On July 21, 2011, thrift institutions entered a new regulatory structure, with the transfer of regulatory responsibility for these institutions from the Office of Thrift Supervision ("OTS") to the other federal banking agencies and with other changes under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act ("Dodd-Frank" or the "Act").1 Dodd-Frank and related reforms, including new international capital standards, will, over time, shape the operations of savings and loan holding companies ("SLHCs") and their subsidiary thrifts. For the most part, the changes will bring the thrift and bank charters closer together, and SLHCs will be treated nearly the same as bank holding companies ("BHCs"). Reinforcing the similarity in treatment are various amendments Dodd-Frank has made to the same provisions in the thrift statute and the banking statutes. Some important distinctions nevertheless will remain, including a slightly greater range of activities for thrift institutions and the qualified thrift lender test.

For some SLHCs, especially those with significant nonbank businesses, the changes may have far-reaching effects. Indeed, in some cases, management of a savings institution may want to consider the relative merits of thrift and bank charters in light of its particular operations and business plans. Certain thrift organizations probably should retain the federal or state charter, however, including mutual savings associations, grandfathered unitary thrift holding companies, any thrift institutions that engage in real estate development or brokerage, and, possibly, those with greater concentrations of commercial real estate loans.

We do not address here the consumer protection and mortgage-related provisions of the Act, which are the subject of several User Guides that we have published.2 This bulletin covers changes to federal preemption, but a comprehensive discussion appears in our Federal Preemption User Guide.3

I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The majority of the Dodd-Frank changes will affect SLHCs, although on a day-to-day basis, primarily through examination and supervision, changes will be felt most acutely at the savings association level. Highlights for both SLHCs and savings associations are as follows.

A. Savings and loan holding companies

  • Control

    The FRB has replaced the OTS control rules with its existing rules for bank holding companies. Among other changes, a greater number of non-controlling investors likely will be required to enter into passivity commitments, and a non-controlling investor may not hold a seat on the board of directors. The new rules apply primarily on a going-forward basis, but in certain circumstances the FRB may review ownership structures created before July 21, 2011.
  • Capital

    SLHCs ultimately will be required to adhere to the same capital standards as BHCs—and these capital standards are themselves in flux. SLHCs should take into account at least three sets of changes to capital planning.
    • Composition of capital. The Collins Amendment to Dodd-Frank requires that BHCs and SLHCs adhere to the same capital requirements that now exist for their subsidiary insured depository institutions—effectively excluding (after a transition period) trust-preferred and other hybrid securities from Tier 1 capital. Basel III introduces a range of other requirements for the composition of Tier 1 capital. These changes will phase in over several years and at different speeds, depending on the size of the institution.
    • New capital ratios. The Act does not provide for new capital ratios other than to require that capital rules incorporate a countercyclical element. However, Basel III provides a more robust set of ratios that U.S. regulators could apply to BHCs and SLHCs of much smaller size than those formally subject to Basel III.
    • Liquidity. Dodd-Frank requires that the FRB adopt liquidity standards for the largest banks and systemically important nonbank financial institutions. Two new liquidity ratios are under review by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision ("BCBS"), as part of the Basel III process.
  • Source of strength

    All SLHCs are or will be required to serve as a source of strength for their subsidiary savings associations. Regulations implementing the doctrine are due in another year, on July 21, 2012. The FRB arguably has authority to enforce the doctrine now.
  • Financial holding company activities—the well-capitalized and well-managed Requirements

    SLHCs engaged in activities permissible only for financial holding companies must be "well-capitalized" and "well-managed."4 The "well capitalized" requirement does not force SLHCs into the full capital framework for BHCs, however.
  • Examination and supervision

    Each agency has its own philosophy and approach. In general, regulatory oversight is likely to be more intensive.
  • Reporting requirements

    Largely over a two-year period, SLHCs will begin to be required to submit to the FRB many of the same reports as BHCs. These requirements may necessitate changes in what types of data SLHCs compile and how they compile it.
  • Applications

    SLHCs are now required to file the same applications and follow the same procedures as BHCs.
  • Mutual holding companies

    These companies now must follow new rules on application processing, dividend waivers, the submission of offering or proxy materials, and stock repurchases.
  • Intermediate holding companies

    Grandfathered unitary thrift holding companies ("GUTHCs") may be required to form intermediate holding companies that will control all of the financial activities of the institution. The FRB is still analyzing how best to deal with these companies and has not yet issued a proposal.

B. Savings associations

The enactment of Dodd-Frank has or will result in several changes to the operations of savings associations. The Act amends federal banking law in several ways that affect banks and thrifts equally, but a few amendments are aimed specifically at savings associations. The transfer of the supervision of savings associations from OTS to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency ("OCC") and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC") will mean other changes perhaps more important for routine operations than the specific provisions of Dodd-Frank. In particular, the two agencies have the supervisory authority to limit activities that are legally permissible for savings associations but not for banks.

  • Commercial real estate lending

    Dodd-Frank does not amend the commercial real estate lending authority of a federal thrift, and this authority is broader than that available to national banks. The OCC historically has taken a stricter view of CRE lending than did OTS. Dodd-Frank and the OCC Interim Rule leave the broader authority for savings associations in place, but the OCC or the FDIC easily could impose institution-specific limits through its supervision function.
  • Service corporations

    Under a provision of HOLA unchanged by Dodd-Frank or by the OCC, this type of subsidiary of a federal savings bank may engage in the broadest range of financial activities— residential real estate development and real estate brokerage among them—of any affiliate of an insured depository institution, including a holding company. This type of subsidiary is worth considering as a vehicle for new and broader business operations.
  • Lending limits

    The Act extends the limits on loans to one borrower and to insiders to capture credit exposures arising from various transactions, including derivatives and repurchase agreements.
  • Transactions with affiliates

    The Act also expands sections 23A and 23B to cover new arrangements or transactions with affiliates that create credit risk. For example, any fund for which a bank (or an affiliate) serves as an investment adviser is now deemed to be an affiliate of the bank for 23A and 23B purposes. The definition of a covered transaction is broadened to include derivatives and the borrowing and lending of securities. Repurchase agreements with affiliates are now subject to collateralization requirements.
  • Insider transactions

    New limitations both on extensions of credit to insiders and on asset sales and purchases with insiders have now taken effect.
  • QTL test

    Dodd-Frank imposes new sanctions for the failure by a savings association to comply with the qualified thrift lender test (the "QTL Test"). The principal change is that the one-year grace period to return to compliance is eliminated. These sanctions took effect the day after the enactment of Dodd-Frank.
  • Preemption

    Dodd-Frank makes important changes to federal preemption in two key respects. First, the Act eliminates preemption for operating subsidiaries and agents on a going-forward basis. Second, four basic OTS preemption regulations, former sections 545.2, 550.136, 557.11, and 560.2 have been narrowed considerably. In addition, the Act has caused the OCC to revise its approach to preemption for national banks and, now, federal savings associations.
  • Increased enforcement efforts by the states

    State attorneys general now have authority to enforce federal regulations against thrift (and other) financial institutions, in addition to the power to bring civil suits against federal savings associations.
  • Examination and supervision

    Both the OCC and the FDIC have their own approaches to examinations. The impact on savings associations will vary by the particular association involved and is difficult to forecast.
  • Reporting

    Beginning with the first quarter of 2012, savings associations will file the same call report as banks, and the thrift financial report will be eliminated.
  • Applications

    Applications by savings associations and the processing of these applications historically has been largely the same as for banks. OCC has revised some of the filing requirements for federal savings associations. State-chartered savings associations should expect to follow the existing FDIC rules for state nonmember banks.
  • Enforcement

    The OCC now has enforcement authority over federal savings associations, and the FDIC has the same authority over state savings associations. The primary statutory authority for enforcement actions is the same for the OCC and the FDIC as it was for OTS, and the nature of these actions should not change. The OCC and the FDIC have different enforcement policies than did OTS, however, and certain changes around the edges of enforcement activity may emerge.

II. SAVINGS AND LOAN HOLDING COMPANIES

Dodd-Frank revises the regulation of SLHCs in many ways that will have significant consequences. The FRB has begun to implement the statutory changes, but there is still a long way to go. To date, the FRB has issued five different rules, proposals, and notices that give effect to many of the new Dodd-Frank requirements.5 The single most important release is the FRB Interim Final Rule, which creates two new parts to the FRB regulations: Regulation LL ("Reg LL"), which addresses SLHCs in ways roughly comparable to the requirements for BHCs, and Regulation MM ("Reg MM"), which deals with mutual holding companies ("MHCs").

A. Control

For many years, OTS undertook a somewhat different analysis from the FRB regarding the circumstances under which an investor would be deemed either to control or not to control an SLHC or a savings association.6 Reg LL replaces the former OTS control rules with the substantive Regulation Y ("Reg Y") requirements for BHCs. The reconciliation of the OTS rules with those of the FRB will affect primarily investors seeking to make passive investments in SLHCs.

  • Investments triggering control considerations. Any investor that holds 10 percent or more of any class of voting securities now must enter into passivity commitments or become a bank holding company or control person. The former OTS rules did not go so far: a 10 percent investor was required to rebut control only if another "control factor" was present—typically the fact that the investor was one of the two largest investors in the SLHC.
  • Passivity commitments. The former OTS rules set forth a standard rebuttal agreement for a 10 percent investor that was required to rebut control. This agreement preserved certain rights for the investor, including the ability to name a director. Reg LL omits this standard rebuttal agreement A non-controlling investor acquiring 10 percent or more of a class of voting securities must enter into passivity commitments that may vary to some degree. In discussions with FRB staff, the FRB has reserved the right to require such commitments from investors holding 5 percent or more of a class of voting securities.
  • Procedure for non-controlling investors. OTS formerly had a separate procedure for rebutting control. The Interim Rule eliminates this formal process. Investors in SLHCs now will be subject to the same practice as investors in BHCs. Potential control will be reviewed as part of an application under section 3 of the Bank Holding Company Act ("BHCA") or in consultation with the FRB about passivity commitments or other mechanisms to avoid control and the necessity of a section 3 application.
  • Change in Bank Control Act notice. The FRB's Reg Y effectively requires a notice filing under the Change in Bank Control Act ("CBCA") by any investor that acquires 10 percent or more of any class of voting securities of a BHC (or a state member bank).7 In certain circumstances, an investment may trigger the CBCA notice requirement, but the investor has been considered non-controlling under section 10 of HOLA or section 2 of the BHCA. Under the former OTS rules, such an investor in an SLHC or a savings association was not required to provide the CBCA notice. Reg LL now requires that such an investor submit this notice.
  • Policies. Together with the statutory and regulatory provisions above, two FRB policies have informed (if not dictated) the structure of non-controlling investments. The first, dating from 1982, suggests (but effectively requires) that an investor may avoid control only if it acquires less than 25 percent of the total equity of a BHC or bank, even if the equity is in a form other than preferred stock. The policy mirrors the definition of control of an SLHC in HOLA.8 (The policy statement also imposes other restrictions on the terms of a non-controlling investment.)

    The second, a more recent addition, revises the 1982 statement (as well as accreted FRB thinking) to allow an investor to acquire up to 33 percent of the total equity of a BHC or state member bank, provided that the investment consists of no more than 15 percent of a class of voting securities (or non-voting securities convertible into voting shares at the election of the investor) and the investor does not hold any board seats.9 Such an investor may hold one board seat and possibly another if certain conditions are met. The policy statement also imposes other restrictions on the terms of the investment, communications between a non-controlling investors and management, and business relationships between the investor and the institution.

The FRB will not, as a general rule, revisit existing ownership structures previously approved by OTS. This policy does not represent a wholesale grandfathering, however. The FRB will examine an existing structure if an SLHC proposes a material transaction, such as an additional expansionary investment, significant recapitalization, or significant modification of its business plan. All new investments will, of course, be subject to Reg LL and review by the FRB.

B. Capital and liquidity

Over the next several years, new capital requirements will roll out for all insured depository institutions and their holding companies. Dodd-Frank anticipates broad reforms to the current bank regulatory capital requirements but offers few specifics. Outside of Dodd-Frank, the FRB and the other federal banking regulators have been participating in the Basel III process, which is likely to lift the capital requirements for all but the smallest BHCs and SLHCs.

Before turning to coming events, the current capital standards for BHCs that could be applied to SLHCs contain at least three provisions that may be unfamiliar to SLHCs that are accustomed only to capital requirements at the savings association level.

  • Deductions of nonfinancial equity investments. BHCs are permitted to make investments in nonbanking entities through their merchant banking authority and a handful of other statutory provisions.10 These investments must, however, be deducted from the core capital elements of Tier 1 in certain amounts, ranging from 8 to 25 percent of the value of the investments. The particular percentage depends on the amount of the total nonfinancial investment relative to Tier 1 capital. (Amounts that are not deducted are risk-weighted at 100 percent.)11 The same rule will apply to SLHCs engaged in nonfinancial activities. For those SLHCs that have permissible nonfinancial investments, material deductions from Tier 1 could be required.
  • Limitations on the inclusion of "restricted core capital elements" in Tier 1 capital. The FRB has imposed restrictions on what can be included in the Tier 1 capital of a BHC other than common stock and noncumulative perpetual preferred stock. These restrictions already apply to savings associations but are not a concern because the only capital instrument at a savings association typically is a class of voting common stock, all of which has been issued to the association's parent. The application of the BHC rules will affect capital planning by SLHCs.

    There are currently five restricted core capital elements: (i) qualifying cumulative perpetual preferred stock; (ii) minority interests relating to certain preferred stock issued by a bank subsidiary; (iii) minority interests relating to common or certain preferred stock issued by a subsidiary that is not a bank; (iv) qualifying trust preferred securities; and (v) subordinated debentures issued to the Treasury Department as part of the TARP program by a subchapter S corporation or a mutual holding company. The rules are complex, but, as a starting point, these five elements may not constitute more than 25 percent of Tier 1 capital. (There is some leniency for the TARP subdebt.) Under different parts of Dodd-Frank and Basel III, eventually there will be significantly greater limits on the inclusion of these elements in Tier 1.
  • Leverage ratio/goodwill. A relatively small point, but, in calculating its leverage ratio, a bank or thrift must deduct goodwill. The Federal Reserve has not imposed this requirement on BHCs, but both Dodd-Frank and Basel III will require the deduction at the holding company level.

Looking ahead, the threshold question is what new capital requirements will reach the vast majority of SLHCs and BHCs, i.e., those with fewer than $50 billion in consolidated assets. There is no clear answer, but changes are coming from several directions. We would observe that Basel III nominally covers only the largest and globally active banking institutions but that we expect Basel III standards to trickle down to all institutions.12

At least three provisions in Dodd-Frank will change the current capital standards for SLHCs (as well as for BHCs). The finalization of Basel III likely will result in changes to capital composition and the risk-weighting of assets. The FRB (and the other federal banking agencies) also have inherent authority to impose new capital requirements on an institution-by-institution basis. The range of possible changes include the following:

  • Composition of capital—Dodd-Frank. Section 171 of Dodd-Frank, also known as the Collins Amendment, directs the federal banking agencies to set new minimum risk-based and leverage requirements for all SLHCs and BHCs. These requirements must be at least as stringent as those that now apply to banks and savings associations.13
  • Composition of capital—Basel III. The required composition of Tier 1 capital seems likely to change. Tier 1 capital is expected to consist "predominantly" of common equity and retained earnings. Historically, the FRB has required that common stock constitute at least 50 percent of Tier 1 capital. A new requirement has not been specified, but we may expect that it will materially exceed 50 percent. Based on regulatory actions during the financial crisis to shore up bank capital and on certain enforcement actions, we anticipate that the federal bank regulatory agencies will require something greater than 51 percent.

    Components of Tier 1 that are not common equity will be required to be subordinated to all creditors, must include a provision enabling the issuer to defer dividend or coupon payments, and must have no incentives to redeem the instruments in times of stress.
  • Trust preferreds and other hybrid instruments. Crucially, the requirement in the Collins Amendment that holding companies become subject to the same capital rules now applicable to their subsidiary insured depository institutions means that trust-preferred securities and other hybrid instruments will be excluded from Tier 1 capital on a going-forward basis. Holding companies with consolidated assets of less than $15 billion—a universe that includes the vast majority of SLHCs—may continue to include in Tier 1 any trust preferreds issued before May 19, 2010.14 (The $15 billion-plus institutions must phase out their pre-May 19, 2010, trust preferreds from Tier 1 over the period between January 2013 and January 2016.)
  • Five-year grace period for SLHCs. The new minimum requirements under section 171 will not apply to SLHCs until July 21, 2015. The practical effect of this provision is not entirely clear. The grace period does not affect the FRB's separate authority to set capital requirements for holding companies, and this authority could be the vehicle for new capital requirements for SLHCs. At the same time, it is clear that the grace period does not cover the elimination of trust-preferred securities from Tier 1, nor does it apply to new countercyclical capital measures that are required in section 616 of the Act.
  • Minority interests in consolidated subsidiaries. Currently, minority interests in the form of common stock or noncumulative perpetual preferred in depository institution subsidiaries are fully includable in Tier 1 capital. Minority interests in the same subsidiaries that are in the form of cumulative preferred and minority interests in the form of common stock or noncumulative perpetual preferred in non-depository subsidiaries may in the aggregate (and including certain other equity instruments) comprise up to 25 percent of a bank holding company's Tier 1 capital. Basel III will reduce the includable amounts of these interests, using a complicated series of calculations in which "surplus" capital is subtracted from the interests in ways that reflect the nature of the equity instruments.
  • New deductions from capital. Basel III enumerates several types of assets that must be deducted from Tier 1 capital, either for the first time or in greater amounts than before. Asset classes affected include investments in other financial institutions, mortgage servicing rights, cash flow hedge reserves, gains on sale in securitization transactions, defined benefit pension fund assets and liabilities, and treasury stock.
  • New capital ratios. Basel III introduces a more complicated set of capital ratios, for which the FRB and the other federal banking agencies already have statutory authority to implement. The new measurements would phase in over several years. Within the next two years, the following standards should come into effect at least on an international basis and for the largest institutions:
    • Tangible common equity ratio. This new ratio—which is not risk-based—begins at 3.5 percent on January 1, 2013, and grows to 4.5 percent by January 1, 2015.
    • Tier 1 risk-based capital. The new minimum of 4.5 percent (up from the current 4 percent for U.S. entities) takes effect in 2013. In 2015, it will be 6 percent.
    • Total risk-based capital. The new international standard will be 8 percent in 2013, up from 6 percent. The standard rule for U.S. banking institutions already is 8 percent and has been at this level for some time.

    Other Basel III capital changes will phase in over a longer period but are likely to have a substantial impact.
    • Capital conservation buffer. This buffer requires additional common equity Tier 1 capital simply on the theory that banking institutions should hold capital above the regulatory minimums. Under Basel III, this buffer does not come into play until 2016. At that point, a banking institution will be required to hold an additional 0.625 percent in Tier 1 common equity capital, measured against risk-based assets. This amount increases incrementally over the following three years so that by January 1, 2019, the buffer will be 2.5 percent.

      Over the last three years, of course, the federal banking agencies effectively have created conservation buffers in specific situations. For example, for a well-capitalized institution, a Capital Purchase Plan investment by the Treasury Department was a form of a conservation buffer and could vary between 1 and 3 percent of risk-weighted assets.
    • Countercyclical buffer. Sections 616(a)-(c) of Dodd-Frank requires the federal banking agencies to promulgate capital rules with a countercyclical component, that is, an element forcing banking institutions to raise capital in prosperous times so that it can be drawn down in times of financial stress.15 Under Basel III, this buffer essentially is an extension of the conservation buffer. The countercyclical buffer is to be phased in along the same time frame as the conservation buffer. Basel III caps the countercyclical buffer at 2.5 percent (once fully in place), but the ceiling is solely for international reciprocity purposes, and regulators may impose higher requirements on domestic institutions. Specific buffer requirements will be set on a national basis (with up to 12 months' advance notice) and will be based on a complicated calculation involving the relationship between the ratio of private sector debt to gross domestic product and the trend of that ratio.
    • Contingent capital. Dodd-Frank contemplates a contingent capital requirement—i.e., an instrument that converts to equity in times of financial stress—at least for the largest U.S. banks (and other systemically significant financial institutions). The Act formally requires only a study of contingent capital by the Financial Stability Oversight Council ("FSOC") to be completed within two years and authorizes—but does not require—the FRB to issue a rule after the report has been completed. Dodd-Frank does not otherwise identify the types of instruments that might be subject to a conversion requirement, nor does it set forth a trigger other than "financial stress." Contingent capital has been a subject of active discussion at the international level, although no international consensus has emerged.16
    • Leverage ratio. For completeness purposes, we note that Basel III includes an explicit leverage ratio for the first time. Thrift organizations in the U.S. already are accustomed to leverage requirements, and there are specified minimums for savings associations. A leverage requirement will be new at the SLHC level (although not new for BHCs). The Basel III proposal is 3 percent, which would phase in slowly over several years. Savings associations currently must maintain a leverage ratio of 4 percent in order to be adequately capitalized. The impact of even a 3 percent requirement on an SLHC, particularly one with significant nonbank operations, could be significant, however.
  • Liquidity. The FRB historically has measured holding company liquidity in a far more granular manner than did OTS. Basel III introduces two new liquidity measures, although their fate is a little uncertain.17
    • FRB measurements. OTS assessed liquidity at an SLHC largely in two ways: the ability to meet contractual obligations from current earnings (the "fixed charge coverage ratio") and a comparison of the maturities of assets and liabilities over the short, medium, and long term.18 In addition to these tools, the FRB recommends review of an array of factors, including a comparison of unpledged liquid asset reserves to liquidity needs; the ratios of volatile wholesale funding to total assets, of volatile retails deposits to total deposits, and of volatile funding to total liabilities; illiquid asset concentrations; funding concentrations; and contingent liabilities.19
    • Liquidity coverage ratio. Basel III proposes a calculation of this ratio (the "LCR")— the ratio of an institution's high-quality, unencumbered liquid assets to total net cash outflows over the next 30 days—in order to measure the ability of a banking organization to meet liquidity needs over the next 30 calendar days. Regulators will effectively set the denominator by specifying a "significantly severe liquidity stress scenario" that will determine liquidity needs. Several factors will inform the regulators' decisions, and liquidity needs may be driven by several different sources, not simply depositors. The desired outcome is that the LCR exceed 100 percent. The LCR will be subject to a three-year observation period beginning Jan. 12, 2012; it then is expected to be applied formally on Jan. 1, 2015. The BCBS is accelerating review of this ratio in order to give banking organizations sufficient time to assess compliance.
    • Net stable funding ratio. This ratio (the "NSFR") is intended to provide a liquidity assessment over a one-year period. Many of the participants in the BCBS are dissatisfied with the ratio as proposed—FRB Governor Tarullo has said that the ratio "needs considerable work"20—and it is headed back to the drawing board. As a starting point, however, it is useful to understand that the NSFR would require that available amounts of stable funding exceed the required amount of stable funding over the course of a year. "Available stable funding" includes all Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital, any other preferred stock not includable in Tier 2, and borrowings and liabilities with effective remaining maturities of more than one year. Deposits and unsecured wholesale funding are also includable, subject to various haircuts. With respect to required amount of stable funding, Basel III identifies the amounts of funding necessary to support different types of assets and applies an adjustment factor (much like risk weights used in Basel II). An observation period for the NSFR begins on Jan. 1, 2013, with full implementation scheduled for Jan. 1, 2018.

C. Source of strength

Dodd-Frank and Reg LL subject all SLHCs to the source-of-strength doctrine: an SLHC must "serve as a source of financial and managerial strength to its subsidiary savings associations."21 In addition, it must "not conduct its operations in an unsafe or unsound manner."22 This regulation does not explicitly authorize the FRB to compel an SLHC to recapitalize a subsidiary savings association. The rule, however, does incorporate HOLA section 10(g)(5), which is a broad grant of enforcement authority over SLHCs. The FRB has the same authority as it has with respect to BHCs to force an SLHC to terminate an activity or to divest a nonbank subsidiary. In order to do so, the FRB must determine both that the control of a nonbank subsidiary or an activity of the SLHC constitutes a serious risk to the financial safety, soundness, or stability of a subsidiary thrift and that it is inconsistent with sound banking principles.23

OTS historically rejected the source-of-strength doctrine, although the substance may have been implicit in the supervision of specific SLHCs. The OTS holding company examination manual took care not to mention the source-of-strength doctrine, but the manual's discussion of capital adequacy on a consolidated basis and of the ability to raise funds in the future encompasses support of a subsidiary thrift. The prompt corrective action regime also contemplates the source-of-strength doctrine: an SLHC must provide at least a partial guarantee of an undercapitalized subsidiary thrift's compliance with a capital restoration plan.24

From a planning perspective, SLHCs should bear in mind that the requirement is to maintain the "ability" to provide assistance. This ability will be the subject of every holding company examination. Accordingly, every SLHC will need to think through its capacity to provide financial support, regardless of the condition of the subsidiary savings association.

The ability to act as a source of strength could entail different approaches to capital policy at a holding company. One obvious way to demonstrate ability would be to hold liquid assets at the holding company in a sufficient amount to contribute the necessary funds to a distressed subsidiary. Alternatively, a holding company should be able to demonstrate its ability to access the capital markets for additional funds. Either course has little meaning for the large number of SLHCs that are shell entities. There is no point in holding liquid assets in reserve at the holding company; these funds could always be put to better use at the operating subsidiary thrift. Access to the capital markets by a shell company will be solely a function of the condition of the thrift subsidiary; accordingly, a holding company brings no greater ability to raise funds than does the subsidiary.

What of a duty on the part of a thrift holding company to make a capital contribution when its subsidiary savings association becomes distressed? Dodd-Frank is on its face ambiguous: a holding company is required to "serve" as a source of strength, but source of strength is defined simply as the "ability" to provide support. The Federal Reserve has been clear, however, that the doctrine is not limited to the demonstration of "ability," and that it requires the contribution of capital when needed. The agency has enforced the duty in several written agreements and consent orders in recent years with the boilerplate that a holding company use its resources "to serve as a source of strength to the [subsidiary bank], including, but not limited to, taking steps to ensure that the [subsidiary bank] complies with" an order or agreement that the bank has entered into with its regulator.25 The underlying bank-level enforcement document typically sets new capital requirements for the bank, requires the submission of a recapitalization plan, and specifies acceptable ways of raising new capital—always including (but not limited to) contributions from the holding company.

Yet section 616(d) and the existing consent orders do not necessarily suggest that a federal bank regulator will respond differently than it does now when the only source of new bank capital is the holding company and the company declines to provide it. This scenario has arisen repeatedly since 2008. Typically (if not always), a holding company refuses to make additional capital contributions on the view that doing so disadvantages its shareholders and creditors. We are not aware that the FRB has sought to litigate the matter.26 It could be argued that the codification of the source-of-strength doctrine in Dodd-Frank removes the impediment to enforcement that courts have found in litigated cases—the MCorp decision27 and a handful of other proceedings—but whether the FRB or the FDIC will take on this issue remains to be seen.

In any event, and notwithstanding the uncertainties surrounding implementation of the doctrine, SLHCs should devote time and energy to analyzing the possible sources of distress at a subsidiary thrift and to determining how the company may be in a position to provide further assistance.

D. Activities

Under OTS oversight, an SLHC generally was free to engage in permissible activities without application or notice to OTS. The FRB takes a different approach, which depends on the nature of the activity. The permissible activities of an SLHC fall into at least one of four statutory categories: financial activities under section 4(k) of the BHCA, activities closely related to banking under section 4(c) of the BHCA, activities permitted for multiple SLHCs before March 5, 1987 (the "1987 List" activities), and insurance agency or escrow activities.

  • Financial activities. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act in 1999 added section 4(k) to the BHCA, which allowed qualifying BHCs to engage in financial activities not previously allowed. These activities primarily include insurance underwriting, securities dealing, and merchant banking. In order to conduct these activities, a BHC must elect financial holding company ("FHC") status: it must be well-managed and well-capitalized, as must its subsidiary insured depository institution subsidiaries, and its subsidiary banks must have at least a satisfactory rating under the Community Reinvestment Act. SLHCs were allowed to engage in the same activities, but without having to meet the qualifying standards that applied to BHCs. Dodd-Frank eliminates this advantage. An SLHC now must elect FHC status and satisfy (in broad terms) the prerequisites as a BHC. If an activity is permissible under both section 4(k) and another provision, an SLHC may rely on the other provision and avoid the section 4(k) requirements.

    Reg LL sets forth a well-capitalized standard for SLHCs that is less stringent than that for a BHC. An SLHC is well-capitalized if (i) all of its insured depository institution subsidiaries are well-capitalized and (ii) the SLHC is not subject to any written agreement, order, capital directive, or prompt corrective action directive issued by the FRB to meet and maintain a specific capital level for any capital measure.28 The SLHC itself is not required to meet a quantitative consolidated capital requirement.

    An SLHC is well-managed if, at its most recent examination (even if the examination was conducted by OTS), the SLHC received (i) at least a satisfactory composite rating and (ii) at least a satisfactory rating for management.29 Under the OTS examination policies for SLHCs, a composite CORE rating and a risk management component rating of 1 or 2 should constitute well-managed status.

    An interesting question for SLHCs is whether, if well-managed (or well-capitalized) status is difficult to maintain, any financial activities at the holding company level should be transferred into service corporation subsidiaries.30 These subsidiaries do not appear to trigger the new well-capitalized and well-managed requirements for holding companies. Service corporations can make all of the same investments as an FHC, plus a few others. It is likely that the investments in these corporations would have to be deducted from a savings association's core capital.

    An FHC election now requires a written election stating the SLHC's intent to be come an FHC and certifying that it has met the criteria.31 Unless the FRB objects within 61 days of the filing, the SLHC will be deemed an FHC. The election is required even in order to engage in activities commenced before July 21, 2011, when, at the time the activities began, the SLHC was not required to make an FHC election. Elections by SLHCs that are made necessary by ongoing activities must be filed by December 31, 2011. If an SLHC is unable to make an election—e.g., because it is not well-capitalized—then the SLHC must file a declaration with the appropriate Reserve Bank that explains the deficiency and how the SLHC will achieve compliance by June 30, 2012. The limitations on and duties of BHCs that cease to meet the FHC requirements will apply to SLHCs that fail at the outset or that later cease to comply.
  • 1987 List. This term is a reference to the activities permissible for a multiple SLHC before March 5, 1987. These activities were enumerated in the former OTS regulation, and Reg LL incorporates this list without change.32 An SLHC now must file a notice with the FRB at least 30 days before launching a new 1987 List activity. This process includes newspaper publication and a period for public comment. If an activity qualifies as both a 1987 List activity and a BHCA section 4(c) activity, then an SLHC need only comply with the procedures for a 1987 List activity, i.e., filing a notice.
  • BHCA § 4(c). An SLHC may engage in any activity that is permissible for BHCs under this provision of the BHCA. These activities primarily are those that the FRB has concluded are closely related to the business of banking and listed in Reg Y.33 OTS formerly required an SLHC to obtain approval before engaging in a section 4(c) activity. Reg LL imposes the same requirement, but the application procedures differ from those of OTS.34
  • Insurance agency or escrow business activities. An SLHC has been able to engage in these activities under a provision separate from the authorities for the sections 4(k) and 4(c) and 1987 List activities.35 OTS did not require a notice or other filing for these lines of business, and neither does the FRB.

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Footnotes

1 Pub. L. No. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010). OTS officially was abolished on October 21, 2011.

2 See Residential Mortgage User Guide ( http://www.mofo.com/files/Uploads/Images/ResidentialMortgage.pdf); Mortgage Servicing User Guide ( http://www.mofo.com/files/Uploads/Images/100830User_Guide_Mortgage_Servicing.pdf); Consumer Financial Protection User Guide ( http://www.mofo.com/files/Uploads/Images/101111-Dodd-Frank-Consumer-Financial-Protection.pdf).

3 This User Guide is available at http://www.mofo.com/files/Uploads/Images/100723UserGuide.pdf.

4 This requirement does not apply to grandfathered unitary thrift holding companies.

5 In chronological order of appearance: (i) Notice of Intent to Apply Certain Supervisory Guidance to Savings and Loan Holding Companies, 76 Fed. Reg. 22662 (Apr. 22, 2011) (the "FRB Supervisory Notice"); (ii) Notice of Intent, Continued Application of Regulations to Savings and Loan Holding Companies, 76 Fed. Reg. 43953 (July 22, 2011); (iii) Order Delegating Certain Actions Relating to Savings and Loan Holding Companies (Aug. 12, 2011) (delegations of supervisory and approval authority to individual FRB Governors, Federal Reserve Banks and others)); (iv) Interim Final Rule 76 Fed. Reg. 56508 (Sept. 13, 2011) (the "FRB Interim Final Rule"); and (v) Proposed Agency Information Collection Activities, 76 Fed. Reg. (Aug.. 25, 2011) (phase-in of certain reporting requirements) ("FRB Reporting Proposal"). Together with the OCC, the FRB also has issued a notice on the transfer of information collections from OTS, but this notice should have no impact on thrift institutions. See Joint Notice, 76 Fed. Reg. 56005 (Sept. 9, 2011) ("Joint Notice").

6 The definitions of control in section 10(a)(2) of the Home Owners' Loan Act ("HOLA") and section 2(a)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act ("BHCA") that guide the two approaches are substantially the same.

7 The CBCA formally requires the notice only when an investor acquires 25 percent or more of the voting stock of a BHC or state member bank. See 12 U.S.C. § 1817(j)(1). Reg Y allows an investor that acquires 10 percent or more but less than 25 percent of such voting stock to rebut control, rather than file the notice, 12 C.F.R. § 225.41(c), but in practice it can be difficult to rebut control successfully and most such investors file the notice.

8 The policy statement is at 12 C.F.R. § 225.143. The statutory requirement is in section 10(a)(2)(B) of HOLA, 12 U.S.C. § 1467a(a)(2)(B).

9 This statement, the Policy statement on equity investments in banks and bank holding companies, is styled 12 C.F.R. § 225.144, but in fact is not included in Reg Y as it appears in the Code of Federal Regulations. It may be found at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20080922b1.pdf.

10 The use of this authority to invest in private equity funds appears to have been checked by the Volcker Rule provisions in section 619 of Dodd-Frank, 12 U.S.C. § 1851. The recent inter-agency proposal on the Volcker Rule does not address explicitly the interplay between the merchant banking authority and Volcker Rule restrictions on ownership of private equity funds. See 76 Fed. Reg. 68846 (Nov. 7, 2011).

11 Savings associations have been required to deduct investments in "non-includable" subsidiaries from core capital, see 12 C.F.R. § 167.5(a)(2), but this rule appears to be somewhat less stringent than the bank holding company rule.

12 In light of the leeway that the FRB has given to BHCs with less than $500 million in consolidated assets on certain debt issues, see Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement, 12 C.F.R. part 225, App. C, it is possible that some Basel III requirements would not trickle down that far.

13 Small BHCs—those with less than $500 million in consolidated assets—are fully exempt from this requirement. Similarly sized savings and loan holding companies may have, like all other thrift holding companies, a five-year exemption (see below), but they do not have the same permanent exception.

14 The Dodd-Frank treatment of these securities is slightly different from Basel III, but Dodd-Frank of course governs.

15 These provisions are codified in 12 U.S.C. §§ 1467a(g)(1) (SLHCs), 1844(b) (BHCs), and 3907(a)(1) (insured depository institutions).

16 See, e.g., Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Consultative Document: Global systemically important banks: Assessment methodology and the additional loss absorbency requirement 17-20 (July 19, 2011).

17 See Basel Comm. on Banking Supervision ("BCBS"), Basel III: International framework for liquidity risk management, standards, and monitoring (Dec. 2010). This document is available at http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs188.pdf.

18 See OTS Holding Company Handbook § 600 at 600.9.

19 See FRB Bank Holding Company Examination Manual § 4020.4 (incorporating by reference the Commercial Bank Examination Manual § 4020.1 at 8).

20 Tarullo, The International Agenda for Financial Regulations (speech before the American Bar Ass'n banking law committee, Nov. 4, 2011).

21 12 C.F.R. § 238.8(a). The statutory basis is section 616(d) of Dodd-Frank, to be codified as section 38A of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act.

22 Id.

23 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.8(b).

24 See 12 U.S.C. § 1831o(e)(2)(c)(ii); 12 C.F.R. § 165.5(i).

25 See, e.g., In re Capital Funding Bancorp, Inc., Consent Order at 3 (No. 11-091-B-HC, Oct. 31, 2011); Written Agreement by and among Huntington Bancshares, Inc., Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, and Banking Commissioner of the Texas Department of Banking at 2 (No. 11-110-WA/RB-HC, Oct. 17, 2011).

26 The FDIC has asserted the doctrine unsuccessfully in claims in bankruptcy against the estates of insolvent holding companies, but no broadly applicable guidance has emerged.

27 MCorp Financial, Inc. v. Bd.of Governors of the Fed. Res. Sys., 900 F.2nd 852 (5th Cir. 1990), aff'd in part and rev'd in part on other grounds, 502 U.S. 32 (1991).

28 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.2(s).

29 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.2(t), incorporating by reference 12 C.F.R. § 225.2(s).

30 As we discuss below, the service corporation concept and the OTS rules have survived Dodd-Frank and the transfer of OTS regulations to the OCC.

31 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.65

32 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.53(b).

33 See 12 C.F.R. § 225.28.

34 See 12 C.F.R. § 238.54(b)

35 See 12 U.S.C. § 1467a(c)(2)(

Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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