By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
November 12 --
Well before today's
mega-merger
announcement
by BB&T,
seeking to buy
Susquehanna
Bancshares for
$2.5 billion,
Inner City
Press / Fair
Finance Watch
has been
showing the
disparities in
BB&T's
lending
record.
On BB&T
application to
acquire 41 branches
in Texas from
Citibank, Fair
Finance Watch
showed the
FDIC for example
that for
conventional
home purchase
loans in the
Houston
Metropolitan
Statistical
Area in 2013,
BB&T made
65 such loans
to whites, and
NONE to
African
Americans.
The
FDIC's Acting
Deputy
Regional
Director for
Compliance
replied that
"the FDIC
deems your
correspondence
to constitute
a protest."
BB&T
through law
firm Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen
& Katz
submitted a
response which
admitted that
in Houston “the
percentage of
Mortgage Loans
made to low
and moderate
income
borrowers
during the
first six
months of 2014
was also below
the 2013
aggregate
industry
average.”
BB&T
Response at
Page 11, which
also notes at
10 that at
least one of
the Citibank
branches
BB&T seeks
to acquire, it
would shutter.
And so on
November 10
Fair Finance Watch
submitted more
extensive comment
opposing
BB&T's
application to
acquire Bank
of Kentucky,
including that
bank's
disparities in
the Cincinnati
regional area
and BB&T's
in the
Louisville
MSA, where in
2013 BB&T
made 229
conventional
home purchase
loans to
whites, and
only 12 to
African
Americans and
only six to
Latinos, while
denying 41.7%
of
applications
from Latinos
versus only
17.5 of
application
from whites, a
disparity of
2.38 to 1.
Now BB&T
announces a much
larger
proposal, to buy
Susquehanna
and its 245
branches in
Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, Maryland
and West Virginia.
Such an
application
requires
approval,
after a
comment period
and possible
public
hearings, by
the Federal
Reserve. We'll
have more on
this.
The secret
recordings of
then
Federal
Reserve
examiner
Carmen Segarra
about Goldman
Sachs and
regulatory
capture have
given rise to
calls for
oversight
hearings by at
least two US
Senators.
Their hearing
will now occur
on November
21. Relatedly,
BB&T's
response from
the law firm
of Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen
& Katz is
penned by a
former Federal
Reserve Board
Legal Division
supervisor.
On
November 7,
Inner City
Press was sent
a redacted
copy of CIT
Group's "Cash
Flow
Projections"
and "Risk
Management"
from its
application to
acquire
OneWest and go
above the $50
billion, Too
Big Too Fail
threshold.
Inner City
Press
immediately put the
partially
redacted
document
online on its
website, here.
First, how
could such
information be
withheld for a
bank seeking
to become Too
Big To Fail?
Second, how
could the
Federal
Reserve insist
that the
comment period
is closed,
while
information
that was
improperly
withheld is
belatedly
released?
On October 10,
Inner City
Press was sent
heavily
redacted
copies of two
letters from
the CIT Group
concerning its
proposed
acquisition of
OneWest to the
Federal
Reserve Bank
of New York,
supposedly in
compliance
with the
Freedom of
Information
Act - now uploaded
to Scribd here
and here.
On October 18,
Inner City
Press &
Fair Finance
Watch
challenged
these
redactions
under FOIA,
and
submitted
comments on
CIT's mockery
of the
Community
Reinvestment
Act to both
the Federal
Reserve and
the Office of
the
Comptroller of
the Currency.
CIT sought to
withhold even
its CRA plan.
Inner City
Press raised
the issue to
Fed Chair
Yellen in
Washington -
and on October
15, the
Federal
Reserve called
Inner City
Press and left
a voice mail
to say its
request for
extension of
the comment
period,
because of the
incorrectly
withheld CIT
documents, has
been granted
until October
22.
While
appreciating
the Fed's
comment period
extension, the
context and
public policy
questions
recently
raised must be
noted.
For now, on
October 18
Inner City
Press &
Fair Finance
Watch
submitted a
fourth timely
comment to the
Fed,
critiquing the
belatedly
released CRA
Plan, and
demanding
release of
still -
withheld
information:
The CIT CRA
Plan which CIT
improperly
withheld
states, in
Section III,
that “the Bank
has lending
and support
operations
primarily
located in
Florida, New
York and New
Jersey” --
then states
its CRA
Program is in
Salt Lake
City, Utah and
“the western
United
States.”
This is
makes a
mockery of
CRA,
explicitly
separating the
bank's lending
operations
from its “CRA”
operations.
In
Section IV,
CIT makes
claims about
outreach and
“public
participation”
in its CRA
Plan - but in
outreach and
participation
excluded the
communities in
which CIT has
its lending
operations
(FLA, NY and
NJ) and from
which, on
information
and belief, it
collects
insured
deposits.
This is
makes a
mockery of
CRA,
explicitly
separating the
bank's deposit
taking from
its “CRA”
operations and
outreach. See
limited list
of contacts in
Appendix C,
and proof of
publication in
(only) the
Salt Lake
Tribute and
Deseret News.
Even in
its artificial
limited
assessment
area, CIT's
“New CRA
Assets” are
less than 1%
of its Assets.
While
still
improper, the
above provide
a motive for
CIT's attempt
to withhold
its CRA Plan
from the
public...
As to CIT's
October 8
letter, ICP
has already
timely
commented
“there is also
the question
of the
agreement the
FDIC reached
with IndyMac /
OneWest, and
whether
wannabe SIFI
CIT would
assume it, as
a windfall.
These are
important
questions
militating for
both the
required
extension of
the comment
period, and
for public
hearings.”
In the
October 8
letter, CIT
begins a
sentence on
page 3
“Clawback
provisions
exist for the
First Fed and
La Jolla
portfolios
[REDACTED.]”
CIT also
redacts, on
page 6,
information
related to the
OnWest /
IndyMac
Consent Order;
HAMP (Page 7);
deposits
collected over
the Internet
(Page 8);
Lending (Page
9); Governance
and Risk
Management
(page 10-12);
and Resolution
Plan (Page
12). CIT also
heavily
redacts what
it calls
“confidential
questions”
(pages 14-16),
and exhibits.
This
information
must be
released, and
the comment
period
extended.
In an
abundance of
caution, ICP
has submitted
a FOIA request
to this
effect.
The Fed's
secrecy is
endemic.
The head of
the FRBNY
since 2009,
William
Dudley, has
insisted that
supervision by
the Fed and
its regional
banks is
"completely in
the public
interest." He
cites, in
support of
this,
something he
calls
"horizontal"
supervision,
which to many
has the
context of
being supine.