[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: 12CFR250.409]

[Page 690-692]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 250--MISCELLANEOUS INTERPRETATIONS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 250.409  Investment for own account affects applicability of section 32.

    (a) The Board of Governors has been presented with the question 
whether a certain firm is primarily engaged in the activities described 
in section 32 of the Banking Act of 1933. If the firm is so engaged, 
then the prohibitions of section 32 forbids a limited partner to serve 
as employee of a member bank.
    (b) The firm describes the bulk of its business, producing roughly 
60 percent of its income, as ``investing for its own account.'' However, 
it has a seat on the

[[Page 691]]

local stock exchange, and acts as specialist and odd-lot dealer on the 
floor of the exchange, an activity responsible for some 30 percent of 
its volume and profits. The firm's ``off-post trading,'' apart from the 
investment account, gives rise to about 5 percent of its total volume 
and 10 percent of its profits. Gross volume has risen from $4 to $10 
million over the past 3 years, but underwriting has accounted for no 
more than one-half of 1 percent of that amount.
    (c) Section 32 provides that

    No officer, director, or employee of any corporation or 
unincorporated association, no partner, or employee of any partnership, 
and no individual, primarily engaged in the issue, flotation, 
underwriting, public sale, or distribution, at wholesale, or retail, or 
through syndicate participation, of stocks, bonds, or other similar 
securities, shall serve the same time (sic) as an officer, director, or 
employee of any member bank * * *

    (d) In interpreting this language, the Board has consistently held 
that underwriting, acting as a dealer, or generally speaking, selling, 
or distributing securities as a principal, is covered by the section, 
while acting as broker or agent is not.
    (e) In one type of situation, however, although a firm was engaged 
in selling securities as principal, on its own behalf, the Board held 
that section 32 did not apply. In these cases, the firm alleged that it 
bought and sold securities purely for investment purposes. Typically, 
those cases involved personal holding companies or small family 
investment companies. Securities had been purchased only for members of 
a restricted family group, and had been held for relatively long periods 
of time.
    (f) The question now before the Board is whether a similar exception 
can apply in the case of the investment account of a professional 
dealer. In order to answer this question, it is necessary to analyze, in 
the light of applicable principles under the statute, the three main 
types of activity in which the firm has been engaged, (1) acting as 
specialist and odd-lot dealer, (2) off-post trading as an ordinary 
dealer, and (3) investing for its own account.
    (g) On several occasions, the Board has held that, to the extent the 
trading of a specialist or odd-lot dealer is limited to that required 
for him to perform his function on the floor of the exchange, he is 
acting essentially in an agency capacity. In a letter of September 13, 
1934, the Board held that the business of a specialist was not of the 
kind described in the (unamended) section on the understanding that

    * * * in acting as specialists on the New York Curb Exchange, it is 
necessary for the firm to buy and sell odd lots and * * * in order to 
protect its position after such transactions have been made, the firm 
sells or buys shares in lots of 100 or multiples thereof in order to 
reduce its position in the stock in question to the smallest amount 
possible by this method. It appears therefore that, in connection with 
these transactions, the firm is neither trading in the stock in question 
or taking a position in it except to the extent made necessary by the 
fact that it deals in odd lots and cannot complete the transactions by 
purchases and sales on the floor of the exchange except to the nearest 
100 share amount.

    (h) While subsequent amendments to section 32 to some extent changed 
the definition of the kinds of securities business that would be covered 
by the section, the amendments were designed so far as is relevant to 
the present question, to embody existing interpretations of the Board. 
Accordingly, to the extent that the firm's business is described by the 
above letter of the Board, it should not be considered to be of a kind 
described in section 32.
    (i) Turning to the firm's off-post trading, the Board is inclined to 
agree with the view that this is sufficient to make the case a 
borderline one under the statute. In the circumstances, the Board might 
prefer to postpone making a determination until figures for 1965 could 
be reviewed, particularly in the light of the recent increase in total 
volume, if it were not for the third category, the firm's own investment 
account.
    (j) While this question has not been squarely presented to it in the 
past, the Board is of the opinion that when a firm is doing any 
significant amount of business as a dealer or underwriter, then 
investments for the firm's own account should be taken into 
consideration in determining whether the firm

[[Page 692]]

is ``primarily engaged'' in the activities described in section 32. The 
division into dealing for one's own account, and dealing with customers, 
is a highly subjective one, and although a particular firm or individual 
may be quite scrupulous in separating the two, the opportunity 
necessarily exists for the kind of abuse at which the statute is 
directed. The Act is designed to prevent situations from arising in 
which a bank director, officer, or employee could influence the bank or 
its customers to invest in securities in which his firm has an interest, 
regardless of whether he, as an individual, is likely to do so. In the 
present case, when these activities are added to the firm's ``off-post 
trading'', the firm clearly falls within the statutory definition.
    (k) For the reasons just discussed, the Board concludes that the 
firm must be considered to be primarily engaged in activities described 
in section 32, and that the prohibitions of the section forbid a limited 
partner in that firm to serve as employee of a member bank.

(12 U.S.C. 248(i))

[30 FR 7743, June 16, 1965. Redesignated at 61 FR 57289, Nov. 6, 1996]