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Contact:
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Robert Schmermund
(202) 857-3104
Jim Eberle
(202) 857-3145
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Jim Eberle
(202) 857-3145 (work)
(703) 893-2593 (home)
[email protected]
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For Immediate Release
February 6, 2001
#01-11 |
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E-mail:
[email protected] |
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AMERICA’S COMMUNITY BANKERS STRONGLY URGES OTS TO WITHDRAW
‘FATALLY FLAWED’ HOLDING COMPANY PRIOR APPROVAL PROPOSAL
WASHINGTON, D.C. — America’s
Community Bankers has strongly opposed the Office of Thrift Supervision’s
proposal to impose prior approval requirements on certain savings and loan
holding company transactions. “ACB believes this proposal is fatally flawed
and must be withdrawn,” said Diane M. Casey, president & CEO of the
national trade group.
ACB also expressed “serious
reservations” about the potential for the proposed regulation to ultimately
impose minimum capital standards on all thrift holding companies. ACB’s views
were expressed in a comment letter to OTS.
“This rule introduces an
unnecessary and overly burdensome regulation for hundreds of well-capitalized
and well-managed savings and loan holding companies that is without sound
regulatory justification,” said Casey. “At best, the proposed rule
introduces a previously unknown, and practically unworkable, prior notice
regulatory scheme; at worst, it represents an unjustified substitution of the
appropriate business judgment of qualified holding company management with that
of the OTS,” she added.
“Nothing in this proposal adds
measurably to improving safety and soundness and at the same time it jeopardizes
the very existence of a corporate structure that has proven valuable over the
years,” Casey said. “ACB strongly opposes this imposition of
additional regulations governing transactions by holding companies.
“Furthermore, ACB does not
support any OTS proposal that would result in the establishment of defined
holding company capital standards that would place savings and loan holding
companies at a competitive disadvantage in the marketplace,” Casey added.
ACB acknowledged that OTS has
legitimate concerns about actions by holding companies that could put their
savings association subsidiaries at risk. “However, we believe that OTS’s
record of regulating savings associations demonstrates quite effectively that
the agency already possesses the requisite supervisory tools to prevent such
rare occurrences within a narrow universe of holding companies requiring
heightened scrutiny.
“It is partly because of the
presence of such regulatory resources that ACB finds the proposed regulation so
troublesome,” said Casey. “If adopted in its current form, savings and
loan holding companies will be hamstrung by this regulation and will operate at
a significant competitive disadvantage. This will, in turn, pose a serious risk
to the long-term viability and attractiveness of a federal savings association
charter.”
Casey said that ACB’s working group
would work with OTS to determine how best to respond to the agency’s supervisory
concerns after the proposal is withdrawn.
ACB’s Comment Letter is ATTACHED.
America’s Community Bankers is the national trade association committed to shaping the future of
banking by being the innovative industry leader strengthening the competitive position of
community banks. To learn more about ACB, visit
www.AmericasCommunityBankers.com.
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