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Sullivan & Cromwell Discusses Proposed OCC Rulemaking on Bank Mergers

On January 29, 2024, Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu spoke at the University of Michigan Stephen M. Ross School of Business on “What Should the U.S. Banking System Look Like? Diverse, Dynamic, and Balanced” (the “Remarks,” available here). The Remarks call for the development of a “macro view” of the banking system—one that holistically evaluates the impact of bank mergers on the banking system and the U.S. economy—as a way to improve “transparency and trust” in the Office of the Comptroller’s (the “OCC”) “micro,” case-by-case approach to reviewing bank merger applications.

In furtherance of that objective, Acting Comptroller Hsu announced that the OCC is releasing today a notice of proposed rulemaking (the “NPR,” available here) inviting comment on a proposal to amend its regulations governing business combination applications to remove (i) provisions related to the expedited review and “deemed approval” of such applications in certain circumstances and (ii) the availability of a streamlined application for these types of transactions. Importantly, the NPR seeks comment on a draft policy statement summarizing the principles the OCC uses when reviewing proposed bank mergers, which could be read as differing in certain critical respects from current policy and practice.  These principles would be added to the OCC’s business combinations regulation as an appendix.

Comments on the NPR will be due 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

BACKGROUND

The Remarks and the NPR come against the background of a reexamination of bank merger policy among the Biden administration and certain bank regulatory agencies over the past two years. In July 2021, President Biden issued an Executive Order on Promoting Competition in the American Economy (available here), urging, among other things, a “revitalization of merger oversight under the Bank Merger Act and the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956.” In accordance with that directive, (i) in December 2021 the U.S. Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division (the “DOJ”) announced that it was seeking public comment on “whether and how the division should revise the 1995 Bank Merger Competitive Review Guidelines,” which explain the analytical framework that guides the competition review of bank mergers,[1] and (ii) in March 2022 the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the “FDIC”) requested information on a wide range of issues relating to bank merger transactions.[2]

Since 2022, the OCC has similarly signaled that it is in favor of revisiting its approach to bank merger applications and its review process for such transactions, and is actively working with the FDIC, the DOJ and the Federal Reserve on updates to the analytical framework related to these transactions.  For example, in May 2022, Acting Comptroller Hsu gave a speech at the Brookings Institute (available here) during which he noted that “the frameworks for analyzing bank mergers need updating” because “[w]ithout enhancements, there is an increased risk of approving mergers that diminish competition, hurt communities, or present systemic risks.” In addition, in February 2023 Senior Deputy Comptroller and Chief Counsel Ben W. McDonough delivered opening remarks for the OCC Bank Merger Symposium on behalf of Mr. Hsu (available here) during which he reiterated the Acting Comptroller’s views that “[the OCC] needs to build a better mousetrap so that healthy mergers get approved while unhealthy mergers get rejected,” and to do so the OCC needs to revise its analytical framework to deepen its evaluation of a bank merger’s effect on market concentration, financial stability and the convenience and needs of the communities served.

PROPOSED RULE

Today, the OCC took an initial step toward updating that framework by issuing an NPR that seeks comment on (i) proposed amendments to the OCC’s regulations to eliminate expedited review and the use of streamlined applications currently available for certain bank mergers, and (ii) the addition of a policy statement to clarify the standards the OCC will apply in reviewing business combinations involving national banks and federal savings associations.

The OCC notes in commentary that it does not expect these regulatory amendments to significantly increase the burden on applicants that would have otherwise qualified for the expedited procedures and use of a streamlined application because, in accordance with its proposed policy statement, the OCC will consider these transactions as possessing “indicators that are likely to satisfy statutory factors and do not otherwise raise supervisory or regulatory concerns” and may “use its discretion to reduce the information that the applicant needs to provide to the OCC” in such circumstances.[8]

Specifically, the proposed policy statement has the following five substantive sections:

Conversely, the OCC indicates that the following indicators, among others, would raise supervisory or regulatory concerns consistent with application denials on the basis of the statutory factors not being met: (i) the acquirer as a CRA rating of Needs to Improve or Substantial Noncompliance; (ii) the acquirer has composite, management and consumer compliance ratings of 3 or worse; (iii) the acquirer is a global systemically important banking (“GSIB”) organization or subsidiary thereof; or (iv) the acquirer has open or pending Bank Secrecy Act or anti-money laundering enforcement or fair lending actions.[10]

ANALYSIS

Although in his Remarks Mr. Hsu suggests the aim of the OCC is to provide institutions and the public with greater transparency and clarity regarding how the OCC reviews bank merger applications, the proposals set forth in the NPR could be considered a significant departure from the OCC’s long-standing approach to evaluating and processing these applications, which may create uncertainty for market participants and potentially discourages them from pursuing “healthy mergers” that are beneficial from financial stability, competition, and community convenience and needs perspectives and that, under a “macro view,” would drive the innovation and economies of scale required to positively impact the U.S. banking system and in turn the U.S. economy.

Apart from these principles, the NPR does not seem to address the lengthy period of time which has been required for bank merger approvals by all the agencies and how the concept of approval deadlines is consistent with the statutes governing bank mergers. Additionally, certain of the proposals, such as requiring a full Interagency Bank Merger Application for internal reorganizations or proposed transactions that are subject to Federal Reserve review, may result in duplicative review processes among the federal banking agencies, particularly in scenarios where the OCC has the ability to comment on an application pending with another agency.

ENDNOTES

[1]           Although the DOJ has not yet issued any proposed revisions to the Bank Merger Competitive Review Guidelines, in July 2023 the DOJ and the Federal Trade Commission (“the FTC”) issued draft merger guidelines (available here) for public comment that articulated a policy more adverse to mergers than their prior long-standing policy.  In December 2023, the DOJ and the FTC adopted final merger guidelines that largely tracked the draft merger guidelines despite many commenters having criticized the draft merger guidelines.  See our prior memorandum to clients regarding the  final merger guidelines here.

[2]           See our prior memorandum to clients regarding the FDIC’s RFI on bank merger transactions here.

[3]           § 5.33(d)(3) defines a “business reorganization” as either a business combination between (i) eligible banks and eligible savings associations, or between an eligible bank or an eligible savings association and an eligible depository institution, that are controlled by the same holding company or that will be controlled by the same holding company prior to the combination; or (ii) an eligible bank or an eligible savings association and an interim national bank or interim Federal savings association chartered in a transaction in which a person or group of persons exchanges its shares of the eligible bank or eligible savings association for shares of a newly formed holding company and receives after the transaction substantially the same proportional share interest in the holding company as it held in the eligible bank or eligible savings association (except for changes in interests resulting from the exercise of dissenters’ rights), and the reorganization involves no other transactions involving the bank or savings association.

[4]           § 5.33(j) authorizes use of a streamlined application if:

(i) at least one party to the transaction is an eligible bank or eligible savings association, and all other parties to the transaction are eligible banks, eligible savings associations or eligible depository institutions, the resulting national bank or resulting federal savings association will be well capitalized immediately following consummation of the transaction, and the total assets of the target institution are no more than 50% of the total assets of the acquiring bank or federal savings association, as reported in each institution’s Consolidated Report of Condition and Income filed for the quarter immediately preceding the filing of the application;

(ii) the acquiring bank or federal savings association is an eligible bank or eligible savings association, the target bank or savings association is not an eligible bank, eligible savings association, or an eligible depository institution, the resulting national bank or resulting Federal savings association will be well capitalized immediately following consummation of the transaction, and the filers in a pre-filing communication request and obtain approval from the appropriate OCC licensing office to use the streamlined application;

(iii) the acquiring bank or federal savings association is an eligible bank or eligible savings association, the target bank or savings association is not an eligible bank, eligible savings association, or an eligible depository institution, the resulting bank or resulting Federal savings association will be well capitalized immediately following consummation of the transaction, and the total assets acquired do not exceed 10% of the total assets of the acquiring national bank or acquiring federal savings association, as reported in each institution’s Consolidated Report of Condition and Income filed for the quarter immediately preceding the filing of the application; or

(iv) in the case of a transaction under § 5.33(g)(4) of this section, the acquiring bank is an eligible bank, the resulting national bank will be well capitalized immediately following consummation of the transaction, the filers in a pre-filing communication request and obtain approval from the appropriate OCC licensing office to use the streamlined application, and the total assets acquired do not exceed 10% of the total assets of the acquiring national bank, as reported in the bank’s Consolidated Report of Condition and Income filed for the quarter immediately preceding the filing of the application.

[5]           See NPR at 6.

[6]           Id. (emphasis added).

[7]           Id. at 7.

[8]           NPR at 6, 8.

[9]           Id. at 5.

[10]         Id. at 26–28.

[11]         Id. at 29.

[12]         Id. at 11, 29 (emphasis added).  We note that this is a departure from prior OCC bank merger review practice.

[13]         Id. at 32.

[14]         Id. at 38.

[15]         Id. 

[16]         Id. at 40.

[17]         Id. at 27.

[18]         See, e.g., OCC Order Approving JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association’s acquisition of the substantial majority of First Republic Bank’s assets (May 1, 2023) (available here).

This post comes to us from Sullivan & Cromwell LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “Acting Comptroller of the Currency Announces Proposed Rulemaking Regarding Bank Mergers,” dated January 29, 2024, and available here. 

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