Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER X— - POWERS AND DUTIES OF MEMBER BANKS › § 371c–1
Banks and their subsidiaries must only do business with their affiliates on terms that are basically the same as, or no worse than, the terms they would get with outside companies. If there are no similar outside deals, they must use terms they would honestly offer to nonaffiliated companies. This rule covers several kinds of deals, such as covered transactions with an affiliate, sales of securities or other assets (including repurchase agreements), payments or services under contracts or leases, situations where an affiliate acts as agent or gets fees, and deals with a third party when an affiliate has a financial interest or takes part. A deal is treated as with an affiliate if any money from it is used to benefit or is sent to the affiliate. A bank or its subsidiary must not buy assets from an affiliate when acting as a fiduciary unless the trust or other fiduciary document allows it, a court allows it, or the governing law allows it. A bank must not knowingly buy a security during an underwriting if an affiliate is a main underwriter, unless the bank’s directors approve before the public sale and find it a sound investment. A bank may not advertise or promise that it will cover an affiliate’s debts. The Board can make rules and, if the FDIC does not object in writing within 60 days, can grant exemptions or exclude certain subsidiaries. Definitions: "affiliate," "bank," "subsidiary," "person," "security," and "covered transaction" are as defined in section 371c.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 371c–1
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73