[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: 12CFR250.143]

[Page 666-667]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 250--MISCELLANEOUS INTERPRETATIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 250.143  Member bank purchase of stock of foreign operations subsidiaries.

    (a) In a previous interpretation, the Board determined that a State 
member bank would not violate the ``stock-purchase prohibition'' of 
section 5136 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24 [para] 7) by 
purchasing and holding the shares of a corporation which performs ``at 
locations at which the bank is authorized to engage in business, 
functions that the bank is empowered to perform directly''.\1\ (1968 
Federal Reserve Bulletin 681, 12 CFR 250.141). The Board of Governors 
has been asked by a State member bank whether, under that 
interpretation, the bank may establish such a so-called operations 
subsidiary outside the United States.
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    \1\ National banking associations are prohibited by section 5136 of 
the Revised Statutes from purchasing and holding shares of any 
corporation except those corporations whose shares are specifically made 
eligible by statute. This prohibition is made applicable to State member 
banks by section 9 [para] 20 of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 335).
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    (b) In the above interpretation the Board viewed the creation of a 
wholly-owned subsidiary which engaged in activities that the bank itself 
could perform directly as an alternative organizational arrangement that 
would be permissible for member banks unless ``its use would be 
inconsistent with other Federal law, either statutory or judicial''.
    (c) In the Board's judgment, the use by member banks of operations 
subsidiaries outside the United States would be clearly inconsistent 
with the statutory scheme of the Federal Reserve Act governing the 
foreign investments and operations of member banks. It is clear that 
Congress has given member banks the authority to conduct operations and 
make investments outside the United States only through gradually 
adopting a series of specific statutory amendments to the Federal 
Reserve Act, each of which has been carefully drawn to give the Board 
approval, supervisory, and regulatory authority over those operations 
and investments.
    (d) As part of the original Federal Reserve Act, national banks 
were, with the Board's permission, given the power to establish foreign 
branches.\2\ In 1916, Congress amended the Federal Reserve Act to permit 
national banks to invest in international or foreign banking 
corporations known as Agreement Corporations, because such corporations 
were required to enter into an agreement or understanding with the Board 
to restrict their operations. Subject to such limitations or 
restrictions as the Board may prescribe, such Agreement corporations may 
principally engage in international or foreign banking, or banking in a 
dependency or insular possession of the United States, either directly 
or through the agency, ownership or control of local institutions in 
foreign countries, or in such dependencies or insular possessions of the 
United States. In 1919 the enactment of section 25(a) of the Federal 
Reserve Act (the ``Edge Act'') permitted national banks to invest in 
federally chartered

[[Page 667]]

international or foreign banking corporations (so-called Edge 
Corporations) which may engage in international or foreign banking or 
other international or foreign financial operations, or in banking or 
other financial operations in a dependency or insular possession of the 
United States, either directly or through the ownership or control of 
local institutions in foreign countries, or in such dependencies or 
insular possessions. Edge Corporations may only purchase and hold stock 
in certain foreign subsidiaries with the consent of the Board. And in 
1966, Congress amended section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act to allow 
national banks to invest directly in the shares of a foreign bank. In 
the Board's judgment, the above statutory scheme of the Federal Reserve 
Act evidences a clear Congressional intent that member banks may only 
purchase and hold stock in subsidiaries located outside the United 
States through the prescribed statutory provisions of sections 25 and 
25(a) of the Federal Reserve Act. It is through these statutorily 
prescribed forms of organization that member banks must conduct their 
operations outside the United States.
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    \2\ Under section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act, State member banks, 
subject, of course, to any necessary approval from their State banking 
authority, may establish foreign branches on the same terms and subject 
to the same limitations and restrictions as are applicable to the 
establishment of branches by national banks (12 U.S.C. 321). State 
member banks may also purchase and hold shares of stock in Edge or 
Agreement Corporations and foreign banks because national banks, as a 
result of specific statutory exceptions to the stock purchase 
prohibitions of section 5136, can purchase and hold stock in these 
Corporations or banks.
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    (e) To summarize, the Board has concluded that a member bank may 
only organize and operate operations subsidiaries at locations in the 
United States. Investments by member banks in foreign subsidiaries must 
be made either with the Board's permission under section 25 of the 
Federal Reserve Act or, with the Board's consent, through an Edge 
Corporation subsidiary under section 25(a) of the Federal Reserve Act or 
through an Agreement Corporation subsidiary under section 25 of the 
Federal Reserve Act. In addition, it should be noted that bank holding 
companies may acquire the shares of certain foreign subsidiaries with 
the Board's approval under section 4(c)(13) of the Bank Holding Company 
Act. These statutory sections taken together already give member banks a 
great deal of organizational flexibility in conducting their operations 
abroad.

(Interprets and applies 12 U.S.C. 24, 335)

[40 FR 12252, Mar. 18, 1975]