SPST-0143 Forms for Processing Deposit Insurance Claims - 2017

SPST-0143 Forms for Processing Deposit Insurance Claims - 2017.docx

Forms Relating to Processing Deposit Insurance Claims

OMB: 3064-0143

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SUPPORTING STATEMENT

FORMS RELATING TO PROCESSING DEPOSIT INSURANCE CLAIMS

(OMB No. 3064-0143)



INTRODUCTION


The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is requesting a three-year renewal of the Forms Relating to Processing Deposit Insurance Claims (OMB No. 3064-0143). Under this information collection, information is reported to the FDIC on various forms to enable the FDIC to pay insured deposits. The current clearance for the collection expires on May 31, 2017. There is no change in the method or substance of the collection.


  1. JUSTIFICATION


  1. Circumstances and Need


When an insured depository institution (“IDI”) is closed by its primary regulatory authority, the FDIC has the responsibility to pay the insured deposits pursuant to Section 11(a) and (f) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act), 12 U.S.C. 1821(a) and (f), and the FDIC’s regulations, “Deposit Insurance Coverage”, 12 CFR part 330, and “Recordkeeping for Timely Deposit Insurance Determination”, 12 CFR part 370. In the event that the requisite information is not available in a failed IDI’s records, the FDIC will utilize these forms, declarations and affidavits to request the necessary information from a depositor.


Generally, deposits are insured to a maximum of $250,000. This maximum coverage is based on “ownership rights and capacities.” All deposits that are maintained in the same right and capacity are added together and insured up to $250,000 in accordance with the regulations relating to deposit insurance of that particular deposit insurance ownership category. Deposits held in different ownership categories are eligible for $250,000 coverage per category. For example, as a general rule, single ownership accounts are separately insured from trust accounts held for qualified beneficiaries.


At the time of an IDI’s closing, the FDIC obtains information about customer accounts from the IDI’s deposit account records. Based on the IDI’s records, the FDIC makes determinations about insurance coverage for each depositor. Depositors deemed to be uninsured because their deposits are over $250,000 may qualify for additional insurance coverage if they can provide documentation substantiating eligibility.


    1. General Deposit Accounts. The forms, declarations, and affidavits in this collection facilitate customers providing the FDIC with the information that may permit a more comprehensive deposit insurance determination.


    1. Deposit Brokers. A failed IDI’s deposit account records may not reveal the actual owner(s) of a particular deposit account. Rather, the deposit account records may indicate that the deposit was placed at the insured institution by a deposit broker on behalf of one or more third parties. In some cases, the broker’s customer may not be an actual owner of the deposit but merely a “second-tier” deposit broker with its own customers. In turn, these customers could be “third-tier” deposit brokers with their own customers. Deposits held in the name of a deposit broker on behalf of clients are covered by federal deposit insurance (up to the $250,000 limit) the same as if the broker’s clients had deposited the funds directly into the insured institution (assuming that the clients are the actual owners of the deposits). This is called “pass-through” deposit insurance coverage.


In order to analyze ownership interest and provide pass-through insurance coverage, the FDIC must obtain certain information from both first- and lower-tier deposit brokers: (1) evidence that each deposit broker is not an owner but an agent or custodian with respect to some or all of the funds at issue; (2) a list of all parties for whom each deposit broker acted as agent or custodian; and (3) the dollar amount of funds held by each deposit broker for each such party as of the date of the IDI’s failure.


  1. Use of the Information Collected


    1. General Deposit Accounts. The FDIC Division of Resolutions and Receiverships uses the information collected to supplement the failed IDI’s records to make determinations with respect to applying the Deposit Insurance Coverage Rules and expediting the payment of insured deposits to the depositors of failed IDIs.


    1. Deposit Brokers. For each deposit broker account, the first-tier broker provides the FDIC with the requested information about that account (i.e., the list of owners and amount of funds held for each such owner). To the extent that a deposit broker places deposits from sub-tier brokers, the lowest tier brokers provide information about their customers to the broker in the tier above them until the information reaches the first-tier broker for that account. The FDIC does not accept documentation directly from a sub-tier broker because the FDIC’s records will not show them as owners of the deposits.


With the collected information, the FDIC identifies the actual owners of the deposits and the amount of each owner’s interest. The FDIC then will aggregate each owner’s interest with the same owner’s other accounts (if any) at the same failed IDI. For each owner, this aggregate balance will be subject to the $250,000 insurance limit.


  1. Use of Technology to Reduce Burden


    1. General Deposit Accounts. The forms are available on the FDIC’s external web site.

    1. Deposit Brokers. Brokers provide customer information via electronic file. In submitting customer information to the FDIC, a broker must complete certain forms (“Affidavits & Declarations”). The purpose of these forms is to assist the FDIC in determining the actual ownership of the deposit account at the failed insured depository institution. Also, these forms assist the FDIC in classifying an account. For example, the FDIC must distinguish deposits held in the “single ownership” right and capacity from deposits held in the “joint ownership” right and capacity. The forms are available on the FDIC’s external website.


  1. Effort to Identify Duplication


The information collected does not duplicate information existing elsewhere.


  1. Minimizing the Burden on Small Entities


    1. General Deposit Accounts. The forms have been designed to minimize burden on small entities, limiting the questions to the minimum necessary to obtain sufficient information to make insurance determinations.


    1. Deposit Brokers. The FDIC must obtain the requested information from all deposit brokers in order to pay deposit insurance to depositors who are entitled to it. The burden on small deposit brokers as well as large deposit brokers is slight because the information requested by the FDIC is maintained by brokers in the usual course of business.


  1. Consequence of Less Frequent Collections


The forms are required only when an IDI is closed and additional deposit insurance coverage is sought by a depositor or on behalf of a depositor and additional information is needed by the FDIC to make a complete insurance determination.


  1. Special Circumstances


The information collected does not present any special circumstances.



  1. Consultation with Persons outside the FDIC


A notice seeking public comment for a 60-day period was published in the Federal Register on February 9, 2017 (82 FR 10004). No comments were received.


  1. Payment or Gift to Respondents


None.


  1. Confidentiality


The information will be kept private to the extent provided by law.


  1. Information of a Sensitive Nature


The forms related to this information collection contain Personally Identifiable Information1, including name, address, telephone number, customer account number and/or social security number. This information is necessary to assist the FDIC in determining the amount of insured deposit coverage upon a financial institution’s closure.


The Systems of Records Notice associated with this collection may be viewed at the following link: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/rules/2000-4000.html#fdic200030--64--0013. The applicable Privacy Impact Assessment is available at https://www.fdic.gov/about/privacy/assessments.html.



  1. Estimates of Hour Burden and Annualized Cost


2017 Summary of Annual Burden and Internal Cost (3064-0143)

 

Type of Burden

Estimated Number of Respondents

Estimated Time per Response

Frequency of Response

Total Estimated Annual Burden

Total Estimated Annual Internal Cost

COMBINED DEPOSIT BROKERS AND INDIVIDUALS

 

 

 

 

 

 

7200/04 – Declaration for Government Deposit

Reporting

14

0.5

On Occasion

7

$410

7200/05 – Declaration for Revocable Trust

Reporting

165

0.5

On Occasion

83

$4,865

7200/06 – Declaration of Independent Activity

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/07 – Declaration of Independent Activity for Unincorporated Association

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/08 – Declaration for Joint Ownership Deposit

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/09 – Declaration for Testamentary Deposit

Reporting

21

0.5

On Occasion

11

$645

7200/10 – Declaration for Defined Contribution Plan

Reporting

0

1.0

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/11 - Declaration for IRA/KEOGH Deposit

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/12 – Declaration for Defined Benefit Plan

Reporting

0

1.0

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/13 – Declaration of Custodian Deposit

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/14 – Declaration or Health and Welfare Plan

Reporting

12

1.0

On Occasion

12

$703

7200/15 – Declaration for Plan and Trust

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/18 – Declaration for Irrevocable Trust

Reporting

0

0.5

On Occasion

0

$0

7200/24 – Claimant Verification

Reporting

218

0.5

On Occasion

109

$6,389

7200/26 – Depositor Interview Form

Reporting

198

0.5

On Occasion

99

$5,802

SUBTOTAL: COMBINED BROKERS AND INDIVIDUALS

 

628

 

 

321

$18,814

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DEPOSIT BROKERS ONLY

 

 

 

 

 

 

Deposit Broker Submission Checklist

Reporting

136

0.08

On Occasion

11.33

$588

Diskette, following “Broker Input File Requirements” - burden will vary depending on the broker's number of brokered accounts

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reporting

102

0.750

On Occasion

76.5

$3,966

 

Reporting

34

5.0

On Occasion

170

$8,813

Exhibit B, the standard agency agreement, or the non-standard agency agreement

Reporting

136

0.0167

On Occasion

2.27

$118

SUBTOTAL: DEPOSIT BROKERS ONLY

 

136

 

 

260.10

$13,483

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TOTAL HOURLY BURDEN AND INTERNAL COST

 

764

 

 

581.10

$32,297




An essential element of this collection is an electronic file from every broker that provides information about its customers and their accounts, including: each customer’s name, address, tax identification number, ownership interest in the account, principal balance of the account and interest earned on the account. Deposit brokers maintain this information about their customers in the normal course of their business activities. Thus, the burden estimate is primarily the time required to format and report the information. The FDIC estimates that the time required to range from less than an hour for small, sub-tier brokers (about 75% of the 136 respondents) to 5 hours for a large, upper-tier broker (about 25% of the 136 respondents). Burden will vary depending on the number of failed institutions in a year and the characteristics of the failed institutions (e.g., how many brokered accounts were held at a failed institution).


  1. Estimated cost.2 Forms 04, 05, 09, 14, 24, and 26 are those most likely to be filled out by a person in a paid capacity. The estimated cost for completing those forms is $18,813.81.


Calculation: $58.61 x 321 hours = $18,813.81.


  1. Estimated cost limited to deposit brokers.3 The FDIC estimates the annualized cost burden of this collection to be $13,483.07.


Calculation: 260.1 hours x 80% x $58.61 / hour = $12,195.57 plus 260.1 hours x 20% x $24.75 / hour = $1,287.50.


  1. Capital, Start-up, Operating, and Maintenance Costs


None.


  1. Estimated Annual Cost to Federal Government


None.




  1. Reason for Change in Burden


There is no change in the method or substance of the collection. The 126 reduction in burden hours is a result of economic fluctuation. The number of respondents has decreased while the hours per response remain the same.


  1. Publication


The information is not published.


  1. Display of Expiration Date


Not applicable.

  1. Exceptions to Certification


None.


  1. STATISTICAL METHODS


Not applicable.


1 The term “Personally Identifiable Information” refers to information which can be used to distinguish or trace an individual’s identity, such as their name, social security number, biometric records, etc. alone, or when combined with other personal or identifying information which is linked or linkable to a specific individual, such as date and place of birth, mother’s maiden name, etc.


2 The hourly compensation estimate is based on published compensation rates for Financial Clerks ($15.64) and Financial Specialists, All Other ($37.03) in the depository credit intermediation sector. The estimate includes the December 2016 75th percentile hourly wage rate reported by the BLS, National Industry-Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates. The reported hourly wage rate is adjusted for changes in the CPI-U between May 2015 and December 2016 (2.5 percent) and grossed up by 154.3 percent to account for non-monetary compensation as reported by the December 2016 Employer Costs for Employee Compensation Data. Therefore, the total estimated hourly compensation cost for covered institutions for Financial Clerks and Financial Specialists, All Other is $24.75 and $58.61, respectively.


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