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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SFC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/02/07
3/13/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Establish Linked Deposit System
SB
CS/578/SFC/aSFC/aSFl
ANALYST Schardin
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($176.4)
($352.8) Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to HB 471
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)
State Treasurer’s Office (STO)
Economic Development Department (EDD)
Regulation and Licensing Department (RLD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl Amendment
The Senate Floor amendment to the Senate Finance Committee substitute for Senate Bill 578
strikes the entire Senate Finance Committee amendment, which was adopted erroneously and did
not synchronize with the substitute.
The Senate Floor amendment also changes the definition of a “financially at risk rural
community" to include municipalities with populations up to 3,500. The original bill required a
community’s population to be less than 2,600 to participate. EDD expects this amendment will
allow about 10 to 15 additional communities to participate in the linked deposit program.
Synopsis of SFC Amendment
The Senate Finance Committee amendments to the Senate Finance Committee substitute for
Senate Bill 578 do not synchronize with the committee substitute. LFC cannot provide an
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2
analysis of the amendments because of the extensive technical issues.
Synopsis of Original Bill
The Senate Finance Committee substitute for Senate Bill 578 creates the linked deposit program,
which would allow the State Treasurer to invest up to 14 percent, not to exceed $49 million, of
state deposits in qualified depository institutions located in financially at risk rural communities.
No more than $10 million could be deposited in any one qualified depository institution. The
State Treasurer will be authorized to accept a rate of return on such deposits that is up to 1
percent below the market rate set by the state board of finance.
Qualified depository institutions are defined as insured banks, trust institutions or credit unions.
To qualify as a financially at risk rural community a community must have no more than one
insured bank, thrift institution, or credit union; a population less than 2,600; and either a
population that declined between the last two decennial censuses or a median household income
less than 80 percent of the state median.
The committee substitute will require the director of the financial institutions division of RLD to
promulgate rules regarding eligibility criteria for qualified depository institutions, application
procedures for participation in the program, and verification criteria to determine that a
participating institution is meeting the banking service needs of its community.
The effective date of these provisions is July 1, 2007.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
EDD and DFA believe it will take about three years for enough financial institutions in New
Mexico to participate in the linked deposit program to exhaust the $49 million cap. It is
estimated that STO will deposit 1/3 of the allowed $49 million in qualified depository
institutions in FY08, 2/3 of the maximum in FY09, and the full $49 million in FY10 and beyond.
The committee substitute states that the treasurer may accept a rate of return that is not more than
1 percent below the market rate (which is set by the State Board of Finance). That Board of
Finance interest rate is the rate earned by the State Treasurer’s CD portfolio. From FY00 to
FY06, the rate of return on the treasurer’s CD portfolio was 8 basis points below the average
return on the total portfolio. Assuming that the rate of return on linked deposit program
investments will be 108 basis points below what would otherwise be earned on the STO
portfolio, interest earnings will be $176.4 thousand lower in FY08, $352.8 thousand lower in
FY09, and $529.2 thousand lower in FY10 and beyond. This fiscal impact estimate is rough as it
depends on participation in the program as well as the amount by which STO rate of return is
lower due to the program.
STO assumes that lost interest earnings will accrue only to the general fund. However, interest
could be lost to local governments participating in the local government investment pool (LGIP),
the state’s permanent funds, and the state’s self-earning accounts (see Technical Issues).
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
This committee substitute follows a recommendation made by the Rural Bank Task Force in
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summer 2006 after Wells Fargo announced it was closing the only banks located in Roy, Vaughn
and Wagon Mound. Later, First National Bank announced it would open branches in Roy and
Wagon Mound, while Everyone’s Federal Credit Union opened a branch in Vaughn.
Proponents of the committee substitute believe allowing state deposits in qualified financial
institutions will prevent closure of banks from leaving New Mexico’s small communities without
any banking services. EDD states that closure of a small community’s only bank can
dramatically hasten a the local economy’s decline.
DFA asserts that the deposits authorized by this committee substitute will not be high-risk
investments because participating depository institutions will have to follow surety requirements
established in statute and will need to meet collateral requirements established by the State Board
of Finance. However, LFC believes that since some rural banks may be required to provide only
50 percent collateral, investment in them does increase STO portfolio risk somewhat.
The State Treasurer is charged to invest state balances in a manner that preserves investment
principal, provides adequate liquidity for state expenditure needs, and provides the maximum
return possible while ensuring safety and liquidity.
STO is currently authorized to deposit up to $350 million in general fund balances in certificates
of deposit (CDs) at New Mexico financial institutions at a rate of return set by the State Board of
Finance. This CD program is currently the only economic development oriented investment
currently made by STO. The committee substitute would add a second economic development
arena to state treasurer investments.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
STO recently adopted a general fund performance benchmark that is a weighted average of 15
percent zero to one year treasuries, 70 percent one to five year federal agency securities, and 15
percent one to five year federal agency securities (option only). If the treasurer chooses to
deposit up to $49 million in financial institutions that qualify for the linked deposit at a rate of
return 1 percent below the market rate set by the State Board of Finance, overall returns will be
lower and it will be more difficult to meet or exceed this benchmark.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The director of the financial institutions division of RLD will be required to promulgate rules to
implement the linked deposit program including eligibility criteria, application procedures, and
verification that participating depository institutions are meeting the banking service needs of
their community.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
The Senate Finance Committee substitute for Senate Bill 578 is similar to House Bill 471.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The Senate Finance Committee amendment to the Senate Finance Committee substitute could
not be analyzed because the amendments do not synchronize with the committee substitute.
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RLD believes the statutory reference to Section 6-10-15 NMSA 1978 on page 2, line 13 of the
committee substitute should be amended to reference Section 6-10-10 NMSA 1978. While
Section 6-10-15 NMSA 1978 pertains to collateral requirements for a bank or savings and loan
associations to qualify to hold deposits of the state treasurer, Section 6-10-10(A) NMSA 1978
reads,
“A. Upon the certification or designation of a bank, savings and loan association or
credit union whose deposits are insured by an agency of the United States to receive
public money on deposit, the state treasurer and county or municipal treasurers who have
on hand any public money by virtue of their offices shall make deposit of that money in
banks and savings and loan associations, and may make deposit of that money in credit
unions whose deposits are insured by an agency of the United States, designated by the
authority authorized by law to so designate to receive the deposits of all money thereafter
received or collected by the treasurers."
Because trust institutions are prohibited from accepting deposits unless they are departments of
insured banks (Section 58-1-76 NMSA 1978), RLD recommends amending page 2, lines 11
though 13 to read, “‘qualified depository institution’ means an insured bank, trust department of
an insured bank or credit union qualified pursuant to Section 6-10-10(A) NMSA 1978."
The definition of “state deposits" as any public funds under control of the state treasurer or the
state treasurer’s designee is vague and should be clarified. The state treasurer accepts deposits
from the general fund, the state’s self-earning accounts, local governments, and the state’s
permanent funds. This definition will determine which types of deposits can be invested in rural
banks, and subsequently, will determine the funds to which the fiscal impact of the committee
substitute will accrue.
SS/mt