FR4021_201006_omb

FR4021_201006_omb.docx

Notification of Nonfinancial Data Processing Activities

OMB: 7100-0306

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Supporting Statement for the

Notification of Nonfinancial Data Processing Activities

(FR 4021; OMB No. 7100-0306)

Summary

The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, under delegated authority from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), proposes to extend, without revision, the Notification of Nonfinancial Data Processing Activities (FR 4021; OMB No. 7100-0306), which relates to the permissible data processing, storage, and transmission activities (collectively, data processing activities) of bank holding companies (BHC) under the Board’s Regulation Y. Regulation Y limits to 49 percent of revenue the amount of nonfinancial data processing activities that a BHC may conduct in connection with its financial data processing activities.1 Regulation Y also includes a notification process by which a BHC may request the Federal Reserve’s approval to administer this 49-percent revenue limit on nonfinancial data processing activities on a business-line or multiple-company basis, rather than on a company-by-company basis. Such requests are designated as the FR 4021.

It is estimated that two respondents per year will submit notifications associated with this type of data process activity. The total annual burden for FR 4021 is estimated to be four hours. A request may be filed in letter form; there is no reporting form for this information collection.

Background and Justification


The BHC Act (12 U.S.C. §§ 1841 et seq.), as amended by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB Act), permits all BHCs to engage in any nonbanking activity that the Federal Reserve had determined, by order or regulation prior to November 12, 1999, to be so closely related to banking as to be a proper incident thereto2 under section 4(c)(8) of the BHC Act. BHCs must conduct these activities subject to the terms and conditions contained in the Federal Reserve’s regulation or order authorizing the activity, unless the Federal Reserve modifies those terms or conditions.


Prior to enactment of the GLB Act, the Federal Reserve had determined, by regulation, that a BHC may conduct financial data processing activities as an activity that is closely related to banking. In addition, the Federal Reserve had determined that, as an incident to these activities, a BHC could conduct nonfinancial data processing activities so long as the revenues derived from such nonfinancial data processing activities did not constitute more than 30 percent of the revenues derived by the BHC from its financial data processing activities.


In 2003, the Federal Reserve adopted a final rule that raised, from 30 percent to 49 percent, the amount of revenue a BHC engaged in financial data processing activities may derive from nonfinancial data processing activities. The Federal Reserve adopted this change because it would allow BHCs to make more efficient use of their data processing expertise and equipment while ensuring that a majority of the business of each processing subsidiary would be financial data processing. As part of this final rulemaking, the Federal Reserve Board also announced that it had delegated authority to the Board’s General Counsel to grant requests by BHCs to administer the new 49-percent revenue limit on a business-line or multiple-entity basis (rather than on a company-by-company basis as would otherwise be required under the rule).


Description of Information Collection


BHCs submit the FR 4021 notification to request permission to administer the 49-percent revenue limit on nonfinancial data processing activities on a business-line or multiple-entity basis. These notifications, which may be submitted in letter form, should describe the structure of the requesting BHC’s data processing operations, the methodology the BHC proposes to use to administer the 49-percent revenue test and the reasons why the BHC believes that the proposed methodology is appropriate. The Federal Reserve will consider any request in light of all the facts and circumstances, including the inter-relationships between the data processing activities conducted by the BHC’s separate subsidiaries, the holding company’s business or operational reasons for conducting its data processing activities in different subsidiaries, and the level of the BHC’s ownership interest in the individual subsidiaries.


Time Schedule for Information Collection


This information collection contains one notice requirement, which a BHC must file with the Federal Reserve Board’s General Counsel before the BHC seeks to administer the 49-percent revenue limit on a business-line or multiple-entity basis. This notice requirement is mandatory, but only if the BHC seeks the additional flexibility to administer the 49-percent test in this manner, and is triggered by a specific event.

Legal Status


The Board’s Legal Division has determined that 12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(8), (j) and (k) authorize the Federal Reserve to collect this information. A bank may request confidential treatment of the information contained in the notice pursuant to exemption 4 of the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. §552(b)(4)) and the Federal Reserve’s Rules Regarding the Availability of Information (12 CFR Part 261).3


Consultation Outside the Agency


On March 25, 2010, the Federal Reserve published a notice in the Federal Register (75 FR 14440) requesting public comment for 60 days on the extension for three years, without revision, of the FR 4021. The comment period for this notice expired on May 24, 2010. The Federal Reserve did not receive any comments. On June 8, 2010, the Federal Reserve published a final notice in the Federal Register (75 FR 32468).



Estimate of Respondent Burden


The annual respondent burden is estimated to be four hours, as shown in the table below. To date, the Federal Reserve has not received any request by a BHC to administer the 49-percent revenue limit on a business-line or multiple-entity basis. In order to provide a burden estimate to OMB, the Federal Reserve estimates that two respondents per year will take two hours to complete and submit a request.4 This reporting requirement represents less than 1 percent of total Federal Reserve System paperwork burden.


Estimated number of respondents

Estimated annual

frequency

Estimated

average hours

per response

Estimated

total annual burden hours

FR 4021

2

1

2

4


The estimated current annual cost to the public of collecting this information is $306.5


Sensitive Questions


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


Estimate of Cost to the Federal Reserve System

The Federal Reserve System's costs for processing this information are minimal.

1 See 68 Federal Register 68, 493 (Dec. 9, 2003). As a general matter, nonfinancial data processing activities refer to data processing activities involving data that is not financial, banking or economic in nature.

2 See Final Rulemaking, 68 FR 68493

3 See Final Rulemaking, 68 FR 68493.

4 Reports with fewer than 10 respondents per year are not subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA); however, because the reporting requirements pertain to all BHCs, the proposal is processed following PRA procedures.

5 Total cost to the public was estimated using the following formula: percent of staff time, multiplied by annual burden hours, multiplied by hourly rate (25% Administrative or Junior Analyst @ $25, 35% Managerial or Technical @ $55, 15% Senior Management @ $100, and 25% Legal Counsel @ $144). Hourly rate estimates for each occupational group are averages using data from the Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS), Occupational Employment and Wages 2007, http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ocwage.nr0.htm Occupations are defined using the BLS Occupational Classification System. http://www.bls.gov/soc/ .

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