Appendix C to Part 25 - Community Reinvestment Act Regulations (Alternative Compliance)
12:1.0.1.1.22.6.28.6.8 : Appendix C
Appendix C to Part 25 - Community Reinvestment Act Regulations
(Alternative Compliance) Note:
The content of this appendix reproduces parts 25 and 195
implementing the Community Reinvestment Act as of the date prior to
October 1, 2020.
PART 25 - COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT AND INTERSTATE DEPOSIT
PRODUCTION REGULATIONS Subpart A - General
§ 25.11 Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority and OMB control number - (1) Authority. The
authority for subparts A, B, C, D, and E is 12 U.S.C. 21, 22, 26,
27, 30, 36, 93a, 161, 215, 215a, 481, 1814, 1816, 1828(c), 1835a,
2901 through 2907, and 3101 through 3111.
(2) OMB control number. The information collection requirements
contained in this part were approved by the Office of Management
and Budget under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
and have been assigned OMB control number 1557-0160.
(b) Purposes. In enacting the Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA), the Congress required each appropriate Federal financial
supervisory agency to assess an institution's record of helping to
meet the credit needs of the local communities in which the
institution is chartered, consistent with the safe and sound
operation of the institution, and to take this record into account
in the agency's evaluation of an application for a deposit facility
by the institution. This part is intended to carry out the purposes
of the CRA by:
(1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) assesses a bank's record
of helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community,
including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with
the safe and sound operation of the bank; and
(2) Providing that the OCC takes that record into account in
considering certain applications.
(c) Scope - (1) General. This part applies to all banks
except as provided in paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this
section.
(2) Federal branches and agencies. (i) This part applies to all
insured Federal branches and to any Federal branch that is
uninsured that results from an acquisition described in section
5(a)(8) of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C.
3103(a)(8)).
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section,
this part does not apply to Federal branches that are uninsured,
limited Federal branches, or Federal agencies, as those terms are
defined in part 28 of this chapter.
(3) Certain special purpose banks. This part does not apply to
special purpose banks that do not perform commercial or retail
banking services by granting credit to the public in the ordinary
course of business, other than as incident to their specialized
operations. These banks include banker's banks, as defined in 12
U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and banks that engage only in one or more of
the following activities: providing cash management controlled
disbursement services or serving as correspondent banks, trust
companies, or clearing agents.
§ 25.12 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
(a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common control with another company. The
term “control” has the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C.
1841(a)(2), and a company is under common control with another
company if both companies are directly or indirectly controlled by
the same company.
(b) Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or
geography is located in an MSA, or for the metropolitan division,
if a person or geography is located in an MSA that has been
subdivided into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a
person or geography is located outside an MSA.
(c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in
accordance with § 25.41.
(d) Automated teller machine (ATM) means an automated,
unstaffed banking facility owned or operated by, or operated
exclusively for, the bank at which deposits are received, cash
dispersed, or money lent.
(e) Bank means a national bank (including a Federal
branch as defined in part 28 of this chapter) with Federally
insured deposits, except as provided in § 25.11(c).
(f) Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as
a branch, whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a
mini-branch in a grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction
with any other local business or nonprofit organization.
(g) Community development means:
(1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing)
for low- or moderate-income individuals;
(2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(3) Activities that promote economic development by financing
businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of the
Small Business Administration's Development Company or Small
Business Investment Company programs (13 CFR 121.301) or have gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
(4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize -
(i) Low- or moderate-income geographies;
(ii) Designated disaster areas; or
(iii) Distressed or underserved nonmetropolitan middle-income
geographies designated by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and OCC,
based on -
(A) Rates of poverty, unemployment, and population loss; or
(B) Population size, density, and dispersion. Activities
revitalize and stabilize geographies designated based on population
size, density, and dispersion if they help to meet essential
community needs, including needs of low- and moderate-income
individuals.
(h) Community development loan means a loan that:
(1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
(2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose
bank:
(i) Has not been reported or collected by the bank or an
affiliate for consideration in the bank's assessment as a home
mortgage, small business, small farm, or consumer loan, unless the
loan is for a multifamily dwelling (as defined in § 1003.2(n) of
this title); and
(ii) Benefits the bank's assessment area(s) or a broader
statewide or regional area that includes the bank's assessment
area(s).
(i) Community development service means a service
that:
(1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
(2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
(3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the bank's
retail banking services under § 25.24(d).
(j) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals
for household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer
loan does not include a home mortgage, small business, or small
farm loan. Consumer loans include the following categories of
loans:
(1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for
the purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
(2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household,
family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a
borrower's use of a “credit card,” as this term is defined in §
1026.2 of this title;
(3) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer
loan that is not included in one of the other categories of
consumer loans; and
(4) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured
consumer loan that is not included in one of the other categories
of consumer loans.
(k) Geography means a census tract delineated by the
United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent decennial
census.
(l) Home mortgage loan means a closed-end mortgage loan
or an open-end line of credit as these terms are defined under §
1003.2 of this title, and that is not an excluded transaction under
§ 1003.3(c)(1) through (10) and (13) of this title.
(m) Income level includes:
(1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less
than 50 percent of the area median income, or a median family
income that is less than 50 percent, in the case of a
geography.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median
income, or a median family income that is at least 50 and less than
80 percent, in the case of a geography.
(3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median
income, or a median family income that is at least 80 and less than
120 percent, in the case of a geography.
(4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120
percent or more of the area median income, or a median family
income that is 120 percent or more, in the case of a geography.
(n) Limited purpose bank means a bank that offers only a
narrow product line (such as credit card or motor vehicle loans) to
a regional or broader market and for which a designation as a
limited purpose bank is in effect, in accordance with §
25.25(b).
(o) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
(1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the
borrower resides;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the
property to which the loan relates is located; and
(3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the
geography where the main business facility or farm is located or
where the loan proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by
the borrower.
(p) Loan production office means a staffed facility,
other than a branch, that is open to the public and that provides
lending-related services, such as loan information and
applications.
(q) Metropolitan division means a metropolitan division
as defined by the Director of the Office of Management and
Budget.
(r) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area as defined
by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
(s) Nonmetropolitan area means any area that is not
located in an MSA.
(t) Qualified investment means a lawful investment,
deposit, membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose
community development.
(u) Small bank - (1) Definition. Small bank means
a bank that, as of December 31 of either of the prior two calendar
years, had assets of less than $1.305 billion. Intermediate small
bank means a small bank with assets of at least $326 million as of
December 31 of both of the prior two calendar years and less than
$1.305 billion as of December 31 of either of the prior two
calendar years.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in paragraph (u)(1) of
this section shall be adjusted annually and published by the OCC,
based on the year-to-year change in the average of the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, not
seasonally adjusted, for each twelve-month period ending in
November, with rounding to the nearest million.
(v) Small business loan means a loan included in “loans
to small businesses” as defined in the instructions for preparation
of the Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
(w) Small farm loan means a loan included in “loans to
small farms” as defined in the instructions for preparation of the
Consolidated Report of Condition and Income.
(x) Wholesale bank means a bank that is not in the
business of extending home mortgage, small business, small farm, or
consumer loans to retail customers, and for which a designation as
a wholesale bank is in effect, in accordance with § 25.25(b).
Subpart B - Standards for Assessing Performance
§ 25.21 Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in
general.
(a) Performance tests and standards. The OCC assesses the
CRA performance of a bank in an examination as follows:
(1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OCC
applies the lending, investment, and service tests, as provided in
§§ 25.22 through 25.24, in evaluating the performance of a bank,
except as provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of this
section.
(2) Community development test for wholesale or limited
purpose banks. The OCC applies the community development test
for a wholesale or limited purpose bank, as provided in § 25.25,
except as provided in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
(3) Small bank performance standards. The OCC applies the
small bank performance standards as provided in § 25.26 in
evaluating the performance of a small bank or a bank that was a
small bank during the prior calendar year, unless the bank elects
to be assessed as provided in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4)
of this section. The bank may elect to be assessed as provided in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section only if it collects and reports
the data required for other banks under § 25.42.
(4) Strategic plan. The OCC evaluates the performance of
a bank under a strategic plan if the bank submits, and the OCC
approves, a strategic plan as provided in § 25.27.
(b) Performance context. The OCC applies the tests and
standards in paragraph (a) of this section and also considers
whether to approve a proposed strategic plan in the context of:
(1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of
household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other
relevant data pertaining to a bank's assessment area(s);
(2) Any information about lending, investment, and service
opportunities in the bank's assessment area(s) maintained by the
bank or obtained from community organizations, state, local, and
tribal governments, economic development agencies, or other
sources;
(3) The bank's product offerings and business strategy as
determined from data provided by the bank;
(4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size
and financial condition of the bank, the economic climate
(national, regional, and local), safety and soundness limitations,
and any other factors that significantly affect the bank's ability
to provide lending, investments, or services in its assessment
area(s);
(5) The bank's past performance and the performance of similarly
situated lenders;
(6) The bank's public file, as described in § 25.43, and any
written comments about the bank's CRA performance submitted to the
bank or the OCC; and
(7) Any other information deemed relevant by the OCC.
(c) Assigned ratings. The OCC assigns to a bank one of
the following four ratings pursuant to § 25.28 and appendix A of
this part: “outstanding”; “satisfactory”; “needs to improve”; or
“substantial noncompliance” as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2).
The rating assigned by the OCC reflects the bank's record of
helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community, including
low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with the safe
and sound operation of the bank.
(d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do
not require a bank to make loans or investments or to provide
services that are inconsistent with safe and sound operations. To
the contrary, the OCC anticipates banks can meet the standards of
this part with safe and sound loans, investments, and services on
which the banks expect to make a profit. Banks are permitted and
encouraged to develop and apply flexible underwriting standards for
loans that benefit low- or moderate-income geographies or
individuals, only if consistent with safe and sound operations.
(e) Low-cost education loans provided to low-income
borrowers. In assessing and taking into account the record of a
bank under this part, the OCC considers, as a factor, low-cost
education loans originated by the bank to borrowers, particularly
in its assessment area(s), who have an individual income that is
less than 50 percent of the area median income. For purposes of
this paragraph, “low-cost education loans” means any education
loan, as defined in section 140(a)(7) of the Truth in Lending Act
(15 U.S.C. 1650(a)(7)) (including a loan under a state or local
education loan program), originated by the bank for a student at an
“institution of higher education,” as that term is generally
defined in sections 101 and 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the implementing regulations
published by the U.S. Department of Education, with interest rates
and fees no greater than those of comparable education loans
offered directly by the U.S. Department of Education. Such rates
and fees are specified in section 455 of the Higher Education Act
of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087e).
(f) Activities in cooperation with minority- or women-owned
financial institutions and low-income credit unions. In
assessing and taking into account the record of a nonminority-owned
and nonwomen-owned bank under this part, the OCC considers as a
factor capital investment, loan participation, and other ventures
undertaken by the bank in cooperation with minority- and
women-owned financial institutions and low-income credit unions.
Such activities must help meet the credit needs of local
communities in which the minority- and women-owned financial
institutions and low-income credit unions are chartered. To be
considered, such activities need not also benefit the bank's
assessment area(s) or the broader statewide or regional area that
includes the bank's assessment area(s).
§ 25.22 Lending test.
(a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a
bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) through its lending activities by considering a bank's home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and community development
lending. If consumer lending constitutes a substantial majority of
a bank's business, the OCC will evaluate the bank's consumer
lending in one or more of the following categories: motor vehicle,
credit card, other secured, and other unsecured loans. In addition,
at a bank's option, the OCC will evaluate one or more categories of
consumer lending, if the bank has collected and maintained, as
required in § 25.42(c)(1), the data for each category that the bank
elects to have the OCC evaluate.
(2) The OCC considers originations and purchases of loans. The
OCC will also consider any other loan data the bank may choose to
provide, including data on loans outstanding, commitments and
letters of credit.
(3) A bank may ask the OCC to consider loans originated or
purchased by consortia in which the bank participates or by third
parties in which the bank has invested only if the loans meet the
definition of community development loans and only in accordance
with paragraph (d) of this section. The OCC will not consider these
loans under any criterion of the lending test except the community
development lending criterion.
(b) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates a bank's
lending performance pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the bank's
home mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in the bank's assessment area(s);
(2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution
of the bank's home mortgage, small business, small farm, and
consumer loans, if applicable, based on the loan location,
including:
(i) The proportion of the bank's lending in the bank's
assessment area(s);
(ii) The dispersion of lending in the bank's assessment area(s);
and
(iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-,
middle-, and upper-income geographies in the bank's assessment
area(s);
(3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution,
particularly in the bank's assessment area(s), of the bank's home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, based on borrower characteristics, including the number
and amount of:
(i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and
upper-income individuals;
(ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms
with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
(iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at
origination; and
(iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-,
and upper-income individuals;
(4) Community development lending. The bank's community
development lending, including the number and amount of community
development loans, and their complexity and innovativeness; and
(5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The bank's
use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe and sound
manner to address the credit needs of low- or moderate-income
individuals or geographies.
(c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a bank's option, the OCC
will consider loans by an affiliate of the bank, if the bank
provides data on the affiliate's loans pursuant to § 25.42.
(2) The OCC considers affiliate lending subject to the following
constraints:
(i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase
if another institution claims the same loan origination or
purchase; and
(ii) If a bank elects to have the OCC consider loans within a
particular lending category made by one or more of the bank's
affiliates in a particular assessment area, the bank shall elect to
have the OCC consider, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, all the loans within that lending category in that
particular assessment area made by all of the bank's
affiliates.
(3) The OCC does not consider affiliate lending in assessing a
bank's performance under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community
development loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which
the bank participates or by a third party in which the bank has
invested:
(1) Will be considered, at the bank's option, if the bank
reports the data pertaining to these loans under § 25.42(b)(2);
and
(2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they
choose, for purposes of the lending test, except that no
participant or investor:
(i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another
participant or investor claims the same loan origination or
purchase; or
(ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage
share (based on the level of its participation or investment) of
the total loans originated by the consortium or third party.
(e) Lending performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's
lending performance as provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 25.23 Investment test.
(a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a bank's
record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) through qualified investments that benefit its assessment
area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area that includes the
bank's assessment area(s).
(b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or
service tests may not be considered under the investment test.
(c) Affiliate investment. At a bank's option, the OCC
will consider, in its assessment of a bank's investment
performance, a qualified investment made by an affiliate of the
bank, if the qualified investment is not claimed by any other
institution.
(d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on
favorable terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch
of the bank that is located in a predominantly minority
neighborhood to a minority depository institution or women's
depository institution (as these terms are defined in 12 U.S.C.
2907(b)) will be considered as a qualified investment.
(e) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates the
investment performance of a bank pursuant to the following
criteria:
(1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
(2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified
investments;
(3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and
community development needs; and
(4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not
routinely provided by private investors.
(f) Investment performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's
investment performance as provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 25.24 Service test.
(a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a bank's
record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) by analyzing both the availability and effectiveness of a
bank's systems for delivering retail banking services and the
extent and innovativeness of its community development
services.
(b) Area(s) benefitted. Community development services
must benefit a bank's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or
regional area that includes the bank's assessment area(s).
(c) Affiliate service. At a bank's option, the OCC will
consider, in its assessment of a bank's service performance, a
community development service provided by an affiliate of the bank,
if the community development service is not claimed by any other
institution.
(d) Performance criteria - retail banking services. The
OCC evaluates the availability and effectiveness of a bank's
systems for delivering retail banking services, pursuant to the
following criteria:
(1) The current distribution of the bank's branches among low-,
moderate-, middle-, and upper-income geographies;
(2) In the context of its current distribution of the bank's
branches, the bank's record of opening and closing branches,
particularly branches located in low- or moderate-income
geographies or primarily serving low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems
for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not
owned or operated by or exclusively for the bank, banking by
telephone or computer, loan production offices, and bank-at-work or
bank-by-mail programs) in low- and moderate-income geographies and
to low- and moderate-income individuals; and
(4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-,
and upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services
are tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
(e) Performance criteria - community development
services. The OCC evaluates community development services
pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The extent to which the bank provides community development
services; and
(2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community
development services.
(f) Service performance rating. The OCC rates a bank's
service performance as provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 25.25 Community development test for wholesale or limited
purpose banks.
(a) Scope of test. The OCC assesses a wholesale or
limited purpose bank's record of helping to meet the credit needs
of its assessment area(s) under the community development test
through its community development lending, qualified investments,
or community development services.
(b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose bank.
In order to receive a designation as a wholesale or limited purpose
bank, a bank shall file a request, in writing, with the OCC, at
least three months prior to the proposed effective date of the
designation. If the OCC approves the designation, it remains in
effect until the bank requests revocation of the designation or
until one year after the OCC notifies the bank that the OCC has
revoked the designation on its own initiative.
(c) Performance criteria. The OCC evaluates the community
development performance of a wholesale or limited purpose bank
pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The number and amount of community development loans
(including originations and purchases of loans and other community
development loan data provided by the bank, such as data on loans
outstanding, commitments, and letters of credit), qualified
investments, or community development services;
(2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services and
the extent to which the investments are not routinely provided by
private investors; and
(3) The bank's responsiveness to credit and community
development needs.
(d) Indirect activities. At a bank's option, the OCC will
consider in its community development performance assessment:
(1) Qualified investments or community development services
provided by an affiliate of the bank, if the investments or
services are not claimed by any other institution; and
(2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and
third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in §
25.22(c) and (d).
(e) Benefit to assessment area(s) - (1) Benefit inside
assessment area(s). The OCC considers all qualified investments,
community development loans, and community development services
that benefit areas within the bank's assessment area(s) or a
broader statewide or regional area that includes the bank's
assessment area(s).
(2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The OCC considers
the qualified investments, community development loans, and
community development services that benefit areas outside the
bank's assessment area(s), if the bank has adequately addressed the
needs of its assessment area(s).
(f) Community development performance rating. The OCC
rates a bank's community development performance as provided in
appendix A of this part.
§ 25.26 Small bank performance standards.
(a) Performance criteria - (1) Small banks that are not
intermediate small banks. The OCC evaluates the record of a small
bank that is not, or that was not during the prior calendar year,
an intermediate small bank, of helping to meet the credit needs of
its assessment area(s) pursuant to the criteria set forth in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) Intermediate small banks. The OCC evaluates the
record of a small bank that is, or that was during the prior
calendar year, an intermediate small bank, of helping to meet the
credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant to the criteria set
forth in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) Lending test. A small bank's lending performance is
evaluated pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted for seasonal
variation, and, as appropriate, other lending-related activities,
such as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets,
community development loans, or qualified investments;
(2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities located in the bank's assessment
area(s);
(3) The bank's record of lending to and, as appropriate,
engaging in other lending-related activities for borrowers of
different income levels and businesses and farms of different
sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the bank's loans; and
(5) The bank's record of taking action, if warranted, in
response to written complaints about its performance in helping to
meet credit needs in its assessment area(s).
(c) Community development test. An intermediate small
bank's community development performance also is evaluated pursuant
to the following criteria:
(1) The number and amount of community development loans;
(2) The number and amount of qualified investments;
(3) The extent to which the bank provides community development
services; and
(4) The bank's responsiveness through such activities to
community development lending, investment, and services needs.
(d) Small bank performance rating. The OCC rates the
performance of a bank evaluated under this section as provided in
appendix A of this part.
§ 25.27 Strategic plan.
(a) Alternative election. The OCC will assess a bank's
record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) under a strategic plan if:
(1) The bank has submitted the plan to the OCC as provided for
in this section;
(2) The OCC has approved the plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The bank has been operating under an approved plan for at
least one year.
(b) Data reporting. The OCC's approval of a plan does not
affect the bank's obligation, if any, to report data as required by
§ 25.42.
(c) Plans in general - (1) Term. A plan may have a term
of no more than five years, and any multi-year plan must include
annual interim measurable goals under which the OCC will evaluate
the bank's performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A bank with more than one
assessment area may prepare a single plan for all of its assessment
areas or one or more plans for one or more of its assessment
areas.
(3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may
prepare a joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each
institution. Activities may be allocated among institutions at the
institutions' option, provided that the same activities are not
considered for more than one institution.
(d) Public participation in plan development. Before
submitting a plan to the OCC for approval, a bank shall:
(1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in
its assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the
plan;
(2) Once the bank has developed a plan, formally solicit public
comment on the plan for at least 30 days by publishing notice in at
least one newspaper of general circulation in each assessment area
covered by the plan; and
(3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of
the plan available for review by the public at no cost at all
offices of the bank in any assessment area covered by the plan and
provide copies of the plan upon request for a reasonable fee to
cover copying and mailing, if applicable.
(e) Submission of plan. The bank shall submit its plan to
the OCC at least three months prior to the proposed effective date
of the plan. The bank shall also submit with its plan a description
of its informal efforts to seek suggestions from members of the
public, any written public comment received, and, if the plan was
revised in light of the comment received, the initial plan as
released for public comment.
(f) Plan content - (1) Measurable goals. (i) A bank shall
specify in its plan measurable goals for helping to meet the credit
needs of each assessment area covered by the plan, particularly the
needs of low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and
moderate-income individuals, through lending, investment, and
services, as appropriate.
(ii) A bank shall address in its plan all three performance
categories and, unless the bank has been designated as a wholesale
or limited purpose bank, shall emphasize lending and
lending-related activities. Nevertheless, a different emphasis,
including a focus on one or more performance categories, may be
appropriate if responsive to the characteristics and credit needs
of its assessment area(s), considering public comment and the
bank's capacity and constraints, product offerings, and business
strategy.
(2) Confidential information. A bank may submit
additional information to the OCC on a confidential basis, but the
goals stated in the plan must be sufficiently specific to enable
the public and the OCC to judge the merits of the plan.
(3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A bank shall
specify in its plan measurable goals that constitute “satisfactory”
performance. A plan may specify measurable goals that constitute
“outstanding” performance. If a bank submits, and the OCC approves,
both “satisfactory” and “outstanding” performance goals, the OCC
will consider the bank eligible for an “outstanding” performance
rating.
(4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met.
A bank may elect in its plan that, if the bank fails to meet
substantially its plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the OCC
will evaluate the bank's performance under the lending, investment,
and service tests, the community development test, or the small
bank performance standards, as appropriate.
(g) Plan approval - (1) Timing. The OCC will act upon a
plan within 60 calendar days after the OCC receives the complete
plan and other material required under paragraph (e) of this
section. If the OCC fails to act within this time period, the plan
shall be deemed approved unless the OCC extends the review period
for good cause.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals,
the OCC considers the public's involvement in formulating the plan,
written public comment on the plan, and any response by the bank to
public comment on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The OCC evaluates a
plan's measurable goals using the following criteria, as
appropriate:
(i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related
activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans
among different geographies, businesses and farms of different
sizes, and individuals of different income levels, the extent of
community development lending, and the use of innovative or
flexible lending practices to address credit needs;
(ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and
responsiveness of the bank's qualified investments; and
(iii) The availability and effectiveness of the bank's systems
for delivering retail banking services and the extent and
innovativeness of the bank's community development services.
(h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a bank may
request the OCC to approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that
there has been a material change in circumstances. The bank shall
develop an amendment to a previously approved plan in accordance
with the public participation requirements of paragraph (d) of this
section.
(i) Plan assessment. The OCC approves the goals and
assesses performance under a plan as provided for in appendix A of
this part.
§ 25.28 Assigned ratings.
(a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c)
of this section, the OCC assigns to a bank a rating of
“outstanding,” “satisfactory,” “needs to improve,” or “substantial
noncompliance” based on the bank's performance under the lending,
investment and service tests, the community development test, the
small bank performance standards, or an approved strategic plan, as
applicable.
(b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The OCC
assigns a rating for a bank assessed under the lending, investment,
and service tests in accordance with the following principles:
(1) A bank that receives an “outstanding” rating on the lending
test receives an assigned rating of at least “satisfactory”;
(2) A bank that receives an “outstanding” rating on both the
service test and the investment test and a rating of at least “high
satisfactory” on the lending test receives an assigned rating of
“outstanding”; and
(3) No bank may receive an assigned rating of “satisfactory” or
higher unless it receives a rating of at least “low satisfactory”
on the lending test.
(c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal
credit practices. (1) The OCC's evaluation of a bank's CRA
performance is adversely affected by evidence of discriminatory or
other illegal credit practices in any geography by the bank or in
any assessment area by any affiliate whose loans have been
considered as part of the bank's lending performance. In connection
with any type of lending activity described in § 25.22(a), evidence
of discriminatory or other credit practices that violate an
applicable law, rule, or regulation includes, but is not limited
to:
(i) Discrimination against applicants on a prohibited basis in
violation, for example, of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act or the
Fair Housing Act;
(ii) Violations of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection
Act;
(iii) Violations of section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission
Act;
(iv) Violations of section 8 of the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act; and
(v) Violations of the Truth in Lending Act provisions regarding
a consumer's right of rescission.
(2) In determining the effect of evidence of practices described
in paragraph (c)(1) of this section on the bank's assigned rating,
the OCC considers the nature, extent, and strength of the evidence
of the practices; the policies and procedures that the bank (or
affiliate, as applicable) has in place to prevent the practices;
any corrective action that the bank (or affiliate, as applicable)
has taken or has committed to take, including voluntary corrective
action resulting from self-assessment; and any other relevant
information.
§ 25.29 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the OCC takes
into account the record of performance under the CRA of each
applicant bank in considering an application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic branch;
(2) The relocation of the main office or a branch;
(3) Under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 1828(c)), the merger or
consolidation with or the acquisition of assets or assumption of
liabilities of an insured depository institution; and
(4) The conversion of an insured depository institution to a
national bank charter.
(b) Charter application. An applicant (other than an
insured depository institution) for a national bank charter shall
submit with its application a description of how it will meet its
CRA objectives. The OCC takes the description into account in
considering the application and may deny or condition approval on
that basis.
(c) Interested parties. The OCC takes into account any
views expressed by interested parties that are submitted in
accordance with the OCC's procedures set forth in part 5 of this
chapter in considering CRA performance in an application listed in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A
bank's record of performance may be the basis for denying or
conditioning approval of an application listed in paragraph (a) of
this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this
section, the term “insured depository institution” has the meaning
given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
Subpart C - Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
§ 25.41 Assessment area delineation.
(a) In general. A bank shall delineate one or more
assessment areas within which the OCC evaluates the bank's record
of helping to meet the credit needs of its community. The OCC does
not evaluate the bank's delineation of its assessment area(s) as a
separate performance criterion, but the OCC reviews the delineation
for compliance with the requirements of this section.
(b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose
banks. The assessment area(s) for a wholesale or limited
purpose bank must consist generally of one or more MSAs or
metropolitan divisions (using the MSA or metropolitan division
boundaries that were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year
in which the delineation is made) or one or more contiguous
political subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or towns, in
which the bank has its main office, branches, and deposit-taking
ATMs.
(c) Geographic area(s) for other banks. The assessment
area(s) for a bank other than a wholesale or limited purpose bank
must:
(1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs or metropolitan
divisions (using the MSA or metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the
delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political
subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or towns; and
(2) Include the geographies in which the bank has its main
office, its branches, and its deposit-taking ATMs, as well as the
surrounding geographies in which the bank has originated or
purchased a substantial portion of its loans (including home
mortgage loans, small business and small farm loans, and any other
loans the bank chooses, such as those consumer loans on which the
bank elects to have its performance assessed).
(d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A bank may adjust
the boundaries of its assessment area(s) to include only the
portion of a political subdivision that it reasonably can be
expected to serve. An adjustment is particularly appropriate in the
case of an assessment area that otherwise would be extremely large,
of unusual configuration, or divided by significant geographic
barriers.
(e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area.
Each bank's assessment area(s):
(1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
(2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
(3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income
geographies, taking into account the bank's size and financial
condition; and
(4) May not extend substantially beyond an MSA boundary or
beyond a state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a
multistate MSA. If a bank serves a geographic area that extends
substantially beyond a state boundary, the bank shall delineate
separate assessment areas for the areas in each state. If a bank
serves a geographic area that extends substantially beyond an MSA
boundary, the bank shall delineate separate assessment areas for
the areas inside and outside the MSA.
(f) Banks serving military personnel. Notwithstanding the
requirements of this section, a bank whose business predominantly
consists of serving the needs of military personnel or their
dependents who are not located within a defined geographic area may
delineate its entire deposit customer base as its assessment
area.
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The OCC uses the
assessment area(s) delineated by a bank in its evaluation of the
bank's CRA performance unless the OCC determines that the
assessment area(s) do not comply with the requirements of this
section.
§ 25.42 Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
(a) Loan information required to be collected and
maintained. A bank, except a small bank, shall collect, and
maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed by the OCC) until
the completion of its next CRA examination, the following data for
each small business or small farm loan originated or purchased by
the bank:
(1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to
identify the relevant loan file;
(2) The loan amount at origination;
(3) The loan location; and
(4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with
gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
(b) Loan information required to be reported. A bank,
except a small bank or a bank that was a small bank during the
prior calendar year, shall report annually by March 1 to the OCC in
machine readable form (as prescribed by the OCC) the following data
for the prior calendar year:
(1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each
geography in which the bank originated or purchased a small
business or small farm loan, the aggregate number and amount of
loans:
(i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
(ii) With amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less
than or equal to $250,000;
(iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000;
and
(iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less (using the revenues that the bank considered in
making its credit decision);
(2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number
and aggregate amount of community development loans originated or
purchased; and
(3) Home mortgage loans. If the bank is subject to
reporting under part 1003 of this title, the location of each home
mortgage loan application, origination, or purchase outside the
MSAs in which the bank has a home or branch office (or outside any
MSA) in accordance with the requirements of part 1003 of this
title.
(c) Optional data collection and maintenance - (1)
Consumer loans. A bank may collect and maintain in machine readable
form (as prescribed by the OCC) data for consumer loans originated
or purchased by the bank for consideration under the lending test.
A bank may maintain data for one or more of the following
categories of consumer loans: Motor vehicle, credit card, other
secured, and other unsecured. If the bank maintains data for loans
in a certain category, it shall maintain data for all loans
originated or purchased within that category. The bank shall
maintain data separately for each category, including for each
loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to
identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
(iii) The loan location; and
(iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the bank
considered in making its credit decision.
(2) Other loan data. At its option, a bank may provide
other information concerning its lending performance, including
additional loan distribution data.
(d) Data on affiliate lending. A bank that elects to have
the OCC consider loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the lending
or community development test or an approved strategic plan, shall
collect, maintain, and report for those loans the data that the
bank would have collected, maintained, and reported pursuant to
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans been
originated or purchased by the bank. For home mortgage loans, the
bank shall also be prepared to identify the home mortgage loans
reported under part 1003 of this title by the affiliate.
(e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third party. A
bank that elects to have the OCC consider community development
loans by a consortium or third party, for purposes of the lending
or community development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall
report for those loans the data that the bank would have reported
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section had the loans been
originated or purchased by the bank.
(f) Small banks electing evaluation under the lending,
investment, and service tests. A bank that qualifies for
evaluation under the small bank performance standards but elects
evaluation under the lending, investment, and service tests shall
collect, maintain, and report the data required for other banks
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(g) Assessment area data. A bank, except a small bank or
a bank that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, shall
collect and report to the OCC by March 1 of each year a list for
each assessment area showing the geographies within the area.
(h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The OCC prepares annually
for each bank that reports data pursuant to this section a CRA
Disclosure Statement that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
(1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a
county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the
bank reported a small business or small farm loan:
(i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-,
middle-, and upper-income geographies;
(ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the
geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
(iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a
small business or small farm loan; and
(iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm
loans to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less;
(2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a
county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the
bank reported a small business or small farm loan:
(i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with
median income relative to the area median income of less than 10
percent, 10 or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less
than 30 percent, 30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more
but less than 50 percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60
or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80
percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 or more but less
than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 percent, 110 or
more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or more;
(ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment
area according to whether the median income in the geography
relative to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or
more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent,
30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50
percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less
than 70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more
but less than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100
or more but less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120
percent, and 120 percent or more;
(iii) A list showing each geography in which the bank reported a
small business or small farm loan; and
(iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm
loans to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less;
(3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
located inside each assessment area reported by the bank and the
number and amount of small business and small farm loans located
outside the assessment area(s) reported by the bank; and
(4) The number and amount of community development loans
reported as originated or purchased.
(i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The OCC, in
conjunction with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, prepares
annually, for each MSA or metropolitan division (including an MSA
or metropolitan division that crosses a state boundary) and the
nonmetropolitan portion of each state, an aggregate disclosure
statement of small business and small farm lending by all
institutions subject to reporting under this part or parts 195,
228, or 345 of this title. These disclosure statements indicate,
for each geography, the number and amount of all small business and
small farm loans originated or purchased by reporting institutions,
except that the OCC may adjust the form of the disclosure if
necessary, because of special circumstances, to protect the privacy
of a borrower or the competitive position of an institution.
(j) Central data depositories. The OCC makes the
aggregate disclosure statements, described in paragraph (i) of this
section, and the individual bank CRA Disclosure Statements,
described in paragraph (h) of this section, available to the public
at central data depositories. The OCC publishes a list of the
depositories at which the statements are available.
§ 25.43 Content and availability of public file.
(a) Information available to the public. A bank shall
maintain a public file that includes the following information:
(1) All written comments received from the public for the
current year and each of the prior two calendar years that
specifically relate to the bank's performance in helping to meet
community credit needs, and any response to the comments by the
bank, if neither the comments nor the responses contain statements
that reflect adversely on the good name or reputation of any
persons other than the bank or publication of which would violate
specific provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation prepared by the OCC. The bank shall place
this copy in the public file within 30 business days after its
receipt from the OCC;
(3) A list of the bank's branches, their street addresses, and
geographies;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed by the bank during the
current year and each of the prior two calendar years, their street
addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available
loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered
at the bank's branches and descriptions of material differences in
the availability or cost of services at particular branches, if
any. At its option, a bank may include information regarding the
availability of alternative systems for delivering retail banking
services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not owned or operated by or
exclusively for the bank, banking by telephone or computer, loan
production offices, and bank-at-work or bank-by-mail programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the
area and identifying the geographies contained within the area,
either on the map or in a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the bank chooses.
(b) Additional information available to the public - (1)
Banks other than small banks. A bank, except a small bank or a bank
that was a small bank during the prior calendar year, shall include
in its public file the following information pertaining to the bank
and its affiliates, if applicable, for each of the prior two
calendar years:
(i) If the bank has elected to have one or more categories of
its consumer loans considered under the lending test, for each of
these categories, the number and amount of loans:
(A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income
individuals;
(B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census
tracts; and
(C) Located inside the bank's assessment area(s) and outside the
bank's assessment area(s); and
(ii) The bank's CRA Disclosure Statement. The bank shall place
the statement in the public file within three business days of its
receipt from the OCC.
(2) Banks required to report Home Mortgage Disclosure Act
(HMDA) data. A bank required to report home mortgage loan data
pursuant part 1003 of this title shall include in its public file a
written notice that the institution's HMDA Disclosure Statement may
be obtained on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's
(Bureau's) website at www.consumerfinance.gov/hmda. In
addition, a bank that elected to have the OCC consider the mortgage
lending of an affiliate shall include in its public file the name
of the affiliate and a written notice that the affiliate's HMDA
Disclosure Statement may be obtained at the Bureau's website. The
bank shall place the written notice(s) in the public file within
three business days after receiving notification from the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council of the availability of
the disclosure statement(s).
(3) Small banks. A small bank or a bank that was a small
bank during the prior calendar year shall include in its public
file:
(i) The bank's loan-to-deposit ratio for each quarter of the
prior calendar year and, at its option, additional data on its
loan-to-deposit ratio; and
(ii) The information required for other banks by paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, if the bank has elected to be evaluated
under the lending, investment, and service tests.
(4) Banks with strategic plans. A bank that has been
approved to be assessed under a strategic plan shall include in its
public file a copy of that plan. A bank need not include
information submitted to the OCC on a confidential basis in
conjunction with the plan.
(5) Banks with less than satisfactory ratings. A bank
that received a less than satisfactory rating during its most
recent examination shall include in its public file a description
of its current efforts to improve its performance in helping to
meet the credit needs of its entire community. The bank shall
update the description quarterly.
(c) Location of public information. A bank shall make
available to the public for inspection upon request and at no cost
the information required in this section as follows:
(1) At the main office and, if an interstate bank, at one branch
office in each state, all information in the public file; and
(2) At each branch:
(i) A copy of the public section of the bank's most recent CRA
Performance Evaluation and a list of services provided by the
branch; and
(ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the
information in the public file relating to the assessment area in
which the branch is located.
(d) Copies. Upon request, a bank shall provide copies,
either on paper or in another form acceptable to the person making
the request, of the information in its public file. The bank may
charge a reasonable fee not to exceed the cost of copying and
mailing (if applicable).
(e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this
section, a bank shall ensure that the information required by this
section is current as of April 1 of each year.
§ 25.44 Public notice by banks.
A bank shall provide in the public lobby of its main office and
each of its branches the appropriate public notice set forth in
appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a bank having more than
one assessment area shall include the bracketed material in the
notice for branch offices. Only a bank that is an affiliate of a
holding company shall include the next to the last sentence of the
notices. A bank shall include the last sentence of the notices only
if it is an affiliate of a holding company that is not prevented by
statute from acquiring additional banks.
§ 25.45 Publication of planned examination schedule.
The OCC publishes at least 30 days in advance of the beginning
of each calendar quarter a list of banks scheduled for CRA
examinations in that quarter.
Subpart D [Reserved] Subpart E - Prohibition Against Use of
Interstate Branches Primarily for Deposit Production
§ 25.61 Purpose and scope.
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this subpart is to implement
section 109 (12 U.S.C. 1835a) of the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking
and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 (Interstate Act).
(b) Scope. (1) This subpart applies to any national bank
that has operated a covered interstate branch for a period of at
least one year, and any foreign bank that has operated a covered
interstate branch that is a Federal branch for a period of at least
one year.
(2) This subpart describes the requirements imposed under 12
U.S.C. 1835a, which requires the appropriate Federal banking
agencies (the OCC, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) to prescribe
uniform rules that prohibit a bank from using any authority to
engage in interstate branching pursuant to the Interstate Act, or
any amendment made by the Interstate Act to any other provision of
law, primarily for the purpose of deposit production.
§ 25.62 Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart, the following definitions
apply:
(a) Bank means, unless the context indicates
otherwise:
(1) A national bank; and
(2) A foreign bank as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 3101(7)
and 12 CFR 28.11(j).
(b) Covered interstate branch means:
(1) Any branch of a national bank, and any Federal branch of a
foreign bank, that:
(i) Is established or acquired outside the bank's home State
pursuant to the interstate branching authority granted by the
Interstate Act or by any amendment made by the Interstate Act to
any other provision of law; or
(ii) Could not have been established or acquired outside of the
bank's home State but for the establishment or acquisition of a
branch described in paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section; and
(2) Any bank or branch of a bank controlled by an out-of-State
bank holding company.
(c) Federal branch means Federal branch as that term is defined
in 12 U.S.C. 3101(6) and 12 CFR 28.11(i).
(d) Home State means:
(1) With respect to a State bank, the State that chartered the
bank;
(2) With respect to a national bank, the State in which the main
office of the bank is located;
(3) With respect to a bank holding company, the State in which
the total deposits of all banking subsidiaries of such company are
the largest on the later of:
(i) July 1, 1966; or
(ii) The date on which the company becomes a bank holding
company under the Bank Holding Company Act;
(4) With respect to a foreign bank:
(i) For purposes of determining whether a U.S. branch of a
foreign bank is a covered interstate branch, the home State of the
foreign bank as determined in accordance with 12 U.S.C. 3103(c) and
12 CFR 28.11(o); and
(ii) For purposes of determining whether a branch of a U.S. bank
controlled by a foreign bank is a covered interstate branch, the
State in which the total deposits of all banking subsidiaries of
such foreign bank are the largest on the later of:
(A) July 1, 1966; or
(B) The date on which the foreign bank becomes a bank holding
company under the Bank Holding Company Act.
(e) Host State means a State in which a covered
interstate branch is established or acquired.
(f) Host state loan-to-deposit ratio generally means,
with respect to a particular host state, the ratio of total loans
in the host state relative to total deposits from the host state
for all banks (including institutions covered under the definition
of “bank” in 12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(1)) that have that state as their
home state, as determined and updated periodically by the
appropriate Federal banking agencies and made available to the
public.
(g) Out-of-State bank holding company means, with respect
to any State, a bank holding company whose home State is another
State.
(h) State means state as that term is defined in 12
U.S.C. 1813(a)(3).
(i) Statewide loan-to-deposit ratio means, with respect
to a bank, the ratio of the bank's loans to its deposits in a state
in which the bank has one or more covered interstate branches, as
determined by the OCC.
§ 25.63 Loan-to-deposit ratio screen.
(a) Application of screen. Beginning no earlier than one
year after a covered interstate branch is acquired or established,
the OCC will consider whether the bank's statewide loan-to-deposit
ratio is less than 50 percent of the relevant host State
loan-to-deposit ratio.
(b) Results of screen. (1) If the OCC determines that the
bank's statewide loan-to-deposit ratio is 50 percent or more of the
host state loan-to-deposit ratio, no further consideration under
this subpart is required.
(2) If the OCC determines that the bank's statewide
loan-to-deposit ratio is less than 50 percent of the host state
loan-to-deposit ratio, or if reasonably available data are
insufficient to calculate the bank's statewide loan-to-deposit
ratio, the OCC will make a credit needs determination for the bank
as provided in § 25.64.
§ 25.64 Credit needs determination.
(a) In general. The OCC will review the loan portfolio of
the bank and determine whether the bank is reasonably helping to
meet the credit needs of the communities in the host state that are
served by the bank.
(b) Guidelines. The OCC will use the following
considerations as guidelines when making the determination pursuant
to paragraph (a) of this section:
(1) Whether covered interstate branches were formerly part of a
failed or failing depository institution;
(2) Whether covered interstate branches were acquired under
circumstances where there was a low loan-to-deposit ratio because
of the nature of the acquired institution's business or loan
portfolio;
(3) Whether covered interstate branches have a high
concentration of commercial or credit card lending, trust services,
or other specialized activities, including the extent to which the
covered interstate branches accept deposits in the host state;
(4) The CRA ratings received by the bank, if any;
(5) Economic conditions, including the level of loan demand,
within the communities served by the covered interstate
branches;
(6) The safe and sound operation and condition of the bank;
and
(7) The OCC's CRA regulations (subparts A through D of this
part) and interpretations of those regulations.
§ 25.65 Sanctions.
(a) In general. If the OCC determines that a bank is not
reasonably helping to meet the credit needs of the communities
served by the bank in the host state, and that the bank's statewide
loan-to-deposit ratio is less than 50 percent of the host state
loan-to-deposit ratio, the OCC:
(1) May order that a bank's covered interstate branch or
branches be closed unless the bank provides reasonable assurances
to the satisfaction of the OCC, after an opportunity for public
comment, that the bank has an acceptable plan under which the bank
will reasonably help to meet the credit needs of the communities
served by the bank in the host state; and
(2) Will not permit the bank to open a new branch in the host
state that would be considered to be a covered interstate branch
unless the bank provides reasonable assurances to the satisfaction
of the OCC, after an opportunity for public comment, that the bank
will reasonably help to meet the credit needs of the community that
the new branch will serve.
(b) Notice prior to closure of a covered interstate
branch. Before exercising the OCC's authority to order the bank
to close a covered interstate branch, the OCC will issue to the
bank a notice of the OCC's intent to order the closure and will
schedule a hearing within 60 days of issuing the notice.
(c) Hearing. The OCC will conduct a hearing scheduled
under paragraph (b) of this section in accordance with the
provisions of 12 U.S.C. 1818(h) and 12 CFR part 19.
Appendix A to Part 25 - Ratings
(a) Ratings in general. (1) In assigning a rating, the
OCC evaluates a bank's performance under the applicable performance
criteria in this part, in accordance with §§ 25.21 and 25.28. This
includes consideration of low-cost education loans provided to
low-income borrowers and activities in cooperation with minority-
or women-owned financial institutions and low-income credit unions,
as well as adjustments on the basis of evidence of discriminatory
or other illegal credit practices.
(2) A bank's performance need not fit each aspect of a
particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and
exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may
compensate for weak performance in others. The bank's overall
performance, however, must be consistent with safe and sound
banking practices and generally with the appropriate rating profile
as follows.
(b) Banks evaluated under the lending, investment, and service
tests - (1) Lending performance rating. The OCC assigns each bank's
lending performance one of the five following ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's lending
performance “outstanding” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its
assessment area(s);
(D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the bank;
(E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in
a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
(ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's lending
performance “high satisfactory” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment
area(s);
(C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment
area(s);
(D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s),
of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the bank;
(E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe
and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made a relatively high level of community development
loans.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's lending
performance “low satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its
assessment area(s);
(D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the bank;
(E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a
safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made an adequate level of community development
loans.
(iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's lending
performance “needs to improve” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment
area(s);
(C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to
low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
(D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s),
of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the bank;
(E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a
safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's lending
performance as being in “substantial noncompliance” if, in general,
it demonstrates:
(A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly
to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment
area(s);
(D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the bank;
(E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe
and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made few, if any, community development loans.
(2) Investment performance rating. The OCC assigns each
bank's investment performance one of the five following
ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's investment
performance “outstanding” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often
in a leadership position;
(B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's investment
performance “high satisfactory” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors,
occasionally in a leadership position;
(B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's investment
performance “low satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors,
although rarely in a leadership position;
(B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's investment
performance “needs to improve” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those
that are not routinely provided by private investors;
(B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments;
and
(C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's
investment performance as being in “substantial noncompliance” if,
in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that
are not routinely provided by private investors;
(B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments;
and
(C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(3) Service performance rating. The OCC assigns each
bank's service performance one of the five following ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The OCC rates a bank's service
performance “outstanding” if, in general, the bank
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to
geographies and individuals of different income levels in its
assessment area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery
systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to
low- or moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment
area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low-
or moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It is a leader in providing community development
services.
(ii) High satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's service
performance “high satisfactory” if, in general, the bank
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies
and individuals of different income levels in its assessment
area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility
of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income
geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides a relatively high level of community development
services.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The OCC rates a bank's service
performance “low satisfactory” if, in general, the bank
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to
geographies and individuals of different income levels in its
assessment area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the
accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and
moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income
individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides an adequate level of community development
services.
(iv) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a bank's service
performance “needs to improve” if, in general, the bank
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible
to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or
moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility its
delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income
geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides a limited level of community development
services.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a bank's
service performance as being in “substantial noncompliance” if, in
general, the bank demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible
to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to
low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the
accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or
moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment
area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low-
or moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
(c) Wholesale or limited purpose banks. The OCC assigns
each wholesale or limited purpose bank's community development
performance one of the four following ratings.
(1) Outstanding. The OCC rates a wholesale or limited
purpose bank's community development performance “outstanding” if,
in general, it demonstrates:
(i) A high level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified
investments, community development loans, or community development
services; and
(iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(2) Satisfactory. The OCC rates a wholesale or limited
purpose bank's community development performance “satisfactory” if,
in general, it demonstrates:
(i) An adequate level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified
investments, community development loans, or community development
services; and
(iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(3) Needs to improve. The OCC rates a wholesale or
limited purpose bank's community development performance as “needs
to improve” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(i) A poor level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services;
and
(iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs in its assessment area(s).
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The OCC rates a wholesale
or limited purpose bank's community development performance in
“substantial noncompliance” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(i) Few, if any, community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services;
and
(iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(d) Banks evaluated under the small bank performance
standards - (1) Lending test ratings. (i) Eligibility
for a satisfactory lending test rating. The OCC rates a small
bank's lending performance “satisfactory” if, in general, the bank
demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal
variations) given the bank's size, financial condition, the credit
needs of its assessment area(s), and taking into account, as
appropriate, other lending-related activities such as loan
originations for sale to the secondary markets and community
development loans and qualified investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities, are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities for individuals of different income
levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and
businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given
the demographics of the bank's assessment area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action, when warranted, in
response to written complaints, if any, about the bank's
performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the
bank's assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an “outstanding” lending test
rating. A small bank that meets each of the standards for a
“satisfactory” rating under this paragraph and exceeds some or all
of those standards may warrant consideration for a lending test
rating of “outstanding.”
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance
ratings. A small bank may also receive a lending test rating of
“needs to improve” or “substantial noncompliance” depending on the
degree to which its performance has failed to meet the standard for
a “satisfactory” rating.
(2) Community development test ratings for intermediate small
banks - (i) Eligibility for a satisfactory community
development test rating. The OCC rates an intermediate small bank's
community development performance “satisfactory” if the bank
demonstrates adequate responsiveness to the community development
needs of its assessment area(s) through community development
loans, qualified investments, and community development services.
The adequacy of the bank's response will depend on its capacity for
such community development activities, its assessment area's need
for such community development activities, and the availability of
such opportunities for community development in the bank's
assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an outstanding community development
test rating. The OCC rates an intermediate small bank's
community development performance “outstanding” if the bank
demonstrates excellent responsiveness to community development
needs in its assessment area(s) through community development
loans, qualified investments, and community development services,
as appropriate, considering the bank's capacity and the need and
availability of such opportunities for community development in the
bank's assessment area(s).
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance
ratings. An intermediate small bank may also receive a
community development test rating of “needs to improve” or
“substantial noncompliance” depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standards for a “satisfactory”
rating.
(3) Overall rating - (i) Eligibility for a
satisfactory overall rating. No intermediate small bank may
receive an assigned overall rating of “satisfactory” unless it
receives a rating of at least “satisfactory” on both the lending
test and the community development test.
(ii) Eligibility for an outstanding overall rating. (A)
An intermediate small bank that receives an “outstanding” rating on
one test and at least “satisfactory” on the other test may receive
an assigned overall rating of “outstanding.”
(B) A small bank that is not an intermediate small bank that
meets each of the standards for a “satisfactory” rating under the
lending test and exceeds some or all of those standards may warrant
consideration for an overall rating of “outstanding.” In assessing
whether a bank's performance is “outstanding,” the OCC considers
the extent to which the bank exceeds each of the performance
standards for a “satisfactory” rating and its performance in making
qualified investments and its performance in providing branches and
other services and delivery systems that enhance credit
availability in its assessment area(s).
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance overall
ratings. A small bank may also receive a rating of “needs to
improve” or “substantial noncompliance” depending on the degree to
which its performance has failed to meet the standards for a
“satisfactory” rating.
(e) Strategic plan assessment and rating - (1)
Satisfactory goals. The OCC approves as “satisfactory”
measurable goals that adequately help to meet the credit needs of
the bank's assessment area(s).
(2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate
group of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels
approved as “satisfactory,” the OCC will approve those goals as
“outstanding.”
(3) Rating. The OCC assesses the performance of a bank
operating under an approved plan to determine if the bank has met
its plan goals:
(i) If the bank substantially achieves its plan goals for a
satisfactory rating, the OCC will rate the bank's performance under
the plan as “satisfactory.”
(ii) If the bank exceeds its plan goals for a satisfactory
rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for an outstanding
rating, the OCC will rate the bank's performance under the plan as
“outstanding.”
(iii) If the bank fails to meet substantially its plan goals for
a satisfactory rating, the OCC will rate the bank as either “needs
to improve” or “substantial noncompliance,” depending on the extent
to which it falls short of its plan goals, unless the bank elected
in its plan to be rated otherwise, as provided in §
25.27(f)(4).
Appendix B to Part 25 - CRA Notice
(a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate bank, one
branch office in each state.
Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the
Comptroller of the Currency evaluates our record of helping to meet
the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound
operations. The Comptroller also takes this record into account
when deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information
about our branches, such as their location and services provided at
them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation, prepared by the Comptroller; and comments received from
the public relating to our performance in helping to meet community
credit needs, as well as our responses to those comments. You may
review this information today.
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the
Comptroller publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are
scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is
available from the Deputy Comptroller (address). You may send
written comments about our performance in helping to meet community
credit needs to (name and address of official at bank) and Deputy
Comptroller (address). Your letter, together with any response by
us, will be considered by the Comptroller in evaluating our CRA
performance and may be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the Deputy
Comptroller. You may also request from the Deputy Comptroller an
announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the
Comptroller. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a
bank holding company. You may request from the (title of
responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of _________ (address)
an announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank
holding companies.
(b) Notice for branch offices.
Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the
Comptroller of the Currency evaluates our record of helping to meet
the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and sound
operations. The Comptroller also takes this record into account
when deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public
section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the
Comptroller, and a list of services provided at this branch. You
may also have access to the following additional information, which
we will make available to you at this branch within five calendar
days after you make a request to us: (1) A map showing the
assessment area containing this branch, which is the area in which
the Comptroller evaluates our CRA performance in this community;
(2) information about our branches in this assessment area; (3) a
list of services we provide at those locations; (4) data on our
lending performance in this assessment area; and (5) copies of all
written comments received by us that specifically relate to our CRA
performance in this assessment area, and any responses we have made
to those comments. If we are operating under an approved strategic
plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
[If you would like to review information about our CRA
performance in other communities served by us, the public file for
our entire bank is available at (name of office located in state),
located at (address).]
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the
Comptroller publishes a nationwide list of the banks that are
scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list is
available from the Deputy Comptroller (address). You may send
written comments about our performance in helping to meet community
credit needs to (name and address of official at bank) and Deputy
Comptroller (address). Your letter, together with any response by
us, will be considered by the Comptroller in evaluating our CRA
performance and may be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the Deputy
Comptroller. You may also request from the Deputy Comptroller an
announcement of our applications covered by the CRA filed with the
Comptroller. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a
bank holding company. You may request from the (title of
responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of _________ (address)
an announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed by bank
holding companies
PART 195 - COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT Subpart A - General
§ 195.11 Authority, purposes, and scope.
(a) Authority. This part is issued under the Community
Reinvestment Act of 1977 (CRA), as amended (12 U.S.C. 2901 et
seq.); section 5, as amended, and sections 3, and 4, as added,
of the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 (12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, and
1464); and sections 4, 6, and 18(c), as amended of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1814, 1816, 1828(c)).
(b) Purposes. In enacting the CRA, the Congress required
each appropriate Federal financial supervisory agency to assess an
institution's record of helping to meet the credit needs of the
local communities in which the institution is chartered, consistent
with the safe and sound operation of the institution, and to take
this record into account in the agency's evaluation of an
application for a deposit facility by the institution. This part is
intended to carry out the purposes of the CRA by:
(1) Establishing the framework and criteria by which the
appropriate Federal banking agency assesses a savings association's
record of helping to meet the credit needs of its entire community,
including low- and moderate-income neighborhoods, consistent with
the safe and sound operation of the savings association; and
(2) Providing that the appropriate Federal banking agency takes
that record into account in considering certain applications.
(c) Scope - (1) General. This part applies to all savings
associations except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
(2) Certain special purpose savings associations. This
part does not apply to special purpose savings associations that do
not perform commercial or retail banking services by granting
credit to the public in the ordinary course of business, other than
as incident to their specialized operations. These associations
include banker's banks, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh), and
associations that engage only in one or more of the following
activities: Providing cash management controlled disbursement
services or serving as correspondent associations, trust companies,
or clearing agents.
§ 195.12 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
(a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common control with another company. The
term “control” has the meaning given to that term in 12 U.S.C.
1841(a)(2), and a company is under common control with another
company if both companies are directly or indirectly controlled by
the same company.
(b) Area median income means:
(1) The median family income for the MSA, if a person or
geography is located in an MSA, or for the metropolitan division,
if a person or geography is located in an MSA that has been
subdivided into metropolitan divisions; or
(2) The statewide nonmetropolitan median family income, if a
person or geography is located outside an MSA.
(c) Assessment area means a geographic area delineated in
accordance with § 195.41.
(d) Automated teller machine (ATM) means an automated,
unstaffed banking facility owned or operated by, or operated
exclusively for, the savings association at which deposits are
received, cash dispersed, or money lent.
(e) [Reserved]
(f) Branch means a staffed banking facility authorized as
a branch, whether shared or unshared, including, for example, a
mini-branch in a grocery store or a branch operated in conjunction
with any other local business or nonprofit organization.
(g) Community development means:
(1) Affordable housing (including multifamily rental housing)
for low or moderate-income individuals;
(2) Community services targeted to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(3) Activities that promote economic development by financing
businesses or farms that meet the size eligibility standards of the
Small Business Administration's Development Company or Small
Business Investment Company programs (13 CFR 121.301) or have gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less; or
(4) Activities that revitalize or stabilize -
(i) Low- or moderate-income geographies;
(ii) Designated disaster areas; or
(iii) Distressed or underserved, nonmetropolitan middle-income
geographies designated by the appropriate Federal banking agency
based on -
(A) Rates of poverty, unemployment, and population loss; or
(B) Population size, density, and dispersion. Activities
revitalize and stabilize geographies designated based on population
size, density, and dispersion if they help to meet essential
community needs, including needs of low- and moderate-income
individuals.
(h) Community development loan means a loan that:
(1) Has as its primary purpose community development; and
(2) Except in the case of a wholesale or limited purpose savings
association:
(i) Has not been reported or collected by the savings
association or an affiliate for consideration in the savings
association's assessment as a home mortgage, small business, small
farm, or consumer loan, unless the loan is for a multifamily
dwelling (as defined in § 1003.2(n) of this title); and
(ii) Benefits the savings association's assessment area(s) or a
broader statewide or regional area that includes the savings
association's assessment area(s).
(i) Community development service means a service
that:
(1) Has as its primary purpose community development;
(2) Is related to the provision of financial services; and
(3) Has not been considered in the evaluation of the savings
association's retail banking services under § 195.24(d).
(j) Consumer loan means a loan to one or more individuals
for household, family, or other personal expenditures. A consumer
loan does not include a home mortgage, small business, or small
farm loan. Consumer loans include the following categories of
loans:
(1) Motor vehicle loan, which is a consumer loan extended for
the purchase of and secured by a motor vehicle;
(2) Credit card loan, which is a line of credit for household,
family, or other personal expenditures that is accessed by a
borrower's use of a “credit card,” as this term is defined in §
1026.2 of this title;
(3) Other secured consumer loan, which is a secured consumer
loan that is not included in one of the other categories of
consumer loans; and
(4) Other unsecured consumer loan, which is an unsecured
consumer loan that is not included in one of the other categories
of consumer loans.
(k) Geography means a census tract delineated by the
United States Bureau of the Census in the most recent decennial
census.
(l) Home mortgage loan means a closed-end mortgage loan
or an open-end line of credit as these terms are defined under §
1003.2 of this title and that is not an excluded transaction under
§ 1003.3(c)(1) through (10) and (13) of this title.
(m) Income level includes:
(1) Low-income, which means an individual income that is less
than 50 percent of the area median income or a median family income
that is less than 50 percent in the case of a geography.
(2) Moderate-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 50 percent and less than 80 percent of the area median income
or a median family income that is at least 50 and less than 80
percent in the case of a geography.
(3) Middle-income, which means an individual income that is at
least 80 percent and less than 120 percent of the area median
income or a median family income that is at least 80 and less than
120 percent in the case of a geography.
(4) Upper-income, which means an individual income that is 120
percent or more of the area median income or a median family income
that is 120 percent or more in the case of a geography.
(n) Limited purpose savings association means a savings
association that offers only a narrow product line (such as credit
card or motor vehicle loans) to a regional or broader market and
for which a designation as a limited purpose savings association is
in effect, in accordance with § 195.25(b).
(o) Loan location. A loan is located as follows:
(1) A consumer loan is located in the geography where the
borrower resides;
(2) A home mortgage loan is located in the geography where the
property to which the loan relates is located; and
(3) A small business or small farm loan is located in the
geography where the main business facility or farm is located or
where the loan proceeds otherwise will be applied, as indicated by
the borrower.
(p) Loan production office means a staffed facility,
other than a branch, that is open to the public and that provides
lending-related services, such as loan information and
applications.
(q) Metropolitan division means a metropolitan division
as defined by the Director of the Office of Management and
Budget.
(r) MSA means a metropolitan statistical area as defined
by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
(s) Nonmetropolitan area means any area that is not
located in an MSA.
(t) Qualified investment means a lawful investment,
deposit, membership share, or grant that has as its primary purpose
community development.
(u) Small savings association - (1) Definition. Small
savings association means a savings association that, as of
December 31 of either of the prior two calendar years, had assets
of less than $1.305 billion. Intermediate small savings association
means a small savings association with assets of at least $326
million as of December 31 of both of the prior two calendar years
and less than $1.305 billion as of December 31 of either of the
prior two calendar years.
(2) Adjustment. The dollar figures in paragraph (u)(1) of
this section shall be adjusted annually and published by the OCC
based on the year-to-year change in the average of the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers, not
seasonally adjusted, for each twelve-month period ending in
November, with rounding to the nearest million.
(v) Small business loan means a loan included in “loans
to small businesses” as defined in the instructions for preparation
of the Thrift Financial Report (TFR) or Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (Call Report), as appropriate.
(w) Small farm loan means a loan included in “loans to
small farms” as defined in the instructions for preparation of the
TFR or Call Report, as appropriate.
(x) Wholesale savings association means a savings
association that is not in the business of extending home mortgage,
small business, small farm, or consumer loans to retail customers,
and for which a designation as a wholesale savings association is
in effect, in accordance with § 195.25(b).
Subpart B - Standards for Assessing Performance
§ 195.21 Performance tests, standards, and ratings, in
general.
(a) Performance tests and standards. The appropriate
Federal banking agency assesses the CRA performance of a savings
association in an examination as follows:
(1) Lending, investment, and service tests. The
appropriate Federal banking agency applies the lending, investment,
and service tests, as provided in §§ 195.22 through 195.24, in
evaluating the performance of a savings association, except as
provided in paragraphs (a)(2), (a)(3), and (a)(4) of this
section.
(2) Community development test for wholesale or limited
purpose savings associations. The appropriate Federal banking
agency applies the community development test for a wholesale or
limited purpose savings association, as provided in § 195.25,
except as provided in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
(3) Small savings association performance standards. The
appropriate Federal banking agency applies the small savings
association performance standards as provided in § 195.26 in
evaluating the performance of a small savings association or a
savings association that was a small savings association during the
prior calendar year, unless the savings association elects to be
assessed as provided in paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), or (a)(4) of
this section. The savings association may elect to be assessed as
provided in paragraph (a)(1) of this section only if it collects
and reports the data required for other savings associations under
§ 195.42.
(4) Strategic plan. The appropriate Federal banking
agency evaluates the performance of a savings association under a
strategic plan if the savings association submits, and the
appropriate Federal banking agency approves, a strategic plan as
provided in § 195.27.
(b) Performance context. The appropriate Federal banking
agency applies the tests and standards in paragraph (a) of this
section and also considers whether to approve a proposed strategic
plan in the context of:
(1) Demographic data on median income levels, distribution of
household income, nature of housing stock, housing costs, and other
relevant data pertaining to a savings association's assessment
area(s);
(2) Any information about lending, investment, and service
opportunities in the savings association's assessment area(s)
maintained by the savings association or obtained from community
organizations, state, local, and tribal governments, economic
development agencies, or other sources;
(3) The savings association's product offerings and business
strategy as determined from data provided by the savings
association;
(4) Institutional capacity and constraints, including the size
and financial condition of the savings association, the economic
climate (national, regional, and local), safety and soundness
limitations, and any other factors that significantly affect the
savings association's ability to provide lending, investments, or
services in its assessment area(s);
(5) The savings association's past performance and the
performance of similarly situated lenders;
(6) The savings association's public file, as described in §
195.43, and any written comments about the savings association's
CRA performance submitted to the savings association or the
appropriate Federal banking agency; and
(7) Any other information deemed relevant by the appropriate
Federal banking agency.
(c) Assigned ratings. The appropriate Federal banking
agency assigns to a savings association one of the following four
ratings pursuant to § 195.28 and appendix A of this part:
“outstanding”; “satisfactory”; “needs to improve”; or “substantial
noncompliance,” as provided in 12 U.S.C. 2906(b)(2). The rating
assigned by the appropriate Federal banking agency reflects the
savings association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of
its entire community, including low- and moderate-income
neighborhoods, consistent with the safe and sound operation of the
savings association.
(d) Safe and sound operations. This part and the CRA do
not require a savings association to make loans or investments or
to provide services that are inconsistent with safe and sound
operations. To the contrary, the appropriate Federal banking agency
anticipates savings associations can meet the standards of this
part with safe and sound loans, investments, and services on which
the savings associations expect to make a profit. Savings
associations are permitted and encouraged to develop and apply
flexible underwriting standards for loans that benefit low- or
moderate-income geographies or individuals, only if consistent with
safe and sound operations.
(e) Low-cost education loans provided to low-income
borrowers. In assessing and taking into account the record of a
savings association under this part, the appropriate Federal
banking agency considers, as a factor, low-cost education loans
originated by the savings association to borrowers, particularly in
its assessment area(s), who have an individual income that is less
than 50 percent of the area median income. For purposes of this
paragraph, “low-cost education loans” means any education loan, as
defined in section 140(a)(7) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C.
1650(a)(7)) (including a loan under a state or local education loan
program), originated by the savings association for a student at an
“institution of higher education,” as that term is generally
defined in sections 101 and 102 of the Higher Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 1001 and 1002) and the implementing regulations
published by the U.S. Department of Education, with interest rates
and fees no greater than those of comparable education loans
offered directly by the U.S. Department of Education. Such rates
and fees are specified in section 455 of the Higher Education Act
of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087e).
(f) Activities in cooperation with minority- or women-owned
financial institutions and low-income credit unions. In
assessing and taking into account the record of a nonminority-owned
and nonwomen-owned savings association under this part, the
appropriate Federal banking agency considers as a factor capital
investment, loan participation, and other ventures undertaken by
the savings association in cooperation with minority- and
women-owned financial institutions and low-income credit unions.
Such activities must help meet the credit needs of local
communities in which the minority- and women-owned financial
institutions and low-income credit unions are chartered. To be
considered, such activities need not also benefit the savings
association's assessment area(s) or the broader statewide or
regional area that includes the savings association's assessment
area(s).
§ 195.22 Lending test.
(a) Scope of test. (1) The lending test evaluates a
savings association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of
its assessment area(s) through its lending activities by
considering a savings association's home mortgage, small business,
small farm, and community development lending. If consumer lending
constitutes a substantial majority of a savings association's
business, the appropriate Federal banking agency will evaluate the
savings association's consumer lending in one or more of the
following categories: Motor vehicle, credit card, other secured,
and other unsecured loans. In addition, at a savings association's
option, the appropriate Federal banking agency will evaluate one or
more categories of consumer lending, if the savings association has
collected and maintained, as required in § 195.42(c)(1), the data
for each category that the savings association elects to have the
appropriate Federal banking agency evaluate.
(2) The appropriate Federal banking agency considers
originations and purchases of loans. The appropriate Federal
banking agency will also consider any other loan data the savings
association may choose to provide, including data on loans
outstanding, commitments and letters of credit.
(3) A savings association may ask the appropriate Federal
banking agency to consider loans originated or purchased by
consortia in which the savings association participates or by third
parties in which the savings association has invested only if the
loans meet the definition of community development loans and only
in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section. The appropriate
Federal banking agency will not consider these loans under any
criterion of the lending test except the community development
lending criterion.
(b) Performance criteria. The appropriate Federal banking
agency evaluates a savings association's lending performance
pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) Lending activity. The number and amount of the
savings association's home mortgage, small business, small farm,
and consumer loans, if applicable, in the savings association's
assessment area(s);
(2) Geographic distribution. The geographic distribution
of the savings association's home mortgage, small business, small
farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, based on the loan
location, including:
(i) The proportion of the savings association's lending in the
savings association's assessment area(s);
(ii) The dispersion of lending in the savings association's
assessment area(s); and
(iii) The number and amount of loans in low-, moderate-,
middle-, and upper-income geographies in the savings association's
assessment area(s);
(3) Borrower characteristics. The distribution,
particularly in the savings association's assessment area(s), of
the savings association's home mortgage, small business, small
farm, and consumer loans, if applicable, based on borrower
characteristics, including the number and amount of:
(i) Home mortgage loans to low-, moderate-, middle-, and
upper-income individuals;
(ii) Small business and small farm loans to businesses and farms
with gross annual revenues of $1 million or less;
(iii) Small business and small farm loans by loan amount at
origination; and
(iv) Consumer loans, if applicable, to low-, moderate-, middle-,
and upper-income individuals;
(4) Community development lending. The savings
association's community development lending, including the number
and amount of community development loans, and their complexity and
innovativeness; and
(5) Innovative or flexible lending practices. The savings
association's use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a
safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies.
(c) Affiliate lending. (1) At a savings association's
option, the appropriate Federal banking agency will consider loans
by an affiliate of the savings association, if the savings
association provides data on the affiliate's loans pursuant to §
195.42.
(2) The appropriate Federal banking agency considers affiliate
lending subject to the following constraints:
(i) No affiliate may claim a loan origination or loan purchase
if another institution claims the same loan origination or
purchase; and
(ii) If a savings association elects to have the appropriate
Federal banking agency consider loans within a particular lending
category made by one or more of the savings association's
affiliates in a particular assessment area, the savings association
shall elect to have the appropriate Federal banking agency
consider, in accordance with paragraph (c)(1) of this section, all
the loans within that lending category in that particular
assessment area made by all of the savings association's
affiliates.
(3) The appropriate Federal banking agency does not consider
affiliate lending in assessing a savings association's performance
under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
(d) Lending by a consortium or a third party. Community
development loans originated or purchased by a consortium in which
the savings association participates or by a third party in which
the savings association has invested:
(1) Will be considered, at the savings association's option, if
the savings association reports the data pertaining to these loans
under § 195.42(b)(2); and
(2) May be allocated among participants or investors, as they
choose, for purposes of the lending test, except that no
participant or investor:
(i) May claim a loan origination or loan purchase if another
participant or investor claims the same loan origination or
purchase; or
(ii) May claim loans accounting for more than its percentage
share (based on the level of its participation or investment) of
the total loans originated by the consortium or third party.
(e) Lending performance rating. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a savings association's lending performance as
provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 195.23 Investment test.
(a) Scope of test. The investment test evaluates a
savings association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of
its assessment area(s) through qualified investments that benefit
its assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or regional area that
includes the savings association's assessment area(s).
(b) Exclusion. Activities considered under the lending or
service tests may not be considered under the investment test.
(c) Affiliate investment. At a savings association's
option, the appropriate Federal banking agency will consider, in
its assessment of a savings association's investment performance, a
qualified investment made by an affiliate of the savings
association, if the qualified investment is not claimed by any
other institution.
(d) Disposition of branch premises. Donating, selling on
favorable terms, or making available on a rent-free basis a branch
of the savings association that is located in a predominantly
minority neighborhood to a minority depository institution or
women's depository institution (as these terms are defined in 12
U.S.C. 2907(b)) will be considered as a qualified investment.
(e) Performance criteria. The appropriate Federal banking
agency evaluates the investment performance of a savings
association pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The dollar amount of qualified investments;
(2) The innovativeness or complexity of qualified
investments;
(3) The responsiveness of qualified investments to credit and
community development needs; and
(4) The degree to which the qualified investments are not
routinely provided by private investors.
(f) Investment performance rating. The appropriate
Federal banking agency rates a savings association's investment
performance as provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 195.24 Service test.
(a) Scope of test. The service test evaluates a savings
association's record of helping to meet the credit needs of its
assessment area(s) by analyzing both the availability and
effectiveness of a savings association's systems for delivering
retail banking services and the extent and innovativeness of its
community development services.
(b) Area(s) benefitted. Community development services
must benefit a savings association's assessment area(s) or a
broader statewide or regional area that includes the savings
association's assessment area(s).
(c) Affiliate service. At a savings association's option,
the appropriate Federal banking agency will consider, in its
assessment of a savings association's service performance, a
community development service provided by an affiliate of the
savings association, if the community development service is not
claimed by any other institution.
(d) Performance criteria - retail banking services. The
appropriate Federal banking agency evaluates the availability and
effectiveness of a savings association's systems for delivering
retail banking services, pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The current distribution of the savings association's
branches among low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income
geographies;
(2) In the context of its current distribution of the savings
association's branches, the savings association's record of opening
and closing branches, particularly branches located in low- or
moderate-income geographies or primarily serving low- or
moderate-income individuals;
(3) The availability and effectiveness of alternative systems
for delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not
owned or operated by or exclusively for the savings association,
banking by telephone or computer, loan production offices, and
bank-at-work or bank-by-mail programs) in low- and moderate-income
geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals; and
(4) The range of services provided in low-, moderate-, middle-,
and upper-income geographies and the degree to which the services
are tailored to meet the needs of those geographies.
(e) Performance criteria - community development
services. The appropriate Federal banking agency evaluates
community development services pursuant to the following
criteria:
(1) The extent to which the savings association provides
community development services; and
(2) The innovativeness and responsiveness of community
development services.
(f) Service performance rating. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a savings association's service performance as
provided in appendix A of this part.
§ 195.25 Community development test for wholesale or limited
purpose savings associations.
(a) Scope of test. The appropriate Federal banking agency
assesses a wholesale or limited purpose savings association's
record of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) under the community development test through its community
development lending, qualified investments, or community
development services.
(b) Designation as a wholesale or limited purpose savings
association. In order to receive a designation as a wholesale
or limited purpose savings association, a savings association shall
file a request, in writing, with the appropriate Federal banking
agency, at least three months prior to the proposed effective date
of the designation. If the appropriate Federal banking agency
approves the designation, it remains in effect until the savings
association requests revocation of the designation or until one
year after the appropriate Federal banking agency notifies the
savings association that the appropriate Federal banking agency has
revoked the designation on its own initiative.
(c) Performance criteria. The appropriate Federal banking
agency evaluates the community development performance of a
wholesale or limited purpose savings association pursuant to the
following criteria:
(1) The number and amount of community development loans
(including originations and purchases of loans and other community
development loan data provided by the savings association, such as
data on loans outstanding, commitments, and letters of credit),
qualified investments, or community development services;
(2) The use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services and
the extent to which the investments are not routinely provided by
private investors; and
(3) The savings association's responsiveness to credit and
community development needs.
(d) Indirect activities. At a savings association's
option, the appropriate Federal banking agency will consider in its
community development performance assessment:
(1) Qualified investments or community development services
provided by an affiliate of the savings association, if the
investments or services are not claimed by any other institution;
and
(2) Community development lending by affiliates, consortia and
third parties, subject to the requirements and limitations in §
195.22(c) and (d).
(e) Benefit to assessment area(s) - (1) Benefit inside
assessment area(s). The appropriate Federal banking agency
considers all qualified investments, community development loans,
and community development services that benefit areas within the
savings association's assessment area(s) or a broader statewide or
regional area that includes the savings association's assessment
area(s).
(2) Benefit outside assessment area(s). The appropriate
Federal banking agency considers the qualified investments,
community development loans, and community development services
that benefit areas outside the savings association's assessment
area(s), if the savings association has adequately addressed the
needs of its assessment area(s).
(f) Community development performance rating. The
appropriate Federal banking agency rates a savings association's
community development performance as provided in appendix A of this
part.
§ 195.26 Small savings association performance
standards.
(a) Performance criteria - (1) Small savings
associations that are not intermediate small savings
associations. The appropriate Federal banking agency evaluates
the record of a small savings association that is not, or that was
not during the prior calendar year, an intermediate small savings
association, of helping to meet the credit needs of its assessment
area(s) pursuant to the criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(2) Intermediate small savings associations. The
appropriate Federal banking agency evaluates the record of a small
savings association that is, or that was during the prior calendar
year, an intermediate small savings association, of helping to meet
the credit needs of its assessment area(s) pursuant to the criteria
set forth in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
(b) Lending test. A small savings association's lending
performance is evaluated pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The savings association's loan-to-deposit ratio, adjusted
for seasonal variation, and, as appropriate, other lending-related
activities, such as loan originations for sale to the secondary
markets, community development loans, or qualified investments;
(2) The percentage of loans and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities located in the savings association's
assessment area(s);
(3) The savings association's record of lending to and, as
appropriate, engaging in other lending-related activities for
borrowers of different income levels and businesses and farms of
different sizes;
(4) The geographic distribution of the savings association's
loans; and
(5) The savings association's record of taking action, if
warranted, in response to written complaints about its performance
in helping to meet credit needs in its assessment area(s).
(c) Community development test. An intermediate small
savings association's community development performance also is
evaluated pursuant to the following criteria:
(1) The number and amount of community development loans;
(2) The number and amount of qualified investments;
(3) The extent to which the savings association provides
community development services; and
(4) The savings association's responsiveness through such
activities to community development lending, investment, and
services needs.
(d) Small savings association performance rating. The
appropriate Federal banking agency rates the performance of a
savings association evaluated under this section as provided in
appendix A of this part.
§ 195.27 Strategic plan.
(a) Alternative election. The appropriate Federal banking
agency will assess a savings association's record of helping to
meet the credit needs of its assessment area(s) under a strategic
plan if:
(1) The savings association has submitted the plan to the
appropriate Federal banking agency as provided for in this
section;
(2) The appropriate Federal banking agency has approved the
plan;
(3) The plan is in effect; and
(4) The savings association has been operating under an approved
plan for at least one year.
(b) Data reporting. The appropriate Federal banking
agency's approval of a plan does not affect the savings
association's obligation, if any, to report data as required by §
195.42.
(c) Plans in general - (1) Term. A plan may have a
term of no more than five years, and any multi-year plan must
include annual interim measurable goals under which the appropriate
Federal banking agency will evaluate the savings association's
performance.
(2) Multiple assessment areas. A savings association with
more than one assessment area may prepare a single plan for all of
its assessment areas or one or more plans for one or more of its
assessment areas.
(3) Treatment of affiliates. Affiliated institutions may
prepare a joint plan if the plan provides measurable goals for each
institution. Activities may be allocated among institutions at the
institutions' option, provided that the same activities are not
considered for more than one institution.
(d) Public participation in plan development. Before
submitting a plan to the appropriate Federal banking agency for
approval, a savings association shall:
(1) Informally seek suggestions from members of the public in
its assessment area(s) covered by the plan while developing the
plan;
(2) Once the savings association has developed a plan, formally
solicit public comment on the plan for at least 30 days by
publishing notice in at least one newspaper of general circulation
in each assessment area covered by the plan; and
(3) During the period of formal public comment, make copies of
the plan available for review by the public at no cost at all
offices of the savings association in any assessment area covered
by the plan and provide copies of the plan upon request for a
reasonable fee to cover copying and mailing, if applicable.
(e) Submission of plan. The savings association shall
submit its plan to the appropriate Federal banking agency at least
three months prior to the proposed effective date of the plan. The
savings association shall also submit with its plan a description
of its informal efforts to seek suggestions from members of the
public, any written public comment received, and, if the plan was
revised in light of the comment received, the initial plan as
released for public comment.
(f) Plan content - (1) Measurable goals. (i) A
savings association shall specify in its plan measurable goals for
helping to meet the credit needs of each assessment area covered by
the plan, particularly the needs of low- and moderate-income
geographies and low- and moderate-income individuals, through
lending, investment, and services, as appropriate.
(ii) A savings association shall address in its plan all three
performance categories and, unless the savings association has been
designated as a wholesale or limited purpose savings association,
shall emphasize lending and lending-related activities.
Nevertheless, a different emphasis, including a focus on one or
more performance categories, may be appropriate if responsive to
the characteristics and credit needs of its assessment area(s),
considering public comment and the savings association's capacity
and constraints, product offerings, and business strategy.
(2) Confidential information. A savings association may
submit additional information to the appropriate Federal banking
agency on a confidential basis, but the goals stated in the plan
must be sufficiently specific to enable the public and the
appropriate Federal banking agency to judge the merits of the
plan.
(3) Satisfactory and outstanding goals. A savings
association shall specify in its plan measurable goals that
constitute “satisfactory” performance. A plan may specify
measurable goals that constitute “outstanding” performance. If a
savings association submits, and the appropriate Federal banking
agency approves, both “satisfactory” and “outstanding” performance
goals, the appropriate Federal banking agency will consider the
savings association eligible for an “outstanding” performance
rating.
(4) Election if satisfactory goals not substantially met.
A savings association may elect in its plan that, if the savings
association fails to meet substantially its plan goals for a
satisfactory rating, the appropriate Federal banking agency will
evaluate the savings association's performance under the lending,
investment, and service tests, the community development test, or
the small savings association performance standards, as
appropriate.
(g) Plan approval - (1) Timing. The appropriate
Federal banking agency will act upon a plan within 60 calendar days
after it receives the complete plan and other material required
under paragraph (e) of this section. If the appropriate Federal
banking agency fails to act within this time period, the plan shall
be deemed approved unless the appropriate Federal banking agency
extends the review period for good cause.
(2) Public participation. In evaluating the plan's goals,
the appropriate Federal banking agency considers the public's
involvement in formulating the plan, written public comment on the
plan, and any response by the savings association to public comment
on the plan.
(3) Criteria for evaluating plan. The appropriate Federal
banking agency evaluates a plan's measurable goals using the
following criteria, as appropriate:
(i) The extent and breadth of lending or lending-related
activities, including, as appropriate, the distribution of loans
among different geographies, businesses and farms of different
sizes, and individuals of different income levels, the extent of
community development lending, and the use of innovative or
flexible lending practices to address credit needs;
(ii) The amount and innovativeness, complexity, and
responsiveness of the savings association's qualified investments;
and
(iii) The availability and effectiveness of the savings
association's systems for delivering retail banking services and
the extent and innovativeness of the savings association's
community development services.
(h) Plan amendment. During the term of a plan, a savings
association may request the appropriate Federal banking agency to
approve an amendment to the plan on grounds that there has been a
material change in circumstances. The savings association shall
develop an amendment to a previously approved plan in accordance
with the public participation requirements of paragraph (d) of this
section.
(i) Plan assessment. The appropriate Federal banking
agency approves the goals and assesses performance under a plan as
provided for in appendix A of this part.
§ 195.28 Assigned ratings.
(a) Ratings in general. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c)
of this section, the appropriate Federal banking agency assigns to
a savings association a rating of “outstanding,” “satisfactory,”
“needs to improve,” or “substantial noncompliance” based on the
savings association's performance under the lending, investment and
service tests, the community development test, the small savings
association performance standards, or an approved strategic plan,
as applicable.
(b) Lending, investment, and service tests. The
appropriate Federal banking agency assigns a rating for a savings
association assessed under the lending, investment, and service
tests in accordance with the following principles:
(1) A savings association that receives an “outstanding” rating
on the lending test receives an assigned rating of at least
“satisfactory”;
(2) A savings association that receives an “outstanding” rating
on both the service test and the investment test and a rating of at
least “high satisfactory” on the lending test receives an assigned
rating of “outstanding”; and
(3) No savings association may receive an assigned rating of
“satisfactory” or higher unless it receives a rating of at least
“low satisfactory” on the lending test.
(c) Effect of evidence of discriminatory or other illegal
credit practices. (1) The appropriate Federal banking agency's
evaluation of a savings association's CRA performance is adversely
affected by evidence of discriminatory or other illegal credit
practices in any geography by the savings association or in any
assessment area by any affiliate whose loans have been considered
as part of the savings association's lending performance. In
connection with any type of lending activity described in §
195.22(a), evidence of discriminatory or other credit practices
that violate an applicable law, rule, or regulation includes, but
is not limited to:
(i) Discrimination against applicants on a prohibited basis in
violation, for example, of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act or the
Fair Housing Act;
(ii) Violations of the Home Ownership and Equity Protection
Act;
(iii) Violations of section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission
Act;
(iv) Violations of section 8 of the Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act; and
(v) Violations of the Truth in Lending Act provisions regarding
a consumer's right of rescission.
(2) In determining the effect of evidence of practices described
in paragraph (c)(1) of this section on the savings association's
assigned rating, the appropriate Federal banking agency considers
the nature, extent, and strength of the evidence of the practices;
the policies and procedures that the savings association (or
affiliate, as applicable) has in place to prevent the practices;
any corrective action that the savings association (or affiliate,
as applicable) has taken or has committed to take, including
voluntary corrective action resulting from self-assessment; and any
other relevant information.
§ 195.29 Effect of CRA performance on applications.
(a) CRA performance. Among other factors, the appropriate
Federal banking agency takes into account the record of performance
under the CRA of each applicant savings association, and for
applications under section 10(e) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12
U.S.C. 1467a(e)), of each proposed subsidiary savings association,
in considering an application for:
(1) The establishment of a domestic branch or other facility
that would be authorized to take deposits;
(2) The relocation of the main office or a branch;
(3) The merger or consolidation with or the acquisition of the
assets or assumption of the liabilities of an insured depository
institution requiring appropriate Federal banking agency approval
under the Bank Merger Act (12 U.S.C. 1828(c));
(4) A Federal thrift charter; and
(5) Acquisitions subject to section 10(e) of the Home Owners'
Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(e)).
(b) Charter application. An applicant for a Federal
thrift charter shall submit with its application a description of
how it will meet its CRA objectives. The appropriate Federal
banking agency takes the description into account in considering
the application and may deny or condition approval on that
basis.
(c) Interested parties. The appropriate Federal banking
agency takes into account any views expressed by interested parties
that are submitted in accordance with the applicable comment
procedures in considering CRA performance in an application listed
in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(d) Denial or conditional approval of application. A
savings association's record of performance may be the basis for
denying or conditioning approval of an application listed in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(e) Insured depository institution. For purposes of this
section, the term “insured depository institution” has the meaning
given to that term in 12 U.S.C. 1813.
Subpart C - Records, Reporting, and Disclosure Requirements
§ 195.41 Assessment area delineation.
(a) In general. A savings association shall delineate one
or more assessment areas within which the appropriate Federal
banking agency evaluates the savings association's record of
helping to meet the credit needs of its community. The appropriate
Federal banking agency does not evaluate the savings association's
delineation of its assessment area(s) as a separate performance
criterion, but the appropriate Federal banking agency reviews the
delineation for compliance with the requirements of this
section.
(b) Geographic area(s) for wholesale or limited purpose
savings associations. The assessment area(s) for a wholesale or
limited purpose savings association must consist generally of one
or more MSAs or metropolitan divisions (using the MSA or
metropolitan division boundaries that were in effect as of January
1 of the calendar year in which the delineation is made) or one or
more contiguous political subdivisions, such as counties, cities,
or towns, in which the savings association has its main office,
branches, and deposit-taking ATMs.
(c) Geographic area(s) for other savings associations.
The assessment area(s) for a savings association other than a
wholesale or limited purpose savings association must:
(1) Consist generally of one or more MSAs or metropolitan
divisions (using the MSA or metropolitan division boundaries that
were in effect as of January 1 of the calendar year in which the
delineation is made) or one or more contiguous political
subdivisions, such as counties, cities, or towns; and
(2) Include the geographies in which the savings association has
its main office, its branches, and its deposit-taking ATMs, as well
as the surrounding geographies in which the savings association has
originated or purchased a substantial portion of its loans
(including home mortgage loans, small business and small farm
loans, and any other loans the savings association chooses, such as
those consumer loans on which the savings association elects to
have its performance assessed).
(d) Adjustments to geographic area(s). A savings
association may adjust the boundaries of its assessment area(s) to
include only the portion of a political subdivision that it
reasonably can be expected to serve. An adjustment is particularly
appropriate in the case of an assessment area that otherwise would
be extremely large, of unusual configuration, or divided by
significant geographic barriers.
(e) Limitations on the delineation of an assessment area.
Each savings association's assessment area(s):
(1) Must consist only of whole geographies;
(2) May not reflect illegal discrimination;
(3) May not arbitrarily exclude low- or moderate-income
geographies, taking into account the savings association's size and
financial condition; and
(4) May not extend substantially beyond an MSA boundary or
beyond a state boundary unless the assessment area is located in a
multistate MSA. If a savings association serves a geographic area
that extends substantially beyond a state boundary, the savings
association shall delineate separate assessment areas for the areas
in each state. If a savings association serves a geographic area
that extends substantially beyond an MSA boundary, the savings
association shall delineate separate assessment areas for the areas
inside and outside the MSA.
(f) Savings associations serving military personnel.
Notwithstanding the requirements of this section, a savings
association whose business predominantly consists of serving the
needs of military personnel or their dependents who are not located
within a defined geographic area may delineate its entire deposit
customer base as its assessment area.
(g) Use of assessment area(s). The appropriate Federal
banking agency uses the assessment area(s) delineated by a savings
association in its evaluation of the savings association's CRA
performance unless the appropriate Federal banking agency
determines that the assessment area(s) do not comply with the
requirements of this section.
§ 195.42 Data collection, reporting, and disclosure.
(a) Loan information required to be collected and
maintained. A savings association, except a small savings
association, shall collect, and maintain in machine readable form
(as prescribed by the appropriate Federal banking agency) until the
completion of its next CRA examination, the following data for each
small business or small farm loan originated or purchased by the
savings association:
(1) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to
identify the relevant loan file;
(2) The loan amount at origination;
(3) The loan location; and
(4) An indicator whether the loan was to a business or farm with
gross annual revenues of $1 million or less.
(b) Loan information required to be reported. A savings
association, except a small savings association or a savings
association that was a small savings association during the prior
calendar year, shall report annually by March 1 to the appropriate
Federal banking agency in machine readable form (as prescribed by
the agency) the following data for the prior calendar year:
(1) Small business and small farm loan data. For each
geography in which the savings association originated or purchased
a small business or small farm loan, the aggregate number and
amount of loans:
(i) With an amount at origination of $100,000 or less;
(ii) With amount at origination of more than $100,000 but less
than or equal to $250,000;
(iii) With an amount at origination of more than $250,000;
and
(iv) To businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less (using the revenues that the savings association
considered in making its credit decision);
(2) Community development loan data. The aggregate number
and aggregate amount of community development loans originated or
purchased; and
(3) Home mortgage loans. If the savings association is
subject to reporting under part 1003 of this title, the location of
each home mortgage loan application, origination, or purchase
outside the MSAs in which the savings association has a home or
branch office (or outside any MSA) in accordance with the
requirements of part 1003 of this title.
(c) Optional data collection and maintenance - (1)
Consumer loans. A savings association may collect and
maintain in machine readable form (as prescribed by the appropriate
Federal banking agency) data for consumer loans originated or
purchased by the savings association for consideration under the
lending test. A savings association may maintain data for one or
more of the following categories of consumer loans: Motor vehicle,
credit card, other secured, and other unsecured. If the savings
association maintains data for loans in a certain category, it
shall maintain data for all loans originated or purchased within
that category. The savings association shall maintain data
separately for each category, including for each loan:
(i) A unique number or alpha-numeric symbol that can be used to
identify the relevant loan file;
(ii) The loan amount at origination or purchase;
(iii) The loan location; and
(iv) The gross annual income of the borrower that the savings
association considered in making its credit decision.
(2) Other loan data. At its option, a savings association
may provide other information concerning its lending performance,
including additional loan distribution data.
(d) Data on affiliate lending. A savings association that
elects to have the appropriate Federal banking agency consider
loans by an affiliate, for purposes of the lending or community
development test or an approved strategic plan, shall collect,
maintain, and report for those loans the data that the savings
association would have collected, maintained, and reported pursuant
to paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this section had the loans been
originated or purchased by the savings association. For home
mortgage loans, the savings association shall also be prepared to
identify the home mortgage loans reported under part 1003 of this
title by the affiliate.
(e) Data on lending by a consortium or a third-party. A
savings association that elects to have the appropriate Federal
banking agency consider community development loans by a consortium
or third party, for purposes of the lending or community
development tests or an approved strategic plan, shall report for
those loans the data that the savings association would have
reported under paragraph (b)(2) of this section had the loans been
originated or purchased by the savings association.
(f) Small savings associations electing evaluation under the
lending, investment, and service tests. A savings association
that qualifies for evaluation under the small savings association
performance standards but elects evaluation under the lending,
investment, and service tests shall collect, maintain, and report
the data required for other savings associations pursuant to
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(g) Assessment area data. A savings association, except a
small savings association or a savings association that was a small
savings association during the prior calendar year, shall collect
and report to the appropriate Federal banking agency by March 1 of
each year a list for each assessment area showing the geographies
within the area.
(h) CRA Disclosure Statement. The appropriate Federal
banking agency prepares annually for each savings association that
reports data pursuant to this section a CRA Disclosure Statement
that contains, on a state-by-state basis:
(1) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a
county) with a population of 500,000 persons or fewer in which the
savings association reported a small business or small farm
loan:
(i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
reported as originated or purchased located in low-, moderate-,
middle-, and upper-income geographies;
(ii) A list grouping each geography according to whether the
geography is low-, moderate-, middle-, or upper-income;
(iii) A list showing each geography in which the savings
association reported a small business or small farm loan; and
(iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm
loans to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less;
(2) For each county (and for each assessment area smaller than a
county) with a population in excess of 500,000 persons in which the
savings association reported a small business or small farm
loan:
(i) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
reported as originated or purchased located in geographies with
median income relative to the area median income of less than 10
percent, 10 or more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less
than 30 percent, 30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more
but less than 50 percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60
or more but less than 70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80
percent, 80 or more but less than 90 percent, 90 or more but less
than 100 percent, 100 or more but less than 110 percent, 110 or
more but less than 120 percent, and 120 percent or more;
(ii) A list grouping each geography in the county or assessment
area according to whether the median income in the geography
relative to the area median income is less than 10 percent, 10 or
more but less than 20 percent, 20 or more but less than 30 percent,
30 or more but less than 40 percent, 40 or more but less than 50
percent, 50 or more but less than 60 percent, 60 or more but less
than 70 percent, 70 or more but less than 80 percent, 80 or more
but less than 90 percent, 90 or more but less than 100 percent, 100
or more but less than 110 percent, 110 or more but less than 120
percent, and 120 percent or more;
(iii) A list showing each geography in which the savings
association reported a small business or small farm loan; and
(iv) The number and amount of small business and small farm
loans to businesses and farms with gross annual revenues of $1
million or less;
(3) The number and amount of small business and small farm loans
located inside each assessment area reported by the savings
association and the number and amount of small business and small
farm loans located outside the assessment area(s) reported by the
savings association; and
(4) The number and amount of community development loans
reported as originated or purchased.
(i) Aggregate disclosure statements. The appropriate
Federal banking agency, in conjunction with the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or the OCC, as appropriate, prepares annually, for each
MSA or metropolitan division (including an MSA or metropolitan
division that crosses a state boundary) and the nonmetropolitan
portion of each state, an aggregate disclosure statement of small
business and small farm lending by all institutions subject to
reporting under this part or parts 25, 228, or 345 of this title.
These disclosure statements indicate, for each geography, the
number and amount of all small business and small farm loans
originated or purchased by reporting institutions, except that the
appropriate Federal banking agency may adjust the form of the
disclosure if necessary, because of special circumstances, to
protect the privacy of a borrower or the competitive position of an
institution.
(j) Central data depositories. The appropriate Federal
banking agency makes the aggregate disclosure statements, described
in paragraph (i) of this section, and the individual savings
association CRA Disclosure Statements, described in paragraph (h)
of this section, available to the public at central data
depositories. The appropriate Federal banking agency publishes a
list of the depositories at which the statements are available.
§ 195.43 Content and availability of public file.
(a) Information available to the public. A savings
association shall maintain a public file that includes the
following information:
(1) All written comments received from the public for the
current year and each of the prior two calendar years that
specifically relate to the savings association's performance in
helping to meet community credit needs, and any response to the
comments by the savings association, if neither the comments nor
the responses contain statements that reflect adversely on the good
name or reputation of any persons other than the savings
association or publication of which would violate specific
provisions of law;
(2) A copy of the public section of the savings association's
most recent CRA Performance Evaluation prepared by the appropriate
Federal banking agency. The savings association shall place this
copy in the public file within 30 business days after its receipt
from the appropriate Federal banking agency;
(3) A list of the savings association's branches, their street
addresses, and geographies;
(4) A list of branches opened or closed by the savings
association during the current year and each of the prior two
calendar years, their street addresses, and geographies;
(5) A list of services (including hours of operation, available
loan and deposit products, and transaction fees) generally offered
at the savings association's branches and descriptions of material
differences in the availability or cost of services at particular
branches, if any. At its option, a savings association may include
information regarding the availability of alternative systems for
delivering retail banking services (e.g., ATMs, ATMs not
owned or operated by or exclusively for the savings association,
banking by telephone or computer, loan production offices, and
bank-at-work or bank-by-mail programs);
(6) A map of each assessment area showing the boundaries of the
area and identifying the geographies contained within the area,
either on the map or in a separate list; and
(7) Any other information the savings association chooses.
(b) Additional information available to the public - (1)
Savings associations other than small savings associations.
A savings association, except a small savings association or a
savings association that was a small savings association during the
prior calendar year, shall include in its public file the following
information pertaining to the savings association and its
affiliates, if applicable, for each of the prior two calendar
years:
(i) If the savings association has elected to have one or more
categories of its consumer loans considered under the lending test,
for each of these categories, the number and amount of loans:
(A) To low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income
individuals;
(B) Located in low-, moderate-, middle-, and upper-income census
tracts; and
(C) Located inside the savings association's assessment area(s)
and outside the savings association's assessment area(s); and
(ii) The savings association's CRA Disclosure Statement. The
savings association shall place the statement in the public file
within three business days of its receipt from the appropriate
Federal banking agency.
(2) Savings associations required to report Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act (HMDA) data. A savings association required to
report home mortgage loan data pursuant part 1003 of this title
shall include in its public file a written notice that the
institution's HMDA Disclosure Statement may be obtained on the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's (Bureau's) website at
www.consumerfinance.gov/hmda. In addition, a savings
association that elected to have the appropriate Federal banking
agency consider the mortgage lending of an affiliate shall include
in its public file the name of the affiliate and a written notice
that the affiliate's HMDA Disclosure Statement may be obtained at
the Bureau's website. The savings association shall place the
written notice(s) in the public file within three business days
after receiving notification from the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council of the availability of the
disclosure statement(s).
(3) Small savings associations. A small savings
association or a savings association that was a small savings
association during the prior calendar year shall include in its
public file:
(i) The savings association's loan-to-deposit ratio for each
quarter of the prior calendar year and, at its option, additional
data on its loan-to-deposit ratio; and
(ii) The information required for other savings associations by
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, if the savings association has
elected to be evaluated under the lending, investment, and service
tests.
(4) Savings associations with strategic plans. A savings
association that has been approved to be assessed under a strategic
plan shall include in its public file a copy of that plan. A
savings association need not include information submitted to the
appropriate Federal banking agency on a confidential basis in
conjunction with the plan.
(5) Savings associations with less than satisfactory
ratings. A savings association that received a less than
satisfactory rating during its most recent examination shall
include in its public file a description of its current efforts to
improve its performance in helping to meet the credit needs of its
entire community. The savings association shall update the
description quarterly.
(c) Location of public information. A savings association
shall make available to the public for inspection upon request and
at no cost the information required in this section as follows:
(1) At the main office and, if an interstate savings
association, at one branch office in each state, all information in
the public file; and
(2) At each branch:
(i) A copy of the public section of the savings association's
most recent CRA Performance Evaluation and a list of services
provided by the branch; and
(ii) Within five calendar days of the request, all the
information in the public file relating to the assessment area in
which the branch is located.
(d) Copies. Upon request, a savings association shall
provide copies, either on paper or in another form acceptable to
the person making the request, of the information in its public
file. The savings association may charge a reasonable fee not to
exceed the cost of copying and mailing (if applicable).
(e) Updating. Except as otherwise provided in this
section, a savings association shall ensure that the information
required by this section is current as of April 1 of each year.
§ 195.44 Public notice by savings associations.
A savings association shall provide in the public lobby of its
main office and each of its branches the appropriate public notice
set forth in appendix B of this part. Only a branch of a savings
association having more than one assessment area shall include the
bracketed material in the notice for branch offices. Only a savings
association that is an affiliate of a holding company shall include
the last two sentences of the notices.
§ 195.45 Publication of planned examination schedule.
The appropriate Federal banking agency publishes at least 30
days in advance of the beginning of each calendar quarter a list of
savings associations scheduled for CRA examinations in that
quarter.
Appendix A to Part 195 - Ratings
(a) Ratings in general. (1) In assigning a rating, the
appropriate Federal banking agency evaluates a savings
association's performance under the applicable performance criteria
in this part, in accordance with §§ 195.21 and 195.28. This
includes consideration of low-cost education loans provided to
low-income borrowers and activities in cooperation with minority-
or women-owned financial institutions and low-income credit unions,
as well as adjustments on the basis of evidence of discriminatory
or other illegal credit practices.
(2) A savings association's performance need not fit each aspect
of a particular rating profile in order to receive that rating, and
exceptionally strong performance with respect to some aspects may
compensate for weak performance in others. The savings
association's overall performance, however, must be consistent with
safe and sound banking practices and generally with the appropriate
rating profile as follows.
(b) Savings associations evaluated under the lending,
investment, and service tests - (1) Lending performance
rating. The appropriate Federal banking agency assigns each
savings association's lending performance one of the five following
ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The appropriate Federal banking agency
rates a savings association's lending performance “outstanding” if,
in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Excellent responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A substantial majority of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) An excellent geographic distribution of loans in its
assessment area(s);
(D) An excellent distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the savings association;
(E) An excellent record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Extensive use of innovative or flexible lending practices in
a safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It is a leader in making community development loans.
(ii) High satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's lending performance “high
satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Good responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A high percentage of its loans are made in its assessment
area(s);
(C) A good geographic distribution of loans in its assessment
area(s);
(D) A good distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s),
of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the savings association;
(E) A good record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe
and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made a relatively high level of community development
loans.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's lending performance “low
satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Adequate responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) An adequate percentage of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) An adequate geographic distribution of loans in its
assessment area(s);
(D) An adequate distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the savings association;
(E) An adequate record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Limited use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a
safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made an adequate level of community development
loans.
(iv) Needs to improve. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's lending performance “needs to
improve” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) Poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A small percentage of its loans are made in its assessment
area(s);
(C) A poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly to
low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment area(s);
(D) A poor distribution, particularly in its assessment area(s),
of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the savings association;
(E) A poor record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) Little use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a
safe and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made a low level of community development loans.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a savings association's lending performance as
being in “substantial noncompliance” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(A) A very poor responsiveness to credit needs in its assessment
area(s), taking into account the number and amount of home
mortgage, small business, small farm, and consumer loans, if
applicable, in its assessment area(s);
(B) A very small percentage of its loans are made in its
assessment area(s);
(C) A very poor geographic distribution of loans, particularly
to low- or moderate-income geographies, in its assessment
area(s);
(D) A very poor distribution, particularly in its assessment
area(s), of loans among individuals of different income levels and
businesses (including farms) of different sizes, given the product
lines offered by the savings association;
(E) A very poor record of serving the credit needs of highly
economically disadvantaged areas in its assessment area(s),
low-income individuals, or businesses (including farms) with gross
annual revenues of $1 million or less, consistent with safe and
sound operations;
(F) No use of innovative or flexible lending practices in a safe
and sound manner to address the credit needs of low- or
moderate-income individuals or geographies; and
(G) It has made few, if any, community development loans.
(2) Investment performance rating. The appropriate
Federal banking agency assigns each savings association's
investment performance one of the five following ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The appropriate Federal banking agency
rates a savings association's investment performance “outstanding”
if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) An excellent level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors, often
in a leadership position;
(B) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(ii) High satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's investment performance “high
satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) A significant level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors,
occasionally in a leadership position;
(B) Significant use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Good responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's investment performance “low
satisfactory” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) An adequate level of qualified investments, particularly
those that are not routinely provided by private investors,
although rarely in a leadership position;
(B) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified
investments; and
(C) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(iv) Needs to improve. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's investment performance “needs
to improve” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(A) A poor level of qualified investments, particularly those
that are not routinely provided by private investors;
(B) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments;
and
(C) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a savings association's investment performance
as being in “substantial noncompliance” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(A) Few, if any, qualified investments, particularly those that
are not routinely provided by private investors;
(B) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments;
and
(C) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs.
(3) Service performance rating. The appropriate Federal
banking agency assigns each savings association's service
performance one of the five following ratings.
(i) Outstanding. The appropriate Federal banking agency
rates a savings association's service performance “outstanding” if,
in general, the savings association demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are readily accessible to
geographies and individuals of different income levels in its
assessment area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has improved the accessibility of its delivery
systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income geographies or to
low- or moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
are tailored to the convenience and needs of its assessment
area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low-
or moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It is a leader in providing community development
services.
(ii) High satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's service performance “high
satisfactory” if, in general, the savings association
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are accessible to geographies
and individuals of different income levels in its assessment
area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has not adversely affected the accessibility
of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and moderate-income
geographies and to low- and moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides a relatively high level of community development
services.
(iii) Low satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's service performance “low
satisfactory” if, in general, the savings association
demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are reasonably accessible to
geographies and individuals of different income levels in its
assessment area(s);
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has generally not adversely affected the
accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- and
moderate-income geographies and to low- and moderate-income
individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
do not vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- and moderate-income geographies and low- and
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides an adequate level of community development
services.
(iv) Needs to improve. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a savings association's service performance “needs to
improve” if, in general, the savings association demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible
to portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to low- or
moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has adversely affected the accessibility of
its delivery systems, particularly in low- or moderate-income
geographies or to low- or moderate-income individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
vary in a way that inconveniences its assessment area(s),
particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low- or
moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides a limited level of community development
services.
(v) Substantial noncompliance. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a savings association's service performance as
being in “substantial noncompliance” if, in general, the savings
association demonstrates:
(A) Its service delivery systems are unreasonably inaccessible
to significant portions of its assessment area(s), particularly to
low- or moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(B) To the extent changes have been made, its record of opening
and closing branches has significantly adversely affected the
accessibility of its delivery systems, particularly in low- or
moderate-income geographies or to low- or moderate-income
individuals;
(C) Its services (including, where appropriate, business hours)
vary in a way that significantly inconveniences its assessment
area(s), particularly low- or moderate-income geographies or low-
or moderate-income individuals; and
(D) It provides few, if any, community development services.
(c) Wholesale or limited purpose savings associations.
The appropriate Federal banking agency assigns each wholesale or
limited purpose savings association's community development
performance one of the four following ratings.
(1) Outstanding. The appropriate Federal banking agency
rates a wholesale or limited purpose savings association's
community development performance “outstanding” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(i) A high level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Extensive use of innovative or complex qualified
investments, community development loans, or community development
services; and
(iii) Excellent responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(2) Satisfactory. The appropriate Federal banking agency
rates a wholesale or limited purpose savings association's
community development performance “satisfactory” if, in general, it
demonstrates:
(i) An adequate level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Occasional use of innovative or complex qualified
investments, community development loans, or community development
services; and
(iii) Adequate responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(3) Needs to improve. The appropriate Federal banking
agency rates a wholesale or limited purpose savings association's
community development performance as “needs to improve” if, in
general, it demonstrates:
(i) A poor level of community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) Rare use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services;
and
(iii) Poor responsiveness to credit and community development
needs in its assessment area(s).
(4) Substantial noncompliance. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates a wholesale or limited purpose savings
association's community development performance in “substantial
noncompliance” if, in general, it demonstrates:
(i) Few, if any, community development loans, community
development services, or qualified investments, particularly
investments that are not routinely provided by private
investors;
(ii) No use of innovative or complex qualified investments,
community development loans, or community development services;
and
(iii) Very poor responsiveness to credit and community
development needs in its assessment area(s).
(d) Savings associations evaluated under the small savings
association performance standard - (1) Lending test
ratings. (i) Eligibility for a satisfactory lending test
rating. The appropriate Federal banking agency rates a small
savings association's lending performance “satisfactory” if, in
general, the savings association demonstrates:
(A) A reasonable loan-to-deposit ratio (considering seasonal
variations) given the savings association's size, financial
condition, the credit needs of its assessment area(s), and taking
into account, as appropriate, other lending-related activities such
as loan originations for sale to the secondary markets and
community development loans and qualified investments;
(B) A majority of its loans and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities, are in its assessment area;
(C) A distribution of loans to and, as appropriate, other
lending-related activities for individuals of different income
levels (including low- and moderate-income individuals) and
businesses and farms of different sizes that is reasonable given
the demographics of the savings association's assessment
area(s);
(D) A record of taking appropriate action, when warranted, in
response to written complaints, if any, about the savings
association's performance in helping to meet the credit needs of
its assessment area(s); and
(E) A reasonable geographic distribution of loans given the
savings association's assessment area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an “outstanding” lending test
rating. A small savings association that meets each of the
standards for a “satisfactory” rating under this paragraph and
exceeds some or all of those standards may warrant consideration
for a lending test rating of “outstanding.”
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance
ratings. A small savings association may also receive a lending
test rating of “needs to improve” or “substantial noncompliance”
depending on the degree to which its performance has failed to meet
the standard for a “satisfactory” rating.
(2) Community development test ratings for intermediate small
savings associations - (i) Eligibility for a satisfactory
community development test rating. The appropriate Federal
banking agency rates an intermediate small savings association's
community development performance “satisfactory” if the savings
association demonstrates adequate responsiveness to the community
development needs of its assessment area(s) through community
development loans, qualified investments, and community development
services. The adequacy of the savings association's response will
depend on its capacity for such community development activities,
its assessment area's need for such community development
activities, and the availability of such opportunities for
community development in the savings association's assessment
area(s).
(ii) Eligibility for an outstanding community development
test rating. The appropriate Federal banking agency rates an
intermediate small savings association's community development
performance “outstanding” if the savings association demonstrates
excellent responsiveness to community development needs in its
assessment area(s) through community development loans, qualified
investments, and community development services, as appropriate,
considering the savings association's capacity and the need and
availability of such opportunities for community development in the
savings association's assessment area(s).
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance
ratings. An intermediate small savings association may also
receive a community development test rating of “needs to improve”
or “substantial noncompliance” depending on the degree to which its
performance has failed to meet the standards for a “satisfactory”
rating.
(3) Overall rating - (i) Eligibility for a
satisfactory overall rating. No intermediate small savings
association may receive an assigned overall rating of
“satisfactory” unless it receives a rating of at least
“satisfactory” on both the lending test and the community
development test.
(ii) Eligibility for an outstanding overall rating. (A)
An intermediate small savings association that receives an
“outstanding” rating on one test and at least “satisfactory” on the
other test may receive an assigned overall rating of
“outstanding.”
(B) A small savings association that is not an intermediate
small savings association that meets each of the standards for a
“satisfactory” rating under the lending test and exceeds some or
all of those standards may warrant consideration for an overall
rating of “outstanding.” In assessing whether a savings
association's performance is “outstanding,” the appropriate Federal
banking agency considers the extent to which the savings
association exceeds each of the performance standards for a
“satisfactory” rating and its performance in making qualified
investments and its performance in providing branches and other
services and delivery systems that enhance credit availability in
its assessment area(s).
(iii) Needs to improve or substantial noncompliance overall
ratings. A small savings association may also receive a rating
of “needs to improve” or “substantial noncompliance” depending on
the degree to which its performance has failed to meet the
standards for a “satisfactory” rating.
(e) Strategic plan assessment and rating - (1)
Satisfactory goals. The appropriate Federal banking agency
approves as “satisfactory” measurable goals that adequately help to
meet the credit needs of the savings association's assessment
area(s).
(2) Outstanding goals. If the plan identifies a separate
group of measurable goals that substantially exceed the levels
approved as “satisfactory,” the appropriate Federal banking agency
will approve those goals as “outstanding.”
(3) Rating. The appropriate Federal banking agency
assesses the performance of a savings association operating under
an approved plan to determine if the savings association has met
its plan goals:
(i) If the savings association substantially achieves its plan
goals for a satisfactory rating, the appropriate Federal banking
agency will rate the savings association's performance under the
plan as “satisfactory.”
(ii) If the savings association exceeds its plan goals for a
satisfactory rating and substantially achieves its plan goals for
an outstanding rating, the appropriate Federal banking agency will
rate the savings association's performance under the plan as
“outstanding.”
(iii) If the savings association fails to meet substantially its
plan goals for a satisfactory rating, the appropriate Federal
banking agency will rate the savings association as either “needs
to improve” or “substantial noncompliance,” depending on the extent
to which it falls short of its plan goals, unless the savings
association elected in its plan to be rated otherwise, as provided
in § 195.27(f)(4).
Appendix B to Part 195 - CRA Notice
(a) Notice for main offices and, if an interstate savings
association, one branch office in each state.
Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the [Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) or Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC)] evaluates our record of helping to
meet the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and
sound operations. The [OCC or FDIC] also takes this record into
account when deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA, including, for example, information
about our branches, such as their location and services provided at
them; the public section of our most recent CRA Performance
Evaluation, prepared by the [OCC or FDIC]; and comments received
from the public relating to our performance in helping to meet
community credit needs, as well as our responses to those comments.
You may review this information today.
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the [OCC
or FDIC] publishes a nationwide list of the savings associations
that are scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list
is available from the [OCC Deputy Comptroller (address) or FDIC
appropriate regional director (address)]. You may send written
comments about our performance in helping to meet community credit
needs to (name and address of official at savings association) and
the [OCC Deputy Comptroller (address) or FDIC appropriate regional
director (address)]. Your letter, together with any response by us,
will be considered by the [OCC or FDIC] in evaluating our CRA
performance and may be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the [OCC Deputy
Comptroller or FDIC appropriate regional director]. You may also
request from the [OCC Deputy Comptroller or FDIC appropriate
regional director] an announcement of our applications covered by
the CRA filed with the [OCC or FDIC]. We are an affiliate of (name
of holding company), a savings and loan holding company. You may
request from the (title of responsible official), Federal Reserve
Bank of _________ (address) an announcement of applications covered
by the CRA filed by savings and loan holding companies.
(b) Notice for branch offices.
Community Reinvestment Act Notice
Under the Federal Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the [Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) or Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC)] evaluates our record of helping to
meet the credit needs of this community consistent with safe and
sound operations. The [OCC or FDIC] also takes this record into
account when deciding on certain applications submitted by us.
Your involvement is encouraged.
You are entitled to certain information about our operations and
our performance under the CRA. You may review today the public
section of our most recent CRA evaluation, prepared by the [OCC or
FDIC] and a list of services provided at this branch. You may also
have access to the following additional information, which we will
make available to you at this branch within five calendar days
after you make a request to us: (1) A map showing the assessment
area containing this branch, which is the area in which the [OCC or
FDIC] evaluates our CRA performance in this community; (2)
information about our branches in this assessment area; (3) a list
of services we provide at those locations; (4) data on our lending
performance in this assessment area; and (5) copies of all written
comments received by us that specifically relate to our CRA
performance in this assessment area, and any responses we have made
to those comments. If we are operating under an approved strategic
plan, you may also have access to a copy of the plan.
[If you would like to review information about our CRA
performance in other communities served by us, the public file for
our entire savings association is available at (name of office
located in state), located at (address).]
At least 30 days before the beginning of each quarter, the [OCC
or FDIC] publishes a nationwide list of the savings associations
that are scheduled for CRA examination in that quarter. This list
is available from the [OCC Deputy Comptroller (address) or FDIC
appropriate regional office (address)]. You may send written
comments about our performance in helping to meet community credit
needs to (name and address of official at savings association) and
the [OCC or FDIC]. Your letter, together with any response by us,
will be considered by the [OCC or FDIC] in evaluating our CRA
performance and may be made public.
You may ask to look at any comments received by the [OCC Deputy
Comptroller or FDIC appropriate regional director]. You may also
request an announcement of our applications covered by the CRA
filed with the [OCC Deputy Comptroller or FDIC appropriate regional
director]. We are an affiliate of (name of holding company), a
savings and loan holding company. You may request from the (title
of responsible official), Federal Reserve Bank of _________
(address) an announcement of applications covered by the CRA filed
by savings and loan holding companies.
[85 FR 34809, June 5, 2020] Effective Date Note:At 85 FR 34809,
June 5, 2020, appendix C was added to part 25, effective until Jan.
1, 2024.