The Federal Home Loan Bank Act of 1932 (FHLB Act; P.L. 72-304, 47 Stat. 128) created the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system, which was established to address frequent liquidity shortfalls, or cash flow disruptions, experienced by mortgage lenders during the Great Depression. Congress modified the FHLB system following the savings and loan (S&L) crisis of the 1980s, the 1986-1992 banking crisis, and the 2008 financial mortgage crisis. The FHLB system's primary function and mission, however, have remained intact:
The FHLB system currently consists of 11 institutions around the country and the system's Office of Finance, which collectively constitute one government-sponsored enterprise. The Office of Finance, the system's fiscal agent, issues and services the 11 FHLBs' debt securities (i.e., borrowings). It also compiles and publishes combined financial statements for the FHLB system.
The FHLBs are federally chartered cooperative financial institutions, meaning that each FHLB is privately owned and capitalized by its members. Four types of financial institutions are able to become FHLB system members: (1) federally insured depository institutions (i.e., banks and credit unions), (2) insurance companies, (3) community development financial institutions (CDFIs), and (4) nonfederally insured credit unions that meet certain statutory criteria. Members that have eligible mortgage and mortgage-related assets may use them as collateral for FHLB advances. Only members and certain eligible associates may receive FHLB services.
Given that Congress created the FHLBs to facilitate mortgage market liquidity, public policy discussions often consider the extent that current operations allow the FHLB system to achieve its public mission. Current operations arguably appear to have inconsistencies. For example, many institutions that are eligible to join the FHLB system may not be principally engaged in residential mortgage finance, thus calling into question the extent that FHLB advances to those institutions subsidize the funding of mortgages or the funding of member institutions' asset portfolios in general. Whether the FHLBs' lending activities directly promote greater mortgage financing activities of its members—and thus whether the FHLBs should contribute greater financial support to their affordable housing programs and other public mission goals—has become the subject of policy discussions. In addition, certain nonbank financial entities that primarily hold mortgages and mortgage-related assets are ineligible to become FHLB members, largely because they do not have either a federal or state prudential regulator. Some mortgage-related assets cannot be used as collateral for FHLB advances (e.g., mortgage servicing rights). Hence, some nonbank firms, which may face similar liquidity risks as banks, are principally engaged in mortgage financing yet cannot join the FHLB system. Whether the FHLBs can increase their financial support for their affordable housing programs without increasing the costs to provide liquidity to their membership is also debated. For these reasons, the overall compatibility of the FHLB system's role as a liquidity provider and its ability to fulfill public mission goals continues to be a leading policy issue for Congress.
The Federal Home Loan Bank Act of 1932 (FHLB Act; P.L. 72-304, 47 Stat. 128) created the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system. The system currently consists of 11 institutions and its Office of Finance, which collectively constitute one government-sponsored enterprise (GSE). The FHLBs are federally chartered cooperative financial institutions, meaning that each FHLB is privately owned and capitalized by its members.1 Only members and certain eligible associates may receive FHLB services.2
The FHLB system was established to address frequent liquidity shortfalls, or cash flow disruptions, experienced by mortgage lenders during the Great Depression. Congress modified the FHLB system following the savings and loan (S&L) crisis of the 1980s, the 1986-1992 banking crisis, and the 2008 financial mortgage crisis. The FHLB system's primary function and mission, however, have remained intact:
The Office of Finance is the FHLB system's fiscal agent. Just as financial institutions borrow the funds they will lend, the FHLBs borrow the funds they lend to member institutions.4 In lieu of deposits, the Office of Finance issues debt securities to investors (that are repaid with interest) to collect the funds for the 11 FHLBs to provide advances to their members. The Office of Finance also services the debt securities for all 11 FHLBs, and it compiles and publishes combined financial statements for the FHLB system.
An eligible financial institution that participates in housing finance markets may voluntarily join the regional FHLB serving the state where its home office or principal place of business is located. Four types of financial institutions are currently eligible for FHLB membership:5
A member institution receives cash advances and dividends on its FHLB's shares of capital stock. Because a member is both an FHLB customer and stockholder, the member's cash advances are less expensive relative to functionally equivalent repurchase agreements (also called repos) obtained in the private capital markets; likewise, a member's dividend return is arguably comparable to the discounted pricing of FHLB advances to attain reasonable (as opposed to maximum) profitability.8
Because Congress created FHLBs to facilitate mortgage market liquidity, public policy discussions often consider the system's effectiveness at achieving the congressional intent. One concern is that many member institutions eligible to join the FHLB system may not be principally engaged in residential mortgage finance, calling into question the extent to which FHLB advances subsidize the funding of mortgages or the funding of member institutions' asset portfolios in general. By contrast, certain financial entities that primarily hold mortgages and mortgage-related assets are ineligible to be FHLB members. The policy debate, therefore, focuses on how closely the FHLBs' activities are linked with their public mission and implications regarding the potential risks for taxpayers.
This report summarizes the FHLB system and some recent policy issues. It begins with an overview of the financial challenges that prompted the creation and evolution of the FHLB system, thus providing historical context to inform contemporary policy discussions. It then describes the FHLB system's role as a financial intermediary, its prudential capitalization and liquidity requirements, and mission goals. This report then discusses policy issues concerning the extent to which current operations allow the FHLB system to achieve its stated public mission. Following a comprehensive review of the FHLB system, its primary regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), proposed legislative and regulatory reforms. Some are highlighted in the last section of the report.
Prior to the creation of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) in 1934, the lending terms of residential mortgages were structured to reduce financial risks borne by lenders and alleviate the funding constraints faced by small lenders with limited access to deposits. Residential mortgages typically were balloon mortgages, meaning that the principal amount did not amortize (i.e., decrease in regularly scheduled amounts over time); only interest payments were made over the loan life, and the last payment included the final interest payment and full principal balance.9 Before the FHA, lenders also required down payments of 50%-60%. Without credit scores and automated underwriting, borrowers were required to make large down payments to ensure they had a significant financial stake in the property asset, which would reduce lenders' default risk. Larger down payments also translated into smaller mortgage sizes, reducing the amount of funds necessary for small depository institutions to collect to make the loans.10
During periods of rising unemployment, particularly during the Great Depression, frequent deposit withdrawals led to cash flow disruptions and stymied lending.11 For-profit commercial banks, which were principally engaged in making commercial business loans, could turn to the Federal Reserve System—specifically, to the regional Federal Reserve bank where they were members—to obtain cash advances when experiencing cash shortfalls.12 By pledging a performing asset (e.g., loan, bond) as collateral, a bank could obtain cash from its member regional Federal Reserve bank to ease cash liquidity or funding needs.13
Savings and Loan (S&L) associations were not eligible to be members of the Federal Reserve System; they were nonprofit, member-owned cooperative financial institutions that relied on member savings deposits to fund residential home mortgages.14 Without access to a lender of last resort that could provide cash advances, S&L associations lacked a short-term funding alternative when cash liquidity shortfalls or funding gaps emerged—specifically, when the demand for mortgage loans outpaced the amount of their deposit holdings.15
Congress responded in 1932 by creating the FHLB system, analogous to the Federal Reserve System at the time, to provide short-term cash advances to S&L associations. The FHLB system initially consisted of 12 regional, member-owned and federally chartered banks, each with its own board of directors. The initial 12 regional FHLBs were located in Atlanta, GA; Boston, MA; Chicago, IL; Cincinnati, OH; Dallas, TX; Des Moines, IA; Indianapolis, IN; New York, NY; Pittsburgh, PA; San Francisco, CA; Seattle, WA; and Topeka, KS. These original FHLBs were given the authority to provide cash advances to federally chartered S&L members at a discounted rate. The eligible collateral for FHLB advances consisted primarily of residential mortgage assets held in the portfolios of member S&L associations, thus promoting a housing finance mission. The profits would be distributed back to member institutions largely in the form of more favorable rates for advances (compared with those offered in the short-term money markets), as well as dividends on the stock shares owned by the cooperative member institutions.
The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) initially headed the FHLB system and was given the authority to regulate and supervise S&L associations.16 Congress also created the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) to insure the deposits collected by S&L associations; the FSLIC was also under the guidance of the FHLBB.17 Congress enacted the Emergency Home Finance Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-351, 84 Stat 450) to create the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, which now uses the name Freddie Mac, as a wholly owned subsidiary of the FHLB system to provide liquidity by purchasing conventional mortgages from the system's members (i.e., the S&L associations).18 The FHLB system remained largely intact for several decades until changes were made following the S&L crisis of the 1980s, the 1986-1992 commercial banking section crisis, and the 2008 financial mortgage crisis.19
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, rising inflation and interest rates prompted depositors to withdraw funds from their savings accounts with regulated interest rate caps and deposit them in accounts without rate caps, such as those offered by money market mutual funds, to earn higher yields.20 Many S&L associations became insolvent following the deposit runoff, which contributed to the FSLIC's insolvency.21
Further evolution of the FHLB system resulted from Congress's response to the S&L crisis, particularly passage of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA; P.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 83). FIRREA made the following changes:
Resolving Troubled Savings and Loan (S&L) Associations and Repaying Expenses The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA; P.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 83) created the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), a temporary federal agency established to act as a conservator and receiver of insolvent S&L associations following the insolvency of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. The RTC's principal funding source to cover expenses was raised by an off-budget entity, the Resolution Funding Corporation (REFCORP). FIRREA created REFCORP to issue $30 billion in Treasury bonds, and the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system was required to make annual interest payments of $300 million on those bonds.24 The RTC, which existed from August 1989 to December 1995, resolved 531 insolvent institutions.25 The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (P.L. 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338) altered and simplified the required obligation of the system's contribution to the old REFCORP debt. Rather than a fixed $300 million, each FHLB was required to pay 20% of net earnings—after making payments to the system's Affordable Housing Programs—to help repay interest on bonds issued by REFCORP, raising the likelihood that payments would be sufficient to defease or repay the debt ahead of schedule. On July 15, 2011, the Federal Housing Finance Agency determined that the FHLBs had repaid the REFCORP obligation and would no longer be required to make contributions.26 |
The commercial banking sector also experienced periods of instability. Regional downturns in Texas and New England led to the failure of approximately 1,000 commercial banks during the 1986-1992 period.27 In the 1992-1999 period, commercial banks experienced funding gaps.28 Although the Federal Reserve's discount window is used primarily as an emergency funding source, further modifications to the FHLB system resulted in a permanent nonemergency funding source for banks.29
Specifically, Congress passed the Federal Home Loan Bank System Modernization Act of 1999, Title VI of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA; P.L. 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338), which made additional changes.
During the 2007-2009 financial crisis and concurrent "Great Recession," numerous financial institutions experienced distress following a sharp rise in the percentage of nonperforming U.S. mortgage loans. For example, Washington Mutual (WaMu) was an S&L association principally engaged in residential mortgages, and it accounted for approximately one-third of the lending by the FHLB of Seattle.31 In 2007, WaMu experienced loan losses, borrowing capacity limitations, and a significantly depressed stock price.32 In September 2008, WaMu became insolvent and was placed into receivership by the FDIC. The FHLB of Seattle then became undercapitalized and was merged with the FHLB of Des Moines on May 31, 2015, leaving 11 FHLBs.33
Congress passed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA; P.L. 110-289) that, among other things, created the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). The FHFA became the prudential regulator for all the housing GSE systems, replacing the Federal Housing Finance Board and the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (under the Department of Housing and Urban Development), which had been the safety and soundness regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The FHLBs are financial intermediaries that, similar to depositories, match savers with borrowers. Under a traditional intermediation business model, a firm borrows funds from savers (e.g., depositors) and uses those funds to originate longer-term consumer and commercial business loans. Consumers and businesses pay higher interest rates for loans with longer maturities relative to the lower interest rates intermediaries pay for successive sequences of loans (e.g., recurring deposits) for shorter periods of time. Lending spreads, or profits, are computed as the difference between the asset returns (yields) that accrue from holding longer-term loans minus the costs of its liabilities, consisting primarily of shorter-term loans.
The FHLBs' financial lending spreads contain various risks.
Because the inherent risks generated by lending spreads are retained on their balance sheets, intermediaries generally must comply with capital and liquidity requirements. This section explains the composition of the FHLBs' lending spreads, their prudential capital and liquidity requirements, and their public mission goals.
The primary assets owned by each FHLB are advances, which are the cash loans to members that must be collateralized or secured at all times with pledged mortgages or other eligible assets.34 The advances are for amounts that are less than the value of the collateral assets, and the difference between the value of the pledged collateral and the advance is called a haircut.35 Haircuts, which vary by the type of collateral pledged and whether the institution is a depository or insurance company, protect the lending FHLB against financial loss if a borrowing member defaults on an advance.36 The FHLBs do not allow members to pledge loans that would violate any federal, state, or local anti-predatory lending laws. The FHLBs may ban all loans that meet the definition of a high-cost loan, as established in the Home Ownership Equity and Protection Act of 1994.37 Table 1 lists some—but perhaps not all—underwriting criteria, eligible collateral that members are required to pledge for advances, and ineligible collateral. Each FHLB may have variations and allowable exceptions to the items listed.38 Table 1, therefore, provides a general overview, but the lending policies of each FHLB should be reviewed independently.39
Examples of Underwriting Criteria for Member Institutions |
Examples of Eligible Collateral for Advances |
Examples of Ineligible Collateral for Advances |
Overall financial condition, including quality of assets and capitalization |
Whole first mortgage loans on improved residential property |
Vacant real properties |
Overall financial condition of subsidiaries and affiliates |
Debt instruments issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies |
Tax credits or warrants |
Quality of the eligible collateral |
Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) issued or guaranteed by Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, or Ginnie Mae |
Mortgage servicing rights |
Strategic reason for borrowing (e.g., whether the loaned funds would be used to purchase safer or riskier securities relative to the asset used to collateralize the loan) |
Certain home equity loans and lines of credit, first mortgage loans on commercial real estate, private-label MBS backed by first mortgage loans, and commercial MBS may be considered if they meet certain criteria |
Non-real estate real property including, but not limited to, houseboats and manufactured homes not deemed real property by applicable state laws |
— |
Cash deposited at a member Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) |
Financial institution stock; privately held/unregistered stock |
— |
Small business, small agribusiness, and small farm loans from member community financial institutions |
Loans with borrower collateral defeasance options |
— |
— |
Loans that would violate any predatory lending laws. |
Source: Congressional Research Service, using information obtained from the FHLBs of Atlanta, GA; Boston, MA; Des Moines, IA; and New York, NY.
The FHLBs perfect their security interests of the collateral asset used for advances via their statutory superlien authority, meaning that the asset cannot be claimed by any other party.40 An FHLB also may require physical delivery of the collateral asset. For example, if a member depository institution were to experience large loan losses and become insolvent and placed into receivership, then the FDIC or NCUA—as the receivers—would collect the financial assets of the insolvent bank or credit union, respectively, and attempt to sell them to other depositories.41 The proceeds would be used to reimburse depositors. The FHLB's superlien authority, however, gives it priority on pledged collateral assets over any and all other creditors, including the FDIC and NCUA. Should a member fail, the FHLB can sell the pledged collateral to reimburse itself for the principal and the interest amounts owed.42
FHLB advances may range from overnight to 30 years and can be customized to fit members' financial needs. For example, some advances contain callable, putable, or convertible option features.43 A callable advance gives a member the option to repay an advance ahead of schedule (on specific dates) without prepayment penalties. A putable advance allows a member to obtain a low fixed interest rate advance; but the lending FHLB has the option to "put the advance," meaning that the member must repay an outstanding advance or obtain another one at existing market prices at the time the option is exercised.44 Members may obtain advances with the option to convert from fixed to floating advance rates (and vice versa). These features may further enhance the use of advances as a cash management tool to reduce funding risk—especially for members holding assets with adjustable rates. FHLB advances with option-like features may also be less expensive relative to some private market interest rate derivative products, which may benefit small depositories that lack sufficient volumes to reduce their costs per transaction.45
FHLBs also lend federal funds to depository institutions in the overnight federal funds market.46 Federal funds are excess cash reserves that depositories may lend to each other, usually overnight or for several days. Lending federal funds typically does not require collateral, causing them to be slightly more expensive relative to collateralized (secured) advances. The pricing difference, therefore, reflects the credit risk difference between secured and unsecured lending.
In addition to advances and loans of federal funds, other FHLBs' assets include mortgages that have been purchased from their members; mortgage-backed securities (MBS) issued by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae; securities issued by the U.S. government and its agencies (e.g., Ginnie Mae47 and federally backed student loan asset-backed securities); and certain private-label MBS.48 FHLBs typically purchase assets in the secondary market, that is, after the loans have been originated and then sell assets to each other or their member institutions. These assets purchases can also facilitate the liquidity for mortgages and mortgage-related assets.
FHLBs face some investment restrictions. For example, they are prohibited from trading securities for speculative purposes or market-making activities. FHLBs also cannot invest in noninvestment grade debt instruments, and they generally may not invest in certain types of securities or loans that would represent an ownership interest.49 However, they may hold common stock in small business investment companies or certain investments targeted to low-income persons or communities.50
FHLBs have some key off-balance sheet commitments. First, they may issue standby letters of credit (SLOCs) on behalf of their members. A SLOC is a guarantee by an FHLB, which is issued for a fee, to honor a payment in the event that an FHLB member is unable to fulfill its obligations. Prior to issuing a SLOC, an FHLB may perform standard underwriting and impose collateral requirements as if it were securing an advance.51 Second, FHLBs are jointly and severally liable for all consolidated obligations, discussed in the following section. In other words, if a FHLB fails to satisfy a payment obligation, another FHLB may be called on to repay all or any part of it, as determined or approved by the FHFA.52
Each FHLB is independently managed with its own board of directors that oversees strategic business and risk management decisions to achieve mission objectives.53 For this reason, each FHLB manages its asset portfolio, which may reflect advances with varying features and varying percentages of permissible investments. Such variations in products and investments may be influenced by the variation in the needs of the FHLB district members.
Liabilities are the borrowings by a lending institution to acquire the funds used to make loans. Unlike a typical retail bank that collects deposits, the FHLB system issues a range of debt securities via its jointly owned Office of Finance to collect the funds necessary to make member advances.54 Specifically, the Office of Finance issues consolidated bonds and discount notes.55 For the discount notes, the maturities range from four to 20 weeks, typically auctioned in sizes from $500 million to over $5 billion each.56 For the bonds, the maturities range from less than one year to 30 years, with the majority of issues between one and five years.57 Buyers of debt securities issued on behalf of the FHLBs include commercial banks, central banks, pension funds, private sector investors, government agencies, and individuals.58
Each FHLB is responsible for repaying the principal and interest on the percentage of consolidated obligations issued on its behalf by the Office of Finance. Any FHLB failing to repay its share of system liabilities is prohibited from paying dividends to its regional members or redeeming or repurchasing shares of its stock. Moreover, the FHLBs are jointly and severally liable for repayment of the total amount of consolidated obligations. For this reason, the FHFA can require one or more other FHLBs to repay any outstanding obligation.59
The FHLBs' consolidated obligations do not carry the full-faith-and-credit backing of the federal government, but debt securities trade at interest rates similar to comparable Treasury debt issuances due to the FHLB system's GSE status. Given the federal assistance provided in 2008 to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to meet their debt obligations, investors in consolidated obligations may believe that an FHLB would not be allowed to fail.60 The ability of the FHLBs to borrow at rates near those of the U.S. Treasury may also be viewed as evidence of having access to a federal backstop. The text box below summarizes additional GSE privileges for the FHLB system.
Summary of Government-Sponsored Enterprise Privileges for the FHLB System Congress has given the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) system certain privileges and exemptions, which include the following:
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In sum, the FHLBs' profits are generated by the differences between the income generated by their assets and the costs of their funds, generally referred to as lending spreads. The FHLBs' assets consist primarily of the advances they provide to their member institutions and are funded by their consolidated obligations. The FHLBs' GSE status translates into an implied federal guarantee, which allows them to borrow at rates closer to Treasury rates and subsequently offer advances at below-market rates to their members. The risks associated with financial intermediation necessitate the FHLBs to follow prudential capital and liquidity requirements, as discussed below.
A sudden disruption in an FHLB's cash flow can occur under a variety of circumstances. For example, commercial banks cannot lend more than 25% of the value of their equity to a single borrower, but FHLBs are not limited on the amount of advances they can provide to an individual member.61 Thus, a member failing to repay a large amount of advances can significantly reduce an FHLB's cash inflow.62 Because FHLBs' assets (as well as the collateral used for many of their advances) consist of mortgages and mortgage-related products, their cash flows can turn negative if, for example, property values fall below the outstanding mortgage balances, thereby providing homeowners with financial incentives to default.63 In these scenarios, cash flow disruptions can erode FHLBs' capital reserves and possibly impede the system's ability to issue more consolidated obligations. Furthermore, the demand for advances may suddenly spike—which happened in 2008 when depository institutions initially turned to the FHLBs for liquidity rather than the Federal Reserve's discount window—and increase the system's need for liquidity.64
For these reasons, the FHLB system has capital requirements. Specifically, each member institution must place a minimum paid-in (rather than publicly traded) capital stock investment as a condition to become and remain a member of its district FHLB.65 Consequently, members must be inspected and prudentially regulated under state or federal banking or similar state laws or, in the case of CDFIs, certified by the CDFI Fund.66 To maintain access to advances, member institutions must also meet community support requirements (CSRs), which refer to their records of support for housing and community development (e.g., lending to first-time homebuyers and, for bank institutions, maintaining Satisfactory or better Community Reinvestment Act ratings).67
The current FHLB system's capitalization framework, established in 1999 by the GLBA, authorizes the FHLBs to issue Class A and Class B stock and defines permanent and total capital requirements.68
The Office of Finance's issuance of consolidated obligations can be curtailed when either the leverage or risk-based capital requirements are not met; thus, satisfying the total demand for advances is possible only if total FHLB system capital levels keeps pace.70
The FHLB system's prudential regulator, the FHFA, is required to conduct annual on-site examinations of the FHLBs and the Office of Finance.71 The FHFA ensures that the FHLBs follow procedures necessary to mitigate exposure to financial risks. The FHFA can also issue supervisory letters, supervisory and capital directives, and can restrict payment of dividends to members. The FHLBs are also stress tested by FHFA, meaning that it develops and approves various macroeconomic scenarios used to assess the resiliency of the system's portfolios to extreme credit and market risk exposures.72
In addition to capital requirements, the FHLBs have liquidity requirements. The FHLBs' assets tend to have longer maturities (i.e., dates when the loans are expected to be repaid in full) relative to the maturities of their shorter-term liabilities, which is typically true for most financial intermediaries. Even if an FHLB's assets are performing, circumstances may arise when the timing of the expected cash inflows does not perfectly match the timing of expected cash outflows, resulting in an evaporation of liquidity. For the FHLBs, a sudden loss of liquidity might trigger intervention by Treasury or the Federal Reserve to purchase consolidated liabilities.
In August 2018, the FHFA required the FHLBs to increase their liquidity positions, which would enhance their abilities to continue operations over longer time periods without accessing capital markets or intervention by the federal government.73 The FHFA established standardized calculations that each FHLB must use to determine acceptable liquidity positions. Specifically, the funding gap calculation expresses the difference between an FHLB's assets and liabilities that are scheduled to mature during specified periods (e.g., three months, one year) as a percentage of its total assets. The FHLBs' funding gaps are subsequently monitored to stay within the set ranges over the set time horizons, thus ensuring sufficient cash flow in case of events that may threaten liquidity.74
In addition to facilitating mortgage market liquidity, the FHLBs are required to administer the following community development programs:75
The FHFA also establishes housing mission goals for the FHLB system.81 On June 3, 2020, the FHFA finalized housing goals pertaining to the system's Acquired Member Assets (AMA) program.82 In the AMA program, an FHLB is able to purchase mortgage originations from its members and either hold or sell them in the secondary market. The final rule establishes a target level of 20% of an FHLB's total AMA purchases to consist of mortgages originated for LMI households.83 The final rule also establishes a small member participation goal of 50% of AMA program participants. This rule is designed to encourage small institutions, which typically lack the necessary volume and scale to make effective use of secondary mortgage markets, to participate in the AMA program, particularly those primarily serving LMI families in LMI areas. The final rule allows the FHLBs flexibility to request alternative target levels for either or both goals from the FHFA if changing financial conditions would likely reduce the feasibility of meeting existing targets.84
With FHLBs initially established to facilitate mortgage market liquidity, analyses focus on the system's overall effectiveness in fulfilling that original mission as it has evolved. Specifically, Congress expanded FHLB membership eligibility to include commercial banks and removed the minimum mortgage asset requirement of 10% (see "Instability in the Commercial Banking Sector") to pay for REFCORP debt obligations.85 Consequently, FHLB members no longer need to be principally engaged in mortgage financing. For this reason, policy discussions have questioned whether the FHLBs' advances, which provide lower cost liquidity to members, generate sufficient support for affordable housing—and the extent to which these activities generate potential risks to taxpayers. In addition, some financial firms that primarily hold mortgages and mortgage-related assets are not eligible to be FHLB members. Certain assets, which may align with mission goals, may not be considered eligible collateral for FHLB advances. This section, therefore, delves into those policy discussions, focusing on what appears to be incompatibilities between FHLB system operations and its achievement of mission goals.
Lenders generally rely on rollovers, a continuous sequence of short-term cash borrowings, to fund loan portfolios. Depositories rely particularly on deposits, which can be seen as sequences of short-term cash borrowings from depositors and repaid with interest. Instead of relying primarily on deposits, supplementary short-term funds may be obtained from wholesale funding markets (sometimes referred to as the interbank market). When depositories borrow and lend short-term cash to each other, the cash instruments can be in various forms, including federal funds, brokered deposits, repurchase agreements, and FHLB advances, as discussed below.86
Another commonly used wholesale funding instrument is the repurchase agreement, or repo. A repo is a contract in which one party sells one or more securities with a commitment to repurchase the securities on a future date at a higher price, which is equivalent to a collateralized loan.87 The securities are used as collateral for the cash advance. The repo rate, the interest paid on the loan, is calculated as the difference between the initial price of the securities and their repurchase price. Repos are an example of a money market transaction that allows a financial institution to utilize some of its illiquid assets to obtain cash for other business needs (e.g., to satisfy its depositors' demands for cash or to temporarily fund assets scheduled to be sold to other financial institutions).
Cash advances from federally related facilities are fungible or functionally equivalent substitutes for repo instruments, meaning that either advances or repos (and even borrowings from the Federal Reserve's discount window) can be used to borrow short-term liquid funds using eligible collateral. The FHLBs' GSE status allows the system to borrow money at rates near those of comparable Treasury rates and then provide cheaper advances relative to private market repos.88 The text box at the end of this section lists some of the other federal or federally backed institutions that provide wholesale funding to financial institutions.
The following developments illustrate the functional equivalency of FHLB advances to the Federal Reserve's discount window and to private sector repo transactions.
In sum, whether the FHLB system specifically facilitates mortgage funding or simply provides wholesale funding at below-market rates is debatable because the funding of assets is a fungible activity.99 Lenders arguably focus on collectively funding their entire asset portfolios rather than funding each asset individually. Although the FHLB advances may reduce the costs to fund a particular category of loans held in asset portfolios, the overall effect may translate into a subsidy that reduces a portion of the total wholesale funding costs, which otherwise would be borne by a member institution.
On the one hand, the fungible nature of the FHLBs' wholesale lending may contribute to increasing financial risks for taxpayers. For example, by providing loans to WaMu, the FHLB of Seattle's exposure to concentration risk (i.e., exposure to a single or predominant source of risk) increased, which may be associated with lending to some large banking firms.100 Concentration risk may amplify other financial risks. A sudden change in interest rates affecting the cash flows of one or more large members, for example, could threaten the timely repayment of outstanding FHLB advances and overall solvency of a district FHLB if the balances owed are relatively large.
On the other hand, providing advances to the largest banks generates significant revenues for the FHLBs, a portion of which supports the system's affordable housing mission.101 Moreover, the revenues generated by the large members are arguably more stable relative to those generated by smaller members, which have substantially lower volumes of lending activity. Furthermore, WaMu's portfolio consisted predominately of mortgage assets and, therefore, was less diversified. By contrast, large commercial banks engage in more diversified lending portfolios and financial activities, arguably reducing the amount of concentration risk transferable to the FHLB system. Hence, the FHLBs' concentration risk exposure may be dampened in light of increased prudential requirements for larger member institutions.
The level of risk generated by the FHLB system's wholesale lending activities that could potentially be borne by taxpayers has also been debated. During March 2023, for example, the usual practice of pledging government-backed securities to obtain FHLB cash advances did not preclude member bank insolvencies.102 Unlike the Federal Reserve, the FHLBs offer cash loans based only upon the current market as opposed to the initial par values of eligible collateral.103 Furthermore, the FHLB system must issue consolidated debt obligations to raise the funds that are subsequently lent to member financial institutions. In other words, the FHLBs have funding limits and, in comparison to a central bank, cannot provide unlimited liquidity support during a financial crisis. Therefore, the use of FHLB advances to bypass the Federal Reserve discount window—a tool that can alert prudential depository regulators of possible liquidity mismanagement problems of individual institutions or of an emerging liquidity crisis that might cause widespread financial distress—arguably increases potential loss risks to taxpayers.
Alternatively, the existence of the FHLB system as an additional liquidity source may sustain liquidity and foster stable financial markets under ordinary circumstances and possibly at times when the Federal Reserve implements changes in monetary policy.104 The FHLBs generally offer advances at lower costs relative to market repos, but the Federal Reserve discount window—prior to March 2020—charged above-market rates for (emergency) cash loans to discourage excessive use of the discount window for cash advances.105 The use of FHLB advances for routine operations—an option to avoid any stigma associated with discount window lending and reduce the risk of generating unfavorable public perceptions, which can possibly spill over and adversely affect other similar financial firms—arguably reduced potential loss risks to taxpayers.106 Since March 2020, however, the Federal Reserve ended the penalty cost to use the discount window and extended the maximum lending period from overnight to 90 days with the option to prepay at any time, thus increasing the attractiveness to use the discount window and possibly bring about competition with the FHLBs.107
Federal Wholesale Funding Institutions Examples of federal wholesale funding facilities established for certain lending institutions are below.
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Not all financial institutions that participate in the mortgage industry are eligible to become members of a district FHLB, including those listed below.
Many nonbank firms are unable to join the FHLB system because they lack a primary prudential federal or state regulator (or certification as a CDFI). If a member is not regularly examined for safety and soundness, then the increased default risk on advances may threaten the financial condition of the issuing FHLB and increase the financial hardship on other member institutions in the cooperative. Furthermore, an FHLB member institution lacking a primary prudential regulator would also be unlikely to have a designated conservator or receiver should it become insolvent—and serving in this capacity is beyond an FHLB's domain.
Prior to 2016, mortgage REITs were able to join the FHLB system and access advances to obtain funding by creating "captive insurance companies" (captives).127 In 2016, the FHFA rescinded the eligibility of captive insurers affiliated with mortgage REITs, forcing them to terminate their FHLB memberships by early 2021.128 The FHFA noted that the prudential regulation of captive insurers was different from traditional commercial insurance companies that sell insurance to the public at large.129 Furthermore, the financial risks of FHLB lending to insurance companies are generally higher relative to depositories.130 The superlien protects an FHLB's financial interest by placing its claims ahead of the FDIC or NCUA if a failed depository is placed into receivership. Insurance companies, however, are regulated by applicable state laws. State insurance regulators, for example, limit the collateral amounts that insurance companies can pledge to secure FHLB advances. Insolvent insurance companies, which are not federally insured, would also be required to go through a state receivership process. Whether the superlien authority would protect any FHLB's claims on assets used to secure advances is uncertain. Consequently, the FHLBs typically require physical delivery of the collateral pledged by eligible member insurance companies prior to providing them with advances. Hence, the particular risks associated with lending to insurance companies factored into the FHFA's 2016 decision to deny captives eligibility as FHLB members.
In September 2019, Treasury recommended, among other things, that the FHFA consider whether expanded access to the FHLB system would be warranted in certain circumstances (e.g., captive insurance companies, nonbanks).131 The FHFA subsequently announced that it would revisit its membership eligibility requirements.132 In a 2023 comprehensive review of the FHLB system, the FHFA noted that ineligible entities typically lack prudential safety and soundness requirements, CSRs, and mission assets (e.g., 10% residential mortgages held in a loan portfolio) or activity requirements such that expanding FHLB membership to these firms would require consideration by Congress.133
As previously noted, MSRs are not accepted by the FHLBs as eligible collateral that can be pledged for advances. MSRs are valued as the discounted sum of projected future cash flows, which are calculated using the expected cash flows generated from the underlying mortgage asset. The risks to an MSR's cash flows are linked to the risks of the underlying mortgage asset.134 If, for example, interest rates were to decline and cause an increase in mortgage prepayment risk, then the value of the linked MSRs would also decline in anticipation of future cash payments being terminated. During March and April 2020, following a drop in interest rates, MSR values fell 50%-60%.135 Borrowers can also default on their mortgages, terminating the cash flows that would have been generated by the assets and linked MSRs. The costs to service a defaulted mortgage would also increase substantially.136 For these reasons, the volatility of MSR values reflect the inherent volatility of their anticipated cash flows.
Given the high volatility of MSR values, the FHLBs would need to require larger haircuts if these MSR assets were used as eligible collateral to mitigate losses. In addition, the FHLBs would need to acquire servicing licenses or have contractual arrangements already in place in case they would need to take possession of MSRs following the default of a member institution and possibly become loan servicers, another activity outside of the domain of an FHLB.137 Given the challenges for the FHLBs if MSRs were used as collateral, nonbanks that lack portfolios of eligible assets (e.g., mortgages) might be unable to obtain advances even if they were granted FHLB membership.
As previously noted, the GLBA gave FHLBs the ability to use small business loans as collateral to secure advances. Some FHLBs, however, are reluctant to accept as eligible collateral the portions of small business loans that are federally guaranteed by the Small Business Administration (SBA)—although portions that are not guaranteed by the SBA may still be eligible.138 If a member institution were to fail to repay an advance, an FHLB's superlien authority could not be used to perfect its security interests on the SBA-guaranteed portion of a loan.139 Following a review of the relevant statutes, FHFA determined that the SBA does not allow third parties (i.e., persons who are not SBA-approved lenders) to present and collect on SBA guarantees.140 Under extenuating circumstances, the FHFA and the FHLBs might allow the use of SBA-guaranteed loans as collateral—but the advance would likely include a large haircut. For this reason, some CDFIs that engage in SBA lending would likely face limited access to liquidity that could be provided by FHLBs.
As previously stated, Congress established and modified the FHLB system to address liquidity shortfalls following the Great Depression, the S&L crisis, the 1986-1992 banking crisis, and the 2008 financial mortgage crisis. However, the FHLB system's primary mission has remained intact. Whether the FHLBs' liquidity-facilitating activities and their public mission are compatible or sufficiently aligned has been the subject of policy debates.
The FHFA requires each FHLB to calculate a core mission achievement ratio (CMAR) to monitor the extent to which its activities align with mission goals. The CMAR is a ratio of an FHLB's asset holdings affiliated with its core mission relative to consolidated obligations. The CMAR consists of primary mission assets (i.e., CICA advances, CIP advances, and AMA assets) and supplemental mission assets and activities, consisting of other assets (e.g., advance commitments, investments in certain small business investment company securities, letters of credit).141 The FHFA has a regulatory preferred CMAR minimum of 70% based on an average calculated over several review periods.142 If an FHLB's CMAR falls below 55% over several consecutive review periods, its board of directors will be required to submit to the FHFA an explanation of the shortfall as well as a strategic plan to restore it at or above the 70% preferred level of mission achievement.
The FHFA also reports that, since fulfillment of the REFCORP debt obligations, each FHLB has voluntarily set aside 20% of its net income to a restricted retained earnings account, which is accounted for separately from the statutory required 10% minimum contribution.143 The funds in the restricted retained earnings account are considered part of an FHLB's overall capital position, specifically the component used to enhance its capacity to absorb losses.144 According to the FHFA, funds in excess of the restricted account requirement, which can then be allocated to an unrestricted retained earnings account, demonstrates the FHLBs' ability to increase their contributions for affordable housing above the current statutory minimum requirement. In a comprehensive system review, FHFA also recognized the FHLBs' commitment to voluntarily increase their giving to 50% above the required AHP contributions.145 The FHFA has since released a formal request for input pertaining to forthcoming rulemaking concerning the FHLB system's mission.146 The rulemaking is expected to update and clarify the system's mission; develop metrics and thresholds to evaluate FHLBs' mission activities (e.g., CMAR); and identify incentives that the FHLBs can provide to their members to support the system's mission.
The FHFA is also considering recommending to Congress that the FHLBs' minimum required AHP contribution be doubled. In response to the request for input, some FHLB members expressed various concerns, including the possibility of rising costs for advances and other FHLB services—thereby reducing the cost advantages of system membership—if AHP contributions were doubled.147 In other words, if a trade-off between providing liquidity (in a prudentially safe and sound manner) and increasing financial support for affordable housing is found to either exist or be nonexistent, then such a discovery could inform the policy discussion pertaining to the compatibility of the FHLB's liquidity operations and public mission goals.
Following a comprehensive review of the FHLB system, the FHFA noted that it would consider a series of legislative and regulatory proposals. In addition to doubling the FHLBs' AHP contributions, the FHFA may also request from Congress the authority to consolidate and reorganize FHLB districts to address the variation in membership counts and locations.148 The FHFA may also request from Congress the authority to prescribe levels or ranges for the compensation of executive officers of FHLBs.149 Some selected rulemaking that the FHFA may undertake may include enhanced stress testing requirements to ensure sufficient capitalization of the FHLBs.150 In addition, the FHFA may provide guidance to enhance the comprehensiveness of the FHLBs' annual reports that summarize their affordable housing and community development activities.151 The FHFA may also propose amendments to increase the usage of the FHLB system's CIP and CICA programs.152 These and other legislative and regulatory proposals discussed in the FHFA's review of the FHLB system are designed to enhance two core objectives—to provide stable and reliable liquidity to FHLB members and to support the focus on housing and community development.153
1. |
Credit unions are also cooperatives that are owned by and make loans to their members. For more information, see CRS In Focus IF11713, Introduction to Financial Services: Credit Unions, by Darryl E. Getter. |
2. |
See Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), "Capital Stock Management," Advisory Bulletin (AB) 2019-03, August 15, 2019, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-06/AB-2019-03-Capital-Composition.pdf. |
3. |
For more information about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, see CRS Report R46746, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Recent Administrative Developments, by Darryl E. Getter. |
4. |
For example, commercial banks and credit unions typically borrow funds from their depositors to make consumer and commercial loans. Depositors are then repaid with interest. |
5. |
See FHFA, "Members of Federal Home Loan Banks," 81 Federal Register 3246-3288, January 20, 2016. |
6. |
See CRS Report R47169, Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund: Overview and Programs, by Donald J. Marples and Darryl E. Getter; and Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFI) Fund, "What Does the CDFI Fund Do?," https://www.cdfifund.gov/Pages/default.aspx. |
7. |
See FHFA, "Federal Home Loan Bank Membership for Non-Federally-Insured Credit Unions," 82 Federal Register 106, June 5, 2017. |
8. |
See Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Form 10: Federal Home Loan Bank of New York, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1329842/000095012305007994/y10017e10v12g.htm. Repos are defined in the "Mortgage Funding or General Wholesale Funding" section. |
9. |
Prior to the establishment of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), most residential mortgages were nonamortizing and variable rate, with 6- to 11-year terms. The FHA encouraged the use of residential mortgages that were amortizing and fixed rate, with terms of 20 years or more. See U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Office of Policy Development and Research, Evolution of the U.S. Housing Finance System: A Historical Survey and Lessons for Emerging Mortgage Markets, April 2006, https://www.huduser.gov/publications/pdf/US_evolution.pdf; and Edward Szymanoski et al., The FHA Single-Family Insurance Program: Performing a Needed Role in the Housing Finance Market, HUD, Office of Policy Development and Research, Working Paper no. HF-019, December 2012, https://www.huduser.gov/portal/publications/FHA_SingleFamilyIns_2012.pdf. |
10. |
For example, U.S. restrictions on interstate and branch banking, as well as eligibility requirements to become credit union members, limited the ability of depository firms to collect deposits that were used to make loans. For more information, see David L. Mengle, The Case for Interstate Branch Banking, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Review (November/December 1990), https://www.richmondfed.org/-/media/richmondfedorg/publications/research/economic_review/1990/pdf/er760601.pdf. |
11. |
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), "Historical Timeline," https://www.fdic.gov/90years/. |
12. |
Federal Reserve Act of 1913 (P.L. 63-43, 38 Stat. 251). Only commercial banks could be members of the Federal Reserve System and use the discount window to obtain cash advances. |
13. |
Commercial banks with access to the Federal Reserve System discount window could use commercial or business loans as eligible collateral for advances. See James A. Clouse, "Recent Developments in Discount Window Policy," Federal Reserve Bulletin, November 1994, pp. 965-977. |
14. |
Savings and loan (S&L) associations are also referred to as thrifts or thrift institutions. |
15. |
S&L associations were not able to join the Federal Reserve System until after the passage of the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-221). See Clouse, "Recent Developments in Discount Window Policy," pp. 965-977. |
16. |
Under the Federal Home Loan Bank Board's guidance, the regional FHLBs provided regulatory oversight for their S&L members. |
17. |
The National Housing Act of 1934 (P.L. 73-479, 49 Stat. 684) created the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC)—analogous to the FDIC. The FDIC insured deposits only for the commercial banking system at that time. In 1989, the FDIC assumed responsibility for the bankrupt fund as the Savings Association Insurance Fund (SAIF). After passage of the Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171, 120 Stat. 9), the FDIC merged the Bank Insurance Fund for commercial banks and the SAIF to form the Deposit Insurance Fund, which became effective on March 31, 2006. See FDIC, "Deposit Insurance Fund: Merger of Bank Insurance Fund and Savings Association Insurance Fund," FIL-36-2006, April 27, 2006, https://www.fdic.gov/news/financial-institution-letters/2006/fil06036.html. |
18. |
Fannie Mae was restricted to secondary market trading of federally insured mortgages, working primarily with mortgage bankers rather than with S&L lenders. |
19. |
See George J. Gaberlavage, The Federal Home Loan Bank System: A Chronological Review and Discussion of Key Issues, Consumer Federation of America, June 2017, https://consumerfed.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/6-14-17-FHLB_Report.pdf. |
20. |
Regulation Q interest rate ceilings, stemming from the Banking Act of 1933 (48 Stat. 162) and the Banking Act of 1935 (49 Stat. 684), capped the interest that could be paid on savings deposits. See Timothy Q. Cook, "Regulation Q and the Behavior of Savings and Small Time Deposits at Commercial Banks and the Thrift Institutions," Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Review (November/December 1978), https://www.richmondfed.org/-/media/richmondfedorg/publications/research/economic_review/1978/pdf/er640602.pdf; R. Alton Gilbert, "Requiem for Regulation Q: What It Did and Why It Passed Away," Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Review, vol. 68, no. 2 (February 1986), https://files.stlouisfed.org/files/htdocs/publications/review/86/02/Requiem_Feb1986.pdf; Paul Calem, "The New Bank Deposit Markets: Goodbye to Regulation Q," Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Business Review (November/December 1985), https://www.philadelphiafed.org/-/media/frbp/assets/economy/articles/business-review/1985/brnd85pc.pdf; R. Alton Gilbert, "Will the Removal of Regulation Q Raise Mortgage Interest Rates?" Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Review (December 1981), http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/81/12/Removal_Dec1981.pdf; and Charlotte E. Ruebling, "The Administration of Regulation Q," Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Review (February 1970), https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/review-federal-reserve-bank-st-louis-820/february-1970-24495?page=29. For information on the S&L crisis, see Alane K. Moysich, "Chapter 4: The Savings and Loan Crisis and Its Relationship to Banking," FDIC, History of the 80s: An Examination of the Banking Crises of the 1980s and Early 1990s, December 1997, https://archive.fdic.gov/view/fdic/9770/fdic_9770_DS1.pdf; and FDIC, "The S&L Crisis: A Chrono-Bibliography," https://www.fdic.gov/publications/sl-crisis-chrono-bibliography. |
21. |
Even without Regulation Q caps on depository accounts, S&L associations would have experienced financial distress had they attempted to pay depositors' short-term interest rates, which had risen to levels that exceeded the long-term fixed interest rate yields attached to mortgages held in their lending portfolios. |
22. |
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act; P.L. 111-203) abolished the Office of Thrift Supervision, transferring its authority and duties to the Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and FDIC. |
23. |
The Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (P.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 83) also eliminated the separate missions of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, making their characteristics and missions similar today. |
24. |
See Federal Housing Finance Board (FHFB), "Determination of Appropriate Present-Value Factors Associated with Payments Made By the Federal Home Loan Banking System to the Resolution Funding Corporation," 65 Federal Register 5447-5453, February 4, 2000. |
25. |
See FDIC, Managing the Crisis: The FDIC and RTC Experience, Volume 1, December 1997, https://www.fdic.gov/system/files/2024-06/managing-the-crisis.pdf. The Financing Corporation (FICO) was established to issue bonds after passage of the FSLIC Recapitalization Act of 1987 (P.L. 100-86, 101 Stat 552). The Deposit Insurance Funds Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-208) authorized the FDIC to collect a special assessment on banks and savings banks to pay interest on the FICO bonds. Outstanding FICO bonds matured from 2017 through 2019. For more information, see FDIC, 2017 Annual Report, "Deposit Insurance Fund," p. 108, https://archive.fdic.gov/view/fdic/178. |
26. |
See FHFA, FHFB, and HUD Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, "Repeal of Regulations," 76 Federal Register 74648-74649, December 1, 2011. |
27. |
See Eliana Balla et al., Did Banking Reforms of the Early 1990s Fail? Lessons from Comparing Two Banking Crises, Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Brief, no. 15-06, June 2015, https://www.richmondfed.org/-/media/richmondfedorg/publications/research/economic_brief/2015/pdf/eb_15-06.pdf; and FDIC, "Managing the Crisis: The FDIC and RTC Experience—Chronological Overview," https://www.fdic.gov/system/files/2024-06/managing-the-crisis.pdf. |
28. |
See Dusan Stojanovic et al., "Do Federal Home Loan Bank Membership and Advances Increase Bank Risk-Taking?," Journal of Banking and Finance, vol. 32, no. 5 (May 2008), pp. 680-698. |
29. |
The Federal Reserve's discount window is designed to provide emergency short-term funding. For more information, see the textbox in the "Mortgage Funding or General Wholesale Funding" section. |
30. |
See U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Home Loan Bank: An Overview of Changes and Current Issues Affecting the System, GAO-489T, April 13, 2005, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GAOREPORTS-GAO-05-489T/pdf/GAOREPORTS-GAO-05-489T.pdf. |
31. |
See Drew DeSilver, "Seattle's Federal Home Loan Bank in Big Money Trouble Again," Seattle Times, July 19, 2009, https://www.seattletimes.com/business/seattles-federal-home-loan-bank-in-big-money-trouble-again/. |
32. |
See Offices of Inspector General, Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and FDIC, Evaluation of Federal Regulatory Oversight of Washington Mutual Bank, Report no. EVAL-10-002, April 2010, https://www.fdicoig.gov/sites/default/files/reports/2022-08/10-002EV.pdf. |
33. |
See FHFA Office of the Inspector General, Merger of the Federal Home Loan Banks of Des Moines and Seattle: FHFA's Role, WPR-2016-002, March 16, 2016, https://www.fhfaoig.gov/sites/default/files/WPR-2016-002.pdf. |
34. |
For example, see FHFA, Report on Collateral Pledged to Federal Home Loan Banks: Prepared for the Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs and the House Committee on Financial Services, December 2023, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2024-01/2023-Annual-Collateral-Report-to-Congress.pdf. The collateral assets pledged for advances are not reported on an FHLB's balance sheet, which is consistent with the Financial Accounting Financial Standards Board ASC 310 guidance for receivables arising from credit sales. See Financial Accounting Standards Board, "Receivables (Topic 310): Disclosures about the Credit Quality of Financing Receivables and the Allowance for Credit Losses," Accounting Standards Update, no. 2010-20, July 2010, https://www.fasb.org/page/ShowPdf?path=ASU%202010-XX%20Receivables%20(Topic%20310)%20Disclosures%20about%20the%20Credit%20Quality%20of%20Financing%20Receivables.pdf. |
35. |
Obtaining a loan at a haircut or for less than the value of a pledged collateral asset is similar to obtaining a mortgage for less than the full value of a house, which occurs when a home buyer makes a down payment. Default incentives are abated when borrowers forfeit a collateral asset of higher value relative to the outstanding loan. The haircut differs from the advance rate, which is the interest cost, charged for an FHLB advance. Suppose a bank pledges an asset worth $100 for a cash advance of $90 while promising to repay the loan in full at a 10% advance rate—the haircut on the pledged asset would be $10, and the advance rate charged to the bank would be $9 for a total repayment of $99 for a $90 loan. See Gary B. Gorton and Andrew Metrick, Securitized Banking and the Run on Repo, National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), Working Paper no. 15223, August 2009. |
36. |
For example, using a Treasury security would result in a lower haircut relative to a mortgage loan. The FHLBs provide lendable collateral values (LCVs), where an LCV = 100% - percentage of haircut, for institutions by type and by type of qualifying collateral. For more information, see FHLB of Atlanta, Member Products and Services Guide, January 29, 2024, https://corp.fhlbatl.com/files/documents/member-products-and-services-guide.pdf. Some FHLBs may use the term lendable value rate instead of LCV. See FHLB of Cincinnati, Advance Forward: Annual Meeting Webinar, May 14, 2020, https://www.fhlbcin.com/media/2965/transcript-annual-meeting.pdf. |
37. |
P.L. 90-90–321, Title I, §129, as added to P.L. 103-103–325, Title I, §152(d). The Home Ownership Equity and Protection Act of 1994 was enacted as an amendment to the Truth-In-Lending Act of 1968, requiring additional disclosures of mortgage terms to consumers. For more information, see FHFA, Report on Federal Home Loan Bank Collateral for Advances and Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Products, July 2009, https://www.fhfa.gov/reports/collateral-pledged-to-fhlbanks/2009. |
38. |
For example, policies regarding participation loans may vary by FHLB. Participation loans are loans provided by two or more financial institutions. One institution may originate and retain a larger share of financial interest in a loan while selling one or more smaller shares to other financial institutions. In this case, the loan would not be considered whole because other shareholders have financial interests. Some FHLBs may prefer whole loans as collateral, which would be free and clear of any other interests in case they need to be liquidated. Some FHLBs may allow participation loans as collateral under certain circumstances, such as to support certain multifamily and community developments. Some FHLBs may have allowed participation loans to be pledged as collateral in the past but have since revised their policies. For more information, see SEC, "Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta Credit and Collateral Policy, as Amended", https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1331465/000119312507180530/dex101.htm; FHLB of Des Moines, "Participation Loan Guidance," February 2020, https://www.fhlbdm.com/webres/File/member-support/collateral/guidelines-for-pledging-participation-loan-guidelines.pdf; SEC, Form 10: FHLB of New York; and FHFA, 2009 Annual Report to Congress, May 25, 2010, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2009_AnnualReportToCongress_508.pdf. |
39. |
The items listed in Table 1 were retrieved primarily from SEC, "Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta Credit and Collateral Policy, as Amended;" FHLB of Boston, Products and Solutions Guide, https://www.fhlbboston.com/fhlbank-boston/member-resources/products-solutions-guide#/; FHLB of Des Moines, Collateral Procedures, August 2022, https://www.fhlbdm.com/webres/File/member-support/collateral/Collateral_Procedures.pdf; and SEC, Form 10: FHLB of New York. |
40. |
See 12 U.S.C. §1430. Because the FHLBs' superlien authority was established under the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987 (P.L. 100-86), it may be referred to as the CEBA lien. Notably, private sector lenders, the FHLBs, and regional Federal Reserve banks (when making discount window loans) may file to perfect their security interests in the collateral pledged by borrowers via Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) financing statements. See UCC Article 9 Secured Transactions at https://www.law.cornell.edu/ucc/9. For a discussion and examples involving UCC financing statements by various collateralized lenders, see Jesse Edgerton, Credit Supply and Business Investment During the Great Recession: Evidence from Public Records of Equipment Financing, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, November 26, 2012, https://www.frbsf.org/wp-content/uploads/Session_3_Paper_3_Edgerton_equipment.pdf; Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Credit Agreement, September 22, 2008, https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/aboutthefed/aig/pdf/original_credit_agreement.pdf; and Federal Home Loan Bank of New York, Advances, Collateral Pledge and Security Agreement, p. 6, https://www.fhlbny.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/hlb_101.pdf. |
41. |
See CRS Report R41718, Federal Deposit Insurance for Banks and Credit Unions, by Darryl E. Getter. |
42. |
See GAO, Federal Home Loan Bank System: Key Loan Pricing Terms Can Differ Significantly, GAO-03-937, September 8, 2003, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GAOREPORTS-GAO-03-973/pdf/GAOREPORTS-GAO-03-973.pdf. |
43. |
See FHLB of Atlanta, "Types of Advances We Offer," https://corp.fhlbatl.com/services/advances/. |
44. |
See FHLB of Indianapolis, "Putable Advances," https://www.fhlbi.com/products-services/credit-products/advances/putable-advances; and SEC, Form 10, Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago, March 31, 2005, https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1331451/000119312505135678/d1012g.htm. |
45. |
See FHLB of Dallas, "Credit Products Summary Guide," https://www.fhlb.com/getmedia/2ae90d1c-e482-4552-a4b0-94d5325db2bd/credit-product-and-summary-guide.pdf. |
46. |
See Gara Afonso, Alex Entz, and Eric LeSuer, "Who's Lending in the Federal Funds Market," Liberty Street Economics, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, December 2, 2013, https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2013/12/whos-lending-in-the-fed-funds-market.html. |
47. |
Ginnie Mae is the federal agency that facilitates the creation of mortgage-backed securities (MBS) linked to residential and multifamily mortgages guaranteed by various federal agencies, such as the FHA, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Department of Agriculture. |
48. |
See FHFA, 2014 Report to Congress, June 15, 2015, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/documents/FHFA_2014_Report_to_Congress.pdf. |
49. |
For example, the FHLBs would not be allowed to invest in common stock or junior tranches of collateralized mortgage obligations and real estate mortgage investment conduits (REMICs). |
50. |
Small business investment companies, which are licensed and regulated by the Small Business Administration (SBA), provide debt and equity financing to businesses that meet certain SBA size requirements. For more information, see CRS Report R41456, SBA Small Business Investment Company Program, by Robert Jay Dilger and Anthony A. Cilluffo. |
51. |
For example, when a state or local municipality public deposits funds into a federally insured bank, standby letters of credit may be used to provide insurance that exceeds the $250,000 limit guaranteed by the FDIC if the bank were to become insolvent. For more information, see Government Finance Officers Association, "Collateralizing Public Deposits," September 2019, https://www.gfoa.org/materials/collateralizing-public-deposits. |
52. |
See FHLB of Cincinnati, SEC Form 10-K: Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019, https://www.fhlbcin.com/media/2918/2019-10k.pdf. |
53. |
For more information about the FHLBs' boards of directors, see GAO, Federal Home Loan Banks: Information on Governance, Board Diversity, and Community Lending, GAO-15-435, May 2015, https://www.gao.gov/assets/680/670146.pdf. |
54. |
See FHFA, "Board of Directors of the Federal Home Loan Bank System Office of Finance," 75 Federal Register 23152-23167, May 3, 2010, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2010-05-03/pdf/2010-10075.pdf. |
55. |
See Council of FHLBanks, Office of Finance, https://fhlbanks.com/office-of-finance/. |
56. |
See FHLBs Office of Finance, "About Discount Notes," http://www.fhlb-of.com/ofweb_userWeb/pageBuilder/about-discount-notes-41. |
57. |
See FHLBs Office of Finance, "About Bonds," http://www.fhlb-of.com/ofweb_userWeb/pageBuilder/about-bonds-47. |
58. |
See FHLBs Office of Finance, "About Debt Securities," http://www.fhlb-of.com/ofweb_userWeb/pageBuilder/debt-securities-home-41. |
59. |
This authority has never been invoked. See SEC Form 10-K: Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati. |
60. |
GAO, Federal Home Loan Bank System, An Overview of Changes and Current Issues Affecting the System, GAO-05-489T, April 13, 2005, p.8. |
61. |
See Adam B. Ashcraft, Morten L. Bech, and W. Scott Frame, The Federal Home Loan Bank System: The Lender of Next-to-Last Resort?, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, November 2008, https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_reports/sr357.pdf. |
62. |
Prior to being owned by JP Morgan Chase, Washington Mutual had accounted for approximately one-third of lending by the FHLB of Seattle. See DeSilver, "Seattle's FHLB in Big Money Trouble Again;" and FDIC, "JPMorgan Chase Acquires Banking Operations of Washington Mutual," September 25, 2008, https://archive.fdic.gov/view/fdic/3396/fdic_3396_DS1.pdf. |
63. |
The FHLB of Seattle experienced losses from nonperforming, private-label MBS. See FHFA Office of Inspector General, Merger of the Federal Home Loan Banks of Des Moines and Seattle: FHFA's Role and Approach for Overseeing the Continuing FHLBank, WPR-2016-002, March 16, 2016, https://www.fhfaoig.gov/sites/default/files/WPR-2016-002.pdf. |
64. |
See Ashcraft, Bech, and Frame, The Federal Home Loan Bank System. The recession that began in December 2007 and ended in 2009 is frequently referred to as the Great Recession. See NBER, "U.S. Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions," http://www.nber.org/cycles.html; and Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis "The Financial Crisis Timeline," https://www.stlouisfed.org/Financial-Crisis. |
65. |
In December 2006, limitations were placed on an FHLB's ability to increase paid-in capital requirements on its members. See FHFA, "Limitation on Issuance of Excess Stock," 71 Federal Register 78046-78051, December 28, 2006, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2006-12-28/pdf/E6-22325.pdf. |
66. |
See CRS Report R47217, Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs): Overview and Selected Issues, by Darryl E. Getter. |
67. |
FHFA, Office of Inspector General, FHFA Has Acted to Strengthen Its Oversight of Federal Home Loan Banks' Compliance with Community Support Requirements, January 10, 2024, https://www.fhfaoig.gov/sites/default/files/COM-2024-001.pdf. For more information about the Community Reinvestment Act (P.L. 95-128, 12 U.S.S. §§2901-2908), see CRS Report R48096, Modernization of the Community Reinvestment Act, by Darryl E. Getter. |
68. |
See FHFA, "Federal Home Loan Bank Capital Requirements," 82 Federal Register 30776-30798, July 3, 2017, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2017-07-03/pdf/2017-13560.pdf. |
69. |
The applicable risk weight for a particular asset or item is referred to as a credit risk percentage requirement (CRPR). The FHFA revised the process used to determine the appropriate CRPRs for corresponding assets. For more information, see FHFA, "Federal Home Loan Bank Capital Requirements," 84 Federal Register 5308-5333, February 20, 2019, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019-02-20/pdf/2018-27918.pdf. |
70. |
For a discussion of various supervisory enforcement actions available to FHFA, see FHLBs Office of Finance, "Discussion of the FHLBanks' Capital Structure and Regulatory Capital Requirements," https://www.fhlb-of.com/ofweb_userWeb/resources/capitalqanda.pdf; and FHFA, Office of Inspector General, FHFA's Oversight of Troubled Federal Home Loan Banks, January 11, 2012, https://www.fhfaoig.gov/sites/default/files/Troubled%20Banks%20EVL-2012-001.pdf. |
71. |
Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-550, Title XIII, as amended by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 [P.L. 110-289]). |
72. |
See FHFA, "Federal Home Loan Bank Stress Tests for Market and Credit Risk," https://www.fhfa.gov/data/fhlb-stress-tests-market-and-credit-risk. |
73. |
See FHFA, Federal Home Loan Bank Liquidity Guidance, August 23, 2018, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-06/AB-2018-07-FHLB-Liquidity-Guidance.pdf. |
74. |
The FHFA funding gap calculation results in a negative number. Consequently, the funding gap requirements for the FHLBs established by the FHFA fall within the range of -10% to -20% for the three-month horizon and -25% to -35% for the one-year horizon. For more information on the formulas and requirements, see FHFA, Federal Home Loan Bank Liquidity Guidance. |
75. |
See FHFA, "Affordable Housing and Community Investment," https://www.fhfa.gov/programs/affordable-housing; and FHFA, "2023 Housing Mission Report: Affordable Housing Activities of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks," April 17, 2024, https://www.fhfa.gov/reports/mission-report/2023; and Office of Finance, "Affordable Housing Programs," http://www.fhlb-of.com/ofweb_userWeb/pageBuilder/affordable-housing-programs-33. |
76. |
For more detail about the operation of an FHLB AHP, see FHLB of Indianapolis, Affordable Housing Program, https://www.fhlbi.com/services/community-programs/affordable-housing-program/. |
77. |
See FHFA, "Affordable Housing Program Amendments," 83 Federal Register 61186-61247, November 28, 2018; and FHLB of Dallas, "Subject: Expanded Criteria for Housing Assistance for Veterans Program (HAVEN)," Bulletin no. 2019-03, March 1, 2019, https://www.fhlb.com/membership/Pages/Expanded-Criteria-for-Housing-Assistance-for-Veterans-Program-(HAVEN).aspx. |
78. |
For an example of the criteria that would qualify for a discounted advance, see FHLB of Indianapolis, "Community Investment Program", https://www.fhlbi.com/products-services/community-investment-and-housing/community-and-economic-development/community-investment-program. |
79. |
See FHLB of Cincinnati, "Community Investment Cash Advances," https://www.fhlbcin.com/housing-programs/community-investment-cash-advances/. |
80. |
Some FHLBs have specialized names for their advance programs that would support disaster relief and small business assistance. For example, see FHLB of Dallas, "Grants and Advances that Fund Hope," https://www.fhlb.com/community/Pages/Community-Investment.aspx. |
81. |
The director of the FHFA is required to "establish housing goals with respect to the purchase of mortgages, if any, by the [FHLBs]." (12 U.S.C. §1430c(a)). |
82. |
See FHFA, "Federal Home Loan Bank Housing Goals Amendments," 85 Federal Register 38031-38052, June 25, 2020. The Mortgage Purchase Program and the Mortgage Partnership Finance Program are two types of Acquired Member Assets (AMA) programs. For more information, see Congressional Budget Office, The Role of Federal Home Loan Banks in the Financial System, March 2024, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/60064. |
83. |
The final rule combines the existing regulation's four separate retrospective mortgage goals into a single prospective mortgage purchase housing goal. The four goals are for home purchase mortgages for low-income families; home purchase mortgages for low-income areas; home purchase mortgages for very low-income families; and refinancing mortgages for low-income families. |
84. |
The final rule also applies the housing goals to each FHLB that acquires any AMA mortgages during a year, thus eliminating a previously existing $2.5 billion volume threshold that previously triggered the application of housing goals for each FHLB. |
85. |
12 C.F.R. Part 1263 of FHFA regulations establishes eligibility requirements, a membership application process, and capital stock requirements for FHLB membership, as well as procedures for the termination of FHLB membership (including the liquidation of member indebtedness, settlement of outstanding business transactions, and redemption or repurchase of capital stock), in the event of voluntary withdrawal from membership, involuntary termination of membership, or a merger or consolidation involving member and nonmember institutions. 12 C.F.R. Part 1263 also contains provisions governing the readmission of FHLB members, FHLB access to member information, and the display of official FHLB membership insignia. |
86. |
FDIC, Liquidity and Funds Management (Section 6.1), pp. 6.1-9-6.1-22, https://www.fdic.gov/system/files/2024-06/section6-1.pdf. |
87. |
See Federal Reserve Bank of New York, "Repo and Reverse Repo Agreements," https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/domestic-market-operations/monetary-policy-implementation/repo-reverse-repo-agreements. |
88. |
Advances from the FHLBs may have some additional advantages over repos. For example, the FHLBs may not require additional collateral (i.e., margin calls) from their members when financial market conditions change. Instead, members may be allowed to prepay advances and subsequently obtain advances with option-like features, thus avoiding the need to purchase additional derivative contracts. |
89. |
See Ashcraft, Bech, and Frame, The FHLB System: The Lender of Next-to-Last Resort?, 2008. |
90. |
Washington Mutual, Bank of America, and Countrywide were the largest FHLB borrowers over this period. Anecdotally, these institutions had planned to sell loans to be securitized; however, the disruption of the secondary mortgage markets prevented the sales, prompting a rise in the demand for FHLB advances to fund the loans that stayed in their asset portfolios. See Ashcraft, Bech, and Frame, The FHLB System: The Lender of Next-to-Last Resort?, 2008. For more about the disruption in the credit markets in 2007, see David Greenlaw et al., "Leveraged Losses: Lessons from the Mortgage Market Meltdown," paper prepared for the U.S. Monetary Policy Forum, New York, NY, February 2008, https://users.nber.org/~confer/2008/si2008/ME/kashyap.pdf. |
91. |
See OCC, Federal Reserve System, and FDIC, "Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards; Final Rule," 79 Federal Register 61440-61541, October 10, 2014, https://www.occ.treas.gov/news-issuances/federal-register/2014/79fr61440.pdf. |
92. |
See Stephen G. Cecchetti and Piti Disyatat, "Central Bank Tools and Liquidity Shortages," Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Economic Policy Review, vol. 16, no. 1 (August 2010), pp. 29-42, https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/epr/10v16n1/1008cecc.pdf; and Stojanovic et al., "Do FHLB Membership and Advances Increase Bank Risk-Taking?," 2008. |
93. |
See OCC, Federal Reserve System, and FDIC, "Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards; Final Rule," 79 Federal Register 61440-61541, October 10, 2014. |
94. |
Except for certain circumstances, banks covered by this rule are defined as large, internationally-active banking organizations with $250 billion or more in total consolidated assets or $10 billion or more in total on-balance sheet foreign exposure, as well as consolidated subsidiary depository institutions of these banking organizations with $10 billion or more in total consolidated assets. |
95. |
The share of commercial banks with assets over $50 billion accounted for approximately 50% of the dollar value of FHLB advances by the end of 2016, which is significantly higher than their share of 2% in 2000. See Stefan Gissler and Borghan Narajabad, "The Increased Role of the Federal Home Loan Bank System in Funding Markets, Part 2: Recent Trends and Potential Drivers," Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, October 18, 2017, https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/the-increased-role-of-the-federal-home-loan-bank-system-in-funding-markets-part-2-20171018.htm. |
96. |
For periods of heavy redemption requests, the Securities and Exchange Commission also provided Money Market Fund (MMF) boards of directors with tools to suspend such requests (i.e., impose gates) and levy redemption fees. See SEC, "Money Market Fund Reform; Amendments to Form PF; Final Rule," 79 Federal Register 47736-47983, August 14, 2014, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2014-08-14/pdf/2014-17747.pdf. |
97. |
See Gissler and Narajabad, "The Increased Role;" Kenechukwu Anadu and Viktoria Baklanova, The Intersection of U.S. Money Market Mutual Fund Reforms, Bank Liquidity Requirements, and the Federal Home Loan Bank System, Office of Financial Research, October 31, 2017, https://www.financialresearch.gov/working-papers/files/OFRwp-17-05_MMF-Reforms_Liquidity_FHLBs.pdf; and Sabastian Ramos, ICD Commentary: Operational and Accounting Issues with the Floating NAV and the Impact on Money Market Funds, SEC, Institutional Cash Distributors, July 2013, https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-03-13/s70313-40.pdf. For more information on MMF holdings, see Federal Reserve, "Money Market Funds: Investment Holdings Detail," https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/efa/efa-project-money-market-funds-investment-holdings-detail.htm. |
98. |
See Gissler and Narajabad, "The Increased Role;" Anadu and Baklanova, The Intersection of U.S. Money Market Mutual Fund Reforms; and David Andolfatto and Jane Ihrig, "Why the Fed Should Create a Standing Repo Facility," Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, On the Economy, March 6, 2019, https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2019/march/why-fed-create-standing-repo-facility. |
99. |
See W. Scott Frame, Diana Hancock, and Wayne Passmore, "Federal Home Loan Bank Advances and Commercial Bank Portfolio Composition," Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, vol. 44, no. 4 (June 2012), pp. 681-684. |
100. |
According to the FHFA Office of Inspector General, the top four large bank holding companies—Bank of America, Citigroup, J.P. Morgan Chase, and Wells Fargo—accounted for one quarter of aggregate advances at the end of 2013. See FHFA Office of Inspector General, Recent Trends in Federal Home Loan Bank Advances to JPMorgan Chase and Other Large Banks, Evaluation Report EVL-2014-006, April 16, 2014, https://www.fhfaoig.gov/sites/default/files/EVL-2014-006_1.pdf; and FHFA, 2014 Report to Congress, Figure 4, June 15, 2015, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/documents/FHFA_2014_Report_to_Congress.pdf. |
101. |
For example, greater demand for the FHLBs' consolidated obligations subsequently lowers the system's cost of funds, which are subsequently used to provide member advances. See Jonathan Adams-Kane and Jakob Wilhelmus, The Real Story Behind the Surge in Federal Home Loan Bank Advances: Macroeconomic Policy Changed How Banks Borrow, Milken Institute, September 2017, https://milkeninstitute.org/sites/default/files/reports-pdf/092117-WP-MMFs-and-FHLB-1.pdf. |
102. |
See Kate Berry, "Silvergate Bank Loaded Up on $4.3 Billion in Home Loan Bank Advances," American Banker, January 10, 2023. The FHLB of San Francisco reported providing $13.5 billion in cash advances to Silicon Valley Bank. See U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Form 10-Q Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2022, https://www.sec.gov/ix?doc=/Archives/edgar/data/1316944/000131694422000164/fhlbsf-20220930.htm; and Kate Berry, "Signature Bank Taps Home Loan Bank Advances in Crypto Pullback," American Banker, January 17, 2023. |
103. |
Following the Federal Reserve's interest rate increases beginning in March 2022, the market value of existing government-backed securities declined, including those held in bank portfolios. On March 12, 2023, the Federal Reserve announced the Bank Term Funding Program, in which it was able to offer loans of up to one year to eligible financial institutions using qualifying assets valued at par as collateral. See Federal Reserve, "Federal Reserve Board Announces It Will Make Available Additional Funding to Eligible Depository Institutions to Help Assure Banks Have the Ability to Meet the Needs of All Their Depositors," press release, March 12, 2023, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20230312a.htm. |
104. |
See Jeff Huther, "The Outlook for FHLB Advances," ABA Banking Journal, October 6, 2023, https://bankingjournal.aba.com/2023/10/the-outlook-for-fhlb-advances/. |
105. |
See Greg Baer et al., "Improving the Government's Lender of Last Resort Function: Lessons from SVB and Signature Bank," Bank Policy Institute, April 24, 2023, https://bpi.com/improving-the-governments-lender-of-last-resort-function-lessons-from-svb-and-signature-bank/. |
106. |
Prior to 2008, financial market participants viewed the federal government as the backstop for securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are also government-sponsored enterprises with congressional charters, despite their explicit disclaimers. The federal government provided Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with financial support in 2008 following their weakening financial conditions, thus making the implicit guarantee explicit. Therefore, various stakeholders, including taxpayers, are likely to believe that the federal government would address losses linked to FHLB financial activities. For more information about the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac conservatorships, see CRS Report R46746, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Recent Administrative Developments, by Darryl E. Getter. |
107. |
See Helene Lee and Asani Sarkar, "The Recent Rise in Discount Window Borrowing," Liberty Street Economics, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, January 17, 2023, https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2023/01/the-recent-rise-in-discount-window-borrowing/; and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Reserve Actions to Support the Flow of Credit to Households and Businesses, March 15, 2020, https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/monetary20200315b.htm. |
108. |
See Thomas M. Humphrey, "The Real Bills Doctrine," Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Review, September/October 1982, https://www.richmondfed.org/-/media/richmondfedorg/publications/research/economic_review/1982/pdf/er680501.pdf; and Clay J. Anderson, Evolution of the Role and the Functioning of the Discount Mechanism, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Fundamental Reappraisal of the Discount Mechanism, November 1966, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/files/docs/historical/federal%20reserve%20history/discountmech/evolrole_ander.pdf. |
109. |
See Pam Hendry, "The Federal Reserve's Discount Window: What It Is and How It Works," Federal Reserve System, Community Banking Connections, Second Issue 2016, https://www.communitybankingconnections.org/articles/2016/i2/federal-reserve-discount-window. |
110. |
The general policies that govern discount window lending may be found in the Federal Reserve's Regulation A. See Federal Reserve, "Discount Window Lending," https://www.federalreserve.gov/regreform/discount-window.htm; Federal Reserve Bank of New York, "Discount Window," https://www.newyorkfed.org/banking/discountwindow; and Federal Reserve Banks, "Lending," Operating Circular, no. 10 (July 2013), https://www.frbservices.org/assets/resources/rules-regulations/071613-operating-circular-10.pdf. |
111. |
See Mark Carlson and Jonathan D. Rose, "Stigma and the Discount Window," Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, FEDS Notes, December 19, 2017, https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/stigma-and-the-discount-window-20171219.htm. |
112. |
National Credit Union Association (NCUA), "Central Liquidity Facility," https://www.ncua.gov/support-services/central-liquidity-facility. |
113. |
Harold Black and Robert H. Dugger, "Credit Union Structure, Growth and Regulatory Problems," Journal of Finance, vol. 36, no. 2 (May 1981), pp. 529-538. Regulation Q interest rate ceilings, which stemmed from the Banking Act of 1933 (48 Stat. 162) and the Banking Act of 1935 (49 Stat. 684), imposed interest rate ceilings on time and savings deposits. |
114. |
See NCUA, "Enhancements to Central Liquidity Facility Membership and Borrowing Authority," April 20, 2020, https://www.ncua.gov/regulation-supervision/letters-credit-unions-other-guidance/enhancements-central-liquidity-facility-membership-and-borrowing-authority. |
115. |
See NCUA, "Your Credit Union's Contingent Liquidity and the Central Liquidity Facility Frequently Asked Questions," August 2012, https://www.ncua.gov/files/letters-credit-unions/LCU2012-10Encl.pdf. |
116. |
See CRS Report RS21278, Farm Credit System, by Jim Monke; and David Nickerson and Ronnie J. Phillips, "Financial Deja Vu?: The Farm Credit System's Past Woes Could Strike the Federal Home Loan Bank System," Regulation, vol. 25, no. 1 (Spring 2002), pp. 40-45. |
117. |
See Farm Credit System, "Our Structure: List of Farm Credit Organizations," https://farmcredit.com/our-structure. |
118. |
See Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation, "Funding a Mission," https://www.farmcreditfunding.com/ffcb_live/index.html. |
119. |
See FHFA, "FHFA Authorizes the Enterprises to Support Additional Liquidity in the Secondary Mortgage Market," press release, March 23, 2020, https://www.fhfa.gov/news/news-release/fhfa-authorizes-the-enterprises-to-support-additional-liquidity-in-the-secondary-mortgage-market. |
120. |
A mortgage servicer collects and remits the principal and interest payments to the mortgage lender; manages the borrower's escrow account; processes the loan title once paid in full; and administers loss mitigation (e.g., forbearance plans) or foreclosure resolution on behalf of the lender if the borrower falls behind or fails to make full payment. |
121. |
For more information, see CRS In Focus IF12151, Mortgage Servicing Assets and Selected Market Developments, by Darryl E. Getter. |
122. |
See CRS Report R44573, Overview of the Prudential Regulatory Framework for U.S. Banks: Basel III and the Dodd-Frank Act, by Darryl E. Getter. |
123. |
See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, FDIC, OCC, NCUA, Report to Congress on the Effect of Capital Rules on Mortgage Servicing Assets, June 2016, https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/other-reports/files/effect-capital-rules-mortgage-servicing-assets-201606.pdf. By April 2020, nonbank mortgage servicers held MSRs for approximately 50% of the federally insured mortgage market, which includes Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. See letter from John W. Ryan, president and CEO of the Conference of State Bank Supervisors, to the Hon. Maxine Waters, chairwoman of the House Financial Services Committee, the Hon. Mike Crapo, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, the Hon. Patrick McHenry, ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee, and the Hon. Sherrod Brown, ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, April 15, 2020, https://www.csbs.org/sites/default/files/2020-04/CSBS%20Letter%20COVID19%20Apr%2020f.pdf. |
124. |
For more information, see CRS Report R44421, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA): Overview and Recent Tax Revisions, by Jane G. Gravelle. |
125. |
Equity Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) own and operate multifamily and commercial properties. Multifamily properties—structures designed to house five or more family units—include traditional apartment buildings, subsidized housing, and housing for seniors and students. Commercial properties include buildings used for offices, retail businesses, hotels and motels, industrial warehouses, and other business purposes. For more information, see CRS Report R46480, Multifamily Housing Finance and Selected Policy Issues, by Darryl E. Getter. |
126. |
See Nareit, "Guide to Mortgage REIT (mREIT) Investing," https://www.reit.com/what-reit/types-reits/guide-mortgage-reits. |
127. |
A captive insurance company (captive) is a licensed insurance company created and wholly owned by a parent company to insure itself against various business risks that might be insured by a separate commercial insurance entity. In other words, captive insurance is a form of self-insurance, and captives are subject to state reporting, capital, and reserve requirements established for insurance companies. See National Association of Insurance Commissioners, "Captive Insurance Companies," May 9, 2024, https://content.naic.org/cipr_topics/topic_captive_insurance_companies.htm; and Captive Insurance News, "What is Captive Insurance," https://www.captive.com/news/2018/08/08/what-is-captive-insurance. |
128. |
See FHFA, "Members of Federal Home Loan Banks," 18 Federal Register 12, January 20, 2016, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2016-01-20/pdf/2016-00761.pdf. |
129. |
The FHFA states that it does not pass judgement on the adequacy of captive insurance regulation, particularly for individual captives that were organized for specific business purposes. See FHFA, "Members of Federal Home Loan Banks," 18 Federal Register 12, January 20, 2016, p. 3256. |
130. |
See FHFA, Report on Collateral Pledged to Federal Home Loan Banks: Prepared for the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs and the House Committee on Financial Services, August 5, 2016, pp. 50-51, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-04/2016_FHLBank-Collateral-Report.pdf. |
131. |
See Treasury, Housing Finance Reform Plan: Pursuant to the Presidential Memorandum Issued March 27, 2019, September 2019, p. 44, https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/Treasury-Housing-Finance-Reform-Plan.pdf. |
132. |
See FHFA, "FHFA Issues RFI on FHLBank Membership," February 24, 2020, https://www.fhfa.gov/news/news-release/fhfa-issues-rfi-on-fhlbank-membership. |
133. |
See FHFA, FHLBank System at 100: Focusing on the Future, November 3, 2023, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2024-01/FHLBank-System-at-100-Report.pdf. |
134. |
See CRS Insight IN11377, Mortgage Servicing Rights and Selected Market Developments, by Darryl E. Getter. |
135. |
See Karan Kaul and Laurie Goodman, "Should Non-Bank Mortgage Companies Be Permitted to Become Federal Home Loan Bank Members?," Urban Institute, Housing Finance Policy Center, June 2020, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/102400/should-nonbank-mortgage-companies-be-permitted-to-become-federal-home-loan-bank-members.pdf. |
136. |
See Laurie Goodman, "Servicing Costs and the Rise of the Squeaky Clean Loan," Urban Institute, Mortgage Banking (February 2016), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/77626/2000607-Servicing-Costs-and-the-Rise-of-the-Squeaky-Clean-Loan.pdf. |
137. |
See Kaul and Goodman, "Should Non-Bank Mortgage Companies Be Permitted to Become Federal Home Loan Bank Members?" |
138. |
See FHLB of Atlanta, "FHLBank Atlanta: Loan Collateral Resource Guide," http://corp.fhlbatl.com/files/documents/loan-collateral-resource-guide.pdf. For more information about the SBA's 7(a) loan guaranty program, see CRS Report R41146, Small Business Administration 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program, by Robert Jay Dilger and Anthony A. Cilluffo. |
139. |
See 13 C.F.R. 120.432(a). |
140. |
See letter from Andre D. Galeano, deputy director of FHFA, to FHLBs presidents and chief executive officers, Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loans as Collateral for FHLBank Advances, April 23, 2020, https://www.fhfa.gov/news/news-release/fhfa-supports-small-business-by-allowing-federal-home-loan-banks-to-accept-paycheck-protection. As described in the letter, FHFA allowed the FHLBs to accept PPP loans as collateral for advances after establishing certain conditions that included haircuts of 20%. |
141. |
See FHFA, "FHLBank Core Mission Achievement," July 14, 2015, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-06/Core%20Mission%20AB%20-%207-14-2015%20FINAL.pdf. |
142. |
See FHFA, 2022 Report to Congress, June 15, 2023, p. 16, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2023-12/FHFA-2022-Annual-Report-to-Congress.pdf. |
143. | |
144. |
Traditional banks must hold Tier 1 capital that generally consists of equity and retained earnings; Tier 2 capital, in which the proceeds come from current income earnings and are used to cover estimated loan losses; and sufficient amounts of capital to withstand losses associated with stress testing scenarios. The FHLBs' restricted retained earning account appears to be analogous to a bank's Tier 2 capital requirement. When the dollar amount of an FHLB's restricted retained earnings exceeds 1.5% of consolidated obligations, it can reallocate the excess of funds (stemming from the 20% voluntary contribution) to an unrestricted retained earnings account. |
145. |
See FHFA, FHLBank System at 100, p. 14. |
146. |
See FHFA, Request for Input: Federal Home Loan Bank Core Mission Activities and Mission Achievement, May 16, 2024, https://www.fhfa.gov/sites/default/files/2024-05/FHLBank-Mission-RFI-2024.pdf. |
147. |
Independent Community Bankers Association, "FHLB System at 100: Summary of Final Report," https://www.icba.org/docs/default-source/icba/advocacy-documents/summaries/summary-of-fhlb-system-at-100-report.pdf. |
148. | |
149. | |
150. |
See FHFA, FHLBank System at 100, p. 31. |
151. |
See FHFA, FHLBank System at 100, p. 29. |
152. | |
153. |
See FHFA, FHLBank System at 100, p. 7. |