) Money orders, savings bonds, and traveler's checks. The issuance and sale at retail
of money orders and similar consumer-type payment instruments; the sale of U.S. savings
bonds; and the issuance and sale of traveler's checks.
-
- (14) Data processing.
-
- (i) Providing data processing and data transmission services, facilities (including data
processing and data transmission hardware, software, documentation, or operating
personnel), data bases, advice, and access to such services, facilities, or data bases by
any technological means, if:
-
- (A) The data to be processed or furnished are financial, banking, or economic; and
-
- (B) The hardware provided in connection therewith is offered only in conjunction with
software designed and marketed for the processing and transmission of financial, banking,
or economic data, and where the general purpose hardware does not constitute more than 30
percent of the
cost of any packaged offering.
-
- (ii) A company conducting data processing and data transmission activities may conduct
data processing and data transmission activities not described in paragraph (b)(14)(i) of
this section if the total annual revenue derived from those activities does not exceed 30
percent of the company's total annual revenues derived from data processing and data
transmission activities.
Endnotes:
\2\ Asset management services include acting as agent in the liquidation
or sale of loans and collateral for loans, including real estate and other assets acquired
through foreclosure or in satisfaction of debts previously contracted.
\3\ For this purpose, the divestiture period for property begins
on the date that the debt is acquired, regardless of when legal title to the property is
acquired.
\4\ For purposes of this section, real estate settlement
services do not include providing title insurance as principal, agent, or broker.
\5\ The requirement that the lease be on a nonoperating basis
means that the bank holding company may not, directly or indirectly, engage in operating,
servicing, maintaining, or repairing leased property during the lease term. For purposes
of the leasing of automobiles, the requirement that the lease be on a nonoperating basis
means that the bank holding company may not, directly or indirectly: (1) Provide
servicing, repair, or maintenance of the leased vehicle during the lease term; (2)
purchase parts and accessories in bulk or for an individual vehicle after the lessee has
taken delivery of the vehicle; (3) provide the loan of an automobile during servicing of
the leased vehicle; (4) purchase insurance for the lessee; or (5) provide for the renewal
of the vehicle's license merely as a service to the lessee where the lessee could renew
the license without authorization from the lessor. The bank holding company may arrange
for a third party to provide these services or products.
\6\ Feasibility studies do not include assisting management with
the planning or marketing for a given project or providing general operational or
management advice.
\7\ A bank-ineligible security is any security that a State
member bank is not permitted to underwrite or deal in under 12 U.S.C. 24 and 335.
\8\ A company or its affiliates may not enter quotes for
specific bank-ineligible securities in any dealer quotation system in connection with the
company's riskless principal transactions; except that the company or its affiliates may
enter ``bid'' or ``ask'' quotations, or publish ``offering wanted'' or ``bid wanted''
notices on trading systems other than NASDAQ or an exchange, if the company or its
affiliate does
not enter price quotations on different sides of the market for a particular security
during any two-day period.
\9\ A bank-ineligible security is any security that a state
member bank is not permitted to underwrite or deal in under 12 U.S.C. 24 and 335.
\10\ This reference does not include acting as a dealer in
options based on indices of bank-ineligible securities when the options are traded on
securities exchanges. These options are securities for purposes of the federal securities
laws and bank-ineligible securities for purposes of section 20 of the Glass-Steagall Act,
12 U.S.C. 337. Similarly, this reference does not include acting as a dealer in any other
instrument that is a bank-ineligible security for purposes of section 20. A bank holding
company may deal in these instruments in accordance with the Board's orders on dealing in
bank-ineligible securities.
\11\ In performing this activity, bank holding companies are
not authorized to perform tasks or operations or provide services to client institutions
either on a daily or continuing basis, except as necessary to instruct the client
institution on how to perform such services for itself. See also the Board's
interpretation of bank management consulting advice (12 CFR 225.131).
\12\ Financial organization refers to insured depository
institution holding companies and their subsidiaries, other than nonbanking affiliates of
diversified savings and loan holding companies that engage in activities not permissible
under section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(c)(8)).
\13\ See also the Board's interpretation on courier activities
(12 CFR 225.129), which sets forth conditions for bank holding company entry into the
activity.
\14\ Extension of credit includes direct loans to borrowers,
loans purchased from other lenders, and leases of real or personal property so long as the
leases are nonoperating and full-payout leases that meet the requirements of paragraph
(b)(3) of this section.
\15\ Finance company includes all non-deposit-taking financial
institutions that engage in a significant degree of consumer lending (excluding lending
secured by first mortgages) and all financial institutions specifically defined by
individual states as finance companies and that engage in a significant degree of consumer
lending.
\16\ These limitations increase at the end of each calendar
year, beginning with 1982, by the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
\17\ Nothing contained in this provision shall preclude a bank
holding company subsidiary that is authorized to engage in a specific
insurance-agency activity under this clause from continuing to engage in
the particular activity after merger with an affiliate, if the merger is
for legitimate business purposes and prior notice has been provided to
the Board.
\18\ For the purposes of this paragraph, activities engaged in
on
May 1, 1982, include activities carried on subsequently as the result of
an application to engage in such activities pending before the Board on
May 1, 1982, and approved subsequently by the Board or as the result of
the acquisition by such company pursuant to a binding written contract
entered into on or before May 1, 1982, of another company engaged in
such activities at the time of the acquisition. |