Site Map | Text Size:
S
M
L
|
Home | About the OCC | News and Issuances | Publications | Tools and Forms | Topics |
What We DoWho We AreContact Us |
About the OCCThe OCC's primary mission is to charter, regulate, and supervise all national banks and federal savings associations. We also supervise the federal branches and agencies of foreign banks. Our goal in supervising banks and federal savings associations is to ensure that they operate in a safe and sound manner and in compliance with laws requiring fair treatment of their customers and fair access to credit and financial products. The OCC was established in 1863 as an independent bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The President, with the advice and consent of the U.S. Senate, appoints the Comptroller to head the agency for a five-year term. The Comptroller also is a director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and NeighborWorks® America. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the OCC has four district offices plus an office in London to supervise the international activities of national banks. The OCC's nationwide staff of bank examiners conducts on-site reviews of national banks and federal savings associations (or federal thrifts) and provides sustained supervision of these institutions’ operations. Examiners analyze loan and investment portfolios, funds management, capital, earnings, liquidity, sensitivity to market risk for all national banks and federal thrifts, and compliance with consumer banking laws national banks and thrifts with less than $10 billion in assets. They review internal controls, internal and external audit, and compliance with law. They also evaluate management's ability to identify and control risk. In regulating national banks and federal thrifts, the OCC has the power to:
OCC FundingThe OCC does not receive appropriations from Congress. Instead, the OCC's operations are funded primarily by assessments on national banks and federal savings associations. National banks and federal thrifts pay for their examinations, and they pay for the OCC's processing of their corporate applications. The OCC also receives revenue from its investment income, primarily from U.S. Treasury securities. The OCC's ObjectivesThe OCC's activities are predicated on four objectives that support the agency's mission to ensure a stable and competitive national system of banks and savings associations:
By law, the OCC is prohibited from releasing information from its safety and soundness examinations to the public. National banks and federal savings associations must, however, submit regular reports of their condition and income to the FDIC, available on its Web site. Help for Customers of National Banks and Federal Savings Associations at HelpWithMyBank.govIn July 2007, the OCC launched www.HelpWithMyBank.gov to assist customers of national banks and federal savings associations. HelpWithMyBank.gov provides answers to common banking questions. If you have a complaint about a national bank or federal savings association, the site also provides a means to filing that complaint online. Minority BankersRecognizing the important role that minority-owned banks and savings associations play in addressing financial services needs in the communities they serve, the OCC is committed to encouraging the success of these financial institutions. FDIC InsuranceThe FDIC insures all types of deposits—CD's, checking, savings, money market, and NOW accounts—held in all FDIC-insured depository institutions, including national banks. The permanent standard insurance amount is $250,000, per depositor, per insured depository institution for each account ownership category. In addition, all deposits held in noninterest-bearing transaction accounts are fully insured, separately from any interest-bearing deposits the owner may hold at the same bank, through December 31, 2012. For more information about deposit insurance, visit the FDIC's Web site Are My Deposits Insured? In addition, bankers and consumers can call the FDIC at 1-877-ASK-FDIC (1-877-275-3342) for information on the FDIC insurance coverage. |