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SDBA Seeks Candidates for 2010-2011 Board Officers
Are you interested in becoming an officer of the
South Dakota Bankers Association? SDBA officers
include the chairman, chairman-elect, vice
chairman and immediate past chairman. The SDBA is
currently seeking people who are interested in
running for the vice chairman position, which will
be elected at the Annual Convention on June 15,
2010, in Fargo, N.D. Chairman-elect Dave Zimbeck,
Citibank, Sioux Falls, will automatically assume
the position of chairman on June 15. The current
vice chairman, Bruce Byrum, First Interstate Bank,
Spearfish, will be eligible to run for
chairman-elect. The current chairman, Bob Rutten,
Citizens State Bank, Arlington, will automatically
become the immediate past chairman. If you are an
executive officer of any SDBA member bank, you are
eligible to run for vice chairman. If you are
interested in running for the position, contact a
member of the nominating committee for more
information and submit a letter of intent to the
SDBA.
Read more.
Obama
Provides Details
on Community Bank Small-Business Program
President Obama at a town hall forum in Nashua,
N.H., this week unveiled details of his proposed
program to provide capital to community banks in
exchange for more small-business lending. The
proposal, mentioned in last week's State of the
Union address, would transfer -- through
legislation -- $30 billion in repaid Troubled
Asset Relief Program funds to a new Small Business
Lending Fund. Banks with $10 billion or less in
assets that receive primary-regulator approval
would be eligible to participate in the program,
which would be separate and distinct from TARP.
Under the program, banks with less than $1 billion
in assets could receive capital investments up to
5 percent of their risk-weighted assets, and those
with between $1 and $10 billion in assets could
receive up to 3 percent. Existing Capital Purchase
Program participants with less than $10 billion in
assets would be permitted to convert their capital
to the new program. Institutions that use the
funds would receive incentives to boost lending.
For every 2.5 percent increase in lending, the
dividend the bank would have to pay the government
would drop by one percentage point. For example,
if a bank increased its lending by 10 percent, the
initial 5 percent dividend would drop to 1
percent.
The program addresses some previously expressed
ABA concerns -- that the asset threshold for
participation should be higher than the originally
proposed $1 billion to include more banks, and
that it should be free of TARP conditions. But
there are other stumbling blocks. Congressional
Republicans oppose using repaid TARP money to fund
the program, arguing that such money should be
returned to Treasury to pay down the deficit. ABA
President and CEO Ed Yingling said other issues of
concern include the need for regulatory approval
prior to participation and ensuring that as many
banks as possible will be eligible for the
program. "It remains a very difficult environment
for community banks to raise capital and that
affects their ability to lend," Yingling said. "We
are hopeful that these issues can be addressed and
look forward to working with Congress and the
administration to make this program viable."
Read
more. Read
a White House fact sheet. Read
Yingling's statement. u
Obama Budget Proposal
Includes Large-Bank Tax, DIF Increase
President Obama this
week unveiled a $3.8 trillion budget proposal for
fiscal year 2011. As expected, the budget includes
a provision that would impose an “approximately”
15-basis-point tax on the largest financial
institutions. Somewhat unexpected is a provision
suggesting it “may be appropriate to consider
raising the [FDIC Deposit Insurance Fund’s] level
above 1.5 percent to maintain positive fund
balances during future downturns.” An FDIC
spokesman said the agency favors the idea,
according to press reports. Current law requires
the FDIC to maintain the DIF’s level at between
1.15 percent and 1.5 percent of all insured
deposits. The budget also contains positive
bank-related provisions that would expand tax
credits to match qualified retirement savings, and
create a system of automatic workplace IRAs
requiring employers to give employees the option
of enrolling in a direct-deposit IRA. Another
provision would extend the popular New Markets Tax
Credit program for 2010 and 2011 and allocate $5
billion for each year. The budget also would
continue -- and make permanent -- most of the 2001
and 2003 tax cuts for the middle class, protecting
individuals earning less than $200,000 and
households making less than $250,000 a year from
tax increases. As in last year’s proposed budget,
there are provisions that would make the 2009
estate tax rate and amount exempted from the
alternative minimum tax permanent.
View
budget documents. u
FDIC Community Bank
Advisory
Committee Details Regulatory Concerns
FDIC's Community Bank Advisory Committee -- a
14-person group which includes Jack Hopkins,
CorTrust Bank, N.A., Mitchell -- discussed a range
of issues affecting community banks and their
customers last Thursday at its second meeting. The
bankers heard some details of the president's plan
to offer capital to community banks in exchange
for increased small business lending. They warned
that the Treasury Department will have to work
hard to distinguish this program from the
stigma-stained Troubled Asset Relief Program. The
bankers also cautioned about creating incentives
to lend in a market with few good unbanked
credits. The committee also discussed hot-button
examination issues, including unclear expectations
about reserve levels and the unintended effects of
examiners' increased scrutiny of commercial real
estate concentrations. Bankers expressed general
concern that an over-reaction on the part of
examiners is restricting banks' ability to serve
customers. Other topics covered included
challenges in raising capital in the current
environment; the merits of extending the
Transaction Account Guarantee Program; the impact
of new interest rate caps for banks that are less
than well capitalized; the need for a change in
how reciprocal deposits such as CDARS are treated;
and a review of regulatory reform legislation.
Read a
list of committee members. u
Fed Launches New Web Site
for Community Bank Directors
The Federal Reserve this
week launched a new Web site --
BankDirectorsDesktop.org -- to help new community
bank directors learn how to ensure the safety and
soundness of their institutions. The Web site
includes links to the interactive course “Training
for Bank Directors,” and the latest edition of the
guide Basics for Bank Directors to help new
directors better understand the issues and
challenges associated with serving on a bank
board.
Read more.
Go to
the Web site. u
ABA Opposition Efforts Cited
in Story on Fading Chances for CFPA
Chances are fading for legislation to create a
separate Consumer Financial Protection Agency as
Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.)
considers alternatives in order to win bipartisan
support, according to a story in The Washington
Post on Sunday. The story chronicles the origin
and evolution of the CFPA proposal and cites ABA's
opposition efforts. "Business groups – most
vociferously the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the
American Bankers Association – have campaigned
fiercely against what they describe as an
unneeded, intrusive new agency that would increase
the cost of doing business," the story said. The
reporter also referenced ABA President and CEO Ed
Yingling's concerns that a new agency would
inevitably come into conflict with prudential
regulators, and that such conflict could undermine
banks' safety and soundness.
Read the story. u
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