On May 20, federal merger policy took a sharp turn as the FDIC voted to rescind its 2024 merger guidelines, and the U.S. House passed a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution to repeal the OCC’s 2024 merger rule.

The FDIC’s now-rescinded guidelines emphasized heightened scrutiny of mergers involving banks with over $50 billion in assets, limited use of conditional approvals, and expectations for public input. With unanimous board approval, the FDIC reverted to its pre-2024 framework, pending a broader review of its merger oversight policies.

On the same day, the House passed S.J. Res. 13, a CRA resolution seeking to nullify the OCC’s 2024 rule that had eliminated expedited merger review procedures and proposed a new policy framework for assessing potential supervisory or competitive concerns. The CRA resolution must still be passed by the Senate and signed by the President to take effect.

Key provisions in the FDIC and OCC’s 2024 merger framework:

Putting It Into Practice: The rollback of the FDIC’s 2024 merger guidelines and the potential repeal of OCC’s 2024 merger rule signal a decisive shift in federal oversight of bank consolidation, particularly for community and mid-sized institutions. Additional reversals of agency rulemakings under the CRA framework are likely to follow (previously discussed here).

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