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Foreign Operations of U.S. Banks - General (2)
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The original documents are located in Box B49, folder "Foreign Operations of US Banks
(2)" of the Arthur F. Burns Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted
materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to
these materials.
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date
June 25, 1973
To
Chairman Burns
Subject: Analysis of Banking Directors'
From
Ralph W. Smith
RWS
Responses to Your Inquiry of June 13
1. Responses were received from all ten of the banking directors
to whom the questionnaire was sent. Of these ten, international activities
were a substantial portion of the business of nine of the banks. Nearly
all of these nine could be described as conducting "full service" inter-
national operations.
2. Eight of the nine replied that the recent situation prevail-
ing in exchange markets had not interfered with their conduct of inter-
national banking activities in any substantial degree. One respondent
said that it had had a substantial effect. The one bank that was not
heavily involved in international business said that it had experienced
no substantial interference.
3. The one bank that had experienced substantial interference
with normal business cited wide fluctuations in exchange rates in thin
markets as the source of its difficulties. It said that its management
of currency positions now required [considerably] more attention. Thin,
volatile markets were also cited by three other banks as being a source
of [minor] difficulties. Minor problems resulting from capital controls
were mentioned by three banks.
4. As for problems encountered by their commercial customers,
four banks mentioned increased uncertainty caused by fluctuations in
exchange rates, while two specifically mentioned increased costs of
hedging.
BERALD FORD LIBRARY
-2-
5. Five of the ten banks indicated that recent experience
had resulted in some change in their attitude with regard to floating
rates. All five indicated that floating rates were working better
than they had anticipated. Of those expressing a preference for
floating versus "fixed" rates, five preferred floating and two
preferred fixed. Of the remaining three, one indicated that it now
prefers even more flexibility than it had previously (though it did
not specifically endorse floating); one indicated that it saw no
marked disadvantage for floating rates to continue; and one was
ambiguous.
6. On the question of whether they would anticipate greater
or lesser difficulties if floating rates should persist for an indefinite
period, three respondents specifically answered less, while one implicitly
answered less. Three specifically answered greater, while two indicated
greater, if controls should proliferate (perhaps implicitly assuming that
that might be the case).
FORD & LIBRARY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYS
Office Correspondence
Date May 15, 1974
To Governor Mitchell
Subject: Data on Leading New York City
From Robert J. Lawrence RJS
Banks
At the Board Meeting on May 14, you indicated that you
felt some data should be developed on the international positions of
the leading New York City Banks. Attached are tables containing
data on the domestic and foreign positions of the New York Banks
from the Call Report of December 31, 1973. I have also included
a table showing Euro-dollar borrowings of these banks.
Is this the type of material you had in mind? Should it?
be distributed to the Board 2
cc: Sam Chase
Attachments
FORD & GERALD LIBRARY
Deposits of Leading New York Banks (December, 1973)
Domestic
Deposits in
Consolidated
% of
Deposits
Foreign Branches
Deposits
Foreign
Bank
($ Millions)
($ Millions)
($ Millions)
to Total
Chase Manhattan Bank
17,128
12,690
36
29,818
43
First National City Bank
18,278
16,005
42
34,283
47
Manufacturers Hanover Trust
11,421
5,556
19
16,977
33
Chemical Bank
17,119
12,699
36
29,818
43
Bankers Trust Company
8,528
5,487
18
14,015
39
Morgan Guaranty Trust
8,875
6,492
20
15,367
42
Marine Midland Bank
2,699
3,956
8
6,655
59
Irving Trust Company
4,837
2,133
8
6,970
31
The Bank of New York
1,413
540
1,953
28
Franklin National Bank
2,600
1,131
2
3,732
30
189
30
34
189/420
17
378
30
3
520
20
14
156] 34.0
15
7
7
2
156
d
FORD
GERALD
LIBRARY
Selected Call Report Items (December 31, 1973)
(Millions $)
Chase Manhattan Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
4,073
4,451
8,525
52
Federal Funds Sold
54
3
58
6
Other Loans, Gross
13,529
8,204
21,733
38
Securities
3,749
149
3,897
4
Other Assets
767
327
1,093
30
TOTAL ASSETS
23,106
13,217
36,317
36
TOTAL DEPOSITS
17,128
12,690
29,818
43
Demand Deposits
9,983
--
9,983
0
Time Deposits /
7,145
12,690
19,835
64
Federal Funds Purchased
1,694
--
1,694
--
Other Liabilities
1,114
208
907
23
TOTAL LIABILITIES
21,008
13,207
34,216
39
Capital Notes and Debentures
151
--
151
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
536
--
536
--
Surplus
709
--
709
--
Undivided Profits
385
--
385
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
1,630
-- 3
1,630
--
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slight for foreign branches.
FORD i LIBRARY GERALD
Selected Call Report Items (December 31, 1973)
(Millions $)
First National City Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
4,110
5,016
9,127
55
Federal Funds Sold
334
-206
128
-161
Other Loans, Gross
14,890
10,876
25,766
42
Securities
3,172
863
4,035
21
Other Assets
564
1,296
1,860
70
TOTAL ASSETS
24,195
18,090
42,285
43
TOTAL DEPOSITS
18,278
16,005
34,283
47
Demand Deposits
9,401
--
9,401
--
Time Deposits 1/
8,877
16,005
24,882
64
Federal Funds Purchased
1,810
491
2,301
21
Other Liabilities
701
694
1,395
50
TOTAL LIABILITIES
21,907
18,162
40,069
45
Capital Notes and Debentures
--
--
--
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
638
--
638
--
Surplus
764
-9
755
-1
Undivided Profits
583
-42
541
-8
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
1,985
-51
1,934
-3
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand dep its.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
FORD is GERALD LIBRARY
Selected Call Report Items (December 31, 1973)
(Millions $)
Manufacturers Hanover Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
3,708
701
3,779
2
Federal Funds Sold
9
--
9
--
Other Loans, Gross
7,768
5,654
13,422
42
Securities
1,246
154
1,400
11
Other Assets
241
120
361
33
TOTAL ASSETS
13,498
5,895
19,393
30
TOTAL DEPOSITS
11,421
5,556
16,977
33
Demand Deposits
7,233
--
7,233
--
Time Deposits 1/
4,188
5,556
9,743
76
Federal Funds Purchased
576
--
576
--
Other Liabilities
182
181
363
50
TOTAL LIABILITIES
12,473
5,878
18,351
32
Capital Notes and Debentures
100
--
100
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
210
--
210
--
Surplus
340
---
340
--
Undivided Profits
201
--
201
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
751
--
751
--
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
GERALD FORD CIBRARY
Selected Call Report Items (December 31, 1973)
(Millions $)
Chemical Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
2,825
2,242
5,067
44
Federal Funds Sold
72
--
72
--
Other Loans, Gross
8,667
1,566
10,233
15
Securities
1,681
270
1,951
14
Other Assets
403
690
1,093
63
TOTAL ASSETS
14,207
22,110
36,317
61
TOTAL DEPOSITS
17,119
12,699
29,818
43
Demand Deposits
5,623
--
5,623
--
Time Deposits 1/
4,700
19,495
24,195
81
Federal Funds Purchased
1,835
-141
1,694
-8
Other Liabilities
515
392
907
43
TOTAL LIABILITIES
13,201
21,015
34,215
61
Capital Notes and Debentures
203
52
151
34
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
161
376
536
70
Surplus
302
407
709
57
Undivided Profits
198
187
385
48
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
661
969
1,630
59
1/
A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
GERALD R. FORD LIBRARA
Selected Call Report Items December 31, 1973
(Millions $)
Bankers Trust Company
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
2,791
2,997
5,788
52
Federal Funds Sold
18
--
18
--
Other Loans, Gross
6,902
2,454
9,356
26
Securities
1,032
603
1,635
37
Other Assets
241
117
358
33
TOTAL ASSETS
11,769
5,737
17,506
33
TOTAL DEPOSITS
8,528
5,487
14,015
39
Demand Deposits
5,447
--
5,447
--
Time Deposits 1/
3,082
5,486
8,568
64
Federal Funds Purchased
1,372
--
1,372
--
Other Liabilities
233
116
349
33
TOTAL LIABILITIES
11,051
5,713
16,764
34
Capital Notes and Debentures
--
--
20
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
91
--
91
--
Surplus
341
--
341
--
Undivided Profits
163
--
163
--
Total Equity Capital
595
--
595
--
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
GERALD FORD
Selected Call Report Items December 31, 1973
(Millions $)
Morgan Guaranty Trust
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
3,350
2,715
6,065
45
Federal Funds Sold
87
--
87
--
Other Loans, Gross
6,545
3,926
10,470
37
Securities
1,408
1,073
2,481
43
Other Assets
685
175
861
20
TOTAL ASSETS
13,150
7,156
20,307
35
TOTAL DEPOSITS
8,875
6,492
15,367
42
Demand Deposits
5,761
--
5,761
--
Time Deposits /
3,111
6,495
9,606
68
Federal Funds Purchased
1,569
--
1,569
--
Other Liabilities
634
321
955
34
TOTAL LIABILITIES
11,764
7,149
18,913
38
Capital Notes and Debentures
191
--
191
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
--
--
Common Stock
237
--
237
--
Surplus
427
--
427
--
Undivided Profits
359
--
359
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
1,024
--
1,024
--
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
FO
is
GERALD
BRARY
Selected Call Report Items December 31, 1973
(Millions $)
Marine Midland Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Bank
1,106
2,592
3,698
70
Federal Funds Sold
11
--
11
--
Other Loans, Gross
1,686
1,379
3,065
45
Securities
345
167
512
33
Other Assets
53
110
163
68
TOTAL ASSETS
3,363
4,207
7,570
56
TOTAL DEPOSITS
2,699
3,956
6,655
59
1,817
--
1,817
--
Demand Deposits
Time Deposits 1/
888
3,950
4,838
82
Federal Funds Purchased
273
--
273
--
Other Liabilities
104
135
239
57
TOTAL LIABILITIES
3,140
4,177
7,317
57
⑉⑉
Capital Notes and Debentures
30
30
:
--
:
:
--
Preferred Stock
Common Stock
61
--
61
:
Surplus
83
--
83
--
47
--
Undivided Profits
47
--
190
--
190
:
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
Selected Call Report Items December 31, 1973
(Millions $)
Irving Trust Company
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
1,616
1,631
3,247
50
Federal Funds Sold
51
--
51
--
Other Loans, Gross
3,230
527
3,757
14
Securities
765
31.
796
4
Other Assets
94
45
139
32
TOTAL ASSETS
6,005
2,211
8,216
27
TOTAL DEPOSITS
4,837
2,133
6,970
31
Demand Deposits
3,124
-
3,124
--
Time Deposits 1/
1,693
2,153
3,846
56
Federal Funds Purchased
325
-7
318
-2
Other Liabilities
102
57
159
36
TOTAL LIABILITIES
5,638
2,206
7,844
28
Capital Notes and Debentures
--
--
--
--
Preferred Stock
--
--
-
--
Common Stock
91
--
91
--
Surplus
153
--
153
--
Undivided Profits
78
--
78
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
323
--
323
--
A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
GERALD R. FORD $ :
Selected Call Report Items December 31, 1973
(Millions $)
Bank of New York
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to Total
Cash and Due From Banks
392
440
832
53
Federal Funds Sold
3
--
3
--
Other Loans, Gross
1,071
97
1,168
8
Securities
303
2
305
1
Other Assets
24
9
33
27
TOTAL ASSETS
1,827
546
2,373
23
TOTAL DEPOSITS
1,413
540
1,953
28
995
--
995
--
Demand Deposits
Time Deposits 1/
418
540
958
56
Federal Funds Purchased
204
--
203
--
Other Liabilities
23
6
29
21
TOTAL LIABILITIES
1,648
546
2,194
25
Capital Notes and Debentures
--
-
--
--
Preferred Stock
---
--
--
--
Common Stock
31
--
31
--
Surplus
69
--
69
--
Undivided Profits
61
1
62
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
161
1
162
:
1/ A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
Selected Call Report Items (December 31, 1973)
(Millions $)
Franklin National Bank
Total
% of
Item
Domestic
Foreign
Consolidated
Foreign to total
Cash and Due From Banks
615
581
1,196
49
Federal Funds Sold
110
--
110
--
Other Loans, Gross
2,172
595
2,767
21
Securities
626
103
729
14
Other Assets
84
27
111
24
TOTAL ASSETS
3,805
1,191
4,996
24
TOTAL DEPOSITS
2,600
1,131
3,732
30
Demand Deposits
1,410
--
1,410
:
Time Deposits 1/
1,189
1,131
2,321
49
Federal Funds Purchased
797
--
797
:
Other Liabilities
93
29
122
24
TOTAL LIABILITIES
3,551
1,192
4,743
25
Capital Notes and Debentures
58
--
58
--
Preferred Stock
19
--
19
--
Common Stock
27
--
27
:
Surplus
82
--
82
--
Undivided Profits
40
--
40
--
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
168
--
168
--
1/
A small share of deposits in foreign branches is represented by demand deposits.
Thus, this item is overstated slightly for foreign branches.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
Daily Average Euro-dollar Borrowings by U.S. Banks from their
Foreign Branches in the Computation Period Ended
March 13, 1974 and December 19, 1973
And Number of Foreign Branches
(millions of dollars)
March 13, 1974 December 19, 1973 December 31, 1973
Net Liabilities
Net Liabilities
Number of Foreign
+ Assets Sold
+ Assets Sold
Branches
Chase Mahhattan Bank, N.Y.
389.9
501.8
104
First National City Bank, N.Y.
a/*
3.1
239
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co., N.Y.
60.0
2.3
6
Chemical Bank, N.Y.
430.5
108.2
8
Bankers Trust Company, N.Y.
103.2
30.0
6
Morgan Guaranty Trust
a/*
42.6
12
Marine Midland Bank, N.Y.
13.0
27.7
5
Irving Trust Co.
a/*
114.3
5
The Bank of New York, N.Y.
31.2
60.7
2
Franklin National Bank, Brooklyn
1.0
1.1
2
*Less than $50,000
a/ Assets sold only; net liabilities were reported as negative but the amount was not shown.
b/
N.A. but assumed zero
/
Did not report
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date June 25, 1974
To
Chairman Burns
Subject: Bank Loans to Foreigners
From
Robert F. Gemmill
In response to your request at a recent briefing, I am
attaching two tables on bank loans to foreign commercial banks and
to private nonbank foreigners from November 1973 through the latest
date available.
The tables show both weekly and monthly data for these types
of loans. As the figures on outstandings suggest, the coverage of the
weekly data is considerably smaller than for the monthly data. The
weekly data are reported only by the weekly reporting banks (as regards
loans to foreign commercial banks) or by a sub-sample of these (as
regards commercial and industrial loans).
By contrast, the monthly data are reported by all banks in
the United States with foreign claims of at least $500,000, including
the following institutions which are not weekly reporting banks:
U.S. agencies, branches and subsidiaries of foreign banks, and Edge
Act Corporations.
In addition to the difference in coverage, comparison of the
two series is made difficult by the differences in timing of the report-
ing dates.
FORDO is LIBRARY GERALD
- 2 -
Table 1. Bank Loans to Foreign Commercial Banks
(millions of dollars)
Weekly data
Monthly data
Date
Amount
Date
Amount
Outstandings
1973-Nov. 28
4,543
1973-Nov. 30
4,639
1974-Jan. 2
5,093
Dec. 31
5,159
Jan. 30
4,637
1974-Jan. 31
4,988
Feb. 27
4,714
Feb. 28
5,572
Mar. 27
5,863
Mar. 31
6,450
May 1
6,365
Apr. 30
6,877
May 29
6,328
June 12
6,209
Changes (no sign = increase)
5 wks. to Jan. 2
550
December
520
4 wks. to Jan. 30
-456
January
-171
4 wks. to Feb. 27
77
February
584
4 wks. to Mar. 27
1,149
March
878
5 wks. to May 1
502
April
427
4 wks. to May 29
-37
2 wks. to June 12
-119
1/ From FR 416 filed by 328 weekly reporting banks.
2/
From Treasury foreign exchange forms.
FORD i LIBRARY 076830
- 3 -
Table 2. Bank Loans to Nonbank Private Foreigners
(millions of dollars)
Weekly data¹/
Monthly data²/
Date
Amount
Date
Amount
Outstandings
1973-Nov. 28
3,352
1973-Nov. 30
6,294
1974-Jan. 2
4,092
Dec. 31
6,464
Jan. 30
4,159
1974-Jan. 31
6,199
Feb. 27
4,017
Feb. 28
6,311
Mar. 27
4,198
Mar. 31
6,422
May 1
4,381
Apr. 30
6,816
May 29
4,478
June 12
4,647₽
Changes (no sign = increase)
5 wks. to Jan. 2
740
December
170
4 wks. to Jan. 30
67
January
-265
4 wks. to Feb. 27
-142
February
112
4 wks. to Mar. 27
181
March
111
5 wks. to May 1
183
April
394
4 wks. to May 29
97
2 wks. to June 12
169
1/ Commercial and industrial loans only. From FR 416a, filed by about 160
(one-half) of the weekly reporting banks.
2/ From Treasury foreign exchange forms.
p/ Preliminary.
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date
July 26, 1974
To
Chairman Burns
Subject: Foreign Lending and Borrowing
From Samuel Pizer op
by U.S. Banks
Reports on the balance of payments situation have indicated for
some time that U.S. banks have been very active this year as foreign
lenders, and also in borrowing from abroad. The data from the post-VFCR
monitoring reports show vividly the steep rise in the foreign assets of
U.S. banks through May, amount to $8-1/2 billion for their own account
and $1.3 billion for the account of customers. Data from the Treasury
reports used in compiling the balance of payments show the same pattern
of increase, with foreign assets rising by $9.6 billion in the January-
May period. The balance of payments data also show, however, that
short-term liabilities of the banks to private foreigners rose by $7.1
billion in the same period, so the net bank-reported outflow was about
$2-1/2 billion (table 1, attached).
Data for bank lending in June are still partial, but there was
probably an increase in claims of over $1.5 billion. Whether this was
fully offset by an increase in comparable liabilities is still not clear,
though liabilities to foreign accounts have been rising substantially,
especially in recent weeks.
I am attaching a note which explores the Treasury data in more
detail. We are also examining other data available on banks' foreign
activities and should be able to provide a more rounded picture of
these activities when more information is pulled together.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
Notes on Capital Flows Through U.S. Banks
in January - - May 1974
The following are the main points that emerge from a close look at
the monthly Treasury data on international capital flows through U.S.
banks for the period 12/73 - 5/74:
1) Total reported claims increased by $9.6 billion; total reported
liabilities (apart from Treasury obligations held in custody for foreign
official accounts) rose by $7.1 billion; consequently, net foreign claims
by banks rose by about $2-1/2 billion (table 1).
2) The gross increase in claims includes an increase of $1.3
billion in claims held for account of customers (derived from the VFCR
reports); if this also is netted out, the net increase in claims on
foreigners by banks becomes about $1.2 billion.
3. Most of the large flows of funds in both directions have been
vis-a-vis foreign banks (table 6) and much of this appears to be between
U.S. banks and their foreign branches, or the U.S. agencies and branches
of foreign banks and their head offices. Unfortunately, the Treasury
data do not give a clear breakdown for dealings among banks, but most
of what appears in table 6 represents such transactions. In that table,
it can be seen that net claims on foreign banks increased about $0.9 billion
in January-May, and that within that total there was a large increase --
about $3.8 billion -- in U.S. banks' net borrowed position vis-a-vis Europe,
and an increase in net asset positions vis-a-vis other areas, especially
a net increase of $2.9 billion in the net asset position with Japan.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
-2-
4) Within the banking data (table 6), it can be estimated from
various sources that of the $6.5 billion increase in liabilities (from
$17.2 billion to $23.7 billion) about $3.2 billion represented liabili-
ties to foreign branches of U.S. banks, and about $1.8 billion was in
liabilities to foreigners reported by U.S. agencies and branches of
foreign banks. There was only a minor increase ($0.5 billion) in
deposit liabilities to foreign banks. Most of the increase in liabilities
shows up opposite Europe, representing mainly Euro-market flows, plus an
increase of about $1.0 billion in amounts due to the Bahamas (presumably
largely to U.S. branches there). On the asset side, increases are more
scattered; the largest increase is $2.6 billion for Japan, and there is
also an increase of $1.0 billion for the Bahamas, matching the increase
in liabilities noted above.
5) Apart from transactions with foreign banks, foreign claims
and liabilities of U.S. banks did not show any striking activity in the
first five months of the year. Claims on other foreigners (tables 4 and
5) show a minor increase ($0.1 billion) in loans to foreign official
institutions and $0.3 billion in other loans. Collections outstanding
were up $0.8 billion -- mainly against Japan -- and this could be
largely customers' claims. On the liability side (tables 2 and 3),
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
there was a small reduction in liabilities to foreign official institu-
tions (other than their holdings of U.S. Government obligations), but
a large element in this was a switch by international organizations
out of CD's into Agency securities -- a matter of no significance. There
were scattered increases in banks' liabilities to foreigners other than
official institutions and banks, which aggregate to about $1.0 billion for
the five months --- but it is difficult to attach any particular significance
to this.
-3-
What can be said in general about this pattern of flows?
a) The increases reported in claims probably could not have
occurred without the lifting of the VFCR, so to some extent we are
seeing foreign loan activity shifting back to U.S. offices of the banks.
b) Changes in borrowings from foreign banks -- largely drawings
from the Eurodollar market -- are not necessarily related to the step-up
in foreign lending from U.S. offices; use of this source of funds
depends primarily on relative costs of funds here and abroad (not
necessarily realistically measured by quoted interest rates), and
probably also to a degree on banks' rules of thumb regarding some
desired distribution over time among the various sources of funds they
can draw on. In more recent weeks, there is probably an impact from
large deposits in London by oil-producing countries, in the sensethat
the London branches are unable to place such funds immediately into
appropriate channels abroad, so that a large residual amount spills
over into U.S. money markets.
c) There is little evidence of direct lending to countries
especially hit by increases in their oil imports (except for Japan,
where other factors also operate), and probably only the beginnings
of any direct placements in the U.S. by the oil-producing countries.
Samuel Pizer
FORD is LIBRARY GERALD
July 26, 1974
Table 1
International Capital Flows Reported by U.S. Banks
(in billions of dollars; outflow from U.S. (-))
1973
1974
Year
Q-1
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
April
May
Jan-
Ma
Capital flows reported by U.S. banks
Short-term claims on foreigners.
-5.0
-4.9
- .4
-1.9
-2.7
- .9
-3.0
-8.8
Liquid
-1.1
-2.2
- .6
- .9
- .8
+.5
-1.5
-3.2
Nonliquid
-3.9
-2.7
+.2
-1.0
-1.9
-1.4
-1.5
-5.6
Short-term liabilities to private foreigners
+4.4
+4.3
+.4
+1.7
+2.2
+.2
+2.6
+7.1
To: Commercial banks
+3.0
+4.4
+.4
+1.7
+2.3
*
+2.2
+6.6
International & regional organizations
+.4
- .6
*
- .1
- .4
- .1
+.3
- .4
Other foreigners
+1.1
+.6
+.1
+.2
+ .3
+.3
+.1
+1.0
(to foreign branches of U.S. banks)
(+ .3)
(+3.4)
(- .2)
(*)
(+3.6)
(-2.0)
(+1.8)
(+3.2)
Net short-term banking flows
- .6
-- - .6
--
- .2 -
- .5
- .7
- .4
-1.7
Long-term claims on foreigners
- .8
- .2
+.1
-.1
- .2
- .6
*
- .8
Net flows, short- and long-term
-1.4
- .8
+.1
- .3
- .7
-1.3
- .4
-2.5
1/ Includes temporary month-end bulge in March of about $2.0 billion, which was reversed in April.
* = Less than $50 million.
Details may not add to totals because of rounding.
GERALE R. FORD
Table 2
CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
Liabilities to Foreigners Reported by U.S. Banks
(Treasury B-1 Reports), Outstanding 12/73 and 5/74
($ billions)
December 1973
Official
Commercial Banks
Other
Deposits
Treas.
Deposits
Deposits
Fgn.
Total
Demand Time
Oblig.
Other
Total
Demand Time Other-
Total
Demand Time
Other
/
Curr.
Total
45.9'
2.2
4.0
31.9
7.8
17.2
6.9
.5
9.7
5.7
2.2
2.5
1.0
.6
Europe
31.6
.6
1.8
24.7
4.6
7.7
3.8
.1
3.7
1.2
.5
.3
.5
.4
(U.K.)
(3.0)
(x)
(-)
(3.0)
-
(2.6)
(.7)
(.1)
(1.8)
(.4)
(.1)
(x)
(.3)
(.1)
Canada
.8
X
X
.7
.1
2.3
.2
.2
1.9
.7
.3
.3
.1
.1
Latin America
2.5
.8
1.1
.2
.4
2.0
1.0
.1
.9
3.0
1.0
1.6
.4
X
Venezuela
(1.0)
(.2)
(.7)
-
(.1)
( .1)
(.1)
(x)
(x)
(.3)
(.1)
(.2)
(x)
( x)
Bahamas
-
-
-
-
-
(.7)
(.1)
(.1)
( .5)
(.1)
-
-
-
-
Asia
5.5
.5
.6
3.4
.9
4.6
1.4
.1
3.1
.7
.3
.3
.1
.1
Japan
(3.7)
(.1)
(x)
(3.0)
(.5)
(3.2)
(.7)
(x)
(2.5)
(.1)
(x)
(x)
( x)
( x)
Africa
.6
.1
.1
.4
X
.3
.3
X
X
.1
.1
X
X
X
Other Countries
2.9
X
.3
2.0
.5
.2
.2
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Int'l Orgs.
2.0
.1
.1
.3
1.5
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
"
May 1974
Total
47.3
2.4
4.0
33.8
7.0
23.7
7.1
.8
15.9
6.7
2.3
2.9
1.5
7
Europe
28.5
.6
1.5
22.3
4.1
12.8
3.9
.3
8.6
1.6
.6
.3
.7
.4
(U.K.)
(2.8)
(.1)
(x)
(2.6)
(x)
(5.4)
(.5)
(.1)
(4.7)
(.6)
(.1)
(.1)
(.3)
(.1)
Canada
1.0
X
X
.9
X
2.4
.2
.2
2.0
.6
.2
.2
.1
.2
Latin America
3.3
.8
1.3
.5
.7
3.4
1.0
.2
2.2
3.5
1.0
2.0
.4
X
Venezuela
(1.8)
(.4)
(1.1)
-
(.3)
(.1)
(.1)
(x)
(x)
(.4)
(.1)
(.2)
( x)
( x)
Bahamas
(x)
-
-
-
-
(1.7)
(x)
(.2)
(1.5)
(.1)
X
x
x
x
Asia
8.9
.6
.7
6.9
.6
4.5
1.4
.1
3.0
.9
.4
.3
.2
X
Japan
(6.0)
(.1)
(x)
(5.8)
(.1)
(2.9)
(.6)
( x)
(2.3)
(.1)
(.1)
(x)
( x)
( x)
Africa
1.5
.2
.1
1.1
(x)
.4
.4
X
X
.1
.1
X
X
X
Other Countries
2.8
X
.2
2.0
.5
.2
.2
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Int'l Orgs.
1.3
.1
.1
X
1.1
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
1/ Includes CD's.
X = Less than $50 million.
GERALD
Details may not add to totals because of rounding.
CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
Table 3
Changes in Liabilities to Foreigners Reported by U.S. Banks
(Treasury B-1 Reports), 12/73 -- 5/74
($ billions)
Official
Commercial Banks
Other
Deposits
Treas.
Deposits
Deposits
1/
Fgn.
Total
Demand Time
1/
Oblig. Other
Total
Demand Time Other
Total
Demand Time
Other
Curr.
Total
+1.4
+.2
-
+1.9
-.8
+6.5
+.2
+.3
+6.2
+1.0
+.1
+.4
+.5
+.1
Europe
-3.1
-
-.3
-2.4
-.5
+5.1
+.1
+.2
+4.9
+.4
+.1
-
+.2
-
(U.K.)
(- .2)
(+.1)
(0)
(- .4)
(0)
(+2.8)
(-.2)
(-)
(+2.9)
(+ .2)
(-)
(+.1)
(-)
( - )
Canada
+.2
0
0
+.2
-.1
+.1
-
-
+.1
- .1
-.1
-.1
-
+.1
Latin America
+.8
-
+.2
+.3
+.3
+1.4
-
+.1
+1.3
+.5
-
+.4
-
0
Venezuela
(+.8)
(+.2)
(+.4)
( - )
(+.2)
(-)
(-)
(0)
(0)
(+ .1)
(-)
(-)
( 0 )
(0)
Bahamas
( 0 )
( -- - )
(-)
(- - )
(-)
(+1.0)
(-.1)
(+.1)
(+1.0)
( - )
(0)
(0)
(0)
(0)
Asia
+3.4
+.1
+.1
+3.5
-.3
- .1
-
-
- .1
+.2
+.1
-
+.1
-.1
Japan
(+2.3)
(-)
(0)
(+2.8)
(-.4)
(- .3)
(-.1)
(0)
(- .2)
( - )
(+.1)
(0)
(0)
(0)
Africa
+.9
+.1
-
+.7
0
+.1
+.1
0
0
-
-
0
0
n
Other Countries
- .1
0
-.1
-
-
-
-
0
0
0
0
0
0
Int'l Orgs.
- .7
-
-
- .3
-.4
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
I
-
1/ Includes CD's.
X = Less than $50 million.
Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.
R.
GERALD
FORD
LIBRARY
Table 4
Claims on Foreigners Reported by U.S. Banks
(Treasury B-2 & B-3 Reports), 12/73 and 5/74
($ billions)
December 1973
Loans
Total
Offic.
Banks
Other
Total
Collect.
Accept.
Other
For.
B-3
B-2 &
Total
Curr.
Total
B-3
Total
, 20.7
.3
4.6
2.9
7.7
4.3
4.2
3.9
.7
5.9
26.6
Europe
4.0
.1
1.4
.4
1.8
.5
.2
1.2
.3
1.2
5.2
(U.K.)
(1.5)
(x)
( .5)
(.1)
(.6)
( .1)
( .1)
( .6)
(.1)
(.1)
(1.6)
Canada
2.0
X
.2
.6
.8
X
.1
.8
.3
.5
2.5
Latin America
5.9
.1
1.8
1.6
3.4
.7
.9
.8
.1
2.1
8.0
Venezuela
( .5)
x
( .1)
(.3)
(.4)
( .1)
X
X
X
(.3)
( .8)
Bahamas
( .9)
-
( .2)
(.1)
(.2)
X
X
( .6)
X
(x)
( .9)
Asia
8.2
.1
1.1
.2
1.5
3.0
2.7
1.1
X
1.5
9.7
Japan
(6.4)
X
( .7)
(x)
(.7)
(2.6)
(2.2)
( .9)
X
(.2)
(6.6)
Africa
.4
X
.1
.1
.2
.1
.1
X
X
.4
.8
Other Countries
.3
X
X
X
.1
.1
.1
X
X
.2
.5
May 1974
Total
29.6
.4
6.6
3.2
10.2
5.1
6.5
7.0
.9
6.7
36.
Europe
5.6
.1
2.0
.4
2.6
.5
.3
1.8
.4
1.7
7.3
(U.K.)
(2.2)
X
( .6)
(.1)
(.7)
( .1)
( .1)
(1.2)
(.1)
(.2)
(2.4)
Canada
2.4
X
.2
.4
.6
X
.1
1.3
.3
.5
2.9
Latin America
8.3
.1
2.5
1.8
4.5
.7.
1.1
1.8
.1
2.4
10.7
Venezuela
( .6)
X
( .1)
(.3)
(.4)
( .1)
X
X
X
(.3)
( .9)
Bahamas
(1.9)
X
( .3)
(.1)
(.4)
X
x
(1.5)
X
( x)
(1.9)
Asia
12.4
.1
1.6
.4
2.2
3.5
4.6
1.9
.1
1.6
14.0
Japan
(9.7)
X
(1.0)
(.2)
(1.3)
(3.1)
(3.7)
(1.7)
(.1)
(.2)
(9.9)
Africa
.6
X
.1
.1
.3
.1
.1
X
X
.3
.9
Other Countries
.4
X
.1
X
.1
.1
.2
X
X
.2
.6
FORD
Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.
GERALD
LIBRARY
X = Less than $50 million.
Table 5
Change in Claims on Foreigners Reported by U.S. Banks
(Treasury B-2 & B-3 Reports), 12/73 -- 5/74
($ billions)
Loans
Total
Offic.
Banks
Other
Total
Collect
Accept.
Other
For.
B-3
B-2 &
Total
Curr.
Total
B-3
Total
+8.9
+.1
+2.0
+.3
+2.5
+.8
+2.3
+3.1
+.2
+.8
+9.6
Europe
+1.6
-
+.6
-
+.8
-
+.1
+.6
+.1
+.5
+2.1
(U.K.)
(+.7)
(0)
(+.1)
(-)
(+.1)
(-)
(-)
(+.6)
(-)
(+.1)
(+.8)
Canada
+.4
0
-
-.2
- .2
0
-
+.5
-
-
+.4
Latin America
+2.4
-
+.7
+.2
+1.1
-
+.2
+1.0
-
+.3
+2.7 -
Venezuela
(+.1)
(0)
(- - )
(-)
( - )
(-)
(0)
( 0 )
(0)
( - )
(+.1)
Bahamas
(+1.0)
(0)
(+ .1)
(-)
(+ .2)
(0)
(0)
(+.9)
(0)
(0)
(+1.0)
Asia
+4.2
-
+.5
+.2
+.7
+.5
+1.9
+.8
+.1
+.1
+4.3
Japan
(+3.3)
(0)
(+.3)
(+.2)
(+ .6)
(+.5)
(+1.5)
(+.8)
(+.1)
(-)
(+3.3)
Africa
+.2
0
-
-
+.1
-
-
0
0
-.1
+
Other Countries
+.1
0
+.1
0
-
-
+.1
0
0
-
+.1
X = Less than $50 million.
Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.
is
GERALD
FORD
LIBERTY
Table 6
CONFIDENTIAL (FR)
U.S. Banks' Positions Vis-a-Vis Banks Abroad - 12/73 and 5/74
($ billions)
December 1973
Change in
Due to Foreign Banks
Due from Foreign Banks
Net
Net Position
Total
Deposits
Other
Total
Loans
Accept.
Other
Position
12/73 - 5/74
Total
, 17.2
7.4
9.7
12.7
4.6
4.2
3.9
-4.5
Europe
7.7
3.9
3.7
2.8
1.4
.2
1.2
-4.9
(U.K.)
(2.6)
( .8)
(1.8)
(1.2)
( .5)
( .1)
( .6)
(-1.4)
Canada
2.3
.4
1.9
1.1
.2
.1
.8
-1.2
Latin America
2.0
1.1
.9
3.5
1.8
.9
.8
+1.5
DEPARTMENT
3)
Venezuela
( .1)
( .1)
(0)
( .1)
( .1)
( 0 )
( 0 )
( 0 )
Bahamas
( .7)
( .2)
( .5)
( .8)
( .2)
(0)
( .6)
(+ .1)
Asia
4.6
1.5
3.1
4.9
1.1
2.7
1.1
+ .3
Japan
(3.2)
( .7)
(2.5)
(3.8)
( .7)
(2.2)
( .9)
(+ .6)
Africa
.3
.3
0
.2
.1
.1
0
- .1
Other Countries
.2
.2
0
.1
0
.1
0
- .1
May 1974
Total
23.7
7.9
15.8
20.1
6.6
6.5
7.0
-3.6
+.9
Europe
12.8
4.2
8.5
4.1
2.0
.3
1.8
-8.7
-3.8
(U.K.)
(5.4)
( .6)
(4.7)
(1.9)
( .6)
( .1)
(1.2)
(-3.5)
(-2.1)
Canada
2.4
.4
2.0
1.6
.2
.1
1.3
- .8
+ .4
Latin America
3.4
1.2
2.2
5.5
2.5
1.1
1.8
+2.1
+ .6
Venezuela
( .1)
( .1)
( 0 )
( .1)
( .1)
(0)
(0)
-
-
Bahamas
(1.7)
( .2)
(1.5)
(1.8)
( .3)
(0)
(1.5)
(+ .1)
-
Asia
4.5
1.5
3.0
8.2
1.6
4.6
1.9
+3.7
+3.4
Japan
(2.9)
( .6)
(2.3)
(6.4)
(1.0)
(3.7)
(1.7)
(+3.5)
(+2.9)
Africa
.4
.4
0
.3
.1
.1
.1
- .1
0
Other Countries
.2
.2
0
.3
.1
.2
0
+.1
+.2
1/ "Other" includes, among other things, accounts between U.S. banks and their foreign branches or head offices.
X = Less than $50 million.
Detail may not add to totals because of rounding.
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL BOARD RESERVE SYSTEM
OF GOVERNORS
Office Correspondence
OF THE
DERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Date August 22, 1974
Records Section
To
1974 AUG 27 Subject: Changes in Overseas Branches of
AND
United States Banks and Foreign
From Frederick R. Dahl
OFFICE OF RECEIVED THE CHAIRMAN
Banking Corporations during
quarter ended June 30, 1974
Overseas Branches Opened
Chemical Bank, New York
Singapore
4-22-74
The First National Bank of Boston, Boston
Frankfurt, Germany
5-14-74
Tokyo, Japan
6-3-74
The First National Bank of Chicago, Chicago
Bridgetown, Barbados
6-19-74
Newcastle-Upon-Tyne,
England
6-10-74
Nairobi, Kenya
6-3-74
Dubai, United Arab
Emirates
4-15-74
The First National Bank of Denver, Denver
Georgetown, Grand Cayman,
Cayman Islands, W.I.
6-12-74
First National City Bank, New York
Cartagena, Colombia
5-28-74
Amman, Jordan
6-1-74
Port Louis, Mauritius
6-3-74
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, New York
Bucharest, Romania
5-27-74
Mellon Bank, N.A., Pittsburgh
Tokyo, Japan
4-15-74
Seattle-First National Bank, Seattle
London, England
4-16-74
United Virginia Bank, Richmond
Georgetown, Grand Cayman,
Cayman Islands, W.I.
5-1-74
Worcester County National Bank, Worcester
Georgetown, Grand Cayman,
Cayman Islands, W.I.
4-22-74
Overseas Branches Closed
The Chase Manhattan Bank, National Association,
New York
Castries, St. Lucia
4-9-74
First National City Bank, New York
Bahia Blanca, Argentina
4-30-74
M & I Marshall & Ilsley Bank, Milwaukee
Nassau, Bahamas
6-30-74
Wells Fargo Bank, National Association,
San Francisco
Frankfurt, Germany
5-31-74
FORD & LIBRARY GLRALD
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As of June 30, 1974, overseas branches of member banks and foreign
banking Corporations totaled 736 as follows:
State Member Banks
American Security and Trust Company, Washington, D.C.
1
The Bank of New Orleans and Trust Company, New Orleans
1
The Bank of New York, New York
2
Bankers Trust Company, New York
6
Chemical Bank, New York
10
The Cleveland Trust Company, Cleveland
1
Commerce Union Bank, Nashville
1
The Connecticut Bank and Trust Company, Hartford
1
The Detroit Bank & Trust Company, Detroit
1
The Fidelity Bank, Rosemont, Pennsylvania
2
Fidelity Union Trust Company, Newark
1
First Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Company, Bala-Cynwyd
3
First Virginia Bank, Falls Church
1
Girard Trust Bank, Bala-Cynwyd, Pennsylvania
1
Harris Trust and Savings Bank, Chicago
2
Irving Trust Company, New York
5
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, New York
7
Marine Midland Bank-New York, New York
5
Marine Midland Bank-Western, Buffalo
1
Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York, New York
12
The Northern Trust Company, Chicago
2
Old Kent Bank and Trust Company, Grand Rapids
1
Peoples Trust of New Jersey, Hackensack
1
Southern Arizona Bank and Trust Company, Tucson
1
State Street Bank and Trust Company, Boston
1
Trust Company of Georgia, Atlanta
1
Union Bank, Los Angeles
1
The Union Commerce Bank, Cleveland
1
United California Bank, Los Angeles
3
United Virginia Bank, Richmond
2
78
National Banks
American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Company, Indianapolis
2
American National Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, Chicago
2
American National Bank and Trust Company of New Jersey, Montclair
1
Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association,
San Francisco
104
GERALD FORD
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The Bank of California National Association, San Francisco
2
Bank of the Southwest National Association, Houston
1
Capital National Bank, Houston
1
Central National Bank in Chicago, Chicago
1
Central National Bank of Cleveland, Cleveland
1
Central Penn National Bank, Philadelphia
1
The Chase Manhattan Bank, National Association, New York
103
The Citizens and Southern National Bank, Savannah
1
City National Bank of Detroit, Detroit
1
Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company of
Chicago, Chicago
15
Crocker National Bank, San Francisco
2
Equibank N.A., Pittsburgh
2
Exchange National Bank of Chicago, Chicago
3
The Fidelity National Bank, Lynchburg, Virginia
1
First and Merchants National Bank, Richmond
1
First American National Bank, Nashville
1
First City National Bank of Houston, Houston
2
The First National Bank and Trust Company of Tulsa, Tulsa
1
First National Bank in Dallas, Dallas
3
First National Bank in St. Louis, St. Louis
1
First National Bank of Arizona, Phoenix
1
First National Bank of Atlanta, Atlanta
1
The First National Bank of Birmingham, Birmingham
1
The First National Bank of Boston, Boston
31
The First National Bank of Chicago, Chicago
21
First National Bank of Commerce, New Orleans
1
The First National Bank of Denver, Denver
1
First National Bank of Fort Worth, Fort Worth
1
First National Bank of Louisville, Louisville
1
First National Bank of Maryland, Baltimore
1
First National Bank of Memphis, Memphis
1
The First National Bank of Miami, Miami
1
First National Bank of Minneapolis, Minneapolis
1
First National Bank of Oregon, Portland
1
The First National Bank of Saint Paul, St. Paul
1
First National City Bank, New York
247
The First New Haven National Bank, New Haven
1
First National State Bank of New Jersey, Newark
1
First Union National Bank of North Carolina, Charlotte
1
First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, Milwaukee
1
The Fort Worth National Bank, Fort Worth
1
Franklin National Bank, Brooklyn, New York
2
R.
FORD
GERALD
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-4-
Hartford National Bank and Trust Company, Hartford
1
Hibernia National Bank, New Orleans
1
Houston National Bank, Houston
1
The Huntington National Bank, Columbus
1
The Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis, Indianapolis
2
Industrial National Bank, Providence
1
LaSalle National Bank, Chicago
1
The Liberty National Bank and Trust Company, Oklahoma City
1
Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit, Detroit
1
Marine National Exchange Bank, Milwaukee
1
Maryland National Bank, Baltimore
1
Mellon Bank, N.A., Pittsburgh
3
Mercantile Trust Company National Association, St. Louis
1
Merchants National Bank and Trust Company of Indianapolis,
Indianapolis
1
Midlantic National Bank, Newark
1
National Bank of Commerce, Memphis
1
The National Bank of Commerce of Seattle, Seattle
2
National Bank of Detroit, Detroit
3
National Bank of North America, New York
1
National Central Bank, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
1
The National City Bank of Cleveland, Cleveland
1
National City Bank of Minneapolis, Minneapolis
1
The National Shawmut Bank of Boston, Boston
1
New England Merchants National Bank, Boston
1
New Jersey Bank National Association, Clifton
1
North Carolina National Bank, Charlotte
2
Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis, Minneapolis
2
The Omaha National Bank, Omaha
1
The Philadelphia National Bank, Philadelphia
2
Pittsburgh National Bank, Pittsburgh
1
Provident National Bank, Bryn-Mawr, Pennsylvania
1
Republic National Bank of Dallas, Dallas
2
Republic National Bank of New York, New York
1
The Riggs National Bank of Washington, D.C.
1
Seattle-First National Bank, Seattle
2
Security Pacific National Bank, Los Angeles
4
Society National Bank of Cleveland, Cleveland
1
Sterling National Bank & Trust Company, New York
1
Texas Commerce Bank National Association, Houston
2
Third National Bank in Nashville, Nashville
1
BERALD FORD
-5-
Union Planters National Bank of Memphis, Memphis
1
United Bank of Denver, National Association, Denver
1
United States National Bank of Oregon, Portland
1
United Virginia Bank/Seaboard National, Norfolk
1
Valley National Bank of Arizona, Phoenix
1
Virgin Islands National Bank, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas
4
Virginia National Bank, Norfolk
1
Wachovia Bank and Trust Company, National Association,
Winston-Salem
1
Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, San Francisco
3
The Whitney National Bank of New Orleans, New Orleans
1
Winters National Bank and Trust Company of Dayton, Dayton
1
Worcester County National Bank, Worcester
1
644
722
Section 25 (a) Corporations
Allied Bank International, New York
2
Bank of America, New York
1
Bank of Boston International, New York
1
Detroit Bank and Trust International, Detroit
1
First National City Overseas Investment Corporation, New York
1
International Bank of Commerce, Seattle
5
International Bank of Detroit, Detroit
1
Philadelphia International Investment Corporation, Philadelphia
1
State Street Bank Boston International, New York
1
14
736
is
FORD
GERALD
LIBRARY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date October 23, 1974
To
Board of Governors
Subject: Board policy on bank expansion:
Applications to expand into the Middle
From Divisions of Banking Supervision and
East and/or OPEC countries.
M6M
Regulation and International Finance
(Messrs. Martinson, Dahl and Gemmill)
Issues
The Board is currently following a policy of denying applications
which involve "significant" expansionary projects by banks whose condition is
viewed as less than satisfactory. Most of the large U.S. banks engaged in
international banking fall into that category. Several of these are now
seeking to enter the Middle East, a financially important area which has
heretofore been largely neglected by U.S. banks. The issue before the Board
is whether there are special public benefits, beyond those generally present
in foreign investments, which warrant making an exception to the Board's
policy on expansion for applications involving ventures in the Middle East
and/or OPEC countries.
Accompanying this memorandum are applications from major U.S banks
involving Iran, Kuwait, Bahrain, Egypt, and Nigeria. As can be seen, these
applications involve oil producing countries and non-oil producing of the
Middle East as well as one non-Middle East oil producing country. Because of
the differences among the applications, not all of the policy arguments set
forth in this memorandum may apply to each application.
The discussion in this memorandum refers to the Middle East as a
whole and not just to the oil producing countries. This is done for two
reasons. First, the "oil problem" is usually discussed in terms of the region
as a whole because of political, cultural, and linguistic ties between the
various countries. Second, probably the most important applications to other
government agencies involve Egypt, a non-oil producing but politically important
country in the region.
The Nigerian application is included in the batch currently before the
Board because, while it is not in the Middle East, it is a major oil
producer and many of the policy arguments in the memo would apply to it.
Also, this application helps to illustrate some of the problems involved
in trying to distinguish between applications on the basis of the country
involved.
DECLASSIFIED
FORD is GERALD LIBRARY
AUTHORITY Ful. Syste the 11/16/82
State guiddings
BY taln NARA, DATE 9/11/09
-2-
Background
The presence of U.S. banks in the Middle East is currently limited
except in Lebanon where many large U.S. banks operate branches or subsidiary
banks. The only Middle East oil countries in which U.S. banks are well
represented are the United Arab Emirates, where four banks have branches
or joint venture banks. The other U.S. banking operations in the area are
two branches of First National City Bank (FNCB) in Saudi Arabia, an FNCB
branch in Jordan, branches of FNCB and Chase Manhattan in Bahrain, and joint
venture banks by FNCB and Continental Illinois in Iran.
The recent massive flow of oil money to Middle East countries is now
prompting major U.S. banks to seek to increase their presence in the area.
The primary goals of the banks entering the area appear to be: (1) to share
in the financing which will be involved in many of the internal development
projects contemplated by countries in the region; (2) to obtain better ac-
cess to deposits of the oil producing countries; and (3) to sell their inter-
national investment advisory and trust services to these countries. Banks
hope that having operating facilities "on the spot" will better enable them
to accomplish these goals.
Possible special public benefits associated with Middle East investments
The prinicpal economic argument that might be advanced in support
of giving special consideration to ventures by U.S. banks in the Middle East
is the possible assistance of such ventures in providing suitable investment
outlets for revenues of oil producing countries. That argument has two strands.
First, the ventures may facilitate increased local utilization of funds within
the region, thereby increasing imports and reducing the Middle East's balance
of payments surplus with the rest of the world. Second, operations of U.S.
banks in the Middle East might aid in providing financing to oil consuming
countries. On balance though, the staff finds neither of these arguments
sufficiently persuasive to justify making an exception on economic grounds
to the Board's general policy on expansion. The Board will, of course,
wish to ascertain whether there are special political considerations to be
taken into account in connection with these applications.
Increased local utilization of funds
The Middle East has long been neglected by major international
financial institutions and because of its generally underdeveloped character,
efficient local financial institutions have not developed. Bankers and
others argue that the lack of such locally-based institutions severely limits
the ability of the region to utilize its petroleum revenues for internal
projects. It is possible that U.S. banks, by establishing new facilities in
the area, would help fill this void. Indeed, one of the apparent reasons for
the recent invitation by the Egyptians to the U.S. banks to establish offices
FORD i LIBRARY GERALD
-3-
in that country is the belief that those banks will be able to assist in the
financing of the development projects Egypt is planning, and that their expertise
will help Egypt attract "petrodollars" for these projects from other Arab
countries. The latter have indicated an interest in placing money in Egypt but
have reportedly been reluctant to do so on a large scale because of the
inefficiency of Egyptian institutions. Many of the other proposed ventures
before the Board are also to some extent aimed at providing local financing for
internal capital projects.
Some of the applications before the Board involve joint ventures with
local institutions (in some cases government entities). It is argued that these
ventures can play an especially significant role in helping to solve the
"utilization problem". This is because there are benefits resulting from these
ventures in addition to those accruing from their financing activities. The
joint ventures involve the local partner (usually a major institution) in a
close working relationship with an international bank with the expertise which
is often lacking in the local environment. This can increase the speed with
which local institutions are able to accept and adopt modern financial practices.
Another favorable aspect of some of these ventures is that they inject some Middle
East money in the form of capital into the international banking system.
While operations of U.S. banks may in fact provide some of these
benefits, their effect is likely to be marginal and then of a long-term character.
The real limiting factor in the utilization of oil revenues within the Middle
East is the non-modern character of the economic, social and political structures
of the region. These structures are not likely to change appreciably in the near
term. Even in Egypt, with its large population, the economic and political
structure makes it unlikely that the country will be able to attract or utilize
petrodollars in amounts large enough to make any appreciable impact on the
"recycling" problem.
Facilitating lending to oil consuming countries
The establishment of facilities by U.S. banks in the Middle East is
unlikely to have any significant impact on the provision of loans to oil consuming
countries. To the extent that banks participate in the reallocation process,
this function can be carried out adequately through facilities which U.S. and
other international banks have already established in the major money centers.
In fact, it appears that the proposed Middle East ventures seem to be designed
primarily as local or regional lending institutions and not as international
financial entities.
GERALD
LIBRARY
-4-
Effect on allocation of "petrodollar" deposits among U.S. banks
It is possible that the proposed Middle East ventures may help
individual U.S. banks broaden their access to petrodollar funds, thereby
adding to deposit stability. In particular, this seems to be the motivation
of Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company (CINB) in its proposed
joint venture in Bahrain. CINB believes that this joint venture will help it
obtain deposits from Gulf states from which it is not currently receiving
deposits. However, so far the record of joint ventures in achieving this goal
is not impressive. For example, officers of CINB have stated that even though
their bank has been a partner in a joint venture bank in Iran for about a year,
CINB is not getting any of Iran's petrodollars. Similarly, a senior officer
of Morgan Guaranty has indicated that he does not believe that Morgan's
participation in a Lebanese joint venture bank with a Kuwaiti government agency
has given Morgan any special benefits in dealing with Kuwait (Morgan though is
apparently getting substantial Kuwaiti funds for other reasons).
It should also be noted that to the extent these ventures do give
particular U.S. banks more favorable access to petrodollar funds, the benefits
will probably go primarily to those few banks which are already receiving the
"lion's share" of these funds. Most of the applications currently before the
Board involve the "giant" banks, and it seems likely that these banks are
precisely the ones which the Arabs will allow to enter future ventures in the
area.
Problems associated with the Board distinguishing among countries
The primary difficulty with making an exception for the Middle East
cases is the problem of differentiating among applications on the basis of the
country involved. One aspect of the problem concerns how to make any distinction
on this basis in such a manner that the Board's overall policy on expansion is
not seriously compromised. Another concerns potential political problems for
the Board associated with, in effect, saying that investments by "overextended"
U.S. banks in some countries are in the public interest while similar ventures
in other countries (or in the United States) are not. A third aspect of this
problem is the effect any Board action on these cases will have on the nation's
overall foreign policy goals.
The Board has taken the position that banks with "insufficient" capital
should not be permitted to undertake new significant expansionary projects at this
time. Therefore, any exception would have to be based on a finding that there
were special public benefits associated with a particular application (assuming
it was not "insignificant"), that outweighed the Board's concerns over the
financial condition of the bank involved. The applications currently before the
GERALD FORD (IBRART
&
FORD
GERALD
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Board illustrate some of the difficulties of making such exceptions on the
basis of the country involved. For example, the Board could rule that there
is a special benefit associated with permitting U.S. banks to go into major
oil producing countries, since it would contribute to solving the "recycling"
problem. However, a ruling on that basis would presumably exclude the
Egyptian applications and could include countries like Canada, Venezuela, etc.
Alternatively, if the Board based its decision on the grounds that because
U.S. banks are not well represented in the Middle East, there is a special
public benefit (e.g., the promotion of U.S. foreign commerce with the area) in
allowing current entry, what about other areas where U.S. banks are not well
represented? Also, how would the Board determine when an area had adequate
representation? Could the Board make an exception to allow some "undercapitalized"
U.S. banks into a country and then at a future date bar entry to other banks in
similar financial condition on the basis that U.S. representation was now
adequate?
In general, it seems possible to find some special circumstances
associated with virtually any foreign application which could be used to justify
an exception to the Board's expansion policy. Thus, by making an exception in
the Middle East cases, a risk would be run that one exception will lead to another
and to a consequent deterioration of the rule itself.
Distinguishing among applications on the basis of the country involved
could also create certain political problems for the Board. Such distinctions
would in effect result in the Board indicating publicly that it viewed some
countries as more important (or more deserving of U.S. investment funds) than
others. Already, the staff has had inquiries from the Philipping Embassy about
whether the Board was discriminating against the Philippines because of the denial
of a Bankers Trust application to invest there. Approval of investments in
some countries but not others would undoubtedly lead to more inquiries of this
nature. Also, to approve new foreign ventures, while at the same time denying
applications for domestic expansion, could lead to criticism that the Board was
permitting U.S. banks to use their scarce capital resources to finance foreign
ventures (particularly those involving rich Arab countries), but not allowing
them to provide additional financial services to U.S. consumers.
These possible political consequences for the Board are intertwined
with the U.S. Government's foreign policy considerations. As is well known,
the Egyptian ventures were promoted and announced during Secretary Simon's trip
to Cairo. Discussion has been held with State and Treasury Departments about
their attitudes toward these investments. These discussions have included
conversations by Governor Wallich with Assistant Secretary's Enders and Parsky,
as well as conversations on the staff level. From these conversations it appears
that the greatest interest is in the Egyptian applications and that much less
importance from a foreign policy view is attached to investments in other Middle
East countries. A formal response from Treasury (see attached) mentions only the
Egyptian applications. Formal views of State have been requested and will be
circulated to the Board.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has encountered similar reactions
because of its classification of certain assets on the basis of country risk.
- -6-
Recommendations and Conclusions
The staff believes that based on economic and banking considerations, no
exceptions to the Board's policy on expansion should be made for applications
involving Middle East countries. While the establishment of facilities by
U.S. banks in these countries may help the area utilize more of its funds
internally (and presumably reduce its balance of payments surplus by stimulating
imports), the effect is likely to be marginal and any public benefits appear
to be outweighed by the disadvantages associated with differentiating among
applications on a country or regional basis. However, as discussed above, there
are foreign policy considerations involved in some of these applications. In
particular, the Board may wish to give special treatment to the Egyptian
applications based on State and Treasury's strong interest in those proposals.
Attachment - Letter from Department of the Treasury dated October 23, 1974.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
OF
THE
THE 1789 TREASURY
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220
ASSISTANT SECRETARY
OCT 23 1972
Dear Mr. Dahl:
Representatives of my office have discussed
with you applications now before the Federal Reserve
by Chase Manhattan Bank and Manufacturers Hanover
Trust Company for authorization to establish certain
banking operations in Egypt. I would like to set
forth the reasons for our support of these applic-
ations.
As you are aware the Egyptian Government has
made a major commitment to undertake significant and
greatly needed liberalization of Egypt's economy,
and to spur the development of both domestic and
foreign investment as a means of providing a compet-
itive influence presently lacking in Egypt's economic
and financial system.
During his visit to Egypt in July, Secretary
Simon warmly endorsed this policy, including Egypt's
willingness to permit foreign banking institutions
to operate in Egypt. While the Secretary was in
Cairo, the Egyptian Government demonstrated its good
faith and announced approval of the applications of
four foreign banks to establish operations in that
country. Several weeks ago Egyptian Minister Taher
Amin asked the Secretary for assistance in facili-
tating U.S. approval of the present applications so
that these new activities can commence.
We believe that the presence of U.S. banks in
Egypt will be a first, but nonetheless significant
step in introducing into the financial structure of
Egypt institutions that will aid in more efficient
SERALD R. FORD
- 2 -
allocation of resources through a more market-oriented
mechanism. As such it will assist in the process of
stimulating the economic development of Egypt, and
will not only supplement other efforts by the U.S.
Government to aid this process, but will help estab-
lish the conditions of self-sustaining development,
bringing nearer the day when broad official aid is no
longer required.
For these reasons, we feel that Board approval
of the applications now before the Federal Reserve
is extremely important in furtherance of our political
and economic objectives in Egypt and that denial of,
or undue delay in acting upon, these applications
will be not only a source of embarrassment to the U.S.
Government, but counterproductive to our other efforts
in that country.
I hope that the Board will take these consider-
ations into account in deciding upon the applications
of the two banks with respect to Egypt and that it
will be able to act upon them affirmatively.
Sincerely yours,
Gerald J. Passby
Gerald L. Parsky
Mr. Fred Dahl
Assistant Director
Division of Banking Supervision
and Regulation
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System
Washington, D.C. 20551
BERALD FORD LIBRARY
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date October 30, 1974
To
Chairman Burns
Subject: Expansion of American Banks
From Brenton C. Leavitt
Into OPEC Countries and Egypt
BEL
For Use When Talking to Secretary Kissinger
The expansion of large U.S. banks into oil producing countries
and Egypt raises several issues possibly involving even the national
wellbeing.
Applications currently before the Board in this area
are:
1. Chase Manhattan asks permission to acquire up to 40 per
cent of Iran Chase International Bank (a commercial bank) for $10.5
million. The other partner in this joint venture is Bank Saderat, the
largest privately owned bank in Iran with total assets of $1.2 billion.
The total assets of the proposed bank in the near term are planned at
$400-$500 million.
2. Chase Manhattan also seeks permission to acquire 49 per
cent of a de novo commercial bank in Egypt at a cost of $13.4 million.
The remaining 51 per cent will be held by the National Bank of Egypt which
is one of four government-owned banks. This bank held total deposits of
$2 billion as of December 31, 1972. Total assets at the new bank are
expected to reach $500 million in a few years.
3. Chase also wishes to acquire all the shares of a new mer-
chant bank in Lagos, Nigeria, at a cost of about $3.3 million. Chase
would also expect to lend $10 million to the new bank to provide funds.
4. First National City Bank seeks permission to acquire up to
40 per cent of the shares of Liberal Bank, Beriut, Lebanon, for $4.3
million. This application involves a joint venture with prominent Kuwaiti
organizations and individuals. The bank is expected to have $200 million
in total assets in 4 or 5 years.
5. Continental International Financial Corp., an edge subsi-
diary of Continental Illinois Bank, seeks permission to acquire 50 per
cent of a new bank to be chartered in the Caymen Islands at a cost of
$2.6 million. At this time, the Caymen Island bank's only office will be
in Bahrain. The remaining 50 per cent will be acquired by two prominent
Bahrainians for $13 thousand. One of these is the Prime Minister and
brother of the ruler.
6. Manufacturer Hanover seeks permission to establish a branch
in Egypt. The total of local deposits are estimated at $7 million in a
few years.
FORD & LIBRARY 9FRA70
October 30, 1974
Chairman Burns
Expension of American Bonks
Brenton C. Leavitt
Into OFFC Countries and Egypt
For Use When Talking to Secretary Kissinger
The expansion of large U.S. banks into oil producing countries
and Egypt raises several issues possibly involving even the national
wellbeing.
Applications currently before the Board in this area
are:
FORD
1. Chase Manhattan asks permission to acquire up to 40 per
cent of Iran Chase International Bank (a commercial bank) for $10.5
million. The other partner in this joint venture is Bank Saderat, the
GERALD
LIBRARY
largest privately owned bank in Iran with total assets of $1.2 billion.
The total assets of the proposed bank in the near term areplanned at
$400-$500 million.
2. Chase Manhatten also seeks permission to sequire 49 per
cent of de novo commercial bank in Egypt at 8 cost of $13.4 million.
The remaining 51 per cent will be held by the National Bank of Egypt which
is one of four government-owned banks. This bank held total deposits of
$2 billion as of December 31, 1972. Total assets at the new bank are
expected to reach $500 million in a few years.
3. Chase also wishes to acquire all the shares of a new mer-
chent bonk in Lagos, Nigeris, at a cost of about $3.3 million. Chase
would also expect to lend $10 million to the new bank to provide funds.
4. First National City Bank seeks permission to acquire up to
40 per cent of the shares of Liberal Bank, Beriut, Lebanon, for $4.3
million. This application involves a joint venture with prominent Kuwaiti
organizations and individuals. The bank is expected to have $200 million
in total assets in 4 or 5 years.
5. Continental International Financial Corp., an edge subsi-
diary of Continental Illinois Bank, seeks permission to scquire 50 per
cent of a new bank to be chartered in the Caymen Islands st a cost of
$2.6 million. At this time, the Caymen Island bank's only office will be
in Bahrain. The remaining 50 per cent will be acquired by two prominent
Bahrainions for $13 thousand. One of these is the Prime Minister and
brother of the ruler.
6. Manufacturer Henover seeks permission to establish a branch
in Egypt. The total of local deposits are estimated at $7 million in a
few years.
OVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1971-421-746
D3423
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Classification
UNITED STATES OF ?
Department of State
INDICATE:
TELEGRAM
COLLECT
CHARGE TO
DISTRIBUTION
ACTION:
November 21, 1974
Ambassador Eilts
Cairo, Egypt
Your recent telegram stresses the desirability of prompt approval of
pending applications by American banks to expand into Egypt.
When I received your telegram, there were two such applications
pending before the Board of Governors. One was a request by Chase
Manhattan Bank to acquire a 49 per cent interest in a de novo bank in
Egypt, and the other was a request by Manufacturers Hanover Trust
Company to establish a branch in Cairo. The Board, after consid-
eration of statutory criteria, promptly approved these applications
and each bank was notified on November 15 of the Board's decision.
The Board somewhat earlier had given First National Bank of Chicago
permission to engage in banking activities in Egypt by joint venturing
with Banco di Roma and Banc Misr of Egypt.
I am informed that First National City Bank of New York and Bank
of America plan to engage in some form of banking activity in Egypt.
Neither of these banks has filed an application with the Federal
Reserve System, but I can assure you that the System will act
promptly when such applications are received.
Gather 2. Buns
Arthur F. Burns, Chairman
Federal Reserve Board
cm
DRAFTED BY: N.B.
DRAFTING DATE
TEL. EXT.
APPROVED BY:
CLEARANCES:
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BCL:slc
or STATE
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*
: STATE AMERICA
Department of State
TELEGRAM
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FM AMEMBASSY CAIRO
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 414
*
LIMITED OFFICIAL USE CAIRO 9484'
E.O. 11652: N/A
TAGS: EGEN EG
SUBJECT: MESSAGE TO FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD CHARMAN
ARTHUR F. BURNS
REF STATE 258858
PLEASE PASS FOLLOWING FROM AMBASSADOR TO CHAIRMAIN
ARTHUR F. BURNS OF FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD: QUOTE THANK
YOU FOR YOUR THOUGHTFUL LETTER. I GREATLY APPRECIATE THE
BOARD'S ACTION IN APPROVING THE APPLICATIONS OF THE SEVERAL
AMERICAN BANKS DESIROUS OF OPERATING IN EGYPT AND YOUR
PERSONAL INTEREST IN THIS MATTER. THIS ACTION IS A
SIGNIFICANT CUNTRIBUTION TO THE FURTHERANCE OF us POLICY
TOWARD EGYPT AND COMES AT A PARTICULARLY TIMELY MOMENT.
PLEASE CONVEY MY DEEP APPRECIATION TO THE OTHER MEMBERS
OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD. HERMANN FREDERICK EILTS,
AMERICAN AMGASSADOR, CAIRO. UNQUOTE.
EILTS
FORD is LIBRARY GERALD
LIMITED OFFICIAL USE
FORM
DS-1652
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
alan
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
1975 SEP -9 AM 10: 42
RECEIVED
TO:
Chairman Burns OFFICE OF THE CHAIRM DATE: September 8, 1975
SUBJECT: Two Investments In
FROM: Brenton B.C.R. C. Leavitt
the Financial Institutions in Oil
Producing Countries by U.S. Banks
The Board recently reviewed an application of Chase
Manhattan's Edge Corporation to invest in a Saudi Arabian bank.
You stated that you wished to obtain views of Secretary Kissinger
about this investment by an American bank in an oil producing
country. Since that time, we have been informed that the Federal
Reserve Bank of San Francisco has received an application from a
subsidiary of Bank of America to make an investment in Kuwait.
The purpose of your inquiry to Secretary Kissinger is to determine
from him his views of the National interest involved and if denial of
either one or both applications would adversely effect the National
interest. I suggest that you might wish to ask Mr. Kissinger about
both proposals at the same time.
The essential facts of the two applications are:
1. Chase Manhattan wants to acquire 20% (cost of
$1,700,000) of a commercial bank to be established
in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. There will be various
other partners none of whom will own more than 10%.
Chase would appoint the General Manager, two of
ten Directors and Technical Assistants.
2. The Edge subsidiary of Bank of America wishes
to acquire 40% (cost of $1, 800, 000) of a finance
company to be formed in Kuwait. The bank would
have two Kuwait partners and will appoint 40% of
Directors and all principle operating officers.
First National City Bank in New York has two branches in
Saudi Arabia; no other U.S. bank has banking facilities in either
Saudi Arabia or Kuwait.
FORD j LIBRARY GERALD
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Date 6-14-16
To: Mr. Chairman
From:
KEN GUENTHER
() Per Conversation
() For comments and suggestions
() For your information () Phone me re attached
Renss' latent press release
aimed at Dr
FORD is LIBRARY 9ERALD
Comptrolly
K
() Over
HENRY REUSS. WIS., CHAIRMAN
ALBERT W. JOHNSON. PA.
WRIGHT PATMAN TEX.
J. WILLIAM STANTON, OHIO
WILLIAM A. BARRETT. PA.
GARRY BROWN. MICH.
LEONOR K. (MRS. JOHN B) SULLIVAN, MO.
CHALMERS P. WYLIE, OHIO
THOMAS L. ASHI EY. OHIO
JOHN H. ROUSSELOT. CALIF.
WILLIAM S. MOORHEAD, PA.
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
STEWART B. MCKINNEY, CONN.
ROBERTO. STEPHENS. JR., GA.
JOHN B. CONLAN. ARIZ.
PERNAND J. ST GERMAIN, R.I.
GEORGE V. HANSEN, IDAHO
HENRY B. GONZALEZ, TEX.
COMMITTEE ON BANKING, CURRENCY AND HOUSING
RICHARD T. SCHULZE, PA.
JOSEPH G. MINISH, N.J.
WILLIS D. GRADISON, JR., OHIO
FRANK ANNUNZIO, ILL.
NINETY-FOURTH CONGRESS
HENRY J. HYDE. ILL.
THOMAS M. REES. CALIF.
RICHARD KELLY, FLA.
JAMES M. HANLEY. N.Y.
2129 RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
CHARLES E. GRASSLEY, IOWA
PARREN J. MITCHELL. MD.
MILLICENT FENWICK, N.J.
WALTER E. FAUNTROY. O.C.
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515
LINDY (MRS. HALE) BOGGS, LA.
225-4247
STEPHEN NEAL. N.C.
JERRY M. PATTERSON, CALIF.
JAMES J. BLANCHARD, MICH.
HAROLD E. FORD. TENN.
CARROLL HUBBARD. JR., KY.
JOHN J. LAFALCE, N.Y.
GLADYS NOON SPELLMAN, MD.
LES AUCOIN. OREG.
PAUL E. TSONGAS. MASS.
BUTLER DERRICK. S.C.
PHILIP H. HAYES. IND.
MARK W. HANNAFORD, CALIF.
DAVID W. EVANS. IND.
NEWS RELEASE
6:00 p.m. EDT
Sunday, June 13, 1976
REUSS WARNS COMMERCIAL BANKS ON LOANS TO CHILE,
RELEASES CORRESPONDENCE WITH COMPTROLLER SMITH
ON $125 MILLION SYNDICATE LOAN
Chairman Henry S. Reuss (D-Wis.), of the House Committee on
Banking, Currency, and Housing, issued the following statement today
about loans by private U.S. commercial banks to Chile:
"On May 21, sixteen U.S. and Canadian banks signed an agreement
to lend $125 million to Chile. Today, I am releasing an exchange of
letters between myself and Comptroller of the Currency James Smith,
which raises serious doubts about the wisdom or propriety of this
loan.
"The present military government, after nearly three years,
has failed to control inflation, to restore industrial production,
to reduce unemployment, or to create the conditions which might
attract the productive private investment the country so desperately
needs. To survive, the Pinochet regime relies on loans of hundreds
of millions of dollars every year from the U.S. government and
from multilateral lenders. Even the International Monetary Fund
has concluded that the Chilean economy will need continuous debt
relief (or debt financing) on a substantial scale over the medium
term to keep its balance of payments manageable.
"Such debt relief or debt financing will happen only with
the support of the United States Government. The fate of Santiago's
Torquemadas thus lies squarely in the hands of those who make
official lending policy in Washington.
"Given this situation, it is difficult to distinguish the
ordinary economic risk associated with the recent commercial bank
loan from the political risk posed by the possibility that the
U.S. may withdraw Chile's financial crutch. Normal mitigating
circumstances, such as participation in the loan by banks from a
wide range of countries, or the existence of a stand-by agreement
between Chile and the IMF, attesting to the soundness of Chile's
economic policies and to the presence of competent international
surveillance of its economic program, are not present.
"The response by the Comptroller of the Currency to this
situation is a shallow one. The Comptroller has shown no inclination
to criticize the banks he is supposed to regulate for pursuing short-
term profit by the Chilean loan at whatever eventual risk to themselves
or to the successful pursuit of U.S. foreign policy objectives.
This contrasts with the Comptroller's recent eagerness to criticize
U.S. commercial bank loans to Italy.
V
MAY Chase Friend
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
mentioned This
2
"In his reply, the Comptroller demonstrates that his office
has not seriously considered several important issues, raised in my
letter. Among them:
1. What is the proper relationship between a private United
States bank and the public government of a foreign nation? Should
banks extend commercial loans to such governments, when they
generally only lend to the Government of the United States through
the medium of marketable notes, bills, and bonds?
2. What is the proper role of the International Monetary
Fund as the arbiter of the creditworthiness of a developing nation?
When, as at present, the IMF fails to extend the seal of approval
represented by a stand-by agreement, indicating an agreed program
for economic policy and for IMF surveillance, should U.S. bank
regulators permit a loan to the country in question to pass without
objection?
3. To what extent, finally, do such loans by private U.S.
banks interfere with the conduct of U.S. foreign policy? Are we
not unwisely permitting a linkage of interest to arise between our
own domestic financial institutions and a morally abhorrent foreign
regime?
"Secretary Kissinger's admirable speech before the General
Assembly of the OAS in Santiago this week may signal the beginning
of a shift in U.S. attitudes towards basic human rights in Chile.
Certainly that shift will accelerate if a Democratic Administration
takes office next winter. When that happens, we may expect the
Administration to take a much harder look at the abysmal condition
of the Chilean economy and the failure of the Pinochet regime either
to restore industrial production or to control inflation.
"Certainly, the 16 banks who signed the $125 million loan
agreement with Chile on May 21 should beware. Any shift in U.S.
policy will leave them in perilous condition on this loan, given
Chile's manifest inability to meet its commitments without massive
outside support. These banks should expect to bear alone any loss
that may come from a return to a sane Chile policy. For my part,
I shall continue to press for a better and more clearly defined
Administration policy on this area of activity by private commercial
banks.
GERALD
HENRY S. REUSS
COMMITTEES:
5TH DISTRICT, WISCONSIN
BANKING. CURRENCY AND
HOUSING
WASHINGTON OFFICE:
CHAIRMAN
2413 RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515
Congress of the United States
JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE
PHONE: 202-225-3571
CHAIRMAN, INTERNATIONAL
MILWAUKEE OFFICES:
House of Representatives
ECONOMICS SUBCOMMITTEE
FEDERAL BUILDING ROOM 400
517 E. WISCONSIN AVENUE
Mashington, D.C. 20515
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53202
ECOLOGY House
May 14, 1976
527 W. WISCONSIN AVENUE
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN 53203
PHONES: 414-272-1226
414-224-1488
Honorable James E. Smith
Comptroller of the Currency
490 L'Enfant Plaza East, S.W.
Washington, D. C. 20219
Dear Mr. Smith:
According to recent press reports, fourteen of the largest banks
in New York, California, and Canada are "close to agreement" on a loan
to the government of Chile of $100 to $125 million, to be applied to
Chile's balance-of-payments deficit. A letter of commitment is expected
to be signed shortly, with a final loan contract to follow within weeks.
While no single bank has been designated the formal syndicate leader, it
appears that Citibank of New York is playing a leading role.
This proposed loan raises several disturbing questions about
the relationship between private banks and U.S. foreign policy, and about
the relationship between our banking system and the international lending
institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund -- as well as
doubts about the wisdom of this particular loan.
Chile's record on inflation is terrible. In January, 1974,
the Chilean government set a target inflation rate of 80 percent for the
year. In fact, inflation went to 375 percent in 1974, and was 340 percent in
1975. Since November, 1975, the monthly inflation rate has nearly doubled:
from a range 7 - 8 percent in November and December, 1975, to 10.0 percent
in January, 10.5 percent in February, and 13.5 percent in March. Annual
inflation will continue in triple digits this year, and may well exceed
200 percent.
In 1975 the Chileans did manage to hold their balance of payments
deficit to about $250 million, close to the target of 240 million dollars
set in March, 1975, but only because their creditors accepted deferred pay-
ment on almost a quarter of a billion dollars worth of debt. Most of Chile's
FORD i LIBRAR 9ERALD
Hon. James E. Smith
May 14, 1976
Page 2
major European creditors -- who hold the largest share of Chilean debt
falling due after 1976 -- are now refusing further debt relief. This
year. Chile's debt service is expected to consume about 38 percent of
its export earnings, according to the World Bank, compared to only 27
percent in the export slump year of 1975. For the next five years, Chile
will continue to labor under an extremely heavy debt service burden; its
obligations will total over $700 million this year, and will remain at
about $600 million per year through 1981, compared with $124 million in
1970, the last year that could be called normal.
In the meantime, the Chilean economy is being sustained by infusions
of hard cash from the United States government, from the World Bank, the
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), from certain of the facilities of
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) -- and from private U.S. banks.
Direct U.S. assistance to Chile totalled $272 million in FY 1975, includ-
ing $96 million in debt relief, and will total at least $120 million in
aid and housing guarantees alone in FY 1976. The IMF, which has already
extended credit to Chile equal to 327 percent of Chile's IMF quota, among
the highest exposures of any nations, is contemplating an additional loan
under the compensation facility this year. The World Bank, this year, has
already committed $33 million to Chile's nationalized copper sector. The
IDB has a tentative lending program for Chile of $120 million this year.
Now our private banks are thinking of chipping in up to $125 million of
their depositors' funds. It is clear that, in the absence of major new
debt relief, which is unlikely, and without this assistance, Chile could
not continue to meet current payments on its debts.
Chile's reliance on foreign lending to avert bankruptcy takes on
added significance in light of the evident failure of the Chileans to
reach an agreement with the IMF on the terms of a stand-by arrangement
for this year. As you know, an IMF stand-by assures that the economic
policies of the recipient nation will be subject to close supervision by
the Fund's staff. Private institutions often consider an IMF stand-by
to be the sine qua non for lending to a foreign government in balance-of-
payments trouble. In fact, when a letter of commitment for a loan of
$175 million to Chile was signed last January by the same group of banks
currently negotiating the new Chilean loan, it was made explicitly con-
tingent on Chile's obtaining an IMF stand-by. Significantly, although
Chile obtained stand-bys in 1974 and 1975, this year no stand-by was
agreed upon, and the January commitment has lapsed. Now, as the banks
negotiate the new loan, it is without the assurance of a supervised
economic policy that a stand-by arrangement would provide.
Accordingly, the large New York, California and Canadian banks who
are engaged in this loan are assuming a very substantial risk: far more
than would be involved in the usual temporary balance-of-payments assistance
BERALD FORD LIBRARY
Hon. James E. Smith
May 14, 1976
Page 3
to a solvent country. They are effectively assisting Chile to roll over
a massive foreign debt that it otherwise could not meet, at a time when
the support that Chile might have hoped for from the IMF has not materialized.
Chile's ability to pay off this loan when the time comes without yet another
massive bank loan is seriously in doubt.
In light of these facts, I believe that you have a clear duty to
review the situation, in conjunction with the banks, and to assure that
they are not taking an excessive risk. This should be done now, before
the loan is extended. In conducting such a review, it would be appro-
priate to ask the following questions, to which I also would like a
response.
1. To what extent is the current loan an effort to protect assets
the banks have already invested in Chile? Specifically, what is the cur-
rent exposure, in dollar amounts and as a percentage of bank capital, in
loans to the Chilean government, government agencies, private Chilean
financial institutions, and to the rest of the Chilean private sector, of
each of the 12 U.S. banks involved in this loan? Are there any other large
U.S. banks with comparable exposure in Chile? How many, and how much have
they loaned? What is the maturity structure of these loans?
2. What are the economic risks associated with this loan? Making
reasonable assumptions about the path of copper prices, does the Chilean
economy have the capacity to recover and meet all of its current debt com-
mitments without major new debt relief? Can the Chilean government success-
fully squeeze enough foreign exchange from the economy to meet its debts if
copper prices do not recover? What other economic risks are involved?
3. To what extent does the success or failure of this loan depend
on political events? In particular, does repayment depend on the continued
willingness of the United States to support the junta with more aid? If
so, is not repayment of this loan effectively contingent on the assumption
that the next Administration will continue to pursue a policy of financial
support to the junta? What will happen if it does not?
4. What in your view is the proper regulatory posture toward such
a loan? According to what criteria does your office classify for regulatory
purposes a non-marketable loan to the public sector of a developing nation,
a loan which is extended without collateral and whose repayment depends on
volatile political factors as well as on economic ones? What was the basis
of your reported decision, since revoked, to "redline" Italy as a borrower
from U.S. banks? Does the same rationale now apply to Chile's loan? Recently
lending from private sources to the governments of stable industrialized
nations has shifted from direct loans by banks to the Eurobond market. Lend-
ing by private banks to the United States Government has long been in the
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
Hon. James E. Smith
May 14, 1976
Page 4
form of marketable Treasury bills, notes and bonds. Why should banks
adopt the more lenient standard of lending that may be incorporated
in a non-marketable direct loan in dealing with an unstable developing
nation such as Chile?
5. What is the proper role of the International Monetary
Fund as arbiter of the creditworthiness of a developing nation? Does
your office, in classifying for regulatory purposes a loan to the
government of a developing nation, use the professional analyses of
the IMF? Is the existence of a stand-by arrangement between a country
and the IMF a factor? If you make an independent evaluation, what is
your evaluation at the present time of the creditworthiness of Chile?
6. What is the truth of the allegation that both the State
and Treasury Departments have encouraged the U.S. banks to make this
loan? If the Executive branch were to encourage private U.S. banks
to lend to Chile, would that not be an evasion of the spirit of
Congressional ceilings on aid to Chile?
7. It is difficult, in this case, to separate the purely
economic criteria which should govern the actions of the banks from
matters which impinge on international politics and United States
foreign policy. Nevertheless the effort should be made. Would not
an ill-considered loan at this time tie the fortunes of our
largest banks to that of the Chilean regime in future years -- with
painful consequences if the U.S. later ends economic support for the
junta? In the event this loan did go sour, would not the banks be
able to transfer a substantial part of the loss to the U.S. taxpayer,
through the tax deduction for bad loans?
I look forward to your prompt response to these questions,
surely before action is completed on this loan.
Sincerely,
denly S. Runs
Henry S. Reuss
Member of Congress
GERALD FORD AIBRARY
of
Comptroller of the Currency
Administrator of National Banks
Washington, D.C. 20219
GERALE
FORD
June 7, 1976
Dear Congressman Reuss:
This is in response to your letter of May 14, 1976, in which you raise
several questions relative to the credit worthiness of the Government of Chile.
You question the propriety of U.S. commercial bank loans to Chile as they relate
to U.S. foreign policy, U.S. depositor funds and U.S. taxpayers. Further, you
request my views on the proper regulatory posture with regard to these issues.
When the present Chilean government assumed power in September 1973, the
need for complete economic reform was obvious. As you know, the country was bank-
rupt. It faced $4 billion in external debt and had no credit rating whatever.
All of her revenues had been spent on nationalizations and debt service, leaving
nothing available for investment. Chile's plant and equipment had been permitted
to deteriorate almost beyond repair and inflation had reached estimated rates of
750 and even as high as 1,000%.
In recognizing Chile's old debt to foreign governments (The Paris Club), the
new regime was forced, first, to try to restructure that debt into an overall term
and amortization schedule realistic to Chile's already worse than "normal" economic
condition simultaneously compounded by the quadrupling of oil prices. Secondly,
the new government had to rebuild Chile's credit rating, primarily with commercial
banks, by demonstrating that they would promptly pay for their trade imports.
They restricted non-essentials and concentrated on the machinery and spare parts
needed to revive mineral and industrial production.
Having been reasonably successful in accomplishing their primary objective
and having performed perfectly on all of their short-term trade obligations, they
were able to acquire some medium-term, commercial bank loans in late 1974 and
throughout 1975. These loans have proved essential to the revitalization of Chile's
economy. 1976 balance of payments deficits are projected to be much smaller than
1975 and after the signing of the $125MM loan in question, all but $20 million of
the deficit will be financed. These 1976 projections were based on a copper price
of 60¢, while copper prices are already at 70¢ and each one cent increase adds
approximately $18 million to Chile's annual export revenue.
The sixteen banks involved in the loan to which you refer have indicated to
the IMF that, in their view, the Chilean economy is well enough in hand, particu-
larily given the steady increase in the price of copper, to warrant granting the
loan without the IMF standby. The loan has been finalized. The agreement was
signed on May 21, 1976. The formal syndicate leader is Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company of New York and of the twelve U.S. banks involved, four are national banks
and therefore come under the purview of my Office.
LIBRARY GERALD FORD
-2-
I do not feel that any of the national banks involved in this credit can be
considered to have granted this loan to protect assets already on their books.
Nor do I believe that any of the national banks have taken on excessive exposure
by virtue of having participated in this loan. Data taken from each of the last
reports of examination of the 20 largest national banks indicates outstanding
loans to Chile as a percentage of gross capital funds at an average of .357%
before the granting of this loan and .358% including the new loan. After dis-
bursement, the largest percentage of Chilean loans at any of these twenty banks
will be only 1.685% of gross capital funds. Aside from the largest twenty, one
national bank carries 4.76% of its capital in loans to Chile. Approximately
36% of all national bank loans to Chile are in short-term trade credits due within
one year with the balance spread over something less than five years.
Since there does not appear to be any imminent political change afoot in
Chile, the major factors governing the quality of these loans are basically of
an economic nature. In the event that higher copper prices do not hold, the
quality of these loans would probably continue to weigh on the present government's
ability to make the proper economic policy decisions but with a significantly
stronger, more efficient, economic base than existed when the government assumed
power in 1973. I believe that Chile's economic future is viable and I certainly
do not consider these loans to be in danger of not being repaid.
The question of commercial banks lending U.S. depositor funds to international
customers is somewhat academic in that these loans are funded by eurodeposits.
The granting of such loans does not deprive U.S. customers of the use of any
domestically lendable funds and, short of failure of the bank involved, does not
effect U.S. depositors in any manner. It is true that both international loan
profits and loan losses do alter the amount of dividends received by bank share-
holders. Finally, the effect which individual international loan losses have on
U.S. taxpayers depends significantly upon the income tax deductions granted each
lending institution by the country in which the loss occurs. Tax deductions not
permitted by the country in which the loan is granted, or by the country in which
the loan is booked, would effectively be deductible in the United States. Perhaps
this is a matter for discussion with the Internal Revenue Service.
National bank examiners do occasionally criticize specific loans to foreign
governments or their agencies. These criticisms are based on well defined credit
weaknesses apparent either in a borrower's overall financial condition or in an
individual loan. Marketability is seledom a consideration since, unlike investments
in securities, bank loans are expected to be held to maturity. Examiners' criticisms
of individual loans are not to be construed as a "redlining" or blacklisting of
the borrower concerned. Similarily, such criticism does not constitute a directive
by which a bank is ordered to cease lending to that borrower. Rather, loan criticisms,
individually and in their aggregates, constitute one of many major factors upon
which this Office evaluates each national bank's condition, the capabilities of
its management and its earnings performance by asset category. Until such time as
minor asset categories are proved to have a noticeably adverse affect upon any of
these measurement factors, or until such time as concentration in any one potentially
risky activity appears likely, or until such time as those activities become
violations of law, I believe that individual credit decisions should be left to the
discretion of professional lenders.
-3-.
I believe this to be proper regulatory posture and I am unaware of any
allegations relative to either the State Department or the Treasury Department
having encouraged U.S. banks to make this loan.
I trust that the above information is responsive to your request. However,
should you have further questions, please do not hesitate to write my Office.
Sincerely,
Jane James E. Smith a. Smith
Comptroller of the Currency
The Honorable Henry S. Reuss
Member of Congress
House of Representatives
2413 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515
FORD & LIBRARY 076839
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date March 4, 1977
To
Board of Governors
Subject:
From John E. Reynolds
Attached is a memorandum from Henry Terrell and Robert Gemmill
discussing two recent article in the New York Times on Nassau Branches.
FORD is LIBRARY GERALD
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date March 4, 1977
To
Mr. Reynolds
Subject: Nassau Branches
From Henry S. Terrell and
Robert F. Gemmill
Introduction
An article in the New York Times of March 3, 1977 (copy attached)
has raised several issues concerning the operations of and the Board's
policy towards Nassau branches of U.S. banks. This memorandum briefly
discusses the issues raised in that article. *
Background
As of December 31, 1976, 130 U.S. banks maintained 136 branches
(of which 130 are shell branches and 6 full service branches) in Nassau
and the Cayman Islands with total assets of $67 billion. The two principal
assets of these branches were claims on foreign banks of $25.3 billion and
claims on foreign nonbanks of $21.5 billion. Principal liabilities were
$21.5 billion to foreign banks, $16 billion to related branches in other
countries, and $14.5 billion to their head offices. On a net basis, Nassau
and Caymans branches received $13.4 billion net from their head offices,
$7.2 billion net from related branches in other countires, and were net
lenders of $17.9 billion to foreign nonbank borrowers. The net funding
from domestic U.S. offices has resulted from the ample liquidity of U.S.
banks.
* The March 3 article and follow-up article that appeared on March 4
are attached to this memorandum.
GERALD
FORD is LIBRARY
FORD
-2-
GERALD
LIBRARY
Issues Raised in Times Article
1. Lost Revenue to New York City and State. Income earned
by Nassau branches is not subject to state and local income taxes but is
subject to Federal income taxes. Therefore, to the extent banks have shifted
loans from their domestic offices to their branches in offshore centers,
state and local jurisdictions have suffered a reduction in tax receipts.
However, a follow-up article in the New York Times of March 4,
1977, seriously overstates the revenue lost. That article assumes that
Citibank shifted an estimated $1 billion in loans from its New York office
to its office in Nassau resulting in a $10 million loss of revenue to
New York State. Assuming a generous 1-1/2 percent interest spread on the
$1 billion in shifted loans results in a shift of $15 million in earnings
from Citibank (New York) to Citibank (Nassau). A 12 percent New York state
income tax combined with a 30 percent surtax results in a reduction in state
income taxes of only $2.34 million, compared to the $10 million estimated
in the Times article.
2. The Federal Regulatory Authorities Know Little About These
Activities. A standard condition of approval for a branch in Nassau or the
Caymans is that duplicate records of all transactions be maintained at the
head office so that examination of these branches may be conducted at the
head office. In addition, the Federal Reserve collects monthly data on
the assets and liabilities of all foreign branches of U.S. banks by type
of customer. These figures are published monthly in the Federal Reserve
Bulletin with separate figures for branches in Nassau and the Caymans. In
addition the Federal Reserve collects quarterly data on the geographical
1/ The March 4 article in The New York Times estimated the lost revenue
to New York State alone. In addition, there would be a revenue loss of $2.07
million to New York City based on a city income tax of 13.823 percent.
-3-
distribution of the assets and liabilities of all branches. Federal
Reserve statistics were in fact utilized in preparing the article in the
New York Times.
There is of course, no Federal Reserve information on lending
to U.S. borrowers from foreign offices of foreign banks because the Federal
Reserve has no authority to collect such data.
3. The Federal Reserve has Sanctioned and Encouraged the
Activities of these Branches. The Federal Reserve has approved these
branches, often with dissenting votes, but has not actively encouraged
their expansion. The Federal Reserve currently has a policy of limiting
to one the number of limited service "shell" branches any bank may have.
The principal reason for Board approval of these branches was to permit
smaller banks without the financial resources to afford a London branch
an opportunity to establish an offshore branch to permit them to compete
in Euro-currency lending with larger banks.
The Federal Reserve has discouraged foreign branches of U.S.
banks in Nassau and the Caymans and elsewhere from lending to U.S. residents
through a 4 percent reserve requirement imposed on such loans under
Regulation M. In approving applications for foreign subsidiaries, the Board
has imposed a condition that subsidiaries not engage in transactions with
U.S. residents other than those incidental to their international activities.
An Alternative to Nassau Branches
An Alternative to Branches
The Board has considered a proposal to allow U.S. banks to
establish a "foreign window" in their domestic offices which could be used
GERALO
LIBRARY
-4-
to accept deposits from (and make loans to) foreigners free from reserve
requirements and ceilings on interest rates. That proposal did not contain
a reference to the tax status of the earnings by the banks from the foreign
window. The Board did not favor that proposal because it would be difficult
in practice to prevent misuse of the window by domestic customers. Since
deposits at the proposed window would be exempt from reserve requirements,
banks could offer higher rates of interest on "window" deposits than are
offered on regular domestic deposits, and some domestic customers might
thereby be induced to shift their activities to the foreign window, perhaps
using foreign affiliates to disguise the transaction. Such shifts could
reduce Federal Reserve control over money and creditflows used domestically.
Nassau branches are not a perfect substitute for a foreign window.
Deposits at foreign branches in the banks' view carry a certain element of
"country risk". Moreover, some U.S. financial institutions are prohibited
by law from placing funds abroad, even in the form of deposits at foreign
branches of U.S. banks.
Attachment
LIBRARY GERALD FORD
March 3, 1977
Growing Bahamian Loan Activity
By U.S. Banks Causes Concern
LIBRARY
By ANN CRITTENDEN
Special to The New York Times
NASSAU, the Bahamas-For years this
Little Known About Effect
Finally, while the earnings of offshore
string of sun-blessed islands off the coast
Even more important, as the volume
branches of Amerian banks are subject
of Florida has enjoyed a lucrative, if
of offshore lending by United States
to Federal taxes, hey are beyond the
slightly dubious, reputation as a tax
banks increases, Federal regulatory au-
reach of state an city tax collectors.
haven-a pleasant locale where individu-
thorities -and the public -know less
Thus the surge inBahamas lending has
al and corporate wealth finds refuge from
and less about the banks' transactions
meant a substantia revenue loss for New
income taxes, gains taxes, inheritance
and how they affect the American econo-
York, where most i the big international
banks are based.
taxes, or any direct taxes at all.
my.
The widening gap in information has
The banks have hifted New York busi-
More recently, however, thanks to a
already made it more difficult to analyze
ness to the Bahasas in two ways. They
marked trend in American banking, this
what is happening in the nation's econo-
are booking loanthat formerly were put
my. For example, while most offshore
on their books i New York directly in
This is the first of two articles on
lending is to foreign corporations or gov-
the Bahamas. All some banks, including
the shift in the international activities
ernments, an intriguing but unknown
Citibank, have also transferred large
of American banks to the Bahamas.
fraction of it is to United States corpora-
blocks of loan from their New York
tions for use at home.
books to their Nassau branch. In doing
tiny Caribbean nation has achieved a new
In other words, instead of routinely
this, the leadin banks have engaged in
financial eminence that, may profoundly
booking a short-term, $25 million loan
affect both the United States economy
to corporations like General Motors or
"an unjustifiable avoidance of taxes,"
and international capital markets.
Exxon in the United States, the compa-
State Commissioner James H. Tull con-
A rapidly growing portion of the inter-
nies' banks in recent months may well
tended in a recent telephone conversa-
have booked such loans in the Bahamas.
tion.
national banking business is being
This "cross-border" lending was so great
More and more of this lending, espe-
booked, or officially recorded, in the
last year, according to Carlos M. Canal
cially to Latin America, is being recorded
Bahamas. Helped by a recent British tax
Jr., executive vice president and head of
on the books of American banks' Baha-
international banking for the Bankers
mian branches. Since the end of 1973,
increase and enhanced by their conven-
Trust Company, that it "could account
the assets of American bank branches
ience to New York, the islands have be-
in part for lagging domestic loan de-
in the Bahamas and Cayman Islands, a
come a key link in the Eurocurrency mar-
mand."
much smaller Caribbean tax haven, have
ket.
"We're flying blind in this area," says
increased by more than 150 percent, to
The little-known Eurocurrency market
Representative Fernand J. St. Germain,
31 percent of the assets of all foreign
a Rhode Island Democrit who is chair-
branches of American banks.
is a vast and largely unregulated pool
man of a House Bankirg, Currency and
(Foreign branch assets, in turn, amount
of funds, four-fifths of them dollars, that
Housing subcommittee on financial insti-
to 40 percent of the total assets of the
are borrowed and lent outside their coun-
tutions. "We don't have a reporting sys-
largest United States commercial banks,
try of origin. The market, which has
tem that enables us to track the impact
which total about $553 billion.)
traditionally centered in London, has
of overseas lending on our domestic
By the end of last May, more offshore
swollen from $65 billion to nearly $300
economy."
loans by American banks were recorded
billion in only six years.
in the Caribbean than in London. The
Long a crucial source of funds for mul-
Underlies Monetry Policies
Bahamas had 31.9 percent of the total,
In the United States virtually all large
versus 27.5 percent in the British capital.
tinational operations, it has more recently
banks have to report to the Federal Re-
Only a year and a half earlier, loans
become the chief vehicle for recycling the
serve detailed inforr in on such things
booked in London had amounted to 38.3
surpluses of oil-producing nations to fi-
as the maturity of 10ms and deposits,
percent of the total, compared with 24.8
nance the huge oil-import bills of hard-
volume of business, consumer and mort-
percent in the Bahamas.
pressed governments around the world.
gage loans and interestcharges. This data
Unlike the Eurocurrency system in
The impressive growth of the Bahamas
is vital not only in meauring the stability
London, where American bank lending
in this credit market reflects the steadily
of the banks themselve, but in determin-
is mainly financed by outside deposits,
increasing activity of big American
ing the health of the overall economy.
most of the lending from the Bahamas is
banks, which have more than doubled
It underlies the monetay policies adopted
financed by transfers of the banks' own
their lending in the last three years. In
for guiding the economy.
funds from London, or increasingly, New
a sense, as one financial specialist put
In contrast, banks ar: required to report
York.
it recently, the American banking busi-
almost no specifies oncerning offshore
$6 Billion More Than Year Ago
ness "is moving aborad."
loans. Thus, as banling shifts abroad.
In the process, New York state and
regulating not only the banks but the
As of last Oct. 31, the latest date for
city have lost millions of dollars in tax
entire economy becores more uncertain.
which figures are available, banks with
revenues from banks-ironically at a
Some Congressionil figures are also
headquarts in the United States had $10.5
juncture when the major New York banks
concerned that the wsurge in bank Euro-
billion on loan to their Nassau and Cay-
are demanding still more stringent fiscal
currency lending is occurring at the ex-
man branches, some $6 billion more than
city. controls from the financially beleaguered
pense of more urgnt credit needs at
a year earlier.
home. It is also chaged that the system
favors the largest corporate borrowers
over smaller busineses.
New York TIMES
March 4, 1977
pg. 1
Citibank Found
To Lead in Shift
To Tax Havens
By ANN CRITTENDEN
Special to The New York Times
NASSAU, the Bahamas-In the sudden
one country to another, depending on the
demand for money.
Nassau is to international banking what
growth of international banking in the
Bahamas, no institution has played as
Internal Citibank documents, itemizing
Liberia is to international shipping-a
prominent a role as Citibank, the nation's
its Bahamian loans and deposits, give a
flag of convenience, a tax-free and com.
rafe look into this highly secretive and
pliant haven for officially recording busi-
second largest bank and in the scope of
complex world. Recently made available
ness done elsewhere. Citibank's Eurocur-
its global activities, the most truly inter-
to the Times, the documents disclose that,
rency operation in Nassau has some 65
national bank in the world.
as of last year, Citibank accounted for
employees, and their job is simply to keep
The giant New York-based institution,
almost one-fourth of the Eurocurrency ac-
the books on the transactions, just as
which ranks only behind the Bank of
civity of American banks in the Bahamas
the bank's loan department in New York
and the Cayman Islands a much smaller
handles the mechanics on domestic loans
America, has led the way in a pronounced
Caribbean tax haven. They show that,
arranged by other departments.
although the Bahamas were not men-
The fundamental reason for the Baha-
Second of two articles.
tioned in Citibank's tabloid-sized, 43-page
mas' attraction, is clear: Nassau levies
annual report last year, a healthy portion
no pofits taxes or direct taxes of any
shift by American banks toward booking
of the bank's profits are concentrated in
sort. American banks began to increase
this island nation.
their lending there after bank taxes in
international loans in offshore tax havens,
The bank records reveal that a sizable-
London, the traditional center for Euro-
of which the Bahamas is the most impor-
portion of Citibank's lending is concen-
currency lending, were raised. Nassau,
tant. The trend has involved a substantial
trated in two debt-laden developing coun-
with good communications and the con-
venience of the same time zone as New
loss of tax revenue for New York state
tries, Mexico and Brazil, and that a sub-
stantial part of Citibank's deposits-per-
York's, was where the banks flocked.
and city. It has also meant that more
haps 10 percent-come from a few Arab
About $1 Billion in Loans Moved
and more of the activities of American
banks are taking place outside the range
states. The documents also support the
Citibank, in particular, has also shifted
bank's frequent assurance thatte vast ma-
of Federal regulatory authorities and be-
an enormous volume of loans from New
jority of its offshoreloans are sound.
York to Nassau, where the interest
yond the knowledge of Congress and the
Loans Shifted to Other Areas
earned is not subject to New York State
public.
Nassau is Citibank's largest banking
or city taxes. According to Donald S.
Network of 2,026 Offices
Howard, senior vice president for finance,
center outside of the United States, larger
Citibank moved approximately $1 billion
As a result, the growth of offshore
than London, Hong Kong, Singapore and
worth of loans already recorded on its
banking has already made it more dif-
Bahrein in actual loans booked. In its
New York books to the Bahamas.
ficult to determine what the banks are
ever-changing global strategy, the bank
This could mean a loss of more than
is now reducing the number of loans
doing and how their activity affects the
$10 million in tax revenues to New York
recorded in Nassau, as it shifts loans
American economy.
State alone, assuming the loans remained
made in Asia and the Middle East to othr
outstanding a year at the state bank tax
Although other major New York banks
centers.
rate of 12 percent plus a 30 percent sur-
have transferred business offshore, none
The bank's documents nevertheless
charge. By comparison, total tax receipts
has done it on anything resembling the
show that, toward the end of last year,
from all comercial banks in New York
more than a third of Citibank's Eurocur-
scale of Citibank, which already has far
are estimated at $106 million during the
Trency loans made in dollars outside of
1976-77 fiscal year.
more loans and deposits offshore than
the United States, were booked in the
In an interview, Mr. Howard said that
in the United States. With its worldwide
Bahamas. About one-fifth of the bank's
the transfer to Nassau of loans originally
network of 2,026 offices and branches
total offshore loans and one-eighth of its
booked in New York was a one-time oc-
in more than 100 countries, the enormous
loans of all sorts, domestic and foreign,
curence. He notes, that to his knowledge,
bank can book its loans and take its
Were placed in Nassau.
all such loans were to foreign borrowers.
Ironically, most of this enormous volume
The bank now books such loans directly
deposits from multinational corporations
of business is conducted no coser to the
in the Bahamas he said.
and governments virtually whereever il
bamy Caribbean than Citibank's Manat-
Mr. Howard acknowledged that the
chooses. It can readily shift funds from
tan offices, where dozens of shirt-sleeved
shift reduced Citibank's state and city
employees and a sophisticated computer
taxés, although. for a complicated set or
system transfer billions of dollars in and
reasons, it could increase the bank's
out of an entity called Nassau. Here is
Federal tax liabilities, he said. He insisted
where most of the buying and selling and
that taxes were not the reason for the
GERALD
transferring of funds to finance the loans
shift to Nassau. it is simply cheaper to
booked in Nassau takes place. They were
fund loans here, he maintained.
actually negotiated either in New York
more often in the bank's Latin-American
branches. Nassau is above all else the
bank's booking center for Western Hemi-
sphcre loans.
Chairman Burns
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
B-2046
OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Office Correspondence
Date April 19, 1977
To
Board of Governors
Subject:
From Mr. Welsh 6 ww
In light of Vice Chairman Gardner's inquiry last week con-
cerning permissible activities for U.S. banks abroad, I am attaching
for your information a copy of a paper prepared by Board staff and sent
to the staff of the Senate Banking Committee in response to questions
posed pursuant to their ongoing study of multi-national banking issues.
Attachment
FORD is GERALD LIBRARY
SUMMARY OF THE KINDS
OF FOREIGN ACTIVITIES
PERMISSIBLE TO U. S. BANKS
Staff Memorandum
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System
GERALD FORD LIBRARY
SUMMARY OF THE KINDS OF FOREIGN ACTIVITIES
PERMISSIBLE TO U.S. BANKS
I. Board Jurisdiction.
The Board presently has jurisdiction to regulate the foreign
activities of member banks, Edge Act and Agreement corporations, and
bank holding companies. It has no jurisdiction over the foreign activities
of federally insured nonmember banks that are not affiliated with bank
holding companies.
II. Foreign Activities of U.S. Banks, Bank Holding Companies, and Their
Affiliates.
At present, member banks are permitted to engage in a considerably
broader range of activities indirectly through foreign affiliates than
directly through foreign branches.
A. Foreign Branches of Member Banks.
BERALD FORD CIBRARY
Under section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act, the Board is
given the authority to approve the establishment of foreign branches
of national banks (12 U.S.C. 601) and to issue regulations which, in
addition to regulating powers which a foreign branch may exercise under
other provisions of law, may authorize foreign branches, subject to
such conditions and requirements as such regulations may prescribe,
to exercise such further powers as may be usual in connection with the
transaction of the business of banking in the places where such foreign
branch shall transact business (12 U.S.C. 604a). Under section 25 of
the Federal Reserve Act, however, such regulations cannot authorize
a foreign branch to engage in the general business of producing, distributing,
-2-
buying or selling goods, wares or merchandise; nor, except as to such
limited extent as the Board may deem necessary with respect to securities
issued by any "foreign State" as defined in section 25 (b) of the Federal
Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 632), can such regulations authorize a foreign
branch to engage or participate, directly or indirectly, in the business
of underwriting, distributing, or selling securities (12 U.S.C. 604(a)).
Under section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act, State member
banks, which have the requisite power to establish foreign branches
under State law, may establish and operate such foreign branches with
the Board's approval and on the same terms and conditions and subject
to the same limitations and restrictions as are applicable to the establishment
of foreign branches by national banks (12 U.S.C. 321). The Board thus
has regulatory authority over the establishment and operation of foreign
branches of both national and State member banks. Foreign branches
of national banks are, however, examined by the Comptroller of the
Currency.
The Board has implemented its authority over foreign branches
of member banks through the adoption and promulgation of its Regulation
M (12 CFR Part 213), a copy of which is enclosed in the Appendix. Regula-
tion M prescribes in detail the regulatory procedures, conditions,
limitations, and prohibitions governing the establishment and operation
of foreign branches of member banks.
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
-3-
Through foreign branches, member banks have been permitted
by the Board to exercise the normal banking powers that they enjoy
domestically under the federal or State laws under which they are chartered
(as limited by the Federal Reserve Act), plus certain enumerated additional
powers of the same general character that are exercisable only to the
extent usual in the business of banking in the foreign countries where
those branches transact their business.
With respect to these latter additional powers not permitted
domestically, the Board has not utilized its full regulatory authority
under section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act to permit foreign branches
of member banks (in the case of State banks, only to the extent authorized
by State law) to exercise all powers usual in the business of banking
in the places where they transact business. Rather, under § 213.3(b)
of Regulation M (12 CFR § 213.3(b)), the Board has permitted foreign
branches of member banks to engage only in the following powers where
usual in the business of banking in the place where the foreign branch
BERALD R. FORD LIBRANZ
transacts business:
(1) Guarantee customers' debts or otherwise agree for their
benefit to make payments on the occurrence of readily ascertainable
events, if the guarantee or agreement specifies its maximum monetary
liability thereunder; but, except to the extent secured with respect
thereto, no national bank may have such liabilities outstanding (i)
in an aggregate amount exceeding 50 per cent of its capital and surplus
1/ Including, but not limited to, such types of events as nonpayment
of taxes, retails, customs duties, or costs of transport and loss or
nonconformance of shipping documents.
-4-
or (ii) for any customer in excess of the amount by which 10 per cent
of its capital and surplus exceeds the aggregate of such customer's
"obligations" to it which are subject to any limitation under section
5200 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 84) ;
(2) Accept commercial drafts or bills of exchange drawn upon
it;
(3) Acquire and hold securities (including certificates or
other evidences of ownership or participation) of the central bank,
clearing houses, governmental entities, and development banks of the
country in which it is located, unless after such an acquisition the
aggregate amount invested by the branch in such securities (exclusive
of securities held as required by the law of that country or as authorized
under section 5136 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24)) would exceed
1 per cent of its total deposits on the preceding year-end call report
date (or on the date of such acquisition in the case of a newly established
branch which has not so reported);
(4) Underwrite, distribute, buy, and sell obligations of
the national government of the country in which it is located, but
no bank may hold, or be under commitment with respect to, obligations
of such a government as a result of underwriting, dealing in, or purchasing
for its own account in an aggregate amount exceeding 10 per cent of
its capital and surplus;
2/ Including obligations issued by any agency or instrumentality, and
supported by the full faith and credit, of such government.
FORD i LIBRARY GERALD
-5-
(5) Take liens or other encumbrances on foreign real estate
in connection with its extensions of credit, whether or not of first
priority and whether or not such real estate is improved or has been
appraised, and without regard to the maturity or amount limitations
or amortization requirements of section 24 of the Federal Reserve Act
(12 U.S.C. 371);
(6) Extend credit to an executive officer of the branch in
an amount not to exceed $100,000 or its equivalent in order to finance
the acquisition or construction of living quarters to be used as his
residence abroad, provided each such credit extension is promptly reported
to its home office; except that, with the prior specific approval of
the parent bank's board of directors, such amount limitation may be
exceeded when necessary to meet local housing costs;
(7) Pay to any officer or employee of the branch a greater
rate of interest on deposits than that paid to other depositors on
similar deposits with the branch; and
(8) Act as insurance agent or broker.
B. Foreign Affiliates of U.S. Banks and Bank Holding Companies.
(1) Permissible Methods of Investment Abroad.
United States banking organizations have essentially three
methods of acquiring and holding investments in foreign banks and corpora-
tions:
FORDO & LIBRARY GERALD
-6-
(a) Direct Investments. National banks may, with the Board's
permission, invest directly in the stock of foreign banks not engaged,
directly or indirectly, in any activity in the United States except
as, in the judgment of the Board, shall be incidental to the international
or foreign business of such foreign bank (12 U.S.C. 601). State member
banks may, with the Board's permission, also make such direct investments,
if also authorized by State law. The Board has implemented its authority
under section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act by adopting and promulgating
§ 213.4 of Regulation M, a copy of which is enclosed in the Appendix.
These regulations are discussed infra.
Under the Board's interpretation of the term "foreign bank"
in section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act, member banks have only been
permitted to invest directly in the stock of foreign institutions that
are principally engaged in a commercial banking business abroad. To
qualify as being engaged in a commercial banking business, a foreign
institution must receive deposits to a substantial extent in the regular
course of its business, must have the power to receive demand deposits,
and must be regulated, supervised or otherwise recognized as a commercial
bank by the banking or monetary authorities of its place of organization
or principal banking operations. A copy of the Board's interpretation
is enclosed in the Appendix.
3/ State member banks may only hold stock in corporations in which a
national bank may invest (12 U.S.C. 335). Since national banks may
directly hold shares of foreign banks, State member banks may also make
such investments with the Board's permission, if otherwise permissible
under State law.
GERALD RD LIBRARY
-7-
In this regard, it should also be noted that the Board has
ruled that member banks may not organize foreign operations subsidiaries
abroad. A copy of this interpretation is also enclosed in the Appendix.
(b) Indirect Investments. Any national bank may, with the
Board's permission, invest in the stock of either a corporation organized
under section 25 (a) of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 611-619) (an
"Edge Act corporation"), or a corporation operating under an agreement
with the Board pursuant to section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 601) (a so-called "Agreement Corporation"), so long as the aggregate
amount of stock held in all Edge Act and Agreement Corporations does
not exceed 10 per centum of the bank's capital and surplus (12 U.S.C.
618) Since stock of these corporations is eligible for investment
by a national bank, State member banks may, with the Board's permission,
also acquire and hold shares of these Corporations if permissible under
State law. State nonmember banks seeking to organize an Edge Act Corpora-
tion must also obtain the Board's approval since such Corporations are
chartered by the Board; State nonmember banks investing in State-chartered
international or foreign banking corporations, such as Agreement Corporations,
need not obtain Board approval under the Federal Reserve Act.
Edge Act Corporations are chartered with the Board's approval
for the purposes of engaging in international or foreign banking or
other international or foreign financial operations either directly
or through the agency, ownership, or control of local institutions in
foreign countries (12 U.S.C. 611). Edge Act Corporations may also,
GERALD FORD LIBRART
-8-
with the Board's consent, acquire and hold stock of any companies that
are not engaged in the general business of buying or selling goods or
commodities in the United States and that do not transact any business
in the United States except such as may be incidental to such companies'
international or foreign business (12 U.S.C. 615). Thus, through their
Edge Act Corporation subsidiaries, U.S. banks may engage indirectly
in international or foreign banking or other international or financial
operations abroad; in addition, U.S. banks may indirectly acquire stock
of foreign companies through their Edge Act Corporation subsidiaries.
Agreement Corporations are banks or corporations chartered
or incorporated under the laws of the United States or of any State
thereof principally engaged in international or foreign banking, or
banking in a dependency or insular possession of the U.S., either directly,
or through the agency, control, or ownership of local institutions in
foreign countries, or in such dependencies or insular possessions (12
U.S.C. 601). In order for a member bank to invest in the shares of
an Agreement Corporation, the corporation must enter into an agreement
QERALD FORD
with the Board to restrict its operations or conduct its business in
such manner or under such limitations as the Board may prescribe for
the place or places where it transacts business (12 U.S.C. 603). The
Board has by regulation limited the activities and investments of Agreement
Corporations to those permissible for an Edge Act Corporation not engaged
in banking. Thus, a member bank through an Agreement Corporation
S 211.10 of the Board's Regulation K (12 CFR S 211.10), a copy of
which is enclosed in the Appendix. An Edge Act Corporation not engaged
in banking is a corporation whose aggregate demand deposits and acceptance
liabilities do not exceed its capital and surplus. See § 211.2(d) of
Regulation K. Such a corporation is given broader lending limits than
a Corporation engaged in banking. See § 211.9 (b) of Regulation K.
-9-
subsidiary may conduct the same foreign activities and hold the same
foreign investments that it may conduct and hold through an Edge Act
Corporation, unless the Agreement Corporation is subject to other specific
requirements in its agreement with the Board or is otherwise limited
by State law. For purposes of this memorandum, any reference to activities
conducted or investments acquired and held by an Edge Act Corporation
shall be deemed to include activities conducted or investments acquired
and held by an Agreement Corporation, since the regulatory standards
governing these Corporations are identical in each case.
Pursuant to its authority under section 25 (a) of the Federal
Reserve Act (hereinafter referred to as the "Edge Act"), the Board has
adopted and promulgated its Regulation K, a copy of which is enclosed
in the Appendix, which sets forth regulations governing the organization
of Edge Act Corporations, their activities, and their investments.
These regulations are discussed infra.
(c) Bank Holding Company Investments. The Board has discretion
under section 4 (c) (13) of the Bank Holding Company Act ("BHCA") to permit
bank holding companies to acquire and hold stock of companies that do
no business in the United States except as an incident to such companies'
international or foreign business, if the Board concludes that such
an exemption would not be substantially at variance with the purposes
of the BHCA and would be in the public interest (12 U.S.C. 1843 (c) (13)).
FORD is LIBRARY GERALD
-10-
Pursuant to its authority under § 4 (c) (13) of the BHCA, the Board has
adopted and promulgated § 225.4 (f) of its Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.4 (f)
which sets forth the regulations governing the foreign investments of
bank holding companies. A copy of Regulation Y is enclosed in the
Appendix. These regulations are discussed infra.
Under § 4 (c) (5) of the BHCA, bank holding companies are also
permitted to acquire shares which are of the kinds and amounts eligible
for investment by national banking associations. Since, as discussed
earlier, national banks may acquire shares of Edge Act Corporations
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
and Agreement Corporations with the Board's approval, the Board has
also permitted bank holding companies under § 4 (c) (5) to invest directly
in the shares of Edge Act and Agreement Corporations. Such Corporations
are, of course, subject to the Board's Regulation K to the same extent
as if held directly by a member bank.
(2) Activities of Foreign Affiliates of U.S. Banks and Bank Holding
Companies.
(a) U.S. Activities Prohibited Foreign Affiliates by Statute
or Regulation. A member bank, an Edge Act Corporation, and a bank
holding company are specifically precluded by statute or regulation
from acquiring and holding, directly or indirectly, the stock or other
certificates of ownership of any foreign bank or company engaged in
any of the following activities in the United States:
(1) any activity in the United States which, in the Board's
judgment, is not incidental to the international or foreign business
of such foreign bank or company;
5/ See 12 U.S.C. 601, 12 U.S.C. 615 and 12 U.S.C. 1843 (c) (13) (1970).
An Edge Act Corporation itself may only directly engage in activities
in the United States that are incidental to its international or foreign
business (12 U.S.C. 616 (1970).
-11-
(2) the general business of buying or selling goods,
wares, merchandise or commodities in the United States; or
(3) the business of underwriting, selling or distributing
securities in the United States.
FORD & GERALD LIBRARY
The types of activities which the Board has determined to
be permissible "incidental" U.S. activities under paragraph (1) above
for foreign companies in which an Edge Act Corporation or a member bank
has a share interest are generally set forth in § 211.7 of the Board's
Regulation K (12 CFR § 211.7), which sets forth the kinds of limited
activities an Edge Act Corporation itself may directly engage in in the
United States. In general, such activities are confined to such limited
business activities in the U.S. as are usual in financing international
commerce. Foreign banks in which Edge Act Corporations or member banks
have a share interest are also limited in the United States to the limited
operations permissible an Edge Act Corporation under Regulation K.
Thus, if a foreign bank in which a member bank or Edge Act Corporation
has a share interest desires to open a branch or agency in the U.S.,
the branch or agency must confine its U.S. activities to those permissible
an Edge Act Corporation under Regulation K. The Board has also ruled
in this regard that it is not permissible for a foreign bank in which
a member bank or Edge Act Corporation has a share interest to organize
See 12 U.S.C. 615 for Edge Act Corporation affiliates. The prohibitions
of the Edge Act are applied by regulation to bank holding company foreign
affiliates under § 225.4 (f) (1) of Regulation Y. Edge Act Corporations
are by statute precluded from directly engaging in such activities (12
U.S.C. 617).
1/ See 12 CFR § 211.8 (c) (1), § 213.4( (b) (1), and § 225.4(f) (1) (by implica-
tion). Edge Act Corporations are also proscribed from directly engaging
in such activities. See 12 CFR § 211.5(b).
-12-
a national or State-chartered subsidiary bank in the U.S., since it
would be engaging in a domestic banking business not incidental to its
international or foreign business.
Foreign companies in which bank holding companies have greater
than a 5 per cent voting share interest are also subject to the same
restraints on incidental U.S. activities as those imposed on companies
in which Edge Act Corporations have a share interest, and in addition
are subject to a regulatory prohibition against accepting deposits or
similar credit balances in the U.S.
(b) Permissible and Nonpermissible Foreign Activities of
Foreign Affiliates.
(1) General Consent "Venture Capital Investment". Under
current Board regulations, a U.S. bank through its Edge Act Corporation
subsidiary may, without obtaining the Board's prior consent, indirectly
purchase and hold the shares of foreign corporations not doing business
in the U.S., irrespective of the kind of foreign activities engaged
in by such foreign corporations, so long as no more than 25 per cent
of the shares of the foreign corporation are acquired and no more than
$500,000 is invested by the Edge Act Corporation in the shares of the
foreign corporation. Bank holding companies are also permitted by regula-
tion to make such investments abroad under the same percentage and amount
limitations.
§ 211.8 (a) of Regulation K and § 225.4(f) (2) of Regulation Y (12
CFR § 211.8 (a) and § 225.4(f) (2))
FORD & GERALD LIBRARY
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The Board has permitted these noncontrolling venture capital
investments in foreign companies by Edge Act Corporations and bank holding
companies because (1) they provide flexibility in structuring a financing
package, (2) secure a limited voice in management to protect extensions
of credit, and (3) promote good will with a bank customer (sometimes
a foreign government) and seek to develop a stable source of foreign
deposits.
In general, such "venture capital investments" are minority
long-term passive investments in the stock of foreign companies (usually
nonfinancial companies) that are made solely to earn a return and not
with the intent to exercise influence over the operations of the companies
invested in for the purposes of expanding the operating capabilities
of the U.S. bank or bank holding company involved.
(2) Investments in Foreign Affiliates. An Edge Act
Corporation must obtain the Board's prior consent to invest more than
$500,000 in the shares of a foreign company or acquire more than 25
per cent of the shares of a foreign company. Bank holding companies,
by regulation, are subject to similar requirements. 10/ A member bank,
however, must in every case obtain the Board's prior consent to acquire
a direct share interest in a foreign bank, irrespective of the amount
invested or percentage of shares acquired.
If less than 25 per cent of the shares of a foreign company
are proposed to be acquired with the Board's prior consent and if the
§ 211.8 (b) of Regulation K (12 CFR § 211.8(b))
10 / § 225.4 (f) (2) of Regulation Y (12 CFR § 225.4 (f) (2)
FORD & GERALD LIBRARY
-14-
Board determines the investment to be a purely passive venture capital
investment which otherwise would be made under the general consent procedures
but for the investing of more than $500,000, the Board will generally
permit the Edge Act Corporation or bank holding company to purchase
and hold the shares of such foreign company irrespective of the types
of financial or nonfinancial activities it may engage in. Due to the
greater amount of the investment, however, the Board, in such situations,
carefully evaluates risks associated with nonfinancial activities.
When a U.S. bank indirectly through its Edge Act Corporation
subsidiary, or when a U.S. bank holding company directly or indirectly
seeks to acquire more than a 25 per cent share interest in a foreign
company, the Board has adopted a policy of narrowing the activities
which may be conducted through such foreign companies to those of a
banking and financial nature. The Board has adopted this line of more
than a 25 per cent investment for imposing limitations on the kinds
of activities that may be engaged in by such foreign companies, because
&
FORD
at that level of investment the Edge Act Corporation or bank holding
11/
GERALD
company has a significant operating interest in the company.
LISRARY
11/ The Board generally evaluates foreign investments of Edge Act Corpora-
tions under a standard of "control" that is based upon majority ownership
of voting shares of a foreign company or actual control of its board
of directors or principal officers. If a foreign company is controlled
by an Edge Act Corporation it is subject by Board letter to the provisions
of Regulation K the same as if it were an Edge Act Corporation. Many
of these provisions relate to financial restrictions such as lending
limits and not to permissible activities. In cases where an Edge Act
Corporation does not have exclusive control of a foreign company but
has greater than a 25 per cent interest, the Board has applied only
the Regulation K limitations on activities that may be engaged in by
an Edge Act Corporation and has not applied the other limitations in
the Regulation. In the Board's judgment, a greater than 25 per cent
interest substantially involves an Edge Act Corporation in the operations
and management of a foreign company and thus the foreign company should
-15-
Specifically, under current Board policy, an Edge Act Corporation
or a bank holding company may, with the Board's consent, acquire and
hold more than 25 per cent of the shares of a foreign company subject
to the condition that such foreign company "shall confine its activities
to international or foreign banking and other international or foreign
financial operations." This same standard also applies to the activities
of a foreign bank in which a member bank has a direct interest of more
than 25 per cent. It should be noted in this regard that, under the
governing statutes, there is no restriction on the types of foreign
activities that can be conducted by foreign companies in which member
banks, Edge Act Corporations or bank holding companies have an interest.
The imposition of this standard is rather through the exercise of the
Board's administrative discretion in this area.
This regulatory standard is taken from the Edge Act wherein
it is stated that Edge Act Corporations are "to be organized for the
purpose of engaging in international or foreign banking or other international
or foreign financial operations. The Board has thus generally
determined that Edge Act Corporations through significant operating
investments in foreign companies should only be permitted to do indirectly
the activities which they are permitted to do directly. By regulation,
12
the Board has imposed this same standard on bank holding companies.
11/ Con't.
FORD & GERALD LIBRARY
be subject to limitations on activities. Most investments falling in
this 25-50 per cent range are joint ventures, where the investing Edge
Act Corporation regards the foreign company as establishing an operating
presence for the Corporation or its parent bank. See in this regard
the Board's recent statement of policy on foreign joint ventures (12
CFR § 211.52) which is included in the Appendix.
12/ § 225.4 (f) (1) of Regulation Y. See press release and Federal Register
Notice accompanying Board adoption of such Regulation enclosed in the
Appendix.
-16-
In interpreting what constitutes permissible "international
or foreign banking or other international or foreign financial operations"
for companies or foreign banks in which Edge Act Corporations, member
banks or bank holding companies have greater than a 25 per cent share
interest (hereinafter collectively referred to as "foreign affiliates
of U.S. banks"), the Board has determined that all of the specific inter-
national and foreign banking and financing activities which Edge Act
Corporations may engage in directly under the Edge Act and the Board's
regulations are also permissible for such foreign affiliates. (These
activities are specified in detail at 12 U.S.C. § 615(a) and § 211.7
of Regulation K.)
Under the Edge Act, however, the Board is also authorized
to empower Edge Act corporations to exercise additional powers usual
in the business of banking or other financial operations in the foreign
countries where they transact business. (12 U.S.C. § 615(a)). The
purpose of such provision is to keep U.S. banks competitive abroad with
their foreign bank counterparts.
In keeping with this purpose, the Board, in construing the
standard "international or foreign banking or other international or
foreign financial operations," has, thus, also sought to permit activities
of general importance to international banking, such as underwriting
of stocks and bonds, that should be capable of being performed by foreign
affiliates of U.S. banks anywhere outside the United States in order
to make them competitive with foreign banks, and has thus approved these
FORD & LIBRARY GERALD
-17-
activities as "international financial operations. m13/ While a foreign
affiliate of a U.S. bank may be able to engage in investment banking
abroad, as noted previously, such foreign affiliate may not, however,
underwrite, distribute or sell securities in the U.S.
Since enactment of the 1970 Amendments to the BHCA, the Board
has generally construed the standard "international or foreign financial
operations" to include activities which the Board has determined to
be activities "closely related to banking" under the domestic standards
of § 4 (c) (8) of the BHCA (12 U.S.C. 1843 (c) (8))
The Board has thus generally permitted foreign affiliates
of U.S. banks to engage in (1) mortgage, finance company, credit card
and factoring operations abroad; (2) servicing loans and other extensions
of credit abroad; (3) performing or carrying on any one or more of the
activities that may be performed or carried on by a trust company (including
activities of a nominee, fiduciary, agency, or custodian nature) in
the manner authorized in the foreign country where the business is to
be transacted; (4) acting as investment or financial adviser abroad;
(5) foreign leasing operations of a type permitted by section 225.4 (a) (6)
of Regulation Y; (6) providing bookkeeping and data processing services
abroad; (7) acting as insurance agent or broker abroad; (8) underwriting
credit-related insurance; and (9) management consulting advice on banking
operations. In some cases, such as foreign leasing activities, the Board
has retained restrictions imposed domestically under Regulation Y on
the activity, because the restrictions relate to ensuring the financing
13/ A paper in the Appendix discusses the legal authority for such
activities in light of the Glass-Steagall Act.
Address GERALD R. FORD
-18-
nature of the activity. 14/ Thus, foreign affiliates of U.S. banks may
not engage in nonfull-payout leasing operations abroad, because the Board
has not determined these activities to be a financial operation. In
the case of the majority of 4 (c) (8) activities such as trust company
activities, the giving of investment and financial advice, providing
bookkeeping and data processing services, and acting as insurance agent
or broker, the Board has not imposed conditions set forth in Regulation
Y which were designed for the domestic market. Generally, foreign affiliates
of U.S. banks may engage in such financial activities to the extent
permitted competing foreign institutions in the foreign country.
The Board has also approved other foreign financial operations
for foreign affiliates of U.S. banks that are not considered closely
related to banking domestically. For example, foreign affiliates of
U.S. banks may engage in management consulting activities abroad subject
to the condition that such services relating to the U.S. market will
be confined to the initial entry of foreign companies into that market.
They may also manage foreign mutual funds subject to the condition
that shares of any such funds will only be sold to nonresident aliens
of the U.S. and that such funds will not directly or indirectly control
or participate in the management of any company. The Board has also
permitted foreign affiliates to engage in travel agency and warehousing
services in certain countries. None of these activities is a permissible
closely related to banking activity under § 4 (c) (8). The Board has,
however, used its discretion to approve these activities as permissible
financial operations abroad for foreign affiliates of U.S. banks in
14/ See 12 CFR § 211.106.
FORD is LIBRARY GERALD
-19-
order to keep U.S. banks competitive abroad because these activities
are either generally performed by foreign banks in their foreign or
international financial operations, or are performed by foreign banks
in certain countries.
The Board has, however, specifically denied requests to permit
foreign affiliates of U.S. banks to engage abroad in underwriting insurance
that is not sold in connection with a credit transaction, 15/ in customs
house brokerage and freight forwarding activities, 16/ in purchasing
and selling of land, real estate development, participating as a joint
venturer in real estate development, hotel ownership and management
and other "non-financial" activities.
17/
These requests were denied because the Board determined that
these activities are not "financial operations" within the meaning of
the governing standard, and U.S. banks would not be harmed competitively
abroad if they could not engage in such activities.
SUMAMRY: In general, the Board has limited the activities of foreign
branches of member banks in a way that closely parallels the standards
applied to the activities of domestic offices of U.S. banks, and has
limited the foreign activities of foreign affiliates of U.S. banks to
2.
FORD
international or foreign banking or other international or foreign
GERALD
financial activities.
LIBRARY
15/ See Board Order of June 19, 1974, denying BankAmerica Corporation's
request to invest in Allstate International, S.A., Zurich, Switzerland,
and Board Order of same date denying First National City Overseas Investment
Corporation's proposed additional investment in Companhia De Seguros
Argos Fluminense, S.A., Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Copies of the Orders
are enclosed in the Appendix.
16/ See Board letters of June 28, 1974 to Bank of Virginia Company and
Boston Overseas Financial Corporation, copies of which are included
in the Appendix.
17/ See Board letter of March 10, 1975 to Citicorp re: investment in
I.A.C. (Holdings), Limited, Melbourne, Australia, a copy of the letter
is in the Appendix.
CHART II
Principal Foreign Activities Permissible
GERALD
URD
to U.S. Banks, by Type of Organization
Edge
and Agree-
ment Cor-
Foreign
Foreign
portations
Foreign
Affiliates
Branches
and Their
Bank Affili-
of
Bank
PRINCIPAL ACTIVITIES
of Member
Foreign
ates of Mem-
Holding
Bank
Affiliates 2 ber Banks Companies
A. Normal Banking Powers Enjoyed in
Home State in U.S.
X
B. Enumerated Powers Usual in Business of
Banking in Host Country
1.
Guarantee customers' debts.
X
X
X
X
2.
Accept commercial drafts or bills
of exchange.
X
X
X
X
3.
Acquire and hold securities of
clearing houses, central and
development banks, and government
entities.
X
X
X
X
4. Underwrite, distribute, buy and sell
obligations of host country's national
government.
X
X
X
X
5. Liens on foreign real estate related
to credit extension.
X
X
X
X
6. Extend credit to executive officers
and pay higher rates on deposits
for officers and employees.
X
X
X
X
7. Act as insurance agent or broker.
X
X
X
X
C. Prohibited Activities
1.
General business of producing,
distributing, buying or selling
goods, wares or merchandise.
X
X
X
X
2. Underwriting, distributing, or
selling [non-government] securities
overseas.
X
*
Corporations organized or operating pursuant to sections 25 and 25 (a) of the Federal
Reserve Act.
Foreign companies acquired by Edge and Agreement Corporations under section 25 and
25 (a) of the Federal Reserve Act.
Foreign banks acquired by member banks under the third paragraph of section 25 of
the Federal Reserve Act.
Foreign companies acquired by bank holding companies under § 4 (c) (13) of the Bank
Holding Company Act.
*These activities may not be engaged in directly by Edge or Agreement Corporations
engaged in banking.
-2-
Edge
and Agree-
ment Cor-
Foreign
Foreign
portations
Foreign
Affiliates
Branches
and Their Bank Affili- of Bank
PRINCIPAL ACTIVITIES
of Member
Foreign
ates of Mem-
Holding
3
Bank
Affiliates
ber Banks
Companies
3.
Underwriting, distributing or
selling securities in the United
States.
X
X
X
X
4. Engaging in activities in U.S. not
incidental to international or
foreign business.
X
X
X
D. Closely Related to Banking in U.S.
1.
Mortgage, finance company, credit
card, and factoring operations.
**
X
X
X
2. Servicing loans and other extensions
of credit.
**
X
X
X
3. Trust company activities.
**
X
X
X
4. Acting as investment or financial
adviser.
**
X
X
X
5. Leasing operations.
**
X
X
X
6. Financially-related data processing
services.
**
X
X
X
7.
Financially-related insurance agent
or brokerage services.
**
X
X
X
8. Underwriting credit-related insurance.
**
X
X
X
9.
Management consulting advice to
banking organizations
**
X
X
X
E. Not Closely Related to Banking in U.S.
1.
Underwriting and distribution of
debt and equity securities abroad
X
X
X
2. General management consulting.
X
X
X
3. Management of mutual funds.
X
X
X
4. Operation of travel agency.
X
X
X
5. Operation of warehousing services
X
X
X
6. General data processing services
X
X
X
7. General insurance agency and brokerage
services
X
X
X
8. Portfolio investments of not more
than 25 per cent.
X
X
X
**Only to the extent permitted parent bank under domestic federal or State banking laws,
and foreign branch under local law.
FORD i LIBRARY 97VR70
-3-
Edge
and Agree-
ment Cor-
Foreign
Foreign
portations
Foreign
Affiliates
Branches
and Their
Bank Affili-
of Bank
PRINCIPAL ACTIVITIES
of Member
Foreign
Affiliates 2 ber Banks Companies
ates of Mem- 3 Holding
Bank
4/
F. Activities Specifically Denied
1.
Non-credit related insurance under-
writing.
***
X
X
X
2.
Land sales or real estate development.
***
X
X
X
3.
Hotel ownership and management.
***
X
X
X
4. Custom house brokerage and freigt
forwarding.
***
X
X
X
5.
Investments in more than 25 per cent
of the shares of nonfinancial companies.
***
X
X
X
***These activities have not yet been applied for by foreign branches.
is
FORD,
BERALD
LIBRARY