speeches · July 21, 1968
Speech
Andrew F. Brimmer · Governor
For Release on Delivery
Monday, July 22, 1968
9:30 a.m., E.D.T.
FEDERAL CHARTERING OF SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS:
A Central Banking Perspective
Remarks By
Andrew F. Brimmer
Member
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System
Before the
81st Annual Convention of the
Michigan Savings & Loan League
Grand Hotel
Mackinac Island, Michigan
July 22, 1968
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FEDERAL CHARTERING OF SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS:
A Central Banking Perspective
By
Andrew F. Brimmer*
Representatives of commercial banks, mutual savings banks, and
savings and loan associations have raised a number of questions about the
position of the Federal Reserve Board with respect to Federal chartering
of mutual savings banks or similar institutions. Some of these questions
have arisen from a genuine lack of information regarding the Board's views.
However, some inquiries are not questions at all — but critical comments
in opposition to the Board's stance on the issue. As a rule, most commer-
cial bankers apparently feel that the Board, rather than favoring the
concept in principle, should oppose the proposal in its entirety. In
contrast, many savings bank and savings and loan officials seem to feel
that the Board, while not objecting to the proposal in principle, has
raised so many reservations that its basic position is actually negative.
Given these widely diverging views with respect to what the
Federal Reserve Board's attitude is (or should be) on the proposal for
Federal chartering of mutual savings institutions, an explanation of the
Board's actual position may serve a useful purpose. Briefly stated, the
Board:
Favors in principle Federal chartering of mutual
savings associations.
Believes that such institutions (including Federally-
chartered savings and loan associations) should be
^Member, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. I am
indebted to several members of the Board's Staff for assistance in
the preparation of these remarks -- especially to Mr. Robert M. Fisher,
Mr. James L. Kichline, Mrs. Barbara N. Opper, and Miss Mary Ann Graves.
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able to offer a wider range of instruments to attract
savings and should be able to invest in a wider range
of assets.
Believes that strengthening of savings institutions
would improve the cyclical stability of mortgage flows.
Does not support the granting of increased operational
flexibility for such thrift institutions unless they
are also made to carry burdens comparable to those borne
by commercial banks with respect to reserve-type require-
ments, taxation of income, and limitations on branching.
Would probably still have serious reservations about some
of the most recent proposals contained in the omnibus housing
bill now before Congress to broaden the authority of savings
and loan associations without correcting the existing inequities.
Federal Charter Proposals in Perspective
The position of the Federal Reserve Board on Federal charters
for mutual savings banks has evolved over the years from one of question-
lf
ing the desirability of such legislation to no objection in principle"
to the proposal. However, the Board has raised critical questions about
particular provisions of the various legislative proposals to authorize
Federal charters.
It will be recalled that some version of a Federal charter bill
has been on the agenda of every Congress beginning with the 86th. In
assessing some of the earlier bills, the Board generally felt that such
legislation would essentially redirect — rather than increase -- the
flow of savings. It doubted that the public interest would necessarily
be served by the rearranging of saving, financial, and competitive relation-
ships among financial institutions that would follow the establishment of
Federal mutual savings banks. In the few years just prior to 1967, the
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Board adopted the general position that it had no objection in principle
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to the proposed legislation. To some extent, this modification reflected
changes in subsequent versions of the proposal to incorporate some of the
recommendations made by the Board.
But changes in the composition of the Federal Reserve Board and
the evaluation of changing financial conditions also play a part in the
:
evolution of the Boards position. Thus, in July 1967, in a report to
the House Banking and Currency Committee on H.R. 10745, emboding one
version of the proposition, the Board stated that it
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. . . has no objection in principle to legislation
that would authorize Federal charters for mutual
savings banks and thus extend to savings banks a dual
system similar to that under which commercial banks
and savings and loan associations operate. However,
enactment of [H.R. 10745 ] would . . .furnish many
existing mutual thrift institutions with an opportunity,
by converting into Federal savings banks, to enlarge
the scope of their competition with commercial banks
without bearing, in a comparable manner, the burdens
applicable to such banks insofar as reserve-type
requirements and taxation are concerned. ."
This is the last public official comment on the Federal charter
proposal by the Board. However, although still later forms of the measure
have appeared, there is no reason to believe that the Board's position has
changed. Against this background, we can examine more closely the Board's
views on a number of the issues raised by the efforts to authorize Federal
charters for mutual savings banks and similar associations.
Factors Favoring Federal Charters
The granting of Federal authority to charter mutual savings
associations would open the way for both savings banks and converting
savings and loan associations to increase their over-all efficiency and
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to improve their competitive strength. All of the proposals would authorize
Federally chartered savings institutions, whether formerly mutual savings
banks or S&L's, to be chartered in all 50 states, including 32 states in
which mutual savings banks are not now permitted to operate. Leaving
aside for the moment the questions of parity with commercial banks with
respect to reserve requirements, branching and taxation, it seems evident
that more -- rather than less -- competition should lead to increased
efficiency in the mobilization and investment of the nation's savings.
Allowing mutual savings banks (along with commercial banks and savings and
loan associations) to be eligible for Federal charters should contribute to
this goal.
Federal chartering should also enable the newly chartered institu-
tions to hasten the development of a much wider range of instruments -- not
redeemable on demand -- to compete for savings. In particular, all thrift
institutions could use a kit of instruments which would permit them to offer
premium interest rates to marginal, interest-sensitive investors to attract
funds -- without having to make an across-the-board increase in dividends or
interest rates on all other accounts. In recent years many thrift institu-
tions (sometimes with the encouragement of supervisory authorities) have
fashioned a wide spectrum of certificate and bonus accounts, with maturities
ranging from six months to over 14 years. Nevertheless, Federal charters
would undoubtedly further broaden these options.
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Similarly, the thrift institutions opportunities to diversify
their portfolios would be widened by Federal chartering. Because they
traditionally obtained virtually all of their funds from individuals whose
savings were not particularly sensitive to variations in interest rates,
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!
mutual savings banks and S&Ls normally were able to invest in long-term,
relatively nonliquid assets --of which residential mortgages were the
prime example. However, over the last few years, partly spurred by
growing competition from commercial banks, thrift institutions have had
to compete for the funds of savers who are becoming increasingly interest
rate-conscious. Thus, these institutions have a much greater need for
liquid assets and for assets with maturities far shorter than those
characteristic of mortgages.
The consequences of thrift institutions (particularly savings
and loan associations) relying on a narrow range of savings instruments
and on mortgages as the principal investment outlet were amply demonstrated
in 1966. As market yields rose in that year under the impact of monetary
restraint, thrift institutions found themselves increasingly unable to
compete for funds. Being heavily invested in mortgages with long maturities
and fixed interest charges, they were not able to expand their earnings to
allow payment of rates to depositors and account holders in line with rates
of return obtainable on deposits in commercial banks and on open market
securities. In contrast, the earnings of commercial banks, reflecting the
1
latters more diversified and more rapidly maturing portfolios, adjusted
more promptly to changes in market interest rates. Furthermore, because
thrift institutions have possessed inadequate liquidity reserves, they have
been unable to maintain a steady outflow of funds into mortgages as the
inflow of savings shrank.
Given these deficiencies in thrift institutions, a shift in the
flow of savings into market securities as interest rates rise must necessarily
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have an adverse impact on the mortgage market. During recent years,
mutual savings banks and savings and loan associations have altogether
supplied about three-fifths of total net private residential mortgage
financing. Consequently, constructive steps taken to strengthen their
ability to compete for savings under changing monetary conditions would also
help to maintain the availability of mortgage funds and to stabilize activity
in the homebuilding industry. Federal chartering of mutual savings banks
and similar associations would constitute such a constructive step.
Principal Objections to Particular Features of Federal Charter Proposals
As mentioned above, while the Federal Reserve Board in recent
years has approved in principle the Federal chartering of mutual savings
banks, it has consistently questioned provisions of any charter bill that --
while providing broader powers more in line with those of commercial banks --
failed to narrow existing competitive advantages over commercial banks
relative to reserves, liquidity requirements, and taxation. Although the
Board has not commented on the most recent legislative efforts to broaden
the powers of savings and loan associations, it is obvious that the latest
proposals suffer from the same weaknesses to which the Board has objected
in the past. Although the House Banking and Currency Committee in late
June refused to allow the most recent version of the Federal charter bill
(H.R. 13718) to go forward as part of the Administration's housing bill,
the Committee did approve a significant broadening of powers for Federally-
chartered savings and loan associations. The provisions include:
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The authority to accept "deposits and pay interest.
The authority to issue notes, bonds, debentures or
other securities (except capital stock).
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- The permission to invest in certificates of deposit
(CD's) issued by FDIC-insured banks.
* The authority to finance small single-family homes
(vacation homes, etc,) up to $5,000 as a home improve-
ment loan.
- The permission to make loans to finance mobile homes.
* The authority to make loans secured by investments or
f
loans which are otherwise legal for the S&Ls.
All of these provisions were included in the omnibus housing bill
recently approved by the House. If they are enacted into law, their imple-
mentation would be subject to the terms of an association's own charter and
to regulations promulgated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. Nevertheless,
the statutory changes alone would represent significant gains for Federal
!
S&Ls. The right to accept deposits and pay interest would involve changes
of substance and not simply in terminology. They would be able to accept
deposits for fixed, minimum or indefinite periods of time, in the form of
passbooks, time certificates of deposit, and "other evidences of savings
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accounts. Unless the FHLBB gave its specific permission, no association
could delay payments to savers for more than 30 days. Apparently only one
major recommendation of the S&L industry was not accepted by the House
Banking and Currency Committee -- which was the request for authority to
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finance home furnishings, a power that would put S&Ls directly into the
consumer credit business.
In adopting the above proposals to broaden the powers of Federal
f
S&Ls, the Committee took no steps at all to correct the inequities which
already exist between these institutions and commercial banks. Thus, S&L's
could enlarge the scope of their competition with commercial banks without
having to meet comparable reserve requirements and while paying substantially
lower Federal income taxes.
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Concerning reserve-type requirements, the version of the
Federal charter proposal embodied in H.R. 13718 specifies that -- in
addition to an initial reserve and an on-going valuation or similar
reserve — a Federal savings association would have to maintain a liquidity
reserve of between 4 and 10 per cent of its deposits and borrowings, as
determined by the FHLBB for different classes of associations. Such a
reserve could be held in the form of one or more of the following assets:
cash, time and savings deposits, U. S. Government securities, obligations
of certain Federal agencies and international institutions, general obligations
of any state, certain bankers' acceptances, or FHL Bank stock. The FHLBB,
however, could specify no minimum cash reserve requirement. In contrast,
the FHLBB was authorized to specify a minimum cash reserve under H.R. 10745,
on which the Board expressed its views in July, 1967, in a letter to the
House Banking and Currency Committee. The Board itself has gone beyond this
point to suggest the use of flexible secondary reserve requirements for
thrift institutions. As mentioned above, the need for such reserves is
strongly supported by the experience of thrift institutions in 1966.
However, the latest version of the Federal charter bill (H.R. 13718) makes
no provision for secondary reserves.
The failure of the various Federal charter proposals to include
provisions for tax treatment of the savings institutions commensurate
with the broadened asset and liability provisions has been one of the
principal objects of criticism by the Federal Reserve Board. No such
provision is included in H.R. 13718. In fact, House Report 1042 accom-
panying the bill as reported by the House Banking and Currency Committee
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noted explicitly (p.30) that . the bill makes no amendment or other
11
reference of any kind to the Federal tax laws, . In commenting on
the bill, the Treasury Department indicated that the Federal savings
institution established under H.R. 13718 would be taxed under the
Internal Revenue Code as savings and loan associations rather than as
mutual savings banks.
The question remains, however, whether it would be equitable
for competitive and tax purposes to treat the new institutions on a par
with savings and loan associations which have asset and liability authority
much more narrow than the newly chartered institutions would enjoy. More-
over, even now Federal income tax payments by thrift institutions --
particularly by mutual savings banks -- fall considerably short of what
Congress anticipated when it adopted the Revenue Act of 1962, one provision
of which was aimed at the more equitable taxation of savings banks and
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S&Ls. The 1962 Act aimed for an effective tax rate on net income of both
types of institutions roughly equal to one-half the effective rate paid by
commercial banks. This target implied tax rates for thrift institutions in
the range between 15 and 18 per cent, compared with the approximately 30
per cent rate that commercial banks had been paying prior to 1962. As
it happened, taxes as a percentage of net income for S&L's have approximated
the target visualized in the 1962 Act; but for mutual savings banks, the
short fall has been considerable. For example, tax rates for commercial
banks in the last few years have remained in the neighborhood of 30 per
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cent. Those for S&Ls rose sharply to a range of 14 to 17 per cent during
the years 1963-66, from 0.3 per cent in 1962. In contrast, the tax rate
for mutual savings banks, which was also at 0.3 per cent in 1962, never
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rose above 4 per cent in the four years following enactment of the tax-
equality measure in 1962. To some extent, the low tax rates paid by
mutual savings banks reflect changes in the composition of their portfolios
as well as deficiencies inherent in the 1962 tax law. But whatever the
reason, the Federal Reserve Board feels strongly that such inequities in
the taxation of thrift institutions compared with commercial banks should
not be perpetuated in a new Federal charter scheme.
Minor Reservations
In commenting on different versions of the proposal, the Board
has also criticized the perpetuation of other inequities among depository-
type institutions that are unwarranted, including branching powers and
investments in equity securities. Under H.R. 13718, it continues to be
true that powers to branch or invest in equity securities would not be
the same for both Federal savings associations and commercial banks --
contrary to the Board's recommendation. In the first place, a Federal
savings association could branch in any state where branching was permitted
either for state-chartered commercial banks or for state-chartered thrift
institutions. Secondly, an association could hold corporate stock, under
certain conditions, in aggregate amounts up to 50 per cent of its reserves,
surplus, and undivided profits.
The Board expressed a minor objection to one feature of the
Federal charter bill as formulated in H.R. 10745 (which also is applicable
to H.R. 13718). It is that a Federal savings association could conceivably
enter into savings deposits contracts without reserving the right to require
any prior notice of withdrawal. In contrast, commercial banks under the
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Board's Regulation Q must insert such a provision in each savings account
contract. Such a provision would also be applicable to all savings accounts
in Federal S&L's under amendments included in the House version of the
omnibus housing bill.
The Board has criticized another provision (also found in H.R. 13718)
that would prohibit a Federal savings association from converting into a
commercial bank for at least 10 years. The only merit such a provision might
have, the Board felt, is to minimize chances for inequitable distributions
of surplus in connection with the conversion of a mutual-type institution
into a stock-type institution. If this is the purpose, a better approach
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would be statutory requirements that a plan be developed . that (1)
would prohibit the distribution of any surplus with respect to deposits made
within one year prior to approval of the conversion by the depositors or by
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directors, whichever occurs earlier, and (2) would require time weighting
of deposits' over at least a five-year period for the purpose of determining
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the amounts of surplus distributions.
Concluding Remarks
In conclusion, let me repeat. Steps to broaden the asset and
liability options of thrift institutions (particularly S&L's) should be
encouraged. Such a broadening in their authority would strengthen their
competitive position in the mobilization of savings and would be of
considerable assistance in the stabilization of the residential mortgage
market.
However, moves to liberalize the powers of Federally chartered
thrift institutions should be taken in conjunction with measures to
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reduce the inequities among such institutions and commercial banks
with respect to reserve and liquidity requirements, taxation and branch-*
ing. Unfortunately, the most recent proposals contained in the omnibus
housing bill now before Congress do not meet these twin objectives.
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Cite this document
APA
Andrew F. Brimmer (1968, July 21). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19680722_brimmer
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19680722_brimmer,
author = {Andrew F. Brimmer},
title = {Speech},
year = {1968},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19680722_brimmer},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}