Order Code RS21104
Updated January 15, 2003
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Should Banking Powers Expand into Real
Estate Brokerage and Management?
William D. Jackson
Specialist in Financial Institutions
Government and Finance Division
Summary
In late 2000, the Federal Reserve and the Treasury proposed to use their authority
to increase banking powers. The regulators proposed allowing banking companies to
engage in real estate brokerage and management, as activities that are financial in nature.
Their proposal has been controversial, pitting real estate companies against banks. The
substantiative issues are of two sorts: those that question the respective nature of
banking and of real estate activities; and those that question what the impact on
consumers will be from the possible benefits of efficiency and potential changes in
competition. Procedural questions involve the intent of the 106th Congress in the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which delegated authority to the two agencies to issue new
regulations of this kind. Members have reintroduced the Community Choice in Real
Estate Act, as H.R. 111/S.98, to block the regulatory proposal and to remove these real
estate activities from future consideration under the market-adaptive powers of the
regulators. In view of the controversy over it, regulatory action on the proposal is in a
holding pattern. Both sides to the controversy continue their public and legislative
relations initiatives, nonetheless; observers expect 108th Congress hearings to occur in
both House and Senate venues. The House, via an amendment introduced by
Representative Northup to the Treasury-Postal appropriations measure, H.R. 5120 of the
107th Congress, had voted to block issuance of the proposed rule in fiscal year 2003.
The Senate appropriations bill, S. 2740, contained no prohibition. Thus, the banker-real
estate prohibition amendment remains on the legislative agenda until a FY2003 Treasury
appropriations bill is passed. This report will be updated as events warrant.
Framework of Legislation and Regulation
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA, P.L. 106-102)1 was landmark legislation that
allowed banking, securities, and insurance companies to operate in affiliation with each
other under the umbrella organizational form of financial holding companies (FHCs.)
1 113 Stat. 1338–1481, Nov. 12, 1999.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
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GLBA also permitted FHCs, like financial subsidiaries of banks (FSs) newly authorized
by the law, to engage in a variety of financial activities not previously allowed to banks
or companies owning banks, while continuing some prohibitions.2 Also, GLBA invested
the authority in regulators to amend and add allowable activities for FHCs and FSs to
adapt to future changes in financial markets. The Federal Reserve (Fed) and the Treasury
Department, through its Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), have authority
to issue regulations expanding activities for FHCs and FSs, respectively.
Statutory standards in GLBA for regulatory expansion of lines of business available
to FHCs and to banks through FSs are somewhat elastic. Section 103 of the Act requires
that the Fed find that new activities for FHCs are financial in nature, or incidental to a
financial activity, or, in a less stringent test, both “complementary” to a financial activity
and not posing a substantial risk to safety and soundness. Section 121 defines the same
standard for FSs. New activities must meet one or more of these tests, as determined by
regulation, to be considered appropriate. GLBA allows the regulators of FHCs and FSs
to propose new permissible activities according to these criteria.
Congress crafted GLBA in this way as a compromise to allow financial affiliations
while avoiding a general mixing of “banking” with “commerce.” For example, the law
specifically excluded bank FSs from underwriting insurance, and from real estate
investment and development, except as may already have been authorized by other law.3
In December 2000, the Fed released several proposals under GLBA’s provision to
expand activities. One allowed FHCs to act as “finders, “ bringing parties to a transaction
together.4 A late-2000 one would allow banking companies into new real estate
businesses, under Sections 103 and 121 of GLBA. It has proven controversial and
Members of Congress have introduced measures that would prevent its application.
Proposed Brokerage and Management Regulation
The proposed regulation would allow FHCs and FSs to offer two new services. The
services are real estate brokerage and real estate property management. The Fed and the
Treasury originally released their draft regulation in late December 2000.5
2 FHCs hold controlling stock interests in separately incorporated or chartered businesses, such
as banks, mortgage companies, stockbrokers and dealers, etc. The Federal Reserve supervises
all FHCs, which are not federally insured. FSs are businesses that banks themselves own. The
bank regulators supervise FSs, which, while not necessarily federally insured, are owned directly
by insured banks. These structural differences are important because GLBA allows more latitude
for uninsured FHCs to operate in nontraditional lines of business. FHCs are considered less
likely than banks and bank subsidiaries to cause difficulties for the federal support mechanisms
for banks, especially deposit insurance funds, should they encounter losses.
3 113 Stat. 1373, 12 U.S.C. 24a.
4 12 C.F.R. 225.86(d), effective Jan. 22, 2001.
5 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and Department of the Treasury, “Bank
Holding Companies and Change in Bank Control,” Federal Register, vol. 66, no. 2, Jan. 3, 2001,
pp. 307-314.
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Their proposal would allow FHCs and FSs to enter real estate brokerage and property
management, if these activities could be considered financial in nature or incidental to a
financial activity. The language of the draft regulation does not address the less exacting
“complementary” test. “Brokerage” includes acting as an intermediary between parties
to a real estate transaction, listing and advertising real estate, soliciting sales, negotiating
terms, and handling closings. It does not involve purchase or sale of property as an owner,
and requires state licensing and regulation. “Property management” includes soliciting
tenants, negotiating leases, servicing rents, maintaining security deposits, making
operating payments, and overseeing upkeep. Managers thus need not be owners, and
banking firms could not become owners of real estate through this proposal.
The Fed and the OCC historically disallowed real estate brokerage and property
management activities for their regulated institutions. The Office of Thrift Supervision
(also within the Treasury) does allow subsidiaries of federal savings associations to
provide real estate brokerage and property management services. Some states allow these
activities for the financial institutions that they charter and regulate, however, actual
practice of them appears not to be common.6 Conversely, real estate brokers and
managers cannot offer essential banking services–accepting deposits and making
commercial loans–and are not seeking to become bank-like. They do not want to form
financial holding companies or obtain bank charters, and especially seek to avoid
becoming regulated by the Fed or other banking agency.
Bankers (American Bankers Association, Financial Services Roundtable, and New
York Clearing House Association) requested the new authority. In their view, it would
allow financial institutions to offer a fuller range of financial services under one roof,
using many skills that banks already have. They argue that real estate brokerage and
property management are financial in nature and that the proposed changes would be
beneficial to customers, because costs of realty transactions might fall.
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) opposes the proposal, arguing that the
law does not authorize banking firms to provide real estate brokerage and property
management services, which it argues are primarily nonfinancial in nature. From its
perspective, the proposal would create anti-competitive and anti-consumer concentrations
of power dominating the realty industry and might increase costs to consumers.
Arguments for and against the substance of the proposed regulation are of two kinds:
those concerning the respective nature of banking and of real estate activities, and those
concerning the potential impacts on consumers. Questions concerning the intent, and the
application, of GLBA to what may or may not be “commercial” activities, and their
effects on banking/securities/corporation practices, also continue to be debated. The
law’s compromises suggest to some that Congress may need to fine-tune its applications
as legislated in the booming 1999 financial climate in a far different post-Enron financial
world.
6 One proponent argues that 17 states allow this authority for their state-chartered banks. The
Financial Services Roundtable, letter to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
and the U.S. Department of the Treasury on RE Brokerage Regulation, March 16, 2001, p. 5.
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Arguments Concerning the Nature of the Industries
Favoring the Proposal.
(1) Banks, FHCs, and FSs already engage in a variety of other real estate activities:
financing, appraising, leasing, settling, escrowing, and investment advising.
(2) Agency services that FHCs and FSs provide in securities and insurance are similar to
those of real estate brokers and property managers.
(3) FHCs may act as “finders,” bringing together buyers and sellers of non-real-estate
assets generally. (Once brought together, the parties must negotiate terms, including
prices, for themselves.)
(4) Bankers already act as intermediaries in arranging commercial real estate equity
financing (transfer of title, control, and risk arrangements for projects).
(5) Several diversified financial companies provide realty services beyond their more
traditional banking, securities, and insurance services. Some realty-based companies offer
bank-like services.
(6) Some depository financial institutions–savings associations and state-chartered banks–
already provide these kinds of real estate services.
Opposing the Proposal.
(1) GLBA specifically prohibits FSs from engaging in real estate development and
investment. Thus, its intent may have been to restrain new realty powers of bankers.
(2) Real estate brokerage and property management are commercial activities. Their
necessary hands-on sales skills are far different from lending.
(3) Real estate brokerage and property management involve negotiation of realty
transactions. That role has been forbidden to FHC s as “finders.” FHC finders may not
engage in any activity requiring registration or licensing as a realty agent or broker.
(4) At least one study states that the real estate industry is highly competitive and
efficient, much more productive in these ways than financial services generally.7 To the
extent this is true, banking companies would presumably bring little or no net benefit to
real estate brokerage and property management.
(5) Entry of deep-pocket banking companies, which benefit from federal assistance
including deposit insurance, might drive out brokers and property managers, which
typically operate on a much smaller scale.
7 This finding is a conclusion of a study by Leonard Zampano of the University of Alabama
presented during a residential forum at the NAR Midyear Legislative Meetings and Trade Expo,
Washington, D.C., May 17, 2001.
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(6) Competition for lending could decline if buyers believe that one-stop realty
transacting and financing would ease credit approval. Mortgage lenders not involved with
the brokerage part of realty transactions might lose business.
Arguments Concerning Customers (Consumers and Businesses)
Favoring the Proposal.
(1) Customers could benefit from lower costs and greater convenience if one organization
provided most realty services bundled together. Transaction details (paperwork) often
overwhelm buyers and sellers of property.
(2) Laws against forcing customers to obtain both non-lending services and loans from
banking companies (which is called”tying”) would still restrain market power of
companies providing banking and realty services jointly.
(3) Clients of banks involved might not have to face the delays and complications of
start-from-scratch checking of creditworthiness, which their bankers already know.
Opposing the Proposal.
(1) Customers might believe that obtaining realty brokerage or property management
services from bankers would ease credit approval for their financing. Better deals may
be available from competition among multiple providers in unbundled form.
(2) Customer service could suffer with fewer specialized providers. Bank credit standards
might not be appropriate for realty transactions requiring flexibility, especially when, as
now, tightening credit quality concerns (“credit crunches”) cut back bank lending.
(3) Low and moderate-income households lacking bank relationships might not benefit
from bundled realty services designed for bank clients of greater resources.
Developments and Legislation
2001. The original proposal remained open for comment until May 1, 2001.
The House Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit held a hearing
on May 2, 2001, in which many Members voiced disapproval of it. The NAR also raised
conflict of interest questions. Two members of the seven-person Board of Governors of
the Fed come from the banking industry. The NAR questioned whether they can be
impartial in voting on the controversial regulation. On December 6, 2001, Representative
Calvert introduced H.R. 3424, the Community Choice in Real Estate Act. It would have
prohibited banking companies from engaging in real estate brokerage or real estate
management activities. Supporters believed the regulatory proposal went around the
congressional intent of GLBA, by redefining real estate activities as financial activities,
thus mixing banking with commerce, and would be anticompetitive as well. Senator
Allard introduced the Senate version, S. 1839, on December 18. H.R. 3424 gathered
more than half the House as cosponsors, while S. 1839 attracted 14 cosponsors.
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2002. In view of the controversy over the proposal and other priorities such
preventing the financial funding of terrorism, the Treasury and the Fed announced they
would not be ruling on it until 2003. Despite deferral of the proposal, Congress continued
to examine it. The Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law of the House
Judiciary Committee held an “Oversight Hearing on Proposed Federal Reserve/Treasury
Department Real Estate Brokerage and Management Rule,” May 16. The Subcommittee
on Financial Institutions of the Senate Banking Committee held its hearing on “Bank and
Financial Holding Company Engagement in Real Estate Brokerage and Property
Management,” May 23. On July 24, the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and
Consumer Credit of the House Financial Service Committee held its second hearing on
the proposal in the current Congress, explicitly focusing on H.R. 3424.
On July 9, 2002, the House Appropriations Committee approved an amendment to
the Treasury Appropriations bill, H.R. 5120, prohibiting the Treasury Department from
issuing the controversial rule. According to H.. Rept. 107-575: “Section 645. The
Committee includes a new provision that prohibits funds in the bill from being used to
issue regulations relating to the determination that real estate brokerage is an activity that
is financial in nature or incidental to a financial activity. “ Since the(non-appropriated)
Fed and the (appropriated) Treasury must jointly issue any regulation(s) allowing realty
powers for banking companies; if Treasury cannot, then the business mix is nonexistent.
The House retained this amendment, offered by Representative Northup, on July 24, when
it passed H.R. 5120. The Senate’s corresponding measure, S. 2740, did not contain any
language addressing the regulation. Thus, the 108th Congress must now resolve the
prohibition amendment upon when it passes Treasury’s FY2003 funding bill.
2003. On January 7, 2003, Representative Calvert and Senator Allard reintroduced
the Community Choice in Real Estate Act, now numbered H.R. 111 and S. 98, to prohibit
FHCs and national banks from engaging, directly or indirectly, in real estate brokerage or
real estate management activities. Both measures are identical to their predecessors. The
House bill already has 117 cosponsors, while its Senate counterpart has seven, including
incoming Senate Banking Committee Chairman Shelby.
The NAR claims chances for the measure(s) could be better in the current
Congress in light of recent accounting scandals and allegations that prominent FHCs
have violated financial and operation safeguards against mixing separate banking
company activities. Supporters of the legislation also include the Building Owners
and Managers Association, Consumers Union, Institute of Real Estate Management,
International Council of Shopping Centers, National Affordable Housing Management
Association, and National Association of Homebuilders. In opposition, the American
Bankers Association, America’s Community Bankers, the Consumer Bankers
Association, the Independent Community Bankers of America, and the Financial
Services Roundtable have renewed their support for the original proposal, on grounds
that since banks and credit unions in several states along with federal savings
institutions nationwide can already engage in real estate brokerage, the issues are of
fairness as well as of properly carrying out GLBA. The Administration continues to
defer acting on the real estate proposal while its new Treasury team examines it.