Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 47— - COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BANKING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BANKING AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS › § 4703a
The Treasury will set up an Emergency Capital Investment Fund and run a program to put up to $9,000,000,000 into small banks, credit unions, and community lenders that serve low- and moderate-income areas hit hard by COVID‑19. The money can be used to buy preferred stock or similar investments, or subordinated debt if needed. The Secretary must start taking applications not later than the end of the 30‑day period beginning on December 27, 2020. Investments must be repaid within 10 years unless the Secretary sets other terms. For the first 10 years, required payments (dividends or interest) cannot exceed 2% per year and none are due in the first 24 months. If an institution increases lending into targeted low‑income, minority, rural, or underserved areas by 200–400% of the investment, its payment rate is capped at 1.25% per year, and if lending increases by more than 400% the rate is capped at 0.5% per year. Each institution may issue at most $250,000,000 under the program and must follow caps based on size (more than $2,000,000,000 in assets: up to 7.5% of assets; $500,000,000–$2,000,000,000: up to 15%; under $500,000,000: up to 22.5%). At least $4,000,000,000 is reserved for institutions with assets of not more than $2,000,000,000, including at least $2,000,000,000 for those with assets under $500,000,000. The Secretary will consult bank regulators, require applicants to show a lending plan (including that at least 30% of recent lending went to low‑ and moderate‑income or other targeted borrowers), set participant rules, limit executive pay and buybacks, bar certain covered public officials and related entities, and make institutions in Troubled Condition or under formal enforcement ineligible. New investment authority ends 6 months after the national emergency declared on March 13, 2020 is terminated. Congress provided $9,000,000,000 for the Fund for fiscal year 2021. Key defined terms, one line each: bank holding company — company that owns one or more banks (defined elsewhere); eligible institution — a low‑ and moderate‑income community financial institution that can join the program; Emergency Capital Investment Fund — the Treasury fund created to make these investments; low‑ and moderate‑income community financial institution — a community development financial institution or minority depository institution that is an insured depository, a bank holding company, a savings and loan holding company, or a federally insured credit union; minority — Black American, Native American, Hispanic American, Asian American, Native Alaskan, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander; minority depository institution — an institution recognized as such by law, by federal bank regulators, or listed on the FDIC’s Third Quarter 2020 list; Program — the Emergency Capital Investment Program; savings and loan holding company — defined elsewhere; Secretary — the Secretary of the Treasury.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 4703a
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73