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Code · REGISTER · 2021-10-27 · PROPOSED RULES · Agriculture Agriculture Department See Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service NOTICES Solicitation of Nominations: Equity Commission Advisory Committee, Equity Commission Subcommittee on Agricultu · Unknown

Unknown. Final rule

6,115 words·~28 min read·/register/2021/10/27/2021-23381·

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

--- schema: federal-register doc_type: fedreg source_file: FR-2021-10-27.xml --- 86 205 Wednesday, October 27, 2021 Contents Agriculture Agriculture Department See Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service NOTICES Solicitation of Nominations: Equity Commission Advisory Committee, Equity Commission Subcommittee on Agriculture; Extension of Application Period, 59360 2021-23425 Alcohol Tobacco Firearms Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives Bureau NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Identification of Imported Explosives Materials, 59426 2021-23354 Animal Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service NOTICES Pest Risk Analysis for the Importation of Fresh Turmeric (Curcuma longa) Rhizome From Samoa Into the United States (including Territories), 59360-59361 2021-23358 Centers Disease Centers for Disease Control and Prevention NOTICES Record of Decision: Acquisition of Site for Development of a Replacement Underground Safety Research Program Facility for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mace, WV, 59391-59392 2021-23341 Civil Rights Civil Rights Commission NOTICES Meetings:
Virginia Advisory Committee, 59361 2021-23360 Coast Guard Coast Guard RULES Fire Protection for Recreational Vessels, 59303 2021-23403 PROPOSED RULES Port Access Route Study: Alaskan Arctic Coast, 59326-59327 2021-23389 Commerce Commerce Department See Foreign-Trade Zones Board See International Trade Administration See National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Comptroller Comptroller of the Currency NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals:
Company-Run Annual Stress Test Reporting Template and Documentation for Covered Institutions with Total Consolidated Assets of $250 Billion or More under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, 59447-59448 2021-23398 Copyright Office Copyright Office, Library of Congress PROPOSED RULES Copyright Claims Board: Initiation of Proceedings and Related Procedures, 59327 2021-23351 Copyright Royalty Board Copyright Royalty Board RULES Determination of Rates and Terms for Digital Performance of Sound Recordings and Making of Ephemeral Copies to Facilitate those Performances (Web V), 59452-59593 2021-20621 Education Department Education Department NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Education Stabilization Fund—Emergency Assistance for Non-Public Schools Program Recipient Annual Reporting Data Collection Form, 59371-59372 2021-23321 School Pulse Panel Data Collection, 59370-59371 2021-23424 Energy Department Energy Department See Federal Energy Regulatory Commission PROPOSED RULES Energy Conservation Program: Test Procedures for Fans and Blowers, 59308-59309 2021-23229 Environmental Protection Environmental Protection Agency PROPOSED RULES Air Quality State Implementation Plans;
Approvals and Promulgations: Michigan and Wisconsin; Finding of Failure to Attain the 2010 Sulfur Dioxide Primary National Ambient Air Quality Standard for the Detroit and Rhinelander Nonattainment Areas, 59327-59333 2021-23274 Oklahoma; Updates to the General SIP and Incorporation by Reference Provisions, 59333-59336 2021-23035 State Plans for Designated Facilities and Pollutants; Approvals and Promulgations: Florida; Control of Emissions from Existing Municipal Solid Waste Landfills, 59336-59338 2021-22914 NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Contractor Conflicts of Interest, 59380 2021-23366 Contractor Cumulative Claim and Reconciliation, 59385 2021-23367 NO <sup>x</sup> SIP Call, 59376 2021-23369 Servicing of Motor Vehicle Air Conditioners, 59386-59387 2021-23368 Fortieth Update of the Federal Agency Hazardous Waste Compliance Docket, 59376-59380 2021-23357 Pesticide Product Registration: Receipt of Applications for New Uses (October 2021), 59380-59381 2021-23390 Proposed CERCLA Cost Recovery and Work Administrative Settlement:
Wampus Milford Associates Site, Milford, Connecticut, 59385-59386 2021-23394 Proposed Consent Decree: Safe Drinking Water Act Claims, 59383-59385 2021-23427 Requests for Nominations: Science Advisory Committee on Chemicals, 59382-59383 2021-23362 Federal Communications Federal Communications Commission RULES Best Practices for Equipment Disposal and Revises FCC Form 5640 Certifications for the Secure and Trusted Communications Networks Reimbursement Program, 59304-59307 2021-23213 Federal Deposit Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation RULES Real Estate Lending Standards, 59279-59282 2021-23381 Federal Energy Federal Energy Regulatory Commission NOTICES Combined Filings, 59374-59375 2021-23420 License Application:
Warrensburg Hydropower Limited Partnership, 59372 2021-23417 Meetings: FFP Project 101, LLC, 59375-59376 2021-23416 Permit Application: PacifiCorp, 59375 2021-23419 Request under Blanket Authorization: WBI Energy Transmission, Inc., 59372-59373 2021-23418 Federal Maritime Federal Maritime Commission NOTICES Agreement Filed, 59387 2021-23385 Federal Mediation Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service NOTICES Privacy Act; Systems of Records, 59387-59390 2021-23408 2021-23409 Federal Motor Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Annual Report of Class I and Class II For-Hire Motor Carriers, 59446-59447 2021-23378 Federal Reserve Federal Reserve System NOTICES Treatment of U.S. Firms Operating in the Spanish Government Debt Market, 59390-59391 2021-23428 Fish Fish and Wildlife Service PROPOSED RULES Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Listing Endangered and Threatened Species and Designating Critical Habitat, 59353-59357 2021-23214 Regulations for Designating Critical Habitat, 59346-59353 2021-23011 NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Native Youth Community Adaptation and Leadership Congress, 59416-59418 2021-23415 Urban Bird Treaty Program Requirements, 59414-59416 2021-23413 Food and Drug Food and Drug Administration NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Registration of Producers of Drugs and Listing of Drugs in Commercial Distribution, 59402-59405 2021-23395 Determination of Regulatory Review Period for Purposes of Patent Extension:
INREBIC, 59397-59399 2021-23388 XENLETA Injection New Drug Application 211673, 59394-59395 2021-23386 XENLETA Tablets New Drug Application 211672, 59392-59394 2021-23387 Exemption of Certain Categories of Biological Products from Certain Reporting Requirements Under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, 59395-59397 2021-23396 Guidance: Website Location of Center for Devices and Radiological Health Fiscal Year 2022, 59399-59401 2021-23392 Issuance of Priority Review Voucher;
Rare Pediatric Disease Product, 59405 2021-23336 Meetings: Antimicrobial Drugs Advisory Committee, 59401-59402 2021-23384 Foreign Assets Foreign Assets Control Office NOTICES Blocking or Unblocking of Persons and Properties, 59448-59449 2021-23393 Foreign Trade Foreign-Trade Zones Board NOTICES Application for Expansion of Subzone: Lam Research Corp., Foreign-Trade Zone 18, San Jose, CA, 59361-59362 2021-23374 General Services General Services Administration NOTICES Federal Travel Regulation:
Applicability of the Federal Travel Regulation Part 301-13 to Employees who are Nursing, 59391 2021-23397 Geological Geological Survey NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program (EDMAP and STATEMAP), 59418-59419 2021-23361 Health and Human Health and Human Services Department See Centers for Disease Control and Prevention See Food and Drug Administration See National Institutes of Health Homeland Homeland Security Department See Coast Guard See U.S.
Customs and Border Protection NOTICES Privacy Act; Systems of Records, 59408-59411 2021-23342 Housing Housing and Urban Development Department RULES Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program: Announcement of Fee to Cover Credit Subsidy Costs, 59302-59303 2021-23365 NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Community Development Block Grant Entitlement Program, 59411-59412 2021-23411 Eviction Protection Grant Program, 59412-59414 2021-23401 Indian Affairs Indian Affairs Bureau NOTICES Request for Applications:
Living Languages Grant Program, 59419-59422 2021-23406 Interior Interior Department See Fish and Wildlife Service See Geological Survey See Indian Affairs Bureau See Land Management Bureau See National Park Service PROPOSED RULES Acquisition Regulation: Buy Indian Act; Procedures for Contracting, 59338-59345 2021-23272 International Trade Adm International Trade Administration NOTICES Antidumping or Countervailing Duty Investigations, Orders, or Reviews: Certain Passenger Vehicle and Light Truck Tires from the People's Republic of China, 59367-59369 2021-23429 Circular Welded Carbon-Quality Steel Pipe from the United Arab Emirates, 59364-59366 2021-23372 Multilayered Wood Flooring from the People's Republic of China, 59362-59364 2021-23373 Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags from Indonesia, Malaysia, the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Thailand, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, 59366-59367 2021-23375 International Trade Com International Trade Commission NOTICES Decision to Review In Part an Initial Determination:
Certain Vacuum Insulated Flasks and Components Thereof, 59424-59426 2021-23359 Justice Department Justice Department See Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives Bureau NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Request for Registration under the Gambling Devices Act, 59427 2021-23355 Labor Department Labor Department See Labor Statistics Bureau See Mine Safety and Health Administration See Occupational Safety and Health Administration Labor Statistics Labor Statistics Bureau NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals, 59427-59428 2021-23363 Land Land Management Bureau NOTICES Application: Withdrawal Extension and Opportunity for Public Meeting for the Holden Mine Reclamation Project, Washington, 59422-59423 2021-23422 Library Library of Congress See Copyright Office, Library of Congress See Copyright Royalty Board Mine Mine Safety and Health Administration NOTICES Petition for Modification of Application of an Existing Mandatory Safety Standard, 59428-59431 2021-23404 2021-23405 National Credit National Credit Union Administration RULES CAMELS Rating System, 59282-59289 2021-23332 Credit Union Service Organizations, 59289-59302 2021-23322 National Institute National Institutes of Health NOTICES Meetings:
Center for Scientific Review, 59405-59406 2021-23382 2021-23383 National Institute of Environmental Health Science, 59406 2021-23371 National Oceanic National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration PROPOSED RULES Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Listing Endangered and Threatened Species and Designating Critical Habitat, 59353-59357 2021-23214 Pacific Island Pelagic Fisheries: 2022 U.S. Territorial Longline Bigeye Tuna Catch Limits, 59357-59359 2021-23356 NOTICES Deadline Extension for the NOAA Brennan Matching Fund Opportunity for Ocean and Coastal Mapping, 59369-59370 2021-23426 Meetings:
Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council, 59370 2021-23399 National Park National Park Service NOTICES Meetings: Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument Advisory Council, 59423-59424 2021-23412 National Science National Science Foundation NOTICES Permit Application: Antarctic Conservation Act, 59431-59432 2021-23364 Nuclear Regulatory Nuclear Regulatory Commission NOTICES License Transfer: In the Matter of Arizona Public Service Co., Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement and Power District, Public Service Co. of New Mexico Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station, Units 1 and 2 and Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation, 59432-59434 2021-23346 Occupational Safety Health Adm Occupational Safety and Health Administration PROPOSED RULES Heat Injury and Illness Prevention in Outdoor and Indoor Work Settings, 59309-59326 2021-23250 Personnel Personnel Management Office NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Representative Payee Application/Information Necessary for a Competency Determination, 59434-59435 2021-23353 Privacy Act; Systems of Records, 59435-59437 2021-23347 Postal Regulatory Postal Regulatory Commission NOTICES New Postal Product, 59438-59439 2021-23340 New Postal Products, 59437-59438 2021-23407 Presidential Documents Presidential Documents PROCLAMATIONS Special Observances: United Nations Day (Proc. 10293), 59595-59598 2021-23559 ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS John F.
Kennedy, Assassination; Temporary Certification of Disclosure of Information in Certain Related Records (Memorandum of October 22, 2021), 59599-59602 2021-23563 Securities Securities and Exchange Commission NOTICES Meetings: Small Business Capital Formation Advisory Committee, 59439 2021-23391 Self-Regulatory Organizations; Proposed Rule Changes: BOX Exchange, LLC, 59439-59443 2021-23343 New York Stock Exchange, LLC, 59443-59445 2021-23344 Small Business Small Business Administration NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals, 59445 2021-23313 State Department State Department NOTICES Culturally Significant Objects Imported for Exhibition: Mixpantli: Space, Time, and the Indigenous Origins of Mexico, 59445-59446 2021-23410 Transportation Department Transportation Department See Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Treasury Treasury Department See Comptroller of the Currency See Foreign Assets Control Office Customs U.S. Customs and Border Protection NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities;
Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Declaration of Free Entry for Returned American Products, 59407-59408 2021-23400 Guarantee of Payment, 59406-59407 2021-23402 Veteran Affairs Veterans Affairs Department NOTICES Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals: Application for Reimbursement of Licensing or Certification Test Fees, 59449-59450 2021-23338 Apportionment of Beneficiary's Award, 59449 2021-23380 Interest Rate Reduction Refinancing Loan Worksheet, 59450 2021-23339 Separate Parts In This Issue Part II Library of Congress, Copyright Royalty Board, 59452-59593 2021-20621 Part III Presidential Documents, 59595-59602 2021-23559 2021-23563 Reader Aids Consult the Reader Aids section at the end of this issue for phone numbers, online resources, finding aids, and notice of recently enacted public laws.
To subscribe to the Federal Register Table of Contents electronic mailing list, go to https://public.govdelivery.com/accounts/USGPOOFR/subscriber/new, enter your e-mail address, then follow the instructions to join, leave, or manage your subscription. 86 205 Wednesday, October 27, 2021 Rules and Regulations FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION 12 CFR Part 365 RIN 3064-AF72 Real Estate Lending Standards AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The FDIC is issuing a final rule to amend Interagency Guidelines for Real Estate Lending Policies (Real Estate Lending Standards). The purpose of the final rule is to incorporate consideration of the community bank leverage ratio
(CBLR)rule, which does not require electing institutions to calculate tier 2 capital or total capital, into the Real Estate Lending Standards. The final rule allows a consistent approach for calculating the ratio of loans in excess of the supervisory loan-to-value limits (LTV Limits) at all FDIC-supervised institutions, using a methodology that approximates the historical methodology the FDIC has followed for calculating this measurement without requiring institutions to calculate tier 2 capital. The final rule also avoids any regulatory burden that could arise if an FDIC-supervised institution subsequently decides to switch between different capital frameworks. DATES: The final rule is effective on November 26, 2021. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alicia R. Marks, Examination Specialist, Division of Risk Management and Supervision,
(202)898-6660, *AMarks@FDIC.gov;* Navid K. Choudhury, Counsel,
(202)898-6526, or Catherine S. Wood, Counsel,
(202)898-3788, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429. For the hearing impaired only, TDD users may contact
(202)925-4618. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: I. Policy Objectives The policy objective of the final rule is to provide consistent calculations of the ratios of loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits between banking organizations that elect, and those that do not elect, to adopt the CBLR framework, while not including capital ratios that some institutions are not required to compute or report. The final rule amends the Real Estate Lending Standards set forth in appendix A of 12 CFR part 365. Section 201 of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA) directs the FDIC, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC)(collectively, the agencies) to develop a community bank leverage ratio for qualifying community banking organizations. The CBLR framework is intended to simplify regulatory capital requirements and provide material regulatory compliance burden relief to the qualifying community banking organizations that opt into it. In particular, banking organizations that opt into the CBLR framework do not have to calculate the metrics associated with the applicable risk-based capital requirements in the agencies' capital rules (generally applicable rule), including total capital. The Real Estate Lending Standards set forth in appendix A of 12 CFR part 365, as they apply to FDIC-supervised banks, contain a tier 1 capital threshold for institutions electing to adopt the CBLR and a total capital threshold for other banks. As described in more detail below in Section III, the final rule provides a consistent treatment for all FDIC-supervised banks without requiring the computation of total capital. II. Background The Real Estate Lending Standards, which were issued pursuant to section 304 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991, 12 U.S.C. 1828(o), prescribe standards for real estate lending to be used by FDIC-supervised institutions in adopting internal real estate lending policies. Section 201 of the EGRRCPA amended provisions in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act relative to the capital rules administered by the agencies. The CBLR rule was issued by the agencies to implement section 201 of the EGRRCPA, and it provides a simple measure of capital adequacy for community banking organizations that meet certain qualifying criteria. 1 Qualifying community banking organizations 2 that elect to use the CBLR framework (Electing CBOs) may calculate their CBLR without calculating tier 2 capital, and are therefore not required to calculate or report tier 2 capital or total capital. 3 As described in more detail below, the FDIC proposed a revision to the Real Estate Lending Standards to allow a consistent approach for calculating loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits without having to calculate tier 2 or total capital as currently provided in part 365 and its appendix. 1 85 FR 64003 (Oct. 9, 2020). 2 The FDIC's CBLR rule defines qualifying community banking organizations as “an FDIC-supervised institution that is not an advanced approaches FDIC-supervised institution” with less than $10 billion in total consolidated assets that meet other qualifying criteria, including a leverage ratio (equal to tier 1 capital divided by average total consolidated assets) of greater than 9 percent. 12 CFR 324.12(a)(2). 3 Total capital is defined as the sum of tier 1 capital and tier 2 capital. *See* 12 CFR 324.2. The final rule ensures that the FDIC's regulation regarding supervisory LTV Limits is consistent with how examiners are calculating credit concentrations, as provided by a statement issued by the agencies on March 30, 2020. The statement provided that the agencies' examiners will use tier 1 capital plus the appropriate allowance for credit losses as the denominator when calculating credit concentrations. 4 4 See the Joint Statement on Adjustment to the Calculation for Credit Concentration Ratios (FIL-31-2020). III. Proposal On June 25, 2021, the FDIC published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR or proposal) to amend part 365 in response to changes in the type of capital information available after the implementation of the CBLR rule. 5 The FDIC proposed to amend the Real Estate Lending Standards so that all FDIC-supervised institutions, both Electing CBOs and other insured financial institutions, would calculate the ratio of loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits using tier 1 capital plus the appropriate allowance for credit losses 6 in the denominator. The proposed amendment would provide a consistent approach for calculating the ratio of loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits for all FDIC-supervised institutions. The proposed amendment would also approximate the historical methodology specified in the Real Estate Lending Standards for calculating the loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits without creating any regulatory burden for Electing CBOs and other banking organizations. 7 Further, the FDIC noted in the proposal that this approach would provide regulatory clarity and avoid any regulatory burden that could arise if Electing CBOs subsequently decide to switch between the CBLR framework and the generally applicable capital rules. The FDIC proposed to amend the Real Estate Lending Standards only relative to the calculation of loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits due to the change in the type of capital information that will be available, and did not consider any revisions to other sections of the Real Estate Lending Standards. Additionally, due to a publishing error, which excluded the third paragraph in this section in the *Code of Federal Regulations* in prior versions, the FDIC included the complete text of the section on loans in excess of the supervisory loan-to-value limits. 5 86 FR 33570 (June 25, 2021). 6 Banking organizations that have not adopted the current expected credit losses
(CECL)methodology will use tier 1 capital plus the allowance for loan and lease losses
(ALLL)as the denominator. Banking organizations that have adopted the CECL methodology will use tier 1 capital plus the portion of the allowance for credit losses
(ACL)attributable to loans and leases. 7 The proposed amendment approximates the historical methodology in the sense that both the proposed and historical approach for calculating the ratio of loans in excess of the LTV Limits involve adding a measure of loss absorbing capacity to tier 1 capital, and an institution's ALLL (or ACL) is a component of tier 2 capital. Under the agencies' capital rules, an institution's entire amount of ALLL or ACL could be included in its tier 2 capital, depending on the amount of its risk-weighted assets base. Based on December 31, 2019, Call Report data—the last Call Report date prior to the introduction of the CBLR framework—96.0 percent of FDIC-supervised institutions reported that their entire ALLL or ACL was included in their tier 2 capital, and 50.5 percent reported that their tier 2 capital was entirely composed of their ALLL. IV. Comments The FDIC received only one comment on the proposal. The commenter, a trade organization, commended the FDIC for proposing this amendment to the calculation of supervisory LTV ratios as a sensible way to help provide uniform application of the measurement of the safety and soundness of all community banking organization on a consistent basis, and it noted that such consistency will allow community banking organizations to be assessed more effectively regardless of their decision to elect the CBLR for regulatory capital reporting. V. The Final Rule For the reasons stated herein and in the NPR, the FDIC is adopting the proposal without change. VI. Expected Effects As of March 31, 2021, the FDIC supervises 3,215 insured depository institutions. The revisions to the Real Estate Lending Standards apply to all FDIC-supervised institutions. The effect of the revisions at an individual bank would depend on whether the amount of its current or future real estate loans with loan-to-value ratios that exceed the supervisory LTV thresholds is greater than, or less than, the sum of its tier 1 capital and allowance (or credit reserve in the case of CECL adopters) for loan and lease losses. Allowance levels, credit reserves, and the volume of real estate loans and their loan to value ratios can vary considerably over time. Moreover, the FDIC does not have comprehensive information about the distribution of current loan to value ratios. For these reasons, it is not possible to identify how many institutions have real estate loans that exceed the supervisory LTV thresholds that would be directly implicated by either the current Real Estate Lending Standards or the revisions. Currently, 3,055 FDIC supervised institutions have total real estate loans that exceed the tier 1 capital plus allowance or reserve benchmark adopted in this final rule, and are thus potentially affected by these revisions depending on the distribution of their loan to value ratios. In comparison, 3,063 FDIC supervised institutions have total real estate loans exceeding the current total capital benchmark and are thus potentially affected by the current Real Estate Lending Standards. As described in more detail below, the population of banks potentially subject to the Real Estate Lending Standards is therefore almost unchanged by these revisions, and their substantive effects are likely to be minimal. 8 8 March 31, 2021, Call Report data. The FDIC believes that a threshold of “tier 1 capital plus an allowance for credit losses” is consistent with the way the FDIC and institutions historically have applied the Real Estate Lending Standards. Also, the typical (or median) FDIC-supervised institution that had not elected the CBLR framework reported almost no difference between the amount of its allowance for credit losses and its tier 2 capital. 9 Consequently, although the FDIC does not have information about the amount of real estate loans at each institution that currently exceeds, or could exceed, the supervisory LTV limits, the FDIC does not expect the final rule to have material effects on the safety-and-soundness of, or compliance costs incurred by, FDIC-supervised institutions. 9 According to March 31, 2021, Call Report data, the median FDIC-supervised institution that had not elected the CBLR framework reported an allowance for credit losses (or allowance for loan and lease losses if applicable) that was $3,000 (or about 0.45 percent) greater than tier 2 capital. VII. Alternatives The FDIC considered two alternatives; however, it believes that none are preferable to the final rule. The alternatives are discussed below. First, the FDIC considered making no change to its Real Estate Lending Standards. The FDIC is not in favor of this approach because the FDIC does not favor an approach in which some banks use a tier 1 capital threshold and other banks use a total capital threshold, and because the existing provision could be confusing for institutions. Second, the FDIC considered revising its Real Estate Lending Standards so that both Electing CBOs and other institutions would use tier 1 capital in place of total capital for the purpose of calculating the supervisory LTV Limits. While this would subject both Electing CBOs and other institutions to the same approach, because the amount of tier 1 capital at an institution is typically less than the amount of total capital, this alternative would result in a relative tightening of the supervisory standards with respect to loans made in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits. The FDIC believes that the general level of the current supervisory LTV Limits, which are retained by this final rule, is appropriately reflective of the safety and soundness risk of depository institutions, and therefore the FDIC does not consider this alternative preferable to the final rule. VIII. Regulatory Analysis A. Effective Date In the proposal, the FDIC proposed to make all provisions of the final rule effective upon publication in the **Federal Register** . The FDIC noted that the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA)allows for an effective date of less than 30 days after publication “as otherwise provided by the agency for good cause found and published with the rule.” 10 The purpose of the 30-day waiting period prescribed in APA section 553(d)(3) is to give affected parties a reasonable time to adjust their behavior and prepare before the final rule takes effect. The FDIC believed that this waiting period would be unnecessary as the proposed rule, if codified, would likely lift burdens on FDIC-supervised institutions by allowing them to calculate the ratio of loans in excess of the supervisory LTV Limits without calculating tier 2 capital, and would also ensure that the approach is consistent, regardless of the institutions' CBLR election status. Consequently, the FDIC believed it would have good cause for the final rule to become effective upon publication. 10 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3). The FDIC did not receive any comment on whether good cause exists to waive the delayed effective date of the rule once finalized. However, because it is not possible to identify how many institutions have real estate loans that exceed the supervisory LTV thresholds that would be directly implicated by either the current Real Estate Lending Standards or the revisions, the FDIC, after further consideration, has determined to implement a 30-day delayed effective date as provided in the APA. Accordingly, all provisions of the final rule will be effective 30 days after publication in the **Federal Register** . B. Regulatory Flexibility Act The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA)generally requires that, in connection with a final rule, an agency prepare and make available for public comment a final regulatory flexibility analysis that describes the impact of the rule on small entities. 11 However, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required if the agency certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, and publishes its certification and a short explanatory statement in the **Federal Register** together with the rule. The Small Business Administration
(SBA)has defined “small entities” to include banking organizations with total assets of less than or equal to $600 million. 12 Generally, the FDIC considers a significant effect to be a quantified effect in excess of 5 percent of total annual salaries and benefits per institution, or 2.5 percent of total noninterest expenses. The FDIC believes that effects in excess of these thresholds typically represent significant effects for FDIC-supervised institutions. For the reasons provided below, the FDIC certifies that the final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small banking organizations. Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required. 11 5 U.S.C. 601 *et seq.* 12 The SBA defines a small banking organization as having $600 million or less in assets, where “a financial institution's assets are determined by averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly financial statements for the preceding year.” 13 CFR 121.201 n.8 (2019). “SBA counts the receipts, employees, or other measure of size of the concern whose size is at issue and all of its domestic and foreign affiliates. . . .” 13 CFR 121.103(a)(6) (2019). Following these regulations, the FDIC uses a covered entity's affiliated and acquired assets, averaged over the preceding four quarters, to determine whether the covered entity is “small” for the purposes of RFA. As of March 31, 2021, the FDIC supervised 3,215 institutions, of which 2,333 were “small entities” for purposes of the RFA. 13 The effect of the revisions at an individual bank would depend on whether the amount of its current or future real estate loans with loan-to-value ratios that exceed the supervisory LTV thresholds is greater than, or less than, the sum of its tier 1 capital and allowance (or credit reserve in the case of CECL adopters) for loan and lease losses. Allowance levels, credit reserves, and the volume of real estate loans and their loan to value ratios can vary considerably over time. Moreover, the FDIC does not have comprehensive information about the distribution of current loan to value ratios. For these reasons, it is not possible to identify how many institutions have real estate loans that exceed the supervisory LTV thresholds that would be directly implicated by either the current Guidelines or the final revisions. 13 March 31, 2021, Call Report data. Currently, 2,210 small, FDIC supervised institutions have total real estate loans that exceed the tier 1 capital plus allowance or reserve benchmark in the revisions and are thus potentially affected by the revisions depending on the distribution of their loan to value ratios. In comparison, 2,218 small, FDIC supervised institutions have total real estate loans exceeding the current total capital benchmark and are thus potentially affected by the current Real Estate Lending Standards. As described in more detail below, the population of banks potentially subject to the Real Estate Lending Standards is therefore almost unchanged by these final revisions, and their substantive effects are likely to be minimal. 14 14 *Id.* The FDIC believes that a threshold of “tier 1 capital plus an allowance for credit losses” is consistent with the way the FDIC and institutions historically have applied the Real Estate Lending Standards. Also, the typical (or median) small, FDIC-supervised institution that had not elected the CBLR framework reported almost no difference between the amount of its allowance for credit losses and its tier 2 capital. 15 Consequently, although the FDIC does not have information about the amount of real estate loans at each small institution that currently exceeds, or could exceed, the supervisory LTV limits, the FDIC does not expect the final rule to have material effects on the safety-and-soundness of, or compliance costs incurred by, small FDIC-supervised institutions. However, small institutions may have to incur some costs associated with making the necessary changes to their systems and processes in order to comply with the terms of the final rule. The FDIC believes that any such costs are likely to be minimal given that all small institutions already calculate tier 1 capital and the allowance for credit losses and had been subject to the previous thresholds for many years before the changes in the capital rules. 15 According to March 31, 2021, Call Report data, the median small, FDIC-supervised institution that had not elected the CBLR framework reported an allowance for credit losses (or allowance for loan and lease losses if applicable) that was $1,000 (or about 0.17 percent) greater than tier 2 capital. Therefore, and based on the preceding discussion, the FDIC certifies that the final rule will not significantly affect a substantial number of small entities. C. Paperwork Reduction Act In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 16 the FDIC may not conduct or sponsor, and a respondent is not required to respond to, an information collection unless it displays a currently-valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB)control number. The FDIC has reviewed this final rule and determined that it would not introduce any new or revise any collection of information pursuant to the PRA. Therefore, no submissions will be made to OMB with respect to this final rule. 16 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521. D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA), 17 in determining the effective date and administrative compliance requirements for new regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements on insured depository institution, each Federal banking agency must consider, consistent with principles of safety and soundness and the public interest, any administrative burdens that such regulations would place on depository institutions, including small depository institutions, and customers of depository institutions, as well as the benefits of such regulations. In addition, section 302(b) of RCDRIA requires new regulations and amendments to regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosures, or other new requirements on insured depository institutions generally to take effect on the first day of a calendar quarter that begins on or after the date on which the regulations are published in final form. 18 17 12 U.S.C. 4802(a). 18 *Id.* at 4802(b). The FDIC believes that this final rule does not impose new reporting, disclosure, or other requirements, and likely instead reduces such burdens by allowing Electing CBOs to avoid calculating and reporting tier 2 capital, as would be required under the current Real Estate Lending Standards. Therefore, the FDIC believes that it is not necessary to delay the effective date beyond the 30-day period provided in the APA. E. Plain Language Section 722 of the GLBA 19 requires each Federal banking agency to use plain language in all of its proposed and final rules published after January 1, 2000. The FDIC sought to present the final rule in a simple and straightforward manner and did not receive any comments on the use of plain language in the proposal. 19 12 U.S.C. 4809. F. Congressional Review Act For purposes of the Congressional Review Act, OMB makes a determination as to whether a final rule constitutes a “major” rule. If a rule is deemed a “major rule” by the OMB, the Congressional Review Act generally provides that the rule may not take effect until at least 60 days following its publication. The Congressional Review Act defines a “major rule” as any rule that the Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of the OMB finds has resulted in or is likely to result in
(1)an annual effect on the economy of $100,000,000 or more;
(2)a major increase in costs or prices for consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government agencies or geographic regions; or
(3)significant adverse effects on competition, employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in domestic and export markets. The OMB has determined that the final rule is not a major rule for purposes of the Congressional Review Act, and the FDIC will submit the final rule and other appropriate reports to Congress and the Government Accountability Office for review. List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 365 Banks, Banking, Mortgages, Savings associations. Authority and Issuance For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation amends part 365 of chapter III of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows: PART 365—REAL ESTATE LENDING STANDARDS 1. The authority citation for part 365 continues to read as follows: Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1828(o) and 5101 *et seq.* 2. Amend appendix A to subpart A by revising the section titled “Loans in Excess of the Supervisory Loan-to-Value Limits” to read as follows: Appendix A to Subpart A of Part 365—Interagency Guidelines for Real Estate Lending Policies Loans in Excess of the Supervisory Loan-to-Value Limits The agencies recognize that appropriate loan-to-value limits vary not only among categories of real estate loans but also among individual loans. Therefore, it may be appropriate in individual cases to originate or purchase loans with loan-to-value ratios in excess of the supervisory loan-to-value limits, based on the support provided by other credit factors. Such loans should be identified in the institution's records, and their aggregate amount reported at least quarterly to the institution's board of directors. (See additional reporting requirements described under “Exceptions to the General Policy.”) The aggregate amount of all loans in excess of the supervisory loan-to-value limits should not exceed 100 percent of total capital. 4 Moreover, within the aggregate limit, total loans for all commercial, agricultural, multifamily or other non-1-to-4 family residential properties should not exceed 30 percent of total capital. An institution will come under increased supervisory scrutiny as the total of such loans approaches these levels. 4 For the purposes of these Guidelines, for state non-member banks and state savings associations, “total capital” refers to the FDIC-supervised institution's tier 1 capital, as defined in § 324.2 of this chapter, plus the allowance for loan and leases losses or the allowance for credit losses attributable to loans and leases, as applicable. The allowance for credit losses attributable to loans and leases is applicable for institutions that have adopted the Current Expected Credit Losses methodology. In determining the aggregate amount of such loans, institutions should:
(a)Include all loans secured by the same property if any one of those loans exceeds the supervisory loan-to-value limits; and
(b)include the recourse obligation of any such loan sold with recourse. Conversely, a loan should no longer be reported to the directors as part of aggregate totals when reduction in principal or senior liens, or additional contribution of collateral or equity ( *e.g.,* improvements to the real property securing the loan), bring the loan-to-value ratio into compliance with supervisory limits. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. By order of the Board of Directors. Dated at Washington, DC, on October 21, 2021. James P. Sheesley, Assistant Executive Secretary. [FR Doc. 2021-23381 Filed 10-26-21; 8:45 am]
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