For Release Upon Delivery
9:15 a.m. on April 23, 2015
TESTIMONY OF
TONEY BLAND
SENIOR DEPUTY COMPTROLLER
FOR MIDSIZE AND COMMUNITY BANK SUPERVISION
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
Before the
SUBCOMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND CONSUMER CREDIT
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FINANCIAL SERVICES
UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 23, 2015
Statement Required by 12 U.S.C. § 250: The views expressed herein are those of the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency and do not necessarily represent the views of the President.
. I.
Introduction
Chairman Neugebauer, Ranking Member Clay, and members of the Subcommittee, thank
you for the opportunity to appear before you today. In response to the Subcommittee’s invitation
letter, my testimony focuses on the challenges facing small national banks and federal savings
associations (hereafter referred to as community banks) and the work of the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to help these institutions remain a vibrant part of our
nation’s financial system. I also discuss specific steps we are taking to address regulatory burden
on community banks, OCC recommendations for legislative action in furtherance of this goal,
and our progress on the review required pursuant to the Economic Growth and Regulatory
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1996 (EGRPRA).
Before describing these initiatives, I would like to share the OCC’s perspective on
community banks. The OCC supervises approximately 1,400 institutions with assets under
$1 billion.
These community banks provide many of the essential financial services and
much of the credit necessary for our nation’s economic growth. Throughout the country,
these banks help small businesses thrive by offering personalized service and credit
products tailored to their customers’ needs. In addition, these banks and their employees
strengthen our cities and towns by helping to meet municipal finance needs and actively
participating in civic life.
Overseeing the safety and soundness of community banks is central to the mission
of the OCC.
Approximately two-thirds of our examination staff is dedicated to the
supervision of these institutions. In my role as Senior Deputy Comptroller for Midsize and
Community Banks, I regularly meet with community bankers to hear first-hand about their
successes, their challenges, and their frustrations. I have seen how well-managed
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community banks weathered the financial crisis and provided a steady source of credit to
their communities. But I have also heard their concerns about the long-term viability of
their business models. In addition, I have heard about their frustration with the time and
resources they spend trying to track and comply with regulatory requirements — time and
resources they believe could be better spent responding to the needs of their customers and
communities.
We take these concerns seriously and are taking steps to help community bankers meet
these challenges and navigate the changing regulatory landscape by ensuring that the OCC’s
supervisory policies and regulations are appropriately tailored to community banks.
II.
The OCC’s Approach to Community Bank Supervision
The OCC is committed to fostering a regulatory climate that allows well-managed
community banks to grow and thrive. We have built our supervision of community banks
around local field offices where the local Assistant Deputy Comptroller (ADC) has
responsibility for the supervision of a portfolio of community banks.
Each ADC reports up to a
District Deputy Comptroller who, in turn, reports to me. Our community bank examiners are
located in over 60 communities throughout the United States, close to the banks they supervise.
Through this supervisory structure, community banks receive the benefits of highly
trained bank examiners with local knowledge and experience, supplemented by the resources
and specialized expertise that a nationwide organization can provide. Our bank supervision
policies and procedures establish a common framework and set of expectations.
Portfolio
managers tailor the supervision of each community bank to its individual risk profile, business
model, and management strategies. We give our ADCs considerable decision-making authority,
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. reflecting their experience, expertise, and first-hand knowledge of the institutions they
supervise, and we expect them to make most supervisory decisions locally.
We also seek to ensure that we apply our supervisory policies, procedures, and
expectations in a consistent and balanced manner. For example, a key element of the OCC’s
supervisory philosophy is open and frequent communication with the banks we supervise. In
this regard, my management team and I encourage bankers with concerns about examination
findings to raise these concerns with their examiners and with the district management team
that oversees the bank. Our ADCs and District Deputy Comptrollers expect and encourage such
inquiries.
If a banker does not want to pursue these avenues of communication, our Ombudsman
provides a venue for bankers to discuss their concerns, either informally or formally.
The
OCC’s Ombudsman is fully independent of the supervisory process, and he reports directly to
the Comptroller. This office provides bankers with an impartial ear to hear complaints and a
mechanism to facilitate the resolution of disputes with our examination staff, in addition to
hearing formal appeals of supervisory determinations.
The OCC’s multi-layered, informal and formal process for addressing concerns about
examination findings encourages the resolution of disagreements at various stages of the
examination cycle and with various management levels within the OCC. Furthermore, as a
safeguard, the Ombudsman contacts a bank or savings association 60 days after resolution of an
appeal and again 60 days after the first examination following an appeal resolution to make sure
that no retaliatory action has been taken by an OCC examiner for an institution’s use of the
appeal process.
This communication is confidential and independent, and we believe that the
institutions we supervise are confident that they can respond candidly.
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. III.
Tailored Supervision
The OCC understands that a one-size-fits-all approach to supervision is not always
appropriate, especially for community banks. We recognize that community banks have different
business models and more limited resources than larger banks. Therefore, where we have the
flexibility under the law, we seek to tailor our supervision to a bank’s size and complexity, and
we factor these differences into the rules we write and the guidance we issue.
The OCC seeks to minimize burden on community banks through various means.
Examples of ways in which we tailor our regulations to accommodate community banks, while
remaining faithful to statutory requirements and legislative intent, include explaining and
organizing our rulemakings so these institutions can better understand their scope and
application, providing alternative ways to satisfy regulatory requirements, and using regulatory
exemptions or transition periods.
For example, the OCC, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) jointly drafted the final risk-based regulatory
capital rule to reflect the nature and complexity of the different institutions we regulate.
Although some provisions in the rule apply broadly, many requirements, including the
supplementary leverage ratio and the countercyclical capital buffer, apply only to the largest
banking organizations, which engage in the most complex and high-risk activities. We also
adjusted the final rule to address significant concerns raised by community bankers by retaining
the capital treatment for residential mortgage exposures and allowing community banks to elect
to continue the treatment of certain accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI)
components.
This treatment of AOCI helps community banks avoid introducing substantial
volatility into their regulatory capital calculations. And we continue to explore additional ways to
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. tailor the capital rules to respond to community bank concerns and proposals, consistent with our
objective of ensuring appropriate levels and quality of capital.
The OCC also responded to community bank concerns when we finalized our revised
lending limits rule, issued in accordance with section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act), to include counterparty credit
exposure arising from derivatives and securities financing transactions. Specifically, the rule
exempts from the lending limit calculations certain securities financing transactions most
commonly used by community banks. It also permits small institutions to adopt compliance
alternatives commensurate with their size and risk profile by providing flexible options for
measuring covered counterparty credit exposures, including an easy-to-use lookup table.
Our final rule implementing the Volcker Rule provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act is
another example of how we seek to adapt statutory requirements to activities at different sized
institutions, where possible. The statute applies to all banking entities, regardless of size;
however, not all banking entities engage in activities covered by the prohibitions in the statute.
One of the OCC’s priorities in the interagency Volcker rulemaking was to make sure that the
final regulations imposed compliance obligations on banking entities in proportion to their
involvement in covered activities and investments.
The rule, however, does not exempt
community banks from the requirement to assess their activities and determine whether they are
covered by the rule. As noted later in my testimony, we have submitted a legislative proposal
that would exempt small banks from this rule.
The OCC is constantly seeking to improve how we communicate information to
community banks and to provide tools and resources to assist them in identifying and managing
their risks. We have designed the bulletins announcing the issuance of each new regulation or
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supervisory guidance so that these banks can quickly assess whether the issuance applies to
them, and we include a “highlights” section that identifies the key components of the rule or
guidance. We also provide plain language descriptions of complex requirements to assist
community bankers in understanding newly issued rules. For example, we provided community
banks with a quick reference guide to the mortgage rules issued by the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau. We also produced a streamlined, two-page summary of the final domestic
capital rule, highlighting aspects of the rule and key transition dates applicable to community
banks.
We supplemented this summary with an online regulatory capital estimator tool for banks,
which we developed with the other federal banking agencies. The agencies augmented the
estimator tool with a supplemental tool that banks may use to help calculate regulatory capital
requirements for securitization exposures.
In addition, the OCC has focused on providing community banks with tools to assist
them in determining whether they are adequately prepared to address cyber threats. This has
been a particular emphasis of both the Comptroller and the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (FFIEC).
Last year, members of the FFIEC, including the OCC, piloted a
cybersecurity assessment at more than 500 community institutions to evaluate their preparedness
to mitigate cybersecurity risks. The assessment supplemented regularly scheduled exams and
built upon key supervisory expectations contained within existing FFIEC information technology
handbooks and other regulatory guidance. The agencies subsequently published FFIEC
Cybersecurity Assessment General Observations, 1 which includes questions for bank
management to consider when assessing their institutions’ cybersecurity preparedness.
We
understand that community banks have found this information helpful in assessing their own
1
http://www.ffiec.gov/press/PDF/FFIEC_Cybersecurity_Assessment_Observations.pdf.
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. strengths and weaknesses in this important area. Last month, the FFIEC provided an overview of
its cybersecurity priorities for the remainder of 2015, which include the issuance of a selfassessment tool to assist institutions, including community banks, in evaluating their inherent
risk and risk management capabilities with respect to cybersecurity.
Through our secure BankNet website, the OCC provides other tools targeted to
community banks. These include a portfolio-level stress test tool designed to provide bankers
with a simple method to perform portfolio stress testing on income producing commercial real
estate loans. OCC examiners developed this optional tool in response to requests from
community bankers seeking additional guidance on how to stress test their loan portfolios.
Another popular tool allows bankers to develop customized peer reports that they can use to
compare their bank’s balance sheet and financial performance ratios to those of other banks.
The OCC’s Semiannual Risk Perspective provides bankers with an analysis of current
market and risk trends that may affect their institutions.
Because we recognize that community
banks may face different challenges than larger banks, the report discusses risks from both a
large and small bank perspective. We supplement this semiannual report with periodic webinars,
generally targeted to community banks, on emerging risk topics. For example, the FFIEC
conducted a webinar for community banks on “Executive Leadership of Cybersecurity.” More
than 5,000 Chief Executive Officers of community institutions registered for this event.
The goal
of this and similar webinars is to provide community bankers with practical information to help
them mitigate emerging risks and to understand and comply with supervisory expectations.
IV.
Other Burden Reduction Opportunities
When considering proposals to reduce burden on community banks, the OCC seeks to
ensure that the proposals do not compromise fundamental safety and soundness or consumer
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. protection safeguards. Within this framework, the OCC is committed to exploring additional
ways to reduce unnecessary regulatory burden on community banks. To this end, we are
undertaking several regulatory review projects designed to reduce burden, particularly on
community banks, and are considering other innovative approaches to address this issue. Late
last year, we drafted and submitted three legislative proposals to the House Committee on
Financial Services and the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, which
provide a statutory basis to revise our regulations and reduce burden on covered institutions, if
enacted.
These proposals, which I describe below, are the product of both our on-going dialogue
with smaller institutions and our supervisory expertise with both large and small banks and
savings associations. The OCC would be pleased to share these proposals, as well as our
experience and expertise, with this Subcommittee as it considers legislative options to address
regulatory burden.
A. Legislative Proposals
Amendments to the Scope of the Volcker Rule.
The risks to the financial system of
proprietary trading and owning or sponsoring private equity and hedge funds are far more
significant when larger institutions engage in these activities than when community banks do so,
to the extent they even engage in such activities. Yet, the Volcker Rule contains no exemption
for community banks. Accordingly, community banks need to ascertain whether their activities
are covered by the Volcker Rule in order to understand whether they have any compliance
obligations.
Making this determination may require them to expend money and resources — for
example, by hiring attorneys and consultants. This regulatory burden is not justified by the risk
these institutions present.
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. In response to concerns raised by community institutions and issues that have arisen
during our ongoing Volcker Rule implementation efforts, the OCC drafted a legislative proposal
to exempt from the Volcker Rule banks with total consolidated assets of $10 billion or less. This
proposal would eliminate unnecessary burden for small banks while ensuring that we address the
risks the Volcker Rule sought to eliminate. Where a community bank engages in activities
covered by the current Volcker Rule, the OCC could address any concerns as part of its normal
safety and soundness supervisory process. Based on our analysis, we estimate that this
amendment could exempt more than 6,000 small banks, including small banks regulated by the
OCC, from the requirement to comply with the regulations implementing the Volcker Rule.
Revisions to the Examination Schedule.
The OCC generally examines national banks and
federal savings associations with total assets greater than $500 million on a 12-month cycle. We
believe, however, that there are additional healthy, well-managed community banks that should
qualify for the 18-month examination cycle. Accordingly, the OCC drafted a legislative proposal
to increase from $500 million to $750 million the asset-size threshold that determines whether a
community bank can qualify for an examination every 18 months, rather than every 12 months.
The OCC would continue to use off-site monitoring tools to identify potential problems in these
low risk institutions and, if warranted, could examine the institution more frequently.
This proposal is consistent with the incremental approach that Congress has taken when
increasing the threshold amount of assets that permits small institutions to qualify for the 18month examination cycle.
Furthermore, it would allow the OCC to more appropriately align our
supervisory resources with risk, while simultaneously reducing the regulatory burden on small,
well-capitalized, and well-managed institutions. We estimate that this amendment would affect
more than 400 banks, including banks regulated by the OCC.
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. I am pleased to see that some Members of Congress, including Representatives Barr and
Tipton, have taken an interest in this issue and introduced legislative proposals to expand the
examination cycle for additional community banks.
Changes to Permissible Activities for Federal Savings Associations. Currently, the
powers of federal savings associations are set out in the Home Owners’ Loan Act (HOLA),
which establishes lending and investment limits for these institutions. Federal savings
associations have told us that they would like to engage in additional activities to serve their
communities but are unable to do so because of the HOLA limits. Under existing law, their only
option is to convert to a bank charter, a process that can impose costs and burden that we believe
can be alleviated.
To address these concerns, the OCC offered legislation that would give a federal savings
association a choice: continue to operate as a traditional thrift or file a notice to be treated as a
“covered savings association.” Generally, a covered savings association would have the powers
of and be subject to the same restrictions as a national bank.
In practice, this means that a federal
savings association that becomes a covered savings association would gain national bank powers
but would have to discontinue activities not permissible for a national bank, subject to rules
governing non-conforming assets and subsidiaries. This option would provide a federal savings
association with the flexibility to retain its current corporate form and governance structure
without unnecessarily limiting the evolution of its business plan. If a federal savings
association’s business plan changed after it became a covered savings association, it generally
would be permitted to reverse its election and regain its traditional thrift status after an
appropriate period.
This option would allow these institutions to adapt to changing economic and
business environments and to better meet the needs of their communities. As the supervisor of
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. both national banks and federal savings associations, we are well-positioned to administer this
type of framework given our familiarity with the individual institutions and their governing
statutes.
I would like to take this opportunity to express my appreciation for the significant efforts
of Representatives Rothfus and Himes, who recently introduced H.R. 1660, the Federal Savings
Association Charter Flexibility Act of 2015. If enacted, this bill will bring the type of flexibility
and regulatory relief I describe above to our nation’s federal savings associations.
B. Current Initiatives
While the OCC calibrates individual regulations to account for differences in the size and
complexity of institutions as they are developed, we recognize the need to periodically assess
how existing rules can be modified to ease regulatory burden on banks.
The OCC has several
projects underway, and we are considering other approaches to achieve this goal.
Integration of National Bank and Savings Association Rules. The Dodd-Frank Act
transferred to the OCC all functions of the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) relating to the
examination, supervision, and regulation of federal savings associations. Following the transfer
of OTS rulemaking functions to the OCC, we began a comprehensive, multi-phase review of our
regulations and those of the former OTS to reduce burden and duplication, promote fairness in
supervision, and create efficiencies for national banks and federal savings associations.
Last
spring, we issued a proposal to integrate our bank and saving association rules relating to
corporate activities and transactions into a single set of rules, where possible. Many of the
changes included in the proposal would reduce burden for all institutions, including community
banks. We are working on a final rule to implement these changes and hope to issue it in the near
future.
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EGRPRA. The OCC, FDIC, Board, and FFIEC are currently engaged in a review of their
regulations, as required by EGRPRA. Specifically, the statute requires that, at least once every
ten years, the agencies seek public comment on rules that are outdated or otherwise unnecessary.
This provides both the agencies and the public with an opportunity to recommend ways to reduce
burden.
To carry out the EGRPRA review, the agencies plan to publish at least four Federal
Register notices, each addressing one or more categories of rules. To date, we have published
two notices, each seeking comment on three categories of rules.
In each notice, we specifically
ask the public to identify ways to reduce unnecessary burden associated with our regulations,
with a particular focus on community banks. We plan to issue a third Federal Register notice
soon, seeking comment on three additional categories, followed by one or more additional
notices on the remaining rules.
In addition, the agencies recently decided to expand the scope of the EGRPRA review in
order to be as inclusive as possible. Accordingly, the agencies will solicit comment on all of our
regulations issued in final form up to the date that we publish our last EGRPRA notice for public
comment.
We will provide more information regarding this expanded EGRPRA review in the
next EGRPRA Federal Register notice.
The agencies received over 40 comments on the first Federal Register notice, and the
comment period on the second Federal Register notice is still open. We carefully review all
comments we receive to identify areas where changes would be appropriate. In addition, we are
undertaking our own review of these rules, and the statutes they implement to assess whether
there are areas where we can reduce burden without compromising safety and soundness.
This
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. project is very important to the Comptroller, and we are hopeful that it will yield positive results,
particularly for community banks.
In addition, the agencies are holding a series of EGRPRA outreach meetings to give
members of the public an opportunity to present their views in person. The outreach meetings
feature panel presentations by industry participants and consumer and community groups. To
date, we have held outreach meetings in Los Angeles and Dallas, and I have participated in each
of these meetings to hear first-hand the views and recommendations offered by the many
participants. We have a meeting scheduled for next month in Boston, followed by meetings in
Chicago and Washington, D.C.
We have also scheduled an outreach meeting in Kansas City that
will focus specifically on rural banking issues. Recognizing that travel costs may restrict the
ability of interested parties to attend in person, we live-stream each outreach meeting, where
possible, and provide a video archive of the proceedings to increase the public’s opportunity to
view the meetings. These resources are easily accessible on the agencies’ EGRPRA website, as
are the Federal Register notices, all comments we have received, and additional EGRPRA
information.
2
While the EGRPRA process will unfold over a period of time, the OCC will not wait
until it is over to implement changes where a good case is made for regulatory relief. Where it is
clear that a regulation is outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome, we will act where we
have the authority to do so. For example, we are actively reviewing suggestions to eliminate
board of director approvals in certain circumstances and to broaden the use of electronic
submissions for filing forms.
In addition, many of the changes that we included in the integration
rulemaking discussed above are consistent with comments we received in the EGRPRA review.
2
The EGRPRA website can be accessed at http://egrpra.ffiec.gov.
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. Finally, the EGRPRA review may help us identify burdensome regulatory requirements that
derive from statutory provisions. When we identify these provisions, we look forward to sharing
our insights and experience with Congress.
Call Report Simplification. The OCC and other federal banking agencies, under the
auspices of the FFIEC, are considering ways that we can further tailor reporting requirements for
community banks. Recently, we received proposals to reduce the burden associated with the
preparation of the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Report), including the
feasibility of allowing certain banks to file a short-form Call Report for two quarters of a year.
The OCC has discussed the Call Report issue in numerous meetings with bankers, and we are
committed to carefully considering their concerns.
As part of this effort, the OCC and other federal banking agencies have agreed to
undertake a Call Report simplification project through the FFIEC Task Force on Reports.
The
first step was the development by the Task Force of guiding principles to serve as the basis for
evaluating potential additions or deletions of data items to and from the Call Report. Using these
guiding principles, the Task Force will undertake a comprehensive review of every line item of
every schedule in the Call Report to identify data items that we can delete. The Task Force is
also considering the feasibility of a simplified Call Report for certain community banks, as the
current version includes schedules and data items not applicable to most of these institutions.
Collaboration.
While we expect that the above-referenced projects will reduce burden for
many community banks, the OCC is also studying other, less conventional approaches to help
community banks thrive in the modern financial world. One especially promising approach
involves collaboration between community banks and is the subject of an important paper the
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. OCC published earlier this year. 3 The principle behind this approach, which grew out of
productive and on-going discussions between the OCC and our community banks, is that by
pooling resources, community banks can manage regulatory requirements, trim costs, and serve
customers who might otherwise lie beyond their reach. We have already seen examples of
successful collaboration, such as community banks forming an alliance to bid on larger loan
projects and banks pooling resources to finance community development activities.
There are many other opportunities of this nature, which can increase efficiencies and
save money. As noted in our paper, these include collaboration on accounting, clerical support,
data processing, employee benefit planning, and health insurance — to name just a few.
Our
innovative community banks can undoubtedly find other ways to share resources in a safe and
sound manner.
V.
Conclusion
Community banks are essential to our nation’s communities and small businesses. The
OCC is committed to minimizing unnecessary regulatory burden for these institutions. We will
continue to consider carefully the potential effect that current and future policies and regulations
may have on community banks and will be happy to work with the Subcommittee on any
proposed legislative initiatives.
3
An Opportunity for Community Banks: Working Together Collaboratively, Jan.
13, 2015.
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