Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 47— - COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BANKING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BANKING AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS › § 4713a
The Treasury Secretary must back bonds or notes issued by approved community development lenders when the money is used to make or refinance loans to certified community development financial institutions for community or economic development, including work in low-income or underserved rural areas. The backing covers verified losses of principal, interest, and any call premium, counts as full U.S. credit, can be transferred to the capital markets, and cannot last more than 30 years. The Secretary can issue up to 10 guarantees each calendar year, each guarantee must be at least $100,000,000, and the total guaranteed in a fiscal year cannot exceed $1,000,000,000. Key terms and main rules: an eligible community development financial institution is a Treasury-certified CDFI that applied for or got a loan under the program. An eligible purpose is a community or economic development use listed in the law, including rural low-income work. A guarantee is the written Treasury promise to cover losses. A loan is any credit made under the program. A master servicer is an approved firm that oversees other servicers; the Secretary must decide approval within 90 days. A program administrator handles approvals and monitoring. A qualified issuer is a CDFI (or its designated issuer) that meets Treasury rules, gives a capital plan, and certifies the uses. At least 90% of guaranteed bond proceeds must go to loans (measured yearly after the first year). No more than 10% may be kept in a relending account, and each qualified issuer must set up a risk-share pool equal to 3% of the outstanding guaranteed amount. Proceeds cannot pay fees (except issuance costs), salaries, or political or lobbying activities. Issuers must pay an annual fee of 10 basis points (0.10%) on unpaid principal to cover Treasury costs. Funds are authorized to be appropriated; fees may be used if appropriations fall short. Investments in these guaranteed bonds do not count for Community Reinvestment Act exams. Rules were to be written within 1 year of September 27, 2010, put into effect within 2 years, and the authority ends on September 30, 2014.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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12 U.S.C. § 4713a
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83