Petitioners in No. 61, an association of open-end investment
companies and several individual such companies, attack (1)
portions of the Comptroller of the Currency's Regulation 9,
purporting to authorize banks to operate collective investment
funds, as violative of the Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933 and
(2) the Comptroller's approval given First National City Bank to
operate a collective investment fund. Petitioner in No. 59 seeks
review of a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) order
exempting that fund from certain provisions of the Investment
Company Act of 1940. The District Court concluded in No. 61 that
the challenged provisions of Regulation 9 were invalid. The Court
of Appeals, after consolidating the cases, held that the
Comptroller's and the SEC's actions were consonant with the
relevant statutes, and affirmed the SEC's order and reversed the
District Court.
Held:
1. Petitioners in No. 61 do not lack standing to challenge
whether national banks may legally enter a field in competition
with them.
Data Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.
S. 150. Pp.
401 U. S.
620-621.
2. The operation of a collective investment fund of the kind
approved by the Comptroller, that is in direct competition with the
mutual fund industry, involves a bank in the underwriting, issuing,
selling, and distributing of securities in violation of
§§ 16 and 21 of the Glass-Steagall Act. Pp.
401 U. S.
621-639.
136 U.S.App.D.C. 241, 420 F.2d 83, reversed in No. 61, and
vacated in No. 59.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BLACK,
DOUGLAS, BRENNAN, WHITE, and MARSHALL, JJ., joined. HARLAN,
Page 401 U. S. 618
J.,
post, p.
401 U. S. 639,
and BLACKMUN, J.,
post, p.
401 U. S. 642,
filed dissenting opinion. BURGER, C.J., took no part in the
consideration or decision of these cases.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
These companion cases involve a double barreled assault upon the
efforts of a national bank to go into the business of operating a
mutual investment fund. The petitioners in No. 61 are an
association of open-end investment companies and several individual
such companies. They brought an action in the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia, attacking portions of
Regulation 9 issued by the Comptroller of the
Page 401 U. S. 619
Currency, [
Footnote 1] on
the ground that this Regulation, in purporting to authorize banks
to establish and operate collective investment funds, sought to
permit activities prohibited to national banks or their affiliates
by various provisions of the Glass-Steagall Banking Act of 1933, 48
Stat. 162. [
Footnote 2] The
petitioners also specifically attacked the Comptroller's approval
of the application of First National City Bank of New York for
permission to establish and operate a collective investment fund.
In No. 59, the National Association of Securities Dealers filed a
petition in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit seeking review of an order of the Securities and
Exchange Commission that partially exempted the collective
investment fund of First National City Bank of New York from
various provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940. [
Footnote 3]
In No. 61, the District Court concluded that the challenged
provisions of Regulation 9 were invalid under the Glass-Steagall
Act. [
Footnote 4] The
Comptroller and First National City Bank appealed from this
decision, and the appeal was consolidated with the petition for
review in No. 59. The Court of Appeals held that the actions taken
by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Comptroller were
fully consonant with the statutes committed to their regulatory
supervision. Accordingly, it affirmed the order of the Commission
and reversed the judgment of the District Court. [
Footnote 5] We granted certiorari to consider
important questions presented under federal regulatory
Page 401 U. S. 620
statutes. [
Footnote 6] For
the reasons that follow, we hold Regulation 9 invalid insofar as it
authorizes the sale of interests in an investment fund of the type
established by First National City Bank pursuant to the
Comptroller's approval. This disposition makes it unnecessary to
consider the propriety of the action of the Securities and Exchange
Commission in affording this fund exemption from certain of the
provisions of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
I
In No. 61, it is urged at the outset that petitioners lack
standing to question whether national banks may legally enter a
field in competition with them. This contention is foreclosed by
Data Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.
S. 150. There, we held that companies that offered data
processing services to the general business community had standing
to seek judicial review of a ruling by the Comptroller that
national banks could make data processing services available to
other banks and to bank customers. We held that data processing
companies were sufficiently injured by the competition that the
Comptroller had authorized to create a case or controversy. The
injury to the petitioners in the instant case is indistinguishable.
We also concluded that Congress did not intend
"to preclude judicial review of administrative rulings by the
Comptroller as to the legitimate scope of activities available to
national banks under [the National Bank Act]."
397 U.S. at
397 U. S. 157.
This is precisely the review that the petitioners have sought in
this case. Finally, we concluded that Congress had arguably
legislated against the competition that the petitioners sought to
challenge, and from which flowed their injury. We noted that
whether Congress had indeed prohibited such competition was a
question for the merits. In the
Page 401 U. S. 621
discussion that follows in the balance of this opinion, we deal
with the merits of the petitioners' contentions, and conclude that
Congress did legislate against the competition that the petitioners
challenge. There can be no real question, therefore, of the
petitioners' standing in the light of the Data Processing case.
See also Arnold Tours v. Camp, 400 U. S.
45.
II
The issue before us is whether the Comptroller of the Currency
may, consistently with the banking laws, authorize a national bank
to offer its customers the opportunity to invest in a stock fund
created and maintained by the bank. Before 1963, national banks
were prohibited by administrative regulation from offering this
service. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
which until 1962 had regulatory jurisdiction over all the trust
activities of national banks, allowed the collective investment of
trust assets only for "the investment of funds held for true
fiduciary purposes." The applicable regulation, Regulation F,
specified that "the operation of such Common Trust Funds as
investment trusts for other than strictly fiduciary purposes is
hereby prohibited." The Board consistently ruled that it was
improper for a bank to use
"a Common Trust Fund as an investment trust attracting
money-seeking investment alone and to embark upon what would be in
effect the sale of participations in a Common Trust Fund to the
public as investments."
26 Fed. Reserve Bull. 393 (1940);
see also 42
Fed.Reserve Bull. 228 (1956); 41 Fed.Reserve Bull. 142 (1955).
In 1962, Congress transferred jurisdiction over most of the
trust activities of national banks from the Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System to the Comptroller of the Currency,
without modifying any provision
Page 401 U. S. 622
of substantive law. Pub.L. 87-722, 76 Stat. 668, 12 U.S.C.
§ 92a. The Comptroller thereupon solicited suggestions for
improving the regulations applicable to trust activities.
Subsequently, new regulations were proposed which expressly
authorized the collective investment of monies delivered to the
bank for investment management, so-called managing agency accounts.
These proposed regulations were officially promulgated in 1963 with
changes not material here. [
Footnote 7] In 1965, the First National City Bank of New
York submitted for the Comptroller's approval a plan for the
collective investment of managing agency accounts. The Comptroller
promptly approved the plan, and it is now in operation. This plan,
which departs in some respects from the plan envisaged by the
Comptroller's Regulation, is expected, the briefs tell us, to be a
model for other banks which decide to offer their customers a
collective investment service. [
Footnote 8]
Under the plan, the bank customer tenders between $10,000 and
$500,000 to the bank, together with an authorization making the
bank the customer's managing agent. The customer's investment is
added to the fund, and a written evidence of participation is
issued which expresses in "units of participation" the customer's
proportionate interest in fund assets. Units of participation are
freely redeemable, and transferable to anyone who has executed a
managing agency agreement with the bank. The fund is registered as
an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The
bank is
Page 401 U. S. 623
the underwriter of the fund's units of participation within the
meaning of that Act. The fund has filed a registration statement
pursuant to the Securities ,Act of 1933. The fund is supervised by
a five-member committee elected annually by the participants
pursuant to the Investment Company Act of 1940. The Securities and
Exchange Commission has exempted the fund from the Investment
Company Act to the extent that a majority of this committee may be
affiliated with the bank, and it is expected that a majority always
will be officers in the bank's trust and investment division.
[
Footnote 9] The actual custody
and investment of fund assets is carried out by the bank as
investment advisor pursuant to a management agreement. Although the
Investment Company Act requires that this management agreement be
approved annually by the committee, including a majority of the
unaffiliated members, or by the participants, it is expected that
the bank will continue to be investment advisor.
III
Section 16 of the Glass-Steagall Act as amended, 12 U.S.C.
§ 24, Seventh, provides that the
"business of dealing in securities and stock [by a national
bank] shall be limited to purchasing and selling such securities
and stock without recourse, solely upon the order, and for the
account of, customers, and in no case for its own account. . . .
Except as hereinafter provided or otherwise permitted by law,
nothing herein contained shall authorize the purchase by [a
national bank] for its own account of any shares of stock of any
corporation. [
Footnote
10]"
The petitioners
Page 401 U. S. 624
contend that a purchase of stock by a bank's investment fund is
a purchase of stock by a bank for its own account in violation of
this section.
Section 16 also provides that a national bank "shall not
underwrite any issue of securities or stock." And § 21 of the
same Act, 12 U.S.C. § 378(a), provides that
"it shall be unlawful -- (1) For any person, firm, corporation,
association, business trust, or other similar organization, engaged
in the business of issuing, underwriting, selling, or distributing,
at wholesale or retail, or through syndicate participation, stocks,
bonds, debentures, notes, or other securities, to engage at the
same time to any extent whatever in the business of [deposit
banking]."
The petitioners contend that the creation and operation of an
investment fund by a bank which offers to its customers the
opportunity to purchase an interest in the fund's assets
constitutes the issuing, underwriting, selling, or distributing of
securities or stocks in violation of these sections.
The questions raised by the petitioners are novel and
substantial. National banks were granted trust powers in 1913.
Federal Reserve Act, § 11, 38 Stat. 261. The first common
trust fund was organized in 1927, and such funds were expressly
authorized by the Federal Reserve Board by Regulation F,
promulgated in 1937. Report on Commingled or Common Trust Funds
Administered by Banks and Trust Companies, H.R.Doc. No. 476, 76th
Cong., 2d Sess., 4-5 (1939). For at least a generation, therefore,
there has been no reason to doubt that a national bank can,
consistently with the banking laws, commingle trust funds on the
one hand, and act as a managing agent on the other. No provision of
the banking
Page 401 U. S. 625
law suggests that it is improper for a national bank to pool
trust assets, or to act as a managing agent for individual
customers, or to purchase stock for the account of its customers.
But the union of these powers gives birth to an investment fund
whose activities are of a different character. The differences
between the investment fund that the Comptroller has authorized and
a conventional open-end mutual fund are subtle, at best, and it is
undisputed that this bank investment fund finds itself in direct
competition with the mutual fund industry. One would suppose that
the business of a mutual fund consists of buying stock "for its own
account" and of "issuing" and "selling" "stock" or "other
securities" evidencing an undivided and redeemable interest in the
assets of the fund. [
Footnote
11] On their face, §§ 16 and 21 of the Glass-Steagall
Act appear clearly to prohibit this activity by national banks.
[
Footnote 12]
Page 401 U. S. 626
But we cannot come lightly to the conclusion that the
Comptroller has authorized activity that violates the banking laws.
It is settled that courts should give great weight to any
reasonable construction of a regulatory
Page 401 U. S. 627
statute adopted by the agency charged with the enforcement of
that statute. The Comptroller of the Currency is charged with the
enforcement of the banking laws to an extent that warrants the
invocation of this principle with respect to his deliberative
conclusions as to the meaning of these laws.
See First National
Bank v. Missouri, 263 U. S. 640,
263 U. S.
658.
The difficulty here is that the Comptroller adopted no expressly
articulated position at the administrative level as to the meaning
and impact of the provisions of §§ 16 and 21 as they
affect bank investment funds. The Comptroller promulgated
Regulation 9 without opinion or accompanying statement. His
subsequent report to Congress did not advert to the prohibitions of
the Glass-Steagall Act. Comptroller of the Currency, 101st Annual
Report 115 (1963). [
Footnote
13] To be sure, counsel for the
Page 401 U. S. 628
Comptroller in the course of this litigation, and specifically
in his briefs and oral argument in this Court, has rationalized the
basis of Regulation 9 with great professional competence. But this
is hardly tantamount to an administrative interpretation of
§§ 16 and 21. In
Burlington Truck Lines v. United
States, 371 U. S. 156, we
said,
"The courts may not accept appellate counsel's
post hoc
rationalizations for agency action. . . . For the courts to
substitute their or counsel's discretion for that of the [agency]
is incompatible with the orderly functioning of the process of
judicial review."
Id. at
371 U. S.
168-169. Congress has delegated to the administrative
official, and not to appellate counsel, the responsibility for
elaborating and enforcing statutory commands. It is the
administrative official, and not appellate counsel, who possesses
the expertise that can enlighten and rationalize the search for the
meaning and intent of Congress. Quite obviously, the Comptroller
should not grant new authority to national banks until he is
satisfied that the exercise of this authority will not violate the
intent of the banking laws. If he faces such questions only after
he has acted, there is substantial danger that the momentum
generated by initial approval may seriously impair the enforcement
of the banking laws that Congress enacted.
Page 401 U. S. 629
IV
There is no dispute that one of the objectives of the
Glass-Steagall Act was to prohibit commercial banks, banks that
receive deposits subject to repayment, lend money, discount and
negotiate promissory notes and the like, from going into the
investment banking business. Many commercial banks were indirectly
engaged in the investment banking business when the Act was passed
in 1933. Even before the passage of the Act, it was generally
believed that it was improper for a commercial bank to engage in
investment banking directly. [
Footnote 14] But in 1908, banks began the practice of
establishing security affiliates that engaged in,
inter
alia, the business of floating bond issues and, less
frequently, underwriting stock issues. [
Footnote 15] The Glass-Steagall Act confirmed that
national banks could not engage in investment banking directly, and
in addition made affiliation with an organization so engaged
illegal. One effect of the Act was to abolish the security
affiliates of commercial banks. [
Footnote 16]
It is apparent from the legislative history of the Act why
Congress felt that this drastic step was necessary. The failure of
the Bank of United States in 1930 was widely attributed to that
bank's activities with respect to its numerous securities
affiliates. [
Footnote 17]
Moreover, Congress
Page 401 U. S. 630
was concerned that commercial banks in general, and member banks
of the Federal Reserve System in particular, had both aggravated
and been damaged by stock market decline partly because of their
direct and indirect involvement in the trading and ownership of
speculative securities. [
Footnote 18] The Glass-Steagall Act reflected a
determination that policies of competition, convenience, or
expertise which might otherwise support the entry of commercial
banks into the investment banking business were outweighed by the
"hazards" and "financial dangers" that arise when commercial banks
engage in the activities proscribed by the Act. [
Footnote 19]
The hazards that Congress had in mind were not limited to the
obvious danger that a bank might invest its own assets in frozen or
otherwise imprudent stock or security investments. For often
securities affiliates had operated without direct access to the
assets of the bank. This was because securities affiliates had
frequently been established with capital paid in by the bank's
stockholders, or by the public, or through the allocation of a
legal dividend on bank stock for this purpose. [
Footnote 20] The legislative history of the
Glass-Steagall Act shows that Congress also had in mind and
repeatedly focused on the more subtle hazards that arise when a
commercial bank goes beyond the business of acting as fiduciary or
managing agent and enters the investment banking business either
directly or by establishing an affiliate to hold and sell
particular investments. This course places new promotional and
other pressures on the bank which, in turn, create new
Page 401 U. S. 631
temptations. For example, pressures are created because the bank
and the affiliate are closely associated in the public mind, and,
should the affiliate fare badly, public confidence in the bank
might be impaired. And since public confidence is essential to the
solvency of a bank, there might exist a natural temptation to shore
up the affiliate through unsound loans or other aid. [
Footnote 21] Moreover, the pressure
to sell a particular investment and to make the affiliate
successful might create a risk that the bank would make its credit
facilities more freely available to those companies in whose stock
or securities the affiliate has invested or become otherwise
involved. Congress feared that banks might even go so far as to
make unsound loans to such companies. [
Footnote 22] In any event, it was thought that the
bank's salesman's interest might impair its ability to function as
an impartial source of credit. [
Footnote 23]
Congress was also concerned that bank depositors might suffer
losses on investments that they purchased in reliance on the
relationship between the bank and its affiliate. [
Footnote 24] This loss of customer good
will might "become an important handicap to a bank during a major
period of security market deflation." [
Footnote 25] More broadly,
Page 401 U. S. 632
Congress feared that the promotional needs of investment banking
might lead commercial banks to lend their reputation for prudence
and restraint to the enterprise of selling particular stocks and
securities, and that this could not be done without that reputation
being undercut by the risks necessarily incident to the investment
banking business. [
Footnote
26] There was also perceived the danger that, when commercial
banks were subject to the promotional demands of investment
banking, they might be tempted to make loans to customers with the
expectation that the loan would facilitate the purchase of stocks
and securities. [
Footnote
27] There was evidence before Congress that loans for
investment written by commercial banks had done much to feed the
speculative fever of the late 1920's. [
Footnote 28] Senator Glass made it plain that it was
"the fixed purpose of Congress" not to see the facilities of
commercial banking diverted into speculative operations by the
aggressive and promotional character of the investment banking
business. [
Footnote 29]
Page 401 U. S. 633
Another potential hazard that very much concerned Congress arose
from the plain conflict between the promotional interest of the
investment banker and the obligation of the commercial banker to
render disinterested investment advice. Senator Bulkley stated:
"Obviously, the banker who has nothing to sell to his depositors
is much better qualified to advise disinterestedly and to regard
diligently the safety of depositors than the banker who uses the
list of depositors in his savings department to distribute
circulars concerning the advantages of this, that, or the other
investment on which the bank is to receive an originating profit or
an underwriting profit or a distribution profit or a trading profit
or any combination of such profits. [
Footnote 30]"
Congress had before it evidence that security affiliates might
be driven to unload excessive holdings through the trust department
of the sponsor bank. [
Footnote
31] Some witnesses at the hearings expressed the view that this
practice constituted self-dealing in violation of the trustee's
obligation of loyalty, and indeed that it would be improper for a
bank's trust department to purchase anything from the bank's
securities affiliate. [
Footnote
32]
Page 401 U. S. 634
In sum, Congress acted to keep commercial banks out of the
investment banking business largely because it believed that the
promotional incentives of investment banking and the investment
banker's pecuniary stake in the success of particular investment
opportunities was destructive of prudent and disinterested
commercial banking and of public confidence in the commercial
banking system. As Senator Bulkley put it:
"If we want banking service to be strictly banking service,
without the expectation of additional profits in selling something
to customers, we must keep the banks out of the investment security
business. [
Footnote 33]"
V
The language that Congress chose to achieve this purpose
includes the prohibitions of § 16 that a national bank "shall
not underwrite any issue of securities or stock" and shall not
purchase "for its own account . . . any shares of stock of any
corporation," and the prohibition of § 21 against engaging in
"the business of issuing, underwriting, selling, or distributing .
. . stocks, bonds, debentures, notes, or other securities." In this
litigation, the Comptroller takes the position that the operation
of a bank investment fund is consistent with these provisions,
because participating interests in such a fund are not "securities"
within the meaning of the Act. It is argued that a bank investment
fund simply makes available to the small investor the benefit of
investment management by a bank trust department which would
otherwise be available only to large investors, and that the
operation of an investment fund creates no problems that are not
present whenever a bank invests in securities for the account of
customers.
Page 401 U. S. 635
But there is nothing in the phrasing of either § 16 or
§ 21 that suggests a narrow reading of the word "securities."
To the contrary, the breadth of the term is implicit in the fact
that the antecedent statutory language encompasses not only equity
securities, but also securities representing debt. And certainly
there is nothing in the language of these provisions to suggest
that the sale of an interest in the business of buying, holding,
and selling stocks for investment is to be distinguished from the
sale of an interest in a commercial or industrial enterprise.
Indeed, there is direct evidence that Congress specifically
contemplated that the word "security" includes an interest in an
investment fund. The Glass-Steagall Act was the product of hearings
conducted pursuant to Senate Resolution 71 which included among the
topics to be investigated the impact on the banking system of the
formation of investment and security trusts. [
Footnote 34] The subcommittee found that one of
the activities in which bank security affiliates engaged was that
of an investment trust: "buying and selling securities acquired
purely for investment or speculative purposes." [
Footnote 35] Since Congress generally
intended to divorce commercial banking from the kinds of activities
in which bank security affiliates engaged, there is reason to
believe that Congress explicitly intended to prohibit a national
bank from operating an investment trust. [
Footnote 36]
But, in any event, we are persuaded that the purposes for which
Congress enacted the Glass-Steagall Act leave no room for the
conclusion that a participation in a bank investment fund is not a
"security" within the
Page 401 U. S. 636
meaning of the Act. From the perspective of competition,
convenience, and expertise, there are arguments to be made in
support of allowing commercial banks to enter the investment
banking business. But Congress determined that the hazards outlined
above made it necessary to prohibit this activity to commercial
banks. Those same hazards are clearly present when a bank
undertakes to operate an investment fund.
A bank that operates an investment fund has a particular
investment to sell. It is not a matter of indifference to the bank
whether the customer buys an interest in the fund or makes some
other investment. If its customers cannot be persuaded to invest in
the bank's investment fund, the bank will lose their investment
business and the fee which that business would have brought in.
Even as to accounts large enough to qualify for individual
investment management, there might be a potential for a greater
profit if the investment were placed in the fund, rather than in
individually selected securities, because of fixed costs and
economics of scale. The mechanics of operating an investment fund
might also create promotional pressure. When interests in the fund
were redeemed, the bank would be effectively faced with the choice
of selling stocks from the fund's portfolio or of selling new
participations to cover redemptions. The bank might have a
pecuniary incentive to choose the latter course in order to avoid
the cost of stock transactions undertaken solely for redemption
purposes.
Promotional incentives might also be created by the circumstance
that the bank's fund would be in direct competition with mutual
funds that, from the point of view of the investor, offered an
investment opportunity comparable to that offered by the bank. The
bank would want to be in a position to show to the prospective
customer that its fund was more attractive than the mutual funds
offered by others. The bank would have
Page 401 U. S. 637
a salesman's stake in the performance of the fund, for, if the
fund were less successful than the competition, the bank would lose
business and the resulting fees.
A bank that operated an investment fund would necessarily put
its reputation and facilities squarely behind that fund and the
investment opportunity that the fund offered. The investments of
the fund might be conservative or speculative, but, in any event,
the success or failure of the fund would be a matter of public
record. Imprudent or unsuccessful management of the bank's
investment fund could bring about a perhaps unjustified loss of
public confidence in the bank itself. If imprudent management
should place the fund in distress, a bank might find itself under
pressure to rescue the fund through measures inconsistent with
sound banking.
The promotional and other pressures incidental to the operation
of an investment fund, in other words, involve the same kinds of
potential abuses that Congress intended to guard against when it
legislated against bank security affiliates. It is not the
slightest reflection on the integrity of the mutual fund industry
to say that the traditions of that industry are not necessarily the
conservative traditions of commercial banking. The needs and
interests of a mutual fund enterprise more nearly approximate those
of securities underwriting, the activity in which bank security
affiliates were primarily engaged. When a bank puts itself in
competition with mutual funds, the bank must make an accommodation
to the kind of ground rules that Congress firmly concluded could
not be prudently mixed with the business of commercial banking.
And there are other potential hazards of the kind Congress
sought to eliminate with the passage of the Glass-Steagall Act. The
bank's stake in the investment fund might distort its credit
decisions or lead to unsound loans to the companies in which the
fund had invested. The bank might exploit its confidential
Page 401 U. S. 638
relationship with its commercial and industrial creditors for
the benefit of the fund. The bank might undertake, directly or
indirectly, to make its credit facilities available to the fund or
to render other aid to the fund inconsistent with the best
interests of the bank's depositors. The bank might make loans to
facilitate the purchase of interests in the fund. The bank might
divert talent and resources from its commercial banking operation
to the promotion of the fund. Moreover, because the bank would have
a stake in a customer's making a particular investment decision --
the decision to invest in the bank's investment fund -- the
customer might doubt the motivation behind the bank's
recommendation that he make such an investment. If the fund
investment should turn out badly, there would be a danger that the
bank would lose the good will of those customers who had invested
in the fund. It might be unlikely that disenchantment would go so
far as to threaten the solvency of the bank. But because banks are
dependent on the confidence of their customers, the risk would not
be unreal.
These are all hazards that are not present when a bank
undertakes to purchase stock for the account of its individual
customers or to commingle assets which it has received for a true
fiduciary purpose, rather than for investment. These activities,
unlike the operation of an investment fund, do not give rise to a
promotional or salesman's stake in a particular investment; they do
not involve an enterprise in direct competition with aggressively
promoted funds offered by other investment companies; they do not
entail a threat to public confidence in the bank itself; and they
do not impair the bank's ability to give disinterested service as a
fiduciary or managing agent. In short, there is a plain difference
between the sale of fiduciary services and the sale of investments.
[
Footnote 37]
Page 401 U. S. 639
VI
The Glass-Steagall Act was a prophylactic measure directed
against conditions that the experience of the 1920's showed to be
great potentials for abuse. The literal terms of that Act clearly
prevent what the Comptroller has sought to authorize here. Because
the potential hazards and abuses that flow from a bank's entry into
the mutual investment business are the same basic hazards and
abuses that Congress intended to eliminate almost 40 years ago, we
cannot but apply the terms of the federal statute as they were
written. We conclude that the operation of an investment fund of
the kind approved by the Comptroller involves a bank in the
underwriting, issuing, selling, and distributing of securities in
violation of §§ 16 and 21 of the Glass-Steagall Act.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment in No. 61 and vacate the
judgment in No. 59.
It is so ordered.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE took no part in the consideration or decision
of these cases.
* Together with No. 59,
National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. v. Securities and Exchange Commission et al.,
argued December 14-15, 1970, also on certiorari to the same
court.
[
Footnote 1]
12 CFR Pt. 9 (1970)
[
Footnote 2]
The provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act are codified in various
sections scattered through Title 12 of the United States Code.
[
Footnote 3]
The exemption was granted in response to an application filed
pursuant to § 6(c) of the Act, 54 Stat. 802, 15 U.S.C. §
80a-6(c).
[
Footnote 4]
274 F.
Supp. 624.
[
Footnote 5]
136 U.S.App.D.C. 241, 420 F.2d 83.
[
Footnote 6]
397 U.S. 986.
[
Footnote 7]
12 CFR § 9.18(a) provides that:
"Where not in contravention of local law, funds held by a
national bank as fiduciary may be invested collectively: . . . (3)
In a common trust fund, maintained by the bank exclusively for the
collective investment and reinvestment of monies contributed
thereto by the bank in its capacity as managing agent under a
managing agency agreement expressly providing that such monies are
received by the bank in trust. . . ."
[
Footnote 8]
For example, the investment fund plan, as established, does not
provide that the bank receives the investor's money in trust.
[
Footnote 9]
The opinion of the Commission and the dissent of Commissioner
Budge are unofficially reported at CCH Fed.Sec.L.Rep. 1964-1966
Decisions, � 77,332.
[
Footnote 10]
Section 16, as enacted in 1933, granted no authority to purchase
stock for the account of customers, and prohibited any purchase of
stock by a national bank. The 1935 Amendments to the National Bank
Act included a provision intended to make it clear that a national
bank may buy stock for the account of customers, but not for its
own account. S.Rep. No. 1007, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 17; H.R.Rep.
No. 742, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., 18.
[
Footnote 11]
A mutual fund is an open-end investment company. The Investment
Company Act of 1940 defines an investment company as an "issuer" of
"any security" which "is or holds itself out as being engaged
primarily . . . in the business of investing . . . in securities. .
. ." 15 U.S.C. §§ 80a-2(a)(21), 80a-3(a)(1). An open-end
company is one "which is offering for sale or has outstanding any
redeemable security of which it is the issuer." 15 U.S.C. §
80a-5(a)(1). An investment company also includes a "unit investment
trust": an investment company which, among other things,
"is organized under a . . . contract of . . . agency . . . and .
. . issues only redeemable securities, each of which represents an
undivided interest in a unit of specified securities. . . ."
15 U.S.C. § 80a-4(2).
[
Footnote 12]
Section 20 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. § 377, prohibits
affiliations between banks that are members of the Federal Reserve
System and organizations
"engaged principally in the issue, flotation, underwriting,
public sale, or distribution at wholesale or retail or through
syndicate participation of stocks, bonds, debentures, notes, or
other securities. . . ."
And § 32, 12 U.S.C. § 78, provides that no officer,
director, or employee of a bank in the Federal Reserve System may
serve at the same time as officer, director, or employee of an
association primarily engaged in the activity described in §
20. The petitioners contend that, if a bank's investment fund be
conceived as an entity distinct from the bank, then its affiliation
with the investment fund is in violation of these sections.
The Board of Governors has had occasion to consider whether an
investment fund of the type operated by First National City Bank
involves a violation of § 32 of the Glass-Steagall Act. 12 CFR
§ 218.111 (1970). The Board concluded, based on "general
principles that have been developed in respect to the application
of section 32," that it would not violate that section for officers
of the bank's trust department to serve at the same time as
officers of the investment fund because the fund and the bank
"constitute a single entity," and the fund "would be regarded as
nothing more than an arm or department of the bank." The Board
called attention to § 21, whose provisions it summarized as
forbidding "a securities firm or organization to engage in the
business of receiving deposits, subject to certain exceptions." The
Board, however, declined to express a position concerning the
applicability of this section because of its policy not to express
views as to the meaning of statutes that carry criminal penalties.
Nor has the Board expressed its views on the application of any
other provision of the banking law to the creation and operation of
a bank investment fund.
We have no doubt but that the Board's construction and
application of § 32 is both reasonable and rational. The
investment fund service authorized by the Comptroller's regulation
and as provided by the First National City Bank is a service
available only to customers of the bank. It is held out as a
service provided by the bank, and the investment fund bears the
bank's name. The bank has effective control over the activities of
the investment fund. Moreover, there is no danger that to
characterize the bank and its fund as a single entity will disserve
the purpose of Congress. The limitations that the banking laws
place on the activities of national banks are at least as great as
the limitations placed on the activities of their affiliates. For
example, § 32 refers to the "public sale" of stocks or
securities, while § 21 proscribes the "selling" of stocks or
securities.
[
Footnote 13]
A law review article written by Comptroller Saxon and Deputy
Comptroller Miller in 1965 did take the position that the
Glass-Steagall Act is inapplicable to bank common trust funds.
Saxon & Miller, Common Trust Funds, 53 Geo.L.J. 994 (1965). But
this view was predicated on the argument that, when Congress in
1936 provided a tax exemption for common trust funds maintained by
a bank, now 26 U.S.C. § 584, it contemplated the exemption of
common trust funds created for strictly investment purposes, and
that consequently Congress must have assumed that the banking laws,
which otherwise appear to proscribe such funds, were not
applicable.
Id. at 1008-1010. Whatever the merits of this
argument, it has no bearing on the instant litigation. It is clear
that the collective investment funds authorized by Regulation 9
need not qualify for tax exemption under § 584; the First
National City Bank Fund does not so qualify. Moreover, the position
advanced in the brief filed on behalf of the Comptroller in this
litigation is not that the banking laws are inapplicable to bank
investment funds, but rather that the creation and operation of
such funds are consistent with the banking laws.
It is noteworthy that the § 584 exemption is available to
common trust funds
"maintained by a bank . . . exclusively for the collective
investment and reinvestment of moneys contributed thereto by the
bank in its capacity as a
trustee, executor, administrator, or
guardian. . . ."
(Emphasis added.) This language, which makes no reference to
contributions by the bank in its capacity as managing agent, is
identical to that exempting such common trust funds from the
Investment Company Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-3(c)(3). The
Securities and Exchange Commission has taken the position that
commingled managing agency accounts do not come within §
80a-3(c)(3).
See Statement of Commissioner Cary, Hearings
on Common Trust Funds -- Overlapping Responsibility and Conflict in
Regulation, before a Subcommittee of the House Committee on
Government Operations, 88th Cong., 1st Sess., 3 (1963).
[
Footnote 14]
Hearings Pursuant to S.Res. 71 before a Subcommittee of the
Senate Committee on Banking and Currency (hereafter 1931 Hearings),
71st Cong., 3d Sess., 40 (1931); 1920 Report of the Comptroller of
the Currency, quoted
id. at 1067, 1068. Senator Glass,
commenting on earlier banking legislation, said, "We tried to, and
thought at the time we had, removed the system as far as possible
from the influence of the stock market."
Id. at 262.
[
Footnote 15]
Id. at 1052.
[
Footnote 16]
Report on Investment Trusts and Investment Companies, pt. 2,
H.R.Doc. No. 70, 76th Cong., 1st Sess., 59 (1939).
[
Footnote 17]
1931 Hearings 116-117, 1017, 1068.
[
Footnote 18]
See S.Rep. No. 77, 73d Cong., 1st Sess., 6, 8, 10.
[
Footnote 19]
Id. at 18;
see 1931 Hearings 365; 75 Cong.Rec.
9911 (remarks of Sen. Bulkley).
[
Footnote 20]
1931 Hearings 41, 192, 1056; 1920 Report of the Comptroller of
the Currency, quoted
id. at 1067.
[
Footnote 21]
1931 Hearings 20, 237, 1063.
See also id. at 1058,
where it is said:
"Activities of a bank's security affiliate as a holding or
finance company or an investment trust are also fraught with the
danger of large losses during a deflation period. Bank affiliates
of this kind show a much greater tendency to operate with borrowed
funds than do organizations of this type which are independent of
banks, the reason being that the identity of control and management
which prevails between the bank and its affiliate tends to
encourage reliance upon the lending facilities of the former."
[
Footnote 22]
See id. at 1064; 75 Cong.Rec. 9912 (remarks of Sen.
Bulkley).
[
Footnote 23]
See 1931 Hearings 87 (remarks of Chairman Glass).
[
Footnote 24]
See 77 Cong.Rec. 4028 (remarks of Rep. Fish).
[
Footnote 25]
1931 Hearings 1064.
[
Footnote 26]
See 75 Cong.Rec. 9912:
"And, although such a loss would possibly not result in any
substantial impairment of the resources of the banking institution
owning that affiliate . . . , there can be no doubt that the whole
transaction tends to discredit the bank and impair the confidence
of its depositors."
(Remarks of Sen. Bulkley.)
[
Footnote 27]
S.Rep. No. 77, 73d Cong., 1st Sess., 9-10.
[
Footnote 28]
1931 Hearings 1006-1029; S.Rep. No. 77, 73d Cong., 1st Sess.,
8-9.
[
Footnote 29]
75 Cong.Rec. 9884.
See also S.Rep. No. 77, 73d Cong.,
1st Sess., 8:
"The outstanding development in the commercial banking system
during the pre-panic period was the appearance of excessive
security loans, and of over-investment in securities of all kinds.
The effects of this situation in changing the whole character of
the banking problem can hardly be overemphasized. National banks
were never intended to undertake investment banking business on a
large scale, and the whole tenor of legislation and administrative
rulings concerning them has been away from recognition of such a
growth in the direction of investment banking as legitimate."
In the same vein, Representative Steagall said:
"Our great banking system was diverted from its original
purposes into investment activities. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"The purpose of the regulatory provisions of this bill is to
call back to the service of agriculture and commerce and industry
the bank credit and the bank service designed by the framers of the
Federal Reserve Act."
77 Cong.Rec. 3835.
[
Footnote 30]
75 Cong.Rec. 9912.
[
Footnote 31]
1931 Hearings 237;
cf. id. at 1064.
[
Footnote 32]
Id. at 266, 300, 311.
[
Footnote 33]
75 Cong.Rec. 9912.
[
Footnote 34]
S.Res. 71, 71st cong.,2d sess., is reprinted in S.Rep. No. 77,
73d cong., 1st sess., 1.
[
Footnote 35]
1931 Hearings 1057.
See also id. at 307.
[
Footnote 36]
see also supra, n 21.
[
Footnote 37]
See 26 Fed. Reserve Bull. 393 (1940), quoted
supra at
401 U. S.
621.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, dissenting.
The Court holds that the Investment Company Institute has
standing as a competitor to challenge the action of the Comptroller
of the Currency because Congress "arguably legislated against the
competition that the petitioners sought to challenge, and from
which flowed their injury." The ICI, says the Court, is entitled to
prevail because "Congress
did legislate against the
competition that the petitioners challenge."
Ante at
401 U. S. 620,
401 U. S. 621
(emphasis added). I understand the Court to mean by "legislated
against the competition" not only that Congress prohibited banks
from entering this field of endeavor, but that it did so in part
for reasons stemming from the fact
Page 401 U. S. 640
of the resulting competition.
See ante at
401 U. S.
631-634,
401 U. S.
636-638. However, the Court cannot mean by this phrase
that it was Congress' purpose to protect petitioners' class against
competitive injury for, as all three judges on the court below
agreed, neither the language of the pertinent provisions of the
Glass-Steagall Act nor the legislative history evinces any
congressional concern for the interests of petitioners and others
like them in freedom from competition. [
Footnote 2/1] Indeed, it appears reasonably plain that,
if anything, the Act was adopted despite its anticompetitive
effects, rather than because of them.
Cf. ante at
401 U. S. 630,
401 U. S.
636.
This being the case, the discussion of standing in
Hardin v.
Kentucky Utilities Co., 390 U. S. 1,
390 U. S. 6
(1968), is directly in point:
"This Court has, it is true, repeatedly held that the economic
injury which results from lawful competition cannot, in and of
itself, confer standing on the injured business to question the
legality of any aspect of its competitor's operations.
Railroad
Co. v. Ellerman, 105 U. S. 166 (1882);
Alabama Power Co. v. Ickes, 302 U. S.
464 (1938);
Tennessee Power Co. v. TVA,
306 U. S.
118 (1939);
Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.,
310 U. S.
113 (1940). But competitive injury provided no basis for
standing in the above cases simply because the statutory and
constitutional requirements that the plaintiff sought to enforce
were in no way concerned with protecting against competitive
injury. In contrast, it has been the rule, at least since the
Chicago
Junction Case,
Page 401 U. S. 641
264 U.
S. 258 (1924), that, when the particular statutory
provision invoked does reflect a legislative purpose to protect a
competitive interest, the injured competitor has standing to
require compliance with that provision."
I do not believe that
Data Processing Service v. Camp,
397 U. S. 150
(1970), and
Arnold Tours v. Camp, 400 U. S.
45 (1970), require the opposite result from the one
suggested by this passage from
Hardin. Data
Processing held that, aside from "case or controversy"
problems not present here, the crucial question in ruling on a
challenge to standing is
"whether the interest sought to be protected by the complainant
is arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or
regulated by the statute or constitutional guarantee in
question."
397 U.S. at
397 U. S. 153.
That question was resolved in favor of the data processors because
"§ 4 [of the Bank Service Corporation Act] arguably brings a
competitor within the zone of interests protected by it."
Id. at
397 U. S. 156.
[
Footnote 2/2] In
Arnold
Tours, the Court observed that it was again dealing with
§ 4 of the Bank Service Corporation Act, and that "[n]othing
in the [Data Processing] opinion limited § 4 to protecting
only competitors in the data processing field." 400 U.S. at
400 U. S. 46.
Plainly these cases provide little support for the Court's
conclusion here that competitors, as such, have standing under the
Glass-Steagall Act as well.
The Court's holding -- that, if Congress prohibited entry into a
field of business for reasons relating to competition, then a
competitor has standing to seek observance of the prohibition --
has a surface appeal, but, so far as I can see, no sound analytical
basis. Certainly none is offered. In any event, it appears to me
that our prior decisions, particularly
Hardin, require the
conclusion that
Page 401 U. S. 642
the petitioners in No. 61 lack standing to challenge the
Comptroller's action. While I would not foreclose the possibility
that those cases should be further modified in some respect,
[
Footnote 2/3] the Court has not
undertaken to reexamine them, and I deem it inappropriate for me to
do so as a single Justice.
The view that I take with regard to petitioners' standing in No.
61 makes it unnecessary for me to reach the merits in that case,
but it does require me to rule on the contentions made in No. 59.
Like MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN,
see post at
401 U. S. 645,
I find lengthy discussion of this topic superfluous. At issue is
the propriety of the action of the Securities and Exchange
Commission in increasing from two to three the number of seats open
to bank officers on the five-man committee which serves as a board
of directors of the account. [
Footnote
2/4] Substantially for the reasons given by the judges of the
court below, 136 U.S.App.D.C. 241, 249-253, 266, 420 F.2d 83,
91-95, 108, I am of the opinion that the Commission did not abuse
its discretion in determining that the fact of this case made
appropriate an exercise of the dispensing power explicitly vested
in the Commission by 15 U.S.C. § 80a(c).
For the reasons given herein, I would affirm the two judgments
under review.
[
Footnote 2/1]
"It is equally clear that giving even the broadest reading of
the legislative history embellishing the Act will not support the
conclusion that Congress meant to bestow upon Appellees any
protection from competitive injury."
136 U.S.App.D.C. 241, 263, 420 F.2d 83, 105 (Burger, J., joined
by Miller, J.) (footnote omitted);
see also id. at 254,
256-258, 420 F.2d at 96, 98-100 (Bazelon, C.J.).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See also Barlow v. Collins, 397 U.
S. 159,
397 U. S. 164
(1970).
[
Footnote 2/3]
For one suggestion to this effect,
see Jaffe, Standing
Again, 84 Harv.L.Rev. 633 (1971).
[
Footnote 2/4]
By virtue of the "person or party aggrieved" provision of the
Investment Company Act, 15 U.S.C. § 80a-2(a), there is no
difficulty supporting petitioner's standing in No. 59.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, dissenting.
The Court's opinion and judgments here, it seems to me, are
based more on what is deemed to be appropriate and desirable
national banking policy than on what is a necessary judicial
construction of the Glass-Steagall Act
Page 401 U. S. 643
of almost four decades ago. It is a far different thing to be
persuaded that it is wise policy to keep national banks out of the
business of operating mutual investment funds, despite the
safeguards that the Comptroller of the Currency and the Securities
and Exchange Commission have provided, than it is to be persuaded
that existing and somewhat ancient legislation requires that
result. Policy considerations are for the Congress, and not for
this Court.
I recognize and am fully aware of the factors and of the
economic considerations that led to the enactment of the
Glass-Steagall Act. The second and third decades of this century
are not the happiest chapter in the history of American banking.
Deep national concerns emerged from the distressful experiences of
those years and from the sad ends to which certain banking
practices of that time had led the industry. But those
then-prevailing conditions, the legislative history, and the remedy
Congress provided prompt me to conclude that what was proscribed
was the involvement and activity of a national bank in investment,
as contrasted with commercial, banking, in underwriting and
issuing, and in acquiring speculative securities for its own
account. These were the banking sins of that time.
The propriety, however, of a national bank's acting, when not in
contravention of state or local law, as an
inter vivos or
testamentary trustee, as an executor or administrator, as a
guardian or committee, as a custodian, and, indeed, as an agent for
the individual customer's securities and funds,
see Carcaba v.
McNair, 68 F.2d 795, 797 (CA5 1934),
cert. denied,
292 U.S. 646, is not, and could not be, questioned by the
petitioners here or by the Court. This being so, there is, for me,
an element of illogic in the ready admission by all concerned, on
the one hand, that a national bank has the power to manage, by way
of a common trust arrangement, those funds that it holds as
fiduciary in the technical sense, and to administer
Page 401 U. S. 644
separate agency accounts, and in the rejection, on the other
hand, of the propriety of the bank's placing agency assets into a
mutual investment fund. The Court draws its decisional line between
the two. I find it impossible to locate any statutory root for that
line drawing. To use the Glass-Steagall Act as a tool for that
distinction is, I think, a fundamental misconception of the
statute.
Accordingly, I am not convinced that the Congress, by that Act
or otherwise, as yet has proscribed the banking endeavors under
challenge here by competitors in a highly competitive field. None
of the judges of the Court of Appeals was so convinced, and neither
was the Comptroller of the Currency, whose expertise the Court
concedes. I would leave to Congress the privilege of now
prohibiting such national bank activity if that is its intent and
desire.
In Parts IV and V of its opinion, the Court outlines hazards
that are present when a bank indulges in specified activities. The
Court then states, in the last paragraph of Part V, that those
hazards are not present when a bank undertakes to purchase stock
for individual customers, or to commingle assets held in its
several fiduciary capacities, and the like. I must disagree. It
seems to me that exactly the same hazards are indeed present. A
bank offers its fiduciary services in an atmosphere of vigorous
competition. One need only observe the current and continuous
advertising of claimed fiduciary skills to know that this is so,
and that the business is one for profit. In the fiduciary area a
bank is engaged in direct competition with other investment
concepts and with nonbanking fiduciaries. Failure or misadventure
of a single trust may constitute a threat to public confidence
among the bank's other trust beneficiaries, prospective trustors,
and even the commercial activities of the bank itself. It has an
inevitable adverse effect upon the bank's fulfillment of what is
fashionably described today as its "full service."
Page 401 U. S. 645
Thus, I feel that the Court overstates its case when it seeks to
diminish the significance of these hazards in the fiduciary area,
as contrasted with mutual fund operation. After all, we deal here
with something akin to the traditional banking function and with a
device that makes available for the small investor what is already
available for the large investor by way of the individual agency
account.
What the Court decries in the investment fund is the combination
of three banking operations, each concededly permissible: acting as
agent for the customer, purchasing for that customer, and pooling
assets. It is said that "the union of these powers" gives birth to
something "of a different character," and is statutorily
prohibited. I doubt that those three powers, each allowed by the
controlling statutes, somehow operate in combination to produce
something forbidden by those same controlling statutes, and I doubt
that the unitization is something more than or something different
from the mere sum of its parts, and that it thereby expands to
achieve offensiveness under the Glass-Steagall Act.
With my position as to the Act only a minority one, detailed
discussion of the additional issue, raised in No. 59, as to the
propriety of the exemption granted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, would be superfluous. Suffice it to say that I am in
accord with the views expressed in the respective opinions on this
issue in the Court of Appeals, 136 U.S.App.D.C. 241, 249-253, 266,
420 F.2d 83, 91-95, and 108, and, in particular, by Chief Judge
Bazelon when he carefully examined the four "danger zones"
considered by the SEC and the protections erected against them, and
then concurred in the Commission's exercise of judgment. I, too,
feel that the Commission did not act arbitrarily or exceed its
statutory authority, and that its determination deserves support
here.
I would affirm the judgments of the Court of Appeals.