ICP
Protested BNC
- High Point,
Now Fed Asks
Questions,
Here
By
Matthew R. Lee
NEW
YORK, August
24 -- The lack
of seriousness
in US bank
regulation
grows from the
relatively
smaller to the
largest banks
like Goldman
Sachs - down
to Bank of
North Carolina
(BNC), whose
proposed
acquisition of
High Point
Bank
Corporation
Inner City
Press has
challenged and
the Federal
Reserve has
asked
questions on,
and
BancorpSouth,
which Inner
City Press
protested for
discrimination
in 2014, and
has now been
charged by the
Department of
Justice and
CFPB.
On the
evening of
August 24, the
Federal
Reserve asked
BNC questions
about Inner
City Press'
protest,
including:
"The
public comment
submitted on
the proposed
merger
includes
assertions
that Home
Mortgage
Disclosure Act
data from
several
metropolitan
areas indicate
that both BNC
Bank and High
Point Bank had
unfavorable
levels of
mortgage
lending to
African
American and
Hispanic
individuals as
compared to
white
individuals.
-Directly
address the
assertions of
unfavorable
levels of
mortgage
lending to
those
population
segments
identified by
the commenter
in each
relevant
geographic
area
referenced in
the comments;
-Discuss
in detail the
outreach and
marketing
activities by
BNC Bank and
High Point
Bank,
including any
contemplated
changes to
those
activities
after
consummation
of the
proposal; and
-Describe
in detail the
fair lending
risk
management
policies and
procedures of
BNC Bank and
High Point
Bank,
including any
contemplated
changes to
these policies
and procedures
after
consummation
of the
proposal...
Discuss
any plans to
open, close,
or consolidate
any bank
branches in
connection
with the
proposal, or
separately
from the
proposal,
particularly
in low- and
moderate-income
(“LMI”) areas.
To the extent
that any
branches in
LMI areas
would be
closed,
discuss
management’s
plans to
mitigate the
impact of such
closures on
the affected
communities."
On
BNC, Inner
City Press /
Fair Finance
Watch has
raised to the
Federal
Reserve:
In the
Charleston MSA
in 2014 for
conventional
home purchase
loans, BNC
made 173 such
loans to
whites and
only SIX to
African
Americans, and
none to
Latinos. For
refinance
loans, it made
68 loans to
whites and
only ONE to an
African
American,
while denying
the
applications
of African
Americans 3.94
times more
frequently
than those of
whites.
Southcoast in
the Charleston
MSA in 2014
for
conventional
home purchase
loans made 136
such loans to
whites and
NONE to
African
Americans. For
refinance
loans,
Southcase made
35 loans to
whites and
only TWO to
African
Americans. To
combine these
two banks
would make
them worse.
In the
Greenville MSA
in 2013 for
home purchase
loans, BNC
made 117 such
loans to
whites and
only SIX to
African
Americans, and
only seven to
Latinos.
For refinance
loans, it made
31 loans to
whites and
only one to an
African
Americans and
none to
Latinos.
BNC
admits, as it
must, that it
is
below-market
in lending to
African
Americans, but
paradoxically
tries to use
that the fact
that it is
subject to a
compliance
order as its
defense to the
Fed.
To Fair
Finance Watch,
too. FFW asked
to see, in
writing, what
are BNC's CRA
plans going
forward. BNC
replied that
it is "unable
to share this
with you. It
is an internal
document that
is only shared
with our Board
of Directors
and the FDIC
(under the
Order)."
We'll have
more on this.
In
April 2014,
Inner City
Press
submitted a
protest to the
Federal
Reserve of the
"Applications
of
BancorpSouth
to merge with
Ouachita
Bancshares
Corporation
and thereby
indirectly
acquire
Ouachita
Independent
Bank, and with
Central
Community
Corporation,
and thereby
indirectly
acquire First
State Bank
Central Texas,
Austin, Texas
- Round Two."
Fair
Finance
Watch's
analysis to
the Fed showed
that "in the
Jackson MS MSA
for
conventional
home purchase
loans,
BancorpSouth
made 258 loans
to whites,
only 17 to
African
Americans and
five to
Latinos.
BancorpSouth's
denial rate
for whites was
7.4% while for
African
Americans it
was 25.8% --
3.49 times
higher. This
was troubling.
NOW,
more
troubling: in
2013 for
conventional
home purchase
loans in the
Jackson MS,
BancorpSouth's
denial rate
for whites was
4.5% while for
African
Americans it
was 26.4% --
now 5.87 times
higher.
In 2012 in the
Baton Rouge LA
MSA for
conventional
home purchase
loans in 2012,
BancorpSouth
made 60 such
loans to
whites; only
three to
African
Americans and
one to a
Latino.
NOW, more
troubling: in
2013 for
conventional
home purchase
loans in the
Baton Rouge
MSA,
BancorpSouth
was up to 72
loans to
whites - but
NONE to
African
Americans."
Now
BancorpSouth
is changed by
the government
with
"redlining by
placing its
branches in
the Memphis
area outside
of minority
neighborhoods
and directing
nearly all its
marketing away
from such
neighborhoods."
Meanwhile
documents
released to
Inner City
Press under
the Freedom of
Information
Act (FOIA)
show, is
inappropriately
bent on
helping Goldman
Sachs. The
Federal
Reserve
belatedly
responded to
Inner City
Press / Fair
Finance
Watch's
September 2,
2015, FOIA
request, with
some of its
internal
documents,
many heavily
redacted. FOIA
letter here;
FOIA
documents
released to
ICP here,
and embedded
below.
Even
as released
the documents
show that
Goldman Sachs
through its
law firm
Sullivan &
Cromwell
reached out to
Fed General
Counsel Scott
Alvarez in May
2015 about the
transaction,
and was
largely able
to vet it with
the Fed's
staff by July,
even receiving
an "additional
information"
request before
any
application
was filed.
Since the
public cannot
comment or ask
questions
before a
transaction is
announced,
this
"pre-review"
by the Fed in
essence cuts
public review
and
transparency
out of the
process. The
Fed's rules
against
ex-parte
communications
can't be
triggered
before there
is an
application.
But should Fed
review be
held, and
apparently
completed,
before there
is any public
notice?
The
deal was
publicly
announced on
August 13,
2015 and
Goldman Sachs
on August 18
submitted the
apparently
pre-approved
application.
Inner City
Press / Fair
Finance Watch
submitted a
comment and
FOIA request...
On
Goldman Sachs,
Federal
Reserve's
Initial FOIA
Response to
Inner City
Press on GE
Capital Bank
by Matthew
Russell Lee
On
October 20,
the Federal
Reserve asked
Goldman Sachs
five
questions, but
not on the
predatory
lending issues
raised... Only
this from
Goldman Sachs,
only
snail-mailed
by its
counsel:
Goldman
Sachs' 2d
Reply to Inner
City Press, As
Fed Withholds
FOIA Documents
by Matthew
Russell Lee
On
October 13
Inner City
Press
published the
Federal
Reserve's
communications
with the CIT
Group's
outside
counsel,
which shows
how the
release of
public
documents is
allowed by the
Fed to be
delayed. CIT
made
disingenuous
requests for
confidential
treatment of
information
that could not
be withheld,
without any
repercussion.
They were
rewarded with
FOIA appeal
denials by Fed
Governor Jay
Powell; now
Goldman is
trying to
withhold
information
that should be
public. Will
there be any
repercussion
or
accountability?
Watch this
site.
Revealed:
Federal
Reserve Asking
CIT Group
About Inner
City Press
FOIA Request:
Now Goldman
Sachs? by
Matthew
Russell Lee