Re: Assessments, Mitigating the Deposit Insurance Assessment Effect of Participation in the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), the PPP Lending Facility, and the Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility, RIN 3064-AF53, May 20, 2020
Mr. Robert E. Feldman
Executive Secretary
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 17th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20429
Mr. Feldman:
The American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute (together, “the Associations”) appreciate the opportunity to comment on the notice of proposed rulemaking from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) to mitigate the effects on assessments for banks that participate in the Paycheck Protection Program (“PPP”) of the U.S. Small Business Administration, as well as in the Federal Reserve’s PPP Liquidity Facility (“PPPLF”) and Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (“MMLF”) (“the NPR”). To this end, the NPR would:
The Paycheck Protection Program is a Federal program, authorized under the CARES Act, to address the devastating economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic by providing subsidies for small businesses to keep employees on their payrolls. This program is administered primarily through banks, which make forgivable loans to small businesses. Banks have made these loans to support their small business customers and their local communities. These loans do not boost a bank’s earnings, as the margins are thin. The Associations therefore agree that banks should not be penalized in the form of higher FDIC assessments for providing this public service.
We appreciate that the FDIC has considered all the elements of the assessment rate formulas for “small,” “large,” and “highly complex” banks and proposed modifications to a range of these elements. In particular, we support the modifications proposed in the NPR for the:
However, the proposed modifications would not completely offset the impact of PPP lending on assessments for any bank; in fact, they would provide minimal-to-no relief for most banks. As detailed below, to more effectively limit the impact of PPP loans on assessments, we recommend that the final rule should:
The final rule should recognize the entire quarter-end balance of all PPP loans, not just those pledged to the PPPLF.
The most critical issue is that the NPR would not provide relief for the total outstanding balance of PPP loans on a bank’s balance sheet. Instead, it generally recognizes only the quarterly average balance of PPP loans pledged against borrowing from the PPPLF.
Many banks funded PPP loan operations with deposits. In making a PPP loan, a bank usually deposits the borrowed funds in a deposit account of the small business borrower. The borrower draws down these deposits over time to cover payroll and other expenses. If the bank needs to replace this financing, it can pledge PPP loans against borrowing from the PPPLF. Such replacement funding builds gradually as the PPP-associated deposits are withdrawn, so the bank’s average PPPLF borrowing over a quarter can be considerably less than its quarter-end PPP loan balance. However, several provisions in the NPR recognize the former (quarterly average PPPLF borrowing), but not the latter (quarter-end PPP loan balance), which would mitigate only a small portion of the impact on assessments from PPP lending.
In demonstration, total borrowing from the PPPLF averaged $17.8 billion for second quarter 2020 through May 20, which was 3.5 percent of the $512.2 billion balance of PPP loans outstanding on that date. This suggests that the NPR provisions would relieve no more than 3.5 percent of the assessment penalty for banks with PPP loans on their books.
Moreover, many banks indicate that they have not needed to participate in the PPPLF because they have sufficient deposits to finance their PPP loans. In addition to deposits from PPP borrowers, deposit inflows from the Economic Impact Payments have helped fund the loans. These banks should not be required to pay 35 basis points to borrow nonessential funds from the PPPLF in order to get credit in their FDIC assessments for making PPP loans.
PPPLF borrowing against PPP loan collateral is provided without recourse. We understand that the FDIC views this feature as justification for mitigating the assessments formulas for PPP loans only when used as collateral for PPPLF borrowing. However, “[l]oans under the PPP are 100 percent guaranteed by [the U.S. Small Business Administration], and the full principal amount of the loans and any accrued interest may qualify for loan forgiveness.” As a general matter, guarantees by the U.S. Small Business Administration are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States Government. Surely multiple levels of federal protection should not be needed for the FDIC to achieve its stated goal of mitigating assessments for PPP loans, including (not exclusively) those pledged to the PPPLF.
Accordingly, the Associations recommend that the final rule provide full credit for the outstanding balance of all PPP loans throughout assessments calculations, including in the:
The entire quarter-end outstanding balance of all PPP loans should factor into the leverage ratio used in the assessment rate formulas.
For the reasons set forth above, as well as for consistent and effective application of approach in the final rule, the Associations recommend that the entire quarter-end outstanding balance of all PPP loans should be taken into account to adjust the leverage ratio used in the base assessment rate formulas for all banks. The federal banking regulators now permit adjustment of the leverage ratio for Prompt Corrective Action purposes based on only the quarterly average of PPP loans pledged against PPPLF borrowing. However, FDIC assessments serve a different purpose, so a different treatment is warranted. This point is significant in that the leverage ratio is heavily weighted in the assessment rate formulas.
PPP loans should not classify as “higher risk assets” in the assessment rate formulas for “large” and “highly complex” banks.
Under FDIC rules, a loan to a “high-risk c&i borrower” is classified as a “higher-risk loan,” a component of “higher-risk assets.” Therefore, a PPP loan to a “higher-risk c&i borrower” would raise the bank’s “higher-risk assets / tier 1 capital and reserves” ratio, and thus potentially its assessment rate. Even if the borrower is not a “higher-risk c&i borrower,” a bank should be saved the steps required to evaluate whether an asset as secure as a PPP loan should classify as “higher-risk.” Accordingly, the final rule should exclude PPP loans from “higher risk assets” in the assessment rate formulas for “large” and “highly complex” banks.
Amended assessments calculators for “small,” “large,” and “highly complex” banks should be posted at FDIC’s soonest convenience.
Banks rely on the assessments calculators on www.fdic.gov/deposit/insurance/calculator.html for planning and budgeting. The Associations respectfully request that revised versions be reposted as soon as a rule on mitigating the effects on assessments from participation in the PPP, PPPLF, and MMLF is finalized.
The new Call Report items should be included under “Memoranda” on Schedule RC-C.
According to the NPR, seven additions to the Call Report are being considered within the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council to accommodate the proposed mitigations. The Associations support these changes. We recommend that the new reporting items be added to the memoranda items on Schedule RC-C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables.
The NPR contained a few questions regarding the option of reporting PPP loans as their own category on Schedule RC-C, Part I in the Call Report. The Associations do not support this alternative, as many institutions have already established processes to report these loans in existing categories on schedule RC-C. Therefore, reporting PPP loans as a separate loan category on Schedule RC-C would create a significant operational burden for these institution.
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The Associations appreciate the opportunity to comment on the NPR. Please contact the undersigned if there are any questions.
Respectfully submitted,
Robert W. Strand
Senior Economist
American Bankers Association
[email protected]
w: 202.663.5350, m: 540.424.8600
www.aba.com
Dafina Stewart
Senior Vice President, Associate General Counsel
Bank Policy Institute
[email protected]
w: 202.589.2424, m: 202.699.2454
www.bpi.com