Friday, 26 April 2024

US OCC issues policy statement on financial technology companies’ eligibility for national bank charter

5 min read

In 1864, The US Congress created the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to charter and supervise national banks. These banks would be federally regulated and exempt from some state laws. Historically, banking has been dominated by large, depository financial institutions, but the rise of financial technology (fintech) companies has changed the sector and garnered attention from regulators. “Fintech” eludes precise definition: it is a catchall term for software used in commercial and personal finance — including everything from payment and lending companies to cryptocurrencies and digital cash to robo-advisors and cybersecurity. Recently, the OCC announced that fintech companies that do not take deposits but are otherwise engaged in “the business of banking” — paying checks or lending money — would be eligible to apply for special purpose national bank (SPNB) charters. For the companies eligible to apply, the charter’s central benefit is the preemption of many state laws and regulations. With some exceptions, preemption will not materially change the products a fintech company can offer,  but it may ease the regulatory burden by consolidating a company’s responsibilities. Though on first blush the OCC announcement seems like a welcome respite from regulation by all fifty states, many fintech companies will lack either eligibility or incentive to apply. However, the OCC’s move may put pressure on state regulators to improve their regulatory schemes and eventually may be a boon to many fintech companies.

On July 31, 2018, the OCC released its Policy Statement on Financial Technology Companies’ Eligibility to Apply for National Bank Charters (the Policy Statement), which announced that the OCC would begin accepting “special purpose national bank charter[]” applications from fintech companies. Chartering fintech companies was not a new idea; the OCC first formally discussed the possibility in a 2016 white paper entitled Exploring Special Purpose National Bank Charters for Fintech Companies (the White Paper). Since then, the details of the proposal have been discussed at length in the public sphere. In recognition of this history, the OCC emphasized that it “adopted this policy after careful consideration of the extensive stakeholder feedback . . . over the past two years.” The newly adopted Policy Statement serves three main functions: to argue that the OCC is authorized to grant these special purpose charters, to describe the purpose of the charters, and to outline the application requirements.

The Policy Statement first asserted the OCC’s authority to grant SPNB charters. The OCC rested its authority on the National Bank Act.  The OCC claimed that the NBA endowed the OCC with broad authority to grant charters to any entity that engaged in the “business of banking.” Per OCC regulations, the “business of banking” encompasses the “three core banking functions”: receiving deposits, paying checks, and lending money. Thus, the OCC reasoned, granting charters to fintech companies engaged in any of those functions would be within its authority.

The OCC articulated several policy reasons to consider fintech applications. First, the OCC claimed that the federal banking system needed to modernize to “remain relevant and vibrant.” Next, the agency emphasized that this particular policy statement was part of the OCC’s ongoing program, begun in 2016, to support “responsible innovation” in the banking space. Finally, the OCC outlined its view on the public benefits of the announcement. Allowing fintech applications, the OCC argued, would “level the playing field” between fintech companies and more traditional banks, “promote consistency in the application of laws and regulations,” and “promote consumer choice, economic growth, modernization, and competition.” National regulation would also protect the financial system and ensure that chartered entities “operate in a safe and sound manner.”

Finally, the OCC sketched out the application requirements. Fintech companies will have to demonstrate that they “ha[ve] a reasonable chance of success, will be operated in a safe and sound manner, will provide fair access to financial services, will treat customers fairly, and will comply with applicable laws and regulations.” They will have to make an appropriate “commitment to financial inclusion.” Companies will also have to craft a “contingency” plan to weather periods of financial distress. The OCC tempered these requirements by promising to consider a bank’s “size, complexity, and risk profile” in evaluating applications, and to provide additional details about the application process in a Licensing Manual Draft Supplement.

The direct impact of the Policy Statement may be limited; few companies are eligible to apply, and the uncertainty surrounding the application process and the impact of the charters could dissuade applicants. However, by moving into this regulatory space, the OCC may put pressure on state regulators to improve their regulatory schemes and ultimately benefit a wider swath of fintech companies. There are undeniable benefits to national charters. SPNBs would reap the benefits of preempting state law and would, in some areas, be subject to one regulatory scheme rather than fifty. Still, to rationalize applying for a national charter, a company would likely have to believe that (a) the yearly cost of federal regulation and supervision would be less than their current regulatory expense, and (b) the cost savings would justify the switching costs. Because there is substantial uncertainty about both the switching costs and the recurrent costs, companies may prefer to stick to the status quo for the time being. That said, state regulators are deeply opposed to the new charters and may proactively ease their regulatory burden to incentivize fintech companies to stay state regulated. As such, the Policy Statement could be a boon to fintech companies that wouldn’t qualify for a national charter as well as those that choose to take advantage of the new regulatory scheme.

Despite the challenges of applying for one, an SPNB charter would have advantages over the current options: a national bank charter could be cheaper than state-by-state regulation, more flexible than partnership with an established national bank, and more feasible than applying for an Industrial Loan Company (ILC) charter. State-by-state regulation is painful and expensive — each state has its own regulations and licenses, and some lobbyists estimate that state-level compliance and regulatory costs “could amount to as much as $2 to 5 million a year per company.” But state-by-state regulation is a well-trodden path and may become more cost-effective as states cooperate further. Partnership with a national bank allows fintech companies to piggyback on the licenses of existing national banks, but may require a young company to sacrifice some of its freedom, speed, and flexibility. ILC charters are state charters, but allow access to the federal payments system and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance. These charters have proven appealing to fintech companies, but the FDIC has not insured any ILCs since 2008. Though none of these options is perfect, each provides competition to the OCC SPNB charter and may disincentives SPNB charter applications.

In practice, there are a limited number of fintech companies whose management and business models can meet the application requirements. To be eligible to apply, the company must engage in one of the “core banking functions”: paying checks, taking deposits, or lending money. The Policy Statement further limited the pool by explicitly excluding depository institutions. The applicants will need to produce a detailed three-year business plan, a showing of adequate capital and liquidity, and some evidence that the proposed management has adequate “experience and expertise . . . to manage the proposed bank.” Unsurprisingly, these charters will be all but inaccessible to small, “working-out-of-the-garage” start ups. For now, this leaves a national charter open only to more mature companies that already have experience working in the state-by-state or bank partnership framework.

Even eligible and experienced companies may hesitate to apply for charters because of three key uncertainties: how the OCC will evaluate applications and regulate SPNBs, how secondary regulators will respond to the charters, and how the courts will resolve lawsuits brought by states to challenge the OCC’s right to charter fintech SPNBs.Though the OCC is likely to support applicants, it’s impossible to predict exactly how it will work with fintech companies. The application process may be longand unpredictable. The OCC has never chartered SPNBs of this sort and has left itself ample room to graft on any requirements to the application that it deems “appropriate.” Because the relationship will be novel, additional requirements seem plausible. The White Paper clarified that, in general, SPNBs would be subject to “the same laws, regulations, examination, reporting requirements, and ongoing supervision as other national banks.”  However, because many fintech models are so different from traditional banks, it is hard to predict how difficult those requirements will be to meet.  In addition, SPNBs that wish to make changes in their business plans or add service lines will have to, at a minimum, outline mechanisms for doing so with the OCC first.  For technology companies relying on flexibility and innovation to overcome a lack of resources, the uncertainty about how the OCC will respond to such requests may be unpalatable.

It’s also uncertain how secondary regulators will respond to the SPNBs. The White Paper laid out a preliminary plan for how the SPNB charter will interact with the rest of the regulatory environment: banks may be subject to oversight by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and more importantly would need to apply and be accepted to the Federal Reserve System. Some of these secondary regulators have indicated that they want to work with fintech companies generally,  but they have not responded to SPNB charters specifically. For example, as of this writing, the Fed has not commented on how receptive it will be to applications from SPNBs. Secondary regulators may play along, but working with more agencies creates more uncertainty and higher costs for fintech companies.

The final uncertainty lies in whether courts will accept the OCC’s authority to issue SPNB charters in the first place. In the spring of 2017, two lawsuits were filed in response to the OCC plan to charter fintech companies. The first, Conference of State Bank Supervisors v. OCC, alleged that the OCC lacked statutory authority to charter nondepository fintech companies, that the OCC should have used notice-and-comment rulemaking procedures, that the OCC decision to begin accepting applications was arbitrary and capricious, and that the preemption of state law violated the Tenth Amendment. The second made similar arguments. Both cases were dismissed on jurisdictional grounds. The suits are almost certain to be revived when the first SPNB charter is granted, creating a strong disincentive to be the first to apply for a charter.

Despite all its drawbacks, the OCC announcement is cause for (tentative) celebration. It is a sign of bipartisan federal support for fintech innovation and reducing the associated regulatory burdens.  More importantly, the announcement may push states to make adherence to state-by-state regulation easier. State regulators are strongly opposed to the charters. The President and CEO of CSBS called the fintech charter scheme “a regulatory train wreck in the making” that will give the federal government undue power to affect the competitive environment and expose taxpayers to failing fintech companies. States are also concerned that federal regulation will excuse fintech companies from complying with their own consumer protection laws. If they want to keep fintech companies chartered at the state level, they will have to make state regulation more appealing than the federal option, which will become more difficult as the federal regulators modernize and companies apply for and receive charters.

The states have a variety of tools to fight back. States are already making efforts to compete with federal regulators. Some states, echoing initiatives in other countries,have created “regulatory sandboxes,” which allow fintech companies to test products in the open market without navigating the traditional regulatory hurdles. Others are negotiating regulatory “passports,” which will allow fintech companies to file a single application to get approvals in multiple states. States have also made big promises to automate state regulation. These efforts have been at least somewhat successful — CSBS claims to have “slashed approval times by half in recent years.” As the leading fintech companies such as Square and SoFi mature, the federal option will start to look more enticing if the states don’t meet their goals. It is the states’ battle to lose, but now they have competition.

 

Re-disseminated by The Asian Banker

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