Title 12 › Chapter 46— GOVERNMENT SPONSORED ENTERPRISES › Subchapter I— SUPERVISION AND REGULATION OF ENTERPRISES › Part A— Financial Safety and Soundness Regulator › § 4516
The Director must charge yearly fees to the regulated companies to cover the agency’s reasonable costs. Those fees pay for exams, credit reviews, money to keep a working capital fund, and the windup of two old housing regulators under the 2008 Reform Act. Each enterprise pays a share based on its total assets. “Total assets” means on-balance-sheet assets, unpaid principal on any mortgage-backed securities not on the books, and other off‑balance obligations the Director counts. Fees are due twice a year, on October 1 and April 1. The Director can raise or adjust a company’s semiannual payments if it is not adequately capitalized, can charge an immediate extra assessment to cover shortfalls, and will credit or refund leftover amounts as needed (non-working-capital leftovers go toward next year’s fee; excess working-capital funds are returned at year end). Fees collected from enterprises or from Federal Home Loan Banks cannot exceed the costs that relate to them. The Director may deposit and use the collected fees like the Comptroller of the Currency does, and may ask the Treasury to invest unused amounts in U.S. government securities at market-based rates. The money is not treated as regular government appropriations and is not subject to apportionment. The Director may use these funds to pay staff and agency expenses. The Director must share financial plans and quarterly reports with OMB, and the agency must prepare yearly financial statements and keep proper accounting systems. The Comptroller General must audit the agency each year, get full access to records, report to Congress, and may hire auditors paid from agency funds to carry out the audit.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 4516
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60