|
[Main Tabs]
[Table of Contents - 4000]
[Index]
[Previous Page]
[Next Page]
[Search]
4000 - Advisory Opinions
Preferential Bank Stock Loans in Correspondence
Relationship
FDIC-79-18
December 17, 1979
Pamela E. F. LeCren, Attorney
Your letter to Dallas Regional Counsel, Charles M. Pickett, dated
October 22, 1979 has been forwarded to the FDIC Legal Division in
Washington, D.C. for reply. According to your letter, *** entered into
certain bank stock loans in September of 1977. The loans are evidenced
by six-month promissory notes. Correspondence between the loan officer
and the borrowers indicates that the interest rate on the loans will be
either at Dallas prime or 8-1/4; percent. If the latter rate is
taken, the rate is to last for the life of the loan. It is
also
{{4-28-89 p.4035}}indicated that the individual loans
will be renewable on a six-month basis and a reduction program that
will amortize the loan over a ten-year period will be followed. You
further state that the loans have been renewed at the 8-1/4
percent interest rate. Prime in the Dallas area was 7-1/4
percent when the loans were made.
You have requested an opinion as to whether or not the above factual
circumstance constitutes a violation of Title VIII of the Financial
Institutions Regulatory and Interest Rate Control Act of 1978
("FIRIRCA"). Title VIII generally prohibits a bank from making a
preferential extension of credit to directors, officers, or principal
shareholders of one of its correspondent banks. I will presume for the
purposes of this opinion that the subject loans were made to such
persons.
Title VIII does not prohibit the continuation of a correspondent
relationship where a preferential loan was extended prior to March 10,
1979. Nor does the statute prohibit the maintenance of a preferential
extension of credit and payment according to the terms of the contract
when the contract was entered into prior to March 10, 1979. In short,
whether or not the fact situation you present involves a violation of
Title VIII will depend initially upon whether *** can be said to have
made an extension of credit after March 10, 1979. The fact that the
loans are evidenced by six-month promissory notes that are renewed
indicates a new extension of credit is being made every six
months. 1
The additional correspondence setting up an amortization schedule is
only relevant if under *** law the correspondence forms part of the
loan contract. If such is the case and the loans are considered under
state law to be installment loans payable over a ten-year period, there
has been no new extension of credit. If the result of including the
correspondence in the contract is to obligate *** to renew the loans at
8-1/4 percent every six months for 10 years, there has been, in
our opinion, no new extension of credit. When a bank is bound by a
contract predating the effective date of Title VIII to renew an
extension of credit at specified terms and has no power to vary those
terms so that they would not be preferential, that renewal is not
an extension of credit within the meaning of that term as used in
Title VIII. It is the intention of the FDIC to follow the above
interpretation except in cases where the parties entered into the
contract in contemplation of Title VIII and in order to avoid its
prohibitions.
Assuming that there has been a new extension of credit, the next
question is whether or not a current bank stock loan to a director,
officer or principal shareholder of a correspondent bank at
8-1/4 percent is preferential. If *** is currently making bank
stock loans to persons not associated with its correspondent banks at
higher interest rates, then the loans would be preferential under Title
VIII.
1 Extension of credit is defined for the purposes of Title VIII
in the same manner as the term is defined in Federal Reserve Board
Regulation O (12 C.F.R. Part 215). That definition includes the renewal
of a loan as an extension of credit. Go Back to Text
[Main Tabs]
[Table of Contents - 4000]
[Index]
[Previous Page]
[Next Page]
[Search]
|