Appendix C to Part 707 - Official Staff Interpretations
12:7.0.2.3.8.0.11.12.18 : Appendix C
Appendix C to Part 707 - Official Staff Interpretations
Introduction
1. Official status. This commentary is the means by which
the staff of the Office of General Counsel of the National Credit
Union Administration issues official staff interpretations of Part
707 of the NCUA Rules and Regulations. Good faith compliance with
this commentary affords protection from liability under section
271(f) of the Truth in Savings Act (TISA), 12 U.S.C. 4311.
Section 707.1 - Authority, Purpose, Coverage, and Effect on State
Laws (c) Coverage
1. Foreign applicability. Part 707 applies to all credit
unions that offer share and deposit accounts to residents
(including resident aliens) of any state as defined in § 707.2(v)
and that offer accounts insurable by the National Credit Union
Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) whether or not such accounts are
insured by the NCUSIF. Corporate credit unions designated as such
by NCUA under 12 CFR 704.2 (definition of “corporate credit union”)
are exempt from part 707.
2. Persons who advertise accounts. Persons who advertise
accounts are subject to the advertising rules. This includes agent
and agented accounts, such as a member who subdivides interests in
a jumbo term share certificate account for sale to other parties or
among members who form a certificate account investment club. For
example, if an agent places an advertisement that offers members an
interest in an account at a credit union, the advertising rules
apply to the advertisement, whether the account is held by the
agent or directly by the member.
3. Nonautomated credit unions. Nonautomated credit unions
with an asset size of $2 million or less, after subtracting any
nonmember deposits, are exempt from TISA and part 707. NCUA defines
a “nonautomated credit union” as a credit union without sufficient
data processing capability and capacity to establish, operate and
maintain a share and loan software system to timely and accurately
process all account transactions of all members. The nonautomated
credit union exemption is available to all credit unions meeting
the asset size and automation standards of this comment, including
newly chartered credit unions. If any of the credit unions eligible
for this exemption grow to have more than $2 million in assets as
of December 31 of any year, the NCUA Board will require such credit
unions to comply with TISA and part 707 on January 1 of one year
after such credit union loses its exemption eligibility. Similarly,
if a credit union becomes sufficiently automated to operate a
complete share and loan system, such credit union will be entitled
to the same compliance phase-in period.
(d) Effect on State Laws
1. Preemption of state laws/Inconsistent requirements.
State law requirements that are inconsistent with the requirements
of TISA and part 707 are preempted to the extent of the
inconsistency. A state law is inconsistent if it requires a credit
union to make disclosures or take actions that contradict the
requirements of the federal law. A state law is also contradictory
if it requires the use of the same term to represent a different
amount or a different meaning than the federal law, requires the
use of a term different from that required in the federal law to
describe the same item, or permits a method of calculating
dividends or interest on an account different from that required in
the federal law.
2. Preemption determinations. A credit union, state, or
other interested party may request the Board to determine whether a
state law requirement is inconsistent with the federal
requirements. A request for a determination should be addressed to
NCUA's Office of General Counsel, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314. Written preemption requests should cite (or include a copy
of) the allegedly inconsistent state law, demonstrate the
inconsistency with TISA and part 707 and the burden on credit
unions, and formally request a preemption determination. The Office
of General Counsel may provide other interested parties,
particularly affected states, an informal opportunity to comment on
any request for a preemption determination, unless it finds that
such notice and opportunity for comment would be impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest. NCUA will
publicize any preemption determinations using any means readily at
its disposal.
3. Effect of preemption determinations. After the Board,
through its Office of General Counsel, determines that a state law
is inconsistent, a credit union may not make disclosures using the
inconsistent term or take actions relying on the inconsistent
law.
4. Reversal of determination. The Board reserves the
right to reverse a determination for any reason bearing on the
coverage or effect of state or federal law.
Section 707.2 - Definitions (a) Account
1. Covered accounts. Examples of accounts subject to the
regulation are:
i. Dividend-bearing and interest-bearing accounts.
ii. Non-dividend-bearing and non-interest-bearing accounts.
iii. Accounts opened as a condition of obtaining a credit
card.
iv. Escrow accounts with a consumer purpose, such as an account
established by a member to escrow rental payments, pending
resolution of a dispute with the member's landlord.
v. Accounts held by a parent or custodian for a minor under a
state's Uniform Gift to Minors Act (or Uniform Transfers to Minors
Act).
vi. Individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and simplified
employee pension (SEP) accounts.
vii. Payable-on-Death (POD) or “Totten trust” accounts.
2. Other accounts. Examples of accounts not
subject to the regulation are:
i. Mortgage escrow accounts for collecting taxes and property
insurance premiums.
ii. Accounts established to make periodic disbursements on
construction loans.
iii. Trust accounts opened by a trustee pursuant to a formal
written trust agreement (not merely declarations of trust on a
signature card such as a “Totten trust,” or an IRA or SEP
account).
iv. Accounts opened by an executor in the name of decedent's
estate.
v. Accounts of individuals operating businesses as sole
proprietors.
vi. Certificates of indebtedness. Some credit unions borrow
funds from their members through a certificate of indebtedness that
sets forth the terms and conditions of the repayment of the
borrowing, such as federal credit unions do through 12 CFR 701.38.
Such an account does not represent an account in a credit union and
is not covered by part 707.
vii. Unincorporated nonbusiness association accounts.
3. Other investments. The term “account” does not apply
to these products. Examples of products not covered are:
i. Government securities.
ii. Mutual funds.
iii. Annuities.
iv. Securities or obligations of a credit union.
v. Contractual arrangements such as repurchase agreements,
interest rate swaps, and bankers acceptances.
vi. Purchases of U.S. Savings Bonds through a credit union.
vii. Services offered through a group purchasing plan or a
credit union service organization (CUSO).
4. Options. All dividend-bearing and interest-bearing
accounts are either fixed-rate or variable-rate accounts.
5. Use of synonyms. Generally, it is not the purpose of
part 707 to prohibit specific descriptive terms for accounts. For
example, credit unions can use adjectives and trade names to
describe accounts such as “Best Share Draft Account,” or “Ultra
Money Market Share Account.” Synonyms for share, share draft, money
market share, and term share accounts may be used to describe
various types of credit union share and deposit accounts as long as
the synonym is accurate and not misleading and, for account
disclosures, is used in conjunction with the correct legal term.
For example, the following synonyms may be used:
i. The term “checking account” may be used to describe share
draft accounts.
ii. The term “money market account” may be used to describe
money market share accounts.
iii. The term “savings account” may be used to describe regular
share and share accounts.
iv. The terms “share certificate,” “certificate account,” or
“certificate” may be used to describe share certificates and other
dividend-bearing term share accounts.
v. However, under no circumstances may a credit union describe a
share account as a deposit account, or vice versa. For example, the
term “certificate of deposit” or “CD” may not be used to describe
share certificates and other dividend-bearing term share accounts.
Similarly, the terms “time account” (used in Regulation DD, 12 CFR
1030.2(u)) and “time deposit” (used in Federal Reserve Board's
Regulation D, 12 CFR 204.2(c)) may not be used to describe term
share accounts.
(b) Advertisement
1. Covered messages. Advertisements include commercial
messages in visual, oral, or print media that invite, offer, or
otherwise announce generally to members and potential members the
availability of member accounts such as:
i. Telephone solicitations.
ii. Messages on automated teller machine (ATM) screens
(including any printout).
iii. Messages on a computer screen in a credit union's lobby
(including any printout) other than a screen viewed solely by the
credit union's employee.
iv. Messages in a newspaper, magazine, or promotional flyer or
on radio or television.
v. Messages promoting an account that are provided along with
information about the member's existing account at a credit union
and that promote another account at the credit union (such as
account promotional messages on the periodic statement).
2. Other messages. Examples of messages that are
not advertisements are:
i. Rate sheets published in newspapers, periodicals, or trade
journals (unless the credit union or share and deposit broker that
offers accounts at the credit union pays a fee to have the
information included or otherwise controls publication).
ii. Telephone conversations initiated by a member or potential
member about an account.
iii. An in-person discussion with a member about the terms for a
specific account.
iv. For purposes of § 707.8(b) of this part through § 707.8(e)
of this part, information given to members about existing accounts,
such as current rates recorded on a voice-response machine or
notices for automatically renewable time account sent before
renewal.
v. Information about a particular transaction in an existing
account.
vi. Disclosures required by Federal or other applicable law.
vii. A share account agreement.
(c) Annual Percentage Yield.
1. General. The annual percentage yield (APY) is required
for disclosures for new accounts, oral responses to inquiries about
rates; disclosures provided upon request; initial disclosures (if
the credit union chooses to provide full disclosures instead of the
abbreviated notice); notices prior to the renewal of a term share
account, if known at the time the notice is sent, and in
advertising. The annual percentage yield shows the total amount of
dividends for a 365 day period (or a 366 day period for a leap
year) on an assumed principal amount based on the dividend rate and
frequency of compounding as a percentage of the assumed principal
(for accounts such as share or share draft accounts) or for the
total amount of dividends over the term of the account for term
share accounts. The annual percentage yield assumes the principal
amount remains in the account for 365 days (366 days for leap year)
or for the term of the account.
2. How Annual Percentage Yield Differs from Annual Percentage
Yield Earned. The annual percentage yield (APY) differs from
the annual percentage yield earned (APYE). The annual percentage
yield earned is required for periodic statements only. The annual
percentage yield earned shows the total amount of dividends earned
for the dividend or statement period as a percent of the actual
average daily balance in the member's account. Unlike the annual
percentage yield, the annual percentage yield earned is affected by
additions and withdrawals during the period. The annual percentage
yield and the annual percentage yield earned must be calculated
according to the formulas provided in appendix A to this rule.
(d) Average Daily Balance Method
1. General. One of the two required methods (the daily
balance is the other) of determining the balance upon which
dividends must be accrued and paid. The average daily balance
method requires the application of a periodic rate to the average
daily balance in the account for the average daily balance
calculation period. The average daily balance is determined by
adding the full amount of principal in the account for each day of
the period and dividing that figure by the number of days in the
period.
(e) Board.
1. General. The NCUA Board.
(f) Bonus
1. General. Bonuses include items of value offered as
incentives to members, such as an offer to pay the final
installment deposit for a holiday club account if the final
installment is over $10. Bonuses do not include the payment of
dividends (including extraordinary dividends), the waiver or
reduction of a fee, the absorption of expenses, non-dividend
membership benefits, or other consideration aggregating $10 or less
per year.
2. Examples. The following are examples of bonuses.
i. A credit union offers $25 to potential members for becoming a
member and opening an account. The $25 could be provided by check,
cash, or direct deposit.
ii. A credit union offers $25 to a member with only a regular
share account to open a share draft account. The $25 could be
provided by check, cash, or direct deposit.
iii. A credit union offers a portable radio with a value of $20
to members and potential members for opening a share draft
account.
iv. A credit union pays the final installment deposit for a
holiday club account if over $10.
3. Examples not comprising bonuses. The following are
examples of items that are not bonuses:
i. Discount coupons distributed by credit unions for use at
restaurants or stores.
ii. A credit union offers $20 to any member if the member is
responsible for encouraging a potential member to open an account.
The $20 is not a bonus because the $20 is not paid to the
individual opening the account. Any item, including cash, given or
offered to a third party (that is not a joint member or joint owner
in an account being opened) in exchange for a member or potential
member opening (or a member renewing or adding to) an account is
not a bonus.
iii. A credit union offers $25 to a member if the member can
locate his name in the body of a newsletter.
iv. Life savings benefits. Many credit unions offer life savings
benefits to beneficiaries of deceased members. Because the benefit
accrues to a third party, such life savings plans offered are not
bonuses.
v. A credit union offers to pay annual membership dues in a
benevolent organization for a class of members.
4. De minimis rule. Items with a de minimis value
of $10 or less are not bonuses. Credit unions may rely on the
valuation standard used by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to
determine if the value of the item is de minimis. Items
required to be reported by the credit union under IRS rules are
bonuses under this regulation. Examples of items of de
minimis values are:
i. Disability insurance premiums on a share account valued at an
amount of $10 or less per year.
ii. Coffee mugs, T-shirts or other merchandise with a market
value of $10 or less per year.
5. Aggregation. In determining if an item valued at $10
or less is a bonus, credit unions must aggregate per account per
calendar year items that may be given to members. In making this
determination, credit unions aggregate per account only the market
value of items that may be given for a specific promotion. To
illustrate, assume a credit union offers in January to give members
an item valued at $7 for each calendar quarter during the year that
the average account balance in a share draft account exceeds
$10,000. The bonus rules are triggered, since members are eligible
under the promotion to receive up to $28 during the year. However,
the bonus rules are not triggered if an item valued at $7 is
offered to members opening a share draft account during the month
of January, even though in November the credit union introduces a
new promotion that includes, for example, an offer to existing
share draft accountholders for an item valued at $8 for maintaining
an average balance of $5,000 for the month.
6. Waiver or reduction of a fee or absorption of
expenses. Bonuses do not include value received by members
through the waiver or reduction of fees for credit union-related
services (even if the fees waived exceed $10), such as the
following:
i. Waiving a safe deposit box rental fee for one year for
members who open a new account.
ii. Waiving fees for travelers checks for members, and waiving
check and share draft printing fees.
iii. Nondiscriminatorily waiving all fees for a particular class
of members, such as seniors or minors.
iv. Discounts on interest rates charged for loans at the credit
union.
v. Rebates of loan interest already paid by a member.
vi. Discounts on application fees charged for loans at the
credit union.
vii. Packaged, linked, or tied-account services.
7. Non-dividend membership benefits. Such benefits are
not bonuses because they are sporadic in nature, often difficult to
value, and providing non-dividend membership benefits is a
long-standing unique credit union practice. (See commentary to §
707.2(r) for examples of such benefits.)
(g) Credit Union
1. General. Includes credit unions in the United States,
Puerto Rico, Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands, and U.S. territories.
Applies to credit unions whether or not the accounts in the credit
union are federally, state, privately insured, or uninsured.
(h) Daily Balance Method
1. General. One of the two required methods (the average
daily balance is the other) of determining the balance upon which
dividends must be accrued and paid. The daily balance method
requires the application of a daily periodic rate to the full
amount of principal in the account each day.
(i) Dividend and Dividends
1. General. Member savings placed in share accounts are
equity investments, and the returns earned on these accounts are
dividends. Federal credit unions may only offer dividend-bearing
and non-dividend-bearing share accounts. State-chartered credit
unions may offer both share and deposit accounts if permitted by
state law. State law, including without limitation regulations and
official interpretations, will determine if returns earned in
accounts in state-chartered credit unions are dividends. Dividends
exclude the payment of a bonus or other consideration worth $10 or
less given during a year, the waiver or reduction of a fee, the
absorption of expenses, non-dividend membership benefits and
extraordinary dividends. Dividend-bearing accounts must be either
fixed-rate or variable-rate accounts.
2. Procedure. Credit unions must follow appropriate law
(state law for state-chartered credit unions and federal law for
federal credit unions) in determining dividend policies and
declaring dividends. Generally, dividends may be viewed as a
portion of the available account and undivided earnings of the
credit union which is set apart, after required transfer to
reserves, by valid act of the board of directors, for distribution
among the members. As a matter of legal procedure, members are
usually not entitled to dividends until the following steps are
completed: (1) The board of the credit union develops a
nondiscriminatory dividend policy, by establishing dividend
periods, dividend credit determination dates dividend distribution
dates, any associated penalties (if applicable), and the method of
dividend computation for each type of share account; (2) the
provisions for required transfers to reserves are made; (3)
sufficient and available prior and/or current earnings are
available at the end of the dividend period; (4) the board formally
makes a dividend declaration in accordance with the credit union's
dividend policy; and (5) dividends must be paid to members by a
credit to the appropriate share account, payment by check or share
draft, or by a combination of the two methods.
3. When available. Credit unions must follow the law of
their primary chartering authority to determine when dividends are
available. Generally, it is the declaration of the dividend itself
which creates the dividend and the member has no right to receive a
dividend until it is so declared. The decision of when to declare
dividends lies within the official discretion of each credit
union's board of directors and cannot be abrogated by contract. An
agreement to pay dividends on a share account is generally
interpreted not as an obligation to pay the stipulated dividends
absolutely and unconditionally, but as an undertaking to pay them
out of the earnings when sufficiently accumulated from which
dividends in general are properly payable. Generally, “prospective
rates” are rates set in good faith in advance of the close of a
dividend period, that may be altered if sufficient funds are not
available, or in the event of a superseding event, such as a
strike, plant closure, significant fluctuation in market rates
and/or a significant change in financial structure, natural
disaster or emergency that alters the assumptions under which the
“prospective rates” were made. It is the intent of TISA that all
disclosure be accurate when made, and credit unions are urged to
make every effort to ratify disclosed “prospective rates.”
“Prospective rates” may also be referred to as “projected rates” or
similar wording, but not as “estimated rates.” (See comment 3(b)-2,
prohibiting use of estimates).
4. Sample dividend resolutions. (i) The following
resolution may be used where the dividend rates are set after the
close of a dividend period.
Resolution of Board of Directors for the Declaration of Dividends
A. I, ________, certify that I am Secretary of ________ Credit
Union Board of Directors, and that the following is a correct copy
of the resolution for declaring dividend adopted by the ________
Credit Union at a meeting of the Board of Directors duly and
properly held on _________, 19__. This resolution appears in the
minutes of this meeting and has not been rescinded or modified.
B. Resolved, that
(1) The Board of Directors has developed a nondiscriminatory
dividend policy, by establishing dividend periods, dividend credit
determination dates, dividend distribution dates, any associated
penalties (if applicable), and the method of dividend computation
for each type of share account;
(2) The required transfers to reserves have been made; and
(3) Sufficient and available prior and/or current earnings are
available at the end of this dividend period.
C. Resolved, further, that the Board of Directors now formally
makes a dividend declaration in accordance with the Credit Union's
dividend policy and authorizes that on ________, 19__, dividends
must be paid to members by a credit to the appropriate share
account, payment by share draft or by a combination of the two
methods.
D. I further certify that the Board of Directors of this Credit
Union has, and at the time of adoption of this resolution had, full
power and lawful authority to adopt the foregoing resolutions and
that this resolution revokes any prior resolution.
In witness whereof, this is my signature and the date on which I
signed this Resolution.
Signature Date [Attach list of accounts with dividend rates for
each type of account.]
(ii) The following resolution may be used where the dividend
rates are set before the close of a dividend period.
Resolution of Board of Directors for the Declaration of Dividends
A. I, ________, certify that I am the Secretary of ________
Credit Union, and that the following is a correct copy of the
resolution for declaring dividends adopted by the ________ Credit
Union at a meeting of the Board of Directors duly and properly held
on __________, 19__. This resolution appears in the minutes of that
meeting and has not been rescinded or modified.
B. Resolved, that the Board of Directors has adopted a
nondiscriminatory dividend policy, by establishing dividend
periods, dividend credit determination dates, dividend distribution
dates, any associated penalties (if applicable) and the method of
dividend computation for each type of share account.
C. Resolved, that it is the policy and practice of the Board of
Directors to meet periodically to establish prospective dividend
rates for each type of dividend-bearing share account.
D. Resolved, that if the required transfers to reserves have
been made and there are sufficient and available prior and/or
current earnings available at the end of a dividend period, the
officers of the Credit Union are authorized to pay dividends at the
rate prospectively established by the Board of Directors for each
account for the dividend period. The officers may pay the dividends
without any further action of the Board of Directors. The act of
paying the dividends shall constitute the declaration of the
dividends and shall be a ratification of the prospective dividend
rate.
In witness whereof, this is my signature and the date on which I
signed this Resolution.
Signature Date [Attach list of accounts with prospective dividend
rates for each type of account.]
5. Referencing. Except where specifically stated
otherwise, use of the term “share” in part 707, as in “share
account,” also refers to “deposit,” as in “deposit account,” where
appropriate (for interest-bearing or non-interest-bearing deposit
accounts at some state-chartered credit unions).
(j) Dividend Declaration Date
1. General. The importance of the dividend declaration
date is to tie the last paid dividend to a certain period of time
to place members and potential members on notice that the last paid
dividend is different from the next dividend to be paid. In order
to achieve this purpose, a credit union may use any of the
following methods:
i. “As of 3/15/95” (the date the board of directors last met and
declared the last paid dividend).
ii. “As of 3/31/95” (the last day of the last dividend period
upon which a dividend has been paid).
iii. “For the period 1/1/95 to 3/31/95” (the last dividend
period upon which a dividend has been paid).
iv. “For the first quarter of 1995” (the last dividend period
upon which a dividend has been paid).
v. “For April 1995” (the last dividend period upon which a
dividend has been paid).
vi. “As of the last dividend declaration date” (the last
dividend period upon which a dividend has been paid).
(k) Dividend Period
1. General. The dividend period is to be set by a credit
union's board of directors for each account type, e.g., regular
share, share draft, money market share, and term share. The most
common dividend periods are weekly, monthly, quarterly,
semi-annually, and annually. Dividend periods need not agree with
calendar months, e.g., a monthly dividend period could begin March
15 and end April 14.
(l) Dividend Rate
1. General. The dividend rate does not reflect
compounding. Compounding is reflected in the “annual percentage
yield” definition.
2. Referencing. Except where specifically stated
otherwise, use of the term “dividend rate” in part 707 also refers
to “interest rate,” where appropriate (for interest-bearing and
non-interest-bearing deposit accounts at some state-chartered
credit unions).
(m) Extraordinary Dividends
1. General. The definition encompasses all irregularly
scheduled and declared dividends, and as dividends, extraordinary
dividends are exempt from the “bonus” disclosure requirements.
Extraordinary dividends do not have to be disclosed on account
disclosures, but the dollar amount of an extraordinary dividend
credited to the account during the statement period does have to be
separately disclosed on the periodic statement for the dividend
period during which the extraordinary dividends are earned.
Extraordinary dividends, like ordinary dividends, do not include
the payment of a bonus or other consideration worth $10 or less
given during a year, the waiver or reduction of a fee, the
absorption of expenses or non-dividend membership benefits. See
comments 2(f) 1 through 7 and 2(i) 1 through 4. Extraordinary
dividends may be calculated by any means determined by the board of
directors of a credit union and may not be used in the annual
percentage yield earned calculation.
2. Use of synonym. Extraordinary dividends may be
described as “bonus dividends.”
(n) Fixed-Rate Account
1. General. Includes all accounts in which the credit
union, by contract, agrees to give at least 30 days advance written
notice of decreases in the dividend rate. Thus, credit unions can
decrease rates only after providing advance written notice of rate
decreases, e.g., a “change-in-terms notice.”
(o) Grace Period
1. General. A period after maturity of an automatically
renewing term share account during which the member may withdraw
funds without being assessed a penalty. Use of a “grace period” is
discretionary, not mandatory. This definition does not refer to the
“grace period” account, which is a synonym for “federal rollback
method” or “in by the 10th” accounts, which are prohibited by TISA
and part 707.
(p) Interest
1. General. Member savings placed in deposit accounts are
debt investments, and the return earned on these accounts is
interest. Federal credit unions are not authorized to offer any
interest-bearing deposit accounts. State-chartered credit unions
may offer both share and deposit accounts if permitted by state
law. State law, including without limitation regulations and
official interpretations, will determine if returns earned in
accounts in state-chartered credit unions are interest. Interest
excludes the payment of a bonus or other consideration worth $10 or
less given during a year, the waiver of reduction of a fee, the
absorption of expenses, non-dividend membership benefits, and
extraordinary dividends.
2. Differences between dividends and interest. Generally,
dividends are returns on an equity investment (shares); interest is
return on a debt investment (deposits). Dividends, in general, are
not properly payable until declared at the close of a dividend
period; interest, in general, is properly payable daily according
to the deposit contract. Dividend rates are prospective until
actually declared; interest rates are set according to contract in
advance and are earned on that basis. Share accounts establish a
member (owner)/credit union (cooperative) relationship; deposit
accounts establish a depositor (creditor)/depository (debtor)
relationship.
3. Referencing. Except where specifically stated
otherwise, use of the terms “dividend” or “dividends” in part 707
also refers to “interest” where appropriate (for interest-bearing
and non-interest-bearing deposit accounts at some state-chartered
credit unions).
(q) Member
1. Professional capacity. Examples of accounts held by a
natural person in a professional capacity for another are:
i. Attorney-client trust accounts.
ii. Trust, estate and court-ordered accounts.
iii. Landlord-tenant security accounts.
2. Other accounts. Examples of accounts not held
in a professional capacity include accounts held by parents for a
child under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (or Uniform Transfers
to Minors Act.
3. Retirement plans. IRAs and SEP accounts are member
accounts to the extent that funds are invested in accounts subject
to the regulation. Keogh accounts, like sole proprietor accounts,
are not subject to the regulation.
(r) Non-Dividend Membership Benefits
1. General. Term reflects unique credit union practices
that are difficult to value, encourage community spirit, and are
not granted in such quantity as to be includable as calculable
dividends.
2. Examples. Examples include:
i. Food, refreshments, and drawings and raffles at annual
meetings, member functions, and branch openings.
ii. Travel club benefits.
iii. Prizes offered at annual meetings, such as U.S. Savings
Bonds, a deposit of funds into the winner's account, trips, and
other gifts. Such prizes are not bonuses because they are offered
as an incentive to increase attendance at the annual meeting, and
not to entice members to open, maintain, or renew accounts or
increase an account balance.
iv. Life savings benefits.
(s) Passbook Account
1. Relation to Regulation E. Passbook accounts include
accounts accessed by preauthorized electronic fund transfers to the
account (as defined in 12 CFR 1005.2(k)), such as an account
credited by direct share and deposit of social security payments.
Accounts that permit access by other electronic means are not
“passbook accounts,” and any statements that are sent four or more
times a year must comply with the requirements of § 707.6.
(t) Periodic Statement
1. General. Periodic statements are not required by part
707. Passbook and term share accounts are exempt from periodic
statement requirements.
2. Examples. Periodic statements do not include:
i. Additional statements provided solely upon request.
ii. General service information such as a quarterly newsletter
or other correspondence that describes available services and
products.
(u) Potential Member
1. General. A potential member is a natural person
eligible for membership in a credit union, who has not yet taken
the steps necessary to become a member. The term also includes
natural person nonmembers eligible to hold accounts in a credit
union pursuant to relevant federal or state law.
2. Verification of eligibility. It is recommended that
credit unions have sound written procedures in place to identify
those eligible for membership. If these procedures include
verification measures, such as an application process, verification
telephone call or letter to an employer or association within the
field of membership, witnessing by an existing member, or similar
procedure, then the credit union may first verify the membership
eligibility of a potential member before providing account
disclosures or other information to the potential member. This
process of verifying a member's eligibility status, making a
recommendation for membership, and providing account disclosures
should be completed within 20 calendar days. This period also
applies when potential members not on credit union premises request
disclosures.
3. Nonmembers. Within its sole discretion, the board of
directors of a credit union may provide TISA disclosures to
nonmembers who are ineligible for membership or to hold an account
at the credit union. If disclosures are made to such nonmembers, it
is the position of the Board that no civil liability can accrue to
the credit union for any errors in such disclosures. (See
commentary to § 707.3(d)).
(v) State
1. General. Territories and possessions include American
Samoa, Guam, the Mariana Islands, and the Marshall Islands.
(w) Stepped-Rate Account
1. General. Stepped-rate accounts are those accounts in
which two or more dividend rates (known at the time the account is
opened) will take effect in succeeding periods.
2. Example. An example of a stepped-rate account is a
one-year term share certificate account in which a 5.00% dividend
rate is paid for the first six months, and 5.50% for the second six
months.
(x) Term Share Account
1. Relation to the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation D.
Federal Reserve Board's Regulation D permits, in limited
circumstances, the withdrawal of funds without penalty during the
first six days after a “time deposit” is opened. (See 12 CFR
204.2(c)(1)(i).) But the fact that a member makes a withdrawal as
permitted by Regulation D does not disqualify the account from
being a term share account for purposes of this regulation (such as
withdrawals upon the death of the member, or within a “grace
period” for automatically renewable term share accounts).
2. Club accounts. Club accounts, including Christmas
club, holiday club, and vacation club accounts may be either term
share or regular share accounts, depending on the terms of the
account. Although club accounts typically have a maturity date,
they are not term share accounts unless they also require a penalty
of at least seven days' dividends for withdrawals during the first
six days after the account is opened.
(y) Tiered-Rate Account
1. General. Tiered-rate accounts are those accounts in
which two or more dividend rates are paid on the account and are
determined by reference to a specified balance level. Tiered-rate
accounts are of two types: Tiering Method A and Tiering Method B.
In Tiering Method A accounts, the credit union pays the applicable
tiered dividends rate on the entire amount in the account. This
method is also known as the “hybrid” or “plateau” tiered-rate
account. In Tiering Method B accounts, the credit union does not
pay the applicable tiered dividends rate on the entire amount in
the account, but only on the portion of the share account balance
that falls within each specified tier. This method is also known as
the “pure” or “split-rate” tiered-rate account. (See appendix A,
part I, D.)
2. Example. An example of a tiered-rate account is one in
which a credit union pays a 5.00% dividend rate on balances below
$1,000, and 5.50% on balances $1,000 and above.
3. Term share accounts. Term share accounts that pay
different rates based solely on the amount of the initial share and
deposit are not tiered-rate accounts.
4. Minimum balance accounts. A requirement to maintain a
minimum balance to earn dividends does not make an account a
tiered-rate account. If dividends are not paid on amounts below a
specified balance level, then the account has a minimum balance
requirement (required to be disclosed under § 707.4(b)(3)(i)), but
the account does not constitute a tiered-rate account. A zero rate
(0%) cannot constitute a tier. Minimum balance accounts are single
rate accounts with a minimum balance requirement.
(z) Variable-Rate Account
1. General. Includes accounts in which the credit union
does not contract to give at least 30 days advance written notice
of decreases in the dividend rate. An account meets this definition
whether the rate change is determined by reference to an index, by
use of a formula, or merely at the discretion of the credit union's
board of directors. An account that permits one or more rate
adjustments prior to maturity at the member's option, such as a
rate relock option, is a variable-rate account.
2. Differences between fixed-rate and variable-rate
accounts. All accounts must either be fixed-rate or
variable-rate accounts. Classifying an account as variable-rate
affects credit unions three ways:
i. Additional account disclosures are required (§
707.4(b)(1)(ii));
ii. Rate decreases are exempted from change-in-terms
requirements (§ 707.5(a)(2)(i)); and
iii. Advertising notice required (§ 707.8(c)(1)).
Fixed-rate accounts require a contract term obligating the
credit union to a 30-day advance, written notice to members before
decreasing the dividend rate on the account. Term changes adversely
affecting the member and rate decreases cannot take effect until 30
days after such fixed-rate change-in-terms notices are mailed or
delivered to members (§ 707.5(a)).
Section 707.3 - General Disclosure Requirements (a) Form
1. General. All required disclosures (e.g., account
disclosures, change-in-terms notices, term share renewal/maturity
notices, statement disclosures and advertising disclosures) must be
made clearly and conspicuously, in a form the member may retain.
Disclosures need be made only as applicable (e.g., disclosures for
a non-dividend-bearing account would not include disclosure of
annual percentage yield, dividend rate, or other disclosures
pertaining to dividend calculations).
2. Design requirements. Disclosures must be presented in
a format that allows members and potential members to readily
understand the terms of their account. Credit unions are not
required to use a particular type size or typeface, nor are credit
unions required to state any term more conspicuously than any other
term. Disclosures may be made:
i. In any order.
ii. In combination with other disclosures or account terms.
iii. In combination with disclosures for other types of
accounts, as long as it is clear to members and potential members
which disclosures apply to their account.
iv. On more than one page and on the front and reverse
sides.
v. By using inserts to a document or filling in blanks.
vi. On more than one document, as long as the documents are
provided at the same time.
3. Consistent terminology. A credit union must use the
same terminology to describe terms or features that are required to
be disclosed. For example, if a credit union describes a monthly
fee (regardless of account activity), as a “monthly service fee” in
account opening disclosures, the periodic statements and
change-in-terms notices must use the same terminology so that
members and potential members can readily identify the fee.
(b) General
1. Terms and conditions. Credit unions are required to
have disclosures reflect the terms of the legal obligation between
the credit union and a member at the time the member opens the
account. This provision does not impose any contract terms or
supersede state or other laws that define how the legal obligations
between a credit union and its membership are determined.
2. Specificity of legal obligation. Credit unions may
refer to the calendar month or to roughly equivalent intervals
during a calendar year as a “month.” Use of estimates is prohibited
in TISA disclosures.
3. Foreign language. Disclosures may be made in any
foreign language, if desired by the board of directors of a credit
union. However, disclosures must also be provided in English, upon
request.
(c) Relation to Regulation E
1. General rule. Compliance with Regulation E (12 CFR
part 1005) is deemed to satisfy the disclosure requirements of this
regulation, such as when:
i. A credit union changes a term that triggers a notice under
Regulation E, and the timing and disclosure rules of Regulation E
for sending change-in-terms notices.
ii. A member adds an ATM access feature to an account, and the
credit union provides disclosures pursuant to Regulation E,
including disclosure of fees before the member receives ATM access.
(See 12 CFR 1005.7.)
iii. A credit union complying with the timing rules of
Regulation E discloses at the same time fees for electronic
services (such as balance inquiry fees imposed if the inquiry is
made at an ATM) that are required to be disclosed by this
regulation, but not by Regulation E.
iv. A credit union relies on Regulation E's rules regarding
disclosures of limitations on the frequency and amount of
electronic fund transfers, including security-related exceptions.
But any limitation on the number of “intra-institutional transfers”
to or from the member's other accounts at the credit union during a
given time period must be disclosed, even though
intra-institutional transfers are exempt from Regulation E.
(d) Multiple Members
1. General. When an account has multiple natural person
member accountholders, delivery of disclosures to any member
accountholder or agent authorized by the accountholder satisfies
the disclosure requirements of part 707.
(e) Oral Response to Inquiries
1. Application of rule. Credit unions need not provide
rate information orally. Disclosures need be made only as
appropriate. For example, the requirement to give a telephone
number for a member to call about rates for interest-bearing
accounts and dividend-bearing term share accounts, would not be
necessary for members calling the credit union for information.
Also, the disclosure requirements are applicable only to credit
union employees and volunteers acting in the ordinary course of
credit union business.
2. Relation to advertising. The advertising rules do not
cover an oral response to a question about rates.
3. Existing accounts. This paragraph does not apply to
oral responses about rate information for existing term share
accounts or accounts not currently offered. For example, if a
member holding a one-year term share account requests dividend rate
information about the account during the term, the credit union
need not disclose the annual percentage yield, unless the member is
calling for rate information under a maturity notice.
(f) Rounding and Accuracy Rules for Rates and Yields (f)(1)
Rounding
1. Permissible rounding. The annual percentage yield,
annual percentage yield earned and dividend rate must be rounded to
the nearest one-hundredth of one percentage point (.01%) when
disclosed. Examples of permissible rounding are an annual
percentage yield calculated to be 5.644%, rounded down and shown as
5.64%; 5.645% would be rounded up and disclosed as 5.65%. For
account disclosures, the dividend rate may be expressed to more
than two decimal places.
(f)(2) Accuracy
1. Annual percentage yield and annual percentage yield
earned. The tolerance for annual percentage yield and annual
percentage yield earned calculations is designed to accommodate
inadvertent errors. Credit unions may not purposely incorporate the
one-twentieth of one percentage point (.05%) tolerance into their
calculation of yields.
2. Dividend rate. There is no tolerance for an inaccuracy
in the dividend rate.
Section 707.4 - Account Disclosures (a) Delivery of Account
Disclosures (a)(1) Account Opening
1. New accounts. New account disclosures must be provided
when:
i. A term share account that does not automatically rollover is
renewed by a member.
ii. A member changes the term for a renewable term share account
(from a one-year term share account to a six-month term share
account, for instance) (see comment 5(b)-5 regarding disclosure
alternatives).
iii. A credit union transfers funds from an account to open a
new account not at the member's request, unless the credit union
previously gave account disclosures and any change-in-terms notices
for the new account (e.g., funds in a money market share account
are transferred by a credit union to open a new account for the
member, such as a share draft account, because the member exceeded
transaction limitations on the money market share account).
iv. A credit union accepts a deposit from a member to an account
that the credit union had previously deemed to be “closed,” under
applicable federal or state law, for the purpose of treating
accrued, but uncredited, dividends as forfeited dividends. New
account numbers are not required by this requirement.
2. Acquired accounts. New account disclosures need not be
given when a credit union acquires an account through an
acquisition of, or merger with, another credit union (but see §
707.5(a) regarding advance notice requirements if terms are
changed).
3. Combination disclosures. New account disclosures need
not be given when a member has already received disclosures
covering several accounts, and opens a new account properly
disclosed by the already received combination disclosures, if the
new account is opened within a reasonable amount of time after
receipt of the combination disclosures and if the received
disclosures and terms are accurate at the time the new account is
opened.
(a)(2) Requests (a)(2)(i)
1. Inquiries versus requests. A response to an oral
inquiry (by telephone or in person) about rates and yields or fees
does not trigger the duty to provide account disclosures. But, when
a member asks for written information about an account (whether by
telephone, in person, or by other means), the credit union must
provide disclosures unless the account is no longer offered to the
public.
2. General requests. When members or potential members
request disclosures about a type of account (a share draft account,
for example), a credit union that offers several variations may
provide disclosures for any one of them. No disclosures need be
made to nonmembers, though a credit union may provide disclosures
to nonmembers within its sole discretion.
3. Timing for response. Ten business days is a reasonable
time for responding to requests for account information that
members or potential members do not make in person, including
requests made by electronic means, such as by electronic mail.
4. Use of electronic means. If a member or potential
member who is not present at the credit union makes a request for
account disclosures, including a request made by telephone, e-mail,
or via the credit union's Web site, the credit union may send the
disclosures in paper form or, if the member or potential member
agrees, may provide the disclosures electronically, such as to an
e-mail address that the member or potential member provides for
that purpose, or on the credit union's Web site, without regard to
the consent or other provisions of the E-Sign Act. The regulation
does not require a credit union to provide, nor a member or
potential member to agree to receive, the disclosures required by §
707.4(a)(2) in electronic form.
(a)(2)(ii)(A)(2)
1. Recent rates. Credit unions comply with this paragraph
if they disclose an interest rate (or dividend rate on a
dividend-bearing term share account) and annual percentage yield
accurate within the seven calendar days preceding the date they
send the disclosures.
(a)(2)(ii)(B)
1. Term. Describing the maturity of a term share account
as “1 year” or “6 months,” for example, illustrates a response
stating the maturity of a term share account as a term rather than
a date (e.g., “June 1, 1995”).
(b) Content of Account Disclosures (b)(1) Rate Information
(b)(1)(i) Annual Percentage Yield and Dividend Rate
1. Rate disclosures. In addition to the dividend rate and
annual percentage yield, credit unions may disclose a periodic rate
corresponding to the dividend rate. No other rate or yield (such as
“tax effective yield”) is permitted. If the annual percentage yield
is the same as the dividend rate, credit unions may disclose a
single figure but must use both terms.
2. Fixed-rate accounts. For fixed-rate term share
accounts paying the opening rate until maturity, credit unions may
disclose the period of time the dividend rate will be in effect by
stating, or cross-referencing, the maturity date. For other
fixed-rate accounts, credit unions may use a date (such as “This
rate will be in effect through June 30, 1995”) or a period (such as
“This rate will be in effect for at least 30 days”).
3. Tiered-rate accounts. Each dividend rate, along with
the corresponding annual percentage yield for each specified
balance level (or range of annual percentage yields, if
appropriate), must be disclosed for tiered-rate accounts. (See
appendix A, Part I, Paragraph D.)
4. Stepped-rate accounts. A single composite annual
percentage yield must be disclosed for stepped-rate accounts. (See
appendix A, Part I, Paragraph B.) The dividend rates and the period
of time each will be in effect also must be provided. When the
initial rate offered for a specified time on a variable-rate
account is higher or lower than the rate that would otherwise be
paid on the account, the calculation of the annual percentage yield
must be made as if for a stepped-rate account. (See appendix A,
Part I, Paragraph C.)
5. Minimum balance accounts. If a credit union sets a
minimum balance to earn dividends, the credit union may, but need
not, state that the annual percentage yield is 0% for those days
the balance in the account drops below the minimum balance level
when using the daily balance method. Nor is a disclosure of 0%
required for credit unions using the average daily balance method,
if the member fails to meet the minimum balance required for the
average daily balance period.
(b)(1)(ii) Variable Rates (b)(1)(ii)(B)
1. Determining dividend rates. To disclose how the
dividend rate is determined, credit unions must:
i. Identify the index and specific margin, if the dividend rate
is tied to an index.
ii. State that rate changes are within the credit union's
discretion, if the credit union does not tie changes to an
index.
(b)(1)(ii)(C)
1. Frequency of rate changes. A credit union reserving
the right to change rates at its discretion must state the fact
that rates may change at any time.
(b)(1)(ii)(D)
1. Limitations. A floor or ceiling on rates or on the
amount the rate may decrease or increase during any time period
must be disclosed. Credit unions need not disclose the absence of
limitations on rate changes.
(b)(2) Compounding and Crediting (b)(2)(i) Frequency
1. General. Descriptions such as “quarterly” or “monthly”
are sufficient. Irregular crediting and compounding periods, such
as if a cycle is out short at year end for tax reporting purposes,
need not be disclosed.
2. Dividend period. For dividend-bearing accounts, the
dividend period must be disclosed. (A specific example must also be
given, see appendix B, § B-1(c).) The dividend period for term
share accounts generally may be disclosed as the account's term
(e.g., two years).
(b)(2)(ii) Effect of Closing an Account
1. Deeming an account closed. A credit union may, subject
to state or other law, provide in account contracts the actions by
members that will be treated as closing the account and that will
result in the forfeiture of accrued but uncredited dividends. An
example is the withdrawal of all funds from the account prior to
the date dividends are credited. Credit unions are cautioned that
bylaw requirements may prevent a credit union from deeming a
member's account closed until certain time periods are extinguished
if funds remain in a member's account. NCUA Standard FCU
Bylaws, Art. III, § 3. Such bylaw requirements may not be
overridden without proper agency approval.
(b)(3) Balance Information (b)(3)(i) Minimum Balance Requirements
1. Par value. Credit unions must disclose any minimum
balance required to open the account, to avoid the imposition of a
fee, or to obtain the annual percentage yield. Since members cannot
generally maintain any accounts until the par value of the
membership share is paid in full, this section requires that credit
unions disclose the par value of a share necessary to become a
member and maintain accounts at the credit union. The par value of
a share and the minimum balance requirement do not have to be the
same amount (e.g., a credit union may have a $5 par value for a
membership share, in order for accounts to be opened and
maintained, and a $100 minimum balance requirement, in order for
the account to earn dividends).
2. Disclosures. The explanation of minimum balance
computation methods may be combined with the balance computation
method disclosures (§ 707.4(b)(3)(ii)) if they are the same. If a
credit union uses different cycles for determining minimum balance
requirements for purposes of assessing fees and for paying
dividends, the credit union must disclose the specific cycle or
time period used for each purpose (e.g., use of a midmonth
statement cycle for determining dividends, and use of a calendar
month cycle for determining fees). Credit unions may assess fees by
using any method. If fees on one account are tied to the balance in
another account, such provision must be explained (e.g., if share
draft fees are tied to a minimum balance in the regular share
account (or a combination of the share draft and regular share
accounts), the share draft account must explain that fact and how
the balance in the regular share account (or both accounts) is
determined). The fee need not be disclosed in the account
disclosures if the fee is not imposed on that account.
(b)(3)(ii) Balance Computation Method
1. Methods and periods. Credit unions may use different
methods or periods to calculate minimum balances for purposes of
imposing a fee (the daily balance for a calendar month, for
example) and accruing dividends (the average daily balance for a
statement period, for example). Each method and corresponding
period must be disclosed.
(b)(3)(iii) When dividends begin to accrue
1. Additional information. Credit unions must include a
statement as to when dividends begin to accrue for noncash
deposits. Credit unions may disclose additional information such as
the time of day after which deposits are treated as having been
received the following business day, and may use additional
descriptive terms such as “ledger” or “collected” balances to
disclose when dividends begin to accrue. Under the ledger balance
method, dividends begin to accrue on the day of deposit. Under the
collected balance methods, dividends begin to accrue when
provisional credit is received for the item deposited.
(b)(4) Fees
1. Types of fees. Fees related to the routine use of an
account must be disclosed. The following are types of fees that
must be disclosed in connection with an account:
i. Maintenance fees, such as monthly service fees.
ii. Fees related to share deposits or withdrawals.
iii. Fees for special services, such as stop payment fees, fees
for balance inquiries or verification of share and deposits, fees
associated with checks returned unpaid, fees for regularly sending
to members share drafts that otherwise would be held by the credit
union, and overdraft line of credit access fees (if charged against
the share account).
iv. Fees to open or to close an account.
v. Fees imposed upon dormant or inactive accounts.
2. Other fees. Credit unions need not disclose fees such
as the following:
i. Fees for services offered to members and nonmembers alike,
such as fees for certain travelers checks, for wire transfers and
automated clearinghouse (ACH) transfers, to process credit card
cash advances, or to handle U.S. Savings Bond Redemption (even if
different amounts are charged to members and nonmembers).
ii. Incidental fees, such as fees associated with state escheat
laws, garnishment or attorneys fees, to change names on an account,
to generate a midcycle periodic statement, to wrap loose coins, for
photocopying, for statements returned to the credit union because
of a wrong address, and locator fees.
3. Amount of fees. Credit unions are cautioned that
merely providing fee information in an account disclosure may not
be sufficient to gain the legal right to impose the fee involved
under applicable law. Credit unions must state the amount and
conditions under which a fee may be imposed. Naming and describing
the fee typically satisfies this requirement. Some examples
are:
i. “$4.00 monthly service fee”.
ii. $7.00 and up” or “fee depends on style of checks ordered”
for check printing fees.
4. Tied-accounts. Credit unions must state if fees that
may be assessed against an account are tied to other accounts at
the credit union. For example, if a credit union ties the fees
payable on a share draft account to balances held in the share
draft account and in a regular share account, the share draft
account disclosures must state that fact and explain how the fee is
determined.
5. Regulation E statements. Some fees are required to be
disclosed under both Regulation E (12 CFR 1005.7) and part 707. If
such fees, such as ATM transaction fees, are disclosed on a
Regulation E statement, they need not be disclosed again on a
periodic statement required under part 707.
6. Fees for overdrawing an account. Under § 707.4(b)(4)
of this part, credit unions must disclose the conditions under
which a fee may be imposed. In satisfying this requirement credit
unions must specify the categories of transactions for which an
overdraft fee may be imposed. An exhaustive list of transactions is
not required. It is sufficient for a credit union to state that the
fee applies to overdrafts “created by check, in-person withdrawal,
ATM withdrawal, or other electronic means.” Disclosing a fee “for
overdraft items” would not be sufficient.
(b)(5) Transaction Limitations
1. General rule. Examples of limitations on the number of
dollar amount of share deposits or withdrawals that credit unions
must disclose are:
i. Limits on the number of share drafts or checks that may be
written on an account for a given time period.
ii. Limits on withdrawals or share deposits during the term of a
term share account.
iii. Limitations required by Regulation D, such as the number of
withdrawals permitted from money market share accounts by check to
third parties each month (credit unions need not disclose
reservation of right to require a notice for withdrawals from
accounts required by federal or state law).
(b)(6) Features of Term Share Accounts (b)(6)(i) Time Requirements
1. “Callable” term share accounts. In addition to the
maturity date, credit unions must state the date or the
circumstances under which the credit union may redeem a term share
account at the credit union's option (a “callable” term share
account).
(b)(6)(ii) Early Withdrawal Penalties
1. General. The term “penalty” may, but need not, be used
to describe the loss that may be incurred by members for early
withdrawal of funds from term share accounts.
2. Examples. Examples of early withdrawal penalties
are:
i. Monetary penalties, such as a specific dollar amount
(e.g., “$10.00”) or a specific days' worth of dividends
(e.g., “seven days' dividends plus accrued but uncredited
dividends, but only if the account is closed”).
ii. Adverse changes to terms such as the lowering of the
dividend rate, annual percentage yield, or reducing the compounding
or crediting frequency for funds remaining in shares or on
deposit.
iii. Reclamation of bonuses.
3. Relation to rules for IRAs or similar plans. Penalties
imposed by the Internal Revenue Code for certain withdrawals from
IRAs or similar pension or savings plans are not early withdrawal
penalties for purposes of this regulation.
4. Disclosing penalties. Penalties may be stated in
months, whether credit unions assess the penalty using the actual
number of days during the period or using another method such as a
number of days that occurs in any actual sequence of the total
calendar months involved. For example, stating “one month's
dividends” is permissible, whether the credit union assesses 30
days' dividends during the month of April, or selects a time period
between 28 and 31 days for calculating the dividends for all early
withdrawals regardless of when the penalty is assessed.
(b)(6)(iv) Renewal Policies
1. Rollover term share accounts. Credit unions are not
required to provide a grace period, to pay dividends during the
grace period, or to disclose whether or not dividends will be paid
during the grace period. Credit unions offering a grace period on
term share accounts must give the length of the grace period.
Commentary, appendix B, Model Clauses, § B-1(i)(iv).
2. Nonrollover term share accounts. Credit unions that
pay dividends on funds following the maturity of term share
accounts that do not renew automatically need not state the rate
(or annual percentage yield) that may be paid.
(b)(7) Bonuses
1. General. Credit unions are required to state the
amount and type of bonus, and disclose any minimum balance or time
requirement to obtain the bonus and when the bonus will be
provided. If the minimum balance or time requirement is otherwise
required to be disclosed, credit unions need not duplicate the
disclosure for purposes of this paragraph.
(b)(8) Nature of Dividends
1. General. Dividends are not payable until declared and
unless sufficient current and undivided earnings are available
after required transfers to reserves at the close of a dividend
period. A disclosure explaining dividends educates members and
protects credit unions in the event that a prospective dividend
cannot be paid, or is not properly payable. This disclosure is
required for all dividend-bearing share accounts. Term share
accounts need not include a statement regarding the nature of
dividends.
2. State-chartered credit unions with interest-bearing
deposit accounts. State law controls the nature of accounts
(i.e., whether an account is a share account or a deposit account).
If a member of a state-chartered credit union is opening only an
interest-bearing deposit account, or is requesting account
disclosures only for an interest-bearing deposit account (if state
law requires the depositor to hold a share account), the
disclosures must generally include the following information on any
dividend-bearing share portion of the account (e.g., membership
share): the par value of a share; a statement that the portion of
the deposit that represents the par value of the membership share
will earn dividends, and that dividends are paid from current
income and available earnings after required transfers to reserves.
Further additional disclosures, such as a separate dividend rate
and annual percentage yield for the membership share, are not
required (if the additional disclosures would agree with the
remainder of the account which is invested in an interest-bearing
deposit).
(c) Notice to Existing Accountholders
1. General. Only members who receive periodic statements
(provided regularly at least four times per year) and who hold
accounts of the type offered by the credit union as of the
compliance date of part 707 (generally January 1, 1995) must
receive the notice. If following receipt of the notice members
request disclosures, credit unions have twenty calendar days from
receipt of the request to provide the disclosures. Rate and annual
percentage yield information in such disclosures must conform to
that required for disclosures upon request. As an alternative to
including the notice in or on the periodic statement, the final
rule permits credit unions to send the account disclosures
themselves, as long as they are sent at the same time as the
periodic statement (the disclosures may be mailed either with the
periodic statement or separately).
2. Form of the notice. The notice may be included on the
periodic statement, in a member newsletter, or on a statement
stuffer or other insert, if it is clear and conspicuous. The notice
cannot be sent in a separate mailing from the periodic
statement.
3. Timing. The notice may accompany the first periodic
statement after the compliance date for part 707, or the periodic
statement for the first cycle beginning after that date. For
example, a credit union's statement cycle is December 15,
1994-January 14, 1995. The statement is mailed on January 15, The
next cycle is January 15, 1995 through February 14, 1995, and the
statement for that cycle is mailed on February 15. The credit union
may provide the notice either on or with the January 15 statement
or on or with the February 15 statement, as it covers the first
cycle after January 1, 1995.
4. Early compliance. Credit unions that provide the
notice to existing members prior to the compliance date of part
707, must be prepared to provide accurate and timely disclosures
when, following receipt of the notice, members ask for account
disclosures. Such disclosures must be provided even if they are
requested before the compliance date of part 707. Credit unions who
provide early notice to existing members need to comply with other
aspects of part 707, but need not provide disclosures already
provided in compliance with part 707.
Section 707.5 - Subsequent Disclosures (a) Change in Terms (a)(1)
Advance Notice required
1. Form of notice. Credit unions may provide a
change-in-term notice on or with a regular periodic statement or in
another mailing (such as a highlighted portion of a newsletter or
statement stuffer insert). If a credit union provides notice
through revised account disclosures, the changed term must be
highlighted in some manner. For example, credit unions may state
that a particular fee has been changed (also specifying the new
amount) or use an accompanying letter that refers to the changed
term. Credit unions are cautioned that unless credit unions have
reserved the right to change terms in the account agreement or
disclosures, a change-in-terms notice may not be sufficient to
amend the terms under applicable law.
2. Effective date. An example of a language for
disclosing the effective date of a change is: “As of May 11,
1995”.
3. Terms that change upon the occurrence of an event. A
credit union offering terms that will automatically change upon the
occurrence of a stated event need not send an advance notice of the
change provided the credit union fully describes the conditions of
the change in the account opening disclosures (and sends any
change-in-term notices regardless of whether the changed term
affects that member's account at that time).
4. Examples. Examples of changes not requiring an advance
change-in-terms notice are:
i. The termination of employment for employee-members for whom
account maintenance or activity fees were waived during their
employment by the credit union.
ii. The expiration of one year in a promotion described in the
account opening disclosures to “waive $4.00 monthly service charges
for one year”.
(a)(2) No Notice Required (a)(2)(ii) Check Printing Fees
1. Increase in fees. A notice is not required for an
increase in fees for printing share drafts (or deposit and
withdrawal slips) even if the credit union adds some amount to the
price charged by the vendor.
(b) Notice Before Maturity for Term Share Accounts Longer Than One
Month That Renew Automatically.
1. Maturity dates on nonbusiness days. In determining the
term of a term share account, credit unions may disregard the fact
that the term will be extended beyond the disclosed number of days
if the maturity date falls on a nonbusiness day. For example, a
holiday or weekend may cause a “one-year” term share account to
extend beyond 365 days (or 366, in a leap year), or a “one-month”
term share account to extend beyond 31 days.
2. Disclosing when rates will be determined. Ways to
disclose when the annual percentage yield will be available include
the use of:
i. A specific date, such as “October 28”.
ii. A date that is easily discernible, such as “the Tuesday
prior to the maturity date stated on the notice” or “as of the
maturity date stated on this notice”.
3. Alternative timing rule. Under the alternative timing
rule, a credit union that offers a 10-day grace period would have
to provide the disclosures at least 10 calendar days prior to the
scheduled maturity date.
4. Club accounts. If members have agreed to the transfer
of payments from another account to a club term share account for
the next club period, the credit union must comply with the
requirements for automatically renewable term share accounts - even
though members may withdraw funds from the club account at the end
of the current club period.
5. Renewal of a term share account. In the case of a
change-in-terms that becomes effective if a rollover term share
account is subsequently renewed:
i. If the change is initiated by the credit union, the
disclosure requirements of this paragraph apply. (Section 707.5(a)
applies if the change becomes effective prior to the maturity of
the existing term share account.)
ii. If the change is initiated by the member, the account
opening disclosure requirements of § 707.4(b) apply. (If the notice
required by this paragraph has been provided, credit unions may
give new account disclosures or disclosures that reflect the new
term.)
6. Example. If a member receives a notice prior to
maturity on a one-year term share account and requests a rollover
to a six-month account, the credit union must provide either
account opening disclosures including the new maturity date or, if
all other terms previously disclosed in the prematurity notice
remain the same, only the new maturity date.
(b)(1) Maturities of Longer Than One Year
1. Highlighting changed terms. Credit unions need not
highlight terms that have changed since the last account
disclosures were provided.
(c) Notice Before Maturity for Term Share Accounts Longer Than One
Year That Do not Renew Automatically
1. Subsequent account. When funds are transferred
following maturity of a nonrollover term share account, credit
unions need not provide account disclosures unless a new account is
established.
Section 707.6 - Periodic Statement Disclosures (a) Rule When
Statement and Crediting Periods Vary
1. General. Credit unions are not required to provide
periodic statements. If they provide periodic statements,
disclosures need only be furnished to the extent applicable. For
example, if no dividends are earned for a statement period, credit
unions need not state that fact. Or, credit unions may disclose
“$0” dividends earned and “0%” annual percentage yield earned.
2. Regulation E interim statements. When a credit union
provides regular quarterly statements, and in addition provides a
monthly interim statement to comply with Regulation E, the interim
statement need not comply with this section unless it states
dividend or rate information. (See 12 CFR 1005.9). For credit
unions that choose not to treat Regulation E activity statements as
part 707 periodic statements, the quarterly periodic statement must
reflect the annual percentage yield earned and dividends earned for
the full quarter. However, credit unions choosing this option need
not redisclose fees already disclosed on an interim Regulation E
activity statement on the quarterly periodic statement. For credit
unions that choose to treat Regulation E activity statements as
part 707 periodic statements, the Regulation E statement must meet
all part 707 requirements.
3. Combined statements. Credit unions may provide certain
information about an account (such as a money market share account
or regular share account) on the periodic statement for another
account (such as a share draft account) without triggering the
disclosures required by this section, as long as:
i. The information is limited to information such as the account
number, the type of account, balance information, accountholders'
names, and social security or tax identification number; and
ii. The credit union also provides members a periodic statement
complying with this section for the account (the money market share
account or regular share account, in the example).
4. Other information. Additional information that may be
given on or with a periodic statement, includes:
i. Dividend rates and corresponding periodic rates to the
dividend rate applied to balances during the statement period.
ii. The dollar amount of dividends earned year-to-date.
iii. Bonuses paid (or any de minimis consideration of $10
or less).
iv. Fees for other products, such as safe deposit boxes.
v. Accounts not covered by the periodic statement disclosure
requirements (passbook and term share accounts) may disclose any
information on the statement related to such accounts, so long as
such information is accurate and not misleading.
5. When statement and crediting periods vary. This rule
permits credit unions, on dividend-bearing share accounts, to
report the annual percentage yield earned and the amount of
dividends earned on a statement other than on each periodic
statement when the dividend period does not agree with, varies
from, or is different than, the statement period. For
dividend-bearing share accounts, credit unions may disclose the
required information either upon each periodic statement, or on the
statement on which dividends are actually earned (credited or
posted) to the member's account. In addition, for accounts using
the average daily balance method of calculating dividends, when the
average daily balance period and the statement periods do not
agree, vary or are different, credit unions may also report annual
percentage yield earned and the dollar amount of dividends earned
on the periodic statement on which the dividends or interest is
earned. For example, if a credit union has quarterly dividend
periods, or uses a quarterly average daily balance on an account,
the first two monthly statements may not state annual percentage
yield earned and dividends earned figures; the third “monthly”
statement will reflect the dividends earned and the annual
percentage yield earned for the entire quarter. The fees imposed
disclosure must be given on the periodic statement on which they
are imposed.
6. Length of the period. Credit unions must disclose the
length of both the dividend period (or average daily balance
calculation period) and the statement period. For example, a
statement could disclose a statement period of April 16 through May
15 and further state that “the dividends earned and the annual
percentage yield earned are based on your dividend period (or
average daily balance) for the period April 1 through April
30.”
7. Dividend period more frequent than statement period.
Credit unions that calculate dividends on a monthly basis, but send
statements on a quarterly basis, may disclose a single dividend
(and annual percentage yield earned) figure. Alternatively, a
credit union may disclose three dividends earned and three annual
percentage yield earned figures, one of each month in the quarter,
as long as the credit union states the number of days (or beginning
and ending date) in each dividend period if it varies from the
statement period.
8. Additional voluntary disclosures. For credit unions
not disclosing the annual percentage yield earned and dividends
earned on all periodic statements, credit unions may place a notice
on statements without dividends and annual percentage yield earned
figures, that the annual percentage yield earned and dollar amount
of dividends earned will appear on the first statement at the close
of the dividend (or average daily balance) period, or similar
wording. Credit unions may also choose to include a telephone
number to call for interim information, if desired by a member.
(b) Statement Disclosures (b)(1) Annual Percentage Yield Earned
1. Ledger and collected balances. Credit unions that
accrue interest using the collected balance method may use either
the ledger or collected balance methods to determine the balance
used to determine the annual percentage yield earned. Ledger
balance means the record of the balance in a member's account, as
per the credit union's records. (The ledger balance may reflect
additions and deposits for which the credit union has not yet
received final payment). Collected balance means the record of
balance in a member's account reflecting collected funds, that is,
cash or checks deposited in the credit union which have been
presented for payment and for which payment has actually been
received. (See Regulation CC, 12 CFR 229.14).
(b)(2) Amount of Dividends or Interest
1. Definition of earned. The term “earned” is defined to
include dividends and interest either “accrued” or “paid and
credited.” Credit unions may use either the “ledger” or the
“collected” balance for either option. (See 707.6(b)(1)1. and
707.7(c)2. of this appendix.)
2. Accrued interest. Credit unions must state the amount
of interest that accrued during the statement period, even if it
was not credited.
3. Terminology. In disclosing dividends earned for the
period, credit unions must use the term “dividends” or terminology
such as: “Dividends paid,” to describe dividends that have been
credited; “Dividends accrued,” to indicate that dividends are not
yet credited.
4. Closed accounts. If a member closes an account between
crediting periods and forfeits accrued dividends, the credit union
may not show any figures for “dividends earned” or annual
percentage yield earned for the period (other than zero, at the
credit union's option).
5. Extraordinary dividends. Extraordinary dividends are
not a component of the annual percentage yield earned or the
dividend rate, but are an addition to the member's account. The
dollar amount of the extraordinary dividends paid, denoted as a
separate, identified figure, must be disclosed on the periodic
statement on which the extraordinary dividends are earned. A credit
union may also disclose information regarding the calculation of
the extraordinary dividends, and additional annual percentage yield
earned and dividend rate figures taking into account the
extraordinary dividend, so long as such information is accurate and
not misleading.
(b)(3) Fees Imposed
1. General. Periodic statements must state fees disclosed
under § 707.4(b) that were debited to the account during the
statement period, even if assessed for an earlier period.
2. Itemizing fees by type. In itemizing fees imposed more
than once in the period, credit unions may group fees if they are
the same type. (See § 707.11(a)(1) of this part regarding
certain fees that are required to be grouped.) When fees of the
same type are grouped together, the description must make clear
that the dollar figure represents more than a single fee, for
example, “total fees for checks written this period.” Examples of
fees that may not be grouped together are -
i. Monthly maintenance and excess-activity fees.
ii. “Transfer” fees, if different dollar amounts are imposed,
such as $.50 for deposits and $1.00 for withdrawals.
iii. Fees for electronic fund transfers and fees for other
services, such as balance-inquiry or maintenance fees.
iv. Fees for paying overdrafts and fees for returning checks or
other items unpaid.
3. Identifying fees. Statement details must enable the
member to identify the specific fee. For example:
i. Credit unions may use a code to identify a particular fee if
the code is explained on the periodic statement or in documents
accompanying the statement.
ii. Credit unions using debit slips may disclose the date the
fee was debited on the periodic statement and show the amount and
type of fee on the dated debit slip.
4. Relation to Regulation E. Disclosure of fees in
compliance with Regulation E complies with this section for fees
related to electronic fund transfers (for example, totaling all
electronic funds transfer fees in a single figure).
(b)(4) Length of Period
1. General. Credit unions providing the beginning and
ending dates of the period must make clear whether both dates are
included in the period. For example, stating “April 1 through April
30” would clearly indicate that both April 1 and April 30 are
included in the period.
2. Opening or closing an account mid-cycle. If an account
is opened or closed during the period for which a statement is
sent, credit unions must calculate the annual percentage yield
earned based on account balances for each day the account was
open.
Section 707.7 - Payment of Dividends (a) Permissible Methods
1. Prohibited calculation methods. Calculation methods
that do not comply with the requirement to pay dividends on the
full amount of principal in the account each day include:
i. The “rollback” method, also known as the “grace period” or
“in by the 10th” method, where credit unions pay dividends on the
lowest balance in the account for the period.
ii. The “increments of par value” method, where credit unions
only pay dividends on full shares in an account, e.g., a credit
union with $5 par value shares pays dividends on $20 of a $24
account balance.
iii. The “ending balance” method, where credit unions pay
dividends on the balance in the account at the end of the
period.
iv. The “investable balance” method, where credit unions pay
dividends on a percentage of the balance, excluding an amount
credit unions set aside for reserve requirements.
v. The “low balance” method, where credit unions pay dividends
on the lowest balance in the account for any day in that
period.
2. Use of 365-day basis. Credit unions may apply a daily
periodic rate that is greater than 1/365 of the dividend rate -
such as 1/360 of the dividend rate - as long as it is applied 365
days a year.
3. Periodic dividend payments. A credit union can pay
dividends each day on the account and still make uniform dividend
payments. For example, for a one-year term share account, a credit
union could make monthly dividend payments that are equal to 1/12
of the amount of dividends that will be earned for a 365-day period
(or 11 uniform monthly payments - each equal to roughly 1/12 of the
total amount of dividends - and one payment that accounts to the
remainder of the total amount of dividends earned for the
period).
4. Leap year. Credit unions may apply a daily rate of
1/366 or 1/365 of the dividend rate for 366 days in a leap year, if
the account will earn dividends for February 29.
5. Maturity of term share accounts. Credit unions are not
required to pay dividends after term share accounts mature.
Examples include:
i. During any grace period offered by a credit union for an
automatically renewable term share account, if the member decides
during that period not to renew the account.
ii. Following the maturity of nonrollover term share
accounts.
iii. When the maturity date falls on a holiday, and the member
must wait until the next business day to obtain the funds.
6. Dormant accounts. Credit unions must pay dividends on
funds in an account, even if inactivity or the infrequency of
transactions would permit the credit union to consider the account
to be “inactive” or “dormant” (or similar status) as defined by
state or other law or the account contract.
7. Insufficient funds. Credit unions are not required to
pay dividends on checks or share drafts deposited to a member's
account that are returned for insufficient funds. If a credit union
accrues dividends on a check that it later determines is not good,
it may deduct from the accrued dividends any dividends attributed
to the proceeds of the returned check. If dividends have already
been credited before the credit union determines the item has
insufficient funds, the credit union may deduct the amount of the
check and associated dividends from the account balance. The amount
deducted will not be reflected in the dividend amount and annual
percentage yield earned reported for the next period.
8. Account drawn below par value of a share. If a member
draws his or her account below the par value of a share, dividends
would continue to accrue on the account so long as any minimum
balance requirement is met. However, under the NCUA Standard FCU
Bylaws, if a member who reduces his or her share balance below
the value of a par value share and does not increase the balance
within at least six months, the credit union may terminate the
member's membership. State-chartered credit unions may have similar
termination provisions.
(a2) Determination of Minimum Balance To Earn Dividends
1. General. Credit unions may set minimum balance
requirements that must be met in order to earn dividends. However,
credit unions must use the same method to determine a minimum
balance required to earn dividends as they use to determine the
balance upon which dividends will accrue and pay. For example, a
credit union that calculates dividends on the daily balance method
must use the daily balance method to determine if the minimum
balance to earn dividends has been met. Similarly, a credit union
that calculates dividends on the average daily balance method must
use the average daily balance method to determine if the minimum to
earn dividends has been met. Credit unions may have a par value of
a share that is different from the minimum balance requirement to
earn dividends. (See commentary to § 707.4(b)(3)(i)).
2. Daily balance accounts. Credit unions that require a
minimum balance to earn dividends may choose not to pay dividends
for days when the balance drops below the required minimum balance
if they use the daily balance method to calculate dividends. For
example, a credit union could set a minimum daily balance level of
$200 and pay dividends only those days the $200 daily balance is
maintained.
3. Average daily balance accounts. Credit unions that
require a minimum balance to earn dividends may choose not to pay
dividends for the average daily balance calculation period in which
the average daily balance drops below the required minimum, if they
use the average daily balance method to calculate dividends. For
example, a credit union could set a minimum average daily balance
level of $200 and pay dividends only if the $200 average daily
balance is met for the calculation period.
4. Beneficial method. Credit unions may not require
members to maintain both a minimum daily balance and a minimum
average daily balance to earn dividends, such as by requiring the
member to maintain a $500 daily balance and a prescribed average
daily balance (whether higher or lower). But a credit union could
offer a minimum balance to earn dividends that includes an
additional method that is “unequivocally beneficial” to the member
such as the following:
i. A credit union using the daily balance method to calculate
dividends and requiring a $500 minimum daily balance could choose
to pay dividends on the account (for those days the minimum balance
is not met) as long as the member maintained an average daily
balance throughout the month of $400.
ii. A credit union using the average daily balance method to
calculate dividends and requiring a $400 minimum average daily
balance could choose to pay dividends on the account as long as the
member maintained a daily balance of $500 for at least half of the
days in the period.
iii. A credit union using either the daily balance method or
average daily balance method to calculate dividends that requires:
(A) a $500 daily balance; or (B) a $400 average daily balance to
pay dividends on the account.
5. Paying on full balance. Credit unions must pay
dividends on the full balance in the account that meets the
required minimum balance. For example, if $300 is the minimum daily
balance required to earn dividends, and a member deposits $500, the
credit union must pay the stated dividend rate on the full $500 and
not just on the $200.
6. Negative balances prohibited. Credit unions must treat
a negative account balance as zero to determine:
i. The daily or average daily balance on which dividends will be
paid.
ii. Whether any minimum balance to earn dividends is met. (See
commentary to appendix A, Part II, which prohibits credit unions
from using negative balances in calculating the dividends figure
for the annual percentage yield earned.)
7. Club accounts. Credit unions offering club accounts
(such as a “holiday” or “vacation” club accounts) cannot impose a
minimum balance requirement for dividends based on the total number
or dollar amount of payments required under the club plan. For
example, if a plan calls for $10 weekly payments for 50 weeks, the
credit union cannot set a $500 minimum balance and then pay only if
the member makes all 50 payments.
8. Minimum balances not affecting dividends. Credit
unions may use the daily balance, average daily balance, or other
computation method to calculate minimum balance requirements not
involving the payment of dividends - such as to compute minimum
balances for assessing fees.
(b) Compounding and Crediting Policies
1. General. Credit unions choosing to compound dividends
may compound or credit dividends annually, semi-annually,
quarterly, monthly, daily, continuously, or on any other basis.
2. Withdrawals prior to crediting date. If members
withdraw funds (without closing the account), prior to a scheduled
crediting date, credit unions may delay paying the accrued
dividends on the withdrawn amount until the scheduled crediting
date, but may not avoid paying dividends.
3. Closed accounts. Subject to state or other law, a
credit union may choose not to pay accrued dividends if members
close an account prior to the date accrued dividends are credited,
as long as the credit union has disclosed that fact. If accrued
dividends are paid, accrued dividends must be paid on funds up
until the account is closed or the account is deemed closed. For
example, if an account is closed on a Tuesday, accrued dividends on
the funds through Monday would be paid. Whether (and the conditions
under which) credit unions are permitted to deem an account closed
by a member is determined by state or other law, if any. Credit
unions are cautioned that bylaw requirements may prevent a credit
union from deeming a member's account closed until certain time
periods are extinguished. (See NCUA Standard FCU Bylaws,
Art. III, § 3. Such bylaw requirements may not be overridden
without proper agency approval.)
(c) Date Dividends Begin To Accrue
1. Relation to Regulation CC. Credit unions may rely on
the Expedited Funds Availability Act (EFAA) and Regulation CC (12
CFR part 229) to determine, for example, when a deposit is
considered made for purposes of dividend accrual, or when dividends
need not be paid on funds because a deposited check is later
returned unpaid.
2. Ledger and collected balances. Credit unions may
calculate dividends by using a “ledger” balance or “collected”
balance method, as long as the crediting requirements of the EFAA
are met (12 CFR 229.14).
3. Withdrawal of principal. Credit unions must accrue
dividends on funds until the funds are withdrawn from the account.
For example, if a check is debited to an account on a Tuesday, the
credit union must accrue dividends on those funds through
Monday.
Section 707.8 - Advertising (a) Misleading or Inaccurate
Advertisements
1. General. All advertisements are subject to the rule
against misleading or inaccurate advertisements, even though the
disclosure applicable to various media differ. The word “profit”
may be used when referring to dividend-bearing share accounts, as
it reflects the nature of dividends. The word “profit” may not be
used when referring to interest-bearing deposit accounts.
2. Indoor signs. An indoor sign advertising an annual
percentage yield is not misleading or inaccurate if:
i. For a tiered-rate account, it also provides the upper and
lower dollar amounts of the tier corresponding to the advertised
annual percentage yield.
ii. For a term share account, it also provides the term required
to obtain the advertised annual percentage yield.
3. “Free” or “no cost” accounts. For purposes of
determining whether an account can be advertised as “free” or “no
cost,” maintenance and activity fees include:
i. Any fee imposed if a minimum balance requirement is not met,
or if the member exceeds a specified number of transactions.
ii. Transaction and service fees that members reasonably expect
to be imposed on an account on a regular basis (see comments
4(b)(4)-1 and 2).
iii. A flat fee, such as a monthly service fee.
iv. Fees imposed to deposit, withdraw or transfer funds,
including per-check or per-transaction charges (for example, $.25
for each withdrawal, whether by check, in person).
4. Other fees. Examples of fees that are not
maintenance or activity fees include:
i. Fees that are not required to be disclosed under §
707.4(b)(4).
ii. Check printing fees of any type.
iii. Fees for obtaining copies of checks, whether or not the
original checks have been truncated or returned to the member
periodically.
iv. Balance inquiry fees.
v. Fees assessed against a dormant account.
vi. Fees for using an ATM.
vii. Fees for electronic transfer services that are not required
to obtain an account, such as preauthorized transfers or home
electronic credit union services.
viii. Stop payment fees and fees for share drafts or checks
returned unpaid.
5. Similar terms. An advertisement may not use a term
such as “fees waived” if a maintenance or activity fee may be
imposed because it is similar to the terms “free” or “no cost.”
6. Specific account services. Credit unions may advertise
a specific account service or feature as free as long as no fee is
imposed for that service or feature. For example, credit unions
offering an account that is free of deposit or withdrawal fees
could advertise that fact, as long as the advertisement does not
mislead members by implying that the account is free and that no
other fee (a monthly service fee, for example) may be charged.
7. Free for limited time. If an account (or a specific
account service) is free only for a limited period of time - for
example, for one year following the account opening - the account
(or service) may be advertised as free as long as the time period
is stated.
8. Conditions not related to share accounts. Credit
unions may advertise accounts as “free” for members that meet
conditions not related to share accounts, such as the member's age.
For example, credit unions may advertise a share draft account as
“free for persons over 65 years old,” even though a maintenance or
activity fee may be assessed on accounts held by members that are
65 or younger.
9. Electronic advertising. If an electronic
advertisement, such as an advertisement appearing on an internet
Web site, displays a triggering term, such as a bonus or annual
percentage yield, the advertisement must clearly refer the member
to the location where the additional required information begins.
For example, an advertisement that includes a bonus or annual
percentage yield may be accompanied by a link that directly takes
the member to the additional information.
10. Examples. Examples of advertisements that would
ordinarily be misleading, inaccurate, or misrepresent the deposit
contract are:
i. Representing an overdraft service as a “line of credit,”
unless the service is subject to 12 CFR part 1026 (Regulation
Z).
ii. Representing that the credit union will honor all checks or
authorize payment of all transactions that overdraw an account,
with or without a specified dollar limit, when the credit union
retains discretion at any time not to honor checks or authorize
transactions.
iii. Representing that members with an overdrawn account can
maintain a negative balance when the terms of the account's
overdraft service require members promptly to return the share
account to a positive balance.
iv. Describing a credit union's overdraft service solely as
protection against bounced checks when the credit union also
permits overdrafts for a fee for overdrawing their accounts by
other means, such as ATM withdrawals, debit card transactions, or
other electronic fund transfers.
v. Advertising an account-related service for which the credit
union charges a fee in an advertisement that also uses the word
“free” or “no cost” or a similar term to describe the account,
unless the advertisement clearly and conspicuously indicates that
there is a cost associated with the service. If the fee is a
maintenance or activity fee under § 707.8(a)(2) of this part,
however, an advertisement may not describe the account as “free” or
“no cost” or contain a similar term even if the fee is disclosed in
the advertisement.
11. Additional disclosures in connection with the payment of
overdrafts. The rule in § 707.3(a), providing that disclosures
required by § 707.8 may be provided to the member in electronic
form without regard to E-Sign Act requirements, applies to the
disclosures described in § 707.11(b), which are incorporated by
reference in § 707.8(f).
(b) Permissible Rates
1. Tiered-rate accounts. An advertisement for a
tiered-rate account that states an annual percentage yield must
also state the annual percentage yield for each tier, along with
corresponding minimum balance requirements. Any dividend rates
stated must appear in conjunction with the annual percentage yields
for each tier.
2. Stepped-rate accounts. An advertisement that states a
dividend rate for a stepped-rate account must state all the
dividend rates and the time period that each rate is in effect.
3. Representative examples. An advertisement that states
an annual percentage yield for a type of account (such as a term
share account for a specified term) need not state the annual
percentage yield applicable to every variation offered by the
credit union or indicate that other maturity terms are available.
In an advertisement stating that rates for an account may vary
depending on the amount of the initial deposit or the term of a
term share account, credit unions need not list each balance level
and term offered. Instead, the advertisement may:
i. Provide a representative example of the annual percentage
yields offered, clearly described as such. For example, if a credit
union offers a $25 bonus on all term share accounts and the annual
percentage yield will vary depending on the term selected, the
credit union may provide a disclosure of the annual percentage
yield as follows: “For example, our 6-month share certificate
currently pays a 3.15% annual percentage yield.”
ii. Indicate that various rates are available, such as by
stating short-term and longer-term maturities along with the
applicable annual percentage yields: “We offer share certificates
with annual percentage yields that depend on the maturity you
choose. For example, our one-month share certificate earns a 2.75%
APY. Or, earn a 5.25% APY for a three-year share certificate.”
(c) When Additional Disclosures are Required
1. Trigger terms. The following are examples of
information stated in advertisements that are not “trigger”
terms:
i. “One, three, and five year share certificates available”.
ii. “Bonus rates available”.
iii. “1% over our current rate,” so long as the rates are not
determinable from the advertisement.
(c)(2) Time Annual Percentage Yield is Offered
1. Specified recent date. If an advertisement discloses
an annual percentage yield as of a specified date, that date must
be recent in relation to the publication or broadcast frequency of
the media used. For example, the printing date of a brochure
printed once for an account promotion that will be in effect for
six months would be considered “recent,” even though rates change
during the six-month period. Dividend rates published in a daily
newspaper or on television must be a rate offered shortly before
(or on) the date the rates are published or broadcast. Similarly,
dividend rates published in a daily newspaper or on television must
be a rate reflecting either the preceding dividend period, or a
prospective rate, and the option chosen should be noted.
2. Reference to date of publication. An advertisement may
refer to the annual percentage yield as being accurate as of the
date of publication, if the date is on the publication itself. For
instance, an advertisement in a periodical may state that a rate is
“current through the date of this issue,” if the periodical shows
the date.
(c)(5) Effect of Fees
1. Scope. This requirement applies only to maintenance or
activity fees as described in paragraph 8(a).
(c)(6) Features of Term Share Accounts (c)(6)(i) Time Requirements
1. Club accounts. If a club account has a maturity date,
but the term may vary depending on when the account is opened,
credit unions may use a phrase such as: “The maturity date of this
club account is November 15; its term varies depending on when the
account is opened.”
(c)(6)(ii) Early Withdrawal Penalties
1. Discretionary penalties. Credit unions imposing early
withdrawal penalties on a case-by-case basis may disclose that they
“may” (rather than “will”) impose a penalty if that accurately
describes the account terms.
(d) Bonuses
1. General reference to “bonus.” General statements such
as “bonus checking” or “get a bonus when you open a checking
account” do not trigger the bonus disclosures.
(e) Exemption for Certain Advertisements (e)(1) Certain Media
(e)(1)(i)
1. Internet advertisements. The exemption for
advertisements made through broadcast or electronic media does not
extend to advertisements posted on the internet or sent by
e-mail.
2. Internet advertisements. The exemption for
advertisements made through broadcast or electronic media does not
extend to advertisements made by electronic communication, such as
advertisements posted on the Internet or sent by e-mail.
(e)(1)(iii)
1. Tiered-rate accounts. Solicitations for tiered-rate
accounts made through telephone response machines must provide all
annual percentage yields and the balance requirements applicable to
each tier.
(e)(2) Indoor Signs (e)(2)(i)
1. General. Indoor signs include advertisements displayed
on computer screens, banners, preprinted posters, and chalk or peg
boards. Any advertisement inside the premises that can be retained
by a member (such as a brochure or a printout from a computer) is
not an indoor sign.
(e)(3) Newsletters
1. General. The partial exemption applies to all credit
union newsletters, whether instituted before or after the
compliance date of part 707. Nor must a newsletter be of any
particular circulation frequency (e.g., weekly, monthly, quarterly,
biannually, annually, or irregularly) or of any certain format
(e.g. magazine, bulletin, broadside, circular, mimeograph, letter,
or pamphlet) in order to be eligible for the partial advertising
exemption.
2. Permissible Distribution. In order for newsletters to
retain the partial advertising exemption, newsletters can be sent
to existing credit union members only. Any distribution reasonably
calculated to reach only members is also acceptable, such as:
i. Mailing newsletters to existing members.
ii. Distributing newsletters at a function reasonably limited to
members, such as an annual meeting or member picnic.
iii. Displaying or offering newsletters at a credit union lobby,
branch, or office.
3. Impermissible Distribution. Distributing a newsletter
in a place open to nonmembers, such as a sponsor's lunch room, is
not reasonably calculated to reach only members, and such
newsletter would be subject to all applicable advertising
rules.
Section 707.9 - Enforcement and Record Retention (c) Record
Retention
1. Evidence of required actions. Credit unions comply
with the regulation by demonstrating they have done the
following:
i. Established and maintained procedures for paying dividends
and providing timely disclosures as required by the regulation,
and
ii. Retained sample disclosures for each type of account offered
to members, such as account-opening disclosures, copies of
advertisements, and change-in-term notices; and information
regarding the dividend rates and annual percentage yields
offered.
2. Methods of retaining evidence. Credit unions must be
able to reconstruct the required disclosures or other actions. They
need not keep disclosures or other business records in hard copy.
Records evidencing compliance may be retained on microfilm,
microfiche, or by other methods that reproduce records accurately
(including computer files). Credit unions must retain copies of all
printed advertisements and the text of all advertisements conveyed
by electronic or broadcast media, and newsletters.
3. Payment of dividends. Credit unions must retain
sufficient rate and balance information to permit the verification
of dividends paid on an account, including the payment of dividends
on the full principal balance.
Section 707.10 [Reserved] Section 707.11 - Additional Disclosures
Regarding the Payment of Overdrafts (a) Disclosure of total fees on
periodic statements (a)(1)
General.
1. Transfer services. The overdraft services covered by §
707.11(a)(1) of this part do not include a service providing for
the transfer of funds from another share account of the member to
permit the payment of items without creating an overdraft, even if
a fee is charged for the transfer.
2. Examples of credit unions advertising the payment of
overdrafts. A credit union would trigger the periodic statement
disclosures if it:
i. Promotes the credit union's policy or practice of paying some
overdrafts, unless the service would be subject to 12 CFR part 1026
(Regulation Z), in advertisements using broadcast media, brochures,
telephone solicitations ,or electronic mail, or on Internet sites,
ATM screens or receipts, billboards, or indoor signs. But see, Sec.
707.11(a)(2) of this part regarding communications about the
payment of overdrafts that would not trigger periodic statement
disclosures;
ii. Includes a message on a periodic statement informing the
member of an overdraft limit or the amount of funds available for
overdrafts. For example, a credit union that includes a message on
a periodic statement informing the member of a $500 overdraft limit
or that the member has $300 remaining on the overdraft limit, is
promoting an overdraft service;
iii. Discloses an overdraft limit or includes the dollar amount
of an overdraft limit in a balance disclosed by any means,
including on an ATM receipt or on an automated system, such as a
telephone response machine, ATM screen, or the credit union's
Internet site.
3. Fees for paying overdrafts. Credit unions must
disclose on periodic statements a total dollar amount for all fees
or charges imposed on the account for paying overdrafts. The credit
union must disclose separate totals for the statement period and
for the calendar year-to-date. The total dollar amount for each of
these periods includes per-item fees as well as interest charges,
daily or other periodic fees, or fees charged for maintaining an
account in overdraft status, whether the overdraft is by check,
debit card transaction, or by any other transaction type. It also
includes fees charged when there are insufficient funds because
previously deposited funds are subject to a hold or are
uncollected. It does not include fees for transferring funds from
another account of the member to avoid an overdraft, or fees
charged under a service subject to Regulation Z (12 CFR part 1026).
See also comment 11(c)-2. Under § 707.11(a)(1)(i), the
disclosure must describe the total dollar amount for all fees or
charges imposed on the account for the statement period and
calendar year-to-date for paying overdrafts using the term “Total
Overdraft Fees.” This requirement applies notwithstanding comment
3(a)-2.
4. Fees for returning items unpaid. The total dollar
amount for all fees for returning items unpaid must include all
fees charged to the account for dishonoring or returning checks or
other items drawn on the account. The credit union must disclose
separate totals for the statement period and for the calendar
year-to-date. Fees imposed when deposited items are returned are
not included. Credit unions may use terminology such as “returned
item fee” or “NSF fee” to describe fees for returning items
unpaid.
5. Waived fees. In some cases, a credit union may provide
a statement for the current period reflecting that fees imposed
during a previous period were waived and credited to the account.
Credit unions may, but are not required to, reflect the adjustment
in the total for the calendar year-to-date and in the applicable
statement period. For example, if a credit union assesses a fee in
January and refunds the fee in February, the credit union could
disclose a year-to-date total reflecting the amount credited, but
it should not affect the total disclosed for the February statement
period, because the fee was not assessed in the February statement
period. If a credit union assesses and then waives and credits a
fee within the same cycle, the credit union may, at its option,
reflect the adjustment in the total disclosed for fees imposed
during the current statement period and for the total for the
calendar year-to-date. Thus, if the credit union assesses and
waives the fee in the February statement period, the February fee
total could reflect a total net of the waived fee.
6. Totals for the calendar year to date. Some credit
unions' statement periods do not coincide with the calendar month.
In such cases, the credit union may disclose a calendar
year-to-date total by aggregating fees for 12 monthly cycles,
starting with the period that begins during January and finishing
with the period that begins during December. For example, if
statement periods begin on the 10th day of each month, the
statement covering December 10, 2006 through January 9, 2007 may
disclose the year-to-date total for fees imposed from January 10,
2006 through January 9, 2007. Alternatively, the credit union could
provide a statement for the cycle ending January 9, 2007, showing
the year-to-date total for fees imposed January 1, 2006 through
December 31, 2006.
7. Itemization of fees. A credit union may itemize each
fee in addition to providing the disclosures required by §
707.11(a)(1) of this part.
(a)(3) Time period covered by disclosures
1. Periodic statement disclosures. The disclosures under
§ 707.11(a) must be included on periodic statements provided by a
credit union starting with the first statement period that begins
after January 1, 2010. For example, if a member's statement period
typically closes on the 15th of each month, a credit union must
provide the disclosures required by § 707.11(a)(1) on subsequent
periodic statements for that member beginning with the statement
reflecting the period from January 16, 2010 to February 15,
2010.
(a)(5) Acquired accounts (b) Advertising disclosures in connection
with overdraft services
1. Examples of credit unions promoting the payment of
overdrafts. A credit union must include the advertising
disclosures in § 707.11(b)(1) of this part if the credit union:
i. Promotes the credit union's policy or practice of paying
overdrafts, unless the service would be subject to 12 CFR part 1026
(Regulation Z). This includes advertisements using print media such
as newspapers or brochures, telephone solicitations, electronic
mail, or messages posted on an Internet site. But see, §
707.11(b)(2) of this part for communications that are not subject
to the additional advertising disclosures;
ii. Includes a message on a periodic statement informing the
member of an overdraft limit or the amount of funds available for
overdrafts. For example, a credit union that includes a message on
a periodic statement informing the member of a $500 overdraft limit
or that the member has $300 remaining on the overdraft limit, is
promoting an overdraft service.
iii. Discloses an overdraft limit or includes the dollar amount
of an overdraft limit in a balance disclosed on an automated
system, such as a telephone response machine, ATM screen, or the
credit union's Internet site. See, however, § 707.11(b)(3) of this
part.
2. Transfer services. The overdraft services covered by §
707.11(b)(1) of this part do not include a service providing for
the transfer of funds from another share account of the member to
permit the payment of items without creating an overdraft, even if
a fee is charged for the transfer.
3. Electronic media. The exception for advertisements
made through broadcast or electronic media, such as television or
radio, does not apply to advertisements posted on a credit union's
Internet site, on an ATM screen, provided on telephone response
machines, or sent by electronic mail.
4. Fees. The fees that must be disclosed under §
707.11(b)(1) of this part include per-item fees as well as interest
charges, daily or other periodic fees, and fees charged for
maintaining an account in overdraft status, whether the overdraft
is by check or by other means. The fees also include fees charged
when there are insufficient funds because previously deposited
funds are subject to a hold or are uncollected. The fees do not
include fees for transferring funds from another account to avoid
an overdraft or fees charged when the credit union has previously
agreed in writing to pay items that overdraw the account and the
service is subject to 12 CFR part 1026 (Regulation Z).
5. Categories of transactions. An exhaustive list of
transactions is not required. Disclosing that a fee may be imposed
for covering overdrafts created by check, in-person withdrawal, ATM
withdrawal, or other electronic means would satisfy the
requirements of § 707.11(b)(1)(ii) of this part where the fee may
be imposed in these circumstances. See comment 4(b)(4)-5 of this
part.
6. Time period to repay. If a credit union reserves the
right to require a member to pay an overdraft immediately or on
demand instead of affording members a specific time period to
establish a positive balance in the account, a credit union may
comply with § 707.11(b)(1)(iii) of this part by disclosing this
fact.
7. Circumstances for nonpayment. A credit union must
describe the circumstances under which it will not pay an
overdraft. It is sufficient to state, as applicable: “Whether your
overdrafts will be paid is discretionary and we reserve the right
not to pay. For example, we typically do not pay overdrafts if your
account is not in good standing, or you are not making regular
deposits, or you have too many overdrafts.”
8. Advertising an account as “free.” If the advertised
account-related service is an overdraft service subject to the
requirements of § 707.11(b)(1) of this part, credit unions must
disclose the fee or fees for the payment of each overdraft, not
merely that a cost is associated with the overdraft service, as
well as other required information. Compliance with comment 8(a) -
10.v is not sufficient.
(c) Disclosure of account balances
1. Balance that does not include additional amounts. For
purposes of the balance disclosure requirement in § 707.11(c), if a
credit union discloses balance information to a member through an
automated system, it must disclose a balance that excludes any
funds the credit union may provide to cover an overdraft pursuant
to a discretionary overdraft service that will be paid by the
credit union under a service subject to part 1026 of this title
(Regulation Z) or that will be transferred from another account
held individually or jointly by a member. The balance may, but need
not, include funds that are deposited in the member's account, such
as from a check, that are not yet made available for withdrawal in
accordance with the funds availability rules under part 229 of the
title (Regulation CC). In addition, the balance may, but need not,
include funds that are held by the credit union to satisfy a prior
obligation of the member, for example, to cover a hold for an ATM
or debit card transaction that has been authorized but for which
the credit union has not settled.
2. Retail sweep programs. In a retail sweep program, a
credit union establishes two legally distinct subaccounts, a share
draft subaccount and a share savings subaccount, which together
make up the member's account. The credit union allocates and
transfers funds between the two subaccounts in order to maximize
the balance in the share savings account while complying with the
monthly limitations on transfers out of savings accounts under the
Federal Reserve Board's Regulation D, 12 CFR 204.2(d)(2). Retail
sweep programs are generally not established for the purpose of
covering overdrafts. Rather, credit unions typically establish
retail sweep programs by agreement with the member in order for the
credit union to minimize its transaction account reserve
requirements and, in some cases, to provide a higher interest rate
than the member would earn on a share draft account alone. Section
707.11(c) does not require a credit union to exclude funds from the
member's balance that may be transferred from another account
pursuant to a retail sweep program that is established for such
purposes and that has the following characteristics:
i. The account involved complies with the Federal Reserve
Board's Regulation D, 12 CFR 204.2(d)(2),
ii. The member does not have direct access to the share savings
subaccount that is part of the retail sweep program, and
iii. The member's periodic statements show the account balance
as the combined balance in the subaccounts.
3. Additional balance. The credit union may disclose
additional balances supplemented by funds that may be provided by
the credit union to cover an overdraft, whether pursuant to a
discretionary overdraft service, a service subject to Regulation Z
(12 CFR part 1026), or a service that transfers funds from another
account held individually or jointly by the member, so long as the
credit union prominently states that any additional balance
includes these additional overdraft amounts. The credit union may
not simply state, for instance, that the second balance is the
members “available balance,” or contains “available funds.” Rather,
the credit union should provide enough information to convey that
the second balance includes these amounts. For example, the credit
union may state that the balance includes “overdraft funds.” Where
a member has not opted into, or as applicable, has opted out of the
credit union's discretionary overdraft service, any additional
balance disclosed should not include funds that otherwise might be
available under that service. Where a member has not opted into, or
as applicable, has opted out of, the credit union's discretionary
overdraft service for some, but not all transactions (e.g.,
the member has not opted into overdraft services for ATM and
one-time debit card transactions), a credit union that includes
these additional overdraft funds in the second balance should
convey that the overdraft funds are not available for all
transactions. For example, the credit union could state that
overdraft funds are not available for ATM and one-time (or
everyday) debit card transactions. Similarly, if funds are not
available for all transactions pursuant to a service subject to
Regulation Z (12 CFR part 1026) or a service that transfers funds
from another account, a second balance that includes such funds
should also indicate this fact.
4. Automated systems. The balance disclosure requirement
in § 707.11(c) applies to any automated system through which the
member requests a balance, including, but not limited to, a
telephone response system, the credit union's Internet site, or an
ATM. The requirement applies whether the credit union discloses a
balance through an ATM owned or operated by the credit union or
through an ATM not owned or operated by the credit union, including
an ATM operated by an entity that is not a financial institution.
If the balance is obtained at an ATM, the requirement also applies
whether the balance is disclosed on the ATM screen or on a paper
receipt.
Appendix A to Part 707 - Annual Percentage Yield Calculation Part
I. Annual Percentage Yield for Account Disclosures and Advertising
Purposes
1. Rounding for calculations. The following are examples
of permissible rounding rules for calculating dividends and the
annual percentage yield:
i. The daily rate applied to a balance carried to five or more
decimals. For example; .008219178%, 3.00% for a 365 day year, would
be rounded to no less than .00822%.
ii. The daily dividends or interest earned carried to five or
more decimals. For example; $.08219178082, daily dividends on
$1,000 at 3% for a 365 day year, would be rounded to no less than
$.08219.
2. Exponents in a leap year. The annual percentage yield
formula's exponent numerator will remain 365 in leap years. The
“days in term” figure used in the denominator should be consistent
with the length of term used in the dividends calculation.
3. First tier of a tiered-rate account. When credit
unions use a rate table, the first tier of a tiered rate account is
to be disclosed and advertised; “Up to but not exceeding * * * ”,
“$.01 to * * * ”, or similar language.
4. Term Share Accounts Opened in Midterm. For club
accounts that meet the definition of a term share account, the
annual percentage yield is based on the maximum number of days in
the term not to exceed 365 days (or 366 days in a leap year).
Part II. Annual Percentage Yield Earned for Periodic Statements
1. Balance method. The dividend or interest figure used
in the calculation of the annual percentage yield earned may be
derived from the daily balance method or the average daily balance
method. Regardless of the dividend calculation method, the balance
used in the annual percentage yield earned formula is the average
daily balance. The average daily balance calculation is the sum of
the balances for each day in the period divided by the number of
days in the period. The balance for each day is based on a point in
time; i.e. beginning of day balance, end of day balance, closing of
day balance, etc. Each day's balance, for dividend accrual and
payment purposes, must be based on the same point in time and
cannot be based on the day's low balance.
2. Negative balances prohibited. Credit unions must treat
a negative account balance as zero to determine the balance on
which the annual percentage yield earned is calculated. (See
commentary to § 707.7(a)(2).)
A. General Formula
1. Accrued but uncredited dividends. To calculate the
annual percentage yield earned, accrued but uncredited
dividends:
i. May not be included in the balance for statements that are
issued at the same time or less frequently than the account's
compounding and crediting frequency. For example, if monthly
statements are sent for an account that compounds dividends daily
and credits dividends monthly, the balance may not be increased
each day to reflect the effect of daily compounding. Assume a
credit union will pay $13.70 in dividends on $100,000 for the first
day, $6.85 in dividends on $50,013.70 for the second day, and $3.43
in dividends on $25,020.55 for the third day. The sum of each days
balance is $175,000 (does not include accrued, but uncredited,
dividends amounts $13.70, $6.85, and $3.43), thereby resulting in
an average daily balance for the three days of $58,333.33.
ii. Must be included in the balance for succeeding statements if
a statement is issued more frequently than compounded dividends is
credited on an account. For example, if monthly statements are sent
for an account that compounds dividends daily and credits dividends
quarterly, the balance for the second monthly statement would
include dividends that had accrued for the prior month. Assume a
credit union will pay $411.78 in dividends on 30 days of $100,000,
$427.28 in dividends on 31 days of $100,411.78, and $415.23 in
dividends on 30 days of $100,839.06. The balance (average daily
balance in the account for the period) for the second 31 days is
$100,411.78.
2. Rounding. The dividends earned figure used to
calculate the annual percentage yield earned must be rounded to two
decimals to reflect the amount actually paid. For example, if the
dividends earned for a statement period is $20.074 and the credit
union pays the member $20.07, the credit union must use $20.07 (not
$20.074) to calculate the annual percentage yield earned. For
accounts that pay dividends based on the daily balance method,
compound and credit dividends or interest quarterly, and send
monthly statements, the credit union may, but need not, round
accrued dividends to two decimals for calculating the “projected”
or “anticipated” annual percentage yield earned on the first two
monthly statements issued during the quarter. However, on the
quarterly statement the dividends earned figure must reflect the
amount actually paid.
3. Compounding frequency using the average daily balance
method. Any compounding frequency, including daily compounding,
can be used when calculating dividends using the average daily
balance method. (See comment 707.7(b), which does not require
credit unions to compound or credit dividends at any particular
frequency).
B. Special Formula for Use Where Periodic Statement is Sent More
Often Than the Period for Which Dividends are Compounded
1. Statements triggered by Regulation E. Credit unions
may, but need not, use this formula to calculate the annual
percentage yield earned for accounts that receive quarterly
statements and that are subject to Regulation E's rule calling for
monthly statements when an electronic fund transfer has occurred.
They may do so even though no monthly statement was issued during a
specific quarter. This formula must be used for accounts that
compound and credit dividends quarterly and that receive monthly
statements, triggered by Regulation E, which comply with the
provisions of § 707.6.
2. Days in compounding period. Credit unions using the
special annual percentage yield earned formula must use the actual
number of days in the compounding period.
Appendix B to Part 707 - Model Clauses and Sample Forms
1. Modifications. Credit unions that modify the model
clauses will be deemed in compliance as long as they do not delete
information required by TISA or regulation or rearrange the format
so as to affect the substance or clarity of the disclosures.
2. Format. Credit unions may use inserts to a document
(see Sample Form B-11) or fill-in blanks (see Sample Forms B-4 and
B-5, which use double underlining to indicate terms that have been
filled in) to show current rates, fees or other terms.
3. Disclosures for opening accounts. The sample forms
illustrate the information that must be provided to a member when
an account is opened, as required by § 707.4(a)(1). (See §
707.4(a)(2), which states the requirements for disclosing the
annual percentage yield, the dividend rate, and the maturity of a
term share account in responding to a member's request.)
4. Compliance with Regulation E. Credit unions may
satisfy certain requirements under Part 707 with disclosures that
meet the requirements of Regulation E. (See § 707.3(c).) The model
clauses and sample forms do not give examples of disclosures that
would be covered by both this regulation and Regulation E (such as
disclosing the amount of a fee for ATM usage). Credit unions should
consult appendix A to Regulation E for appropriate model
clauses.
5. Duplicate disclosures. If a requirement such as a
minimum balance applies to more than one account term (to obtain a
bonus and determine the annual percentage yield, for example),
credit unions need not repeat the requirement for each term, as
long as it is clear which terms the requirement applies to.
6. Guide to model clauses. In the model clauses,
italicized words indicate the type of disclosure a credit union
should insert in the space provided (for example, a credit union
might insert “March 25, 1995” in the blank for “(date)”
disclosure). Brackets and diagonals (“/”) indicate a credit union
must choose the alternative that describes its practice (for
example, [daily balance/average daily balance]).
7. Sample forms. The sample forms (B-4 through B-11)
serve a purpose different from the model clauses. They illustrate
various ways of adapting the model clauses to specific accounts.
The clauses shown relate only to the specific transactions
described.
[59 FR 59899, Nov. 21, 1994, as amended at 60 FR 21699, May 3,
1995; 61 FR 68129, Dec. 27, 1996; 63 FR 71575, Dec. 29, 1998; 66 FR
33163, June 21, 2001; 70 FR 72899, Dec. 8, 2005; 72 FR 30246, May
31, 2007; 74 FR 36105, July 22, 2009; 75 FR 47175, Aug. 5, 2010; 77
FR 71085, Nov. 29, 2012; 85 FR 62212, Oct. 2, 2020]