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What it would take to create a Seattle muni bank

Demands are read at a locked Broadway Wells Fargo during a 2017 ‘Divest the Globe’ protest

With reporting from Seattle City Council Insight

Continuing its push to fully divest from Wells Fargo and break free of large financial corporations, City Council members Kshama Sawant and Mike O’Brien have released a report detailing what it would take for Seattle to open and operate a city-owned bank. The report documents the opportunity — and the significant legal, logistical, regulatory and financial challenges the plan would face.

“From their financial backing of environmentally devastating projects like the Dakota Access Pipeline to their brazen discriminatory and gouging practices against communities of color and low-income people, for-profit mega-banks like Wells Fargo are clearly not the bank for the City of Seattle,” Sawant said in a statement released with the new report. “My office and community activists are committed to taking the next steps outlined in this thorough feasibility study to create a public bank for our city.”

The full report from the study is below.

The study is born of the failure of the attempt to remove the city’s accounts from Wells Fargo beginning in 2017 over the company’s business practices and financial involvement in the Dakota Access Pipeline. Sawant and the council voted for divestiture but a City Hall bidding process found there weren’t other banks capable of replacing the financial giant.

HR&A Advisors, the company that did the municipal bank study, spoke to local bankers to understand why the city’s call for proposals generated no responses:

Conversations with local bankers suggest that the lack of responses resulted from the demands of the City’s banking activity, the challenge of responding to each module separately, and stringent requirements such as an “Outstanding” Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) rating.

HR&A notes that only two banks in Washington state currently have “outstanding” CRA ratings: Community First Bank and Farmington State Bank, both based in rural eastern Washington.

The study was based around two goals for the formation of a Seattle muni bank:

  1. Independence from the questionable business practices of Wells Fargo and other large financial corporations in how it manages its own money;
  2. The ability to provide retail banking services, including deposits and loans, to the public in order to help the city meet its racial and social justice goals.

HR&A broke these goals apart, establishing a “baseline” model that accomplishes the first goal, and a second model that adds in retail activities.

Banks — even publicly-owned ones –are highly regulated, as they should be to protect taxpayers’ and depositors’ money. Public banks are not exempted from banking regulations, and indeed have some additional hurdles they need to jump. Nothing in state law either explicitly allows for or exempts cities from creating a bank to provide itself banking service, so under “home rule”  the city has the authority to do so. However, the City Charter would need to be amended to add a public bank as an authorized function of city government; that requires City Council approval and a vote of the people.

There are several other state requirements that must be followed. State law specifies that all public funds must be deposited in a certified public depositary, so a municipal bank would need to be certified by the state Public Deposit Protection Commission (PDPC). Doing so would require it to pledge collateral equivalent to the uninsured public assets that it intended to hold, or to obtain insurance for its assets in holding (a topic we’ll come back to later). That means the city would have to pledge as collateral the maximum amount of money it would have on deposit at any given time (which ranges from $28 million to over $300 million). The collateral — which needs to be liquid assets that can be converted to cash quickly — would either need to be separate assets in another financial institution, or the deposits themselves. If the collateral is the deposits, then none of it could be loaned out or invested in anything other than liquid assets.

Then the city would need to obtain a banking charter from the state DFI, in the process establishing the bank’s board, management and governance structure, capital structure,  premises and fixed assets, information systems, business plan, an ability to achieve financial feasibility, a commitment to maintain capital levels above the regulatory minimums, and an ability to meet community needs. An important part of obtaining DFI’s approval will be demonstrating how the bank’s governance will be shielded from political influence by city government; most of the bank’s directors will need to be independent from city government, and personnel decisions will need to be apolitical. Further, the bank will need to have a clear legal division from the city to protect depositors (even if the city is the only one), so it will need to be a separate entity such as a public authority. And despite the independence, the city will need to make a binding commitment to support the bank’s financial health, particularly in the first ten years when it is likely to lose money for several of them.

Once the DFI charter is obtained, the bank can then seek access to the Federal Reserve payment system, through which all U.S. banks clear transactions. The HR&A study notes that in the past the Federal Reserve has only granted access to public banks after “lengthy scrutiny.”

All of that is possible but it creates an enormous amount of bureaucracy and overhead, and will be expensive.

Proponents of a municipal bank throw around $3 billion as the size of Seattle’s business, which conjures up images of that much money sitting in a bank account, drawing a low interest rate and allowing the bank to make loans and other investments.

But the reality is much different.

$3 billion is approximately the total amount of deposit transactions that the city makes in one year. At the end of any given day, the city’s bank account may hold a balance of somewhere between $28 million and $325 million, with an average of $173 million. But — and this is very important — every day all but $3 million is “swept” into the city’s “investment account” (basically a money market account that gets a slightly better interest rate than a generic savings account). So there are billions of dollars moving through the bank account over the course of a year, but very little stays there for more than a day.

Banks make money two ways: from transaction fees, and from the “spread” between what it pays depositors in interest and what it earns from lending and investing depositors’ money.

According to the HR&A study, the average spread for a bank is 1.31%. In case you’re curious, 1.31% of $3 million is $39,300. Wells Fargo’s banking services contract with the City of Seattle isn’t about access to deposits; it’s about transaction fees, for which the city pays the bank $150,000 to $200,000 annually.

Wells Fargo handles a wide variety of transactions for the city, including electronic funds transfers; cash, check and ATM deposits; cash vault deposits; account information and reporting; merchant banking services; commercial card services; and cash management. At Wells Fargo’s scale, it’s easy to make the fixed overhead investment in building the capability to do all of that because it will be heavily utilized across its entire customer base, and even if it isn’t making money from the city’s deposits, it can make a profit from its transactions. But a municipal bank with only one customer would have great difficulty covering the overhead costs for all of those transaction services, and without the ability to profit from a large pool of deposits, it won’t be able to keep the business in the black. It would certainly cost much more than $200,000 annually for a municipal bank to serve the city’s transactions if that was its only customer.

What about going retail?
The financial picture changes significantly if the municipal bank branches out to handling retail deposits and loans. Businesses often tend to run heavy on transactions and low on accumulated balances, but individual consumers are just the opposite. That could make for a nice complement to the city’s account.

But, retail banking is a completely different world, with its own requirements, restrictions, and legal barriers.

Barring a change to the state Constitution — requiring legislative action and a vote of the people — a municipal bank can probably only loan money to low-income individuals. And that’s a great public service, but without a larger, more diverse population to balance out the risk and return, it’s not financially viable. This is directly akin to the ACA’s health insurance pools: if you take all the healthy people out of the pool, the system falls apart.

Second, in order to get a state banking charter,  again the bank would need to provide liquid collateral equivalent to somewhere between 50% and 100% of the total deposits it accepts. The better the bank is “capitalized” (meaning it has its own money too, either from initial investment or from business profits) the lower the collateral requirement. So in order for a municipal bank to lend money to anyone, the city would need to make a substantial initial investment of equity into the bank to cover both startup costs and to “capitalize” it.

Third: in order to obtain a banking charter from the state DFI that allows it to accept retail deposits, a municipal bank will probably need to get FDIC insurance. The FDIC has never granted insurance coverage to a public bank.

The HR&A study points out that the FDIC considers “management quality” to be the single most important factor in determining whether to insure a bank’s deposits. The city would need to prove that the bank has full political independence (meaning that the City Council and Mayor can’t influence loan decisions), while at the same time proving that the city is committed to financial support of the bank for as long as it takes to reach self-sufficiency. The study also suggests that the city might have a difficult time making the case that Seattle is underserved by its existing banks.

The city might try to do an end-run around the FDIC insurance requirement by self-insuring deposits with the “full faith and credit of the city.” Other public banks have taken this approach, but those banks don’t accept retail deposits. Also, doing so financially burdens the city’s assets and may lower the city’s top-notch bond rating. If that happened, then the city would get less favorable interest rates when it issues bonds, costing it money in the long run. The bank could also try to get private insurance for deposits, but no banks in the U.S. currently do that so it would be setting a precedent.

Finally: there are hopes that a municipal bank would be able to provide banking services to the cannabis industry, as existing banks refuse to do so. However, a municipal bank would face the same problem: since selling marijuana is against federal law, the Federal Reserve will not grant access to its banking transaction clearance system to any institution that provides service to the cannabis industry.

Summing it up
While technically there are no insurmountable steps to starting a municipal bank to handle only the city’s own deposits, it will be costly, it will take years, and it won’t provide money to invest back in the community without large-scale changes to the way the city manages its investments and the return it expects to get from them. And there are barriers to a municipal bank providing retail banking services that are probably insurmountable; even if they aren’t, it would take even more years to run the gauntlet and the resulting business would be so constrained as to be financially infeasible.

 

Further, it places the Mayor, the City Council, and the city at risk of being sued for breach of their fiscal responsibilities by taking a large financial risk and accepting lower investment returns on city resources.

But the study does suggest some alternative paths.

One that O’Brien champions is re-issuing the proposal for new providers of banking services to the city using learnings from HR&A’s discussions with local bankers to make it more attractive. However, the new call would need to lower the bar for the Community Reinvestment Act rating, a bitter pill for the City Council to swallow.

Another option is to wait to see what the State of Washington does.

Olympia is developing a business plan for its own public bank, that would be open to participation from local jurisdictions. A state public bank might have an easier time pushing through the necessary changes to laws and regulations to make it feasible.

Meanwhile, Sawant has introduced an item into the budget development process for 2019 to request the development of a business plan for a Seattle municipal bank by June 1, 2019. Given the results of the study, a realistic plan — no matter the deadline — will be a major challenge.

Here is the full “Public Bank Feasibility Study” report:

 

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9 Comments
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Jim98122x
Jim98122x
5 years ago

This is a great and very informative article.

Fisher
Fisher
5 years ago
Reply to  Jim98122x

Totally agree. Appreciate the thorough view into an interesting proposal. Thanks for the reporting.

Mark Atwood
5 years ago

Just use one of the existing credit unions.

City of Seattle can’t fill potholes, and can’t paint a bike lane without multimillion dollar budget overruns. What makes anyone think it could start a bank.

Kevin Schofield
5 years ago
Reply to  Mark Atwood

Unfortunately, credit unions don’t meet the state requirements for financial institutions to accept public funds.

Frank B.
Frank B.
5 years ago

You are absolutely correct stay out of the Banking business
This will cost the Citizens millions of dollars. For what.

Jim98122x
Jim98122x
5 years ago
Reply to  Frank B.

“The HR&A study points out that the FDIC considers “management quality” to be the single most important factor in determining whether to insure a bank’s deposits.”

Ahem

dflt
dflt
5 years ago
Reply to  Jim98122x

Indeed

RWK
RWK
5 years ago

The fact that this is being promoted by Sawant and O’Brien is all you need to know to oppose it. For them, it’s all about antipathy towards “big banks” and not about creating something that Seattleites need or want.

Trotsky
Trotsky
5 years ago

Yeah. We should probably stay out of this business…I mean…unless they want Scott Kubly to run it. Or perhaps Councilperson O’Briens wife. She got people to work for free for her!