Activities monitoring



Consumer Satisfaction Questionnaire, Federal Reserve Consumer Help - Consumer Survey, and Consumer Complaint Form
The Consumer Satisfaction Questionnaire (FR 1379a) consists of six general questions in which consumers are asked about their dealings with Federal Reserve staff and the customer service provided, if they were satisfied with the handling of their complaint investigations, and whether the Federal Reserve's response was clear and received in a timely manner. The Federal Reserve Consumer Help (FRCH) - Consumer Survey (FR 1379b) consists of five questions that ask consumers to rate the performance of the service provided by the FRCH. The Consumer Complaint Form (FR 1379c) enables consumers to submit an online consumer complaint or inquiry via the FRCH web site and consists of three sections: consumer contact information, institution information, and consumer complaint description.


Annual Daylight Overdraft Capital Report for U.S. Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks
The FR 2225 report requests information needed to identify the foreign bank respondent and its fiscal year-end and to determine its capital and assets for purposes of daylight overdraft monitoring. The capital and assets items include the following: capital for the foreign bank parent, capital used by any direct or indirect subsidiary of the respondent that has its own net debit cap, the foreign bank's worldwide capital base calculation, the bank's worldwide assets, and the exchange rate used in the calculation.


Suspicious Activity Report
This report must be completed by a financial institution, including a state member bank, a bank holding company and its nonbank subsidiaries, an Edge or an agreement corporation and a domestic branch or agency of a foreign bank, when it knows of or suspects criminal activity that violates a federal criminal statute involving, among other things, financial crimes, money laundering, and violations of the Bank Secrecy Act or when it identifies any suspicious financial transactions. Suspicious financial transactions include transactions that the financial institution suspects involve funds derived from illegal activities; that were conducted for the purpose of hiding or disguising funds from illegal activities; or that were designed to evade the recordkeeping or reporting requirement of the Bank Secrecy Act. Suspicious financial transactions also include transactions that the financial institution believes are suspicious for any other reason.


Notifications Related to Community Development and Public Welfare Investments of State Member Banks Pursuant to Section 208.22 of Regulation H
Regulation H requires state member banks (SMBs) engaging in permissible community development and public welfare investments provide notice of such investments to the Federal Reserve Bank in their District. The statutory provision authorizes SMBs to make investments designed primarily to promote the public welfare to the extent permissible under state law and subject to regulation by the Board. Regulation H permits SMBs to make certain public welfare investments without prior approval so long as the aggregate of such investments does not exceed 5 percent of the capital stock and surplus of the SMB, the bank is well capitalized and well managed, and the investment does not expose the SMB to liability beyond the amount of the investment.


The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act/Loan Application Register
This report takes the form of a register of mortgage and home improvement loan applications and their disposition during a calendar year.


Capital Assessments and Stress Testing
This report annually collects large bank holding companies' (BHCs) quantitative projections of balance sheet, income, losses, and capital across a range of macroeconomic scenarios and qualitative information on methodologies used to develop internal projections of capital across scenarios. The BHCs are required to complete the following FR Y-14A schedules: the Summary, Macro Scenario, Counterparty Credit Risk (CCR), Basel III/Dodd-Frank, and Regulatory Capital Instruments. The number of schedules each BHC completes is subject to materiality thresholds and certain other criteria.


Capital Assessments and Stress Testing
This monthly report comprises two loan-level collections, one account- and portfolio-level collection, and one detailed address-matching collection to supplement the two loan-level collections. The bank holding companies (BHCs) are required to complete the following FR Y-14M schedules: Domestic First Lien Closed-End 1-4 Family Residential Mortgage, Domestic Home Equity Residential Mortgage, Domestic Credit Card, and Address Matching. The number of schedules each BHC completes is subject to materiality thresholds.


Capital Assessments and Stress Testing
This report collects granular data on bank holding companies' (BHCs) various asset classes and pre-provision net revenue (PPNR) for the reporting period. The BHCs are required to complete the following FR Y-14Q schedules: the Securities Risk; Retail Risk; PPNR; Wholesale Risk; Trading, Private Equity, and Other Fair Value Assets; Basel III/Dodd-Frank; Regulatory Capital Instruments; and Operational Risk. The number of schedules each BHC completes is subject to materiality thresholds.


Recordkeeping and Disclosure Requirements Associated with Loans Secured by Real Estate Located in Flood Hazard Areas Pursuant to 208.25 Regulation H
Regulation H requires state member banks to notify a borrower and servicer (person responsible for receiving scheduled payments from a borrower or making payments of principal and interest and other payments from the amounts received from the borrower) when a loan is secured by real estate that is determined to be in a designated flood hazard area. For such loans, the state member bank must then notify the borrower and servicer whether flood insurance is available. The state member bank must also notify the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of the identity of, and any change of, the servicer of the loan. Last, the bank must retain a copy of the Standard Flood Hazard Determination Form used to determine whether the property securing a loan is in a designated flood hazard area.

 
Last update: September 8, 2007