[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR230.10]

[Page 632-661]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 230--TRUTH IN SAVINGS (REGULATION DD)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 230.10  Electronic communication.

    (a) Definition. ``Electronic communication'' means a message 
transmitted electronically between a depository institution and a 
consumer in a format that allows visual text to be displayed on 
equipment, for example, a personal computer monitor.
    (b) General rule. In accordance with the Electronic Signatures in 
Global and National Commerce Act (the E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et 
seq.) and the rules of this part, a depository institution may provide 
by electronic communication any disclosure required by this part to be 
in writing.
    (c) When consent is required. Under the E-Sign Act, a depository 
institution is required to obtain a consumer's affirmative consent when 
providing disclosures related to a transaction. For purposes of this 
requirement, the disclosures required under Secs. 230.4(a)(2) and 230.8 
are deemed not to be related to a transaction.
    (d) Address or location to receive electronic communication. A 
depository institution that uses electronic communication to provide 
disclosures required by this part shall:
    (1) Send the disclosure to the consumer's electronic address; or
    (2) Make the disclosure available at another location such as an 
Internet web site; and
    (i) Alert the consumer of the disclosure's availability by sending a 
notice to the consumer's electronic address (or to a postal address, at 
the depository institution's option). The notice shall identify the 
account involved (if applicable) and the address of the Internet web 
site or other location where the disclosure is available; and
    (ii) Make the disclosure available for at least 90 days from the 
date the disclosure first becomes available or from the date of the 
notice alerting the consumer of the disclosure, whichever comes later.
    (3) Exceptions. A depository institution need not comply with 
paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section for disclosures required under 
Sec. 230.4(a)(2), and need not comply with paragraphs (d)(2)(i) and (ii) 
of this section for disclosures required under Sec. 230.8.
    (e) Redelivery. When a disclosure provided by electronic 
communication is returned to a depository institution undelivered, the 
depository institution shall take reasonable steps to attempt redelivery 
using information in its files.

[[Page 633]]

    (f) Entities other than a depository institution. A person other 
than a depository institution that is required to comply with this part 
may use electronic communication in accordance with the requirements of 
this section, as applicable.

[Reg. DD, 66 FR 17803, Apr. 4, 2001]

       Appendix A to Part 230--Annual Percentage Yield Calculation

    The annual percentage yield measures the total amount of interest 
paid on an account based on the interest rate and the frequency of 
compounding.\1\ The annual percentage yield is expressed as an 
annualized rate, based on a 365-day year.\2\ Part I of this appendix 
discusses the annual percentage yield calculations for account 
disclosures and advertisements, while Part II discusses annual 
percentage yield earned calculations for periodic statements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ The annual percentage yield reflects only interest and does not 
include the value of any bonus (or other consideration worth $10 or 
less) that may be provided to the consumer to open, maintain, increase 
or renew an account. Interest or other earnings are not to be included 
in the annual percentage yield if such amounts are determined by 
circumstances that may or may not occur in the future.
    \2\ Institutions may calculate the annual percentage yield based on 
a 365-day or a 366-day year in a leap year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Part I. Annual Percentage Yield for Account Disclosures and Advertising 
                                Purposes

    In general, the annual percentage yield for account disclosures 
under Secs. 230.4 and 230.5 and for advertising under Sec. 230.8 is an 
annualized rate that reflects the relationship between the amount of 
interest that would be earned by the consumer for the term of the 
account and the amount of principal used to calculate that interest. 
Special rules apply to accounts with tiered and stepped interest rates, 
and to certain time accounts with a stated maturity greater than one 
year.

                            A. General Rules

    Except as provided in Part I.E. of this appendix, the annual 
percentage yield shall be calculated by the formula shown below. 
Institutions shall calculate the annual percentage yield based on the 
actual number of days in the term of the account. For accounts without a 
stated maturity date (such as a typical savings or transaction account), 
the calculation shall be based on an assumed term of 365 days. In 
determining the total interest figure to be used in the formula, 
institutions shall assume that all principal and interest remain on 
deposit for the entire term and that no other transactions (deposits or 
withdrawals) occur during the term.\3\ For time accounts that are 
offered in multiples of months, institutions may base the number of days 
on either the actual number of days during the applicable period, or the 
number of days that would occur for any actual sequence of that many 
calendar months. If institutions choose to use the latter rule, they 
must use the same number of days to calculate the dollar amount of 
interest earned on the account that is used in the annual percentage 
yield formula (where ``Interest'' is divided by ``Principal'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ This assumption shall not be used if an institution requires, as 
a condition of the account, that consumers withdraw interest during the 
term. In such a case, the interest (and annual percentage yield 
calculation) shall reflect that requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The annual percentage yield is calculated by use of the following 
general formula (``APY'' is used for convenience in the formulas):

APY=100 [(1+Interest/Principal)(365/Daysinterm)-1]

    ``Principal'' is the amount of funds assumed to have been deposited 
at the beginning of the account.
    ``Interest'' is the total dollar amount of interest earned on the 
Principal for the term of the account.
    ``Days in term'' is the actual number of days in the term of the 
account. When the ``days in term'' is 365 (that is, where the stated 
maturity is 365 days or where the account does not have a stated 
maturity), the annual percentage yield can be calculated by use of the 
following simple formula:

APY=100 (Interest/Principal)

                                Examples

    (1) If an institution pays $61.68 in interest for a 365-day year on 
$1,000 deposited into a NOW account, using the general formula above, 
the annual percentage yield is 6.17%:

APY=100[(1+61.68/1,000) (365/365) -1]
APY=6.17%
    Or, using the simple formula above (since, as an account without a 
stated term, the term is deemed to be 365 days):

APY=100(61.68/1,000)
APY=6.17%
    (2) If an institution pays $30.37 in interest on a $1,000 six-month 
certificate of deposit (where the six-month period used by the 
institution contains 182 days), using the general formula above, the 
annual percentage yield is 6.18%:

APY=100[(1+30.37/1,000) (365/182) -1]
APY=6.18%

[[Page 634]]

 B. Stepped-Rate Accounts (Different Rates Apply in Succeeding Periods)

    For accounts with two or more interest rates applied in succeeding 
periods (where the rates are known at the time the account is opened), 
an institution shall assume each interest rate is in effect for the 
length of time provided for in the deposit contract.

                                Examples

    (1) If an institution offers a $1,000 6-month certificate of deposit 
on which it pays a 5% interest rate, compounded daily, for the first 
three months (which contain 91 days), and a 5.5% interest rate, 
compounded daily, for the next three months (which contain 92 days), the 
total interest for six months is $26.68 and, using the general formula 
above, the annual percentage yield is 5.39%:

APY=100[(1+26.68/1,000) (365/183) -1]
APY=5.39%
    (2) If an institution offers a $1,000 two-year certificate of 
deposit on which it pays a 6% interest rate, compounded daily, for the 
first year, and a 6.5% interest rate, compounded daily, for the next 
year, the total interest for two years is $133.13, and, using the 
general formula above, the annual percentage yield is 6.45%:

APY=100[(1+133.13/1,000) (365/730) -1]
APY=6.45%

                        C. Variable-Rate Accounts

    For variable-rate accounts without an introductory premium or 
discounted rate, an institution must base the calculation only on the 
initial interest rate in effect when the account is opened (or 
advertised), and assume that this rate will not change during the year.
    Variable-rate accounts with an introductory premium (or discount) 
rate must be calculated like a stepped-rate account. Thus, an 
institution shall assume that: (1) The introductory interest rate is in 
effect for the length of time provided for in the deposit contract; and 
(2) the variable interest rate that would have been in effect when the 
account is opened or advertised (but for the introductory rate) is in 
effect for the remainder of the year. If the variable rate is tied to an 
index, the index-based rate in effect at the time of disclosure must be 
used for the remainder of the year. If the rate is not tied to an index, 
the rate in effect for existing consumers holding the same account (who 
are not receiving the introductory interest rate) must be used for the 
remainder of the year.
    For example, if an institution offers an account on which it pays a 
7% interest rate, compounded daily, for the first three months (which, 
for example, contain 91 days), while the variable interest rate that 
would have been in effect when the account was opened was 5%, the total 
interest for a 365-day year for a $1,000 deposit is $56.52 (based on 91 
days at 7% followed by 274 days at 5%). Using the simple formula, the 
annual percentage yield is 5.65%:

APY=100(56.52/1,000)
APY=5.65%

  D. Tiered-Rate Accounts (Different Rates Apply to Specified Balance 
                                 Levels)

    For accounts in which two or more interest rates paid on the account 
are applicable to specified balance levels, the institution must 
calculate the annual percentage yield in accordance with the method 
described below that it uses to calculate interest. In all cases, an 
annual percentage yield (or a range of annual percentage yields, if 
appropriate) must be disclosed for each balance tier.
    For purposes of the examples discussed below, assume the following:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Interest
   rate                Deposit balance required to earn rate
(percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
     5.25  Up to but not exceeding $2,500.
     5.50  Above $2,500 but not exceeding $15,000.
     5.75  Above $15,000.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Tiering Method A. Under this method, an institution pays on the full 
balance in the account the stated interest rate that corresponds to the 
applicable deposit tier. For example, if a consumer deposits $8,000, the 
institution pays the 5.50% interest rate on the entire $8,000.
    When this method is used to determine interest, only one annual 
percentage yield will apply to each tier. Within each tier, the annual 
percentage yield will not vary with the amount of principal assumed to 
have been deposited.
    For the interest rates and deposit balances assumed above, the 
institution will state three annual percentage yields--one corresponding 
to each balance tier. Calculation of each annual percentage yield is 
similar for this type of account as for accounts with a single interest 
rate. Thus, the calculation is based on the total amount of interest 
that would be received by the consumer for each tier of the account for 
a year and the principal assumed to have been deposited to earn that 
amount of interest.
    First tier. Assuming daily compounding, the institution will pay 
$53.90 in interest on a $1,000 deposit. Using the general formula, for 
the first tier, the annual percentage yield is 5.39%:

APY=100[(1+53.90/1,000) (365/365) -1]
APY=5.39%
    Using the simple formula:

APY=100(53.90/1,000)
APY=5.39%

[[Page 635]]

    Second tier. The institution will pay $452.29 in interest on an 
$8,000 deposit. Thus, using the simple formula, the annual percentage 
yield for the second tier is 5.65%:

APY=100(452.29/8,000)
APY=5.65%
    Third tier. The institution will pay $1,183.61 in interest on a 
$20,000 deposit. Thus, using the simple formula, the annual percentage 
yield for the third tier is 5.92%:

APY=100(1,183.61/20,000)
APY=5.92%
    Tiering Method B. Under this method, an institution pays the stated 
interest rate only on that portion of the balance within the specified 
tier. For example, if a consumer deposits $8,000, the institution pays 
5.25% on $2,500 and 5.50% on $5,500 (the difference between $8,000 and 
the first tier cut-off of $2,500).
    The institution that computes interest in this manner must provide a 
range that shows the lowest and the highest annual percentage yields for 
each tier (other than for the first tier, which, like the tiers in 
Method A, has the same annual percentage yield throughout). The low 
figure for an annual percentage yield range is calculated based on the 
total amount of interest earned for a year assuming the minimum 
principal required to earn the interest rate for that tier. The high 
figure for an annual percentage yield range is based on the amount of 
interest the institution would pay on the highest principal that could 
be deposited to earn that same interest rate. If the account does not 
have a limit on the maximum amount that can be deposited, the 
institution may assume any amount.
    For the tiering structure assumed above, the institution would state 
a total of five annual percentage yields--one figure for the first tier 
and two figures stated as a range for the other two tiers.
    First tier. Assuming daily compounding, the institution would pay 
$53.90 in interest on a $1,000 deposit. For this first tier, using the 
simple formula, the annual percentage yield is 5.39%:

APY=100(53.90/1,000)
APY=5.39%
    Second tier. For the second tier, the institution would pay between 
$134.75 and $841.45 in interest, based on assumed balances of $2,500.01 
and $15,000, respectively. For $2,500.01, interest would be figured on 
$2,500 at 5.25% interest rate plus interest on $.01 at 5.50%. For the 
low end of the second tier, therefore, the annual percentage yield is 
5.39%, using the simple formula:

APY=100(134.75/2,500)
APY=5.39%
    For $15,000, interest is figured on $2,500 at 5.25% interest rate 
plus interest on $12,500 at 5.50% interest rate. For the high end of the 
second tier, the annual percentage yield, using the simple formula, is 
5.61%:

APY=100(841.45/15,000)
APY=5.61%
    Thus, the annual percentage yield range for the second tier is 5.39% 
to 5.61%.
    Third tier. For the third tier, the institution would pay $841.45 in 
interest on the low end of the third tier (a balance of $15,000.01). For 
$15,000.01, interest would be figured on $2,500 at 5.25% interest rate, 
plus interest on $12,500 at 5.50% interest rate, plus interest on $.01 
at 5.75% interest rate. For the low end of the third tier, therefore, 
the annual percentage yield (using the simple formula) is 5.61%:

APY=100 (841.45/15,000)
APY=5.61%
    Since the institution does not limit the account balance, it may 
assume any maximum amount for the purposes of computing the annual 
percentage yield for the high end of the third tier. For an assumed 
maximum balance amount of $100,000, interest would be figured on $2,500 
at 5.25% interest rate, plus interest on $12,500 at 5.50% interest rate, 
plus interest on $85,000 at 5.75% interest rate. For the high end of the 
third tier, therefore, the annual percentage yield, using the simple 
formula, is 5.87%.

APY=100 (5,871.79/100,000)
APY=5.87%
    Thus, the annual percentage yield range that would be stated for the 
third tier is 5.61% to 5.87%.
    If the assumed maximum balance amount is $1,000,000 instead of 
$100,000, the institution would use $985,000 rather than $85,000 in the 
last calculation. In that case, for the high end of the third tier the 
annual percentage yield, using the simple formula, is 5.91%:

APY=100 (59134.22/1,000,000)
APY=5.91%
    Thus, the annual percentage yield range that would be stated for the 
third tier is 5.61% to 5.91%.
    E. Time Accounts with a Stated Maturity Greater than One Year that 
Pay Interest At Least Annually
    1. For time accounts with a stated maturity greater than one year 
that do not compound interest on an annual or more frequent basis, and 
that require the consumer to withdraw interest at least annually, the 
annual percentage yield may be disclosed as equal to the interest rate.

                                 Example

    (1) If an institution offers a $1,000 two-year certificate of 
deposit that does not compound and that pays out interest semi-annually 
by check or transfer at a 6.00% interest rate, the annual percentage 
yield may be disclosed as 6.00%.
    (2) For time accounts covered by this paragraph that are also 
stepped-rate accounts,

[[Page 636]]

the annual percentage yield may be disclosed as equal to the composite 
interest rate.

                                 Example

    (1) If an institution offers a $1,000 three-year certificate of 
deposit that does not compound and that pays out interest annually by 
check or transfer at a 5.00% interest rate for the first year, 6.00% 
interest rate for the second year, and 7.00% interest rate for the third 
year, the institution may compute the composite interest rate and APY as 
follows:
    (a) Multiply each interest rate by the number of days it will be in 
effect;
    (b) Add these figures together; and
    (c) Divide by the total number of days in the term.
    (2) Applied to the example, the products of the interest rates and 
days the rates are in effect are (5.00%x365 days) 1825, (6.00%x365 days) 
2190, and (7.00%x365 days) 2555, respectively. The sum of these 
products, 6570, is divided by 1095, the total number of days in the 
term. The composite interest rate and APY are both 6.00%.

     Part II. Annual Percentage Yield Earned for Periodic Statements

    The annual percentage yield earned for periodic statements under 
Sec. 230.6(a) is an annualized rate that reflects the relationship 
between the amount of interest actually earned on the consumer's account 
during the statement period and the average daily balance in the account 
for the statement period. Pursuant to Sec. 230.6(b), however, if an 
institution uses the average daily balance method and calculates 
interest for a period other than the statement period, the annual 
percentage yield earned shall reflect the relationship between the 
amount of interest earned and the average daily balance in the account 
for that other period.
    The annual percentage yield earned shall be calculated by using the 
following formulas (``APY Earned'' is used for convenience in the 
formulas):
    A. General formula.
APY Earned=100 [(1+Interest earned/
Balance)(365/Daysinperiod)-1]

    ``Balance'' is the average daily balance in the account for the 
period.
    ``Interest earned'' is the actual amount of interest earned on the 
account for the period.
    ``Days in period'' is the actual number of days for the period.

                                Examples

    (1) Assume an institution calculates interest for the statement 
period (and uses either the daily balance or the average daily balance 
method), and the account has a balance of $1,500 for 15 days and a 
balance of $500 for the remaining 15 days of a 30-day statement period. 
The average daily balance for the period is $1,000. The interest earned 
(under either balance computation method) is $5.25 during the period. 
The annual percentage yield earned (using the formula above) is 6.58%:

APY Earned=100 [(1+5.25/1,000)(365/30)-1]
APY Earned=6.58%
    (2) Assume an institution calculates interest on the average daily 
balance for the calendar month and provides periodic statements that 
cover the period from the 16th of one month to the 15th of the next 
month. The account has a balance of $2,000 September 1 through September 
15 and a balance of $1,000 for the remaining 15 days of September. The 
average daily balance for the month of September is $1,500, which 
results in $6.50 in interest earned for the month.The annual percentage 
yield earned for the month of September would be shown on the periodic 
statement covering September 16 through October 15. The annual 
percentage yield earned (using the formula above) is 5.40%:

APY Earned=100 [(6.50/1,500)(365/30)-1]
APY Earned=5.40%
    (3) Assume an institution calculates interest on the average daily 
balance for a quarter (for example, the calendar months of September 
through November), and provides monthly periodic statements covering 
calendar months. The account has a balance of $1,000 throughout the 30 
days of September, a balance of $2,000 throughout the 31 days of 
October, and a balance of $3,000 throughout the 30 days of November. The 
average daily balance for the quarter is $2,000, which results in $21 in 
interest earned for the quarter. The annual percentage yield earned 
would be shown on the periodic statement for November. The annual 
percentage yield earned (using the formula above) is 4.28%:

APY Earned=100 [(1+21/2,000)(365/91)-1]
APY Earned=4.28%
    B. Special formula for use where periodic statement is sent more 
often than the period for which interest is compounded.
    Institutions that use the daily balance method to accrue interest 
and that issue periodic statements more often than the period for which 
interest is compounded shall use the following special formula:

[[Page 637]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.048

    The following definition applies for use in this formula (all other 
terms are defined under Part II):

``Compounding'' is the number of days in each compounding period.
    Assume an institution calculates interest for the statement period 
using the daily balance method, pays a 5.00% interest rate, compounded 
annually, and provides periodic statements for each monthly cycle. The 
account has a daily balance of $1,000 for a 30-day statement period. The 
interest earned is $4.11 for the period, and the annual percentage yield 
earned (using the special formula above) is 5.00%:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC27SE91.049

APY Earned=5.00%

[57 FR 43376, Sept. 21, 1992, as amended at 57 FR 46480, Oct. 9, 1992; 
58 FR 15082, Mar. 19, 1993; 60 FR 5130, Jan. 26, 1995; Reg. DD, 63 FR 
40638, July 30, 1998]

         Appendix B to Part 230--Model Clauses and Sample Forms

                            Table of contents

B-1--Model Clauses for Account Disclosures (Section 230.4(b))
B-2--Model Clauses for Change in Terms (Section 230.5(a))
B-3--Model Clauses for Pre-Maturity Notices for Time Accounts (Section 
          230.5(b)(2) and 230.5(d))
B-4--Sample Form (Multiple Accounts)
B-5--Sample Form (Now Account)
B-6--Sample Form (Tiered Rate Money Market Account)
B-7--Sample Form (Certificate of Deposit)
B-8--Sample Form (Certificate of Deposit Advertisement)
B-9--Sample Form (Money Market Account Advertisement)

               B-1--Model Clauses for Account Disclosures

    (a) Rate information
    (i) Fixed-rate accounts
    The interest rate on your account is ----% with an annual percentage 
yield of ----%. You will be paid this rate [for (time period)/until 
(date)/ for at least 30 calendar days].
    (ii) Variable-rate accounts
    The interest rate on your account is ----% with an annual percentage 
yield of ----%.
    Your interest rate and annual percentage yield may change.

                          Determination of Rate

    The interest rate on your account is based on (name of index) [plus/
minus a margin of --------].

        or

    At our discretion, we may change the interest rate on your account.

                        Frequency of Rate Changes

    We may change the interest rate on your account [every (time 
period)/at any time].

                       Limitations on Rate Changes

    The interest rate for your account will never change by more than --
--% each (time period).
    The interest rate will never be [less/more] than ----%.

        or

    The interest rate will never [exceed----% above/drop more than ----% 
below] the interest rate initially disclosed to you.
    (iii) Stepped-rate accounts
    The initial interest rate for your account is ----%. You will be 
paid this rate [for (time period)/until (date)]. After that time, the 
interest rate for your account will be ----%, and you will be paid this 
rate [for (time period)/until (date)]. The annual percentage yield for 
your account is ----%.
    (iv) Tiered-rate accounts

                            Tiering Method A

     If your [daily balance/average daily balance] is $---- or 
more, the interest rate paid on the entire balance in your account will 
be ----% with an annual percentage yield of ----%.
     If your [daily balance/average daily balance] is more than 
$----, but less than $----,

[[Page 638]]

the interest rate paid on the entire balance in your account will be --
--% with an annual percentage yield of ----%.
     If your [daily balance/average daily balance] is $---- or 
less, the interest rate paid on the entire balance will be ----% with an 
annual percentage yield of ----%.

                            Tiering Method B

     An interest rate of ----% will be paid only for that 
portion of your [daily balance/average daily balance] that is greater 
than $----. The annual percentage yield for this tier will range from --
--% to ----%, depending on the balance in the account.
     An interest rate of ----% will be paid only for that 
portion of your [daily balance/average daily balance] that is greater 
than $----, but less than $----. The annual percentage yield for this 
tier will range from ----% to ----%, depending on the balance in the 
account.
     If your [daily balance/average daily balance] is $---- or 
less, the interest rate paid on the entire balance will be ----% with an 
annual percentage yield of ----%.
    (b) Compounding and crediting

                              (i) Frequency

    Interest will be compounded [on a ---- basis/every (time period)]. 
Interest will be credited to your account [on a ---- basis/every (time 
period)].
    (ii) Effect of closing an account
    If you close your account before interest is credited, you will not 
receive the accrued interest.
    (c) Minimum balance requirements
    (i) To open the account
    You must deposit $------ to open this account.
    (ii) To avoid imposition of fees
    A minimum balance fee of $------ will be imposed every (time period) 
if the balance in the account falls below $------ any day of the (time 
period).
    A minimum balance fee of $------ will be imposed every (time period) 
if the average daily balance for the (time period) falls below $------. 
The average daily balance is calculated by adding the principal in the 
account for each day of the period and dividing that figure by the 
number of days in the period.
    (iii) To obtain the annual percentage yield disclosed
    You must maintain a minimum balance of $------ in the account each 
day to obtain the disclosed annual percentage yield.
    You must maintain a minimum average daily balance of $------ to 
obtain the disclosed annual percentage yield. The average daily balance 
is calculated by adding the principal in the account for each day of the 
period and dividing that figure by the number of days in the period.
    (d) Balance computation method
    (i) Daily balance method
    We use the daily balance method to calculate the interest on your 
account. This method applies a daily periodic rate to the principal in 
the account each day.
    (ii) Average daily balance method
    We use the average daily balance method to calculate interest on 
your account. This method applies a periodic rate to the average daily 
balance in the account for the period. The average daily balance is 
calculated by adding the principal in the account for each day of the 
period and dividing that figure by the number of days in the period.
    (e) Accrual of interest on noncash deposits
    Interest begins to accrue no later than the business day we receive 
credit for the deposit of noncash items (for example, checks).

        or

    Interest begins to accrue on the business day you deposit noncash 
items (for example, checks).
    (f) Fees
    The following fees may be assessed against your account:
    ------------------------------$--------
    ------------------------------$--------
    ------------------------------$--------
    --------(conditions for imposing fee)$--------
    ----------------------------------% of --------.
    (g) Transaction limitations
    The minimum amount you may [withdraw/write a check for] is $------.
    You may make -------- [deposits into/withdrawals from] your account 
each (time period).
    You may not make [deposits into/withdrawals from] your account until 
the maturity date.
    (h) Disclosures relating to time accounts
    (i) Time requirements
    Your account will mature on (date).
    Your account will mature in (time period).
    (ii) Early withdrawal penalties
    We [will/may] impose a penalty if you withdraw [any/all] of the 
[deposited funds/principal] before the maturity date. The fee imposed 
will equal ------ days/week[s]/month[s] of interest.

      or

    We [will/may] impose a penalty of $------ if you withdraw [any/all] 
of the [deposited funds/principal] before the maturity date.
    If you withdraw some of your funds before maturity, the interest 
rate for the remaining funds in your account will be ------% with an 
annual percentage yield of ------%.
    (iii) Withdrawal of interest prior to maturity
    The annual percentage yield assumes interest will remain on deposit 
until maturity. A withdrawal will reduce earnings.
    (iv) Renewal policies
    (1) Automatically renewable time accounts

[[Page 639]]

    This account will automatically renew at maturity.
    You will have [------ calendar/business] days after the maturity 
date to withdraw funds without penalty.

      or

    There is no grace period following the maturity of this account to 
withdraw funds without penalty.
    (2) Non-automatically renewable time accounts
    This account will not renew automatically at maturity. If you do not 
renew the account, your deposit will be placed in [an interest-bearing/a 
noninterest-bearing] account.
    (v) Required interest distribution.
    This account requires the distribution of interest and does not 
allow interest to remain in the account.
    (i) Bonuses
    You will [be paid/receive] [$------ /(description of item)] as a 
bonus [when you open the account/on (date) ------].
    You must maintain a minimum [daily balance/average daily balance] of 
$------ to obtain the bonus.
    To earn the bonus, [$------ /your entire principal] must remain on 
deposit [for (time period)/until (date)------].

                 B-2--Model Clauses for Change in Terms

    On (date), the cost of (type of fee) will increase to $------.
    On (date), the interest rate on your account will decrease to ------
% with an annual percentage yield of ------%.
    On (date), the minimum [daily balance/average daily balance] 
required to avoid imposition of a fee will increase to $------.

      B-3--Model Clauses for Pre-Maturity Notices for Time Accounts

    (a) Automatically renewable time accounts with maturities of one 
year or less but longer than one month
    Your account will mature on (date).
    If the account renews, the new maturity date will be (date).
    The interest rate for the renewed account will be ------% with an 
annual percentage yield of ------%.

      or

    The interest rate and annual percentage yield have not yet been 
determined. They will be available on (date). Please call (phone number) 
to learn the interest rate and annual percentage yield for your new 
account.
    (b) Non-automatically renewable time accounts with maturities longer 
than one year
    Your account will mature on (date).
    If you do not renew the account, interest [will/will not] be paid 
after maturity.

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[57 FR 43376, Sept. 21, 1992, as amended at 57 FR 46480, Oct. 9, 1992; 
Reg. DD, 60 FR 5131, Jan. 26, 1995]

              Appendix C to Part 230--Effect on State Laws

                      (a) Inconsistent Requirements

    State law requirements that are inconsistent with the requirements 
of the act and this part are preempted to the extent of the 
inconsistency. A state law is inconsistent if it requires a depository 
institution to make disclosures or take actions that contradict the 
requirements of the federal law. A state law is also contradictory if it 
requires the use of the same term to represent a different amount or a 
different meaning than the federal law, requires the use of a term 
different from that required in the federal law to describe the same 
item, or permits a method of calculating interest on an account 
different from that required in the federal law.

                      (b) Preemption Determinations

    A depository institution, state, or other interested party may 
request the Board to determine whether a state law requirement is 
inconsistent with the federal requirements. A request for a 
determination shall be in writing and addressed to the Secretary, Board 
of Governors of the Federal Reserve

[[Page 649]]

System, Washington, DC 20551. Notice that the Board intends to make a 
determination (either on request or on its own motion) will be published 
in the Federal Register, with an opportunity for public comment unless 
the Board finds that notice and opportunity for comment would be 
impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest and 
publishes its reasons for such decision. Notice of a final determination 
will be published in the Federal Register and furnished to the party who 
made the request and to the appropriate state official.

                 (c) Effect of Preemption Determinations

    After the Board determines that a state law is inconsistent, a 
depository institution may not make disclosures using the inconsistent 
term or take actions relying on the inconsistent law.

                      (d) Reversal of Determination

    The Board reserves the right to reverse a determination for any 
reason bearing on the coverage or effect of state or federal law. Notice 
of reversal of a determination will be published in the Federal Register 
and a copy furnished to the appropriate state official.

        Appendix D to Part 230--Issuance of Staff Interpretations

    Officials in the Board's Division of Consumer and Community Affairs 
are authorized to issue official staff interpretations of this part. 
These interpretations provide the protections afforded under section 
271(f) of the act. Except in unusual circumstances, interpretations will 
not be issued separately but will be incorporated in an official 
commentary to this part, which will be amended periodically. No staff 
interpretations will be issued approving depository institutions' forms, 
statements, or calculation tools or methods.

        Supplement I to Part 230--Official Staff Interpretations

                              Introduction

    1. Official status. This commentary is the means by which the 
Division of Consumer and Community Affairs of the Federal Reserve Board 
issues official staff interpretations of Regulation DD. Good faith 
compliance with this commentary affords protection from liability under 
section 271(f) of the Truth in Savings Act.

Section 230.1  Authority, purpose, coverage, and effect on state laws
    (c) Coverage
    1. Foreign applicability. Regulation DD applies to all depository 
institutions, except credit unions, that offer deposit accounts to 
residents (including resident aliens) of any state as defined in 
Sec. 230.2(r). Accounts held in an institution located in a state are 
covered, even if funds are transferred periodically to a location 
outside the United States. Accounts held in an institution located 
outside the United States are not covered, even if held by a U.S. 
resident.
    2. Persons who advertise accounts. Persons who advertise accounts 
are subject to the advertising rules. For example, if a deposit broker 
places an advertisement offering consumers an interest in an account at 
a depository institution, the advertising rules apply to the 
advertisement, whether the account is to be held by the broker or 
directly by the consumer.

Section 230.2  Definitions
    (a) Account
    1. Covered accounts. Examples of accounts subject to the regulation 
are:
    i. Interest-bearing and noninterest-bearing accounts
    ii. Deposit accounts opened as a condition of obtaining a credit 
card
    iii. Accounts denominated in a foreign currency
    iv. Individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and simplified employee 
pension (SEP) accounts
    v. Payable on death (POD) or ``Totten trust'' accounts
    2. Other accounts. Examples of accounts not subject to the 
regulation are:
    i. Mortgage escrow accounts for collecting taxes and property 
insurance premiums
    ii. Accounts established to make periodic disbursements on 
construction loans
    iii. Trust accounts opened by a trustee pursuant to a formal written 
trust agreement (not merely declarations of trust on a signature card 
such as a ``Totten trust,'' or an IRA and SEP account)
    iv. Accounts opened by an executor in the name of a decedent's 
estate
    3. Other investments. The term ``account'' does not apply to all 
products of a depository institution. Examples of products not covered 
are:
    i. Government securities
    ii. Mutual funds
    iii. Annuities
    iv. Securities or obligations of a depository institution
    v. Contractual arrangements such as repurchase agreements, interest 
rate swaps, and bankers acceptances
    (b) Advertisement

    1. Covered messages. Advertisements include commercial messages in 
visual, oral, or print media that invite, offer, or otherwise announce 
generally to prospective customers the availability of consumer 
accounts--such as:
    i. Telephone solicitations
    ii. Messages on automated teller machine (ATM) screens

[[Page 650]]

    iii. Messages on a computer screen in an institution's lobby 
(including any printout) other than a screen viewed solely by the 
institution's employee
    iv. Messages in a newspaper, magazine, or promotional flyer or on 
radio
    v. Messages that are provided along with information about the 
consumer's existing account and that promote another account at the 
institution
    2. Other messages. Examples of messages that are not advertisements 
are:
    i. Rate sheets in a newspaper, periodical, or trade journal (unless 
the depository institution, or a deposit broker offering accounts at the 
institution, pays a fee for or otherwise controls publication)
    ii. In-person discussions with consumers about the terms for a 
specific account
    iii. Information given to consumers about existing accounts, such as 
current rates recorded on a voice response machine or notices for 
automatically renewable time accounts sent before renewal

    (f) Bonus
    1. Examples. Bonuses include items of value, other than interest, 
offered as incentives to consumers, such as an offer to pay the final 
installment deposit for a holiday club account. Items that are not a 
bonus include discount coupons for goods or services at restaurants or 
stores.
    2. De minimis rule. Items with a de minimis value of $10 or less are 
not bonuses. Institutions may rely on the valuation standard used by the 
Internal Revenue Service to determine if the value of the item is de 
minimis. Examples of items of de minimis value are:
    i. Disability insurance premiums valued at an amount of $10 or less 
per year
    ii. Coffee mugs, T-shirts or other merchandise with a market value 
of $10 or less
    3. Aggregation. In determining if an item valued at $10 or less is a 
bonus, institutions must aggregate per account per calendar year items 
that may be given to consumers. In making this determination, 
institutions aggregate per account only the market value of items that 
may be given for a specific promotion. To illustrate, assume an 
institution offers in January to give consumers an item valued at $7 for 
each calendar quarter during the year that the average account balance 
in a negotiable order of withdrawal (NOW) account exceeds $10,000. The 
bonus rules are triggered, since consumers are eligible under the 
promotion to receive up to $28 during the year. However, the bonus rules 
are not triggered if an item valued at $7 is offered to consumers 
opening a NOW account during the month of January, even though in 
November the institution introduces a new promotion that includes, for 
example, an offer to existing NOW account holders for an item valued at 
$8 for maintaining an average balance of $5,000 for the month.
    4. Waiver or reduction of a fee or absorption of expenses. Bonuses 
do not include value that consumers receive through the waiver or 
reduction of fees (even if the fees waived exceed $10) for banking-
related services such as the following:
    i. A safe deposit box rental fee for consumers who open a new 
account
    ii. Fees for travelers checks for account holders
    iii. Discounts on interest rates charged for loans at the 
institution
    (h) Consumer
    1. Professional capacity. Examples of accounts held by a natural 
person in a professional capacity for another are attorney-client trust 
accounts and landlord-tenant security accounts.
    2. Other accounts. Accounts not held in a professional capacity 
include accounts held by an individual for a child under the Uniform 
Gifts to Minors Act.
    3. Sole proprietors. Accounts held by individuals as sole 
proprietors are not covered.
    4. Retirement plans. IRAs and SEP accounts are consumer accounts to 
the extent that funds are invested in covered accounts. But Keogh 
accounts are not subject to the regulation.
    (j) Depository institution and institution
    1. Foreign institutions. Branches of foreign institutions located in 
the United States are subject to the regulation if they offer deposit 
accounts to consumers. Edge Act and Agreement corporations, and agencies 
of foreign institutions, are not depository institutions for purposes of 
this regulation.
    (k) Deposit broker
    1. General. A deposit broker is a person who is in the business of 
placing or facilitating the placement of deposits in an institution, as 
defined by the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 29(g)).
    (n) Interest
    1. Relation to Regulation Q. While bonuses are not interest for 
purposes of this regulation, other regulations may treat them as the 
equivalent of interest. For example, Regulation Q identifies payments of 
cash or merchandise that violate the prohibition against paying interest 
on demand accounts. (See 12 CFR Sec. 217.2(d).)
    (p) Passbook savings account
    1. Relation to Regulation E. Passbook savings accounts include 
accounts accessed by preauthorized electronic fund transfers to the 
account (as defined in 12 CFR Sec. 205.2(j)), such as an account that 
receives direct deposit of social security payments. Accounts permitting 
access by other electronic means are not ``passbook saving accounts'' 
and must comply with the requirements of Sec. 230.6 if statements are 
sent four or more times a year.
    (q) Periodic statement
    1. Examples. Periodic statements do not include:

[[Page 651]]

    i. Additional statements provided solely upon request
    ii. General service information such as a quarterly newsletter or 
other correspondence describing available services and products
    (t) Tiered-rate account
    1. Time accounts. Time accounts paying different rates based solely 
on the amount of the initial deposit are not tiered-rate accounts.
    2. Minimum balance requirements. A requirement to maintain a minimum 
balance to earn interest does not make an account a tiered-rate account.
    (u) Time account
    1. Club accounts. Although club accounts typically have a maturity 
date, they are not time accounts unless they also require a penalty of 
at least seven days' interest for withdrawals during the first six days 
after the account is opened.
    2. Relation to Regulation D. Regulation D permits in limited 
circumstances the withdrawal of funds without penalty during the first 
six days after a ``time deposit'' is opened. (See 12 CFR 
Sec. 204.2(c)(1)(i).) But the fact that a consumer makes a withdrawal as 
permitted by Regulation D does not disqualify the account from being a 
time account for purposes of this regulation.
    (v) Variable-rate account
    1. General. A certificate of deposit permitting one or more rate 
adjustments prior to maturity at the consumer's option is a variable-
rate account.

Section 230.3  General disclosure requirements
    (a) Form
    1. Design requirements. Disclosures must be presented in a format 
that allows consumers to readily understand the terms of their account. 
Institutions are not required to use a particular type size or typeface, 
nor are institutions required to state any term more conspicuously than 
any other term. Disclosures may be made:
    i. In any order
    ii. In combination with other disclosures or account terms
    iii. In combination with disclosures for other types of accounts, as 
long as it is clear to consumers which disclosures apply to their 
account
    iv. On more than one page and on the front and reverse sides
    v. By using inserts to a document or filling in blanks
    vi. On more than one document, as long as the documents are provided 
at the same time
    2. Consistent terminology. Institutions must use consistent 
terminology to describe terms or features required to be disclosed. For 
example, if an institution describes a monthly fee (regardless of 
account activity) as a ``monthly service fee'' in account-opening 
disclosures, the periodic statement and change-in-term notices must use 
the same terminology so that consumers can readily identify the fee.
    (b) General
    1. Specificity of legal obligation. Institutions may refer to the 
calendar month or to roughly equivalent intervals during a calendar year 
as a ``month.''
    (c) Relation to Regulation E
    1. General rule. Compliance with Regulation E (12 CFR part 205) is 
deemed to satisfy the disclosure requirements of this regulation, such 
as when:
    i. An institution changes a term that triggers a notice under 
Regulation E, and uses the timing and disclosure rules of Regulation E 
for sending change-in-term notices
    ii. Consumers add an ATM access feature to an account, and the 
institution provides disclosures pursuant to Regulation E, including 
disclosure of fees (See 12 CFR Sec. 205.7.)
    iii. An institution complying with the timing rules of Regulation E 
discloses at the same time fees for electronic services (such as for 
balance inquiry fees at ATMs) required to be disclosed by this 
regulation but not by Regulation E
    iv. An institution relies on Regulation E's rules regarding 
disclosure of limitations on the frequency and amount of electronic fund 
transfers, including security-related exceptions. But any limitations on 
``intra-institutional transfers'' to or from the consumer's other 
accounts during a given time period must be disclosed, even though 
intra-institutional transfers are exempt from Regulation E.
    (e) Oral response to inquiries
    1. Application of rule. Institutions are not required to provide 
rate information orally.
    2. Relation to advertising. The advertising rules do not cover an 
oral response to a question about rates.
    3. Existing accounts. This paragraph does not apply to oral 
responses about rate information for existing accounts. For example, if 
a consumer holding a one-year certificate of deposit (CD) requests 
interest rate information about the CD during the term, the institution 
need not disclose the annual percentage yield.
    (f) Rounding and accuracy rules for rates and yields
    (f)(1) Rounding
    1. Permissible rounding. Examples of permissible rounding are an 
annual percentage yield calculated to be 5.644%, rounded down and 
disclosed as 5.64%; 5.645% rounded up and disclosed as 5.65%.
    (f)(2) Accuracy
    1. Annual percentage yield and annual percentage yield earned. The 
tolerance for annual percentage yield and annual percentage yield earned 
calculations is designed to accommodate inadvertent errors. Institutions 
may not purposely incorporate the tolerance into their calculation of 
yields.


[[Page 652]]


Section 230.4  Account disclosures

    (a) Delivery of account disclosures
    (a)(1) Account opening
    1. New accounts. New account disclosures must be provided when:
    i. A time account that does not automatically rollover is renewed by 
a consumer
    ii. A consumer changes a term for a renewable time account (see 
Sec. 230.5(b)-5 regarding disclosure alternatives)
    iii. An institution transfers funds from an account to open a new 
account not at the consumer's request, unless the institution previously 
gave account disclosures and any change-in-term notices for the new 
account
    iv. An institution accepts a deposit from a consumer to an account 
that the institution had deemed closed for the purpose of treating 
accrued but uncredited interest as forfeited interest (see 
Sec. 230.7(b)-3)
    2. Acquired accounts. New account disclosures need not be given when 
an institution acquires an account through an acquisition of or merger 
with another institution (but see Sec. 230.5(a) regarding advance notice 
requirements if terms are changed).
    (a)(2) Requests
    (a)(2)(i)
    1. Inquiries versus requests. A response to an oral inquiry (by 
telephone or in person) about rates and yields or fees does not trigger 
the duty to provide account disclosures. But when consumers ask for 
written information about an account (whether by telephone, in person, 
or by other means), the institution must provide disclosures unless the 
account is no longer offered to the public.
    2. General requests. When responding to a consumer's general request 
for disclosures about a type of account (a NOW account, for example), an 
institution that offers several variations may provide disclosures for 
any one of them.
    3. Timing for response. Ten business days is a reasonable time for 
responding to requests for account information that consumers do not 
make in person, including requests made by electronic communication.
    4. Requests by electronic communication. Posting disclosures on a 
depository institution's web site generally does not relieve the 
institution's duty to provide disclosures upon request. If the consumer 
provides an e-mail address, the institution may provide the disclosures 
electronically, but the institution must either send the disclosures by 
e-mail or send a notice to the consumer's e-mail address pursuant to 
Sec. 230.10(d)(2)(i) to inform the consumer where the disclosures are 
posted.
    (a)(2)(ii)(A)
    1. Recent rates. Institutions comply with this paragraph if they 
disclose an interest rate and annual percentage yield accurate within 
the seven calendar days preceding the date they send the disclosures.
    (a)(2)(ii)(B)
    1. Term. Describing the maturity of a time account as ``1 year'' or 
``6 months,'' for example, illustrates a statement of the maturity of a 
time account as a term rather than a date (``January 10, 1995'').
    (b) Content of account disclosures
    (b)(1) Rate information
    (b)(1)(i) Annual percentage yield and interest rate
    1. Rate disclosures. In addition to the interest rate and annual 
percentage yield, institutions may disclose a periodic rate 
corresponding to the interest rate. No other rate or yield (such as 
``tax effective yield'') is permitted. If the annual percentage yield is 
the same as the interest rate, institutions may disclose a single figure 
but must use both terms.
    2. Fixed-rate accounts. For fixed-rate time accounts paying the 
opening rate until maturity, institutions may disclose the period of 
time the interest rate will be in effect by stating the maturity date. 
(See Appendix B, B-7--Sample Form.) For other fixed-rate accounts, 
institutions may use a date (``This rate will be in effect through May 
4, 1995'') or a period (``This rate will be in effect for at least 30 
days'').
    3. Tiered-rate accounts. Each interest rate, along with the 
corresponding annual percentage yield for each specified balance level 
(or range of annual percentage yields, if appropriate), must be 
disclosed for tiered-rate accounts. (See Appendix A, Part I, Paragraph 
D.)
    4. Stepped-rate accounts. A single composite annual percentage yield 
must be disclosed for stepped-rate accounts. (See Appendix A, Part I, 
Paragraph B.) The interest rates and the period of time each will be in 
effect also must be provided. When the initial rate offered for a 
specified time on a variable-rate account is higher or lower than the 
rate that would otherwise be paid on the account, the calculation of the 
annual percentage yield must be made as if for a stepped-rate account. 
(See Appendix A, Part I, Paragraph C.)
    (b)(1)(ii) Variable rates
    (b)(1)(ii)(B)
    1. Determining interest rates. To disclose how the interest rate is 
determined, institutions must:
    i. Identify the index and specific margin, if the interest rate is 
tied to an index
    ii. State that rate changes are within the institution's discretion, 
if the institution does not tie changes to an index
    (b)(1)(ii)(C)
    1. Frequency of rate changes. An institution reserving the right to 
change rates at its discretion must state the fact that rates may change 
at any time.
    (b)(1)(ii)(D)

[[Page 653]]

    1. Limitations. A floor or ceiling on rates or on the amount the 
rate may decrease or increase during any time period must be disclosed. 
Institutions need not disclose the absence of limitations on rate 
changes.
    (b)(2) Compounding and crediting
    (b)(2)(ii) Effect of closing an account
    1. Deeming an account closed. An institution may, subject to state 
or other law, provide in its deposit contracts the actions by consumers 
that will be treated as closing the account and that will result in the 
forfeiture of accrued but uncredited interest. An example is the 
withdrawal of all funds from the account prior to the date that interest 
is credited.
    (b)(3) Balance information
    (b)(3)(ii) Balance computation method
    1. Methods and periods. Institutions may use different methods or 
periods to calculate minimum balances for purposes of imposing a fee 
(the daily balance for a calendar month, for example) and accruing 
interest (the average daily balance for a statement period, for 
example). Each method and corresponding period must be disclosed.
    (b)(3)(iii) When interest begins to accrue
    1. Additional information. Institutions may disclose additional 
information such as the time of day after which deposits are treated as 
having been received the following business day, and may use additional 
descriptive terms such as ``ledger'' or ``collected'' balances to 
disclose when interest begins to accrue.
    (b)(4) Fees
    1. Covered fees. The following are types of fees that must be 
disclosed:
    i. Maintenance fees, such as monthly service fees
    ii. Fees to open or to close an account
    iii. Fees related to deposits or withdrawals, such as fees for use 
of the institution's ATMs
    iv. Fees for special services, such as stop-payment fees, fees for 
balance inquiries or verification of deposits, fees associated with 
checks returned unpaid, and fees for regularly sending to consumers 
checks that otherwise would be held by the institution
    2. Other fees. Institutions need not disclose fees such as the 
following:

    i. Fees for services offered to account and nonaccount holders 
alike, such as travelers checks and wire transfers (even if different 
amounts are charged to account and nonaccount holders)
    ii. Incidental fees, such as fees associated with state escheat 
laws, garnishment or attorneys fees, and fees for photocopying
    3. Amount of fees. Institutions must state the amount and conditions 
under which a fee may be imposed. Naming and describing the fee (such as 
``$4.00 monthly service fee'') will typically satisfy these 
requirements.
    4. Tied-accounts. Institutions must state if fees that may be 
assessed against an account are tied to other accounts at the 
institution. For example, if an institution ties the fees payable on a 
NOW account to balances held in the NOW account and a savings account, 
the NOW account disclosures must state that fact and explain how the fee 
is determined.
    (b)(5) Transaction limitations
    1. General rule. Examples of limitations on the number or dollar 
amount of deposits or withdrawals that institutions must disclose are:

    i. Limits on the number of checks that may be written on an account 
within a given time period
    ii. Limits on withdrawals or deposits during the term of a time 
account
    iii. Limitations required by Regulation D on the number of 
withdrawals permitted from money market deposit accounts by check to 
third parties each month. Institutions need not disclose reservations of 
right to require notices for withdrawals from accounts required by 
federal or state law.
    (b)(6) Features of time accounts
    (b)(6)(i) Time requirements
    1. ``Callable'' time accounts. In addition to the maturity date, an 
institution must state the date or the circumstances under which it may 
redeem a time account at the institution's option (a ``callable'' time 
account).
    (b)(6)(ii) Early withdrawal penalties
    1. General. The term ``penalty'' may but need not be used to 
describe the loss of interest that consumers may incur for early 
withdrawal of funds from time accounts.
    2. Examples. Examples of early withdrawal penalties are:
    i. Monetary penalties, such as ``$10.00'' or ``seven days' interest 
plus accrued but uncredited interest''
    ii. Adverse changes to terms such as a lowering of the interest 
rate, annual percentage yield, or compounding frequency for funds 
remaining on deposit
    iii. Reclamation of bonuses
    3. Relation to rules for IRAs or similar plans. Penalties imposed by 
the Internal Revenue Code for certain withdrawals from IRAs or similar 
pension or savings plans are not early withdrawal penalties for purposes 
of this regulation.
    4. Disclosing penalties. Penalties may be stated in months, whether 
institutions assess the penalty using the actual number of days during 
the period or using another method such as a number of days that occurs 
in any actual sequence of the total calendar months involved. For 
example, stating ``one month's interest'' is permissible, whether the 
institution assesses 30 days' interest during the month of April, or 
selects a time period between 28 and 31 days for calculating the 
interest for all early withdrawals regardless of when the penalty is 
assessed.
    (b)(6)(iv) Renewal policies
    1. Rollover time accounts. Institutions offering a grace period on 
time accounts that automatically renew need not state whether

[[Page 654]]

interest will be paid if the funds are withdrawn during the grace 
period.
    2. Nonrollover time accounts. Institutions paying interest on funds 
following the maturity of time accounts that do not renew automatically 
need not state the rate (or annual percentage yield) that may be paid. 
(See Appendix B, Model Clause B-1(h)(iv)(2).)

Section 230.5  Subsequent disclosures
    (a) Change in terms
    (a)(1) Advance notice required
    1. Form of notice. Institutions may provide a change-in-term notice 
on or with a periodic statement or in another mailing. If an institution 
provides notice through revised account disclosures, the changed term 
must be highlighted in some manner. For example, institutions may note 
that a particular fee has been changed (also specifying the new amount) 
or use an accompanying letter that refers to the changed term.
    2. Effective date. An example of language for disclosing the 
effective date of a change is ``As of November 21, 1994.''
    3. Terms that change upon the occurrence of an event. An institution 
offering terms that will automatically change upon the occurrence of a 
stated event need not send an advance notice of the change provided the 
institution fully describes the conditions of the change in the account 
opening disclosures (and sends any change-in-term notices regardless of 
whether the changed term affects that consumer's account at that time).
    4. Examples. Examples of changes not requiring an advance change-in-
terms notice are:
    i. The termination of employment for consumers for whom account 
maintenance or activity fees were waived during their employment by the 
depository institution
    ii. The expiration of one year in a promotion described in the 
account opening disclosures to ``waive $4.00 monthly service charges for 
one year''
    (a)(2) No notice required
    (a)(2)(ii) Check printing fees
    1. Increase in fees. A notice is not required for an increase in 
fees for printing checks (or deposit and withdrawal slips) even if the 
institution adds some amount to the price charged by the vendor.
    (b) Notice before maturity for time accounts longer than one month 
that renew automatically
    1. Maturity dates on nonbusiness days. In determining the term of a 
time account, institutions may disregard the fact that the term will be 
extended beyond the disclosed number of days because the disclosed 
maturity falls on a nonbusiness day. For example, a holiday or weekend 
may cause a ``one-year'' time account to extend beyond 365 days (or 366, 
in a leap year) or a ``one-month'' time account to extend beyond 31 
days.
    2. Disclosing when rates will be determined. Ways to disclose when 
the annual percentage yield will be available include the use of:
    i. A specific date, such as ``October 28''
    ii. A date that is easily determinable, such as ``the Tuesday before 
the maturity date stated on this notice'' or ``as of the maturity date 
stated on this notice''
    3. Alternative timing rule. Under the alternative timing rule, an 
institution offering a 10-day grace period would have to provide the 
disclosures at least 10 days prior to the scheduled maturity date.
    4. Club accounts. If consumers have agreed to the transfer of 
payments from another account to a club time account for the next club 
period, the institution must comply with the requirements for 
automatically renewable time accounts--even though consumers may 
withdraw funds from the club account at the end of the current club 
period.
    5. Renewal of a time account. In the case of a change in terms that 
becomes effective if a rollover time account is subsequently renewed:
    i. If the change is initiated by the institution, the disclosure 
requirements of this paragraph apply. (Paragraph 230.5(a) applies if the 
change becomes effective prior to the maturity of the existing time 
account.)
    ii. If the change is initiated by the consumer, the account opening 
disclosure requirements of Sec. 230.4(b) apply. (If the notice required 
by this paragraph has been provided, institutions may give new account 
disclosures or disclosures highlighting only the new term.)
    6. Example. If a consumer receives a prematurity notice on a one-
year time account and requests a rollover to a six-month account, the 
institution must provide either account opening disclosures including 
the new maturity date or, if all other terms previously disclosed in the 
prematurity notice remain the same, only the new maturity date.
    (b)(1) Maturities of longer than one year
    1. Highlighting changed terms. Institutions need not highlight terms 
that changed since the last account disclosures were provided.
    (c) Notice for time accounts one month or less that renew 
automatically
    (d) Notice before maturity for time accounts longer than one year 
that do not renew automatically
    1. Subsequent account. When funds are transferred following maturity 
of a nonrollover time account, institutions need not provide account 
disclosures unless a new account is established.

Section 230.6  Periodic statement disclosures
    (a) General rule

[[Page 655]]

    1. General. Institutions are not required to provide periodic 
statements. If they do provide statements, disclosures need only be 
furnished to the extent applicable. For example, if no interest is 
earned for a statement period, institutions need not state that fact. 
Or, institutions may disclose ``$0'' interest earned and ``0%'' annual 
percentage yield earned.
    2. Regulation E interim statements. When an institution provides 
regular quarterly statements, and in addition provides a monthly interim 
statement to comply with Regulation E, the interim statement need not 
comply with this section unless it states interest or rate information. 
(See 12 CFR Sec. 205.9(b).)
    3. Combined statements. Institutions may provide information about 
an account (such as an MMDA) on the periodic statement for another 
account (such as a NOW account) without triggering the disclosures 
required by this section, as long as:
    i. The information is limited to the account number, the type of 
account, or balance information, and
    ii. The institution also provides a periodic statement complying 
with this section for each account.
    4. Other information. Additional information that may be given on or 
with a periodic statement includes:
    i. Interest rates and corresponding periodic rates applied to 
balances during the statement period
    ii. The dollar amount of interest earned year-to-date
    iii. Bonuses paid (or any de minimis consideration of $10 or less)
    iv. Fees for products such as safe deposit boxes
    (a)(1) Annual percentage yield earned
    1. Ledger and collected balances. Institutions that accrue interest 
using the collected balance method may use either the ledger or the 
collected balance in determining the annual percentage yield earned.
    (a)(2) Amount of interest
    1. Accrued interest. Institutions must state the amount of interest 
that accrued during the statement period, even if it was not credited.
    2. Terminology. In disclosing interest earned for the period, 
institutions must use the term ``interest'' or terminology such as:
    i. ``Interest paid,'' to describe interest that has been credited
    ii. ``Interest accrued'' or ``interest earned,'' to indicate that 
interest is not yet credited
    3. Closed accounts. If consumers close an account between crediting 
periods and forfeits accrued interest, the institution may not show any 
figures for interest earned or annual percentage yield earned for the 
period (other than zero, at the institution's option).
(a)(3) Fees imposed
    1. General. Periodic statements must state fees disclosed under 
Sec. 230.4(b) that were debited to the account during the statement 
period, even if assessed for an earlier period.
    2. Itemizing fees by type. In itemizing fees imposed more than once 
in the period, institutions may group fees if they are the same type. 
But the description must make clear that the dollar figure represents 
more than a single fee, for example, ``total fees for checks written 
this period.'' Examples of fees that may not be grouped together are:
    i. Monthly maintenance and excess activity fees
    ii. ``Transfer'' fees, if different dollar amounts are imposed--such 
as $.50 for deposits and $1.00 for withdrawals
    iii. Fees for electronic fund transfers and fees for other services, 
such as balance inquiry or maintenance fees

    3. Identifying fees. Statement details must enable consumers to 
identify the specific fee. For example:
    i. Institutions may use a code to identify a particular fee if the 
code is explained on the periodic statement or in documents accompanying 
the statement.
    ii. Institutions using debit slips may disclose the date the fee was 
debited on the periodic statement and show the amount and type of fee on 
the dated debit slip.
    4. Relation to Regulation E. Disclosure of fees in compliance with 
Regulation E complies with this section for fees related to electronic 
fund transfers (for example, totaling all electronic funds transfer fees 
in a single figure).
    (a)(4) Length of period
    1. General. Institutions providing the beginning and ending dates of 
the period must make clear whether both dates are included in the 
period.
    2. Opening or closing an account mid-cycle. If an account is opened 
or closed during the period for which a statement is sent, institutions 
must calculate the annual percentage yield earned based on account 
balances for each day the account was open.
(b) Special rule for average daily balance method
    1. Monthly statements and quarterly compounding. This rule applies, 
for example, when an institution calculates interest on a quarterly 
average daily balance and sends monthly statements. In this case, the 
first two monthly statements would omit annual percentage yield earned 
and interest earned figures; the third monthly statement would reflect 
the interest earned and the annual percentage yield earned for the 
entire quarter.
    2. Length of the period. Institutions must disclose the length of 
both the interest calculation period and the statement period. For 
example, a statement could disclose a statement period of April 16 
through May 15 and further state that ``the interest earned and the 
annual percentage yield earned are

[[Page 656]]

based on your average daily balance for the period April 1 through April 
30.''
    3. Quarterly statements and monthly compounding. Institutions that 
use the average daily balance method to calculate interest on a monthly 
basis and that send statements on a quarterly basis may disclose a 
single interest (and annual percentage yield earned) figure. 
Alternatively, an institution may disclose three interest and three 
annual percentage yield earned figures, one for each month in the 
quarter, as long as the institution states the number of days (or 
beginning and ending dates) in the interest period if different from the 
statement period.

Section 230.7  Payment of interest

    (a)(1) Permissible methods
    1. Prohibited calculation methods. Calculation methods that do not 
comply with the requirement to pay interest on the full amount of 
principal in the account each day include:
    i. Paying interest on the balance in the account at the end of the 
period (the ``ending balance'' method)
    ii. Paying interest for the period based on the lowest balance in 
the account for any day in that period (the ``low balance'' method)
    iii. Paying interest on a percentage of the balance, excluding the 
amount set aside for reserve requirements (the ``investable balance'' 
method)
    2. Use of 365-day basis. Institutions may apply a daily periodic 
rate greater than 1/365 of the interest rate--such as 1/360 of the 
interest rate--as long as it is applied 365 days a year.
    3. Periodic interest payments. An institution can pay interest each 
day on the account and still make uniform interest payments. For 
example, for a one-year certificate of deposit an institution could make 
monthly interest payments equal to 1/12 of the amount of interest that 
will be earned for a 365-day period (or 11 uniform monthly payments--
each equal to roughly 1/12 of the total amount of interest--and one 
payment that accounts for the remainder of the total amount of interest 
earned for the period).
    4. Leap year. Institutions may apply a daily rate of 1/366 or 1/365 
of the interest rate for 366 days in a leap year, if the account will 
earn interest for February 29.
    5. Maturity of time accounts. Institutions are not required to pay 
interest after time accounts mature. (See 12 CFR part 217, the Board's 
Regulation Q, for limitations on duration of interest payments.) 
Examples include:
    i. During a grace period offered for an automatically renewable time 
account, if consumers decide during that period not to renew the account
    ii. Following the maturity of nonrollover time accounts
    iii. When the maturity date falls on a holiday, and consumers must 
wait until the next business day to obtain the funds
    6. Dormant accounts. Institutions must pay interest on funds in an 
account, even if inactivity or the infrequency of transactions would 
permit the institution to consider the account to be ``inactive'' or 
``dormant'' (or similar status) as defined by state or other law or the 
account contract.
    (a)(2) Determination of minimum balance to earn interest
    1. Daily balance accounts. Institutions that require a minimum 
balance may choose not to pay interest for days when the balance drops 
below the required minimum, if they use the daily balance method to 
calculate interest.
    2. Average daily balance accounts. Institutions that require a 
minimum balance may choose not to pay interest for the period in which 
the balance drops below the required minimum, if they use the average 
daily balance method to calculate interest.
    3. Beneficial method. Institutions may not require that consumers 
maintain both a minimum daily balance and a minimum average daily 
balance to earn interest, such as by requiring consumers to maintain a 
$500 daily balance and a prescribed average daily balance (whether 
higher or lower). But an institution could offer a minimum balance to 
earn interest that includes an additional method that is ``unequivocally 
beneficial'' to consumers such as the following: An institution using 
the daily balance method to calculate interest and requiring a $500 
minimum daily balance could offer to pay interest on the account for 
those days the minimum balance is not met as long as consumers maintain 
an average daily balance throughout the month of $400.
    4. Paying on full balance. Institutions must pay interest on the 
full balance in the account that meets the required minimum balance. For 
example, if $300 is the minimum daily balance required to earn interest, 
and a consumer deposits $500, the institution must pay the stated 
interest rate on the full $500 and not just on $200.
    5. Negative balances prohibited. Institutions must treat a negative 
account balance as zero to determine:
    i. The daily or average daily balance on which interest will be paid
    ii. Whether any minimum balance to earn interest is met
    6. Club accounts. Institutions offering club accounts (such as a 
``holiday'' or ``vacation'' club) cannot impose a minimum balance 
requirement for interest based on the total number or dollar amount of 
payments required under the club plan. For example, if a plan calls for 
$10 weekly payments for 50 weeks, the institution cannot set a $500 
``minimum balance'' and then pay interest

[[Page 657]]

only if the consumer has made all 50 payments.
    7. Minimum balances not affecting interest. Institutions may use the 
daily balance, average daily balance, or any other computation method to 
calculate minimum balance requirements not involving the payment of 
interest--such as to compute minimum balances for assessing fees.
    (b) Compounding and crediting policies
    1. General. Institutions choosing to compound interest may compound 
or credit interest annually, semi-annually, quarterly, monthly, daily, 
continuously, or on any other basis.
    2. Withdrawals prior to crediting date. If consumers withdraw funds 
(without closing the account) prior to a scheduled crediting date, 
institutions may delay paying the accrued interest on the withdrawn 
amount until the scheduled crediting date, but may not avoid paying 
interest.
    3. Closed accounts. Subject to state or other law, an institution 
may choose not to pay accrued interest if consumers close an account 
prior to the date accrued interest is credited, as long as the 
institution has disclosed that fact.
    (c) Date interest begins to accrue
    1. Relation to Regulation CC. Institutions may rely on the Expedited 
Funds Availability Act (EFAA) and Regulation CC (12 CFR part 229) to 
determine, for example, when a deposit is considered made for purposes 
of interest accrual, or when interest need not be paid on funds because 
a deposited check is later returned unpaid.
    2. Ledger and collected balances. Institutions may calculate 
interest by using a ``ledger'' or ``collected'' balance method, as long 
as the crediting requirements of the EFAA are met (12 CFR 229.14).
    3. Withdrawal of principal. Institutions must accrue interest on 
funds until the funds are withdrawn from the account. For example, if a 
check is debited to an account on a Tuesday, the institution must accrue 
interest on those funds through Monday.

Section 230.8  Advertising

    (a) Misleading or inaccurate advertisements
    1. General. All advertisements are subject to the rule against 
misleading or inaccurate advertisements, even though the disclosures 
applicable to various media differ.
    2. Indoor signs. An indoor sign advertising an annual percentage 
yield is not misleading or inaccurate when:
    i. For a tiered-rate account, it also provides the lower dollar 
amount of the tier corresponding to the advertised annual percentage 
yield
    ii. For a time account, it also provides the term required to obtain 
the advertised annual percentage yield
    3. Fees affecting ``free'' accounts. For purposes of determining 
whether an account can be advertised as ``free'' or ``no cost,'' 
maintenance and activity fees include:
    i. Any fee imposed when a minimum balance requirement is not met, or 
when consumers exceed a specified number of transactions
    ii. Transaction and service fees that consumers reasonably expect to 
be imposed on a regular basis
    iii. A flat fee, such as a monthly service fee
    iv. Fees imposed to deposit, withdraw, or transfer funds, including 
per-check or per-transaction charges (for example, $.25 for each 
withdrawal, whether by check or in person)
    4. Other fees. Examples of fees that are not maintenance or activity 
fees include:
    i. Fees not required to be disclosed under Sec. 230.4(b)(4)
    ii. Check printing fees
    iii. Balance inquiry fees
    iv. Stop-payment fees and fees associated with checks returned 
unpaid
    v. Fees assessed against a dormant account
    vi. Fees for ATM or electronic transfer services (such as 
preauthorized transfers or home banking services) not required to obtain 
an account
    5. Similar terms. An advertisement may not use the term ``fees 
waived'' if a maintenance or activity fee may be imposed because it is 
similar to the terms ``free'' or ``no cost.''
    6. Specific account services. Institutions may advertise a specific 
account service or feature as free if no fee is imposed for that service 
or feature. For example, institutions offering an account that is free 
of deposit or withdrawal fees could advertise that fact, as long as the 
advertisement does not mislead consumers by implying that the account is 
free and that no other fee (a monthly service fee, for example) may be 
charged.
    7. Free for limited time. If an account (or a specific account 
service) is free only for a limited period of time--for example, for one 
year following the account opening--the account (or service) may be 
advertised as free if the time period is also stated.
    8. Conditions not related to deposit accounts. Institutions may 
advertise accounts as ``free'' for consumers meeting conditions not 
related to deposit accounts, such as the consumer's age. For example, 
institutions may advertise a NOW account as ``free for persons over 65 
years old,'' even though a maintenance or activity fee is assessed on 
accounts held by consumers 65 or younger.
    9. Electronic advertising. If an advertisement using electronic 
communication displays a triggering term (such as a bonus or annual 
percentage yield) the advertisement must clearly refer the consumer to 
the location where the additional required information begins. For 
example, an advertisement that includes a bonus or annual percentage 
yield may be accompanied by a link that directly

[[Page 658]]

takes the consumer to the additional information.
    (b) Permissible rates
    1. Tiered-rate accounts. An advertisement for a tiered-rate account 
that states an annual percentage yield must also state the annual 
percentage yield for each tier, along with corresponding minimum balance 
requirements. Any interest rates stated must appear in conjunction with 
the applicable annual percentage yields for each tier.
    2. Stepped-rate accounts. An advertisement that states an interest 
rate for a stepped-rate account must state all the interest rates and 
the time period that each rate is in effect.
    3. Representative examples. An advertisement that states an annual 
percentage yield for a given type of account (such as a time account for 
a specified term) need not state the annual percentage yield applicable 
to other time accounts offered by the institution or indicate that other 
maturity terms are available. In an advertisement stating that rates for 
an account may vary depending on the amount of the initial deposit or 
the term of a time account, institutions need not list each balance 
level and term offered. Instead, the advertisement may:
    i. Provide a representative example of the annual percentage yields 
offered, clearly described as such. For example, if an institution 
offers a $25 bonus on all time accounts and the annual percentage yield 
will vary depending on the term selected, the institution may provide a 
disclosure of the annual percentage yield as follows: ``For example, our 
6-month certificate of deposit currently pays a 3.15% annual percentage 
yield.''
    ii. Indicate that various rates are available, such as by stating 
short-term and longer-term maturities along with the applicable annual 
percentage yields: ``We offer certificates of deposit with annual 
percentage yields that depend on the maturity you choose. For example, 
our one-month CD earns a 2.75% APY. Or, earn a 5.25% APY for a three-
year CD.''
    4. Electronic communication. An interest rate may be stated only if 
it is provided in conjunction with, but not more conspicuously than, the 
annual percentage yield to which it relates. In an advertisement using 
electronic communication, the consumer must be able to view both rates 
simultaneously. This requirement is not satisfied if the consumer can 
view the annual percentage yield only by use of a link that connects the 
consumer to information appearing at another location.
    (c) When additional disclosures are required
    1. Trigger terms. The following are examples of information stated 
in advertisements that are not ``trigger'' terms:
    i. ``One, three, and five year CDs available''
    ii. ``Bonus rates available''
    iii. ``1% over our current rates,'' so long as the rates are not 
determinable from the advertisement
    (c)(2) Time annual percentage yield is offered
    1. Specified date. If an advertisement discloses an annual 
percentage yield as of a specified date, that date must be recent in 
relation to the publication or broadcast frequency of the media used, 
taking into account the particular circumstances or production deadlines 
involved. For example, the printing date of a brochure printed once for 
a deposit account promotion that will be in effect for six months would 
be considered ``recent,'' even though rates change during the six-month 
period. Rates published in a daily newspaper or on television must 
reflect rates offered shortly before (or on) the date the rates are 
published or broadcast.
    2. Reference to date of publication. An advertisement may refer to 
the annual percentage yield as being accurate as of the date of 
publication, if the date is on the publication itself. For instance, an 
advertisement in a periodical may state that a rate is ``current through 
the date of this issue,'' if the periodical shows the date.
    (c)(5) Effect of fees
    1. Scope. This requirement applies only to maintenance or activity 
fees described in paragraph 8(a).
    (c)(6) Features of time accounts
    (c)(6)(i) Time requirements
    1. Club accounts. If a club account has a maturity date but the term 
may vary depending on when the account is opened, institutions may use a 
phrase such as: ``The maturity date of this club account is November 15; 
its term varies depending on when the account is opened.''
    (c)(6)(ii) Early withdrawal penalties
    1. Discretionary penalties. Institutions imposing early withdrawal 
penalties on a case-by-case basis may disclose that they ``may'' (rather 
than ``will'') impose a penalty if such a disclosure accurately 
describes the account terms.
    (d) Bonuses
    1. General reference to ``bonus.'' General statements such as 
``bonus checking'' or ``get a bonus when you open a checking account'' 
do not trigger the bonus disclosures.
    (e) Exemption for certain advertisements
    (e)(1) Certain media
    (e)(1)(i)
    1. Internet advertisements. The exemption for advertisements made 
through broadcast or electronic media does not extend to advertisements 
made by electronic communication, such as advertisements posted on the 
Internet or sent by e-mail.
    (e)(1)(iii)
    1. Tiered-rate accounts. Solicitations for a tiered-rate account 
made through telephone response machines must provide the annual 
percentage yields and the balance requirements applicable to each tier.

[[Page 659]]

    (e)(2) Indoor signs
    (e)(2)(i)
    1. General. Indoor signs include advertisements displayed on 
computer screens, banners, preprinted posters, and chalk or peg boards. 
Any advertisement inside the premises that can be retained by a consumer 
(such as a brochure or a printout from a computer) is not an indoor 
sign.

Section 230.9  Enforcement and record retention

    (c) Record retention
    1. Evidence of required actions. Institutions comply with the 
regulation by demonstrating that they have done the following:

    i. Established and maintained procedures for paying interest and 
providing timely disclosures as required by the regulation, and
    ii. Retained sample disclosures for each type of account offered to 
consumers, such as account-opening disclosures, copies of 
advertisements, and change-in-term notices; and information regarding 
the interest rates and annual percentage yields offered.
    2. Methods of retaining evidence. Institutions must be able to 
reconstruct the required disclosures or other actions. They need not 
keep disclosures or other business records in hard copy. Records 
evidencing compliance may be retained on microfilm, microfiche, or by 
other methods that reproduce records accurately (including computer 
files).
    3. Payment of interest. Institutions must retain sufficient rate and 
balance information to permit the verification of interest paid on an 
account, including the payment of interest on the full principal 
balance.

Section 230.10  Electronic Communication

    (b) General Rule
    1. Relationship to the E-Sign Act. The E-Sign Act authorizes the use 
of electronic disclosures. It does not affect any requirement imposed 
under this part other than a provision that requires disclosures to be 
in paper form, and it does not affect the content or timing of 
disclosures. Electronic disclosures are subject to the regulation's 
format, timing, and retainability rules and the clear and conspicuous 
standard. For example, to satisfy the clear and conspicuous standard for 
disclosures, electronic disclosures must use visual text.
    2. Clear and conspicuous standard. An institution must provide 
electronic disclosures using a clear and conspicuous format. Also, in 
accordance with the E-Sign Act:
    i. The institution must disclose the requirements for accessing and 
retaining disclosures in that format;
    ii. The consumer must demonstrate the ability to access the 
information electronically and affirmatively consent to electronic 
delivery; and
    iii. The institution must provide the disclosures in accordance with 
the specified requirements.
    3. Timing and effective delivery. i. When a consumer opens an 
account on-line. When a consumer opens an account on-line, the consumer 
must be required to access the disclosures required under Sec. 230.4 
before the account is opened or a service is provided, whichever is 
earlier. A link to the disclosures satisfies the timing rule if the 
consumer cannot bypass the disclosures before opening the account. Or 
the disclosures in this example must automatically appear on the screen, 
even if multiple screens are required to view the entire disclosure. The 
institution is not required to confirm that the consumer has read the 
disclosure.
    ii. For disclosures provided periodically. Disclosures provided by 
mail are timely based on when the disclosures are sent. Disclosures 
posted at an Internet web site, such as periodic statements or change-
in-terms and other notices, are timely when the institution has both 
made the disclosures available and sent a notice alerting consumer that 
the disclosures have been posted. For example, under Sec. 230.5, 
institutions must give advance notice to affected customers at least 30 
calendar days in advance of certain changes. For a change in terms 
notice posted on the Internet, an institution must both post the notice 
and notify consumers of its availability at least 30 days in advance of 
the change.
    4. Retainability of disclosures. Depository institutions satisfy the 
requirement that disclosures be in a form that the consumer may keep if 
electronic disclosures are delivered in a format that is capable of 
being retained (such as by printing or storing electronically). The 
format must also be consistent with the information required to be 
provided under 101(c)(1)(C)(i) of the E-Sign Act 15 U.S.C. 
7001(c)(1)(C)(i)) about the hardware and software requirements for 
accessing and retaining electronic disclosures.
    5. Disclosures provided on depository institution's equipment. A 
depository institution that controls the equipment providing electronic 
disclosures to consumers (for example, a computer terminal located in a 
depository institution's lobby or at a public kiosk) must ensure that 
the equipment satisfies the regulation's requirements to provide timely 
disclosures in a clear and conspicuous format and in a form that the 
consumer may keep. For example, if disclosures are required at the time 
of an on-line transaction, the disclosures must be sent to the 
consumer's e-mail address or must be posted at another location such as 
the institution's Internet web site, unless the institution provides a 
printer that automatically prints the disclosures.
    (d) Address or Location To Receive Electronic Communication
    (d)(1)

[[Page 660]]

    1. Electronic address. A consumer's electronic address is an e-mail 
address that is not limited to receiving communications transmitted 
solely by the depository institution.
    (d)(2)
    1. Identifying account involved. A depository institution may 
identify a specific account in a variety of ways and is not required to 
identify an account by reference to the account number. For example, 
where the consumer has only one deposit account, and no confusion would 
result, the depository institution may refer to ``your deposit 
account.'' If the consumer has two accounts, the depository institution 
may, for example, differentiate accounts by using terms such as 
``primary account'' and ``secondary account'' or by using a truncated 
account number.
    2. 90-day rule. The actual disclosures provided to consumer must be 
available for at least 90 days, but the institution has discretion to 
determine whether they should be available at the same location for the 
entire period.
    (e) Redelivery
    1. E-mail returned as undeliverable. If an e-mail to the consumer 
(containing an alert notice or other disclosure) is returned as 
undeliverable, the redelivery requirement is satisfied if, for example, 
the depository institution sends the disclosure to a different e-mail 
address or postal address that the depository institution has on file 
for the consumer. Sending the disclosures a second time to the same 
electronic is not sufficient if the depository institution has a 
different address for the consumer on file.

       Appendix A to Part 230--Annual Percentage Yield Calculation

Part I. Annual Percentage Yield for Account Disclosures and Advertising 
                                Purposes

    1. Rounding for calculations. The following are examples of 
permissible rounding for calculating interest and the annual percentage 
yield:

    i. The daily rate applied to a balance carried to five or more 
decimal places
    ii. The daily interest earned carried to five or more decimal places

     Part II. Annual Percentage Yield Earned for Periodic Statements

    1. Balance method. The interest figure used in the calculation of 
the annual percentage yield earned may be derived from the daily balance 
method or the average daily balance method. The balance used in the 
formula for the annual percentage yield earned is the sum of the 
balances for each day in the period divided by the number of days in the 
period.
    2. Negative balances prohibited. Institutions must treat a negative 
account balance as zero to determine the balance on which the annual 
percentage yield earned is calculated. (See commentary to 
Sec. 230.7(a)(2).)

                           A. General Formula

    1. Accrued but uncredited interest. To calculate the annual 
percentage yield earned, accrued but uncredited interest:

    i. May not be included in the balance for statements issued at the 
same time or less frequently than the account's compounding and 
crediting frequency. For example, if monthly statements are sent for an 
account that compounds interest daily and credits interest monthly, the 
balance may not be increased each day to reflect the effect of daily 
compounding.
    ii. Must be included in the balance for succeeding statements if a 
statement is issued more frequently than compounded interest is credited 
on an account. For example, if monthly statements are sent for an 
account that compounds interest daily and credits interest quarterly, 
the balance for the second monthly statement would include interest that 
had accrued for the prior month.
    2. Rounding. The interest earned figure used to calculate the annual 
percentage yield earned must be rounded to two decimals and reflect the 
amount actually paid. For example, if the interest earned for a 
statement period is $20.074 and the institution pays the consumer 
$20.07, the institution must use $20.07 (not $20.074) to calculate the 
annual percentage yield earned. For accounts paying interest based on 
the daily balance method that compound and credit interest quarterly, 
and send monthly statements, the institution may, but need not, round 
accrued interest to two decimals for calculating the annual percentage 
yield earned on the first two monthly statements issued during the 
quarter. However, on the quarterly statement the interest earned figure 
must reflect the amount actually paid.

 B. Special Formula for Use Where Periodic Statement is Sent More Often 
            Than the Period for Which Interest is Compounded

    1. Statements triggered by Regulation E. Institutions may, but need 
not, use this formula to calculate the annual percentage yield earned 
for accounts that receive quarterly statements and are subject to 
Regulation E's rule calling for monthly statements when an electronic 
fund transfer has occurred. They may do so even though no monthly 
statement was issued during a specific quarter. But institutions must 
use this formula for accounts that compound and credit interest 
quarterly and receive monthly statements that, while triggered by 
Regulation E, comply with the provisions of Sec. 230.6.
    2. Days in compounding period. Institutions using the special annual 
percentage yield

[[Page 661]]

earned formula must use the actual number of days in the compounding 
period.

         Appendix B to Part 230--Model Clauses and Sample Forms

    1. Modifications. Institutions that modify the model clauses will be 
deemed in compliance as long as they do not delete required information 
or rearrange the format in a way that affects the substance or clarity 
of the disclosures.
    2. Format. Institutions may use inserts to a document (see Sample 
Form B-4) or fill-in blanks (see Sample Forms B-5, B-6 and B-7, which 
use underlining to indicate terms that have been filled in) to show 
current rates, fees, or other terms.
    3. Disclosures for opening accounts. The sample forms illustrate the 
information that must be provided to consumers when an account is 
opened, as required by Sec. 230.4(a)(1). (See Sec. 230.4(a)(2), which 
states the requirements for disclosing the annual percentage yield, the 
interest rate, and the maturity of a time account in responding to a 
consumer's request.)
    4. Compliance with Regulation E. Institutions may satisfy certain 
requirements under Regulation DD with disclosures that meet the 
requirements of Regulation E. (See Sec. 230.3(c).) For disclosures 
covered by both this regulation and Regulation E (such as the amount of 
fees for ATM usage, institutions should consult appendix A to Regulation 
E for appropriate model clauses.
    5. Duplicate disclosures. If a requirement such as a minimum balance 
applies to more than one account term (to obtain a bonus and determine 
the annual percentage yield, for example), institutions need not repeat 
the requirement for each term, as long as it is clear which terms the 
requirement applies to.
    6. Sample forms. The sample forms (B-4 through B-8) serve a purpose 
different from the model clauses. They illustrate ways of adapting the 
model clauses to specific accounts. The clauses shown relate only to the 
specific transactions described.

                B-1 Model Clauses for Account Disclosures

              B-1(h) Disclosures Relating to Time Accounts

    1. Maturity. The disclosure in Clause (h)(i) stating a specific date 
may be used in all cases. The statement describing a time period is 
appropriate only when providing disclosures in response to a consumer's 
request.

                  B-2 Model Clauses for Change in Terms

    1. General. The second clause, describing a future decrease in the 
interest rate and annual percentage yield, applies to fixed-rate 
accounts only.

                   B-4 Sample Form (Multiple Accounts)

    1. Rate sheet insert. In the rate sheet insert, the calculations of 
the annual percentage yield for the three-month and six-month 
certificates are based on 92 days and 181 days respectively. All 
calculations in the insert assume daily compounding.

           B-6 Sample Form (Tiered-Rate Money Market Account)

    1. General. Sample Form B-6 uses Tiering Method A (discussed in 
Appendix A and Clause (a)(iv)) to calculate interest. It gives a 
narrative description of a tiered-rate account; institutions may use 
different formats (for example, a chart similar to the one in Sample 
Form B-4), as long as all required information for each tier is clearly 
presented. The form does not contain a separate disclosure of the 
minimum balance required to obtain the annual percentage yield; the 
tiered-rate disclosure provides that information.

[Reg. DD, 59 FR 40221, Aug. 8, 1994, as amended at 59 FR 52658, Oct. 19, 
1994; 63 FR 52107, Sept. 29, 1998; 66 FR 17803, Apr. 4, 2001]