PUBLICATION OF THE DECEMBER 2000 UPDATE TO THE BANK HOLDING COMPANY SUPERVISION MANUAL.The December 2000 update to the Bank Holding Company Supervision Manual, Supplement No. 19, has been published and is now available. The Manual comprises the Federal Reserve System's bank holding company (BHC BHC benzene hexachloride. BHC, ?-BHC see benzene hexachloride. ) supervisory and inspection guidance. The supplement includes new or revised supervisory information and examiner guidance on the following topics: 1. The Statutory Authority, Focus, and Scope of BHC Inspections. The Gramm--Leach--Bliley (GLB (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act) Enacted in 1999 and effective in mid 2001, the GLB stipulates that every financial institution shall protect the security and confidentiality of its customers' confidential personal information. Act), which amended a·mend v. a·mend·ed, a·mend·ing, a·mends v.tr. 1. To change for the better; improve: amended the earlier proposal so as to make it more comprehensive. 2. section 5(c) of the BHC Act, sets forth the statutory authority, focus, and scope of BHC inspections. The GLB Act provides specific supervisory guidance pertaining per·tain intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains 1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident. 2. to the breadth of BHC inspections, as well as inspections of their subsidiaries. The focus of inspections will be on preserving the safety and soundness of the holding company's affiliated depository institutions Depository institution A financial institution that obtains its funds mainly through deposits from the public. This includes commercial banks, savings and loan associations, savings banks and credit unions. . 2. The GLB Act's revisions to Section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act (transactions between affiliates). The GLB Act expanded the coverage of section 23A by including transactions between banks and their financial subsidiaries and by providing a definition of financial subsidiary. With respect to transactions between a bank and an individual financial subsidiary of the bank, the GLB Act provides that the 10 percent limit on covered transactions does not apply. The GLB Act also created a rebuttable presumption A conclusion as to the existence or nonexistence of a fact that a judge or jury must draw when certain evidence has been introduced and admitted as true in a lawsuit but that can be contradicted by evidence to the contrary. that a company or shareholder controls another company if the company or shareholder directly or indirectly owns or controls 15 percent or more of the equity capital of the other company as a portfolio company. 3. The Revised June 2000 Uniform Retail-Credit Classification and Account-Management Policy (revised policy). The revised policy supersedes the February 1999 policy and provides for the following: * Stressing the need for institutions to adopt and adhere to adhere to verb 1. follow, keep, maintain, respect, observe, be true, fulfil, obey, heed, keep to, abide by, be loyal, mind, be constant, be faithful 2. prudential Prudential is the name of two different companies and buildings named after them: Companies:
* Limiting re-aging of open-end accounts that participate in a debt counseling or workout Workout Informal repayment or loan forgiveness arrangement between a borrower and creditors. workout 1. The process of a debtor's meeting a loan commitment by satisfying altered repayment terms. program, following receipt of at least three consecutive minimum monthly payments, or an equivalent cumulative amount * A current assessment of value to be made no later than 180 days past the contractual due date for loans secured by real estate (any loan balance exceeding the property's value, less selling costs, is to be classified as a loss and charged off) * A clarification that collateralized loans due to be charged off under the policy can be written down to the collateral's value, less cost to sell, instead of being entirely charged off * A clarification that payments received after the applicable charge-off Eliminate or write off. The term charge-off is used to describe the process of removing from the records of a company something that was once regarded as an asset but has subsequently become worthless. threshold, but before the end of the month in which the charge-off threshold is triggered, may be considered when determining if a charge-off remains appropriate. While the terms of the revised policy apply only to federally insured depository institutions, they are broadly applicable to BHCs, particularly their consumer finance nonbank non·bank adj. Of, relating to, or done by a business or an institution that is not a bank but performs similar services. subsidiaries and other credit-extending financial affiliates. Examiners are advised to consider the methodology used for aging retail loans. The contractual method of loan aging is emphasized as the more accurate and preferred methodology for aging retail loans. See Supervision and Regulation (SR) Letter 00-8. (SR Letters are the Federal Reserve's primary means of communicating key policy directives to its examiners, supervisory staff, and the banking industry. SR Letters can be viewed on the Board's Internet site: www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters.) 4. Financial Holding Companies (FHCs). Information is provided on the focus and scope of the Federal Reserve System's supervisory framework for FHCs. Under the GLB Act, the Federal Reserve has supervisory oversight
Oversight may refer to:
The GLB Act designates the Federal Reserve as the umbrella supervisor of FHCs. In carrying out its supervisory oversight role, the Federal Reserve will maintain a supervisory focus that is concentrated on a consolidated or group-wide analysis of the organization. The Federal Reserve will thus identify and evaluate the significant risks in the diversified diversified (di·verˑ·s holding company, assessing how these risks could affect the safety and soundness and viability of its affiliated depository institutions. The Federal Reserve will also emphasize analysis of the consolidated financial condition of FHCs and the risks associated with engaging in a broad range of financial activities, since those risks can cut across the organization's legal entities and business lines. See SR Letter 00-13. 5. Risk Assessments for Small Shell Bank Holding Companies (SSBHCs). As announced in SR Letter 00-15, risk assessments for small SSBHCs are now due within sixty days of receipt of the lead bank's full-scope examination report, instead of forty-five days (as stated previously in SR Letter 97-27 and the Board's S-Letter 2587). A more detailed summary of changes is included with the update package. The Manual and updates, including pricing information, are available from Publications Services, Mail Stop 127, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System The managing body of the Federal Reserve System, which sets policies on bank practices and the money supply. , Washington, DC 20551 (or charge by facsimile: 202-728-5886). The Manual is also available on the Board's public web site: www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/ supmanual/. |
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