FRY9.200802.omb

FRY9.200802.omb.doc

Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies

OMB: 7100-0128

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Supporting Statement for

Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies

(FR Y-9C, FR Y-9LP, FR Y-9SP, FR Y-9CS and FR Y-9ES; OMB No. 7100-0128)


Summary


The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, under delegated authority from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), proposes to extend for three years, with revision, the following mandatory reports, for implementation in 2008:


  1. the Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9C; OMB No. 7100-0128),

  2. the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for Large Bank Holding Companies (FRY-9LP; OMB No. 7100-0128), and

(3) the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for Small Bank Holding Companies (FRY-9SP; OMB No. 7100-0128).


The Federal Reserve also proposes to extend for three years, without revision, the following mandatory reports:


  1. the Financial Statements for Employee Stock Ownership Plan Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9ES; OMB No. 7100-0128) and

  2. the Supplement to the Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies (FR Y-9CS; OMB No. 7100-0128).


Pursuant to the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended, the Federal Reserve requires bank holding companies (BHCs) to provide standardized financial statements to fulfill the Federal Reserve’s statutory obligation to supervise these organizations. BHCs file the

FR Y-9C and FR Y-9LP quarterly, the FR Y-9SP semiannually, the FR Y-9ES annually, and the FR Y-9CS on a schedule that is determined when the supplement is used.


The Federal Reserve proposes to modify information collected on the FR Y-9C to: report interest and fee income on and the quarterly average for 1-4 family residential mortgages and income on and the quarterly average for all other real estate loans separately from income on and the quarterly average for all other loans; add new data items for restructured troubled mortgages and mortgage loans in process of foreclosure; expand the schedule for closed-end 1-4 family residential mortgage banking activity to include originations, purchases, and sales of open-end mortgages as well as closed-end and open-end mortgage loan repurchases and indemnifications during the quarter; modify the trading account definition and enhance information available on instruments accounted for under the fair value option on the loan schedule and the fair value measurements schedule; revise the schedule on trading assets and liabilities; clarify the instructions for reporting credit derivative data in the risk-based capital schedule and make a corresponding change to the schedule itself; modify the threshold for reporting significant items of other noninterest income and expense in the income statement; and revise the instructions for reporting fully insured brokered deposits in the deposit liabilities schedule to conform to the instructions for reporting time deposits in this schedule. Most of the proposed revisions would take effect as of March 31, 2008. In response to public comments, certain new data items would be optional for March 31, 2008, but required for June 30, 2008, to allow institutions ample time to change their programs and systems.


The Federal Reserve proposes to modify the FR Y-9LP to: collect certain data from all institutions that choose, under generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), to apply a fair value option to one or more financial instruments and one or more classes of servicing assets and liabilities; add two data items on cash flows related to business acquisitions and divestitures; and combine two cash flow statement items into a single net item. The proposed changes would be effective as of March 31, 2008.


The Federal Reserve proposes to modify the FR Y-9SP to also collect certain data from all institutions that choose, under GAAP, to apply a fair value option to one or more financial instruments and one or more classes of servicing assets and liabilities. The proposed changes would be effective as of June 30, 2008.


The Federal Reserve requests latitude to modify proposed revisions to the FR Y-9 family of reports to be consistent with any revisions to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Reports) (FFIEC 031 & 041; OMB No. 7100-0036) proposed by the FFIEC for implementation in 2008. Also, as is customary for Call Report changes, institutions will be advised that they may report reasonable estimates for any new or revised data item in their FR Y-9C report for March 31, 2008, if the information is not readily available.


A copy of the proposed reporting forms, marked to show the revisions, is provided in the attachment. The total current annual burden for the FR Y-9 family of reports is estimated to be 221,013 hours. The overall reporting burden is estimated to increase by 12,288 hours with the proposed revisions.


Background and Justification


The FR Y-9C, FR Y-9LP, and FR Y‑9SP are standardized financial statements for the consolidated BHC and its parent. The FR Y-9ES is a financial statement for BHCs that are Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs). The Federal Reserve also has the authority to use the FR Y-9CS, a free form supplement, to collect any additional information deemed to be critical and needed in an expedited manner. The FR Y‑9 family of reports historically has been, and continues to be, the primary source of financial information on BHCs between on-site inspections. Financial information from these reports is used to detect emerging financial problems, to review performance and conduct pre-inspection analysis, to monitor and evaluate capital adequacy, to evaluate BHC mergers and acquisitions, and to analyze a BHC's overall financial condition to ensure safe and sound operations.


Description of the Information Collection


FR Y-9C


The FR Y-9C consists of standardized financial statements similar to the Call Report filed by commercial banks. The FR Y‑9C collects consolidated data from BHCs. The FR Y-9C is filed by top-tier BHCs with total consolidated assets of $500 million or more.1


Proposed Revisions Related to Call Report Revisions


The Federal Reserve proposes to make the following revisions to the FR Y-9C to parallel proposed changes to the Call Report. BHCs have commented that changes should be made to the FR Y-9C in a manner consistent with changes to the Call Report to reduce reporting burden.


Revisions Related to 1-4 Family Residential Mortgage Loans


Since year-end 2000, FR Y-9C respondent holdings of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans in domestic offices have increased nearly 118 percent to more than $2.1 trillion. Nearly all of FR Y-9C respondents hold such mortgages within the consolidated entity. 1-4 family residential mortgages continue to represent the single largest category of loans held by FR Y-9C respondents. As a percentage of total loans and leases, 1-4 family residential mortgages have grown from 26 percent at year-end 2000 to 35 percent at year‑end 2006. Similarly, 1-4 family residential mortgages have increased from less than 15 percent of total assets to over 17 percent of total assets during this period. In addition, there has been a growing use of nontraditional residential mortgage products and an increasing number of BHC subsidiaries offering such products. The volume of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans extended to subprime borrowers has increased. At the same time, home prices have stagnated or declined in many areas of the country.


The higher concentration of 1-4 family residential mortgages across the industry and the changing risk profile of the loans with which BHCs are associated in some capacity has led the Federal Reserve to evaluate the information they collect about such loans in the FR Y-9C. As a result, the Federal Reserve proposes several reporting changes that are intended to enhance its ability to monitor the nature and extent of BHCs’ involvement with 1-4 family residential mortgage loans as originators, holders, sellers, and servicers of such loans.


Interest and Fee Income and Quarterly Average


At present, BHCs include the total amount of interest and fee income on their loans secured by real estate (in domestic offices) in the income statement (Schedule HI, data item 1.a.(1), Interest and fee income on loans: in domestic offices) and include the quarterly average

for these loans (in domestic offices) in the quarterly averages schedule (Schedule HC-K, data item 3, Loans and leases). The Federal Reserve proposes to split these existing income statement and quarterly average items into separate data items for the interest and fee income on and the quarterly averages of, Loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties, All other loans secured by real estate, and All other loans in domestic offices.


Restructured Mortgages


BHCs currently report information on the amount of loans whose terms have been modified, because of deterioration in the financial condition of the borrower, to provide for a reduction of either interest or principal. When such restructured loans are past due thirty days or more or are in nonaccrual status in relation to their modified terms as of the report date, they are reported in Schedule HC-N, Memorandum item 1. In contrast, when such restructured loans are less than thirty days past due and are not otherwise in nonaccrual status, that is, when they are deemed to be in compliance with their modified terms as discussed in the FR Y-9C reporting instructions, BHCs report the amount of these loans in the loan schedule (Schedule HC-C, Memorandum item 1). However, the instructions advise respondents to exclude restructured loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties from these memoranda items.

This exclusion was incorporated into the reporting instructions because the original disclosure requirements for troubled debt restructurings under GAAP provided that creditors need not disclose information on restructured real estate loans secured by 1‑4 family residential properties.2 However, this exemption from disclosure under GAAP has since been eliminated.3 Accordingly, the Federal Reserve proposes to add a new memorandum item to Schedule HC-C, for Loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties, that have been restructured and are in compliance with their modified terms and a new memorandum item to Schedule HC-N, for restructured Loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties, that are past due 30 days or more or in nonaccrual status.


Mortgages in Foreclosure


BHCs currently report data on the amount of loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties that are past due thirty days or more or are in nonaccrual status (Schedule HC-N, data item 1.c) with the amount of foreclosed 1-4 family residential properties held by the BHC included in real estate acquired in satisfaction of debts previously contracted (Schedule HC-M, data item 13.a). However, regardless of whether the BHC owns the loans or services the loans for others, BHCs do not report the volume of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans that are in process of foreclosure. These data are an important indicator of potential additions to the BHC’s

other real estate owned in the near term. The Federal Reserve proposes to add two new memoranda items for the amount of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans owned by the BHC and serviced by the BHC that are in foreclosure as of the quarter-end report date. Mortgage loans in foreclosure would be defined as those for which the legal process of foreclosure has been initiated, but for which the foreclosure process has not yet been resolved at quarter-end.4 These memoranda items would be added to the loan schedule (Schedule HC-C) and the servicing, securitization, and asset sale activities schedule (Schedule HC-S), with the carrying amount (before any applicable allowance for loan and leases losses) reported in the former memorandum item and the principal amount reported in the latter memorandum item. Reporting mortgage loans as being in process of foreclosure will not exempt those loans owned by the BHC from being reported as past due or nonaccrual, as appropriate, in Schedule HC-N, and will not exempt those loans serviced by the BHC that are reported in Schedule HC-S, data item 1, from being reported as past due, as appropriate, in that schedule.


Open-end 1-4 Family Residential Mortgage Banking Activities


BHCs with $1 billion or more in total assets and smaller BHCs that meet certain criteria currently provide data on originations, purchases, and sales of closed-end 1-4 family residential mortgage loans during the quarter arising from their mortgage banking activities in Schedule HC-P. These BHCs also report the amount of closed-end 1-4 family residential mortgage loans held for sale at quarter-end as well as the noninterest income for the quarter from the sale, securitization, and servicing of these mortgage loans. Data (other than for noninterest income) are provided separately for first lien and junior lien mortgages in Schedule HC-P. About 450 BHCs complete Schedule HC-P, 110 of which have total assets of less than $1 billion. However, this information does not provide a complete picture of BHCs’ mortgage banking activities since it excludes open-end 1-4 family residential mortgages extended under lines of credit. From year-end 2001 to year-end 2006, FR Y-9C respondent holdings of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans extended under lines of credit nearly tripled to about $470 billion. Accordingly, the Federal Reserve proposes to expand the scope of Schedule HC-P to include separate data items for originations, purchases, and sales of open-end 1-4 family residential mortgages during the quarter; the amount of such mortgages held for sale at quarter-end; and noninterest income for the quarter from the sale, securitization, and servicing of open-end residential mortgages. When reporting the originations, purchases, sales, and mortgages held for sale, BHCs would report both the total commitment under the line of credit and the principal amount funded5 under the line. For BHCs with less than $1 billion in total assets, the criteria used to determine whether Schedule HC-P must be completed would be modified to include both closed-end and open-end 1-4 family residential mortgage bank activities.

Mortgage Repurchases and Indemnifications


As a result of their 1-4 family residential mortgage banking activities, BHCs may be obligated to repurchase mortgage loans that they have sold or otherwise indemnify the loan purchaser against loss because of borrower defaults, loan defects, other breaches of representations and warranties, or for other reasons, thereby exposing BHCs to additional risk. Such information is not currently captured in Schedule HC‑P. Therefore, the Federal Reserve proposes to add four new data items to Schedule HC-P to collect data on mortgage loan repurchases and indemnifications during the quarter. For both closed-end first lien and closed‑end junior lien 1-4 family residential mortgages, BHCs would report the principal amount of mortgages repurchased or indemnified. For open-end 1‑4 family residential mortgages, BHCs would report both the total commitment under the line of credit and the principal amount funded under the line for mortgages repurchased or indemnified. This revision would be optional for March 31, 2008, and required for June 30, 2008.


Trading Assets and Liabilities and Other Assets and Liabilities

Accounted for Under a Fair Value Option


Reporting of Assets and Liabilities under the Fair Value Option as Trading


On February 15, 2007, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Statement No. 159, The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities (FAS 159), which is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. Earlier adoption of FAS 159 was permitted as of the beginning of an earlier fiscal year, provided the BHC (i) also adopts all of the requirements of FASB Statement No. 157, Fair Value Measurements (FAS 157) at the early adoption date of FAS 159; (ii) has not yet issued a financial statement or submitted FR Y-9C data for any period of that fiscal year; and (iii) satisfies certain other conditions. Thus, a BHC with a calendar-year fiscal year may have voluntarily adopted FAS 159 as of January 1, 2007. Changes in the fair value of financial assets and liabilities to which the fair value option is applied are reported in current earnings as is currently the case for trading assets and liabilities. The Federal Reserve understands that some institutions would like to reclassify certain loans elected to be accounted for under the fair value option as trading assets. The FR Y-9C reporting instructions currently do not specifically allow loans to be reported as trading assets.


Under FAS 159, all securities within the scope of FASB Statement No. 115, Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities (FAS 115), that a BHC has elected to report at fair value under a fair value option should be classified as trading securities. Recognizing the provisions of FAS 159, the Federal Reserve proposes the following clarification to the reporting instructions, including the Glossary entry for Trading Account.

BHCs may classify assets (other than securities within the scope of FAS 115 for which a fair value option is elected) and liabilities as trading if the BHC applies fair value accounting, with changes in fair value reported in current earnings, and manages these assets and liabilities as trading positions, subject to the controls and applicable regulatory guidance related to trading activities. For example, a


BHC would generally not classify a loan to which it has applied the fair value option as a trading asset unless the BHC holds the loan, which it manages as a trading position, for one of the following purposes: (1) for market making activities, including such activities as accumulating loans for sale or securitization, (2) to benefit from actual or expected price movements, or (3) to lock in arbitrage profits.


Revision of Certain Fair Value Measurement and Fair Value Option Information


Effective for the March 31, 2007, reporting date, the Federal Reserve started collecting information on certain assets and liabilities measured at fair value on Schedule HC-Q, Financial Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value. Schedule HC-Q was intended to be consistent with the disclosure and other requirements contained in FAS 157 and FAS 159. Based on the the Federal Reserve’s review of initial industry practice and inquiries from BHCs, the Federal Reserve has determined that industry practice for preparing and reporting FAS 157 disclosures has evolved differently than the process for the information collected on Schedule HC-Q. This divergence has resulted in unnecessary burden and less transparency for the affected BHCs in two material respects.


First, Schedule HC-Q does not allow BHCs to separately identify each of the three levels of fair value measurements prescribed by FAS 157. The Federal Reserve included Level 1 fair value measurements in the total fair value amount in column A of Schedule HC-Q as a means of minimizing reporting burden. However, the omission of a separate column on Schedule HC-Q for Level 1 fair value measurements has increased the time BHC management spends preparing and reviewing Schedule HC-Q because the fair value disclosures on Schedule HC-Q differ from those in the BHCs’ other financial statements. Second, Schedule HC-Q does not allow BHCs to separately identify any amounts by which the gross fair values of assets and liabilities reported for Level 2 and 3 fair value measurements included in columns B and C have been offset (netted) in the determination of the total fair value reported on the balance sheet (Schedule HC), which is disclosed in column A of Schedule HC-Q. Based on a review of industry practice, these disclosures are commonly made in the BHCs’ other financial statements.

To reduce confusion related to the differences in industry practice and the FR Y-9C, the Federal Reserve proposes to add two columns to Schedule HC-Q to allow BHCs to report any netting adjustments and Level 1 fair value measurements separately in a manner consistent with industry practice. The new columns would be captioned column B, Amounts Netted in the Determination of Total Fair Value Reported on Schedule HC, and column C, Level 1 Fair Value Measurements. Existing column B, Level 2 Fair Value Measurements, and column C, Level 3 Fair Value Measurements, of Schedule HC-Q would be recaptioned as columns D and E, respectively. Column A would remain unchanged.


The Federal Reserve has also given further consideration to the information that will be necessary to effectively assess the safety and soundness of BHCs that utilize the fair value option pursuant to FAS 159. Based on this assessment, the Federal Reserve proposes to amend certain other FR Y-9C schedules to improve the Federal Reserve’s ability to make comparisons between entities that elect a fair value option and those that do not. The primary focus of these proposed changes is to enhance the information provided by BHCs that elect the fair value option for loans. The proposed changes are based on the principal objectives for disclosures and the required disclosures in FAS 159, which were intended to provide “information to enable users to understand the differences between fair value and contractual cash flows” and to provide information “that would have been disclosed if the fair value option had not been elected.”


Specifically, the Federal Reserve proposes to add data items to Schedule HC-C, Loans and Leases, to collect data on the loans reported in this schedule that are measured at fair value under a fair value option: (1) the fair value of such loans measured by major loan category and (2) the unpaid principal balance of such loans by major loan category.


Because Schedule HC‑C provides data on loans held for investment and for sale, the Federal Reserve proposes to add the same data items to Schedule HC-D, Trading Assets and Liabilities, for loans measured at fair value under a fair value option that are designated as held for trading. The Federal Reserve also proposes to add a new data item to Schedule HC-D, Other trading liabilities, in recognition of a BHC’s ability to elect to measure certain liabilities at fair value (for example, repurchase agreements) in accordance with FAS 159 and designate them as held for trading.

The Federal Reserve proposes to add two data items to Schedule HC-N, Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets, to collect data on the fair value and unpaid principal balance of loans measured at fair value under a fair value option that are past due or in nonaccrual status. The data items would follow the existing three column breakdown on Schedule HC-N that BHCs utilize to report all other past due and nonaccrual loans. Since trading assets are not currently reported on Schedule HC-N, the Federal Reserve proposes to add similar data items to Schedule HC-D to collect the total fair value and unpaid principal balance of loans ninety days or more past due that are classified as trading based on the loan’s contractual maturity. This revision would be optional for March 31, 2008, and required for June 30, 2008.


Finally, the Federal Reserve proposes to add memoranda items to Schedule HI, Income Statement, to collect information on: (1) net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on assets that are reported at fair value under a fair value option, (2) estimated net gains (losses) on loans attributable to changes in instrument-specific credit risk, (3) net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on liabilities that are reported at fair value under a fair value option, and (4) estimated net gains (losses) on liabilities attributable to changes in the instrument-specific credit risk.


Other Revisions to Information Collected on Trading Assets and Liabilities


Since 2000, the total trading assets reported by FR Y-9C respondents has increased approximately 156 percent to over $1.4 trillion or nearly 11 percent of total industry assets as of March 31, 2007. In terms of concentrations, approximately 41 percent of total trading assets now are either reported in the category of Trading assets held in foreign offices (approximately 27 percent of total trading assets) or Other trading assets in domestic offices (approximately 14 percent of total trading assets). Schedule HC-D, Trading Assets and Liabilities, currently does not provide any specific detail on the trading assets held in foreign offices or other trading assets in domestic offices. This lack of detail limits the Federal Reserve’s ability to assess BHC exposures to market, liquidity, credit, operational, and other risks posed by these assets. To appropriately assess the safety and soundness of BHCs with these exposures and BHCs with significant concentrations in trading assets, the Federal Reserve proposes three revisions to Schedule HC-D.


First, the Federal Reserve proposes to eliminate the single data item for trading assets in foreign offices and revise the schedule to include separate columns for the consolidated BHC and for domestic offices. This will provide detail on the assets in foreign offices in a manner consistent with disclosures about trading assets throughout the BHC.


Second, the Federal Reserve proposes to change the reporting threshold for Schedule HC-D. At present, a BHC must complete Schedule HC-D each quarter during a calendar year if the BHC reported a quarterly average for trading assets of $2 million or more in Schedule HC-K, data item 4.a, for any quarter of the preceding calendar year. As proposed, Schedule HC-D would be completed in any quarter when the quarterly average for trading assets was $2 million or more in Schedule HC-K, data item 4.a, in any of the four preceding quarters. This change will enable the Federal Reserve to more quickly and readily monitor the composition and risk exposures of the trading accounts of BHCs that become more significantly involved in trading activities. During 2006, eighty-nine BHCs reported average trading assets of $2 million or more in any quarter of the year.


Third, the Federal Reserve proposes to require BHCs with average trading assets of $1 billion or more in any of the four preceding quarters to provide additional detail on trading assets and liabilities included in the currently collected trading asset and liability categories. These BHCs would provide additional breakouts for asset-backed securities by major category, collateralized debt obligations (both synthetic and non-synthetic), retained interests in securitizations, equity securities (both with and without readily determinable fair values), and loans held pending securitization. In addition, these BHCs would be required to provide a description of and the fair value of any type of trading asset or liability in the Other trading assets and Other trading liabilities categories that is greater than $25,000 and exceeds 25 percent of the amount reported in that trading category. This revision would be optional for March 31, 2008, and required for June 30, 2008.


Reporting Credit Derivative Data for Risk-based Capital Purposes


For credit derivative contracts that are covered by the Federal Reserve’s risk-based capital standards, the FR Y-9C reporting instructions require BHCs to report these credit derivatives in data item 52, All other off-balance sheet liabilities, of Schedule HC-R, Regulatory Capital, unless the credit derivatives represent recourse arrangements or direct credit substitutes and are reported in one of the preceding data items in the Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items section of the schedule. This reporting approach was developed to enable BHCs that sold credit protection and held the credit derivative to apply a 100 percent risk weight to the notional amount consistent with the risk-based capital treatment of standby letters of credit and guarantees. At present, Schedule HC-R, data item 54, Derivative contracts, specifically excludes credit derivatives.


However, this reporting approach does not consider that some credit derivative positions are subject to a counterparty credit risk charge, which is calculated for other derivative positions in data item 54, even if the credit derivatives are held by a BHC that is subject to the market risk capital rules. The Federal Reserve also understands that credit derivatives often are included in bilateral netting arrangements. When derivatives are subject to such an arrangement, the instructions to Schedule HC-R, data item 54, permit a BHC to report a net amount representing its exposure to a counterparty for all derivative transactions under the bilateral netting arrangement with that counterparty. However, by instructing a BHC not to report its counterparty credit risk exposure for credit derivatives in Schedule HC-R, data item 54, the Federal Reserve is, in effect, requiring the BHC to separate its exposures resulting from credit derivatives from its net exposure to a counterparty. As a consequence, the BHC is unable to recognize the netting benefit in its risk-based capital calculation.


The Federal Reserve proposes to modify the reporting instructions for Schedule HC-R to allow the reporting of the credit equivalent amount of credit derivatives subject to the counterparty credit risk charge in data item 54 of the schedule.


Revision of Reporting Threshold for Other Noninterest Income and

Other Noninterest Expense


In 2001, the Federal Reserve changed the threshold for reporting detail on the components of Other noninterest income, included in Schedule HI, data item 5.l, and Other noninterest expense, reported in Schedule HI, data item 7.d, to require BHCs to separately disclose on Schedule HI, Memoranda items 6 and 7, the description and amount of any component included in other noninterest income and other noninterest expense that exceeded 1 percent of the sum of interest income and noninterest income. Since that time, the Federal Reserve has monitored BHC disclosures of the types of noninterest income and noninterest expenses in excess of this threshold to assess the safety and soundness considerations associated with the changing sources of these income and expense streams. Based on this review, the Federal Reserve has determined that the current threshold does not provide sufficient information on the sources of BHC noninterest income and noninterest expenses to adequately address their safety and soundness concerns. As a result, the Federal Reserve proposes to change the threshold for reporting detail information on the components of other noninterest income and other noninterest expense.


Prior to 2001, BHCs were required to separately disclose the description and amount of any data item included in other noninterest income that exceeded 10 percent of other noninterest income and any data item included in other noninterest expense that exceeded 10 percent of other noninterest expense. The Federal Reserve has determined that thresholds based on a percentage of other noninterest income and other noninterest expense are more relevant criteria for determining when a BHC should provide more detail on the components of other noninterest income or other noninterest expense, respectively. The Federal Reserve proposes to change the threshold to require BHCs to separately disclose the description and amount of any data item included in other noninterest income that is greater than $25,000 and exceeds 3 percent of other noninterest income and any data item included in other noninterest expense that is greater than $25,000 and exceeds 3 percent of other noninterest expense. This threshold is intended to initially result in a level of disclosure detail that is comparable to the current 1 percent of interest income plus noninterest income threshold. It is also expected to provide more relevant disclosures than the current threshold as the amounts reported in noninterest income and noninterest expense change over time.


In addition, based on a review of recent BHC disclosures of components of other noninterest income and other noninterest expense reported in Schedule HI, Memoranda items 6 and 7, the Federal Reserve proposes to add one new preprinted caption for other noninterest income and four new preprinted captions for other noninterest expense to help BHCs comply with the disclosure requirements. As with the existing preprinted captions for other noninterest income and other noninterest expense, BHCs are only required to use these descriptions and provide the amounts for these components when the amounts included in other noninterest income or other noninterest expense exceed the reporting threshold. The new preprinted other noninterest income caption is bank card and credit card interchange fees. The new preprinted noninterest expense captions are accounting and auditing expenses, consulting and advisory expenses, automated teller machine (ATM) and interchange expenses, and telecommunications expenses.6


Reporting Brokered Time Deposits Participated Out by the Broker


The Federal Reserve revised the instructions for Schedule HC-E, data items 1.d, Time deposits of less than $100,000, 1.e, Total time deposits of $100,000 or more, held in domestic offices of commercial bank subsidiaries, 2.d, Time deposits of less than $100,000 and 2.e., Time deposits of $100,000 or more, held in domestic offices of subsidiary depository institutions other than commercial banks, in March 2007, so that brokered time deposits issued in denominations of $100,000 or more that are participated out by the broker in shares of less than $100,000 would be reported in data items 1.d and 2.d rather than in data items 1.e and 2.e. However, the conforming instructional revision to Schedule HC-E, Memoranda items 1, 2, and 3, was not made to the FR Y-9C for collecting information on maturity breakdowns of brokered deposits and time deposits, which means that these participated brokered time deposits continue to be

reported as brokered deposits of greater than $100,000 rather than brokered deposits of less than $100,000. Consistent reporting of these brokered time deposits across these Schedule HC-E memoranda items is needed for purposes of measuring a BHC’s non-core liabilities. Therefore, the Federal Reserve proposes to revise Schedule HC-E, Memoranda items 1, 2, and 3, so that brokered time deposits issued in denominations of $100,000 or more that are participated out by the broker in shares of less than $100,000 are reported in Memoranda items 1 and 2 and not reported in Memorandum item 3.

FR Y-9LP


The FR Y-9LP includes standardized financial statements filed quarterly on a parent company only basis from each BHC that files the FR Y-9C. In addition, for tiered BHCs, a separate FR Y-9LP must be filed for each lower tier BHC.


Proposed Revisions


The Federal Reserve proposes to make the following revisions to the FR Y-9LP effective as of March 31, 2008. These proposed revisions are not related to the revisions proposed to the Call Report.


Reporting on Fair Value Measurements and the Use of the Fair Value Option


On September 15, 2006, FASB issued FAS 157, which is effective for BHCs and other entities for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. The fair value measurements standard provides guidance on how to measure fair value and describes the type of inputs used to measure fair value based on a three‑level hierarchy for all assets and liabilities that are re-measured at fair value on a recurring basis.7


As previously mentioned, on February 15, 2007, FASB issued FAS 159, which is effective for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. The FASB’s Fair Value Option standard allows BHCs and other entities to report certain financial assets and liabilities at fair value with the changes in fair value included in earnings.


FAS 159 can be applied on a contract by contract basis. Currently there is no means to determine to what extent the reporting entity is applying this standard and the basis used to value assets and liabilities. Therefore, the Federal Reserve proposes to add two new memoranda items to Schedule PC, Parent Company Only Balance Sheet, and one new memorandum item to Schedule PI, Income Statement, that would be completed by BHCs that have adopted FAS 157 and have elected to account for financial instruments or servicing assets and liabilities on the books of the parent BHC at fair value under a fair value option. The Federal Reserve proposes to add to Schedule PC, Memorandum item 1, Financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value, collecting data in Memoranda items 1.a, Total assets and 1.b, Total liabilities. The Federal Reserve proposes to add to Schedule PI, Memorandum item 5, Net change in fair values of financial instruments accounted for under a fair value option.


Revisions Related to the Reporting of Cash Flows


The Federal Reserve proposes to add two new data items to Schedule PI-A, Cash Flow Statement, Part II, Cash Flows from Investing Activities for Outlays for business acquisitions and Proceeds from business divestitures. Collection of this information is important for the analysis of the consolidation of the banking industry. Specifically, this information would provide the Federal Reserve a better understanding not only of the effects of mergers of whole entities, but also of acquisitions or disposals of major business operations as part of BHCs' corporate strategies. In addition, BHCs typically provide similar information in public financial statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). However, such information provided by BHCs in their SEC filings is not standardized across filers, is not necessarily provided by all BHCs involved in acquisitions and divestitures, and is not available from non-public BHCs.


Based on industry comment on ways to reduce reporting burden, the Federal Reserve also proposes to combine the reporting of two data items on Schedule PI-A, Part III, Cash Flows from Financing Activities. Data item 1, Proceeds from purchased funds and other short-term borrowings, and data item 2, Repayments of purchased funds and other short-term borrowings, would be combined into a single data item for Net change in purchased funds and other short-term borrowings. The Federal Reserve has determined that collection of these data items on a gross basis is no longer needed.


FR Y-9SP


The FR Y-9SP is a parent company only financial statement filed by smaller BHCs. Respondents include BHCs with total consolidated assets of less than $500 million. This form is a simplified or abbreviated version of the more extensive parent company only financial statement for large BHCs (FR Y-9LP). This report is designed to obtain basic balance sheet and income information for the parent company, information on intangible assets, and information on intercompany transactions.


Proposed Revisions


The Federal Reserve proposes to make the following revisions to the FR Y-9SP effective as of June 30, 2008. These proposed revisions are not related to the revisions proposed to the Call Report.


Reporting on Fair Value Measurements and the Use of the Fair Value Option


The Federal Reserve proposes to add two new memoranda items to Schedule SC, Balance Sheet, and one new memorandum item to Schedule SI, Income Statement, that would be completed by BHCs that have adopted FAS 157 and have elected to account for financial instruments or servicing assets and liabilities on the books of the parent BHC at fair value under a fair value option. The Federal Reserve proposes to add to Schedule SC, Memorandum item 3, Financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value, collecting data in Memoranda items 3.a, Total assets, and 3.b, Total liabilities. The Federal Reserve proposes to add to Schedule SI, Memorandum item 4, Net change in fair values of financial instruments accounted for under a fair value option.


FR Y-9ES


The FR Y-9ES collects financial information from ESOPs that are also BHCs on their benefit plan activities. It consists of four schedules: Statement of Changes in Net Assets Available for Benefits, Statement of Net Assets Available for Benefits, Memoranda, and Notes to the Financial Statements. No revisions are proposed to the FR Y-9ES. The Federal Reserve does not propose any revisions to the FR Y-9ES.

Frequency


No changes are proposed to the reporting frequency of the FR Y-9 family of reports. The current reporting frequencies provide adequate timely data to meet the analytical and supervisory needs of the Federal Reserve.


Time Schedule for Information Collection


The FR Y-9C and FR Y-9LP are filed quarterly as of the end of March, June, September, and December. The filing deadline for the FR Y-9C is forty calendar days after the March 31, June 30, and September 30 as-of dates. The filing deadline for the FR Y-9C is forty-five calendar days after the December 31 as-of date. The filing deadline for the FR Y-9LP is forty-five calendar days after the quarter-end as-of date.


The FR Y-9SP report must be submitted within forty-five calendar days after the as-of date. The FR Y-9SP is reported semiannually as of the end of June and December. The annual FR Y-9ES is collected as of December 31 and submitted to the Federal Reserve Banks by July 31, unless an extension is granted for filing by October 15.

The data from the FR Y-9 family of reports that are not given confidential treatment are available to the public on the FFIEC website at www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/nichome.aspx and through the National Technical Information Service.


Legal Status


The Board’s Legal Division has determined that the FR Y-9 family of reports are authorized by Section 5(c) of the Bank Holding Company Act [12 U.S.C. 1844(c)]. Overall, the Board does not consider the financial data in these reports to be confidential. However, a respondent may request confidential treatment pursuant to sections (b)(4), (b)(6), and (b)(8)of the Freedom of Information Act [5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), (b)(6), and (b)(8)]. The applicability of these exemptions would need to be determined on a case-by-case basis.


Consultation Outside the Agency


On November 9, 2007, the Federal Reserve published a notice in the Federal Register (72 FR 63580) requesting public comment for sixty days on the extension, with revision, of the FR Y-9C, FR Y-9LP, and FR Y-9 SP reports. The Federal Register notice also covers the extension, without revision, of the FR Y-9ES and FR Y-9CS. The comment period for this notice expired on January 8, 2008. The Federal Reserve received four comment letters on this proposal, with all of the comments addressing only changes proposed to the FR Y-9C report. In addition, five other comments were received by the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on proposed revisions to the Call Reports that parallel the proposed revisions to the FR Y-9C and are taken into consideration for this proposal. On February 27, 2008, the Federal Reserve published a final notice in the Federal Register (73 FR 10442).


Sensitive Questions


This collection of information contains no questions of a sensitive nature, as defined by OMB guidelines.


Estimates of Respondent Burden


The current annual reporting burden for the FR Y-9 family of reports is estimated to be 221,013 hours and would increase to 233,301 hours as shown in the following table. The average estimated hours per response for FR Y-9C filers would increase from 38.35 hours to 40.50 hours resulting from an increase of 2.15 hours for proposed new data items. The Federal Reserve anticipates that proposed new data items related to Schedule HC-D would be applicable to only a small number of respondents and estimates that less than half of the respondents would be required to provide new information on open-end 1-4 family residential mortgage loans and additional information on fair value reporting. The Federal Reserve estimates that most respondents would be required to provide new income, quarterly average, restructurings, and process of foreclosure information for 1-4 family residential mortgages. The average estimated hours per response for FR Y-9LP filers would increase from 4.75 hours to 5.25 hours resulting in a net increase of 0.5 hours for proposed revisions. The Federal Reserve anticipates that proposed new data items related to the fair value option may be applicable to up to three fourths of respondents and estimates that less than half of the respondents would be required to report the proposed new cash flow items. The average estimated hours per response for FR Y-9SP filers would increase from 5.10 hours to 5.25 hours resulting in a net increase of 0.15 hours for proposed revisions. The Federal Reserve anticipates that proposed new data items related to the fair value option may be applicable to up to one fourth of respondents. The revised total burden for the FR Y-9 family of reports would represent less than 4 percent of total Federal Reserve System annual burden.




Number

of

respondents

Annual

frequency

Estimated

average hours

per response

Estimated

annual burden hours






Current





FR Y-9C

988

4

38.35

151,559

FR Y-9LP

1,222

4

4.75

23,218

FR Y-9SP

4,489

2

5.10

45,788

FR Y-9ES

96

1

0.50

48

FR Y-9CS

200

4

0.50

400

Total




221,013






Proposed





FR Y-9C

988

4

40.50

160,056

FR Y-9LP

1,222

4

5.25

25,662

FR Y-9SP

4,489

2

5.25

47,135

FR Y-9ES

96

1

0.50

48

FR Y-9CS

200

4

0.50

400

Total




233,301

Change




+12,288


The total cost to the public is estimated to increase from the current level of $13,625,451 to $14,383,006 for the revised BHC reports.8


Estimate of Cost to the Federal Reserve System


Current costs to the Federal Reserve System for collecting and processing these reports are estimated to be $1,831,697 per year. With the revisions the estimated costs will increase to $1,890,981 per year. The one‑time costs to implement the revised reports are estimated to be $72,157.


1 Under certain circumstances defined in the General Instructions, BHCs under $500 million may be required to file the FR Y-9C.

2 See Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 15, Accounting by Debtors and Creditors for Troubled Debt Restructurings, footnote 25.


3 See Financial Accounting Standards Board Statement No. 114, Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan, paragraph 22(f).


4 For banks that participate in the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) National Delinquency Survey, the time at which mortgage loans would become reportable as being in process of foreclosure for FR Y-9C reporting purposes would be the same time at which mortgage loans become reportable as being in “foreclosure inventory” for MBA survey purposes (although the dollar amount of such loans would be reported in the FR Y-9C while the number of such loans are reported for MBA survey purposes).

5 Total commitment would be defined as the total amount of the lines of credit granted to customers at the time the open-end credits were originated. For retail and wholesale originations of such open-end loans, principal amount funded would be defined as the initial funding made to customers on newly established lines of credit. In addition, for open-end loans purchased, sold, held for sale, and repurchased or indemnified, principal amount funded would be defined as the principal balance outstanding of loans extended under lines of credit at the transaction date or at quarter-end, as appropriate.


6 The reporting instructions will clarify the definition of telecommunications expenses and note that for bundled services, institutions should report expenses that reflect a single charge for grouped or “bundled” services in the item that most closely describes the predominant type of expense incurred, and that this categorization should be used consistently over time.

7 The FASB’s three-level fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3). Level 1 inputs are quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the reporting BHC has the ability to access at the measurement date (e.g., the FR Y-9LP or FR Y-9SP reporting date). Level 2 inputs are inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. Level 3 inputs are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability.

8 Total cost to the public was estimated using the following formula. Percent of staff time, multiplied by annual burden hours, multiplied by hourly rate: 30% Clerical @ $25, 45% Managerial or Technical @ $55, 15% Senior Management @ $100, and 10% Legal Counsel @ $144. Hourly rate estimates for each occupational group are averages using data from the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, news release.



16


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