Appendix A to Part 363 - Guidelines and Interpretations
12:6.0.1.1.14.0.1.7.12 : Appendix A
Appendix A to Part 363 - Guidelines and Interpretations Table of
Contents Introduction Scope of Rule and Definitions (§ 363.1)
1. Measuring Total Assets
2. Insured Branches of Foreign Banks
3. Compliance by Holding Company Subsidiaries
4. Comparable Services and Functions
4A. Financial Reporting
Annual Reporting Requirements (§ 363.2)
5. Annual Financial Statements
5A. Institutions Merged out of Existence
6. Holding Company Statements
7. Insured Branches of Foreign Banks
7A. Compliance with Designated Laws and Regulations
8. Management Report
8A. Management's Reports on Internal Control over Financial
Reporting under Part 363 and Section 404 of SOX
8B. Internal Control Reports and Part 363 Annual Reports for
Acquired Businesses
8C. Management's Disclosure of Noncompliance with the Designated
Laws and Regulations
9. Safeguarding of Assets
10. Standards for Internal Control
11. Service Organizations
12. Reserved
Role of Independent Public Accountant (§ 363.3)
13. General Qualifications
14. Reserved
15. Peer Review Guidelines
16. Reserved
17. Information to be Provided to the Independent Public
Accountant
18. Attestation Report and Management Letters
18A. Internal Control Attestation Standards for Independent
Auditors
19. Reviews with Audit Committee and Management
20. Notice of Termination
21. Reliance on Internal Auditors
Filing and Notice Requirements (§ 363.4)
22. Reserved
23. Notification of Late Filing
24. Public Availability
25. Reserved
26. Notices Concerning Accountants
Audit Committees (§ 363.5)
27. Composition
28. “Independent of Management” Considerations
29. Reserved
30. Holding Company Audit Committees
31. Duties
32. Banking or Related Financial Management Expertise
33. Large Customers
34. Access to Counsel
35. Transition Period for Forming and Restructuring Audit
Committees
Other
36. Modifications of Guidelines
Introduction
Congress added section 36, “Early Identification of Needed
Improvements in Financial Management” (section 36), to the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act) in 1991.
The FDIC Board of Directors adopted 12 CFR part 363 of its rules
and regulations (the Rule) to implement those provisions of section
36 that require rulemaking. The FDIC also approved these
“Guidelines and Interpretations” (the Guidelines) and directed that
they be published with the Rule to facilitate a better
understanding of, and full compliance with, the provisions of
section 36.
Although not contained in the Rule itself, some of the guidance
offered restates or refers to statutory requirements of section 36
and is therefore mandatory. If that is the case, the statutory
provision is cited.
Furthermore, upon adopting the Rule, the FDIC reiterated its
belief that every insured depository institution, regardless of its
size or charter, should have an annual audit of its financial
statements performed by an independent public accountant, and
should establish an audit committee comprised entirely of outside
directors.
The following Guidelines reflect the views of the FDIC
concerning the interpretation of section 36. The Guidelines are
intended to assist insured depository institutions (institutions),
their boards of directors, and their advisors, including their
independent public accountants and legal counsel, and to clarify
section 36 and the Rule. It is recognized that reliance on the
Guidelines may result in compliance with section 36 and the Rule
which may vary from institution to institution. Terms which are not
explained in the Guidelines have the meanings given them in the
Rule, the FDI Act, or professional accounting and auditing
literature.
Scope of Rule and Definitions (§ 363.1)
1. Measuring Total Assets. To determine whether this part
applies, an institution should use total assets as reported on its
most recent Report of Condition (Call Report) or Thrift Financial
Report (TFR), the date of which coincides with the end of its
preceding fiscal year. If its fiscal year ends on a date other than
the end of a calendar quarter, it should use its Call Report or TFR
for the quarter end immediately preceding the end of its fiscal
year.
2. Insured Branches of Foreign Banks. Unlike other
institutions, insured branches of foreign banks are not separately
incorporated or capitalized. To determine whether this part
applies, an insured branch should measure claims on non-related
parties reported on its Report of Assets and Liabilities of U.S.
Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks (form FFIEC 002).
3. Compliance by Holding Company Subsidiaries. Audited
consolidated financial statements and other reports or notices
required by this part that are submitted by a holding company for
any subsidiary institution should be accompanied by a cover letter
identifying all subsidiary institutions subject to part 363 that
are included in the holding company's submission. When submitting a
Part 363 Annual Report, the cover letter should identify all
subsidiary institutions subject to part 363 included in the
consolidated financial statements and state whether the other
annual report requirements (i.e., management's statement of
responsibilities, management's assessment of compliance with
designated safety and soundness laws and regulations, and, if
applicable, management's assessment of the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting and the independent
public accountant's attestation report on management's internal
control assessment) are being satisfied for these institutions at
the holding company level or at the institution level. An
institution filing holding company consolidated financial
statements as permitted by § 363.1(b)(1) also may report on changes
in its independent public accountant on a holding company basis. An
institution that does not meet the criteria in § 363.1(b)(2) must
satisfy the remaining provisions of this part on an individual
institution basis and maintain its own audit committee. Subject to
the criteria in §§ 363.1(b)(1) and (2), a multi-tiered holding
company may satisfy all of the requirements of this part at the
top-tier or any mid-tier holding company level.
4. Comparable Services and Functions. Services and
functions will be considered “comparable” to those required by this
part if the holding company:
(a) Prepares reports used by the subsidiary institution to meet
the requirements of this part;
(b) Has an audit committee that meets the requirements of this
part appropriate to its largest subsidiary institution; and
(c) Prepares and submits management's assessment of compliance
with the Designated Laws and Regulations defined in guideline 7A
and, if applicable, management's assessment of the effectiveness of
internal control over financial reporting based on information
concerning the relevant activities and operations of those
subsidiary institutions within the scope of the Rule.
4A. Financial Statements Prepared for Regulatory Reporting
Purposes. (a) As set forth in § 363.3(c) of this part,
“financial reporting,” at a minimum, includes both financial
statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles for the insured depository institution or its
holding company and financial statements prepared for regulatory
reporting purposes. More specifically, financial statements
prepared for regulatory reporting purposes include the schedules
equivalent to the basic financial statements that are included in
an insured depository institution's or its holding company's
appropriate regulatory report (for example, Schedules RC, RI, and
RI-A in the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call
Report) for an insured bank; and Schedules SC and SO, and the
Summary of Changes in Equity Capital section in Schedule SI in the
Thrift Financial Report (TFR) for an insured thrift institution).
For recognition and measurement purposes, financial statements
prepared for regulatory reporting purposes shall conform to
generally accepted accounting principles and section 37 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act.
(b) Financial statements prepared for regulatory reporting
purposes do not include regulatory reports prepared by a non-bank
subsidiary of a holding company or an institution. For example, if
a bank holding company or an insured depository institution owns an
insurance subsidiary, financial statements prepared for regulatory
reporting purposes would not include any regulatory reports that
the insurance subsidiary is required to submit to its appropriate
insurance regulatory agency.
Annual Reporting Requirements (§ 363.2)
5. Annual Financial Statements. Each institution (other
than an insured branch of a foreign bank) should prepare
comparative annual consolidated financial statements (balance
sheets and statements of income, changes in equity capital, and
cash flows, with accompanying footnote disclosures) in accordance
with GAAP for each of its two most recent fiscal years. Statements
for the earlier year may be presented on an unaudited basis if the
institution was not subject to this part for that year and audited
statements were not prepared.
5A. Institutions Merged Out of Existence. An institution
that is merged out of existence after the end of its fiscal year,
but before the deadline for filing its Part 363 Annual Report (120
days after the end of its fiscal year for an institution that is
neither a public company nor a subsidiary of a public company that
meets the criterion specified in § 363.1(b)(1), and 90 days after
the end of its fiscal year for an institution that is a public
company or a subsidiary of a public company that meets the
criterion specified in § 363.1(b)(1)), is not required to file a
Part 363 Annual Report for the last fiscal year of its
existence.
6. Holding Company Statements. Subject to the criterion
specified in § 363.1(b)(1), subsidiary institutions may file copies
of their holding company's audited financial statements filed with
the SEC or prepared for their FR Y-6 Annual Report under the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956 to satisfy the audited financial
statements requirement of § 363.2(a).
7. Insured Branches of Foreign Banks. An insured branch
of a foreign bank should satisfy the financial statements
requirement by filing one of the following for each of its two most
recent fiscal years:
(a) Audited balance sheets, disclosing information about
financial instruments with off-balance-sheet risk;
(b) Schedules RAL and L of form FFIEC 002, prepared and audited
on the basis of the instructions for its preparation; or
(c) With written approval of the appropriate Federal banking
agency, consolidated financial statements of the parent bank.
7A. Compliance with Designated Laws and Regulations. The
designated laws and regulations are the Federal laws and
regulations concerning loans to insiders and the Federal and, if
applicable, State laws and regulations concerning dividend
restrictions (the Designated Laws and Regulations). Table 1 to this
Appendix A lists the designated Federal laws and regulations
pertaining to insider loans and dividend restrictions (but not the
State laws and regulations pertaining to dividend restrictions)
that are applicable to each type of institution.
8. Management Report. Management should perform its own
investigation and review of compliance with the Designated Laws and
Regulations and, if required, the effectiveness of internal control
over financial reporting. Management should maintain records of its
determinations and assessments until the next Federal safety and
soundness examination, or such later date as specified by the FDIC
or the appropriate Federal banking agency. Management should
provide in its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control
over financial reporting, or supplementally, sufficient information
to enable the accountant to report on its assertions. The
management report of an insured branch of a foreign bank should be
signed by the branch's managing official if the branch does not
have a chief executive officer or a chief accounting or financial
officer.
8A. Management's Reports on Internal Control over Financial
Reporting under Part 363 and Section 404 of SOX. An institution
with $1 billion or more in total assets as of the beginning of its
fiscal year that is subject to both part 363 and the SEC's rules
implementing section 404 of SOX (as well as a public holding
company permitted under the holding company exception in §
363.1(b)(2) to file an internal control report on behalf of one or
more subsidiary institutions with $1 billion or more in total
assets) can choose either of the following two options for filing
management's report on internal control over financial
reporting.
(i) Management can prepare two separate reports on the
institution's or the holding company's internal control over
financial reporting to satisfy the FDIC's part 363 requirements and
the SEC's section 404 requirements; or
(ii) Management can prepare a single report on internal control
over financial reporting provided that it satisfies all of the
FDIC's part 363 requirements and all of the SEC's section 404
requirements.
8B. Internal Control Reports and Part 363 Annual Reports for
Acquired Businesses. Generally, the FDIC expects management's
and the related independent public accountant's report on an
institution's internal control over financial reporting to include
controls at an institution in its entirety, including all of its
consolidated entities. However, it may not always be possible for
management to conduct an assessment of the internal control over
financial reporting of an acquired business in the period between
the consummation date of the acquisition and the due date of
management's internal control assessment.
(a) In such instances, the acquired business's internal control
structure and procedures for financial reporting may be excluded
from management's assessment report and the accountant's
attestation report on internal control over financial reporting.
However, the FDIC expects management's assessment report to
identify the acquired business, state that the acquired business is
excluded, and indicate the significance of this business to the
institution's consolidated financial statements. Notwithstanding
management's exclusion of the acquired business's internal control
from its assessment, management should disclose any material change
to the institution's internal control over financial reporting due
to the acquisition of this business. Also, management may not omit
the assessment of the acquired business's internal control from
more than one annual part 363 assessment report on internal control
over financial reporting. When the acquired business's internal
control over financial reporting is excluded from management's
assessment, the independent public accountant may likewise exclude
this acquired business's internal control over financial reporting
from the accountant's evaluation of internal control over financial
reporting.
(b) If the acquired business is or has a consolidated subsidiary
that is an insured depository institution subject to part 363 and
the institution is not merged out of existence before the deadline
for filing its Part 363 Annual Report (120 days after the end of
its fiscal year for an institution that is neither a public company
nor a subsidiary of a public company that meets the criterion
specified in § 363.1(b)(1), and 90 days after the end of its fiscal
year for an institution that is a public company or a subsidiary of
public company that meets the criterion specified in §
363.1(b)(1)), the acquired institution must continue to comply with
all of the applicable requirements of part 363, including filing
its Part 363 Annual Report.
8C. Management's Disclosure of Noncompliance with the
Designated Laws and Regulations. Management's disclosure of
noncompliance, if any, with the Designated Laws and Regulations
should separately indicate the number of instances or frequency of
noncompliance with the Federal laws and regulations pertaining to
insider loans and the Federal (and, if applicable, State) laws and
regulations pertaining to dividend restrictions. The disclosure is
not required to specifically identify by name the individuals
(e.g., officers or directors) who were responsible for or
were the subject of any such noncompliance. However, the disclosure
should include appropriate qualitative and quantitative information
to describe the nature, type, and severity of the noncompliance and
the dollar amount of the insider loan(s) or dividend(s) involved.
Similar instances of noncompliance may be aggregated as to number
of instances and quantified as to the dollar amounts or the range
of dollar amounts of insider loans and/or dividends for which
noncompliance occurred. Management may also wish to describe any
corrective actions taken in response to the instances of
noncompliance as well any controls or procedures that are being
developed or that have been developed and implemented to prevent or
detect and correct future instances of noncompliance on a timely
basis.
9. Safeguarding of Assets. “Safeguarding of assets,” as
the term relates to internal control policies and procedures
regarding financial reporting and which has precedent in accounting
and auditing literature, should be encompassed in the management
report and the independent public accountant's attestation
discussed in guideline 18. Testing the existence of and compliance
with internal controls on the management of assets, including loan
underwriting and documentation, represents a reasonable
implementation of section 36. The FDIC expects such internal
controls to be encompassed by the assertion in the management
report, but the term “safeguarding of assets” need not be
specifically stated. The FDIC does not require the accountant to
attest to the adequacy of safeguards, but does require the
accountant to determine whether safeguarding policies exist. 15
15 It is management's responsibility to establish policies
concerning underwriting and asset management and to make credit
decisions. The auditor's role is to test compliance with
management's policies relating to financial reporting.
10. Standards for Internal Control. The management of
each insured depository institution with $1 billion or more in
total assets as of the beginning of its fiscal year should base its
assessment of the effectiveness of the institution's internal
control over financial reporting on a suitable, recognized control
framework established by a body of experts that followed
due-process procedures, including the broad distribution of the
framework for public comment. In addition to being available to
users of management's reports, a framework is suitable only when
it:
• Is free from bias;
• Permits reasonably consistent qualitative and quantitative
measurements of an institution's internal control over financial
reporting;
• Is sufficiently complete so that those relevant factors that
would alter a conclusion about the effectiveness of an
institution's internal control over financial reporting are not
omitted; and
• Is relevant to an evaluation of internal control over
financial reporting.
In the United States, Internal Control - Integrated
Framework, including its addendum on safeguarding assets, which
was published by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the
Treadway Commission, and is known as the COSO report, provides a
suitable and recognized framework for purposes of management's
assessment. Other suitable frameworks have been published in other
countries or may be developed in the future. Such other suitable
frameworks may be used by management and the institution's
independent public accountant in assessments, attestations, and
audits of internal control over financial reporting.
11. Service Organizations. Although service organizations
should be considered in determining if internal control over
financial reporting is effective, an institution's independent
public accountant, its management, and its audit committee should
exercise independent judgment concerning that determination. Onsite
reviews of service organizations may not be necessary to prepare
the report required by the Rule, and the FDIC does not intend that
the Rule establish any such requirement.
12. [Reserved]
Role of Independent Public Accountant (§ 363.3)
13. General Qualifications. To provide audit and attest
services to insured depository institutions, an independent public
accountant should be registered or licensed to practice as a public
accountant, and be in good standing, under the laws of the State or
other political subdivision of the United States in which the home
office of the institution (or the insured branch of a foreign bank)
is located. As required by section 36(g)(3)(A)(i), the accountant
must agree to provide copies of any working papers, policies, and
procedures relating to services performed under this part.
14. [Reserved]
15. Peer Review Guidelines. The following peer review
guidelines are acceptable:
(a) The external peer review should be conducted by an
organization independent of the accountant or firm being reviewed,
as frequently as is consistent with professional accounting
practices;
(b) The peer review (other than a PCAOB inspection) should be
generally consistent with AICPA Peer Review Standards; and
(c) The review should include, if available, at least one audit
on an insured depository institution or consolidated depository
institution holding company.
16. [Reserved]
17. Information to be Provided to the Independent Public
Accountant. Attention is directed to section 36(h) which
requires institutions to provide specified information to their
accountants. An institution also should provide its accountant with
copies of any notice that the institution's capital category is
being changed or reclassified under section 38 of the FDI Act, and
any correspondence from the appropriate Federal banking agency
concerning compliance with this part.
18. Attestation Report and Management Letters. The
independent public accountant should provide the institution with
any management letter and, if applicable, an internal control
attestation report (as required by section 36(c)(1)) at the
conclusion of the audit. The independent public accountant's
attestation report on internal control over financial reporting
must specifically include a statement as to regulatory reporting.
If a holding company subsidiary relies on its holding company's
management report to satisfy the Part 363 Annual Report
requirements, the accountant may attest to and report on the
management's assertions in one report, without reporting separately
on each subsidiary covered by the Rule. The FDIC has determined
that management letters are exempt from public disclosure.
18A. Internal Control Attestation Standards for Independent
Auditors. (a) § 363.3(b) provides that the independent public
accountant's attestation and report on management's assertion
concerning the effectiveness of an institution's internal control
structure and procedures for financial reporting shall be made in
accordance with generally accepted standards for attestation
engagements or the PCAOB's auditing standards, if applicable. The
standards that should be followed by the institution's independent
public accountant concerning internal control over financial
reporting for institutions with $1 billion or more in total assets
can be summarized as follows:
(1) For an insured institution that is neither a public company
nor a subsidiary of a public company, its independent public
accountant need only follow the AICPA's attestation standards.
(2) For an insured institution that is a public company that is
required to comply with the auditor attestation requirement of
section 404 of SOX, its independent public accountant should follow
the PCAOB's auditing standards.
(3) For an insured institution that is a public company but is
not required to comply with the auditor attestation requirement of
section 404 of SOX, its independent public accountant is not
required to follow the PCAOB's auditing standards. In this case,
the accountant need only follow the AICPA's attestation
standards.
(4) For an insured institution that is a subsidiary of a public
company that is required to comply with the auditor attestation
requirement of section 404 of SOX, but is not itself a public
company, the institution and its independent public accountant have
flexibility in complying with the internal control requirements of
part 363. If the conditions specified in § 363.1(b)(2) are met,
management and the independent public accountant may choose to
report on internal control over financial reporting at the
consolidated holding company level. In this situation, the
independent public accountant's work would be performed for the
public company in accordance with the PCAOB's auditing standards.
Alternatively, the institution may choose to comply with the
internal control reporting requirements of part 363 at the
institution level and its independent public accountant could
follow the AICPA's attestation standards.
(b) If an independent public accountant need only follow the
AICPA's attestation standards, the accountant and the insured
institution may instead agree to have the internal control
attestation performed under the PCAOB's auditing standards.
19. Reviews with Audit Committee and Management. The
independent public accountant should meet with the institution's
audit committee to review the accountant's reports required by this
part before they are filed. It also may be appropriate for the
accountant to review its findings with the institution's board of
directors and management.
20. Notice of Termination. The notice of termination
required by § 363.3(c) should state whether the independent public
accountant agrees with the assertions contained in any notice filed
by the institution under § 363.4(d), and whether the institution's
notice discloses all relevant reasons for the accountant's
termination. Subject to the criterion specified in § 363.1(b)(1)
regarding compliance with the audited financial statements
requirement at the holding company level, the independent public
accountant for an insured depository institution that is a public
company and files reports with its appropriate Federal banking
agency, or is a subsidiary of a public company that files reports
with the SEC, may submit the letter it furnished to management to
be filed with the institution's or the holding company's current
report (e.g., SEC Form 8-K) concerning a change in
accountant to satisfy the notice requirements of § 363.3(c).
Alternatively, if the independent public accountant confirms that
management has filed a current report (e.g., SEC Form 8-K)
concerning a change in accountant that satisfies the notice
requirements of § 363.4(d) and includes an independent public
accountant's letter that satisfies the requirements of § 363.3(c),
the independent public accountant may rely on the current report
(e.g., SEC Form 8-K) filed with the FDIC by management
concerning a change in accountant to satisfy the notice
requirements of § 363.3(c).
21. Reliance on Internal Auditors. Nothing in this part
or this Appendix is intended to preclude the ability of the
independent public accountant to rely on the work of an
institution's internal auditor.
Filing and Notice Requirements (§ 363.4)
22. [Reserved]
23. Notification of Late Filing. (a) An institution's
submission of a written notice of late filing does not cure the
requirement to timely file the Part 363 Annual Report or other
reports or notices required by § 363.4. An institution's failure to
timely file is considered an apparent violation of part 363.
(b) If the late filing notice submitted pursuant to § 363.4(e)
relates only to a portion of a Part 363 Annual Report or any other
report or notice, the insured depository institution should file
the other components of the report or notice within the prescribed
filing period together with a cover letter that indicates which
components of its Part 363 Annual Report or other report or notice
are omitted. An institution may combine the written late filing
notice and the cover letter into a single notice that is submitted
together with the other components of the report or notice that are
being timely filed.
24. Public Availability. Each institution's Part 363
Annual Report should be available for public inspection at its main
and branch offices no later than 15 days after it is filed with the
FDIC. Alternatively, an institution may elect to mail one copy of
its Part 363 Annual Report to any person who requests it. The Part
363 Annual Report should remain available to the public until the
Part 363 Annual Report for the next year is available. An
institution may use its Part 363 Annual Report under this part to
meet the annual disclosure statement required by 12 CFR 350.3, if
the institution satisfies all other requirements of 12 CFR Part
350.
25. [Reserved]
26. Notices Concerning Accountants. With respect to any
selection, change, or termination of an independent public
accountant, an institution's management and audit committee should
be familiar with the notice requirements in § 363.4(d) and
guideline 20, and management should send a copy of any notice
required under § 363.4(d) to the independent public accountant when
it is filed with the FDIC. An insured depository institution that
is a public company and files reports required under the Federal
securities laws with its appropriate Federal banking agency, or is
a subsidiary of a public company that files such reports with the
SEC, may use its current report (e.g., SEC Form 8-K)
concerning a change in accountant to satisfy the notice
requirements of § 363.4(d) subject to the criterion of §
363.1(b)(1) regarding compliance with the audited financial
statements requirement at the holding company level.
Audit Committees (§ 363.5)
27. Composition. The board of directors of each
institution should determine whether each existing or potential
audit committee member meets the requirements of section 36 and
this part. To do so, the board of directors should maintain an
approved set of written criteria for determining whether a director
who is to serve on the audit committee is an outside director (as
defined in § 363.5(a)(3)) and is independent of management. At
least annually, the board of each institution should determine
whether each existing or potential audit committee member is an
outside director. In addition, at least annually, the board of an
institution with $1 billion or more in total assets as of the
beginning of its fiscal year should determine whether all existing
and potential audit committee members are “independent of
management of the institution” and the board of an institution with
total assets of $500 million or more but less than $1 billion as of
the beginning of its fiscal year should determine whether the
majority of all existing and potential audit committee members are
“independent of management of the institution.” The minutes of the
board of directors should contain the results of and the basis for
its determinations with respect to each existing and potential
audit committee member. Because an insured branch of a foreign bank
does not have a separate board of directors, the FDIC will not
apply the audit committee requirements to such branch. However, any
such branch is encouraged to make a reasonable good faith effort to
see that similar duties are performed by persons whose experience
is generally consistent with the Rule's requirements for an
institution the size of the insured branch.
28. “Independent of Management” Considerations. It is not
possible to anticipate, or explicitly provide for, all
circumstances that might signal potential conflicts of interest in,
or that might bear on, an outside director's relationship to an
insured depository institution and whether the outside director
should be deemed “independent of management.” When assessing an
outside director's relationship with an institution, the board of
directors should consider the issue not merely from the standpoint
of the director himself or herself, but also from the standpoint of
persons or organizations with which the director has an
affiliation. These relationships can include, but are not limited
to, commercial, banking, consulting, charitable, and family
relationships. To assist boards of directors in fulfilling their
responsibility to determine whether existing and potential members
of the audit committee are “independent of management,” paragraphs
(a) through (d) of this guideline provide guidance for making this
determination.
(a) If an outside director, either directly or indirectly, owns
or controls, or has owned or controlled within the preceding fiscal
year, 10 percent or more of any outstanding class of voting
securities of the institution, the institution's board of directors
should determine, and document its basis and rationale for such
determination, whether such ownership of voting securities would
interfere with the outside director's exercise of independent
judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of an audit committee
member, including the ability to evaluate objectively the propriety
of management's accounting, internal control, and reporting
policies and practices. Notwithstanding the criteria set forth in
paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of this guideline, if the board of
directors determines that such ownership of voting securities would
interfere with the outside director's exercise of independent
judgment, the outside director will not be considered “independent
of management.”
(b) The following list sets forth additional criteria that, at a
minimum, a board of directors should consider when determining
whether an outside director is “independent of management.” The
board of directors may conclude that additional criteria are also
relevant to this determination in light of the particular
circumstances of its institution. Accordingly, an outside director
will not be considered “independent of management” if: (1) The
director serves, or has served within the last three years, as a
consultant, advisor, promoter, underwriter, legal counsel, or
trustee of or to the institution or its affiliates.
(2) The director has been, within the last three years, an
employee of the institution or any of its affiliates or an
immediate family member is, or has been within the last three
years, an executive officer of the institution or any of its
affiliates.
(3) The director has participated in the preparation of the
financial statements of the institution or any of its affiliates at
any time during the last three years.
(4) The director has received, or has an immediate family member
who has received, during any twelve-month period within the last
three years, more than $100,000 in direct and indirect compensation
from the institution, its subsidiaries, and its affiliates for
consulting, advisory, or other services other than director and
committee fees and pension or other forms of deferred compensation
for prior service (provided such compensation is not contingent in
any way on continued service). Direct compensation also would not
include compensation received by the director for former service as
an interim chairman or interim chief executive officer.
(5) The director or an immediate family member is a current
partner of a firm that performs internal or external auditing
services for the institution or any of its affiliates; the director
is a current employee of such a firm; the director has an immediate
family member who is a current employee of such a firm and who
participates in the firm's audit, assurance, or tax compliance
practice; or the director or an immediate family member was within
the last three years (but no longer is) a partner or employee of
such a firm and personally worked on the audit of the insured
depository institution or any of its affiliates within that
time.
(6) The director or an immediate family member is, or has been
within the last three years, employed as an executive officer of
another entity where any of the present executive officers of the
institution or any of its affiliates at the same time serves or
served on that entity's compensation committee.
(7) The director is a current employee, or an immediate family
member is a current executive officer, of an entity that has made
payments to, or received payments from, the institution or any of
its affiliates for property or services in an amount which, in any
of the last three fiscal years, exceeds the greater of $200
thousand, or 5 percent of such entity's consolidated gross
revenues. This would include payments made by the institution or
any of its affiliates to not-for-profit entities where the director
is an executive officer or where an immediate family member of the
director is an executive officer.
(8) For purposes of paragraph (b) of this guideline:
(i) An “immediate family member” includes a person's spouse,
parents, children, siblings, mothers- and fathers-in-law, sons- and
daughters-in-law, brothers- and sisters-in-law, and anyone (other
than domestic employees) who shares such person's home.
(ii) The term affiliate of, or a person affiliated with, a
specified person, means a person or entity that directly, or
indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controls, or is
controlled by, or is under common control with, the person
specified.
(iii) The term indirect compensation for consulting, advisory,
or other services includes the acceptance of a fee for such
services by a director's immediate family member or by an
organization in which the director is a partner or principal that
provides accounting, consulting, legal, investment banking, or
financial advisory services to the institution, any of its
subsidiaries, or any of its affiliates.
(iv) The terms direct and indirect compensation and payments do
not include payments such as dividends arising solely from
investments in the institution's equity securities, provided the
same per share amounts are paid to all shareholders of that class;
interest income from investments in the institution's deposit
accounts and debt securities; loans from the institution that
conform to all regulatory requirements applicable to such loans
except that interest payments or other fees paid in association
with such loans would be considered payments; and payments under
non-discretionary charitable contribution matching programs.
(c) An insured depository institution that is a public company
and a listed issuer (as defined in Rule 10A-3 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act)), or is a subsidiary of a
public company that meets the criterion specified in § 363.1(b)(1)
and is a listed issuer, may choose to use the definition of audit
committee member independence set forth in the listing standards
applicable to the public institution or its public company parent
for purposes of determining whether an outside director is
“independent of management.”
(d) All other insured depository institutions may choose to use
the definition of audit committee member independence set forth in
the listing standards of a national securities exchange that is
registered with the SEC pursuant to section 6 of the Exchange Act
or a national securities association that is registered with the
SEC pursuant to section 15A(a) of the Exchange Act for purposes of
determining whether an outside director is “independent of
management.”
29. [Reserved]
30. Holding Company Audit Committees. (a) When an insured
depository institution satisfies the requirements for the holding
company exception specified in §§ 363.1(b)(1) and (2), the audit
committee requirement of this part may be satisfied by the audit
committee of the top-tier or any mid-tier holding company. Members
of the audit committee of the holding company should meet all the
membership requirements applicable to the largest subsidiary
depository institution subject to part 363 and should perform all
the duties of the audit committee of a subsidiary institution
subject to part 363, even if the holding company directors are not
directors of the institution.
(b) When an insured depository institution subsidiary with total
assets of $1 billion or more as of the beginning of its fiscal year
does not meet the requirements for the holding company exception
specified in §§ 363.1(b)(1) and (2) or maintains its own separate
audit committee to satisfy the requirements of this part, the
members of the audit committee of the top-tier or any mid-tier
holding company may serve on the audit committee of the subsidiary
institution if they are otherwise independent of management of the
subsidiary institution, and, if applicable, meet any other
requirements for a large subsidiary institution covered by this
part.
(c) When an insured depository institution with total assets of
$500 million or more but less than $1 billion as of the beginning
of its fiscal year does not meet the requirements for the holding
company exception specified in §§ 363.1(b)(1) and (2) or maintains
its own separate audit committee to satisfy the requirements of
this part, the members of the audit committee of the top-tier or
any mid-tier holding company may serve on the audit committee of
the subsidiary institution provided a majority of the institution's
audit committee members are independent of management of the
subsidiary institution.
(d) Officers and employees of a top-tier or any mid-tier holding
company may not serve on the audit committee of a subsidiary
institution subject to part 363.
31. Duties. The audit committee should perform all duties
determined by the institution's board of directors and it should
maintain minutes and other relevant records of its meetings and
decisions. The duties of the audit committee should be appropriate
to the size of the institution and the complexity of its
operations, and, at a minimum, should include the appointment,
compensation, and oversight of the independent public accountant;
reviewing with management and the independent public accountant the
basis for their respective reports issued under §§ 363.2(a) and (b)
and §§ 363.3(a) and (b); reviewing and satisfying itself as to the
independent public accountant's compliance with the required
qualifications for independent public accountants set forth in §§
363.3(f) and (g) and guidelines 13 through 16; ensuring that audit
engagement letters comply with the provisions of § 363.5(c) before
engaging an independent public accountant; being familiar with the
notice requirements in § 363.4(d) and guideline 20 regarding the
selection, change, or termination of an independent public
accountant; and ensuring that management sends a copy of any notice
required under § 363.4(d) to the independent public accountant when
it is filed with the FDIC. Appropriate additional duties could
include:
(a) Reviewing with management and the independent public
accountant the scope of services required by the audit, significant
accounting policies, and audit conclusions regarding significant
accounting estimates;
(b) Reviewing with management and the accountant their
assessments of the effectiveness of internal control over financial
reporting, and the resolution of identified material weaknesses and
significant deficiencies in internal control over financial
reporting, including the prevention or detection of management
override or compromise of the internal control system;
(c) Reviewing with management the institution's compliance with
the Designated Laws and Regulations identified in guideline 7A;
(d) Discussing with management and the independent public
accountant any significant disagreements between management and the
independent public accountant; and
(e) Overseeing the internal audit function.
32. Banking or Related Financial Management Expertise. At
least two members of the audit committee of a large institution
shall have “banking or related financial management expertise” as
required by section 36(g)(1)(C)(i). This determination is to be
made by the board of directors of the insured depository
institution. A person will be considered to have such required
expertise if the person has significant executive, professional,
educational, or regulatory experience in financial, auditing,
accounting, or banking matters as determined by the board of
directors. Significant experience as an officer or member of the
board of directors or audit committee of a financial services
company would satisfy these criteria. A person who has the
attributes of an “audit committee financial expert” as set forth in
the SEC's rules would also satisfy these criteria.
33. Large Customers. Any individual or entity (including
a controlling person of any such entity) which, in the
determination of the board of directors, has such significant
direct or indirect credit or other relationships with the
institution, the termination of which likely would materially and
adversely affect the institution's financial condition or results
of operations, should be considered a “large customer” for purposes
of § 363.5(b).
34. Access to Counsel. The audit committee should be able
to retain counsel at its discretion without prior permission of the
institution's board of directors or its management. Section 36 does
not preclude advice from the institution's internal counsel or
regular outside counsel. It also does not require retaining or
consulting counsel, but if the committee elects to do either, it
also may elect to consider issues affecting the counsel's
independence. Such issues would include whether to retain or
consult only counsel not concurrently representing the institution
or any affiliate, and whether to place limitations on any counsel
representing the institution concerning matters in which such
counsel previously participated personally and substantially as
outside counsel to the committee.
35. Transition Period for Forming and Restructuring Audit
Committees.
(a) When an insured depository institution's total assets as of
the beginning of its fiscal year are $500 million or more for the
first time and it thereby becomes subject to part 363, no
regulatory action will be taken if the institution (1) develops and
approves a set of written criteria for determining whether a
director who is to serve on the audit committee is an outside
director and is independent of management and (2) forms or
restructures its audit committee to comply with § 363.5(a)(2) by
the end of that fiscal year.
(b) When an insured depository institution's total assets as of
the beginning of its fiscal year are $1 billion or more for the
first time, no regulatory action will be taken if the institution
forms or restructures its audit committee to comply with §
363.5(a)(1) by the end of that fiscal year, provided that the
composition of its audit committee meets the requirements specified
in § 363.5(a)(2) at the beginning of that fiscal year, if such
requirements were applicable.
(c) When an insured depository institution's total assets as of
the beginning of its fiscal year are $3 billion or more for the
first time, no regulatory action will be taken if the institution
forms or restructures its audit committee to comply with § 363.5(b)
by the end of that fiscal year, provided that the composition of
its audit committee meets the requirements specified in §
363.5(a)(1) at the beginning of that fiscal year, if such
requirements were applicable.
Other
36. Modifications of Guidelines. The FDIC's Board of
Directors has delegated to the Director of the FDIC's Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection authority to make and publish
in the Federal Register minor technical amendments to the
Guidelines in this Appendix and the guidance and illustrative
reports in Appendix B, in consultation with the other appropriate
Federal banking agencies, to reflect the practical experience
gained from implementation of this part. It is not anticipated any
such modification would be effective until affected institutions
have been given reasonable advance notice of the modification. Any
material modification or amendment will be subject to review and
approval of the FDIC Board of Directors.
Table 1 to Appendix A - Designated Federal
Laws and Regulations Applicable to:
|
|
National banks |
State member banks |
State
non-member banks |
Savings
associations |
Insider Loans - Parts and/or Sections of Title 12 of the United
States Code |
375a |
Loans to Executive Officers of
Banks |
√ |
√ |
(A) |
(A) |
375b |
Extensions of Credit to
Executive Officers, Directors, and Principal Shareholders of
Banks |
√ |
√ |
(A) |
(A) |
1468(b) |
Extensions of Credit to
Executive Officers, Directors, and Principal Shareholders |
|
|
|
√ |
1828(j)(2) |
Extensions of Credit to
Officers, Directors, and Principal Shareholders |
|
|
√ |
|
1828(j)(3)(B) |
Extensions of Credit to
Officers, Directors, and Principal Shareholders |
(B) |
|
(C) |
|
Parts and/or Sections of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations |
31 |
Extensions of Credit to
Insiders |
√ |
|
|
|
32 |
Lending Limits |
√ |
|
|
|
215 |
Loans to Executive Officers,
Directors, and Principal Shareholders of Member Banks |
√ |
√ |
(D) |
(E) |
337.3 |
Limits on Extensions of Credit
to Executive Officers, Directors, and Principal Shareholders of
Insured Nonmember Banks |
|
|
√ |
|
390.338 (state
savings associations) |
Loans by Savings Associations
to Their Executive Officers, Directors, and Principal
Shareholders |
|
|
|
√ |
Dividend Restrictions - Parts and/or Sections of Title 12 of the
United States Code |
56 |
Prohibition on Withdrawal of
Capital and Unearned Dividends |
√ |
√ |
|
|
60 |
Dividends and Surplus
Fund |
√ |
√ |
|
|
1467a(f) |
Declaration of Dividend |
|
|
|
√ |
1831o(d)(1) |
Prompt Corrective Action -
Capital Distributions Restricted |
√ |
√ |
√ |
√ |
Parts and/or Sections of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations |
5 Subpart E |
Payment of Dividends |
√ |
|
|
|
6.6 |
Prompt Corrective Action -
Restrictions on Undercapitalized Institutions |
√ |
|
|
|
208.5 |
Dividends and Other
Distributions |
|
√ |
|
|
208.45 |
Prompt Corrective Action -
Restrictions on Undercapitalized Institutions |
|
√ |
|
|
324.405 |
Prompt Corrective Action -
Restrictions on Undercapitalized Institutions |
|
|
√ |
|
390.342-.348
(state savings associations) |
Capital Distributions |
|
|
|
√ |
390.455 (state
savings associations) |
Prompt Corrective Action -
Restrictions on Undercapitalized Institutions |
|
|
|
√ |
[74 FR 35745, July 20, 2009, as amended at 78 FR 55596, Sept. 10,
2013; 83 FR 17742, Apr. 24, 2018]