ICBA Press Release Banner 2020

WASHINGTON, D.C. (March 16, 2020)
– The Bank Policy Institute, Center for Responsible Lending (CRL), NAACP, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, and Independent Community Bankers of America sent a letter to Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Chairwoman Jelena McWilliams urging the agency not to approve deposit insurance applications submitted by industrial banks or industrial loan companies (ILC) until its ILC rulemaking is final.

The letter was sent ahead of FDIC’s meeting on Tuesday, March 17, where agency leaders are expected to announce a notice of proposed rulemaking regarding ILCs. ILCs are an avenue to the banking system for commercial companies (including BigTech) and other nonbank firms seeking to access the Federal Reserve payments system and take deposits.

“Given the number and variety of significant outstanding policy issues, we believe it would be imprudent for the FDIC to approve applications from ILCs or industrial banks until the final rulemaking is promulgated,” the group wrote in the letter to FDIC Chairwoman McWilliams. “It is our hope that this rulemaking will resolve some of the significant, unaddressed policy issues related to ILCs.”

In the letter, the group specifies the urgent need for the FDIC to refrain from approving any applications submitted by industrial banks or ILCs for deposit insurance until the proposed rulemaking is finalized and that the agency should hold public hearings on each of the pending ILC deposit insurance applications.

Additionally, the group suggests that rulemaking is necessary to provide clarity and fixes to current policy, including: how the FDIC will ensure the ILCs--and their affiliates--will comply with consumer protection and fair lending laws; whether federal privacy and data security standards and requirements will apply to parent companies and affiliates; whether the parent companies and affiliates will be subject to any limits or restrictions on their ability to engage in nonfinancial activities; and other issues.


About ICBA

The Independent Community Bankers of America® creates and promotes an environment where community banks flourish. With more than 50,000 locations nationwide, community banks constitute 99 percent of all banks, employ nearly 750,000 Americans and are the only physical banking presence in one in three U.S. counties. Holding more than $5 trillion in assets, nearly $4 trillion in deposits, and more than $3.4 trillion in loans to consumers, small businesses and the agricultural community, community banks channel local deposits into the Main Streets and neighborhoods they serve, spurring job creation, fostering innovation and fueling their customers’ dreams in communities throughout America. For more information, visit ICBA’s website at www.icba.org.

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