Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IX— - POWERS AND DUTIES OF FEDERAL RESERVE BANKS › § 343
Federal Reserve banks may buy or lend against short-term business notes, drafts, and bills that come from real agricultural, industrial, or commercial deals. If one of its member banks signs the paper, that bank is treated as giving up demand, notice, and protest for its own signature. The Board of Governors decides what kinds of business paper qualify. Paper backed by staple farm products or other goods can qualify, and advances made by factors to producers of raw farm products can qualify. Paper meant only for investment or for trading stocks, bonds, or other securities does not qualify, except for U.S. Government bonds and notes. Any paper bought under this rule must have no more than 90 days left until it’s due, not counting any grace period. In rare emergency situations, the Board of Governors, by a vote of at least five members, can let any Federal Reserve bank buy or lend against such paper for participants in broad programs or facilities. Rates follow section 357. The Fed must be satisfied the paper is properly endorsed or secured, and must first get proof the borrower can’t get credit from other banks. After July 21, 2010, the Board must make rules with the Treasury to ensure emergency lending provides system liquidity, protects taxpayers with sufficient collateral and proper valuation, stops aiding failing or insolvent firms, and ends in an orderly way. Programs aimed at helping a single company avoid bankruptcy are not allowed as “broad-based.” The Board needs Treasury approval before starting such programs. The Board must report to Congress within 7 days after any emergency loan and give updates every 30 days, including who got help, amounts, terms, collateral values, fees, and expected taxpayer costs. If a borrower later becomes a covered financial company and the Fed bank takes a net loss, the Fed bank gets a claim for that loss with the same priority as the Treasury under section 210(b) of Dodd-Frank.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 343
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73