| August 10, 2006
The Honorable Michael G. Oxley
Chairman
The Honorable Barney Frank
Ranking Member
Committee on Financial Services
2129 Rayburn House Office Building
United States House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Chairman Oxley and Mr. Frank:
We want to thank you for your leadership in raising questions about the Federal
Housing Finance Board’s proposed regulation on excess stock and retained
earnings in your letter to the Finance Board of June 30, 2006. We too have
concerns about the Finance Board’s proposal and believe that it could have a
significant negative impact on the Federal Home Loan Banks, their member
institutions and their communities. We would like to provide our perspective on
the Finance Board’s response to your letter.
While we appreciate the declaration that the Finance Board is taking an
open-minded, cautious approach, we remain concerned that the Finance Board has
not adequately considered the capital regime established by Congress in the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), the Board’s own precedents, and the impact of the
proposal on the FHLBank System and the System’s member institutions,
particularly smaller institutions. While there are indications that the Finance
Board may be willing to stretch out the period for FHLBanks to come into
compliance with the proposed restrictions, we respectfully submit that time
cannot cure the problems with the current proposal. We continue to believe that
the best approach is for the Finance Board to withdraw the current proposal and
begin anew with an advance notice of proposed rulemaking process that would
foster a better dialogue among the various stakeholders in the FHLBank System.
Our key concerns are discussed in more detail below.
The Proposed Rule is Inconsistent with Capital Standards Mandated by
Congress
We must respectfully disagree with the assertion that the proposed rule conforms
to the requirements of GLBA.
Under GLBA, Congress gave each FHLBank discretion to determine, subject to
Finance Board approval of the capital plan required under GLBA, the precise
combination of Class B stock and retained earnings that it would utilize to
satisfy its capital requirement. Moreover, GLBA gives
the boards of the individual FHLBanks the authority to determine the amount of
excess stock that an FHLBank can have at one time. These determinations by the
individual boards are necessarily based on the individual circumstances, balance
sheets and activities of each of the FHLBanks. The one-size-fits-all policy
proposed by the Finance Board does not comport with GLBA’s capital scheme.
Moreover, while GLBA provides that member Class B stock, which is redeemable
within five years from a request to redeem, is permanent capital, the proposed
rule suggests that retained earnings are the only real buffer against economic
loss in the FHLBank System. The Finance Board’s treatment of Class B stock has
resulted in an excessive focus on retained earnings as the sole means of
absorbing certain potential losses, and a proposed regulation that requires an
unnecessarily high proportion of retained earnings in total capital. Congress
did not mandate a set proportion of retained earnings to Class B stock; rather,
it left this determination to the individual FHLBanks.
Much of the Finance Board’s rationale for the proposed rule is based on the
assertion that FHLBank member stock is a volatile source of capital redeemable
at a member’s will. Member stock is not redeemable at the will of a member.
Rather, it is a stable source of permanent capital. The vast majority of the
member stock in the FHLBank system is Class B stock with a five-year redemption
period, subject to controls that prevent redemption beyond the five-year
redemption period in times of financial stress.
Moreover, having just approved the individual FHLBank capital plans required by
GLBA in 2002, the Finance Board necessarily approved the FHLBanks’ determination
of the appropriate mix of retained earnings and Class B stock and use of excess
stock. We believe that the Finance Board’s letter fails to provide an adequate
explanation for its fundamental departure from the approvals it so recently
granted the FHLBanks in connection with their capital plans.
The Proposed Rule Will Have a Serious, Negative Impact on Operations of
FHLBanks
The Finance Board fails to recognize the proposal’s potential for altering the
long-term operation of the FHLBanks. The response does not adequately
acknowledge the likely impact of the proposed regulation on the cost of FHLBank
advances. In fact, the retained earnings requirement (REM) and the resulting
restriction on dividends will have a significant adverse impact on member
institutions and will have great potential to create instability within the
FHLBank System. The FHLBanks will have to increase retained earnings by over $3
billion over the next 18 to 36 months. Also, the FHLBanks will have to target an
amount of retained earnings above the actual REM requirement because the
consequences of falling out of compliance once the target is obtained are
significant. These dividend restrictions will reduce the member institutions’
income and increase the all-in cost of advances. Large member institutions with
access to other wholesale funding sources will seek those alternatives and
reduce their use of FHLBank advances. Reduced use by the larger members will
deprive the FHLBanks of a valuable source of earnings and limit their scale of
operations, increasing costs and reducing services to smaller member
institutions. The net result is that the proposal likely will reduce mortgage
finance services to member institutions and simultaneously frustrate the Finance
Board’s overall goal of increasing retained earnings.
The burden of these restrictions will fall the heaviest on smaller institutions
that rely on the dividend income that comes from FHLBank stock ownership and
that are unable to access the capital markets directly for funding. In an
evaluation of the impact of the proposal on publicly traded financial
institutions, one analyst estimated that smaller institutions could suffer a
five percent reduction of net income until full dividends are restored.
The REM is based on a flawed formula that does not justify the proposed large
increase in retained earnings, and results in a level of retained earnings
beyond what is needed for FHLBank System safety and soundness. As a result, the
REM may needlessly depress dividends and increase the cost of advances on an
on-going basis.
The formula for the retained earnings requirement also is constructed to
disfavor investments in securities needed to provide liquidity. As a result, the
FHLBanks will have less flexibility in managing their balance sheets and
providing services to their members. This point was emphasized in a recent
ratings agency report from Standard and Poor’s.
The Finance Board suggests that the FHLBank of New York will have no problem in
complying with the REM requirement. This is not the case for the other FHLBanks,
and it may be uneconomic for the FHLBank of New York to remain in compliance if
the rule is adopted. In fact, the proposed rule’s impact will have a disparate
impact on the FHLBanks for reasons unrelated to financial performance. For
example, the FHLBank of San Francisco has never had an earnings problem and has
capital well in excess of the minimum. Yet, the FHLBank of San Francisco will
have one of the largest retained earnings deficits. We question the rationale of
a regulatory proposal that attains such results.
Impact on AHP
The proposed rule will result in a decrease in funds available for the FHLBanks’
affordable housing programs (AHP). As noted above, the proposed rule will likely
lead to reduced use of the System by larger member institutions with access to
alternative sources of wholesale funding. As a result, the earnings of many of
the FHLBanks will be reduced, which will reduce the funds available for AHP.
While acknowledging that lower earnings will reduce AHP payments, the Finance
Board argues an FHLBank’s earnings might increase as a result of the excess
stock restriction if member banks take out new advances, triggering new
activity-based stock requirements, rather than accept stock redemption. This
assertion is based on the illogical premise that a member institution will take
on advance obligations that it did not need.
Additionally, the Finance Board argues that higher retained earnings will give
the FHLBanks a larger base of capital that should increase earnings over the
long-term. However, the increase in retained earnings will not be available to
support additional earning assets, but instead will be required under the
proposal to support the existing asset structure. In any event, this argument
represents an unexplained change in position by the Finance Board. In the
preamble to the proposed rule, the Finance Board said its “purpose proposing the
rule change is not necessarily to require the Banks to increase their overall
levels of capital.” 71 Fed. Reg. 13311. If the Finance Board’s true intent is
reflected in the preamble, then the letter’s assertion that FHLBank earnings
will increase has no foundation.
The Proposed Rule is Based on Flawed Analyses and Assumptions
The Finance Board’s letter implies that it does not favor FHLBank investments in
highly liquid assets and acquired member assets (AMA). It argues that these
investments are not essential to the mission of FHLBanks. ACB disagrees. The
acquisition of money-market securities and similar highly liquid assets is
fundamental to the mission of the FHLBanks. Additionally, the AMA programs are
considered core mission activities for FHLBanks under Finance Board regulations.
Finally, it is important to keep in mind that the Finance Board has based its
legal authority for the proposed rule on its general safety and soundness
powers, not on the explicit capital provisions of GBLA. But, the Board has
failed to make a case that there are system-wide safety and soundness concerns
that justify the current proposal. In fact, the Finance Board has admitted in
its regulatory proposal that “[the Board’s] capital rules and the FHLBanks’
overall capital levels remain adequate and the risk of capital insolvency at any
FHLBank in the foreseeable future is de minimis.” 71 Fed. Reg. at 13311.
To address these and other concerns, we believe that the interests of the public
would best be served by a congressional oversight hearing on the proposed rule
before the Finance Board issues a final rule. We are confident that the Finance
Board, Congress, member institutions and community development organizations
share a common interest that the FHLBank System’s mission is fulfilled in an
efficient and a safe and sound manner. We promise our full and vigorous support
of your efforts to ensure this result. Thank you for this opportunity to present
our views.
Sincerely
Robert R. Davis
Executive Vice President and
Managing Director, Government Relations
Cc: Chairman Ronald A. Rosenfeld
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