[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: 12CFR250.165]

[Page 670-672]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 250--MISCELLANEOUS INTERPRETATIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 250.165  Bankers' acceptances: definition of participations.

    (a)(1) Section 207 of the Bank Export Services Act (Title II of Pub. 
L. 97-290) (``BESA'') raised the limits on the aggregate amount of 
eligible bankers' acceptances (``BAs'') that may be created by a member 
bank from 50 percent (or 100 percent with the permission of the Board) 
of its paid up and unimpaired capital stock and surplus (``capital'') to 
150 percent (or 200 percent with the permission of the Board) of its 
capital. Section 207 also prohibits a member bank from creating eligible 
BAs for any one person in the aggregate in excess of 10 percent of the 
institution's capital. Eligible BAs growing out of domestic transactions 
are not to exceed 50 percent of the aggregate of all eligible 
acceptances authorized for a member bank. This section of the BESA 
applies the same limits applicable to member banks to U.S. branches and 
agencies of foreign banks that are subject to reserve requirements under 
section 7 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3105).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ The institutions subject to the BA limitations of BESA will 
hereinafter be referred to as ``covered banks.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) This section of the BESA also provides that any portion of an 
eligible BA created by a covered bank (``senior bank'') that is conveyed 
through a ``participation agreement'' to another covered bank (``junior 
bank'') shall not be included in the calculation of the senior bank's 
bankers' acceptance limits established by section 207 of BESA.\2\ 
However, the amount of the participation is to be included in the BA 
limits applicable to the junior bank. The language of the statute does 
not define what constitutes a participation agreement for purposes of 
the applicability of the BESA limitations. However, the statute does 
authorize the Board to further define any of the terms used in section 
207 of the BESA (12 U.S.C. 372(g)). The Board is clarifying the term 
participation for purposes of the BA limitations of the BESA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ The use of the terms senior bank and junior bank has no 
implications regarding priority of claims. These terms merely represent 
a shorthand method of identifying the depository institution that has 
created the acceptance and conveyed the participation (senior bank) and 
the depository institution that has received the participation (junior 
bank).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) The legislative history of section 207 of the BESA indicates 
that Congress intended that the junior bank be obligated to the senior 
bank in the event that the account party defaults on its obligation to 
pay, but that the junior bank need not also be obligated to pay the 
holder of the acceptance at the time the BA is presented for payment. H. 
Rep. No. 97-629, 97th Cong., 2nd Sess. 15 (1982); 128 Cong. Rec. H 4647 
(daily ed. July 27, 1982) (remarks by Rep. Barnard): and 128 Cong. Rec. 
H 8462 (daily ed. October 1, 1982) (remarks by Rep. Barnard). The 
legislative history also indicates that Congress intended

[[Page 671]]

that eligible BAs in which participations had been conveyed not be 
required to indicate the name(s) (or interest(s)) of the junior bank(s) 
on the acceptance in order for the BA to be excluded from the BESA 
limitations applicable to the senior bank. 128 Cong. Rec. S 12237 (daily 
ed. September 24, 1982) (remarks of Senators Heinz and Garn): and 128 
Cong. Rec. H 4647 (daily ed. July 27, 1982) (remarks of Rep. Barnard).
    (c)(1) In view of Congressional intent with regard to what 
constitutes a participation in an eligible BA, the Board has determined 
that, for purposes of the BESA limits, a participation must satisfy the 
following two minimum requirements:
    (i) A written agreement entered into between the junior and senior 
bank under which the junior bank acquires the senior bank's claim 
against the account party to the extent of the amount of the 
participation that is enforceable in the event that the account party 
fails to perform in accordance with the terms of the acceptance; and
    (ii) The agreement between the junior and senior bank provides that 
the senior bank obtains a claim against the junior bank to the extent of 
the amount of the participation that is enforceable in the event the 
account party fails to perform in accordance with the terms of the 
acceptance.
    (2) Consistent with Congressional intent, the minimum requirements 
do not require the junior bank to be obligated to pay the holder of the 
acceptance at the time the BA is presented for payment. Similarly, the 
minimum requirements do not require the name(s) or interest(s) of the 
junior bank(s) to appear on the face of the acceptance.
    (3) An eligible BA that is conveyed through a participation that 
does not satisfy these minimum requirements would continue to be 
included in the BA limits applicable to the senior bank. Further, an 
eligible BA conveyed to a covered bank through a participation that 
provided for additional rights and obligations among the parties would 
be excluded from the BESA limitations of the senior bank provided the 
minimum requirements were satisfied.
    (4) A participation structured pursuant to these minimum 
requirements would be as follows: Upon the conveyance of the 
participation, the senior bank retains its entire obligation to pay the 
holder of the BA at maturity. The senior bank has a claim against the 
junior bank to the extent of the amount of the participation that is 
enforceable in the event the account party fails to perform in 
accordance with the terms of the acceptance. Similarly, the junior bank 
has a corresponding claim against the account party to the extent of the 
amount of the participation that is enforceable in the event the account 
party fails to perform in accordance with the terms of the acceptance.
    (d)(1) The Board is not requiring the senior bank and the account 
party specifically to agree that the senior bank's rights are assignable 
because the Board believes such rights to be assignable even in the 
absence of an explicit agreement.
    (2) The junior and senior banks may contract among themselves as to 
which party(ies) have the responsibility for administering the 
arrangement, enforcing claims, or exercising remedies.
    (e) The Board recognizes that both the junior bank's claim on the 
account party and the senior bank's claim on the junior bank involve 
risk. Therefore, it is essential that these risks be assessed by the 
banks involved in accordance with prudent and sound banking practices. 
The examiners will in the normal course of the examination process 
review the risk assessment procedures instituted by the banks. The 
junior bank should review the creditworthiness of each account party 
when the junior bank acquires a participation and the senior bank should 
review on an ongoing basis the creditworthiness of the junior bank. 
Junior bank agreement to rely exclusively upon the credit judgment of 
the senior bank and purchase on an ongoing basis from the senior bank 
all participations in BAs regardless of the identity of the account 
party is not appropriate in view of the risks involved. However, in 
those cases involving a participation between a parent bank and its Edge 
affiliate where the credit review for both entities is performed by the 
parent bank,

[[Page 672]]

the Edge Corporation should maintain documentation indicating that it 
concurs with the parent bank's analysis and that the acceptance 
participation is appropriate for inclusion in the Edge Corporation's 
portfolio.
    (f) Similarly, the Board has determined that it is appropriate to 
include the risks incurred by the senior bank in assessing the senior 
bank's capital and the risks incurred by the junior bank in assessing 
the junior bank's capital.
    (g) In view of this clarification of the issues relating to 
participations in BAs, the Board encourages the private sector to 
develop standardized forms for BAs and participations therein that 
clearly delineate the rights and responsibilities of the relevant 
parties.

(Sec. 13, Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 372))

[48 FR 57109, Dec. 28, 1983]