[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 201 (Friday, October 16, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 66108-66143]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-20655]
[[Page 66107]]
Vol. 85
Friday,
No. 201
October 16, 2020
Part V
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Parts 210, 229, and 249
Update of Statistical Disclosures for Bank and Savings and Loan
Registrants; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 201 / Friday, October 16, 2020 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 66108]]
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 210, 229, and 249
[Release No. 33-10835; 34-89835; File No. S7-02-17]
RIN 3235-AL79
Update of Statistical Disclosures for Bank and Savings and Loan
Registrants
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: We are adopting rules to update our statistical disclosure
requirements for banking registrants. These registrants currently
provide many disclosures in response to the items set forth in Industry
Guide 3 (``Guide 3''), Statistical Disclosure by Bank Holding
Companies, which are not Commission rules. The amendments update and
expand the disclosures that registrants are required to provide, codify
certain Guide 3 disclosure items and eliminate other Guide 3 disclosure
items that overlap with Commission rules, U.S. Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (``U.S. GAAP''), or International Financial
Reporting Standards (``IFRS''). In addition, we are relocating the
codified disclosure requirements to a new subpart of Regulation S-K and
rescinding Guide 3.
DATES:
Effective date: These final rules are effective November 16, 2020,
except for the amendments to 17 CFR 229.801(c) and 229.802(c), which
are effective on January 1, 2023.
Compliance date: See Section V for further information on
transitioning to the final rules.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Sullivan, Associate Chief
Accountant, Division of Corporation Finance, at (202) 551-3400, U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Commission is amending 17 CFR 229.404 (``Item 404 of Regulation
S-K'') under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act'') \1\ and
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act''); \2\ 17 CFR
210.9-01 (``Rule 9-01 of Regulation S-X'') and 17 CFR 210.9-03 (``Rule
9-03 of Regulation S-X'') under the Securities Act and the Exchange
Act; and 17 CFR 249.220f (``Form 20-F'') under the Exchange Act. In
addition, the Commission is adding a new subpart, 17 CFR 229.1400
(``Item 1400 of Regulation S-K''), which will include 17 CFR 229.1401
through 17 CFR 229.1406, and rescinding 17CFR 229.801(c) and 229.802(c)
under the Securities Act and Exchange Act.
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\1\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
\2\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.
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Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. New Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K
A. Codification
B. Location of Codification Requirements and XBRL
C. Scope
D. Applicability to Domestic Registrants and Foreign Registrants
E. Reporting Periods
F. Distribution of Assets, Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity;
Interest Rate and Interest Differential (Average Balance, Interest
and Yield/Rate Analysis and Rate/Volume Analysis)
G. Investment Portfolio
H. Loan Portfolio
I. Allowance for Credit Losses
J. Deposits
III. Certain Existing Guide 3 Disclosures That Would Not Be Codified
in Proposed Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K
A. Return on Equity and Assets
B. Short-Term Borrowings
IV. Changes to Article 9 of Regulation S-X
V. Compliance Date
VI. Other Matters
VII. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
B. Baseline
C. Economic Effects
D. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Summary of the Collections of Information
B. Burden and Cost Estimates Related to the Proposed Rules
IX. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
X. Statutory Authority
Text of the Amendments
I. Introduction
On September 17, 2019, we proposed rules \3\ to update the
disclosure of information that banks, bank holding companies
(``BHCs''), savings and loan associations, and savings and loan holding
companies (together, ``bank and savings and loan registrants'') provide
in response to the items set forth in Guide 3.\4\ By its terms, Guide 3
applies to BHCs. However, the disclosures called for by Guide 3 are
also provided by other registrants with material lending and deposit
activities, including savings and loan holding companies.\5\ Guide 3
calls for disclosure in seven areas: (1) Distribution of assets,
liabilities and stockholders' equity; interest rates and interest
differential, (2) investment portfolios, (3) loan portfolios, (4)
summary of loan loss experience, (5) deposits, (6) return on equity and
assets, and (7) short-term borrowings. We proposed to include within
the rules' scope the registrants that under existing practice provide
the disclosures called for by Guide 3: Banks, savings and loan
associations, and savings and loan holding companies. We also proposed
to update the disclosures that bank and savings and loan registrants
must provide to investors, including the elimination of disclosure
items that overlap with Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS.\6\
Finally, we proposed to codify the updated disclosure requirements in a
new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K and to rescind Guide 3.
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\3\ Update of Statistical Disclosures for Bank and Savings and
Loan Registrants, Release No. 33-10688 (Sept. 17, 2019) [84 FR 52936
(Oct. 3, 2019)] (``Proposing Release'').
\4\ Guides for Statistical Disclosure by Bank Holding Companies,
Release No. 33-5735 (Aug. 31, 1976) [41 FR 39007 (Sept. 14, 1976)]
(``Guide 3 Release''). When it published the Guide 3 Release, the
Commission stated that ``[t]he Guides are not Commission rules nor
do they bear the Commission's official approval; they represent
policies and practices followed by the Commission's Division of
Corporation Finance in administering the disclosure requirements of
the federal securities laws.'' Guide 3 was originally published as
Securities Act Guide 61 and Exchange Act Guide 3. In 1982,
Securities Act Guide 61 and Exchange Act Guide 3 were redesignated
as Securities Act Industry Guide 3 and Exchange Act Industry Guide
3. See Rescission of Guides and Redesignation of Industry Guides,
Release No. 33-6384 (Mar. 3, 1982) [47 FR 11476 (Mar. 16, 1982)].
\5\ Many registrants refer to Staff Accounting Bulletin Topic
11:K--Application of Article 9 and Guide 3 (``SAB 11:K''), which
states that ``[t]he SEC staff believes [Guide 3 information] would
be material to a description of business of [non-BHC] registrants
with material lending and deposit activities . . .'' The Industry
Guides and SAB 11:K are not rules, regulations or statements of the
Commission. In light of the adoption of these amendments, the staff
intends to rescind SAB 11:K.
\6\ References to IFRS throughout are to IFRS as issued by the
International Accounting Standards Board (``IASB'').
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We received a number of comment letters in response to the
Proposing Release.\7\ Many of the commenters generally supported the
Commission's efforts to revise existing Guide 3
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disclosure items.\8\ Several of the commenters who supported the
proposed rules also suggested certain revisions to the proposed
disclosure requirements.\9\ We have reviewed and considered all of the
comments that we received on the proposed rules. After taking into
consideration the public comments, we are adopting rules substantially
as proposed.
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\7\ See, e.g., letters from Aimee Heilig (Nov. 9, 2019) (``A.
Heilig''); American Bankers Association (Dec. 23, 2019) (``ABA'');
Bank of America Corporation (Dec. 2, 2019) (``BAC''); Bank Policy
Institute and Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
(Dec. 2, 2019) (``BPI/SIFMA''); Center for Audit Quality (Nov. 25,
2019) (``CAQ''); CFA Institute (Jan. 9, 2020) (``CFA''); Crowe LLP
(Nov. 25, 2019) (``Crowe''); Deloitte & Touche LLP (Nov. 25, 2019)
(``Deloitte''); Ernst & Young LLP (Nov. 27, 2019) (``EY''); KPMG LLP
(Dec. 2, 2019) (``KPMG''); Maria Deering (Nov. 10, 2019) (``M.
Deering''); PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (Nov. 21, 2019) (``PwC'');
Qing Burke, Assistant Professor of Accounting, et al., Miami
University (Oct. 3, 2019) (``Prof. Burke''); XBRL US, Inc. (Dec. 2,
2019) (``XBRL''). The comments on the Proposing Release are
available at: https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7/-02/-17/s70217.htm.
\8\ See, e.g., letters from A. Heilig; ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ;
Crowe; Deloitte; EY; KPMG; and PwC.
\9\ See, e.g., letters from ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe;
Deloitte; EY; KPMG; and PwC.
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II. New Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K
A. Codification
We proposed to update and codify certain Guide 3 disclosure items
in a new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K, consistent with the approach
the Commission has taken when it modernized other Industry Guides. A
number of commenters agreed with this proposal,\10\ and no commenters
opposed codification. Accordingly, the final rules codify the updated
disclosure requirements in a new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K.
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\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
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B. Location of Disclosure Requirements and XBRL
Consistent with existing Guide 3, we did not propose to require the
disclosures required by new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K to be
presented in the notes to the financial statements. Therefore, if
disclosures are provided outside the financial statements, the
disclosures would not be required to be audited, nor would they be
subject to the Commission's requirement to file financial statements in
a machine-readable format using XBRL. The Proposing Release requested
comment as to whether we should require the proposed disclosures to be
included in the notes to the financial statements, as well as whether
we should require the proposed disclosures to be provided in a
structured format.\11\
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\11\ Registrants subject to the financial disclosure
requirements of Regulation S-K are either currently required or will
be required to file their financial statements and filing cover page
disclosures in the Inline XBRL format. See [17 CFR 229.601(b)(101)];
[17 CFR 229.601(b)(104)]. See also Inline XBRL Filing of Tagged
Data, Securities Act Release No. 10514 (June 28, 2018) [83 FR 40846
(Aug. 16, 2018), at 40851] (``Inline XBRL Adopting Release'').
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A number of commenters observed that the existing Guide 3
disclosures are typically included within Management's Discussion &
Analysis (``MD&A''), the Business section, or the notes to the
financial statements.\12\ Several of these commenters agreed that the
proposed disclosure items should not be required to be presented in the
notes to the financial statements, thus retaining the existing
flexibility for registrants to determine where the disclosures are
provided.\13\ One commenter stated that allowing registrants to decide
where best to present each disclosure will result in ``superior
disclosures,'' with related disclosures being grouped together.\14\ A
few commenters encouraged the Commission to consider input from
investors and others as to whether the disclosures should be included
in the audited financial statements before mandating such an
approach.\15\ Several commenters observed that if we were to require
the disclosures in the notes to the financial statements, the note
disclosures would be subject to audit procedures, and registrants would
need to file them in an XBRL format.\16\ Two of these commenters
specifically noted that mandating footnote disclosure of specified data
would likely increase audit costs.\17\ However, these commenters also
noted that footnote disclosures are subject to XBRL tagging and are
more likely to be uniform in their content and location compared to
information outside the financial statements, which would reduce search
costs for users.
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\12\ See e.g., letters from BAC; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe; and EY.
\13\ See letters from ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; and EY.
\14\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\15\ See letters from CAQ; EY; and PWC.
\16\ See letters from CAQ; Deloitte; and EY.
\17\ See letters from CAQ and EY.
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Several commenters stated that the proposed disclosures should not
be subject to the Commission's requirements to file financial
statements in a machine-readable format using XBRL.\18\ Two of these
commenters noted that requiring a structured format could be difficult
for registrants or confusing for investors because registrants may
provide the disclosures in MD&A, which would result in some MD&A
disclosures being provided in an XBRL format while other MD&A
disclosures would not be.\19\ For example, one of these commenters
stated that the cost of selectively providing these disclosures in XBRL
format in MD&A could be significant to registrants.\20\
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\18\ See letters from ABA; BAC; and BPI/SIFMA.
\19\ See letters from BAC and BPI/SIFMA.
\20\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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A few commenters supported the use of a machine-readable format for
the disclosure items that would be codified in Subpart 1400 of
Regulation S-K.\21\ These commenters recommended requiring registrants
to tag all Subpart 1400 data in XBRL, regardless of location, to ensure
that a machine-readable format of these disclosures is consistently
available across all registrants providing them. Furthermore, these
commenters recommended that Inline XBRL be used for Subpart 1400 data
because it is already supported in the marketplace for other required
disclosures, specifically the financial statements and data on the
cover page of certain filings.\22\ These commenters stated that data
provided in a machine-readable format improves the productivity of the
data collection process, which reduces the cost of analysis and
encourages more robust and in-depth analysis. These commenters also
stated that the costs for XBRL preparation have declined and that they
do not believe that the additional tags required for Subpart 1400 data
would pose a significant burden.\23\
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\21\ See letters from CFA and XBRL.
\22\ See letters from CFA and XBRL.
\23\ See id. (citing the pricing study for small reporting
companies conducted by the AICPA and XBRL, available at: https://www.aicpa.org/InterestAreas/FRC/AccountingFinancialReporting/XBRL/DownloadableDocuments/XBRL%20Costs%20for%20Small%20Companies.pdf).
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The final rules do not require bank and savings and loan
registrants to include Item 1400 of Regulation S-K disclosures in a
specified location. We agree with commenters that retaining flexibility
as to where to provide the disclosures is important and will allow
registrants to use their judgment to determine where the disclosures
can best be included to maximize the readability and usefulness of the
disclosure. We are cognizant of the additional costs that would be
incurred if the disclosures were required to be included in the notes
to the financial statements, and we believe investors are accustomed to
locating this information in different locations within SEC filings
given the current flexibility as to where to include the disclosures.
As discussed above, we received mixed comments regarding the
benefits, costs and practical challenges of requiring the proposed
disclosures in a machine readable format. Therefore, like the proposed
rules, the final rules do not require a registrant to present new
Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K in a machine-readable format unless the
registrant elects to include the disclosures within the financial
statements.
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C. Scope
i. Proposal
We proposed that Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K would apply to bank
and savings and loan registrants. In the Proposing Release, we
expressed the view that identifying and codifying the types of
registrants within the scope of the proposed rules would clarify the
existing practice of providing Guide 3 disclosures when registrants
have material lending and deposit-taking activities.\24\ We also
indicated that the proposed scope would capture the majority of
registrants that predominantly engage in the activities covered by
existing Guide 3 and for which these activities are material.\25\
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\24\ See supra note 5.
\25\ See note 44 of the Proposing Release observing that there
were only four registrants with loans and bank deposits on their
balance sheets that would not have been within the scope of the
proposed rules. However, as discussed in note 169, we estimate that
the final rules will capture all of the registrants that we have
identified in Section VII.B.ii as currently being covered by
existing Guide 3. See infra note 169 for a description of
methodology used to determine this set of registrants.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter stated that the scope of the proposed rules would
largely capture the majority of registrants who currently provide the
disclosures called for by Guide 3.\26\ Another commenter recommended
expanding the scope of the proposed rules to cover any institution that
performs the services under the scope of the proposed rules, even if it
is not their primary role or sole function, provided it does not place
undue burden on the institution.\27\ One commenter encouraged the
Commission to consider input from investors and others regarding the
scope of registrant applicability.\28\
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\26\ See letter from BAC.
\27\ See letter from M. Deering.
\28\ See letter from PwC.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting rules related to
the scope as proposed. Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K applies to bank
and savings and loan registrants. We received limited feedback
suggesting that the scope should be expanded to include other
registrants in the financial services industry, and we did not receive
any feedback from investors or others explaining how the proposed
disclosures would be valuable for assessing registrants outside of the
proposed scope. We continue to believe there is not a large population
of non-bank and savings and loan registrants that are providing Guide 3
disclosures today that will be outside the scope of Subpart 1400 of
Regulation S-K. This is because those registrants likely engage in only
one or a few of the activities addressed by Guide 3 (e.g., lending and
deposit-taking). We also continue to believe that registrants should be
able to ascertain easily whether they are a bank or savings and loan
registrant for purposes of these rules, reducing any potential
confusion regarding the applicability of the disclosure requirements to
non-bank and savings and loan registrants.
D. Applicability to Domestic Registrants and Foreign Registrants
i. Proposal
Consistent with existing Guide 3, we proposed that the rules would
apply to both domestic registrants, including Regulation A issuers, and
foreign registrants, notwithstanding the differences between U.S. GAAP
and IFRS in some of the items called for by Guide 3, such as the
measurement of credit losses and disclosures of financial instruments,
among other areas.\29\ The proposed rules would explicitly exempt
foreign private issuers applying IFRS (``IFRS registrants'') from
certain of the disclosure requirements that are not applicable under
IFRS in order to address certain challenges foreign private issuers may
face in providing the proposed disclosures.\30\
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\29\ See note 56 in the Proposing Release.
\30\ Foreign private issuers are a subset of foreign
registrants, and include any foreign issuer other than a foreign
government, except for an issuer that has more than 50% of its
outstanding voting securities held of record by U.S. residents and
any of the following: A majority of its officers or directors are
citizens or residents of the United States; more than 50% of its
assets are located in the United States; or its business is
principally administered in the United States. See Rule 405 of
Regulation C [17 CFR 230.405] and Exchange Act Rule 3b-4(c) [17 CFR
240.3b-4(c)].
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We also proposed not to codify the undue burden or expense
accommodation for foreign registrants in Guide 3's General Instruction
6, which states that the disclosure items also apply to foreign
registrants to the extent the information is available or can be
compiled without unwarranted or undue burden and expense. In doing so,
we noted that all registrants, not just foreign registrants, can avail
themselves of relief from providing information that is ``unknown and
not reasonably available to the registrant'' under 17 CFR 230.409
(``Securities Act Rule 409'') and 17 CFR 240.12b-21 (``Exchange Act
Rule 12b-21'').\31\
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\31\ Securities Act Rule 409 and Exchange Act Rule 12b-21 state
that information required need be given only insofar as it is known
or reasonably available to the registrant. If any required
information is unknown and not reasonably available to the
registrant, either because the obtaining thereof would involve
unreasonable effort or expense, or because it rests peculiarly
within the knowledge of another person not affiliated with the
registrant, the information may be omitted. The rule provides two
additional conditions. The first is that the registrant must give
such information on the subject that it possesses or can acquire
without unreasonable effort or expense, together with the sources of
that information. The second is that the registrant must include a
statement either showing that unreasonable effort or expense would
be involved or indicating the absence of any affiliation with the
person within whose knowledge the information rests and stating the
result of a request made to such person for the information.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter stated that the proposed rules should apply to both
domestic and foreign registrants, but asked the Commission to consider
carve-outs and add other exceptions that align with the registrant's
applicable accounting standards in their domicile countries.\32\ This
commenter did not provide any examples of exceptions in accounting
standards that were not addressed in the proposed rules.
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\32\ See letter from BAC.
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Another commenter stated that the proposed rules would modify
certain of the requirements for foreign registrants filing Form 20-F
using IFRS and supported those changes.\33\ However, this commenter
also noted that many foreign registrants currently report Guide 3
information on a modified basis as a result of prior consultations with
Commission staff and asked the Commission to confirm in the adopting
release that the proposed amendments are not intended to change
existing interpretations of hardship or prior staff guidance to foreign
registrants with respect to the disclosure requirements. This commenter
also stated the Commission should codify the undue burden or expense
accommodation in General Instruction 6.\34\ Other commenters noted that
they had seen limited use of the accommodation in Rules 409 and 12b-21
and therefore surmised that it may be rare for a registrant to be able
to demonstrate that the required information is not reasonably
available or that obtaining it may require unreasonable effort or
expense.\35\ These commenters asked the Commission to provide guidance
on factors the registrant should consider when evaluating whether the
requested information is unknown or that obtaining it would require
unreasonable effort or expense. Several commenters stated it is unclear
whether registrants
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would be required to discuss an accommodation or alternative
presentation with the staff if they relied on the guidance in Rules 409
and 12b-21 and suggested clarifying any expectations.\36\ One commenter
recommended using language based on Item 3.A.1 of Form 20-F,\37\ which
they stated provides a similar hardship accommodation for foreign
private issuers.\38\
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\33\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\34\ See id.
\35\ See, e.g., letters from CAQ; Crowe; Deloitte; and KPMG.
\36\ See letters from CAQ; Crowe; and Deloitte.
\37\ Item 3.A.1 of Form 20-F states, in part, that selected
financial data for either or both of the earliest two years of the
five-year period may be omitted if the company represents that such
information cannot be provided, or cannot be provided on a restated
basis, without unreasonable effort or expense. The Commission
recently proposed to delete this Item and the related instructions.
See Management's Discussion & Analysis, Selected Financial Data, and
Supplementary Financial Information, Release No. 33-10750 (Jan. 30,
2020) (the ``2020 MD&A Proposing Release'').
\38\ See letter from CAQ.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting the rules as
proposed. The rules apply to domestic registrants, including Regulation
A issuers,\39\ and to foreign registrants.\40\ In considering whether
to codify the undue burden or expense accommodation for foreign
registrants in General Instruction 6, we note that no commenters
provided examples of disclosures that would involve an undue hardship
to provide. We also note that the staff has not received any requests
for accommodation during the past ten years and that prior
accommodation requests tended to request relief with respect to
reporting periods or categories or classes of financial instruments
that were different from those called for by Guide 3. We believe the
final rules address these matters by linking the disclosure
requirements to categories or classes of financial instruments
disclosed in the registrant's U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements,
aligning the reporting period requirements with those required to be
presented in the financial statements, and explicitly exempting IFRS
registrants from certain of the disclosure requirements. We also
acknowledge commenter feedback that requested that we consider carve-
outs and add other exceptions that align with the foreign registrants'
applicable accounting standards in their domicile countries. However, a
foreign registrant that presents financial statements prepared in
accordance with its home-country accounting standards is required to
reconcile the financial statements to U.S. GAAP and to provide all
other information required by U.S. GAAP and Regulation S-X, unless the
requirements specifically do not apply to the foreign registrant.\41\
Therefore, the information required to be disclosed under Item 1400 of
Regulation S-K would always be in accordance with U.S. GAAP or IFRS,
which eliminates the need for an exception for the accounting standards
in the registrant's domicile country for the purpose of these
disclosures. For the reasons discussed above, we do not believe
codifying the accommodation in General Instruction 6 is necessary.
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\39\ Item 7(c) of Form 1-A [17 CFR 239.90] states that the
disclosure guidelines in all Securities Act Industry Guides must be
followed, and to the extent that the industry guides are codified
into Regulation S-K, the Regulation S-K industry disclosure items
must be followed. Therefore, issuers in Tier 1 and Tier 2 offerings
are required to comply with the final rules in Regulation A offering
statements. Additionally, issuers in Tier 2 offerings are required
to file annual reports on Form 1-K [17 CFR 239.91]. Item 1 of Form
1-K requires the information required by Item 7 of Form 1-A to be
included in annual reports.
\40\ We have added an Instruction to Item 4 of Form 20-F to
state that if a registrant is a bank, BHC, savings and loan
association, or savings and loan holding company, it must provide
the information specified in Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K.
\41\ See Item 18 of Form 20-F.
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Securities Act Rule 409 and Exchange Act Rule 12b-21, however,
remain applicable to all registrants, including foreign registrants.
Although several commenters requested guidance related to the
application of Securities Act Rule 409 and Exchange Act Rule 12b-21 by
foreign registrants, we do not believe it is necessary to do so because
registrants have applied these rules for many years in a variety of
other contexts without the need for additional guidance. Additionally,
we believe the application of Rule 409 or Rule 12b-21 is dependent on
the registrant's specific facts and circumstances. To the extent that a
registrant believes Rule 409 or Rule 12b-21 applies to its facts and
circumstances for any of the disclosures required by Item 1400 of
Regulation S-K, there is no requirement to discuss such application or
analysis in advance with the staff.
E. Reporting Periods
i. Proposal
We proposed defining the term ``reported period'' for purposes of
Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K to mean each annual period for which
Commission rules require a registrant to provide financial statements.
Commission rules generally require two years of balance sheets and
three years of income statements,\42\ except that smaller reporting
companies (``SRCs'') \43\ may present only two years of income
statements,\44\ and emerging growth companies (``EGCs'') \45\ may
present only two years of financial statements in initial public
offerings of common equity securities.\46\ Lastly, Commission rules for
Regulation A issuers generally require two years of annual financial
statements for Tier 1 and Tier 2 offerings.\47\
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\42\ 17 CFR 210.3 (``Article 3 of Regulation S-X'').
\43\ An SRC is an issuer (other than an investment company, an
asset-backed issuer, or a majority-owned subsidiary of a parent that
is not an SRC) that had a public float of less than $250 million as
of the last business day of its most recently completed second
fiscal quarter; or had annual revenues of less than $100 million
during its most recently completed fiscal year, and no public float
or a public float of less than $700 million as of the last business
day of its most recently completed second fiscal quarter. See Rule
405 of Regulation C, Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act [17 CFR 240.12b-
2], and Item 10(f) of Regulation S-K [17 CFR 229.10(f)].
\44\ 17 CFR 210.8 (``Article 8 of Regulation S-X'').
\45\ An EGC is an issuer with less than $1.07 billion in total
annual gross revenues during its most recently completed fiscal
year. If an issuer qualifies as an EGC as of the first day of its
most recently completed fiscal year it maintains that status until
the earliest of: (1) The last day of the fiscal year of the issuer
during which it has total annual gross revenues of $1.07 billion or
more; (2) the last day of its fiscal year following the fifth
anniversary of the first sale of its common equity securities
pursuant to an effective registration statement; (3) the date on
which the issuer has, during the previous 3-year period, issued more
than $1 billion in non-convertible debt; or (4) the date on which
the issuer is deemed to be a ``large accelerated filer'' (as defined
in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2). See Rule 405 of Regulation C under the
Securities Act and Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
\46\ Securities Act Sec. 7(a)(2)(A), 15 U.S.C. 77g(a)(2)(A).
\47\ Part F/S(b) of Form 1-A requires two years of annual
financial statements for Tier 1 offerings, which need not be on an
audited basis, and Part F/S(c)(ii) of Form 1-A requires two years of
audited annual financial statements for Tier 2 offerings. Issuers in
Tier 2 offerings are required to file an annual report on Form 1-K
containing two years of audited financial statements.
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We also proposed requiring interim period disclosures if there is a
material change in the information or the trend evidenced thereby.
Lastly, we proposed to require new bank and savings and loan
registrants to disclose certain credit ratios for each of their last
five fiscal years in initial registration statements and Regulation A
offering statements.\48\ Consistent with Securities Act Rule 409 and
Exchange Act Rule 12b-21, the information would be required only
insofar as it is known or reasonably available to the registrant.
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\48\ See discussion of credit ratios disclosure in Section
II.I.iv of the Proposing Release.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter agreed with each of the proposed changes to reporting
periods.\49\ A number of commenters agreed with the proposal to reduce
the number of reporting periods and align them with the annual periods
for which
[[Page 66112]]
Commission rules require financial statements to be presented.\50\ One
of these commenters supported the proposal to modify the current
interim period instruction to clarify that the threshold to include an
additional interim period is based on whether there is a material
change in the information or the trend evidenced thereby, stating that
this is consistent with other Commission guidance and FASB
guidance.\51\ However, another commenter stated that the Commission
should align the threshold for interim reporting to the threshold in
Rule 10-01(a)(5) of Regulation S-X,\52\ which only requires disclosure
of information to the extent sufficient to keep the interim disclosures
from being misleading.\53\
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\49\ See letter from M. Deering.
\50\ See letters from ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; and EY.
\51\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\52\ See 17 CFR 210.10-01(a)(5).
\53\ See letter from BAC.
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A few commenters were supportive of the proposed credit ratio
disclosures for each of the last five fiscal years in initial
registration statements and initial Regulation A offering
statements.\54\ One of these commenters cited the lack of publicly
available prior period information for these reporting periods as
reason for its support.\55\ Another commenter stated it was supportive
only if the information is known or reasonably available to the
registrant.\56\ This commenter indicated that the use of Rules 409 and
12b-21 is very limited, and observed that registrants generally have
omitted information that could not be produced without unreasonable
effort or expense only when the exception is codified in the specific
disclosure requirement (e.g., Item 3 of Form 20-F \57\ as it relates to
Selected Financial Data for the earliest two years).
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\54\ See letters from BAC and EY.
\55\ See letter from BAC.
\56\ See letter from EY.
\57\ See supra note 37.
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Several other commenters encouraged the Commission to consider
requiring the credit ratio disclosure for only the number of years
presented in the financial statements in the initial registration
statement.\58\ One of these commenters questioned whether the five-year
requirement was consistent with disclosure effectiveness and investor
protection.\59\ All of these commenters requested that the Commission,
at a minimum, align the reporting periods to the financial statement
periods for EGCs in order for the requirement to be consistent with the
underlying principles and objectives of the Jumpstart Our Business
Startups Act \60\ (``JOBS Act'').\61\ Two of these commenters also
recommended that the Commission consider this revised approach for
Regulation A issuers that would otherwise qualify as EGCs.\62\
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\58\ See letters from CAQ; Crowe; and Deloitte.
\59\ See letter from Crowe.
\60\ Public Law 112-106, Sec. 102, 126 Stat. 309 (2012).
\61\ See letters from CAQ; Crowe; and Deloitte.
\62\ See letters from CAQ and Crowe.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting the rules as
proposed for the annual and interim reporting period definitions. We
continue to believe it is appropriate to align the required reporting
periods with the relevant annual periods for which Commission rules
require a registrant to provide financial statements because the
Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K disclosures are integrally related to
the financial statements. There have been changes in technology since
Guide 3 was originally issued, particularly the availability of past
financial statements and other disclosure made in filings on the
Commission's Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system
(``EDGAR''). As such, the historical information provided pursuant to
Guide 3 that is not required by Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K will
generally be accessible through the registrant's prior filings on
EDGAR. Furthermore, the elimination of repetitive disclosures,
reduction in costs and burdens to registrants, and availability of
technology reflected in the final rules is in line with the 2015 Fixing
America's Surface Transportation Act (``FAST Act'') mandate \63\ and
the related Commission rulemaking.\64\ Finally, we do not believe it is
necessary to align the threshold for interim reporting with the
threshold in Rule 10-01(a)(5) of Regulation S-X. Investors and bank and
savings and loan registrants are familiar with the interim period
threshold we are codifying, and we believe that threshold strikes the
appropriate balance for when additional information would be material
to an investment decision.
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\63\ Public Law 114-94, Sec. 72003, 129 Stat. 1312 (2015).
\64\ FAST Act Modernization and Simplification of Regulation S-
K. Release No. 33-10618 (Mar. 20, 2019) [84 FR 12674 (Apr. 2,
2019)].
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After considering commenter feedback, we are not adopting the
proposed rules that would have required certain credit ratio
disclosures for each of the registrant's last five fiscal years in
initial registration statements and in initial Regulation A offering
statements of bank and savings and loan registrants. Instead, the final
rules limit the required credit ratio disclosures to the periods for
which financial statements are required, consistent with the
requirements for periodic reports and other registration statements. As
commenters indicated, the JOBS Act provided scaled disclosure
requirements for EGCs, including reducing the maximum number of years
for which financial statements are required from three to two. As
raised by a commenter, the proposed five-year requirement is
inconsistent with the staff practice to accept only two years of
summary financial data \65\ in an EGC's initial registration statement
instead of the five years required in non-EGCs' registration
statements.\66\ We agree that EGCs and Regulation A issuers should be
able to align the credit ratio reporting periods with the periods for
which they provide financial statements, similar to other financial
reporting requirements. Additionally, after consideration of commenter
feedback and additional staff analysis as to the frequency of initial
registration statements filed by EGCs and Regulation A bank and savings
and loan registrants relative to all initial registration statements
filed by bank and savings and loan registrants, we do not believe it is
necessary to require a different reporting requirement for the limited
non-EGC bank and savings and loan registrants filing initial
registration statements. There was only one initial registration
statement in the last two years that was filed by a non-EGC bank and
savings and loan registrant.\67\ Therefore, all registrants and
Regulation A issuers will be required to provide the ratios for the
same periods for which they provide financial statements. After further
consideration and analysis, we believe this approach is appropriate
because it is unclear how useful the limited credit ratio information
would be without the additional context of other financial statement
information for those additional periods. Additionally, we note that
our existing rules already
[[Page 66113]]
require a discussion of known trends,\68\ and the Commission has issued
guidance emphasizing the requirement to provide trend disclosure in
MD&A.\69\ Therefore to the extent that additional historical
information is necessary to discuss those trends, such as information
outside the financial statement periods included in the filing,
registrants will continue to be required to provide that information.
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\65\ Item 301 of Regulation S-K [17 CFR 229.301]. The Commission
recently proposed to eliminate Item 301 of Regulation S-K. See 2020
MD&A Proposing Release at supra note 37.
\66\ See the JOBS Act Frequently Asked Questions document issued
by the Division of Corporation Finance addressing generally
applicable questions on Title 1 of the JOBS Act available at:
https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/guidance/cfjjobsactfaq-title-i-general.htm.
\67\ Based on staff analysis, the total number of bank and
savings and loan registrants' initial registration statements that
went effective from May 1, 2018 to May 1, 2020 was 32. Based on XBRL
data, 31 were EGCs. No bank and savings and loan registrants'
offering statements were qualified during this period.
\68\ Item 303 of Regulation S-K [17 CFR 229.303] requires a
registrant to discuss its financial condition, changes in financial
condition, and results of operations. Instruction 3 to paragraph
303(a) states that the discussion shall focus on the material events
and uncertainties known to management that would cause reported
financial information not to be necessarily indicative of future
operating results or of future financial condition. The instruction
further states that this would include descriptions and amounts of
matters that: (A) Would have an impact on future operations and have
not had an impact in the past, and (B) have had an impact on
reported operations and are not expected to have an impact on future
operations.
Similarly, for foreign private issuers, Item 5.D. of Form 20-F
requires a foreign private issuer to discuss, for at least the
current financial year, any known trends, uncertainties, demands,
commitments or events that are reasonably likely to have a material
effect on the company's net sales or revenues income from continuing
operations, profitability, liquidity, or capital resources, or that
would cause reported financial information not necessarily to be
indicative of future operating results or financial condition.
\69\ See, e.g., Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations; Certain Investment
Company Disclosures, Release No. 33-6835 (May 18, 1989) [54 FR 22427
(May 24, 1989)] and Commission Guidance Regarding Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operation, Release No. 33-8350 (Dec. 19, 2003) [68 FR 75056 (Dec.
29, 2003)] (the ``2003 MD&A Interpretive Release'').
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F. Distribution of Assets, Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity;
Interest Rate and Interest Differential (Average Balance, Interest and
Yield/Rate Analysis and Rate/Volume Analysis)
i. Proposal
We proposed to codify in proposed Item 1402 of Regulation S-K all
of the average balance sheet, interest and yield/rate analysis, and
rate/volume analysis disclosure items currently in Item I of Guide 3.
We also proposed to further disaggregate the categories of interest-
earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities required to be
disclosed. Specifically, we proposed to require registrants to separate
(1) federal funds sold \70\ from securities purchased with agreements
to resell and (2) federal funds purchased from securities sold under
agreements to repurchase \71\ and to disaggregate commercial paper.\72\
Finally, we proposed to codify the instructions related to foreign
activities contained in General Instruction 7 \73\ and Instruction 5 of
Item I \74\ of Guide 3.
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\70\ Federal funds sold are reserves of a banking institution
that are lent to other institutions overnight.
\71\ ASC 860-10 defines a repurchase agreement as an arrangement
under which a transferor (repo party) transfers a security to a
transferee (repo counterparty or reverse party) in exchange for cash
and concurrently agrees to reacquire the security at a future date
for an amount equal to the cash exchanged plus a stipulated interest
factor.
\72\ Commercial paper consists of short-term promissory notes
issued primarily by corporations. Maturities of commercial paper
range up to 270 days but average about 30 days.
\73\ General Instruction 7 of Guide 3 clarifies that foreign
data need not be presented if the registrant is not required to make
separate disclosures concerning its foreign activities pursuant to
the test set forth in Rule 9-05 of Regulation S-X [17 CFR 210.9-05].
Rule 9-05 requires disclosure when foreign activities, which include
loans and other revenue producing assets, exceed 10% of (1) assets,
(2) revenue, (3) income (loss) before income tax expense, or (4) net
income (loss).
\74\ Instruction 5 to Item I of Guide 3 states that if
disclosure regarding foreign activities is required pursuant to
General Instruction 7 of Guide 3, the information required by
paragraphs A, B and C of Item I should be further segregated between
domestic and foreign activities for each significant category of
assets and liabilities disclosed pursuant to Item I.A, as well as
disclosure of the percentage of total assets and total liabilities
attributable to foreign activities.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter supported the proposal to codify the average balance
and rate section of Guide 3, stating that the disclosures are unique to
Guide 3 and that users of its financial statements find the information
useful.\75\ In contrast, another commenter stated that the additional
disaggregation that would be required by the proposal appears to remove
any element of professional judgment based on quantitative or
qualitative materiality assessments, and therefore may result in
disaggregation that will be of little value to users.\76\ A different
commenter stated that the required disaggregation is more granular than
current practice and financial statement requirements.\77\ This
commenter noted that, for example, federal funds sold and securities
purchased with agreements to resell are typically aggregated on a
single line item on the balance sheet. This commenter also stated that
separating these items and requiring them to be disclosed on an average
balance basis may not be relevant or may be confusing to investors.
Several commenters recommended either retaining Guide 3's existing
language of ``should include,'' or revising the language in proposed
Item 1402 to state ``must include, if material'' when referring to the
disaggregation requirement, in order to give registrants the
flexibility to present this information in a way that they believe is
most relevant to users.\78\
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\75\ See letter from BAC.
\76\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\77\ See letter from ABA.
\78\ See letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting the rules
substantially as proposed. Item 1402 of Regulation S-K codifies all of
the average balance sheet, interest and yield/rate analysis and rate/
volume analysis disclosure items currently in Item I of Guide 3, along
with General Instruction 7 and Instruction 5 of Item 1 of Guide 3. We
also are adopting the requirement to disaggregate the categories of
interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities required to be
disclosed, as proposed.
In a change from the proposal, as suggested by commenters, Item
1402(a) of Regulation S-K states that the categories enumerated in Item
1402(a) ``must be included, if material,'' rather than the proposed
language, which stated that disclosure ``must include, at a minimum.''
While we continue to believe this disclosure can elicit useful
information about the drivers of the changes in net interest earnings
across registrants in a simple and comparable format, we acknowledge
commenters' concerns about requiring disaggregated information when it
is not material to investors. We believe the adopted approach strikes
an appropriate balance between providing sufficient information to help
investors understand material changes in interest income and interest
expense from period to period, and permitting the omission of
immaterial information that could make it more difficult to understand
the material drivers of business results. Furthermore, we believe that
in practice registrants have applied a materiality qualifier in
providing the existing disclosures called for by Guide 3, and therefore
we believe that this change aligns the language in the final rules with
how registrants apply the existing descriptions of ``major categories
of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities.'' In
addition, while we acknowledge one commenter's statement that federal
funds sold and securities purchased with agreements to resell are
typically aggregated in a single line item on the balance sheet, the
type of collateral could vary under the two categories, which could
drive differences in weighted average interest rates and related
changes in the rate/volume analysis. As a result, we continue to
believe it is appropriate to list these two
[[Page 66114]]
categories separately but note that the final rules only require
disaggregation if material.
G. Investment Portfolio
i. Proposal
We proposed to codify in Item 1403 of Regulation S-K the
requirement to disclose weighted average yield for each range of
maturities by category of debt securities and proposed to use the
categories required by U.S. GAAP \79\ or IFRS,\80\ rather than those
categories currently called for by Item II.B of Guide 3. In the
Proposing Release, we stated our belief that the proposed weighted
average yield disclosure would provide investors with information to
evaluate more effectively the performance of the portfolio and that
revising the categories of debt securities to conform to the categories
presented in accordance with U.S. GAAP or IFRS would enhance the
consistency and usefulness of the registrant's investment portfolio
disclosures.\81\ As proposed, this disclosure requirement would apply
only to debt securities that are not carried at fair value through
earnings. Due to the substantial overlap with U.S. GAAP and IFRS
disclosure requirements, we proposed not to codify in Item 1403 the
following disclosure items in Item II of Guide 3: (a) Book value
information; (b) the maturity analysis of book value information; and
(c) the disclosures related to investments exceeding 10% of
stockholders' equity.
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\79\ ASC 320-10 addresses the accounting and reporting for debt
securities. ASC 320-10-50-1B states that major security types should
be based on the nature and risks of the security and that an entity
should consider all of the following when considering whether
disclosure for a particular security type is necessary: (a) Shared
activity or business sector, (b) vintage, (c) geographic
concentration, (d) credit quality, and (e) economic characteristics.
Financial institutions, including banks, savings and loan
associations, savings banks, credit unions, finance companies and
insurance entities are required to include the nine securities
categories listed in ASC 942-320-50-2, although additional types may
also be necessary: (a) Equity securities, segregated by either (1)
industry type or (2) registrant size, or (3) investment objective;
(b) debt securities issued by U.S. Treasury and other U.S.
government corporations and agencies; (c) debt securities issued by
states of the United States and political subdivisions of the
states; (d) debt securities issued by foreign governments; (e)
corporate debt securities; (f) residential mortgage-backed
securities; (g) commercial mortgage-backed securities; (h)
collateralized debt obligations; and (i) other debt obligations.
\80\ IFRS 7 addresses disclosures for financial instruments.
IFRS 7.6 requires disclosures by classes of financial instruments,
which are defined as ``. . . classes that are appropriate to the
nature of the information disclosed and that take into account the
characteristics of those financial instruments.''
\81\ See Section II.F.iii of the Proposing Release.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter supported the proposal to eliminate the investment
portfolio disclosure items that overlap with U.S. GAAP.\82\ This
commenter also supported moving away from the bright-line thresholds in
Guide 3.\83\ Furthermore, this commenter also supported the proposal to
require disclosure of weighted average yields of each category of debt
securities not carried at fair value through earnings by specified
range of maturities because it would provide decision-useful
information to investors. While not commenting specifically on the
investment portfolio disclosure requirements, many commenters generally
supported the elimination of disclosure items that overlap with those
in Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS.\84\
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\82\ See letter from BAC.
\83\ For example, the disclosures related to investments
exceeding 10% of stockholders' equity. See further discussion in
Section II.F of the Proposing Release.
\84\ See, e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe;
Deloitte; EY; KPMG; M. Deering; and PwC.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting Item 1403 of
Regulation S-K as proposed. Item 1403 of Regulation S-K codifies the
requirement to disclose weighted average yield for each range of
maturities by category of debt securities required to be disclosed in
the registrant's U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements. As proposed,
the final rules only apply to debt securities that are not carried at
fair value through earnings. The final rules do not codify the
following disclosure items in Item II of Guide 3: (a) Book value
information; (b) the maturity analysis of book value information; and
(c) the disclosures related to investments exceeding 10% of
stockholders' equity, because these items substantially overlap with
U.S. GAAP and IFRS disclosure requirements.
H. Loan Portfolio
i. Proposal
We proposed to codify in Item 1404 of Regulation S-K the
requirement to disclose the maturity by loan category and the total
amount of loans due after one year that have (a) predetermined interest
rates and (b) floating or adjustable interest rates disclosure
currently called for by Item III.B, by the loan categories disclosed in
the registrant's U.S. GAAP \85\ or IFRS \86\ financial statements.
Currently Item III.B of Guide 3 provides for the exclusion of certain
loan categories (real estate-mortgage, installment loans to individuals
and lease financing) from these disclosures and the aggregation of
other loan categories (foreign loans to governments and official
institutions, banks and other financial institutions, commercial and
industrial and other loans). The proposed rules would not provide for
any exclusion of loan categories, or permit the aggregation of loan
categories for purposes of this disclosure. Additionally, we proposed
to codify the existing Guide 3 instruction stating that the
determination of maturities should be based on contractual terms. We
proposed to clarify the ``rollover policy'' for these disclosures by
stating that, to the extent non-contractual rollovers or extensions are
included for purposes of measuring the allowance for credit losses
under U.S. GAAP or IFRS, such non-contractual rollovers or extensions
should be included for purposes of the maturities classification and
the policy should be briefly disclosed.
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\85\ ASC 310-10-45-2 and ASC 310-10-50-3 require that major
categories of loans or trade receivables be presented separately
either in the balance sheet or in the notes to the financial
statements.
\86\ See supra note 80.
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We proposed not to codify the following Guide 3 disclosure items
because they call for disclosures that are reasonably similar to
disclosures already required by Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS:
\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See Section II.G of the Proposing Release.
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The loan category disclosures called for by Item III.A of
Guide 3;
The loan portfolio risk elements disclosure called for by
Item III.C, which among other disclosures, included disclosure of loan
concentrations exceeding 10% of loans that are not otherwise disclosed
in the loan category disclosure in Item III.A and disclosure of cross
border outstandings to borrowers in each foreign country where such
outstandings exceed 1% of total assets; and
The other interest bearing assets disclosure called for by
Item III.D.\88\
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\88\ We also proposed to delete the loan presentation disclosure
required under 17 CFR 210.9-03(7)(a)-(c) (``Rule 9-03(7)(a)-(c) of
Regulation S-X''). See Section IV below.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter supported aligning the requirements with the loan
categories under existing U.S. GAAP and IFRS requirements but asked the
Commission to allow registrants to
[[Page 66115]]
exclude any loan categories from the maturity and sensitivity to
interest rate changes disclosure that are not material to the
registrant.\89\ This commenter stated that, similar to disclosure
requirements for U.S. GAAP, registrants should have the ability to
aggregate certain loan categories for purposes of the disclosure on the
basis of relevance, materiality, and other considerations. This
commenter also supported moving away from the bright-line thresholds in
Guide 3 and instead relying on existing U.S. GAAP and IFRS requirements
that call for the disclosure of significant concentrations of credit
risk. Finally, this commenter stated that the use of the
``significant'' threshold in U.S. GAAP and IFRS would not result in the
loss of material information.
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\89\ See letter from BAC.
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Another commenter recommended the Commission continue to allow
registrants to exclude or aggregate certain loan categories if they
determine an alternative presentation is more appropriate.\90\ This
commenter stated that mirroring the loan categories and classes
presented in the financial statements, without the flexibility to
exclude certain loan categories, would not result in more meaningful
disclosures. For example, this commenter stated it is likely that large
portfolios of consumer loans, such as credit cards, would be classified
in the ``within 1 year'' category, whereas residential real estate
loans would generally be in the ``over 10 year'' category.
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\90\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting final rules
substantially as proposed. Consistent with the proposal, Item 1404(a)
of Regulation S-K codifies the requirement to disclose the maturity by
loan category disclosure currently called for by Item III.B of Guide 3,
with the loan categories based on the categories required by U.S. GAAP
\91\ or IFRS \92\ in the financial statements, but in response to
comments received, the final rules also require additional maturity
categories to provide investors with sufficient information on the
potential interest rate risk associated with the loans in the
portfolio. The final rules also codify the existing Guide 3 instruction
stating the determination of maturities should be based on contractual
terms, and also codifies the language, as proposed, regarding the
``rollover policy'' for these disclosures.
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\91\ See supra note 85.
\92\ See supra note 80.
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Item 1404(b) of Regulation S-K codifies the disclosure items in
Item III.B of Guide 3 regarding the total amount of loans due after one
year that have (a) predetermined interest rates or (b) floating or
adjustable interest rates, and specifies that this disclosure should
also be disaggregated by the loan categories disclosed in the
registrant's U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements.
While we acknowledge commenter feedback suggesting that the final
rules should allow registrants to exclude certain loan categories from
the Item 1404 of Regulation S-K disclosure, we do not believe any
exceptions are necessary as the disclosure is driven by the loan
categories required by U.S. GAAP or IFRS. U.S. GAAP \93\ considers
materiality, so such immaterial loan categories generally would not be
presented in the financial statements, and therefore would not be
required by these disclosure requirements. The staff has observed that
registrants typically aggregate immaterial loan categories into an
``other'' loan category, or will combine these immaterial loan
categories with the most comparable material loan category. We would
not expect this ``other'' loan category to be disaggregated further for
purposes of this disclosure. Rather, this ``other'' loan category would
be disclosed as a single additional category, consistent with the
presentation in the U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements. We continue
to believe conforming the loan categories required in this disclosure
to those required by U.S. GAAP or IFRS promotes consistency of loan
portfolio disclosures throughout a registrant's filing, and elicits
trend information about interest income and potential interest rate
risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ See supra note 85.
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In response to commenter feedback about large portfolios being
concentrated in a single maturity category, the final rules require
additional maturity categories. Specifically, we have separated the
proposed ``after five years'' maturity category into two categories:
(1) After five years through 15 years, and (2) after 15 years. We
believe these additional maturity categories will elicit more decision-
relevant information for investors by capturing the maturity periods of
commonly offered residential mortgage loan products, such as 15-year
and 30-year residential mortgages. For example, we expect that under
the final rules, residential mortgage loans would no longer be
classified in a single maturity category, as noted by a commenter, thus
providing investors additional information about the risk profile of
those loans. Furthermore, for as long as the loans remain outstanding,
the loans would move through the maturity categories until they are
paid off or sold, such that over time, even 30-year residential
mortgage loans would migrate into different maturity categories.
Consistent with the proposal, the final rules do not codify the
loan category disclosure items in Item III.A of Guide 3, the loan
portfolio risk element disclosure items in Item III.C, or the other
interest bearing asset disclosure items in Item III.D. The rules codify
the Guide 3 loan disclosure items that we believe elicit information
material to an investment decision and do not overlap with other
existing disclosure requirements or principles. The final rules will
thereby elicit disclosure that assists investors in evaluating the
registrant's loan portfolio while also limiting the burdens on
registrants to prepare such disclosures as registrants should be able
to derive this information from their existing books and records.
I. Allowance for Credit Losses
i. Proposal
We proposed to require in Item 1405 of Regulation S-K the
disclosure of the ratio of net charge-offs during the period to average
loans outstanding based on the loan categories required to be disclosed
in the registrant's U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements, instead of
on a consolidated basis as called for by Guide 3. We also proposed to
require registrants to provide the tabular allocation of the allowance
disclosure called for by Item IV.B of Guide 3, except that the
allocation would be based on the loan categories presented in the U.S.
GAAP financial statements, instead of the loan categories specified in
Item IV.B of Guide 3, which we believe is not a substantive change from
existing practice given the existing instruction \94\ in Item IV of
Guide 3 which permits other loan categories to be used if considered a
more appropriate presentation.\95\ We did not propose to codify the
rollforward of the allowance for loan loss disclosures called for by
Item IV.A of Guide 3, given the overlap of this requirement with U.S.
GAAP and IFRS.
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\94\ See Instruction 3 to Item IV of Guide 3.
\95\ As explained in the Proposing Release, we did not propose
to apply this requirement to IFRS registrants because IFRS 7.35H
already requires this information at a similar level of
disaggregation in the financial statements. See Section II.H.iii of
the Proposing Release.
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The proposed rules did not require any incremental disclosures
related to
[[Page 66116]]
the New Credit Loss Standard or IFRS 9 because, as explained in the
Proposing Release, we first wanted to assess the disclosures provided
under the new U.S. GAAP and IFRS standards and evaluate whether
additional information is necessary.\96\ However, the Proposing Release
contained a number of requests for comments seeking feedback on the
types of disclosures that may be material upon the adoption of the New
Credit Loss Standard.
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\96\ See Section II.H of the Proposing Release. Accounting
Standards Update (``ASU'') 2016-13- Financial Instruments--Credit
Losses (Topic 326) (``New Credit Loss Standard'') replaces the
current U.S. GAAP incurred loss methodology with a methodology that
reflects expected credit losses over the entire contractual terms of
the financial instruments. Absent an election to suspend adoption
under Section 4014 of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic
Security Act (``CARES Act''), as discussed further below, the New
Credit Loss Standard became effective for public business entities
that meet the definition of an SEC filer for their fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2019, including interim periods within
those fiscal years. Public Law 116-136, 134 Stat. 281 (Mar. 27,
2020). However, SEC filers that are eligible to be SRCs, as defined
by the SEC, and entities that are not SEC filers, are provided a
delayed effective date of three years. Thus, SRCs, certain EGCs, and
non-SEC filers are able to elect to defer adopting the New Credit
Loss Standard until their fiscal year beginning after December 15,
2022.
The CARES Act provides an insured depository institution, a bank
holding company, or any affiliate thereof with the option to
temporarily suspend application of the New Credit Loss Standard
until the earlier of the date on which the national emergency
concerning COVID-19 terminates or December 31, 2020.
IFRS 9--Financial Instruments was effective January 1, 2018 for
calendar year companies and requires a 12-month expected credit loss
measurement unless there has been a significant increase in credit
risk, in which case it is a lifetime expected credit loss
measurement.
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ii. Comments on Proposal
Several commenters supported eliminating the allowance for credit
losses disclosure items, such as the five-year analysis of loan loss
experience called for by Item IV.A of Guide 3, that are duplicative of
U.S. GAAP or IFRS.\97\ One commenter was supportive of the proposed
allocation of the allowance for credit losses disclosure
requirement.\98\ Another commenter stated that the tabular allocation
of the allowance for credit losses would not be burdensome to prepare
and that it provides a convenient location for such information to be
obtained by investors.\99\ However, this commenter and another
commenter indicated that the disclosures should be at the same level as
the allowance disclosures under U.S. GAAP, which is at the portfolio
segment level, and that further disaggregation is not warranted.\100\
One of these commenters stated that there will be significant
operational difficulties in allocating the allowance in ways that would
not conform to U.S. GAAP reporting.\101\ The other commenter
recommended retaining the instruction to Item III.A of Guide 3, which
provides latitude to registrants to use loan categories outside of
those identified in Guide 3 ``if considered a more appropriate
presentation.'' \102\
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\97\ See letters from ABA and BAC.
\98\ See letter from A. Heilig.
\99\ See letter from ABA.
\100\ See letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
\101\ See letter from ABA.
\102\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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One commenter asserted that the proposed requirement to disclose
disaggregated net charge-offs to average loans ratios by loan category
may not provide meaningful information to the extent the disaggregated
ratios are not significant drivers of business results.\103\ Another
commenter stated that the charge-off ratios will have little, if any,
relation to credit loss provisions or the allowance for credit losses
upon the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, especially for loans
with longer terms, such as many consumer loan products, and therefore
appears not to support the requirement to provide this ratio.\104\ This
commenter further stated that charge-off ratios on these product lines
might confuse investors and others who are trying to assess credit
performance, as allowances will be recorded at origination or
commitment and can significantly change based on economic forecasts.
One commenter stated that the charge-off ratios should not be more
disaggregated than at the portfolio segment level, which is the level
U.S. GAAP requires for allowance disclosures.\105\ Several commenters
stated there may be operational challenges or systems limitations
associated with calculating the ratio of net charge-offs to average
loans on a disaggregated basis versus on a consolidated basis as
provided today.\106\ These commenters highlighted the estimated
increase in burden hours as well as professional costs related to these
disclosure requirements from the Paperwork Reduction Act analysis in
the Proposing Release and recommended the Commission consider feedback
from investors and others to determine whether the benefits justify
these costs.\107\
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\103\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\104\ See letter from ABA.
\105\ See letter from ABA.
\106\ See letters from CAQ (stating that the ratio would not be
computable from disclosures in the financial statements) and Crowe.
\107\ See Table 12: Estimated Change in Internal Burden Hours
and Costs for Outside Professionals from the Aggregated Portions of
the Proposed Rules in Section VII of the Proposing Release.
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In response to request for comments on disclosure requirements
related to the New Credit Loss Standard or IFRS 9, no commenters
indicated that we should require disclosures incremental to the New
Credit Loss Standard or IFRS 9 at this time. A few commenters stated
that it was premature to determine which incremental disclosures may be
useful to investors given that the standard-setting processes for the
New Credit Loss Standard and IFRS 9 were only recently completed and
have resulted in major changes to previous accounting standards.\108\
These commenters recommended that the Commission provide registrants
the opportunity to determine the most appropriate way to communicate to
their investors about the new standard, including how best to explain
period-to-period changes in expected credit losses, consideration of
loan mix and volume, credit performance related to expectations,
changes in key inputs and assumptions, or other factors over the next
few years before proposing any additional disclosure requirements.
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\108\ See letters from ABA and KPMG.
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One of these commenters cautioned that, while the inputs and
assumptions made to the New Credit Loss Standard models will be
critical to credit loss estimates and thus will be important to
investment decisions, and disclosure of such inputs initially appears
helpful to investors, the complexity of credit loss modeling (for
example, non-linear relationships of changes in certain economic
conditions to loss given default) will likely frustrate many investors
who wish to use inputs in their own modeling.\109\ This commenter
stated that any future required disclosure related to the New Credit
Loss Standard methodology should not be required in a formulaic manner
or template. This commenter also noted that due to the broad range of
credit loss modeling methods that will be performed by banks, it
expects there to be a wide diversity in how qualitative adjustments are
defined and applied in the credit loss modeling, not only between
registrants, but also between periods within a registrant.
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\109\ See letter from ABA.
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting the rules as
proposed. Item 1405(c) of Regulation S-K codifies the requirement to
provide a tabular allocation of the allowance disclosures based on the
loan categories presented in the U.S. GAAP financial statements
[[Page 66117]]
for registrants applying or reconciling to U.S. GAAP. Item 1405(c) of
Regulation S-K does not apply to IFRS registrants because IFRS already
requires this information at a similar level of disaggregation in the
financial statements.\110\ While one commenter recommended retaining
the instruction to Item III.A of Guide 3, which provides latitude to
registrants to use loan categories outside of those identified in Guide
3, we do not believe this is necessary as we have tied the loan
categories for this disclosure to the loan categories presented in the
U.S. GAAP financial statements. We continue to believe the tabular
allocation required by this Item will provide for easier analysis by
investors when reviewing these disclosures. The final rules also codify
the requirement to disclose disaggregated net charge-off ratios. We
continue to believe that, in many circumstances, disclosure of
disaggregated net charge-off ratios may provide material information to
investors in terms of transparency and comparability. For example, the
staff has observed that credit cards and other unsecured loans often
have higher net charge-off ratios relative to secured loans, such as
residential mortgage loans or commercial loans. Therefore, to the
extent a bank and savings and loan registrant has a material loan
category with higher net charge-offs relative to other loan categories
in its loan portfolio, a single disclosure of the consolidated net
charge-off ratio may not reveal trends present in the loan portfolio
because the portfolio performance can be skewed by a specific loan
category or by the number and type of loan products. Furthermore,
disaggregated net charge-off ratio disclosures can facilitate
comparison of loan performance by specific loan category among banks of
varying sizes and operations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\110\ IFRS 7.35H.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While one commenter noted that the meaningfulness of the
disaggregation of the net charge-off ratio may be contingent on whether
the ratios are significant drivers of business results, and another
stated that the charge-off ratio will have little, if any, relation to
the provisions or the allowance for credit losses upon the adoption of
the New Credit Loss Standard, we believe disaggregated net charge-off
ratios generally are key performance measures for bank and savings and
loan registrants. This is evident from the disclosure that bank and
savings and loan registrants provide in SEC filings, including earnings
releases, which often includes information about charge-offs by loan
category, and in some cases, the net charge-off ratio at the loan
category level. The staff has observed that some bank and savings and
loan registrants have continued to provide this information in their
quarterly reports after their recent adoption of the New Credit Loss
Standard. Additionally, the staff has observed that some bank and
savings and loan registrants have disclosed expectations of future
charge-off amounts as part of their disclosure of projections or
earnings guidance for the forecasted period upon their adoption of the
New Credit Loss Standard. We also note that the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (``FDIC'') publishes a quarterly banking profile
(``FDIC Quarterly'') that provides a comprehensive summary of the
financial results for all FDIC-insured institutions.\111\ Both prior
to, and after, the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, the FDIC
Quarterly reports, among other things, the net charge-off amounts and
the net charge-off ratio on an industry-wide basis, including the
charge-off ratio at the loan category level. We therefore continue to
believe this information may be material for investors to understand a
registrant's financial results. Furthermore, we did not receive any
comments from registrants indicating that the disaggregated net charge-
off ratios would be costly or burdensome to provide. We acknowledge
that adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard affects the relationship
between the net charge-off ratio to the provision for loan losses and
the allowance for credit losses, but we continue to believe this
information is used by investors, as evidenced by the fact that the
information is still disclosed by a number of registrants.
Additionally, despite the change in the allowance for credit loss
methodology upon the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, we note
that both components of the disaggregated net charge-off ratios (net
charge-offs during the period and average loans outstanding during the
period), and therefore the ratio itself, are generally not materially
affected by the New Credit Loss Standard. The New Credit Loss Standard
did not directly change the applicable U.S. GAAP guidance for charge-
offs and total loans. Therefore, we believe that changes in these
ratios over time, including prior to and after adoption of the New
Credit Loss Standard, may provide material trend information to
investors about how the portfolio is performing.
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\111\ Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Quarterly Banking
Profile (Second Quarter 2020), available at https://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/quarterly/2020-vol14-3/fdic-v14n3-2q2020.pdf.
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Consistent with the proposal, and the suggestions of several
commenters, the final rules do not codify the disclosure items in Item
IV of Guide 3 that overlap with U.S. GAAP and IFRS and do not require
any disclosures related to the New Credit Loss Standard or IFRS 9.
iv. Proposal--New Credit Ratios Disclosure
Guide 3 currently calls for the disclosure of one credit ratio, net
charge-offs during the period to average loans outstanding, as outlined
in Item IV.A of Guide 3. As discussed in Section II.I.i above, we
proposed to codify the requirement to disclose this ratio by the loan
categories disclosed in the U.S. GAAP or IFRS financial statements. In
addition, we also proposed to require in Item 1405(a) of Regulation S-K
disclosure of the following new credit ratios on a consolidated basis,
along with each of the components used in their calculation: (1)
Allowance for Credit Losses \112\ to Total Loans; (2) Nonaccrual Loans
to Total Loans; and (3) Allowance for Credit Losses \113\ to Nonaccrual
Loans. The proposed rules would also require a discussion of the
factors that drove material changes in the ratios, or related
components, during the periods presented. As discussed in Section
II.E.iii above, the credit ratios would be required for each annual
period for which Commission rules require financial statements, and any
additional interim period if there was a material change in the
information or the trends evidenced thereby. The proposed rules would
not require disclosure of the ratio of nonaccrual loans to total loans
or the allowance for credit losses to nonaccrual loans for IFRS
registrants, as
[[Page 66118]]
there is no concept of nonaccrual loans in IFRS.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ Allowance for Credit Losses refers to the allowance for
loan losses recorded on the registrant's loan portfolio calculated
in accordance with U.S. GAAP or IFRS. To the extent that net
investments in leases by a lessor are included in the total loans
denominator, the allowance for credit losses also includes the
related allowance for credit losses for the net investment in
leases. The allowance for credit losses excludes any allowance for
credit losses recorded related to the securities portfolio or
unfunded commitments, which are not considered as part of the total
loan portfolio in the denominator of this ratio.
\113\ To the extent that net investments in leases by a lessor
are included in the nonaccrual loans denominator, the allowance for
credit losses also includes the related allowance for credit losses
for the net investment in leases. The allowance for credit losses
excludes any allowance for credit losses recorded related to the
securities portfolio or unfunded commitments, which are not
considered within nonaccrual loans in the denominator of this ratio.
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v. Comments on Proposal
We received limited feedback on our proposal to require credit
ratios disclosure. The primary feedback we received was that these
credit ratios may no longer be as relevant to investors upon the
adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ See letter from ABA.
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One commenter stated that each of the ratios, excluding the net
charge-off to average loans ratio, is readily calculable from U.S. GAAP
disclosures already provided in the financial statements and encouraged
the Commission to consider feedback from users to determine whether
separate disclosure of the amounts is necessary.\115\ Another commenter
stated that many analysts and investors already calculate and monitor
these ratios and that disclosing them would not be substantially
burdensome to banks.\116\ However, this commenter recommended not
codifying the requirement to disclose the ratios due to the potential
changes resulting from the adoption of the New Credit Loss
Standard.\117\ This commenter noted that under the incurred loss
accounting methodology, increases in nonaccrual loans will typically
coincide with higher allowance levels and higher credit loss
provisions, but this relationship is significantly diminished under the
New Credit Loss Standard as credit performance should effectively be
anticipated at origination.\118\ This commenter further cautioned that,
due to the significant changes in the measurement basis of the
allowance for credit losses from the New Credit Loss Standard, the
ratio disclosures may be confusing to analysts, not only in comparing
the ratios based on the incurred loss methodology prior to the adoption
of the New Credit Loss Standard, but also in comparing registrants that
are adopting the New Credit Loss Standard in 2020 to those that will
adopt in 2023.\119\
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\115\ See letter from CAQ.
\116\ See letter from ABA.
\117\ The New Credit Loss Standard replaces the current incurred
loss methodology with a methodology that reflects expected credit
losses over the entire contractual term of the financial
instruments. See ASC Topic 326.
\118\ This comment relates only to the allowance for credit
losses to nonaccrual loans and not the other three credit ratios
proposed.
\119\ See supra note 96.
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One commenter noted the proposed credit ratios are not required by
U.S. GAAP and IFRS.\120\ This commenter recommended that we not require
disclosures beyond those required by U.S. GAAP or IFRS until such time
as it is clear that incremental disclosures are necessary given that
the standard-setting processes for the New Credit Loss Standard and
IFRS 9 were only recently completed by the FASB and IASB and have
resulted in major changes to the previous accounting standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ See letter from KPMG.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A few commenters stated the Commission should not require a
discussion of the factors that drove material changes in credit
ratios.\121\ One of these commenters said the proposed disclosure
requirement overlaps with Item 303(a) of Regulation S-K's requirement
to provide such other information that the registrant believes is
necessary to an understanding of its financial condition, changes in
financial condition, and results of operations.\122\ Another commenter
cited the complexity of what can drive the New Credit Loss Standard
estimate.\123\ For example, this commenter observed that nonaccrual
loans and charge-offs result from credit deterioration events, which
are not necessarily direct drivers of the New Credit Loss Standard
allowance estimate, and therefore would not necessarily drive changes
in ratios to the extent they have been accurately forecast. As a
result, according to this commenter, a discussion of these metrics may
be confusing to analysts or investors. Finally, although the proposed
rules would not have required disclosure of the ratio of nonaccrual
loans to total loans or the allowance for credit losses to nonaccrual
loans for IFRS registrants as there is no concept of nonaccrual loans
in IFRS, this commenter asked the Commission to explore how ``Stage 3''
\124\ assets under IFRS 9 may be considered comparable to nonaccrual
loans within U.S. GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ See e.g., letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
\122\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\123\ See letter from ABA.
\124\ The term ``Stage 3 assets'' is not formally defined in
IFRS 9 but has become part of the common description of the IFRS 9
methodology. In this context, Stage 3 assets are considered to be
non-performing or credit-impaired loans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
vi. Final Rules
Having considered the comments, we are adopting the rules as
proposed. We continue to believe that investors evaluate these ratios
when making investment decisions and that disclosure of the components
used in the calculation of the ratios, along with the proposed
narrative disclosure of the factors driving material changes in the
ratio or related components, would further aid investors' understanding
of the reasons for the material changes in ratios. The staff has
observed that these credit ratios are already commonly disclosed by
most bank and savings and loan registrants with material lending
portfolios, and the staff has observed that many bank and savings and
loan registrants have continued to provide these credit ratios in their
earnings releases and periodic reports after the adoption of the New
Credit Loss Standard. Therefore, we believe these registrants may
continue to find that this information may be material for an
investor's understanding of their financial results.\125\
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\125\ See supra note 96. As illustrated by Table 2 in Section
VII, around 44% of bank and savings and loan registrants are either
SRCs or EGCs and are not required to adopt the New Credit Loss
Standard until fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2022.
Therefore, over the next few years, there will continue to be a
significant population of bank and savings and loan registrants that
apply the incurred loss approach and not the New Credit Loss
Standard.
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We also note that the FDIC Quarterly,\126\ both prior to and after
the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, continues to collect and
report industry-wide data on the components, or similar components, of
these ratios, and the related ratios or similar ratios. For example,
the FDIC Quarterly reports industry-wide data on the allowance for
credit losses and total loans, and the related allowance for credit
losses to total loans outstanding ratio. Additionally, the FDIC
Quarterly reports noncurrent loans and leases,\127\ the noncurrent
loans to total loans ratio, and the ratio of the allowance for credit
losses to noncurrent loans and leases, which is similar to, but not the
same as, the two nonaccrual \128\ ratios (nonaccrual loans to total
loans outstanding at each period end and allowance for credit losses to
nonaccrual loans at each period end) that we are codifying in Item 1405
of Regulation S-K. Furthermore, while we acknowledge commenter feedback
that the ratios are affected by the adoption of the New Credit Loss
Standard, the staff has observed that registrants that continue to
disclose them have provided disclosure to explain the impact of the
change in the accounting for credit losses on the ratios from period to
period. Additionally, despite the change in the allowance for credit
loss methodology upon the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, we
note that both components of the nonaccrual loans to total loans ratio
(nonaccrual loans and total loans outstanding at
[[Page 66119]]
period end), and therefore the ratio itself, are generally not
materially affected by the New Credit Loss Standard. The New Credit
Loss Standard did not directly change the applicable U.S. GAAP guidance
for nonaccrual loans or total loans outstanding. Therefore, we believe
that changes in this ratio over time, including prior to and after
adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, can provide material trend
information to investors about how the portfolio is performing.
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\126\ See supra note 111.
\127\ The FDIC Quarterly defines noncurrent loans as loans that
are past due 90 days or more or that are in nonaccrual status.
\128\ Nonaccrual loans represent loans that are in nonaccrual
status. See ASC 326-20-50-16.
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We recognize that, under the incurred loss approach, changes in the
allowance for credit losses are based on changes in losses incurred to
date, whereas under the New Credit Loss Standard, changes in the
allowance for credit losses are based on changes in estimates of
expected credit losses over the life of the loan portfolio. As such,
the allowance for credit losses to total loans ratio and allowance for
credit losses to nonaccrual loans ratio convey different information to
investors under the two approaches. We believe that, despite this
important difference in the information contained in these ratios under
alternative credit loss approaches, the disclosure of these two ratios
along with the discussion of the factors that led to material changes
in these ratios or their components could be material to investors,
regardless of the approach used (incurred loss approach or New Credit
Loss Standard). This is because investors are familiar with these
ratios and are accustomed to analyzing them, and while the drivers of
the changes in the ratios are affected by the New Credit Loss Standard,
we believe the ratios continue to convey information that is relevant
to evaluating a registrant's credit risk and lending policy decisions.
For example, the ratio of nonaccrual loans to total loans conveys
information about the registrant's lending decisions and how their
portfolio has performed since origination. Similarly, the allowance for
credit losses to total loans provides information about the level of
credit losses estimated relative to the loan portfolio, with a higher
ratio reflecting a higher estimate of credit losses in the portfolio.
Over time, investors can evaluate changes in trends in these ratios,
which may give material quantitative information about how changes in
the registrant's underwriting policies or servicing decisions can
affect the credit quality of their portfolio, or how the loan portfolio
is affected by macroeconomic and other factors. Furthermore, having
this information disclosed on a ratio basis allows for comparability of
credit trends across bank and savings and loan registrants of all
sizes. For example, the ratios take into account the size of the loan
portfolio, and thus a small community bank's ratio could be compared
against a large bank's ratio, in addition to peers of a similar size.
This could allow investors to assess credit trends more broadly. While
we acknowledge commenter feedback that with the adoption of the New
Credit Loss Standard, credit deterioration events, including those that
result in nonaccrual loans and charge-offs, may not necessarily
directly drive changes in the ratios, another commenter stated that
analysts and investors calculate and monitor these ratios.\129\ The
final rules ensure these ratios are calculated on a consistent and
comparable basis among all bank and savings and loan registrants. The
benefit to investors of having these consistent and comparable ratio
disclosures along with their components and discussion of the material
changes to the ratios already disclosed in the filing, without
investors having to perform their own calculations and analysis,
justifies the limited burden on a registrant to disclose this
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\129\ See letter from ABA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We acknowledge commenter feedback that the ratio disclosures may be
confusing to analysts, not only in comparing a registrant's prior
ratios based on the incurred loss methodology to the ratios after the
adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard, but also in comparing
registrants that are adopting the New Credit Loss Standard in 2020 to
those that will adopt in 2023. However, it is common for any new
accounting standard to have different adoption dates based on the size
or type of entity, so this is not unique to the New Credit Loss
Standard, and we believe investors and analysts are accustomed to
making adjustments to their analysis as a result. Furthermore, since
the final rules require registrants to disclose material changes in the
credit ratios, we believe investors should have the information
available to understand the factors driving the changes in the ratios,
which may include how they are affected upon the adoption of the New
Credit Loss Standard, or material changes in the credit quality of the
loan portfolio.
We also acknowledge that a few commenters stated that we should not
require a discussion of the factors that drove material changes in the
credit ratios. However, we continue to believe that this narrative
disclosure is necessary for an investor's understanding of the material
changes in the ratios and credit quality of the loan portfolio, and we
believe management has the information readily available to them to
discuss the drivers of the material changes in the ratios because the
individual components are already required by U.S. GAAP and IFRS. We
believe this information could be provided within MD&A if management
believes it is the most appropriate place to discuss the information.
To the extent that there were no material changes in the credit ratios
or the related components, there would be no requirement to provide
this narrative discussion.
We also note that U.S. GAAP, both before and after the adoption of
the New Credit Loss Standard, requires disclosure of many of the
components of these ratios, such as nonaccrual loans, and the
rollforward of the allowance for credit losses by portfolio segment,
which includes separate line items showing charge-offs against the
allowance and recoveries of amounts previously charged off (that
together can be used to calculate net charge-offs, which is the
numerator to the disaggregated net charge-off ratio). We believe this
indicates that these components, and potentially the related ratios,
continue to have relevance upon the adoption of the New Credit Loss
Standard.\130\ As noted by a commenter, we believe this will limit the
burden a registrant will have in providing these disclosures.\131\
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\130\ ASC 310-10-50-7 (and ASC 326-20-50-16 upon the adoption of
the New Credit Loss Standard) requires disclosure of nonaccrual
loans by class of financing receivable. ASC 310-10-50-11B (and ASC
326-20-50-13 upon the adoption of the New Credit Loss Standard)
requires disclosure of a rollforward of the allowance for credit
losses, by portfolio segment, showing the beginning and ending
balance, the current period provision, writeoffs charged against the
allowance, and recoveries of amounts previously charged off.
\131\ See letter from ABA.
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J. Deposits
i. Proposal
We proposed to codify in Item 1406 of Regulation S-K the majority
of the deposit disclosure items in Item V of Guide 3, with some
revisions. Specifically, we proposed to replace the ``amount of
outstanding domestic time certificates of deposit and other time
deposits equal to or in excess of $100,000'' by maturity disclosure
called for by Item V.D with a requirement to disclose the ``amount of
time deposits in uninsured accounts'' by maturity. We proposed to
require separate presentation of: (1) U.S. time deposits in amounts in
excess of the FDIC insurance limit, and (2) time deposits that are
[[Page 66120]]
otherwise uninsured (including, for example, U.S. time deposits in
uninsured accounts, non-U.S. time deposits in uninsured accounts, or
non-U.S. time deposits in excess of any country-specified insurance
fund), by time remaining until maturity of: (A) Three months or less;
(B) over three through six months; (C) over six through 12 months; and
(D) over 12 months. The proposed rules did not have a defined dollar
threshold for the disclosure, which we indicated would make the rules
easier to apply when there is a change in the FDIC insurance
limit.\132\
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\132\ See Section II.I.iii of the Proposing Release.
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Additionally, we proposed that bank and savings and loan
registrants quantify the amount of uninsured deposits as of the end of
each reported period. The proposed rules defined uninsured deposits for
bank and savings and loan registrants that are U.S. federally insured
deposit institutions as individual deposits in U.S. offices of amounts
exceeding the FDIC insurance limit and investment products such as
mutual funds, annuities, or life insurance policies. The proposed rules
would require foreign bank and savings and loan registrants to disclose
how they define uninsured deposits for purposes of this disclosure
given that the definition varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
ii. Comments on Proposal
One commenter stated that the proposed deposit disclosures would
provide transparency with respect to a registrant's source of funding
and liquidity risk profile.\133\ Another commenter was supportive of
the proposed disclosures related to bank deposits, including the
amounts that are uninsured. \134\
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\133\ See letter from BAC.
\134\ See letter from A. Heilig.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated the Commission should emphasize that the rules
would change existing practice regarding the disclosure of uninsured
deposits as existing Guide 3 disclosures do not call for the separate
disclosure of the uninsured portion of time deposits or any other
deposits.\135\ Several commenters highlighted that there may be
potential complexity and costs or operational challenges involved in
calculating a precise amount for uninsured deposits.\136\ Most of these
commenters attributed these challenges to complex deposit insurance
rules \137\ that apply across accounts.\138\ A few of these commenters
also noted that depository institutions report estimated uninsured
amounts in their call reports.\139\
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\135\ See letter from CAQ.
\136\ See e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe; EY; and
PwC.
\137\ 12 CFR 1821(a).
\138\ See letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe; and PwC.
\139\ See letters from CAQ; Crowe; and PwC.
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Several commenters mentioned the FDIC's new rule, Recordkeeping for
Timely Deposit Insurance Determination (FDIC Part 370 Rule),\140\ which
became effective on April 1, 2020, and is limited to insured depository
institutions with greater than two million deposit accounts.\141\ This
rule requires such institutions to configure information systems to
accurately calculate insured and uninsured deposits. One of these
commenters encouraged the Commission to consider further outreach to
the FDIC and registrants about the potential difficulty and cost of
preparing the proposed disclosure and whether the disclosure objective
could be achieved in another way.\142\ This commenter also asked the
Commission to consider whether certain information provided in investor
and analyst presentations with respect to registrant's sources of
deposits might achieve the same objective as the proposed rule.
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\140\ 12 CFR part 370. See also Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 12 CFR part 370 Recordkeeping for Timely Deposit
Insurance Determination (July 17, 2020), available at https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/resources/recordkeeping/.
\141\ See e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; and PwC.
\142\ See letter from Crowe.
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One commenter suggested that given the complexities and the FDIC's
new standard of accuracy in reporting that will differ between the
largest and other depository institutions, the Commission should
consider aligning its proposed disclosures with other regulatory
requirements and standards, or otherwise simplify the proposed
disclosure requirements.\143\ Another commenter stated that providing
total uninsured deposits would not address the purpose of the proposed
disclosure to allow users of the financial statements to assess a
firm's potential liquidity risk, because disclosing only total
uninsured deposits provides an incomplete picture of a firm's liquidity
risk and, on its own, could result in an investor making an uninformed
judgment.\144\ This commenter further stated that the disclosure of
uninsured deposits would present significant challenges and costs for
registrants, and the lack of comparability among different deposit
schemes may prove misleading to investors and therefore should not be
adopted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ See letter from PwC.
\144\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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Several commenters stated that, if adopted, the Commission should
clarify the definition of uninsured deposits.\145\ For example:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ See e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; and EY.
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A few commenters sought clarity on whether the amount to
be disclosed would be the portion of the individual deposit account
balance that is greater than the FDIC limit, or the total deposit
account balance.\146\
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\146\ See letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ and EY.
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One commenter sought clarification on whether the amount
of uninsured deposits should be measured for each individual account or
should include all accounts or persons to whom the insurance limits
apply.\147\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\147\ See letter from EY.
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Another commenter noted that certain states such as
Massachusetts have their own deposit insurance funds and recommended
that deposits covered by these and other similar regimes be considered
insured for purposes of the proposed disclosure.\148\
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\148\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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A few commenters stated that the final rule should explain
how the term ``uninsured deposits'' would be applied to investment
products such as mutual funds, annuities, or life insurance
policies.\149\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\149\ See letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
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One commenter commended the Commission for proposing to remove the
$100,000 threshold for uninsured deposits and replace it with a more
principles-based requirement and to provide foreign registrants with
the flexibility to disclose the definition of uninsured deposits
appropriate for their country of domicile.\150\ However, this commenter
stated that U.S. GAAP disclosure requirements largely address the
proposed disclosure of outstanding time deposits in uninsured accounts
by maturity and recommended not adopting this disclosure
requirement.\151\
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\150\ See letter from BAC.
\151\ See letter from BAC (stating that ASC-942-405-50-1
requires disclosure of the aggregate amount of time deposit accounts
(including certificates of deposits) in denominations that meet or
exceed the FDIC insurance limit and ASC 470-10-50-1 requires
disclosure of time deposits having a remaining term of more than one
year and the aggregate amount of maturities for each of the five
years following the balance sheet date).
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iii. Final Rules
After considering the comments, we are adopting the rules
substantially as proposed. Item 1406 of Regulation S-K codifies the
majority of the disclosure items in Item V of Guide 3, with some
revisions.
[[Page 66121]]
The final rules define uninsured deposits for bank and savings and
loan registrants that are U.S. federally insured depository
institutions as the portion of deposit accounts in U.S. offices that
exceed the FDIC insurance limit or similar state deposit insurance
regimes and amounts in any other uninsured investment or deposit
accounts that are classified as deposits and not subject to any federal
or state deposit insurance regimes. This definition varies slightly
from the proposal based on commenter feedback. Specifically, we have
clarified that the amount to be disclosed for uninsured deposits is
based on the portion of the account balance greater than the FDIC
insurance limit and that registrants may consider other similar state
deposit insurance regimes in evaluating whether a deposit is insured.
We also eliminated the reference to ``individual'' deposits in the
revised definition to address commenter feedback seeking clarity on
whether uninsured deposits are measured based on each individual
account, or include all accounts or persons to whom the insurance
limits apply. Consistent with the proposal, the final rules require
foreign bank and savings and loan registrants to disclose the
definition of uninsured deposits appropriate for their country of
domicile. However, in response to commenter concerns about how the
proposed disclosure requirements would interact with overlapping
regulatory regimes, the final rules specify that all registrants should
determine the amount of uninsured deposits for purposes of Item 1406
based on the same methodologies and assumptions used for regulatory
reporting requirements, to the extent applicable. This clarification
better aligns the final rules with U.S. bank regulatory reporting
requirements and provides some additional parameters for foreign
registrants that may operate in several different jurisdictions and
therefore may be subject to different insurance regimes. We believe
this change should reduce the cost of providing this disclosure and
reduce some of the comparability concerns for registrants operating in
different jurisdictions. Unlike the proposed rules, however, the final
rules do not expressly reference other investment products such as
mutual funds, annuities or life insurance policies or otherwise address
whether such products would be considered uninsured deposits as some
commenters requested. We believe bank and savings and loan registrants
already evaluate whether any particular product is subject to an FDIC
insurance regime, or similar state deposit insurance regimes, and
therefore additional guidance is unnecessary.
In another change from the proposal, and consistent with commenter
feedback, we have revised the final rules to permit a registrant to
disclose uninsured deposits at the reported date based on an estimate
of uninsured deposits if it is not reasonably practicable to provide a
precise measure of uninsured deposits. To avail itself of this
accommodation, a registrant must disclose that the amounts are based on
estimated amounts of uninsured deposits, and the estimates must be
based on the same methodologies and assumptions used for the bank or
savings and loan registrant's regulatory reporting requirements, such
as the FDIC rules. We believe this change will reduce complexity and
better align the requirements with U.S. bank regulatory reporting
requirements, which should reduce the cost of providing this
disclosure.
Consistent with the proposal, the rules require disclosure of (1)
U.S. time deposits in excess of the FDIC insurance limit, and (2) time
deposits that are otherwise uninsured by time remaining until maturity
of: (A) Three months or less; (B) over three through six months; (C)
over six through 12 months; and (D) over 12 months. While U.S. GAAP
\152\ requires disclosure of time deposits that meet or exceed the
insured limit, it does not require this information to be disaggregated
into the same maturity categories. Furthermore, U.S. GAAP does not
require disclosure of time deposits that are otherwise uninsured by
time remaining until maturity. IFRS does not specifically require any
of the deposit disclosures in Item 1406 of Regulation S-K.\153\ While
we acknowledge commenter feedback that U.S. GAAP disclosure
requirements are similar to the uninsured deposit disclosures, we
continue to believe the disaggregated maturity categories provide
material information about deposits that are more prone to withdrawals
if a registrant experiences financial difficulty, which may help
investors better evaluate potential risks to the registrant's short-
term liquidity position. While we acknowledge commenters' concerns that
disclosing only total uninsured deposits may present an incomplete
picture of a firm's liquidity risk, we believe the disclosure of
uninsured deposits, along with the other deposit disclosures required
by the final rules, as well as the liquidity disclosures required
within MD&A, would significantly mitigate these concerns.
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\152\ ASC 942-405-50-1(a).
\153\ See Section II.I of the Proposing Release.
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Overall, in light of the revisions and clarifications we have made,
we believe the final rules provide transparency regarding a material
source of funding for bank and savings loan registrants, while
balancing any operational costs and burdens a registrant may incur in
providing this disclosure.\154\
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\154\ See Section VII.C.i below.
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III. Certain Existing Guide 3 Disclosures That Would Not Be Codified in
Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K
A. Return on Equity and Assets
Item VI of Guide 3 calls for disclosure of four specific ratios for
each reported period, including return on assets, return on equity, a
dividend payout ratio, and an equity to assets ratio. We proposed not
to codify the requirement to disclose these ratios in Subpart 1400 of
Regulation S-K because these ratios are not unique to bank and savings
and loan registrants, and the Commission's guidance on MD&A already
requires registrants to identify and discuss key performance measures
when they are used to manage the business and would be material to
investors.\155\ Furthermore, the Commission recently issued additional
guidance on the disclosure of key performance indicators and metrics in
MD&A that highlights the requirement to provide disclosure that a
registrant believes is necessary to an understanding of its financial
condition, changes in financial condition, and results of
operations.\156\ We did not receive any commenter feedback on this
aspect of the proposal. For the reasons noted in the Proposing Release,
and in light of this recent guidance, we are adopting the rules as
proposed and are not codifying the requirement to disclose any of the
ratios currently called for by Item VI of Guide 3.
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\155\ See Section III.A of the Proposing Release.
\156\ See Commission Guidance on Management's Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, Release
No. 33-10751 (Jan. 30, 2020) (the ``2020 MD&A Interpretive
Release'').
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B. Short-Term Borrowings
We proposed not to codify the short-term borrowing disclosure items
in Item VII of Guide 3 in their current form. Instead, we proposed to
codify as part of proposed Item 1402 of Regulation S-K the average
balance and related average rate paid for each major category of
interest-bearing liability disclosures currently called for by Item
I.B.1 and I.B.3 of Guide 3, and to further require disaggregation of
the major
[[Page 66122]]
categories of interest-bearing liabilities to include those referenced
in Item VII of Guide 3 and Article 9 \157\ of Regulation S-X. We did
not propose to codify any of the other existing disclosure items in
Item VII because we believed these are substantially covered by
existing Commission rules \158\ and the financial statement
requirements.\159\ We did not receive any commenter feedback on this
aspect of the proposal, and are adopting the rules as proposed for the
reasons noted in the Proposing Release.
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\157\ 17 CFR 210.9-01 through 9-07. Article 9 sets forth the
form and content of the consolidated financial statements filed for
bank holding companies and for any financial statements of banks
that are included in filings with the Commission.
\158\ In the Proposing Release, the Commission referred to the
Commission Guidance on Presentation of Liquidity and Capital
Resources Disclosures in Management's Discussion and Analysis,
Release No. 33-9144 (Sept. 17, 2010) [75 FR 59893 (Sept. 28, 2010)],
as support for the idea that Item 303 of Regulation S-K elicits
disclosure of any trends or uncertainties that may arise related to
the maximum month-end amounts of short-term borrowings called for by
Item VII.2. See Section III.B.i of the Proposing Release.
\159\ See Section II.F.i discussing the proposed codification of
the requirement to disclose the average amount outstanding during
the period and the interest paid on such amount, and the average
rate paid, for each major category of interest-bearing liability.
Article 9 of Regulation S-X requires disclosure of the period-end
amount outstanding by the short-term borrowing categories.
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IV. Changes to Article 9 of Regulation S-X
Rule 9-01 of Regulation S-X states that Article 9 is applicable to
the consolidated financial statements filed for BHCs and to any
financial statements of banks that are included in filings with the
Commission, although other registrants with material lending and
deposit activities also apply the rules in Article 9 of Regulation S-
X.\160\ In light of our proposal to codify the scope of Subpart 1400 of
Regulation S-K to include savings and loan associations and savings and
loan holding companies, we proposed to amend Rule 9-01 of Regulation S-
X to include these registrants within the scope of Article 9 of
Regulation S-X as well. However, we also noted that, if registrants
other than bank and savings and loan registrants believe the Article 9
presentation would be material to an understanding of their business,
the proposed rules would not preclude that presentation for those
registrants. Additionally, we proposed deleting Rule 9-03(7)(a)-(c) of
Regulation S-X due to overlapping requirements with both U.S. GAAP
\161\ and IFRS.\162\ We did not receive any commenter feedback on this
aspect of the proposal, and are adopting the amendments as proposed for
the reasons noted in the Proposing Release.
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\160\ See supra note 5.
\161\ See supra note 85.
\162\ See supra note 80.
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V. Compliance Date
After considering feedback from commenters,\163\ registrants will
be required to apply the final rules for the first fiscal year ending
on or after December 15, 2021 (the ``mandatory compliance date'').
Registrants filing initial registration statements are not required to
apply the final rules until an initial registration statement is first
filed containing financial statements for a period on or after the
mandatory compliance date. Until the mandatory compliance date, bank
and savings and loan registrants should continue to refer to Guide 3
for assistance in meeting their disclosure obligations.
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\163\ See letters from BPI/SIFMA and KPMG. BPI/SIFMA recommended
that the Commission not require the rules to be effective until at
least the December 31, 2021 Form 10-K to allow registrants
sufficient time to source and test the information and ensure the
information produced is accurate and reliable. KPMG encouraged the
Commission to provide detailed transition guidance that includes
consideration of the timing of the rule's effective date and
approaching relevant filing deadlines.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Voluntary early compliance with the final rules is permitted \164\
in advance of the registrant's mandatory compliance date, provided that
the final rules are applied in their entirety from the date of early
compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ To the extent that registrants have questions about
application of the rules in connection with early compliance, they
should reach out to Commission staff for additional transition
guidance.
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VI. Other Matters
If any of the provisions of these rules, or the application thereof
to any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, such invalidity
shall not affect other provisions or application of such provisions to
other persons or circumstances that can be given effect without the
invalid provisions or application.
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act,\165\ the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has designated these rules as not a
``major rule,'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\165\ 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VII. Economic Analysis
A. Introduction
The Commission is adopting rules to rescind Guide 3 and to update
and codify into a new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K certain Guide 3
disclosure items that do not overlap with existing disclosure
requirements in Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS, while adding to
that Subpart certain credit ratio disclosure requirements. New Subpart
1400 applies to bank and savings and loan registrants. The final rules
are expected to streamline bank and savings and loan registrants'
compliance efforts and may enhance comparability across issuers, to the
benefit of both registrants and investors.
We are mindful of the costs imposed by, and the benefits obtained
from, our rules. In this section, we analyze potential economic effects
stemming from the final rules and alternatives considered by the
Commission, including those posed by commenters.\166\ We analyze these
effects against a baseline that consists of the current regulatory
framework and current market practices.
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\166\ Securities Act Section 2(a) and Exchange Act Section 3(f)
require the Commission, when engaging in rulemaking where it is
required to consider or determine whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to consider, in addition to the
protection of investors, whether the action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. Further, Exchange Act Section
23(a)(2) requires the Commission, when making rules under the
Exchange Act, to consider the impact that the rules would have on
competition and prohibits the Commission from adopting any rule that
would impose a burden on competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the purposes of the Exchange Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Where possible, we have attempted to quantify the expected economic
effects of the final rules. In many cases, however, we are unable to
quantify these economic effects. Some of the primary economic effects,
such as the effect on investors' search costs, are inherently difficult
to quantify. In many instances, we lack the information or data
necessary to provide reasonable estimates for the economic effects of
the final rules. Furthermore, we did not receive any information from
commenters that would allow us to further quantify the economic
effects. Where we cannot quantify the relevant economic effects, we
discuss them in qualitative terms. In addition, the broader economic
effects of the final rules, such as those related to efficiency,
competition, and capital formation, are difficult to quantify with any
degree of certainty because the final rules simultaneously codify
certain disclosure requirements, add new credit ratio disclosure
requirements, and rescind disclosure items that overlap with Commission
rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS. Therefore, it is difficult to quantitatively
attribute the overall effects on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation to specific aspects of the final rules.
[[Page 66123]]
B. Baseline
Our baseline consists of the disclosures currently called for by
Guide 3, as well as those provided under current market practices.
i. Regulation
In general, Guide 3 calls for disclosures related to interest-
earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities of both domestic and
foreign BHC registrants and registrants that have material lending and
deposit-taking activities.\167\ Since the last substantive revision of
Guide 3 in 1986, certain U.S. GAAP and IFRS disclosure requirements
have changed for registrants engaged in the activities addressed in
Guide 3, resulting in some overlap between the Guide 3 disclosure items
and other disclosure requirements, which may impose compliance costs on
registrants without providing additional material information to
investors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\167\ See supra Section I for a description of Guide 3
disclosure categories. See also instructions to Item 4 of Form 20-F,
which indicate that the information specified in any industry guide
that applies to the registrant should be furnished. In addition, the
staff has observed that, although not required, Form 40-F filers
that are banking institutions typically provide the disclosures
called for by Guide 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guide 3 calls for five years of loan portfolio and loan loss
experience data and three years of all other data. This timeframe goes
beyond the financial statement periods specified in Commission
rules,\168\ which generally require two years of balance sheets and
three years of income statements for registrants other than EGCs and
SRCs. Guide 3 provides that registrants with less than $200 million of
assets or less than $10 million of net worth may present only two years
of information. In contrast, the scaled disclosure regimes in
Commission rules for SRCs and EGCs are based on other thresholds, such
as public float, total annual revenues, or a combination of both. As
such, some SRCs and EGCs may not qualify for scaled disclosure under
Guide 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ See Articles 3 and 8 of Regulation S-X.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. Affected Registrants
We define the scope of Guide 3 as the population of registrants
that currently may be providing Guide 3 disclosures. Table 1 below
shows the estimated number of registrants within the Guide 3
scope,\169\ along with their cumulative assets by type and domestic/
foreign status.\170\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\169\ To estimate the scope, we first identify registrants that
meet the definition of a BHC in Rule 1-02(e) of Regulation S-X or
that are BHCs under the Bank Holding Company Act. To estimate the
number of BHC registrants, staff reviewed Commission filings by
registrants in the following Standard Industrial Classification
(``SIC'') codes to determine if the registrant met the definition of
a BHC under Rule 1-02(e) of Regulation S-X: 6021, 6022, 6029, 6035,
and 6036. For purposes of this economic analysis, we only considered
BHCs that are within the following SIC codes: 6021, 6022, 6029,
6035, 6036, 6099, 6111, 6141, 6153, 6159, 6162, 6163, 6172, 6199,
6200, 6211, 6221, 6282, 6311, 6321, 6324, 6331, 6351, 6361, 6399,
6411, 6500, 6510, 6519, 6798, and 7389. We note that registrants
with SIC codes other than these may be BHCs. As such, the population
of BHCs may be underestimated.
We also identify certain other financial services registrants
that have both lending and deposit-taking activities but are not
BHCs, as these registrants may be providing Guide 3 disclosures as a
result of their activities. For purposes of this economic analysis,
we assume that a registrant is a financial services registrant if
its type of business is identified by one of the following SIC
codes: 6021, 6022, 6029, 6035, 6036, 6099, 6111, 6141, 6153, 6159,
6162, 6163, 6172, 6199, 6200, 6211, 6221, 6282, 6311, 6321, 6324,
6331, 6351, 6361, 6399, 6411, 6500, 6510, 6519, 6798, and 7389. We
note that registrants with SIC codes other than these may be
providing financial services and some registrants with the specified
above SIC codes may not be providing financial services. As such,
the population of financial services registrants may be under- or
overestimated.
For the purposes of this analysis, we define the subset of
financial services registrants that have both lending and deposit-
taking activities as those financial services registrants that have
any amounts of loans and deposits reported in Commission filings. We
note that amounts of loans and deposits may not be material for some
registrants in the subset. Therefore, the number of registrants that
currently may be providing Guide 3 disclosures due to their
activities may be overestimated.
This analysis is based on data from XBRL filings and staff
review of filings for financial services registrants that did not
submit XBRL filings. To identify financial services registrants that
have both lending and deposit-taking activities, we used XBRL tags
commonly used for loans and deposits. Staff reviewed the financial
statements of identified registrants to determine whether the tags
were related to the type of activities described in Guide 3 and
excluded those with unrelated activities. We note that some
registrants may use non-standard or custom XBRL tags to identify
their lending or deposit-taking activities. As such, the number of
financial services registrants with lending and deposit-taking
activities may be underestimated.
We also note that registrants with SIC codes other than those
specified above may have lending and deposit-taking activities. For
example, based on data from XBRL filings, staff identified 22
registrants that report both holdings of loans and deposit-taking
activities and that may provide some Guide 3 disclosures.
\170\ For purposes of this economic analysis, we define domestic
registrants as those that file Forms 10-K and foreign registrants as
those that file Forms 20-F.
Table 1--Registrants Within the Guide 3 Scope \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Domestic Foreign Total
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type Assets,\2\
Number $bln Number Assets, $bln Number Assets, $bln
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
BHCs \3\................................................ 391 18,251 26 23,246 417 41,497
Financial services registrants with lending and deposit- 60 1,737 16 3,104 76 4,840
taking activities: \4\.................................
SLHCs \5\........................................... 49 637 0 0 49 637
Banks............................................... 11 1,099 16 3,104 27 4,203
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total........................................... 451 19,988 42 26,350 493 46,337
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The estimates are based on the data as of May 1, 2020. We define active registrants as those that have filed an annual, periodic, or current report
or registration statement with the Commission during the period beginning May 1, 2019 and ending May 1, 2020.
In the Proposing Release, we identified 487 registrants within the Guide 3 scope. Upon further review of filings, we identified four registrants
included in Table 1 of the Proposing Release that were either inactive or no longer met the definition of a BHC or a bank; and 17 registrants that
were inadvertently excluded from the scope of registrants providing Guide 3 disclosures. Therefore, we are updating the scope estimate for May 1, 2019
reported in the Proposing Release from 487 to 500.
Our estimate of the scope as of May 1, 2020 excludes 30 BHC, SLHC, and bank registrants that became inactive during the period between May 1, 2019 and
May 1, 2020 (based on the definition of active registrants for the period ending May 1, 2020) and includes 23 new financial service registrants that
became active during the period between May 1, 2019 and May 1, 2020. As a result, the estimated number of registrants within the Guide 3 scope
decreased from 500 to 493 during the period between May 1, 2019 and May 1, 2020.
\2\ The estimates for total assets of registrants are based on these registrants' most recent Form 10-K or Form 20-F filed as of May 1, 2020. The
analysis is based on data from XBRL filings and staff review of filings for financial services registrants that did not submit XBRL filings. For
foreign registrants that report total assets in local currency, we used exchange rates as of December 31, 2019 to convert their reported value to U.S.
dollars.
[[Page 66124]]
\3\ Data on holding companies subject to the Bank Holding Company Act was obtained from Reporting Form FR Y-9C for holding companies as of Q4 2019.
\4\ In Table 1 of the Proposing Release, we identified four registrants in the ``other'' category. We defined other registrants as those that did not
meet the definition of a bank, savings and loan holding company (``SLHC''), or savings and loan association (``SLA''). Upon further stuff review, we
reclassified these four registrants as BHCs because they met the definition of a BHC under Rule 1-02(e) of Regulation S-X, as of May 1, 2020.
\5\ We identified only SLHCs and did not identify any SLAs within the population of financial services registrants with lending and deposit-taking
activities.
We estimate that, among registrants identified as being within the
scope of Guide 3, approximately 84.6% are BHCs that in aggregate hold
approximately 89.6% of total Guide 3 registrants' total assets. We also
estimate that, among the registrants within the scope of Guide 3, 91.4%
are domestic registrants that in aggregate hold 43.1% of total Guide 3
registrants' total assets. Although the number of foreign registrants
is much smaller than the number of domestic registrants, foreign
registrants in aggregate hold approximately 56.9% of total assets, as
shown by the total assets in Table 1.
Table 2 below shows the estimated number of registrants within the
scope of Guide 3 that qualify for scaled Guide 3 disclosures, as well
as the number of registrants that qualify for SRC and/or EGC status.
Table 2--Scaled Disclosure Thresholds for Registrants Within the Guide 3
Scope \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Qualifying registrants
-----------------------------------
Scaled disclosure threshold Total assets
Number $bln
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guide 3 scaled threshold registrants 7 7
SRC registrants..................... 204 257
EGC registrants..................... 73 143
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ To estimate the number of registrants that meet the Guide 3 scaled
disclosure threshold, the staff analyzed the most recent Form 10-K or
Form 20-F filed as of May 1, 2020. The analysis was based on data from
XBRL filings and staff review of filings for those registrants that
did not submit their filings in XBRL format. The estimates for the
number of affected registrants that are SRCs are based on information
from their most recent annual filing, as of May 1, 2020. The estimates
for the number of affected registrants that are EGCs are based on
their most recent periodic filings, as of May 1, 2020.
Among the 493 registrants within the Guide 3 scope, 44% are either
SRCs or EGCs.\171\ However, only 1% of registrants within the Guide 3
scope qualify for scaled disclosure in Guide 3. We also estimate that
among the seven registrants that qualify for scaled Guide 3 disclosure,
six are either an SRC, an EGC, or both.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\171\ We note that 54 affected registrants are both SRCs and
EGCs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Economic Effects
The economic effects of the final rules primarily stem from changes
to the substance and reporting periods of the Guide 3 disclosure items,
including, among other things, the addition of certain new credit ratio
disclosure requirements. As a result, the affected bank and savings and
loan registrants would experience changes in their compliance costs. In
particular, affected registrants would experience a decrease in
compliance costs stemming from a removal of overlapping disclosure
items and reduced reporting periods. However, this reduction may be
fully or partially offset by an increase in costs stemming from the
proposed new credit ratio disclosure requirements and more
disaggregated disclosure requirements. As discussed in Section VIII.B.v
below, we estimate that the final rules will on aggregate increase
paperwork and reporting burdens for the affected registrants.\172\ As a
result, these costs may flow through to customers in the form of higher
costs for financial services, and to shareholders in the form of lower
earnings. On the other hand, the final rules are expected to decrease
investors' search costs and reduce information asymmetries between
investors and affected registrants, which may lead to increased
allocative efficiency and lower cost of capital. Below, we first
discuss the economic effects of changes to the substance and reporting
periods of the disclosure requirements, followed by a discussion of
economic effects related the scope and applicability of the disclosure
requirements and the location and format of the required disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\172\ See infra Section VIII for a discussion of our estimates--
for PRA purposes--of the burdens and costs associated with the final
rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Codified Disclosures
The final rules codify in a new Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K
Guide 3 disclosure items that do not significantly overlap with
disclosure requirements in other Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, and IFRS.
a. Costs and Benefits
Codifying Guide 3 disclosure items that do not significantly
overlap with disclosure requirements in Commission rules, U.S. GAAP,
and IFRS provides a single source of disclosure requirements about the
specified financial activities, which will facilitate compliance and
may make it easier for registrants to understand their disclosure
obligations. Codifying disclosure requirements in Regulation S-K may
cause affected registrants to expend additional resources to produce
the disclosures, as the status of the disclosure items would be
elevated from staff guidance to a rule, which could result in
additional costs. However, this effect may be fully or partially
offset, due to the elimination of uncertainty around the existing
disclosure structure for BHCs and registrants with material lending and
deposit-taking activities under Guide 3, as well as any uncertainty on
the part of registrants as to whether specific disclosures are
required, given the staff guidance status of Guide 3.
The final rules modify some of the disclosure requirements that are
being codified to better align them with other existing reporting
practices. Specifically, the final rules align the investment
categories in Item II.B and loan categories in Items III.B, IV.A, and
IV.B of Guide 3 with the respective debt securities and loan categories
required to be disclosed in the registrant's U.S. GAAP or IFRS
financial statements. One commenter generally supported aligning the
loan categories to the existing U.S.
[[Page 66125]]
GAAP and IFRS requirements.\173\ We believe that revising loan and debt
securities categories to conform to financial statement categories will
promote comparability and consistency of disclosures within a
registrant's filing and reduce the preparation burdens and other
related costs imposed on affected registrants. However, we recognize
that, to the extent that Guide 3 loan and investment categories provide
information incremental to financial statement categories, and bank and
savings and loan registrants currently provide these disclosures based
on the Guide 3 categories, investors may lose this information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\173\ See letter from BAC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the Proposing Release, we proposed to codify Guide 3 maturity
categories for loan disclosures without a change: Due in one year or
less, due in one to five years, and due after five years. However, two
commenters indicated that some loan categories may be predominantly
classified into a single maturity bucket due to their nature, and,
therefore, requiring disaggregation by maturity for such loan
categories would not provide more meaningful information to
investors.\174\ Another commenter submitted a study concluding that
disaggregated information may be value-relevant to investors because
such information may have predictive and confirmatory value.\175\ In
response to commenters' feedback, the final rules further disaggregate
the categories of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing
liabilities in Item I disclosures and further disaggregate the ``after
5 year'' maturity category for loan disclosures in Item III into ``5
years through 15 years'' and ``after 15 years.'' We expect that, under
the final rules, some loan categories, such as real estate loans, will
no longer be classified within a single ``after five years'' maturity
bucket. Therefore, the final rules should provide more decision-
relevant information to investors by better accommodating maturity
periods on commonly offered loan products. We recognize that additional
disaggregation may increase compliance costs for the affected
registrants, which could be passed onto customers and investors.
However, this increase in compliance costs may be offset by a potential
reduction in cost of capital that could arise as a result of increased
transparency and decreased information asymmetries between investors
and affected registrants. To the extent that investors view loans with
maturities of 5 to 15 years and loans with maturities of 15 years or
longer differently in terms of their risk profile, investors may be
able to make more efficient portfolio allocation decisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\174\ See letters from BAC and BPI/SIFMA.
\175\ See letter from Prof. Burke (citing Qing L. Burke, Terry
D. Warfield, & Matthew M. Wieland, Value Relevance of Disaggregated
Information: An Examination of the Volume and Rate Analysis of Bank
Net Interest Income, Acct. Horizons (forthcoming, 2020)).
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The final rules do not exclude certain loan categories from the
sensitivities of loans to changes in interest rates disclosure
requirement.\176\ One commenter noted that the maturity and
sensitivities to changes in interest rates disclosures should allow for
exclusion of loan categories that are not material to the
registrant.\177\ Another commenter stated that mirroring loan
categories and classes presented in the financial statements without
the flexibility to exclude certain loan categories from the maturity
disclosure would not result in more meaningful disclosures.\178\
However, as discussed in section II.H.iii above, we believe that
immaterial loan categories generally would not be presented in the
financial statements.\179\ Therefore, we expect the maturity
disclosures for each reported loan category to be relevant to
investors. Specifically, the maturity table may help investors and
other users of Commission filings to better understand the liquidity
profile of registrants' assets, and the interest rate disclosures may
help them understand the interest rate risk associated with specific
loan categories. As a result, investors' search costs, as well as
information asymmetries between investors and affected registrants may
decrease. In addition, while we agree with commenters that some loan
categories historically have been predominantly classified into a
single maturity bucket, we do not expect this always to be the case.
For example, in an environment with decreasing interest rates, it can
be beneficial for individuals and businesses to refinance their loans.
In this case, the maturity of such loans may be extended, provided that
borrowers refinanced loans with the same original maturity across
institutions. As a result, multiple loans within a specific loan
category presented by a registrant may have similar maturities.
However, we do not expect the same effect to be present in an
environment with rising interest rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\176\ Currently, Guide 3 excludes the following domestic loan
categories from the maturity by loan category disclosure: Real
estate mortgage loans, installment loans to individuals, and lease
financing.
\177\ See letter from BAC.
\178\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\179\ Because U.S. GAAP considers materiality, we believe that
immaterial loan categories would not be presented as a response to
the adopted disclosure requirements. Under the current baseline,
Part III.A of Guide 3 calls for disclosure for each specified loan
category, regardless of materiality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed to require separate presentation of federal funds sold
and securities purchased with agreements to resell. One commenter
indicated that the required disaggregation of federal funds sold and
securities purchased with agreements to resell may not be relevant for
certain institutions and may be confusing to investors.\180\ Another
commenter stated that the additional disaggregation in Item I appears
to remove any element of professional judgment based on quantitative or
qualitative materiality assessments, and therefore may result in
disaggregation that will be of little value to users.\181\ While we
continue to believe that more disaggregated categories of assets and
liabilities may provide investors with insight into the drivers of
changes in the affected registrants' net interest earnings, we
recognize that only material categories would be relevant to investors.
The final rules clarify that only major categories that are material
must be disaggregated in the disclosure. We do not expect this
clarification to substantially reduce the amount of information about
interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities available to
investors, relative to the baseline. At the same time, this
clarification should help registrants avoid the burden associated with
providing such information when it is not material.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\180\ See letter from ABA.
\181\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
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The final rules also modify the categories of deposits in Item V of
Guide 3 and require separate presentation of uninsured deposits. The
final rules link the definition of uninsured deposits to federal or
state deposit insurance regimes for U.S. registrants and provides
foreign registrants the flexibility to use and disclose a definition of
uninsured deposits appropriate for their country of domicile.
Additionally, the final rules permit a registrant to disclose an
estimate of uninsured deposits based on the same methodologies and
assumptions used for the registrant's regulatory reporting requirements
if it is not practicable to provide a precise measure of uninsured
deposits at the reported period. Two commenters supported replacing the
$100,000 bright-line threshold in Guide 3 with a threshold that aligns
with federal or state deposit insurance limits.\182\ We
[[Page 66126]]
believe that by avoiding specific reference to existing dollar limits,
the final rules better accommodate future changes in the deposit
insurance regimes that are applicable to registrants, as it would allow
registrants to avoid calculating two different amounts for uninsured
deposits if the FDIC limit changes. This aspect of the final rules will
also provide investors with more clarity as to which deposits should be
classified as insured and which should not, potentially reducing the
associated compliance burden and providing greater transparency for
investors with respect to the affected registrants' sources of funding
and risks related to these particular types of funding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\182\ See letters from BAC and A. Heilig.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules require disclosure of uninsured deposits. One
commenter suggested that due to the lack of comparability among
different deposit schemes, the disclosure of uninsured deposits may be
misleading to investors and, therefore, should not be required.\183\
However, other commenters indicated that disclosure of uninsured
deposits would provide transparency with respect to a registrant's
sources of funding and liquidity risk profile.\184\ While recognizing
that comparability of uninsured deposits among affected registrants may
be limited due to different insurance regimes and differences in
methodologies used to calculate amounts of uninsured deposits, we
believe that the final rules provide transparency with respect to
affected registrants' sources of funding and risks related to these
particular types of funding. As a result, requiring disclosure of
uninsured deposits may reduce information asymmetries between investors
and registrants and may increase allocative efficiency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\183\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\184\ See letters from BAC and A. Heilig.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules also require disclosure of net charge-offs on a
disaggregated basis, as proposed. Two commenters stated that there may
be operational challenges or systems limitations associated with
calculating the ratio of net charge-offs to average loans on a
disaggregated basis.\185\ We recognize that, to the extent that some
bank and savings and loan registrants currently may not be compiling
data that is sufficiently granular to compute these ratios on such a
basis, providing the disaggregated information would increase costs for
these registrants. Another commenter indicated that this disclosure
might not provide meaningful information to investors to the extent the
disaggregated ratios are not significant drivers of business
results.\186\ However, we believe that more disaggregated data for the
net charge-off ratio may provide material information, as it could help
investors better understand drivers of the changes in a bank and
savings and loan registrant's charge-offs and the related provision for
loan losses. This may result in decreased information asymmetries
between registrants and investors and increased allocative efficiency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\185\ See letters from CAQ and Crowe.
\186\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Alternatives
As an alternative, we could have defined uninsured deposits of
FDIC-insured registrants based solely on whether the amount of deposits
exceeds the FDIC insurance limit, as proposed. This alternative
definition would count deposits that are insured by states or other
similar deposit insurance regimes as uninsured deposits, as also
pointed out by a commenter,\187\ despite similar risk profile between
FDIC-insured deposits and deposits insured by states or other similar
deposit insurance regimes. In addition, this alternative would include
state or other regulator-insured deposits within the definition of
uninsured deposits for FDIC-insured registrants while excluding
deposits insured by similar deposit regimes for foreign registrants,
which could make uninsured deposits of domestic and foreign registrants
less comparable relative to the final rules. Therefore, we have revised
the final definition of uninsured deposits to exclude deposits covered
by state deposit insurance regimes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\187\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As another alternative, we could have defined uninsured deposits to
expressly include investment products such as mutual funds, annuities,
or life insurance policies, as proposed. This alternative would have
helped to ensure that such products are considered by registrants when
disclosing their uninsured deposits. In response to the proposal, two
commenters called for the final rules to explain how the term
``uninsured deposits'' would be applied to investment products such as
mutual funds, annuities, or life insurance policies.\188\ To avoid
regulatory complexity, the final rules do not specify what products are
considered uninsured deposits; rather, they allow the affected
registrants to apply the methodology used for regulatory bank reporting
to make such determinations. Relative to the proposal, this aspect of
the final rules may increase comparability in the disclosure of
uninsured deposits among registrants that share similar regulatory
reporting requirements (as they would apply the same methodology used
for regulatory reporting purposes) while decreasing the operational
complexity associated with providing such disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\188\ See letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, we could have required all affected registrants to
disclose precise amounts of uninsured deposits, as proposed. Under this
alternative, comparability among registrants would increase relative to
the final rules. However, several commenters urged the Commission to
consider operational complexities and costs of calculating the precise
amounts of uninsured deposits rather than providing an estimate, which
is more consistent with industry practices.\189\ We recognize that, in
some instances, due to complex deposit insurance rules that apply
across accounts, it may be operationally challenging and costly for
registrants to report precise amounts of uninsured deposits. Therefore,
the final rules allow disclosure of an estimate of uninsured deposits
if it is not practicable to provide a precise measure. To mitigate
potential loss of comparability due to disclosure of estimated rather
than the precise amount of uninsured deposits, the final rules require
that the methodologies and assumptions used for the estimate be the
same as those used for the registrant's regulatory reporting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\189\ See e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe; and
PWC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ii. New Credit Ratios
The final rules require disclosure of three additional credit
ratios for bank and savings and loan registrants, along with each of
the components used in the ratios' calculation and a discussion of the
factors that led to material changes in the ratios or related
components.\190\ In the Proposing Release, we indicated that the
additional compliance burden for the proposed credit ratio disclosure
requirements would not be significant for existing bank and savings and
loan registrants, as the components of each proposed ratio are already
required disclosures in bank and savings and loan registrants'
financial statements. One commenter agreed with this assessment.\191\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\190\ The final rules also include an instruction stating that
affected IFRS registrants do not have to provide either of the
nonaccrual ratios as there is no concept of nonaccrual in IFRS.
\191\ See letter from ABA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For similar reasons, we also stated in the Proposing Release that
the benefit to investors of requiring these additional
[[Page 66127]]
credit ratios may be modest. One commenter agreed that the ratios are
easily calculable from the information already required in the
financial statements, and on that basis, questioned whether the
separate disclosure of the ratios is necessary.\192\ We note that,
although the ratios can be calculated from the financial statements
under the final rules, disclosure of these ratios will be accompanied
by a discussion of the factors that led to material changes in the
ratios or their components. This discussion may be material information
to investors and can potentially reduce information asymmetries between
registrants and investors, resulting in more efficient investment
decisions and potentially lowering cost of capital for the affected
registrants. While we recognize that the ratios themselves can be
calculated from the financial statements, we believe that the required
discussion of changes to ratios or their components would be more
complete and likely more informative with disclosure of the ratios
themselves.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\192\ See letter from CAQ.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Two commenters indicated that, under the New Credit Loss
Standard,\193\ some of the new ratios may not be as relevant to
investors.\194\ We recognize that, under the current approach, changes
in the allowance for credit losses are based on changes in losses
incurred to date, whereas under the New Credit Loss Standard, changes
in the allowance for credit losses are based on changes in estimates of
expected losses over the life of the loan portfolio. As such, the
allowance for credit losses to total loans ratio and allowance for
credit losses to nonaccrual loans ratio convey different information to
investors under the two approaches. We believe that, despite this
important difference in the information contained in these ratios under
alternative credit loss approaches, the disclosure of these two ratios
along with the discussion of the factors that led to material changes
in these ratios or their components could be material to investors,
regardless of the approach used (New Credit Loss Standard or incurred
loss approach). To the extent that the ratios are material to
investors, the final rules may result in increased information
efficiency, allowing investors to better allocate their investment
portfolios and potentially reducing cost of capital for the affected
registrants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\193\ See supra note 96.
\194\ See letters from ABA and KPMG.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also stated that because the timeline for the
implementation of the New Credit Loss Standard differs among the types
of affected registrants (e.g., a regional bank that is not an SRC
versus a community bank that is an SRC), it may be difficult or
confusing to compare these credit ratios across all bank and savings
and loan registrants. We recognize that comparability of ratios across
registrants may be reduced until all affected registrants adopt the New
Credit Loss Standard. However, we believe that the discussion of the
factors that led to material changes in the ratios or their components
may mitigate this concern, as investors will be able to understand how
the ratios and their components differ across registrants. In addition,
as discussed in Section II.I above, we believe that the majority of
affected registrants will adopt New Credit Loss Standard by the
mandatory compliance date of the final rules.
iii. Not Codified Disclosures and Instructions
The final rules do not codify the following Guide 3 disclosure
items and instructions that overlap with Commission rules, U.S. GAAP,
or IFRS:
Short-term borrowing disclosures called for by Item VII.1
and 2;
Book value information, the maturity analysis of book
value information, and the disclosures related to investments exceeding
10% of stockholders' equity called for by Item II;
Loan category disclosure, the loan portfolio risk elements
disclosure, and the other interest-bearing assets disclosure called for
by Item III;
The analysis of loss experience disclosure called for by
Item IV.A;
The breakdown of the allowance disclosures called for by
Item IV.B for IFRS registrants; and
General Instruction 6 to Guide 3.
The final rules also do not codify the disclosure items in Item VI
of Guide 3 related to return on assets, return on equity, dividend
payout, and equity to assets ratios. Because we are rescinding Guide 3,
we do not anticipate affected registrants would provide any Guide 3
disclosures not required by new subpart 1400, unless required by other
Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS. However, registrants may
voluntarily continue to provide these disclosures.
a. Costs and Benefits
To the extent that the disclosure items not codified are reasonably
similar to disclosure requirements in Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or
IFRS, not including these disclosure requirements in Regulation S-K
should facilitate bank and savings and loan registrants' compliance
efforts by reducing the need to replicate disclosures or reconcile
overlapping disclosure requirements, and decrease the reporting burdens
for the registrants that currently may be following Guide 3. This is
consistent with feedback received from some commenters, who stated that
the removal of overlapping disclosure requirements will streamline
compliance efforts and decrease registrants' reporting burdens.\195\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\195\ See, e.g., letter from BAC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investors should not be adversely affected by the decision not to
codify the aforementioned disclosure items, given that the overlapping
disclosure requirements in Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS elicit
reasonably similar information. Moreover, some commenters pointed out
that duplication of information and/or presentation of information that
is almost, but not quite, the same, can prove confusing to
investors.\196\ To the extent that this effect is present, the more
streamlined presentation of information may reduce search costs for
investors and decrease information asymmetries between registrants and
investors. On the other hand, to the extent that the Guide 3 disclosure
items elicit incremental information to investors, not codifying these
disclosure items could marginally increase information asymmetries and
investor search costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\196\ See, e.g., letter from BPI/SIFMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules do not codify the ratios in Item VI of Guide 3.
Because these ratios are not specific to the activities of bank and
savings and loan registrants, we believe that in most cases the Item VI
ratios do not provide additional information about the risks that are
particular to the affected registrants. In addition, to the extent the
Item VI ratios may be relevant to some affected registrants,
codification of these ratios could be viewed as duplicative because
Commission guidance on Item 303 of Regulation S-K states that companies
should identify and discuss key performance indicators when they are
used to manage the business and would be material to investors.\197\
Moreover, users of financial disclosures can calculate the ratios based
on information already disclosed in Commission filings. Therefore,
eliminating the disclosure of these ratios should not result in the
loss of material information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\197\ See Proposing Release at note 264 (citing the 2003 MD&A
Interpretive Release, supra note 69). See also the 2020 MD&A
Interpretive Release, supra note 156.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules also do not codify the undue burden or expense
accommodation for foreign registrants in General Instruction 6 of Guide
3. One
[[Page 66128]]
commenter indicated that this accommodation should be codified,\198\
and several commenters \199\ noted that they had seen limited use of
the accommodation in Rules 409 and 12b-21 and therefore surmised that
it may be rare for a registrant to be able to demonstrate that the
required information is not reasonably available or that obtaining it
may require unreasonable effort or expense.\200\ However, these
commenters did not provide any specific examples of when reliance on
the accommodation in General Instruction 6 of Guide 3 would be
necessary, notwithstanding the flexibility in disclosure provided to
IFRS registrants under the final rules and the ability of all
registrants to rely on Securities Act Rule 409 and Exchange Act Rule
12b-21. To the extent that some registrants currently rely on the undue
burden accommodation in General Instruction 6 and would be unable to
rely on Securities Act Rule 409 or Exchange Act Rule 12b-21, these
registrants may experience an increase in compliance costs. However,
the final rules' linkage of categories of debt securities and loans
with those required by U.S. GAAP and IFRS should reduce the need for
foreign registrants to seek regulatory accommodations with respect to
the final disclosure requirements. In addition, as noted in Section
II.D above, the staff has not received any requests from foreign
registrants seeking relief under General Instruction 6 during the past
10 years. Thus, we do not expect any such increase in compliance costs
to be substantial.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\198\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA.
\199\ See letters from CAQ; Crowe; Deloitte; and KPMG.
\200\ See supra note 31.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iv. Reporting Periods
The final rules align the reporting periods for the required
disclosures with the periods required by Commission rules for financial
statements, rather than the longer periods called for by Guide 3.
a. Costs and Benefits
Consistent with commenters' feedback,\201\ we believe that
alignment of reporting periods with the periods required by Commission
rules for financial statements will reduce compliance costs for
registrants currently following Guide 3 and will make it easier for
both investors and bank and savings and loan registrants to determine
which periods should be disclosed and why they are disclosed. We
believe that the cost reduction associated with this alignment will be
more pronounced for affected registrants that are EGCs or SRCs. As
indicated in Table 2 above, only seven registrants within the Guide 3
scope qualify for scaled disclosure under Guide 3. However, we estimate
that 223 registrants within the Guide 3 scope are either EGCs, SRCs, or
both; and among these, only six qualify for the scaled disclosure under
Guide 3. In contrast, under Commission rules, all EGCs and SRCs qualify
for scaled disclosure. As such, the final rules will provide the same
relief to these registrants as they have under other Commission rules,
reducing their compliance costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\201\ See, e.g., letters from ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; and EY.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because prior period information for existing registrants is
publicly available on EDGAR, scaling the number of reporting periods
required to be presented in a particular filing should not have a
significant adverse impact on investors of existing registrants. We
acknowledge, however, that, to the extent that investors of new bank
and savings and loan registrants rely on Guide 3 information that
covers a longer period of time than the required reporting periods
under the final rules, information asymmetries between investors and
new bank and savings registrants may increase.
b. Alternatives
As an alternative, we considered codifying the current Guide 3
reporting periods. Under this alternative, all bank and savings and
loan registrants with total assets over $200 million or net worth over
$10 million, including SRCs and EGCs, would provide the loan and
allowance for credit losses disclosures for five years and the rest of
the disclosures for three years. As such, the data would be required
for a longer period of time than Commission rules require for financial
statements. On the one hand, additional historical periods may benefit
investors in new bank and savings and loan registrants, as historical
information is not publicly available for these registrants.\202\ On
the other hand, under this alternative, the majority of SRCs and EGCs
would not realize the benefits of scaled disclosure, which would impose
higher compliance costs for these registrants. On balance, we believe
benefits of scaled disclosure justify the reduction in historical
information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\202\ See letters from BAC and EY.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
v. Scope
a. Costs and Benefits
The final rules will apply to bank and savings and loan
registrants. One commenter agreed that the final rules' scope captures
the majority of registrants who currently provide Guide 3
disclosures.\203\ We agree with the commenter and expect that this
approach will not subject any additional registrants to requirements to
disclose information currently called for by Guide 3 and will not
exclude any registrants that are within the Guide 3 scope from the
final rules' disclosure requirements, as our analysis indicates that
the population identified above in Table 1 includes all bank and
savings and loan registrants within the financial services industry. At
the same time, the final rules' scope will provide more certainty to
registrants with lending and deposit-taking activities because they no
longer will need to assess the applicability of Guide 3 based on the
materiality of their activities and, instead, will be explicitly
required to provide disclosure based on whether they are a bank and
savings and loan registrant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\203\ See letter from BAC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Alternatives
As an alternative to the final scope, we considered a scope that
would not be limited to bank and savings and loan registrants, but
instead would encompass all financial services registrants that conduct
the activities addressed in the final rules. Such an approach was
supported by one commenter.\204\ Tables 3 below shows the estimated
number of financial services registrants \205\ that conduct activities
addressed in the final rules and Table 4 lists these financial services
registrants by their type of business. Both tables display the
applicability of the final rules to these registrants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\204\ See letter from M. Deering.
\205\ See supra note 169.
[[Page 66129]]
Table 3--Activities of Financial Services Registrants
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Holding debt securities \1\ Holding loans Deposit-taking
Financial services registrants -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number Assets, $bln Number Assets, $bln Number Assets, $bln
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Within final rules' scope............................... 493 46,337 493 46,337 493 46,337
Not within final rules' scope........................... 527 19,759 296 16,979 0 0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................................... 1,020 66,096 789 63,316 493 46,337
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For purposes of this economic analysis, we define financial services registrants holding debt securities as those that have any investment
securities reported in their financial statements. The analysis was based on data from XBRL filings and staff review of filings for financial services
registrants that did not submit XBRL filings. To the extent that the estimate includes financial services registrants that hold equity and not debt
securities or that hold debt securities that are not material, the number of financial services registrants with holdings of debt securities may be
overestimated. To the extent that some financial services registrants may use non-standard or custom XBRL tags to identify their investment activities
or that there are financial services registrants outside of the SIC codes specified in note 169, supra, the number of financial services registrants
with holdings of debt securities may be underestimated. To estimate the number of registrants holding debt securities, the staff analyzed the most
recent Form 10-K or Form 20-F filed as of May 1, 2020 for financial services registrants.
Table 4--Financial Services Registrants by Type \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Within final rules' scope Not within final rules' scope Total
Type of financial services -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number Assets, $bln Number Assets, $bln Number Assets, $bln
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Banking and saving \2\.................................. 461 40,995 2 0 463 40,995
Credit and finance...................................... 20 1,706 62 6,552 82 8,258
Brokers, dealers, and exchanges......................... 7 3,436 93 832 100 4,268
Investment advice....................................... 1 152 43 263 44 415
Insurance............................................... 1 12 142 10,460 143 10,471
Real estate............................................. 0 0 213 1,658 213 1,658
Other financial services................................ 3 37 65 510 68 547
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................................... 493 46,337 620 20,274 1,113 66,612
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ We used SIC codes 6021, 6022, 6029, 6035, and 6036 to identify banks and saving institutions; SIC codes 6111, 6141, 6153, 6159, 6162, 6172, and 6199
to identify credit and finance services registrants; SIC codes 6163, 6200, 6211, and 6221 to identify brokers, dealers, and exchanges; SIC code 6282
to identify investment advisers; SIC codes 6311, 6321, 6324, 6331, 6351, 6361, 6399, and 6411 to identify insurance services companies; SIC codes
6500, 6510, 6519, and 6798 to identify real estate registrants; and SIC codes 6099 and 7389 to identify registrants that provide other financial
services.
\2\ We note that there are 30 registrants outside of the SIC codes 6021, 6022, 6029, 6035, and 6036 (and thus not included in the 463 banking and
savings registrants) that are either identified as BHCs under the BHC Act or Rule 1-02(e) of Regulation S-X, or identified as SLHCs.
We estimate that, out of 1,113 financial services registrants that
report at least one of the activities addressed in the final rules in
their filings, 620 registrants that in aggregate hold 30.4% of
financial services registrants' assets are not within the scope of the
final rules. Under the alternative approach discussed above, these 620
financial services registrants would be subject to the final rules and
would experience an increase in compliance costs as a result of new
disclosure obligations. Among these 620 registrants, 203 report
holdings of debt securities and loans, 93 report holdings of loans
only, and 324 report holdings of debt securities only. We also estimate
that all of 493 financial services registrants that report deposit-
taking activities will be within the final rules' scope; however, out
of 1,020 financial services registrants that hold debt securities, 527
registrants that in aggregate hold approximately 29.9% of assets among
financial services registrants with debt securities would not be within
the final rules' scope; out of 789 financial services registrants that
hold loans, 296 registrants that in aggregate hold approximately 26.8%
of assets among financial services registrants with holdings of loans
would not be within the final rules' scope. Under the alternative
approach discussed above, the disclosure of these activities would be
required for the financial services registrants that do not fall under
the definition of a banking and savings registrant.
To the extent that certain types of registrants outside the final
rules' scope conduct activities similar to bank and savings and loan
registrants, this alternative approach could lead to more consistent
and comparable disclosure among registrants that provide similar
financial services and help investors better compare registrants that
conduct similar activities, which in turn could increase allocative
efficiency. In addition, to the extent registrants that conduct one of
the activities addressed by the final rules are not within the final
rules' scope, and to the extent that these registrants currently have a
competitive advantage over registrants providing Guide 3 disclosures
due to lower costs, the alternative may decrease this disparity.
However, given that many of the 620 registrants that do not fall within
the final rules' scope may not currently provide the disclosures we are
codifying, the increased costs due to this alternative approach may be
significant. However, we note that even for a registrant that will not
be subject to disclosure requirements under the final rules, other
Commission disclosure requirements, such as MD&A, or investor demand
may elicit certain disclosure about financial activities of these
registrants to the extent they are material.
vi. Applicability of Disclosure
a. Costs and Benefits
Guide 3 calls for disclosure related to lending, deposit-taking,
and investment activities, regardless of materiality of these
activities; and specifies a few bright-line thresholds for disclosure
of specific items related to these activities. The final rules codify
the 10% bright-line disclosure threshold for deposit categories
disclosure, clarify that disaggregation of Item I disclosures is
[[Page 66130]]
required only for material items,\206\ and do not specify disclosure
thresholds, similar to Guide 3, for any of the other disclosure
requirements that are being codified. As such, we believe that this
aspect of the final rules will not result in meaningful economic
effects for registrants and investors as compared to the baseline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\206\ The existing language in Item I of Guide 3 indicates that
registrants ``should'' rather than ``must'' include specific
disaggregated categories. We believe that clarifying the final rules
to add a materiality qualifier should bring the required disclosures
more in line with existing disclosure practices under Guide 3. See
supra Section VII.C.i.a for a discussion of economic effects related
to disaggregation of Item I.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Alternatives
As an alternative, we considered requiring disclosures based on the
materiality of the relevant financial activities to the registrant's
business or financial statements. While a materiality-based approach
may result in a more tailored compliance regime and elicit disclosure
that is more relevant to a registrant's operations, such an approach
could increase uncertainty about whether bank and savings and loan
registrants need to provide disclosures, as these registrants would
have to make a judgment about which of their activities are material.
This alternative approach may also lead to a decreased comparability
between registrants that conduct activities specified in the final
rules. In addition, if certain investors have a different perception
than registrants about what activities are material, these investors
may have less information on which to base their investment decisions.
As another alternative, we considered using a bright-line threshold
for all proposed disclosure requirements. Such an approach may be
easier to apply as it would not require judgment and would reduce bank
and savings and loan registrants' uncertainty about whether they need
to provide disclosures. However, a bright-line threshold may be under-
or over-inclusive, especially for bank and savings and loan registrants
with a level of activities just below or over the specified threshold.
As a result, disclosures by registrants that fall just below the
threshold would be less comparable to those of registrants above the
threshold, despite conducting similar activities. In addition, under
this alternative, some bank and savings and loan registrants may be
incentivized to actively manage their activity to the level just below
the threshold such that they would not have to provide the disclosures
for specified activities, even though those activities could be
material to their business. In this instance, the bright-line approach
would be under-inclusive.
vii. Location of Disclosures
a. Costs and Benefits
Investors and other users of Commission filings may process
information located in different places within a registrant's filing
differently. The final rules provide bank and savings and loan
registrants with flexibility to determine where in the filing to
present the required information, just as they do under the current
Guide 3 instructions.\207\ As such, we expect that this aspect of the
final rules will not result in meaningful economic effects for
registrants and investors as compared to the baseline.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\207\ Based on the staff's review of financial services
registrants' annual reports that contain Guide 3 disclosures, there
currently is diversity in location of the disclosures, with some
registrants providing the disclosures in the Business section and
others providing it in MD&A. Several commenters also noted that the
disclosures currently called for by Guide 3 are typically included
in the Business section or in MD&A. See letters from CAQ; Crowe; and
EY. Two other commenters noted that many preparers include existing
Guide 3 disclosures in MD&A in conjunction with other required MD&A
disclosures, while others include the information within their
financial statements. See letters from BAC and BPI/SIFMA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Alternatives
As an alternative, we could have required disclosures to be placed
in the footnotes to the financial statements. Several commenters noted
that under this alternative approach, the footnote disclosures would be
subjected to audit procedures, and registrants would need to file the
disclosures in an XBRL format.\208\ One of these commenters stated that
requiring the disclosures to be included in the footnotes would likely
increase audit costs.\209\ As such, we expect that affected
registrants' compliance costs would be higher under this alternative,
relative to the final rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\208\ See e.g., letters from CAQ; Deloitte; and EY.
\209\ See letter from EY.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the Proposing Release, we noted that requiring the disclosure to
be located in the footnotes to financial statements could increase
reliability of disclosures and decrease search costs for users of
financial statements and information asymmetries between investors and
bank and savings and loan registrants. One commenter, however,
indicated that allowing registrants to decide where best to present the
disclosure will result in a superior presentation, with related
disclosures being grouped together.\210\ We agree that prescribing a
specific location for the disclosures could diminish bank and savings
and loan registrants' ability to present the information in the context
in which it is most relevant and understandable for investors reading
the report. In addition, this alternative would increase compliance
costs for those bank and savings and loan registrants that currently
provide the aforementioned disclosures within the MD&A section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\210\ See letter from BPI/SIFMA. Several other commenters
supported retaining the existing flexibility to determine where the
disclosures are provided. See letters from ABA; BAC; BPI/SIFMA; and
EY.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
viii. Format of Disclosures
In the Proposing Release, we requested comment on whether the
disclosures addressed in the final rules should be provided in a
structured machine-readable format. A few commenters supported the use
of the structured machine-readable Inline XBRL format for disclosures
addressed in the final rules, regardless of their location.\211\
According to these commenters, this requirement would ensure
consistency of data across all affected registrants.\212\ In addition,
these commenters stated that data provided in a structured format
encourages more robust and in-depth analysis due to reduced costs of
analysis.\213\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\211\ See letters from CFA and XBRL.
\212\ Id. See also letter from EY.
\213\ See letters from CFA and XBRL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On the other hand, two commenters stated that the cost to
registrants of providing the information in XBRL format could be
significant.\214\ One commenter indicated that such an approach would
be confusing for users of financial statements and would reduce
comparability among registrants.\215\ In addition, some commenters
indicated that it may be difficult for registrants that provide
disclosures addressed in the final rules within their MD&A section to
selectively provide such disclosures in a structured data format while
providing other MD&A disclosures in a non-structured data format.\216\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\214\ See letters from ABA and BPI/SIFMA.
\215\ See letter from BAC.
\216\ See letters from BPI/SIFMA and BAC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While we recognize that having the data provided in a structured
machine-readable format could increase financial statement
comparability and enable investors and other users of Commission
filings to access and use disclosures more easily, thus reducing
information asymmetries between investors and affected registrants, we
also recognize
[[Page 66131]]
the challenges of providing data in structured format.\217\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\217\ See Section VI.C.vii of the Proposing Release for a
discussion of academic research on the benefits and costs of XBRL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, requiring final rules' disclosures to be submitted in
a structured machine-readable format regardless of their location may
impose additional compliance costs on those affected registrants that
currently provide the disclosures within their MD&A section in a non-
structured format. Even though the costs of providing disclosures in
XBRL format may have declined in the recent years,\218\ requiring
registrants that provide the final rules' disclosures within their MD&A
section to provide these disclosures in a structured data format may
initially increase their compliance costs, relative to unaffected
registrants, for which MD&A disclosures are not required to be in a
structured data format. Ultimately, for the reasons discussed in
Section II.B above, we decided not to adopt this alternative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\218\ Two commenters referenced a study that estimates that XBRL
preparation costs for small companies declined by 45% from 2014 to
2017, and that the average cost of a full-year of fully outsourced
XBRL preparation for such companies in 2017 was less than $5,500.
See letters from CFA and XBRL. See also Press Release, AICPA, XBRL
Costs for Small Companies Have Declined 45%, According to AICPA
Study (Aug. 18, 2018), available at https://www.aicpa.org/press/pressreleases/2018/xbrl-costs-have-declined-according-to-aicpa-study.
As a baseline matter, all affected registrants currently are
subject to Inline XBRL tagging requirements for the financial
statements and cover pages in their periodic reports and for the
financial statements in certain registration statements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Effects on Efficiency, Competition, and Capital Formation
Consistent with commenters' feedback, we believe that the
codification of certain Guide 3 disclosure items may promote
comparability among filings, increase the quality and availability of
information about bank and savings and loan registrants' activities,
and help avoid uncertainty about when the disclosures are required. As
a result, the final rules may reduce information asymmetries, allowing
investors to achieve better allocative efficiency which, in turn, may
increase the demand for securities offerings, reduce costs of capital,
and enhance capital formation.
The outcome of not codifying the disclosure requirements that
overlap with Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, and IFRS on informational
efficiency depends on the balance of two effects. On the one hand, the
clarity of information presented in Commission filings may increase,
which would reduce search costs for investors who do not use
computerized search tools for locating data and lead to more efficient
information processing. Given that some investors may have limited
attention and limited information processing capabilities \219\ and may
invest more in firms with more concise disclosures,\220\ we believe
that eliminating overlapping or duplicative information should
facilitate more efficient investment decision-making, enhancing the
informational and allocative efficiency of the market and facilitating
capital formation. On the other hand, not codifying certain Guide 3
disclosure items could lead to increased information asymmetries
between investors and bank and savings and loan registrants to the
extent that some of the Guide 3 disclosure items that overlap with, but
are not entirely duplicative of, U.S. GAAP or IFRS disclosures would no
longer be called for by an industry guide. This impact may be
heightened for smaller registrants and first time entrants, as these
types of registrants may exhibit more information asymmetries due to
less historical information being available for investors. We did not
receive any comments that quantify the size of either of these two
effects. As such, we acknowledge that both effects may be present.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\219\ See, e.g., David Hirshleifer & Siew Hong Teoh, Limited
Attention, Information Disclosure, and Financial Reporting, 36 J.
Acct. & Econ. 337 (2003).
\220\ See, e.g., Alastair Lawrence, Individual Investors and
Financial Disclosure, 56 J. Acct. & Econ. 130 (2013); Michael S.
Drake, Jeffrey Hales, & Lynn Rees, Disclosure Overload? A
Professional User Perspective on the Usefulness of General Purpose
Financial Statements, 36 Contemp. Acct. Res. 1935 (2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rules also may have several effects on competition.\221\
First, to the extent that compliance costs increase for bank and
savings and loan registrants under the final rules, private banking
companies may gain additional competitive advantage from not incurring
such increased costs. Second, to the extent that certain costs related
to required disclosures are fixed, these burdens may have a larger
impact on smaller bank and savings and loan registrants, potentially
reducing their ability to offer banking products and terms that would
enable them to better compete with their larger peers. Third, the cost
savings from not codifying all of the Guide 3 disclosure items may be
larger for IFRS bank and savings and loan registrants, as they often
face particular challenges in presenting the Guide 3 disclosures that
presume a U.S. GAAP presentation; however; we do not anticipate this
effect to be substantial.\222\ Although we requested comment on the
extent of the aforementioned effects on competition, we did not receive
any feedback from commenters. As such, we acknowledge that all three
effects may be present.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\221\ See Section VI.D of the Proposing Release for a more
detailed discussion.
\222\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
A. Summary of the Collections of Information
Certain provisions of our rules that would be affected by the final
rules contain ``collection of information'' requirements within the
meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA'').\223\ The
Commission published a notice requesting comment on the collection of
information requirements in the Proposing Release, and submitted the
proposed rules to the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') for
review in accordance with the PRA.\224\ While some commenters provided
comments on the possible costs of the proposed rules,\225\ no
commenters specifically addressed our PRA analysis. Where appropriate,
we have revised our burden estimates after considering other relevant
comments as well as differences between the proposed and final rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\223\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
\224\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
\225\ See, e.g., letters from ABA; BPI/SIFMA; CAQ; Crowe; EY;
and PWC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The hours and costs associated with preparing and filing the forms
and reports constitute reporting and cost burdens imposed by each
collection of information. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information
requirement unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
Compliance with the information collections is mandatory. Responses to
the information collections are not kept confidential and there is no
mandatory retention period for the information disclosed. The titles
for the affected collections of information are:
Regulation S-K (OMB Control No. 3235-007); \226\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\226\ The paperwork burden from Regulation S-K is imposed
through the forms that are subject to the requirements in that
regulation and is reflected in the analysis of those forms. To avoid
a PRA inventory reflecting duplicative burdens and for
administrative convenience, we do not assign paperwork burdens to
Regulation S-K.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form S-1 \227\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0065);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\227\ 17 CFR 239.11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 66132]]
Form S-3 \228\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0073); \229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\228\ 17 CFR 239.13.
\229\ The paperwork burdens for Form S-3 and Form F-3 that would
result from the final rules are imposed through the forms from which
they are incorporated by reference and reflected in the analysis of
those forms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form S-4 \230\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0324);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\230\ 17 CFR 239.25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form F-1 \231\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0258);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\231\ 17 CFR 239.31.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form F-3 \232\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0256);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\232\ 17 CFR 239.33.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form F-4 \233\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0325);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\233\ 17 CFR 239.34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10 \234\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0064);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\234\ 17 CFR 249.210.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K \235\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0064);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ 17 CFR 249.310.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-Q \236\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0070);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\236\ 17 CFR 249.308a.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F (OMB Control No. 3235-0063); and
Regulation A (Form 1-A) \237\ (OMB Control No. 3235-0286).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\237\ 17 CFR 239.90.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The regulations and forms listed above were adopted under the
Securities Act or the Exchange Act. The regulations and forms set forth
the disclosure requirements for registration statements, offering
statements, and periodic reports filed by registrants and issuers to
help investors make informed investment decisions. A description of the
final rules, including the need for the information and its use, as
well as a description of the likely respondents, can be found in
Sections II through V above, and a discussion of the economic effects
of the proposed rules can be found in Section VII above.
B. Burden and Cost Estimates Related to the Proposed Rules
i. Affected Registrants and Forms
We estimate that, currently, approximately 493 bank and savings and
loan registrants provide the disclosures set forth in Guide 3. These
registrants have to provide the disclosures required by the final rules
in Securities Act registration statements filed on Forms S-1, S-3, S-4,
F-1, F-3, and F-4, Exchange Act registration statements on Forms 10 and
20-F, Exchange Act annual reports on Forms 10-K and 20-F, Exchange Act
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, and Regulation A offering statements on
Form 1-A. We refer to these registrants in this PRA analysis as
``affected registrants.''
The final rules codify certain disclosure items in Guide 3 and
eliminate other Guide 3 disclosure items that overlap with Commission
rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS. Although the disclosure Items in Guide 3 are
not Commission rules, under existing practice, affected registrants
currently provide many of these disclosures in response to Guide 3.
Therefore, the burdens associated with these disclosure requirements
are already included in the current burden hours and costs for the
affected forms. As such, for PRA purposes, we are only revising the
burdens and costs of the affected forms to reflect changes to the
existing Guide 3 disclosure items in the final rules.
For example, as discussed in greater detail below,\238\ the final
rules do not codify in Item 1403 the disclosure items in Item II of
Guide 3 that substantially overlap with U.S. GAAP and IFRS disclosure
requirements, and those disclosure requirements that the final rules do
codify in Item 1403 are consistent with the current disclosure items in
Item II. Therefore, we estimate that there would be no change to the
burdens and costs of affected registrants as a result of Item 1403
because the Item would include disclosure items that are already
included in Guide 3. In contrast, as discussed below,\239\ Item 1404,
in addition to codifying the loan disclosure items in Item III of Guide
3 that do not overlap with Commission rules, U.S. GAAP, or IFRS,
requires certain interest rate disclosures that are not currently
called for by Guide 3. Therefore, we estimate that Item 1404 would
increase the burden and costs to affected registrants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\238\ See Section VIII.B.iii.b below.
\239\ See Section VIII.B.iii.c below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, for PRA purposes, we have allocated the burden and
costs estimates related to the final rules to annual reports on Forms
10-K and 20-F. We have not adjusted the burdens and costs of a
registrant filing its quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, as the registrant
would be required to collect and disclose almost the same information
related to the final rules cumulatively in its annual report as in each
of its prior quarterly reports. Therefore, including the burden and
cost estimates in both annual and quarterly reports would result in a
PRA inventory reflecting duplicative burdens.
Further, as with quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, a registrant would
be required to collect and disclose almost the same information related
to the final rules in a registration or offering statement as it would
in an annual report. However, we recognize that there could be some
additional burdens and costs associated with a registration or offering
statement that may not apply to an annual report. Therefore, we assign
a small incremental increase in burdens and costs to all affected
registration and offering statements, including Forms 20-F, S-1, S-4,
F-1, F-4, 10, and 1-A.
ii. Standard Estimated Burden Allocation for Specified Forms
For purposes of the PRA, total burden is to be allocated between
internal burden hours and outside professional costs. A registrant's
internal burden is estimated in internal burden hours and its outside
professional costs are estimated at $400 per hour.\240\ Table 5 below
sets forth the percentage estimates we typically use for the burden
allocation for each form.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\240\ We recognize that the costs of retaining outside
professionals may vary depending on the nature of the professional
services, but for purposes of this PRA analysis, we estimate that
such costs will be an average of $400 per hour. This estimate is
based on consultations with several registrants, law firms, and
other persons who regularly assist registrants in preparing and
filing reports with the Commission.
Table 5--Standard Estimated Burden Allocation for Specified Forms
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outside
Form type Internal professionals
(percent) (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K 75 25
Form 20-F 25 75
Form S-1 25 75
Form S-4 25 75
Form F-1 25 75
Form F-4 25 75
Form 10 25 75
Form 1-A 75 25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Burden Change for Specific Portions of the Final Rules
a. Disclosure Related to Distribution of Assets, Liabilities, and
Stockholders' Equity; and Interest Rate and Interest Differential (Item
I of Guide 3/Item 1402)
The final rules in Item 1402 require additional disaggregation to
include the categories under Item VII of Guide 3 and certain other
categories in Article 9 of Regulation S-X. We are adopting the rules
substantially as proposed. In a change from the proposed rules, the
final rules clarify that the categories enumerated in the final rules
``must be included, if material,'' rather than the disclosure ``must
include, at a minimum.'' We do not believe this change affects our
burdens and costs
[[Page 66133]]
estimate from the Proposing Release as in many cases we believe the
additional disaggregation will provide material information. Therefore,
we estimate that the burdens and costs of an affected annual report
will increase by two hours per year and the burdens and costs of an
affected registration or offering statement will increase by one hour
per year. Table 6 below shows the resulting estimated change in an
affected registrant's internal burden hours and costs for outside
professionals due to the disclosure related to the distribution of
assets, liabilities, and stockholders' equity and interest rate and
interest differential.
Table 6--Estimated Increase in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Professionals From the Disclosure Related to
Distribution of Assets, Liabilities, and Stockholders' Equity; and Interest Rate and Interest Differential
[Item I of Guide 3/Item 1402]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase in Total
Number of Increase in Total outside increase in
Form affected internal increase in professional outside
filings burden hours internal cost per professional
per registrant burden hours registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = +2 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ 1.5 675 \2\ $200 $90,000
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ 0.5 21.5 \4\ 600 25,800
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = +1 hour
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ 0.25 0.25 \6\ 300 300
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ 0.25 3.75 \8\ 300 4,500
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ 0.25 21.75 \10\ 300 26,100
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ 0.25 0.25 \12\ 300 300
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ 0.25 0.5 \14\ 300 600
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ 0.25 0.5 \16\ 300 600
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ 0.75 0.75 \18\ 100 75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Two hours x 0.75 = 1.5 hours.
\2\ (Two hours x 0.25) x $400 = $200.
\3\ Two hours x 0.25 = 0.5 hours.
\4\ (Two hours x 0.75) x $400 = $600.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
b. Disclosure Related to Investment Portfolios (Item II of Guide 3/Item
1403)
We are adopting final rules as proposed. The disclosure items in
Item II of Guide 3 that the final rules do not codify in Item 1403
substantially overlap with U.S. GAAP and IFRS disclosure requirements,
and those that the final rules codify in Item 1403 are consistent with
the current disclosure items in Item II of Guide 3. Therefore, we
estimate that there will be no change to the burdens and costs of an
affected annual report or registration or offering statement as a
result of this aspect of the final rules.
c. Disclosure Related to Loan Portfolios (Item III of Guide 3/Item
1404)
In Item 1404, the final rules codify the loan disclosure items in
Item III of Guide 3 that do not overlap with Commission rules, U.S.
GAAP, or IFRS. We are adopting final rules substantially as proposed.
In a change from the proposed rules, the final rules separate the
``after five years'' maturity category is into two separate categories.
We do not believe this change affects our burdens and costs estimate
from the Proposing Release because the change requires only a slightly
different calculation. The final rules in Item 1404 require additional
disclosure regarding interest rates for all loan categories, so we
estimate that the burdens and costs of an affected annual report will
increase by three hours per year and the burdens and costs of an
affected registration or offering statement will increase by one hour
per year. Table 7 below shows the resulting estimated change in an
affected registrant's internal burden hours and costs for outside
professionals due to the final disclosure requirements related to loan
portfolios.
[[Page 66134]]
Table 7--Estimated Change in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professionals From the Disclosure
Related to Loan Portfolios
[Item III of Guide 3/Item 1404]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase in
Number of Increase in Total increase outside Total increase
Form affected internal in internal professional in outside
filings burden hours burden hours cost per professional
per registrant registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = +3 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ 2.25; 1,012.5 \2\ $300 $135,000
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ 0.75 32.25 \4\ 900 38,700
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = +1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ 0.25 0.25 \6\ 300 300
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ 0.25 3.75 \8\ 300 4,500
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ 0.25 21.75 \10\ 300 26,100
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ 0.25 0.25 \12\ 300 300
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ 0.25 0.5 \14\ 300 600
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ 0.25 0.5 \16\ 300 600
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ 0.75 0.75 \18\ 100 75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Three hours x 0.75 = 2.25 hours.
\2\ (Three hours x 0.25) x $400 = $300.
\3\ Three hours x 0.25 = 0.75 hours.
\4\ (Three hours x 0.75) x $400 = $900.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
d. Disclosure Related to Allowance for Credit Losses (Item IV of Guide
3/Item 1405(c))
We are adopting final rules as proposed. The disclosure items in
Item IV of Guide 3 that the final rules do not codify in proposed Item
1405(c) substantially overlap with U.S. GAAP and IFRS disclosure
requirements, and those disclosure items that the final rules do codify
in Item 1405(c) are consistent with the current disclosure items in
Item IV of Guide 3. Therefore, we estimate that there will be no change
to the burdens and costs of an affected annual report or registration
or offering statement as a result of this aspect of the final rules.
e. Disclosure Related to Deposits (Item V of Guide 3/Item 1406)
The final rules in Item 1406 codify the majority of the disclosure
items in Item V of Guide 3, with some revisions. We are adopting final
rules substantially as proposed. In a change from the proposed rules,
the final rules state that uninsured deposits may be based on estimated
amounts of uninsured deposits as of the reporting period end, to the
extent it is not practicable to provide a precise measure of uninsured
deposits. The final rules also differ from the proposed rules by
requiring that such estimates of uninsured deposits be based on the
same methodologies and assumptions used for the applicable bank or
savings and loan registrant's regulatory reporting requirements. We do
not believe these changes affect our burdens and costs estimate from
the Proposing Release as they represent modest accommodations that do
not fundamentally alter the registrant's disclosure obligations. We
estimate that burdens and costs of an affected annual report will
increase by three burden hours per year and the burdens and costs of an
affected registration or offering statement will increase by one hour
per year. Table 8 below shows the resulting estimated change in an
affected registrant's internal burden hours and costs for outside
professionals due to the final disclosure related to deposits.
[[Page 66135]]
Table 8--Estimated Change in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professionals From the Disclosure
Related to Deposits
[Item V of Guide 3/Item 1406]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase in
Number of Increase in Total increase outside Total increase
Form affected internal in internal professional in outside
filings burden hours burden hours cost per professional
per registrant registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = +3 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ 2.25 1,012.5 \2\ $300 $135,000
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ 0.75 32.25 \4\ 900 38,700
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = +1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ 0.25 0.25 \6\ 300 300
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ 0.25 3.75 \8\ 300 4,500
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ 0.25 21.75 \10\ 300 26,100
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ 0.25 0.25 \12\ 300 300
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ 0.25 0.5 \14\ 300 600
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ 0.25 0.5 \16\ 300 600
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ 0.75 0.75 \18\ 75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Three hours x 0.75 = 2.25 hours.
\2\ (Three hours x 0.25) x $400 = $300.
\3\ Three hours x 0.25 = 0.75 hours.
\4\ (Three hours x 0.75) x $400 = $900.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
f. Disclosure Related to Return on Equity and Assets (Item VI of Guide
3)
As proposed, the final rules do not codify the disclosure items in
Item VI of Guide 3. Therefore, we estimate that the burdens and costs
of an affected annual report will decrease by two burden hours per year
and the burdens and costs of an affected registration or offering
statement will decrease by one hour per year. Table 9 below shows the
resulting estimated change in an affected registrant's internal burden
hours and costs for outside professionals due to this aspect of the
final rules.
Table 9--Estimated Decrease in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professionals From the Disclosure
Related to Return on Equity and Assets
[Item VI of Guide 3]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decrease in
Number of Decrease in Total decrease outside Total decrease
Form affected internal in internal professional in outside
filings burden hours burden hours cost per professional
per registrant registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = -2 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ (1.5) (675) \2\ ($200) ($90,000)
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ (0.5) (21.5) \4\ (600) (25,800)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = -1 hour
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ (0.25) (0.25) \6\ (300) (300)
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ (0.25) (3.75) \8\ (300) (4,500)
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ (0.25) (21.75) \10\ (300) (26,100)
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ (0.25) (0.25) \12\ (300) (300)
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ (0.25) (0.5) \14\ (300) (600)
[[Page 66136]]
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ (0.25) (0.5) \16\ (300) (600)
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ (0.75) (0.75) \18\ (100) (75)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Two hours x 0.75 = 1.5 hours.
\2\ (Two hours x 0.25) x $400 = $200.
\3\ Two hours x 0.25 = 0.5 hours.
\4\ (Two hours x 0.75) x $400 = $600.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
g. Disclosure Related to Short-Term Borrowings (Item VII of Guide 3/
Item 1402)
We are adopting final rules as proposed. The final rules codify the
average amount outstanding and interest paid disclosure items in Item
VII of Guide 3 as part of Rule 1402, but do not codify the remaining
disclosure items in Item VII. Therefore, we estimate that the burdens
and costs of an affected annual report will decrease by four burden
hours per year and the burdens and costs of an affected registration or
offering statement will decrease by one hour per year. Table 10 below
shows the resulting estimated change in an affected registrant's
internal burden hours and costs for outside professionals due to the
disclosure related to short-term borrowings.
Table 10--Estimated Decrease in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professionals From the Final Rules
Related to Short-Term Borrowings
[Item VII of Guide 3/Item 1402]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decrease in
Number of Decrease in Total decrease outside Total decrease
Form affected internal in internal professional in outside
filings burden hours burden hours cost per professional
per registrant registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = -4 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ (3) (1,350) \2\ ($400) ($180,000)
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ (1) (43) \4\ (1,200) (51,600)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = -1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ (0.25) (0.25) \6\ (300) (300)
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ (0.25) (3.75) \8\ (300) (4,500)
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ (0.25) (21.75) \10\ (300) (26,100)
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ (0.25) (0.25) \12\ (300) (300)
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ (0.25) (0.5) \14\ (300) (600)
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ (0.25) (0.5) \16\ (300) (600)
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ (0.75) (0.75) \18\ (100) (75)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Four hours x 0.75 = 3 hours.
\2\ (Four hours x 0.25) x $400 = $400.
\3\ Four hours x 0.25 = 1 hours.
\4\ (Four hours x 0.75) x $400 = $1,200.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
[[Page 66137]]
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
h. Disclosure Related to Credit Ratios (Items 1405(a) and (b))
Under the final rules, credit ratios and related disclosures are
required for the same periods for which our rules require financial
statements for those filings. We proposed this same period requirement
for all filings other than initial registration and offering
statements, such that the proposed credit ratios and related
disclosures for annual reports and registration or offering statements
that are not initial registration or offering statements would be
required for the same periods for which our rules require financial
statements for those filings, which would be less than five years.
Additionally, we proposed a period requirement of five years for
initial registration and offering statements, such that an affected
registrant filing its initial registration or offering statement would
be required to provide its credit ratios and related disclosures for
each of the last five years. The final rules eliminate this bifurcation
and require credit ratios and related disclosures for the same periods
for which our rules require financial statements for those filings.
In the Proposing Release, we estimated that the burdens and costs
of an annual report would increase by six burden hours per year and the
burdens and costs of a registration or offering statement that is not
an initial registration or offering statement would increase by one
hour per year. Additionally, we estimated that providing the additional
years of credit ratios and related disclosures that go beyond what
would be required in an annual report or a registration or offering
statement that is not an initial registration or offering statement
would increase the burdens and costs for an initial registration or
offering statement by six burden hours per year. Because the final
rules do not include a five-year period requirement for credit ratio
disclosures in initial registration statements, we estimate that the
burdens and costs of an annual report will increase by six burden hours
per year and the burdens and costs of a registration or offering
statement, initial or otherwise, will increase by one hour per year.
Table 11 below shows the resulting estimated change in an affected
registrant's internal burden hours and costs for outside professionals
due to the disclosure related to credit ratios.
Table 11--Estimated Increase in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professionals From the Disclosure
Related to Credit Ratios (Items 1405(a) and (b))
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase in
Number of Increase in Total increase outside Total increase
Form affected internal in internal professional in outside
filings burden hours burden hours cost per professional
per registrant registrant cost
(A) (B) (C) (D) [(B) * (E) (F) [(B) *
(C)] (E)]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Reports = +6 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... 450 \1\ 4.5 2,025 \2\ $600 $270,000
Form 20-F....................... 43 \3\ 1.5 64.5 \4\ 1,800 77,400
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Registration and Offering Statements = +1 hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... 1 \5\ 0.25 0.25 \6\ 300 300
Form S-1........................ 15 \7\ 0.25 3.75 \8\ 300 4,500
Form S-4........................ 87 \9\ 0.25 21.75 \10\ 300 26,100
Form F-1........................ 1 \11\ 0.25 0.25 \12\ 300 300
Form F-4........................ 2 \13\ 0.25 0.5 \14\ 300 600
Form 10......................... 2 \15\ 0.25 0.5 \16\ 300 600
Form 1-A........................ 1 \17\ 0.75 0.75 \18\ 100 75
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Six hours x 0.75 = 4.5 hours.
\2\ (Six hours x 0.25) x $400 = $600.
\3\ Six hours x 0.25 = 1.5 hours.
\4\ (Six hours x 0.75) x $400 = $1,800.
\5\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\6\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\7\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\8\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\9\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\10\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\11\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\12\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\13\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\14\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\15\ One hour x 0.25 = 0.25 hours.
\16\ (One hour x 0.75) x $400 = $300.
\17\ One hour x 0.75 = 0.75 hours.
[[Page 66138]]
\18\ (One hour x 0.25) x $400 = $100.
iv. Total Change in Burden Per Form as a Result of the Final Rules
Table 12 below shows the resulting estimated change in an affected
registrant's internal burden hours and costs for outside professionals
per form as a result of the final rules.
Table 12--Estimated Total Increase in Internal Burden Hours and Costs for Outside Professional as a Result of
the Final Rules
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outside Total change
Total number Burden hour Total change professional in outside
Form of affected change per in internal costs change professional
forms form burden hours per form cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10-K....................... .............. .............. 2,700 .............. $360,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 450 1.5 675 $200 $90,000
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 $0 0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 450 2.25 1,012.5 $300 $135,000
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 $0 0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 450 2.25 1,012.5 $300 $135,000
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 450 (1.5) (675) ($200) ($90,000)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 450 (3) (1,350) ($400) ($180,000)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 450 4.5 2,025 $600 270,000
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F....................... .............. .............. 86.5 .............. $103,800
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 20-F (Annual Report)....... .............. 2 86 $2,400 $103,200
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 43 0.5 21.5 $600 $25,800
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 $0 0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 43 0.75 32.25 $900 $38,700
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 $0 0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 43 0.75 32.25 $900 $38,700
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 43 (0.5) (21.5) ($600) ($25,800)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 43 (1) (43) ($1,200) ($51,600)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 43 1.5 64.5 $1,800 $77,400
(b) of S-K)....................
Form 20-F (Registration .............. 0.5 0.5 $600 $600
Statement).....................
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 $0 $0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 $0 $0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 1 (0.25) (0.25) ($300) ($300)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 (0.25) (0.25) ($300) ($300)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form S-1........................ .............. .............. 7.5 .............. $9,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 15 0.25 3.75 $300 $4,500
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 0 0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 15 0.25 3.75 $300 $4,500
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 0 0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 15 0.25 3.75 $300 $4,500
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 15 (0.25) (3.75) ($300) ($4,500)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 15 (0.25) (3.75) ($300) ($4,500)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 15 0.25 3.75 $300 $4,500
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form S-4........................ .............. .............. 43.5 .............. $52,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 87 0.25 21.75 $300 $26,100
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 0 0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 87 0.25 21.75 $300 $26,100
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 0 0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 87 0.25 21.75 $300 $26,100
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 87 (0.25) (21.75) ($300) ($26,100)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 87 (0.25) (21.75) ($300) ($26,100)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 87 0.25 21.75 $300 $26,100
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form F-1........................ .............. .............. 0.5 .............. $600
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 0 $0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 0 $0
K).............................
[[Page 66139]]
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 1 (0.25) (0.25) ($300) ($300)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 (0.25) (0.25) ($300) ($300)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 1 0.25 0.25 $300 $300
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form F-4........................ .............. .............. 1.0 .............. $1,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 0 $0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 0 $0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 2 (0.25) (0.5) ($300) ($600)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 2 (0.25) (0.5) ($300) ($600)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 10......................... .............. .............. 1.0 .............. $1,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 0 $0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 0 $0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 2 (0.25) (0.5) ($300) ($600)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 2 (0.25) (0.5) ($300) ($600)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 2 0.25 0.5 $300 $600
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Form 1-A........................ .............. .............. 1.5 .............. $1,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsection a (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 0.75 0.75 $600 $600
Subsection b (Item 1403 of S-K). 0 0 0 $0 $0
Subsection c (Item 1404 of S-K). 1 0.75 0.75 $600 $600
Subsection d (Item 1405(c) of S- 0 0 0 $0 $0
K).............................
Subsection e (Item 1406 of S-K). 1 0.75 0.75 $600 $600
Subsection f (Item VI of Guide 1 (0.75) (0.75) ($600) ($600)
3).............................
Subsection g (Item 1402 of S-K). 1 (0.75) (0.75) ($600) ($600)
Subsection h (Items 1405(a) and 1 0.75 0.75 $600 $600
(b) of S-K)....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................... .............. .............. 2,842 .............. $529,200
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
v. Total Paperwork Burden Under the Final Rules
Table 13 below shows the total estimated internal burden hours and
costs for outside professional under the final rules.\241\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ Figures in the table have been rounded to the nearest
whole number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 13--Total Paperwork Burden Under the Final Rules
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Change in Change in
Current annual Current Current cost internal outside Burden hours Costs for
responses burden hours burden registrant professional for affected affected
burden hours costs responses responses
(A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) [(B) + (G) [(C) + (E)]
(D)]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10-K................................ 8,137 14,198,780 $1,895,224,719 2,700 $360,000 14,201,480 $1,895,584,719
20-F................................ 725 479,304 576,875,025 87 103,800 479,391 576,978,825
S-1................................. 901 147,208 180,319,975 8 9,000 147,216 180,328,975
S-4................................. 551 562,465 677,378,579 44 52,200 562,509 677,430,779
F-1................................. 63 26,692 32,275,375 1 600 26,693 32,275,975
F-4................................. 39 14,049 17,073,825 1 1,200 14,050 17,075,025
10.................................. 216 11,855 14,091,488 1 1,200 11,856 14,092,688
1-A................................. 179 98,396 13,111,912 2 1,200 98,398 13,113,112
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 66140]]
IX. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
The Commission certified, under section 605(b) of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (``RFA''), that, when adopted, the proposed amendments
to the rules would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. This certification, including our
basis for the certification, was set forth in Section IX of the
Proposing Release. The Commission solicited comments regarding this
certification and received no comments. We continue to believe this
certification is appropriate. As noted in the Proposing Release, the
Commission identified only one issuer that potentially would be subject
to the proposed amendments and that may be considered a small entity.
In addition, the proposed rules would have resulted in only modest
effects on registrants' compliance burdens, for example, by adding
between six additional burden hours for annual reports and one
additional burden hour for registration statements (initial or
otherwise). We also do not believe the proposed rules would otherwise
have a significant economic effect on any small entities.
We are adopting the final rules as proposed with one substantive
change relating to the proposed new credit ratio disclosure
requirements. We do not believe that this change, which as discussed
above will further limit the registrant's compliance burdens, alters
the basis upon which the certification in the Proposing Release was
made. Accordingly, we certify that the final rules will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
X. Statutory Authority
The amendments contained in this release are being adopted under
the authority set forth in Sections 3(b), 7, 10, 19(a), and 28 of the
Securities Act and Sections 3(b), 12, 13, 15(d), 23(a), and 36(a) of
the Exchange Act.
List of Subjects
17 CFR Part 210
Accountants, Accounting, Banks, Banking, Employee benefit plans,
Holding companies, Insurance companies, Investment companies, Oil and
gas exploration, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities,
Utilities.
17 CFR Part 229
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
17 CFR Part 249
Brokers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
In accordance with the foregoing, Title 17, Chapter II of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
PART 210--FORM AND CONTENT OF AND REQUIREMENTS FOR FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS, SECURITIES ACT OF 1933, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934, INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940, INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF
1940, AND ENERGY POLICY AND CONSERVATION ACT OF 1975
0
1. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3,
77aa(25), 77aa(26), 77nn(25), 77nn(26), 78c, 78j-1, 78l, 78m, 78n,
78o(d), 78q, 78u-5, 78w, 78ll, 78mm, 80a-8, 80a-20, 80a-29, 80a-30,
80a-31, 80a-37(a), 80b-3, 80b-11, 7202 and 7262, and sec. 102(c),
Pub. L. 112-106, 126 Stat. 310 (2012), unless otherwise noted.
0
2. Revise Sec. 210.9-01 to read as follows:
Sec. 210.9-01 Application of Sec. Sec. 210.9-01 to 210.9-07
The consolidated financial statements filed for bank holding
companies, savings and loan holding companies, and the financial
statements of banks and savings and loan associations, must apply the
guidance in this article in filings with the Commission.
0
3. Amend Sec. 210.9-03 by:
0
a. Removing and reserving paragraphs 7(a) through (c); and
0
b. revising paragraph 7(e)(2).
The revisions to read as follows:
Sec. 210.9-03 Balance sheets.
* * * * *
7. * * *
(e) * * *
(2) If a significant portion of the aggregate amount of loans
outstanding at the end of the fiscal year disclosed pursuant to
(e)(1)(i) above relates to loans that are disclosed as past due,
nonaccrual or troubled debt restructurings in the consolidated
financial statements, so state and disclose the aggregate amounts of
such loans along with such other information necessary to an
understanding of the effects of the transactions on the financial
statements.
* * * * *
PART 229--STANDARD INSTRUCTIONS FOR FILING FORMS UNDER SECURITIES
ACT OF 1933, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 AND ENERGY POLICY AND
CONSERVATION ACT OF 1975--REGULATION S-K
0
3. The authority citation for part 229 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77k, 77s, 77z-2,
77z-3, 77aa(25), 77aa(26), 77ddd, 77eee, 77ggg, 77hhh, 77iii, 77jjj,
77nnn, 77sss, 78c, 78i, 78j, 78j-3, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78n-1, 78o, 78u-
5, 78w, 78ll, 78 mm, 80a-8, 80a-9, 80a-20, 80a-29, 80a-30, 80a-
31(c), 80a-37, 80a-38(a), 80a-39, 80b-11 and 7201 et seq.; 18 U.S.C.
1350; sec. 953(b), Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1904 (2010); and sec.
102(c), Pub. L. 112-106, 126 Stat. 310 (2012).
0
4. Amend Sec. 229.404 by revising Instruction 4.c under ``Instructions
to Item 404(a)'' to read as follows:
Sec. 229.404 (Item 404) Transactions with Related Persons, Promoters
and Certain Control Persons
* * * * *
Instructions to Item 404(a)
* * * * *
4. * * *
c. If the lender is a bank, savings and loan association, or
broker-dealer extending credit under Federal Reserve Regulation T (12
CFR part 220) and the loans are not disclosed as past due, nonaccrual
or troubled debt restructurings in the consolidated financial
statements, disclosure under paragraph (a) of this Item may consist of
a statement, if such is the case, that the loans to such persons:
i. Were made in the ordinary course of business;
ii. Were made on substantially the same terms, including interest
rates and collateral, as those prevailing at the time for comparable
loans with persons not related to the lender; and
iii. Did not involve more than the normal risk of collectibility or
present other unfavorable features.
* * * * *
Sec. 229.801 [Amended]
0
5. Amend Sec. 229.801 by removing and reserving paragraph (c).
Sec. 229.802 [Amended]
0
6. Amend Sec. 229.802 by removing and reserving paragraph (c).
0
7. Add subpart 229.1400, consisting of Sec. Sec. 229.1400 through
229.406, to read as follows:
Subpart 229.1400--Disclosure by Bank and Savings and Loan
Registrants
Sec.
[[Page 66141]]
229.1401 (Item 1401) General instructions.
229.1402 (Item 1402) Distribution of assets, liabilities and
stockholders' equity; interest rates and interest differential.
229.1403 (Item 1403) Investments in debt securities.
229.1404 (Item 1404) Loan portfolio.
229.1405 (Item 1405) Allowance for Credit Losses.
229.1406 (Item 1406) Deposits.
Sec. 229.1401 (Item 1401) General instructions.
(a) A bank, bank holding company, savings and loan association, or
savings and loan holding company (``bank and savings and loan
registrants'') must provide the disclosure required by this subpart.
(b) When the term ``reported period'' is used in this subpart, it
refers to each of the periods described below:
(1) Each annual period required by 17 CFR part 210 (``Regulation S-
X'') or 17 CFR 239.90 (``Form 1-A''); and--
(2) Any additional interim period subsequent to the most recent
fiscal year end if a material change in the information or the trend
evidenced thereby has occurred.
(c) In this subpart, registrants are required to use daily averages
unless otherwise indicated. Registrants may use weekly or month-end
averages where the collection of data on a daily average basis would
involve unwarranted or undue burden or expense; provided that such
averages are representative of the registrant's operations. Registrants
must disclose the basis used for presenting averages.
(d) In various provisions throughout this subpart, registrants are
required to disclose information relating to certain foreign financial
activities. For purposes of this subpart, a registrant only is required
to present this information if the registrant meets the threshold to
make separate disclosures concerning its foreign activities in its
consolidated financial statements pursuant to the test set forth in
Sec. 210.9-05 of Regulation S-X.
Sec. 229.1402 (Item 1402) Distribution of assets, liabilities and
stockholders' equity; interest rates and interest differential.
(a) For each reported period, present average balance sheets
containing the information specified below. The format of the average
balance sheets may be condensed from consolidated financial statements,
provided that the condensed average balance sheets indicate the
significant categories of assets and liabilities, including all major
categories of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities.
Major categories of interest-earning assets must include, if material,
loans, taxable investment securities, non-taxable investment
securities, interest bearing deposits in other banks, federal funds
sold, securities purchased with agreements to resell, and other short-
term investments. Major categories of interest-bearing liabilities must
include, if material, savings deposits, other time deposits, federal
funds purchased, securities sold under agreements to repurchase,
commercial paper, other short-term debt, and long-term debt.
(b) For each reported period, present an analysis of net interest
earnings as follows:
(1) For each major category of interest-earning asset and each
major category of interest-bearing liability, the average amount
outstanding during the period and the interest earned or paid on such
amount.
(2) The average yield for each major category of interest-earning
asset.
(3) The average rate paid for each major category of interest-
bearing liability.
(4) The average yield on all interest-earning assets and the
average rate paid on all interest-bearing liabilities.
(5) The net yield on interest-earning assets (net interest earnings
divided by total interest-earning assets, with net interest earnings
equaling the difference between total interest earned and total
interest paid).
(6) The registrant may, at its option, present its analysis in
connection with the average balance sheet required by paragraph (a) of
this section.
(c) For the interest rates and interest differential analysis,
(1) Present for each comparative reporting period
(i) The dollar amount of change in interest income, and
(ii) The dollar amount of change in interest expense.
(2) For each major category of interest-earning asset and interest-
bearing liability, segregate the changes presented pursuant to
paragraph (c)(1) of this section into amounts attributable to:
(i) Changes in volume (change in volume times old rate),
(ii) Changes in rates (change in rate times old volume), and
(iii) Changes in rates and volume (change in rate times change in
volume).
(3) The rates and volume variances presented pursuant to paragraph
(c)(2) must be allocated on a consistent basis between rates and volume
variances, and the basis of allocation disclosed in a note to the
table.
Instructions to Item 1402:
1. If material, disclose how non-accruing loans have been treated
for purposes of the analyses required by paragraph (b).
2. In the calculation of the changes in the interest income and
interest expense required by paragraph (c), exclude any out-of-period
items and adjustments and disclose the types and amounts of items
excluded in a note to the table.
3. If material loan fees are included in the interest income
computation, disclose the amount of such fees.
4. If tax-exempt income is calculated on a tax equivalent basis,
describe the extent of recognition of exemption from Federal, state,
and local taxation and the combined marginal or incremental rate used
in a brief note to the table.
5. If disclosure regarding foreign activities is required pursuant
to Item 1401(d) of this subpart, the information required by paragraphs
(a), (b) and (c) of this section must be further segregated between
domestic and foreign activities for each significant category of assets
and liabilities disclosed pursuant to paragraph (a). In addition, for
each reported period, present separately, on the basis of averages, the
percentage of total assets and total liabilities attributable to
foreign activities.
Sec. 229.1403 (Item 1403) Investments in debt securities.
(a) As of the end of the latest reported period, state the weighted
average yield of each category of debt securities not carried at fair
value through earnings for which disclosure is required in the
financial statements and is due:
(1) In one year or less,
(2) After one year through five years,
(3) After five years through ten years, and
(4) After ten years.
(b) Disclose how the weighted average yield has been calculated.
Additionally, state whether yields on tax-exempt obligations have been
computed on a tax-equivalent basis (see Instruction 4 to Item 1402 of
this subpart). Discuss any major changes in the tax-exempt portfolio.
Sec. 229.1404 (Item 1404) Loan portfolio.
(a) As of the end of the latest reported period, present separately
the amount of loans in each category for which disclosure is required
in the financial statements that are due:
(1) In one year or less,
(2) After one year through five years,
(3) After five years through 15 years, and
(4) After 15 years.
(b) For each loan category for which disclosure is provided in
response to paragraph (a), present separately the total amount of loans
in such loan category that are due after one year that
(1) Have predetermined interest rates and
[[Page 66142]]
(2) Have floating or adjustable interest rates.
Instructions to Item 1404:
1. Report scheduled repayments in the maturity category in which
the payment is due.
2. Report demand loans, loans having no stated schedule of
repayments and no stated maturity, and overdrafts as due in one year or
less.
3. Determinations of maturities shall be based upon contractual
terms. However, to the extent that non-contractual rollovers or
extensions are included for purposes of measuring the allowance for
credit losses under U.S. GAAP or IFRS, include such non-contractual
rollovers or extensions for purposes of the maturities classification
and briefly discuss this methodology.
Sec. 229.1405 (Item 1405) Allowance for Credit Losses.
(a) For each reported period, disclose the following credit ratios,
along with each component of the ratio's calculation:
(1) Allowance for credit losses to total loans outstanding at each
period end.
(2) Nonaccrual loans to total loans outstanding at each period end.
(3) Allowance for credit losses to nonaccrual loans at each period
end.
(4) Net charge-offs during the period to average loans outstanding
during the period. Provide this ratio for each loan category for which
disclosure is required in the financial statements.
(b) Provide a discussion of the factors that drove material changes
in the ratios in (a) above, or the related components, during the
periods presented.
(c) At the end of each reported period, provide a breakdown of the
allowance for credit losses by each loan category for which disclosure
is required by U.S. GAAP in the following format:
Allocation of the Allowance for Credit Losses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reported period
-------------------------------
Percent of
Balance at End of Period Applicable to: loans in each
Amount category to
total loans
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Each loan category required by U.S. GAAP $X X%
-------------------------------
100%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Instructions to Item 1405:
1. A foreign private issuer that prepares its financial statements
in accordance with IFRS as issued by the IASB does not need to provide
disclosure responsive to Items 1405(a)(2), (a)(3) and Item 1405(c).
2. Net charge-offs must be based on current period net charge-offs
for each loan category.
Sec. 229.1406 (Item 1406) Deposits.
(a) For each reported period, present separately the average amount
of and the average rate paid on each of the following deposit
categories that are in excess of 10 percent of average total deposits:
(1) Noninterest bearing demand deposits.
(2) Interest-bearing demand deposits.
(3) Savings deposits.
(4) Time deposits.
(5) Other.
(b) If the registrant believes other categories more appropriately
describe the nature of the deposits, those categories may be used.
(c) If material, separately present domestic deposits and foreign
deposits for all amounts reported under (a) above. Foreign deposits as
used here means deposits from depositors who are not in the
registrant's country of domicile.
(d) If material, the registrant must disclose separately the
aggregate amount of deposits by foreign depositors in domestic offices.
Registrants are not required to identify the nationality of the
depositors.
(e) As of the end of each reported period, present separately the
amount of uninsured deposits. For registrants that are U.S. federally
insured depository institutions, uninsured deposits are the portion of
deposit accounts in U.S. offices that exceed the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation insurance limit or similar state deposit
insurance regime, and amounts in any other uninsured investment or
deposit accounts that are classified as deposits and not subject to any
federal or state deposit insurance regime. Foreign banking or savings
and loan registrants must disclose the definition of uninsured deposits
appropriate for their country of domicile. All registrants should
consider the methodologies and assumptions used for regulatory
reporting of uninsured deposits, to the extent applicable, for
disclosure of uninsured deposits. To the extent it is not reasonably
practicable to provide a precise measure of uninsured deposits at the
reported period, the registrant must disclose that the amounts are
based on estimated amounts of uninsured deposits as of the reported
period. Such estimates must be based on the same methodologies and
assumptions used for the applicable bank or savings and loan
registrant's regulatory reporting requirements.
(f) As of the end of the latest reported period, state the amount
outstanding of:
(1) The portion of U.S. time deposits, by account, that are in
excess of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance limit or
similar state deposit insurance regime; and
(2) Time deposits that are otherwise uninsured (including for
example, U.S. time deposits in uninsured accounts, non-U.S. time
deposits in uninsured accounts, or non-U.S. time deposits in excess of
any country-specific insurance fund limit), by time remaining until
maturity of:
(i) 3 months or less;
(ii) Over 3 through 6 months;
(iii) Over 6 through 12 months; and
(iv) Over 12 months.
PART 249--FORMS, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
0
9. The authority citation for part 249 continues to read in part as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78a et seq. and 7201 et seq.; 12 U.S.C.
5461 et seq.; 18 U.S.C. 1350; Sec. 953(b) Public Law 111-203, 124
Stat. 1904; Sec. 102(a)(3), Public Law 112-106, 126 Stat. 309
(2012); Sec. 107, Public Law 112-106, 126 Stat. 313 (2012), and Sec.
72001, Public Law 114-94, 129 Stat. 1312 (2015), unless otherwise
noted.
0
10. Amend Form 20-F (referenced in Sec. 249.220f) by:
0
a. Adding Instruction 4 to Item 4; and
0
b. revising Instruction 2 to Item 7.B.
The addition and revisions to read as follows:
Note: The text of Form 20-F does not, and this amendment will
not, appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
[[Page 66143]]
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, WASHINGTON, DC 20549
FORM 20-F
* * * * *
PART I
* * * * *
Instructions to Item 4: * * *
4. If you are bank, bank holding company, savings and loan
association or savings and loan holding company, provide the
information specified in Subpart 1400 of Regulation S-K (Sec. 229.1400
et seq. of this chapter).
* * * * *
Instructions to Item 7.B: * * *
2. In response to Item 7.B.2, if the lender is a bank, savings and
loan association, or broker dealer extending credit under Federal
Reserve Regulation T, and the loans are not disclosed as past due,
nonaccrual or troubled debt restructurings in the consolidated
financial statements, your response may consist of a statement, if
true, that the loans in question (A) were made in the ordinary course
of business, (B) were made on substantially the same terms, including
interest rates and collateral, as those prevailing at the time for
comparable transactions with other persons, and (C) did not involve
more than the normal risk of collectability or present other
unfavorable features.
* * * * *
By the Commission.
Dated: September 11, 2020.
Vanessa A. Countryman,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-20655 Filed 10-15-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P