Bank Affiliate Transactions Under Scrutiny Complying With Regulation W's Complex Restrictions on Business Dealings with Affiliate Institutions

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Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A Bank Affiliate Transactions Under Scrutiny Complying With Regulation W's Complex Restrictions on Business Dealings with Affiliate Institutions TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 1pm Eastern 12pm Central 11am Mountain 10am Pacific Today s faculty features: William E. Stern, Partner, Goodwin Procter, New York Lawrence D. Kaplan, Paul Hastings, Washington, D.C. The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10.

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Bank Affiliate Transactions: Complying With Regulation W's Complex Restrictions on Business Dealings with Affiliate Institutions William E. Stern Goodwin Procter LLP WStern@goodwinprocter.com 212.813.8890 Lawrence D. Kaplan Paul Hastings LLP lawrencekaplan@paulhastings.com 202.551.1829 5

What are Section 23A and Section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act? When do these statutes apply? Who is and who is not an Affiliate? What transactions are covered by, and what transactions are exempt from, Section 23A and Section 23B? What are the limits on affiliate transactions? What other requirements apply to affiliate transactions? What changes did the Dodd-Frank Act make to the affiliate transaction requirements and how are those changes being implemented? 6

Sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act, and implementing Regulation W reflect long-standing limitations on certain transactions between a bank and its affiliates. Section 23A imposes quantitative limitations and collateral requirements on certain types of covered transactions between a bank and its affiliates, while Section 23B imposes a market terms requirement on virtually all transactions involving a bank and its affiliates. Impose prudential limitations on transactions between depository institutions and their affiliates: Intended to protect depository institutions from misuse of their resources in transactions with their affiliates Limit the ability of depository institutions to transfer to affiliates the subsidy arising from access to the Federal safety net (insured deposits, the payment system, and the discount window) Implemented by the Federal Reserve Board s Regulation W Regulation W took effect April 1, 2003. It defines terms in the statute, explains the statute s requirements, prescribes valuation rules, and exempts certain transactions In 2011, the Federal Reserve Board adopted Subpart I of Regulation W relating to 7 savings associations

Three factors must be present for a Section 23A transaction: A bank or one of its subsidiaries is a party to the transaction An affiliate of the bank is a party to the transaction (or benefits from the transaction) The transaction is covered by Regulation W Super 23A provision of Volcker Rule applies more broadly 8

Other key points Transactions between a bank and its own subsidiary are generally not subject to Section 23A or Regulation W Transactions between two affiliates, without the bank s involvement, are generally not subject to Regulation W Super 23A requirement of Volcker Rule Transactions between two-affiliated insured institutions may be subject to some (but not most) requirements 9

Section 23A and Section 23B apply to all types of insured depository institutions: By their terms, Section 23A and Section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act and Regulation W apply to banks that are members of the Federal Reserve System National banks State member banks Section 18(j) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act makes Section 23A and Section 23B applicable to all insured state chartered non-member banks State nonmember banks, including industrial banks Section 11 of the Home Owners Loan Act makes Section 23A and Section 23B applicable to all savings associations Additional restrictions apply to savings associations Applies to certain transactions involving a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank 10

Parent holding company Companies controlled by the parent holding company or under common control as well as their subsidiaries Insured depository institutions are treated as affiliates for some purposes (but entitled to exemptions for most transactions the so-called sister bank exemption) Companies with interlocking directorates Depository institution subsidiaries Financial subsidiaries (entities engaged in what a national bank cannot do directly) Companies held under merchant banking or insurance company investment authority Subject to exception for non-controlled investments Partnerships Subsidiaries of affiliates Other companies specified by the Federal Reserve Board The Dodd-Frank Act expanded the types of investment funds subject to affiliate status 11

Companies controlled by and under common control with parent holding company: 25% or more of class of voting securities (including convertible securities) General partner of partnership Manager of LLC 25% or more of equity capital Ability to select majority of directors Ability to exercise controlling influence Caution -- Control can exist at lower thresholds through management interlocks, management agreements, restrictions on transfer, voting agreements, etc. 12

As of July 21, 2012, Dodd-Frank provisions became effective: Section 608(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act amended the definition of affiliate so that it includes any investment fund with respect to which a bank or an affiliate is an investment adviser Super 23A provision of Volcker rule applies affiliate transaction restrictions to certain covered funds 13

Exceptions from affiliate status Bank subsidiaries, except for: Financial subsidiaries Companies directly controlled by an affiliate or a shareholder or group of shareholders that control the bank Depository institutions (except for 23B purposes) Employee stock option plan, trust or similar arrangement that benefits shareholders, partners, members or employees of the bank or its affiliates Safe deposit companies Companies engaged solely in holding obligations of or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies as to principal and interest Bank premises companies Companies held as DPC (a foreclosed asset) 14

Transactions where a bank actually or potentially provides money to or on behalf of an affiliate: Making a loan or extension of credit to an affiliate Effective July 21, 2012, this now includes repurchase transactions Providing a guarantee on behalf of an affiliate or confirming a letter of credit issued by an affiliate Purchasing assets from an affiliate Purchasing securities issued by an affiliate Accepting affiliate issued securities as collateral for a loan Effective July 21, 2012, this now includes accepting any affiliate debt obligation as collateral for a loan 15

Effective July 21, 2012, securities lending/borrowing transactions and derivatives transactions are treated as covered transactions to the extent the transaction causes a... bank... to have credit exposure to the affiliate.... Section 608(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act permits the Federal Reserve Board to issue interpretations or regulations addressing the manner in which a netting agreement may be taken into account for purposes of determining the amount of a covered transaction 16

Other kinds of extensions of credit: Failure by an affiliate to make timely payment for services Purchasing a loan from an affiliate with affiliate provided recourse Overnight overdraft Credit derivatives on affiliate obligations Cross-Affiliate Netting Arrangement Securities lending/borrowing (where bank lends securities to an affiliate or borrows securities and posts cash or securities collateral) 17

Attribution Rule Transaction with any person is deemed to be a transaction with an affiliate if: Proceeds transferred to an affiliate Proceeds used for the benefit of an affiliate The attribution rule can apply when a bank and an affiliate both make loans to the same borrower General purpose credit card exception Exception for certain brokerage fees/riskless principal markup The bottom line: Follow the money Where were the funds used? By Whom? Who benefited? 18

A bank may NOT enter into a covered transaction if: The aggregate amount of covered transactions outstanding between the Bank and any one affiliate would exceed 10% of the Bank s capital and surplus Effective July 21, 2012, financial subsidiaries are now subject to this requirement prospectively The aggregate amount of covered transactions outstanding between the Bank and all affiliates would exceed 20% of a Bank s capital and surplus in the aggregate An open-ended guarantee violates these limitations 19

Section 23A requires that loans to affiliates be collateralized The amount of collateral depends upon the type: 100%-Cash and Treasury Securities 110%-Obligations of States and their political subdivisions 120%-Other debt obligations (receivables, commercial paper) 130%-Stock, leases, other real or personal property 20

A bank makes a $1,000 loan to an affiliate. The affiliate posts as collateral for the loan $500 in U.S. Treasury securities, $480 in corporate debt securities, and $130 in real estate: 21

Ineligible Collateral Affiliate issued securities Letter of credit Guarantee Intangible assets Low quality assets Equity securities issued by the bank and debt securities issued by the bank that represent regulatory capital 22

Effective July 21, 2012, Section 608(a) of Dodd-Frank Act amended Section 23A so that it requires that the required amount of collateral be maintained at all times More stringent than pre-dodd-frank requirements Previously, value determined at the inception of transaction Previously no need to top off collateral (except for retired or amortized collateral) The entire unused portion of a line of credit must be collateralized, unless: The bank does not have a legal obligation to advance funds until the affiliate provides the required amount of collateral 23

For purposes of quantitative limitations and collateral requirements (in the case of extensions of credit), the following valuation rules generally apply: Credit transactions generally value at the greater of (i) the principal amount of the transaction, (ii) the amount owed by the affiliate, or (iii) the amount provided to or on behalf of the affiliate by the bank, plus any amount that the bank is required to provide to or on behalf of the affiliate Asset purchases generally valued at the amount of consideration given by the bank for the asset (may be reduced by amortization or depreciation) Investment in affiliate issued securities generally valued at the greater of (i) amount of consideration given by the bank, or (ii) the carrying value of the security Credit transactions secured by affiliate issued securities generally valued at the lesser of (i) the amount of the extension of credit (may be reduced to reflect fair market value of collateral other than affiliate issued securities), or (ii) the fair market value of the affiliate issued securities pledged as collateral. Federal Reserve Board recently provided guidance on valuation of derivative transactions 24

Prohibition on bank purchasing low quality assets Assets classified as substandard, doubtful, loss, special mention or similar classification Nonaccrual assets Past due more than 30 days Renegotiated assets (due to deteriorating condition of obligor) Assets acquired through foreclosure (unless the asset has been examined by bank examiners) Applies to bank-to-bank transactions Even transactions otherwise subject to the sister-bank exemption Exemption applies if bank makes an independent credit evaluation BEFORE the affiliate acquired the asset 25

All covered transactions and other transactions must be consistent with safe and sound banking practices 26

Savings associations are subject to additional restrictions Investments in affiliates (other than subsidiaries) are not permitted Extension of credit to an affiliate engaged in any activity other than certain activities permissible for a bank holding company is not permitted Historically, the OTS did not attribute to a parent company activities conducted indirectly by a subsidiary Federal Reserve Board added Subpart I to Regulation W Adopts the substance of former OTS regulation at 12 C.F.R. 563.41, except: Some nomenclature changes Removes recordkeeping and notification requirements 27

Super Section 23A Included in Volcker rule Became effective July 21, 2012 Certain transactions appear to be permissible during the conformance period Applies to any covered fund sponsored by a banking entity or for which a banking entity serves as investment manager or investment adviser Applied as if the fund were an affiliate and the banking entity and each of its affiliates were a member bank Prohibits a banking entity and its affiliates from entering into any transaction with the fund that would be a covered transaction Applies even if the transaction would be permitted under Regulation W Narrow exception for certain prime brokerage transactions 28

Payment of dividends by a bank Sale of assets to an affiliate (subject to market terms) Purchasing loans on a nonrecourse basis from an affiliated depository institution Sister bank exemption 80% ownership Subject to prohibition on purchasing low quality assets Credit for uncollected items Correspondent banking deposits Liquid assets Marketable securities Municipal securities Purchasing an extension of credit subject to a repurchase agreement 29

Asset purchase by a newly formed bank Transactions Approved under the Bank Merger Act Must involve insured depository institutions Purchasing an extension of credit originated by an affiliate 250.250 exemption Intraday extensions of credit Riskless principal transactions Corporate reorganization transactions Step transactions Daylight overdrafts 30

Covered transactions and other transactions in which a bank pays money or furnishes services to an affiliate must be on market terms The transaction must be conducted on terms and under circumstances, including credit standards, that are substantially the same, or at least as favorable to the bank or its subsidiary, as those prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with or involving non-affiliated companies In the absence of comparable transactions, the transaction must be on terms and under circumstances, including credit standards, that in good faith would be offered to or would apply to non-affiliated companies Market terms requirement applies to most transactions with affiliates: Sales of assets to affiliates Service Agreements Entities/transactions in which an affiliate has a financial interest 31

Additional Section 23B prohibitions: Purchasing securities from an affiliate as a fiduciary unless permitted by: Governing instrument Court order Applicable law Purchasing a security for which an affiliate is a principal underwriter during the existence of an underwriting or selling syndicate Applies to principal and fiduciary purchases Does not apply if purchase is approved in advance by a majority of the bank s entire board of directors based on a determination that the purchase is a sound investment irrespective of the fact that an affiliate is a principal underwriter Advertisements or agreements suggesting that the bank will be responsible for the obligations of an affiliate A guarantee that complies with Section 23A is permitted 32

Effective July 21, 2012, Section 608(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act eliminated the Federal Reserve Board s unilateral authority to grant Section 23A exemptions by order. However: Exemptions from Section 23A by order remain possible by joint action of primary federal regulator, Federal Reserve Board and FDIC The Federal Reserve Board may continue to grant Section 23A and Section 23B exemptions by regulation if FDIC does not object to the proposed exemptions Section 23B does not permit exemptions by order (no change) 33