April 5, 2006 Vol.
3, No. 4
A Mutual Exchange is a monthly electronic newsletter for
mutual institutions. America’s Community Bankers is as committed to
mutual banks as you are to serving your community. We hope that this monthly
update will keep you current on the issues facing mutual
institutions. We welcome your feedback. Please email
[email protected] with your thoughts, comments and
suggestions.
MUTUAL NEWSLETTER SPECIAL EDITION—ACB DEFENDS
MUTUAL CHARTER
In the last edition of “A Mutual Exchange,” sent to you on March
24, 2006, we reported on activities of a minority shareholder group
that is seeking to advance legislation in Congress that would allow
the transfer of the majority mutual interest in an MHC to minority
public shareholders. This would enable them to appoint all of the
directors and force second step conversions. ACB is actively
opposing this proposal.
On Friday, March 31, 2006, the American Banker printed a Viewpoint
article entitled “Standards for Mutuals In Dire Need of Change.” The
article, written by an associate of Larry Seidman, an activist
minority shareholder, argues that mutual holding companies and
mutually-owned thrifts have weak corporate governance standards that
should be changed. Clearly, this article is intended to bolster
support for the minority shareholder congressional proposal.
ACB has submitted the following response defending mutual
institutions and we expect it to be be printed in the Friday, April 7, 2006,
edition of the American Banker. The text of the letter is below.
We wanted you to be aware of these important developments in advance
of the American Banker article. ACB is actively pursuing a
legislative strategy at this time.
We will issue a member Action Alert in the near future asking
members to become engaged in this issue and will provide further
background information.
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Patty Milon,
ACB’s Senior Vice President of Regulatory
Affairs at
[email protected] or (202) 857-3121.
______________________________________________________________________
To the American Banker
Re: Viewpoint on Standards for Mutual Holding Companies, March 31,
2006
The author of your March 31st Viewpoint entitled “Standards for
Mutuals in Dire Need of Change,” finds something “particularly
vexing” about mutual banks, and especially about mutual holding
companies (MHCs). As the president and CEO of Connecticut Mutual
Holding Company, an MHC in Litchfield, Conn., and one of its two
affiliate banks, Litchfield Bancorp, I find something vexing, too:
That corporate raiders are so willing to misrepresent the facts
about a form of banking organization that has served communities
well in this country for almost 200 years.
About one statement I have no disagreement. There are those who
would destroy mutuality for “the potential of outsized gains.” These
corporate raiders do not care about the cooperative structures of
mutuals that have allowed these institutions to operate for decades
in the interest of community stakeholders. Corporate raiders care
nothing for the community stakeholders’ interest in the value built
up in these institutions by countless generations. What they do care
about is wresting away the keys to the treasury to enrich
themselves. Fortunately, there are rules and laws in place to
prevent corporate raiders from trying to turn today’s vibrant mutual
institutions into “Sunbeam Corporations,” to the detriment of
community stakeholders.
I am also first vice chairman of America’s Community Bankers, which
represents the majority of the 750 mutual depository institutions in
the United States, of which 161 are mutual holding companies.
Sixty-four of these mutual holding companies have issued stock; mine
has not. MHCs are chartered by the Federal Reserve, as in our case,
by the Office of Thrift Supervision or by state governments, and
have been an important form of mutual organization since the late
1980’s.
A key point that is lost in the March 31st Viewpoint is that mutual
institutions in general, and MHCs in particular, operate in a highly
regulated environment. The claim that standards for mutuals are in
“dire” need of change simply is not accurate. In fact, this is used
merely as a pretense to express concerns about “corporate
governance” to hide the real goals of those who would be enriched by
such changes.
Mutual banks are subject to rigorous examination and supervision,
and MHCs that do issue stock are further subject to the rigors of
being registered issuers under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Not only are many of the bank subsidiaries of the MHCs subject to
the audit and internal control requirements of FDICIA, the corporate
governance and internal control provisions of Sarbanes-Oxley also
are applicable. MHCs are as transparent as any other regulated
entity.
Mutual holding companies were developed to provide mutual
institutions a mechanism to raise capital and give them some
corporate flexibility without giving up their cooperative status.
When a mutual forms an MHC and raises capital through a public
offering of minority shares, the same regulated process is followed
as in any public offering. The process provides maximum disclosure
to the depositors and members of the community who subscribe to the
offering, and to the investors who purchase the remaining shares, if
any.
The shares purchased in the subscription and community offerings
often are acquired by customers and neighbors who are interested in
the future of the institution, support community activities, and
desire the retention of a stable community bank. For those
depositors, the continued existence of the institution is more
important than the “potential for outsized gains.” As a result of
the disclosure requirements imposed by the Securities and Exchange
Commission and the Office of Thrift Supervision, purchasers of these
shares are given ample notice of the limitations and risks of
purchasing minority shares of mutual holding companies. Further,
many mutual holding company formations that have included a minority
offering have also established a community foundation with a
percentage of the proceeds.
The holding company board and the board of the resulting savings
institution have a fiduciary duty to the holding company and the
institution, respectively. They are required to look at
transactions, whether a buyback, the declaration of a dividend or
the decision about a corporate reorganization, with the same
diligence that the board of a stock institution must use. The
benefit plans that compensate management and the directors are
described in proxy materials that are approved by the regulators and
are voted upon by the shareholders. Shareholders receive notice of
corporate actions that require their approval. The same rules and
responsibilities governing the setting of compensation for the board
members and management are applicable whether the institution is in
mutual, stock or mutual holding company form.
Operational or administrative decisions at community banks —
whether mutual or stock — are made by management as delegated by
the board, and are made with a view to the safe and sound operation
of the institution. Management at mutual institutions is tasked by
the board of directors to run the bank and make day-to-day
decisions. Mutual depositors on the other hand do not have a say in
running the institution. The courts have found numerous times that
depositors have limited interests.
The allegation of the March 31st Viewpoint that mutual holding
companies and mutual institutions are operating without adequate
oversight, of either stakeholders or regulators, is not supported by
the facts. The regulator has continuous oversight over the
performance and safe and sound operation of the institution through
frequent and rigorous examination. The average equity capital of
mutual institutions is 12.92 percent. Their level of non-performing
loans is lower than their stock peers. Bottomline: these MHCs remain
strong, independent, and vital institutions in the communities they
serve.
Mutuals and mutual holding companies have almost 200 years of
service to their communities, and they will continue to thrive into
the 21st century.
Sincerely,
Mark E. Macomber
First Vice Chairman, America’s Community Bankers
President and CEO
Connecticut Mutual Holding Company and
Litchfield Bancorp
Litchfield, Conn.
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