Financial Regulators Pressed To Act On Marijuana Businesses

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As Colorado and Washington state prepare to legalize recreational marijuana sales, credit union and banking regulators are facing pressure to bring pot merchants into the financial mainstream.

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The arm-twisting is coming from a hodgepodge of officials who don't necessarily care whether pot is legal, but who hope to prevent armed robberies and money laundering in states where it's currently being sold on a cash-only basis.

That group includes the National Credit Union Administration, governors, members of Congress, state banking regulators, and local law enforcement officials.

"The people of our state have spoken," says Scott Jarvis, director of the department of financial institutions in Washington, where a 2012 referendum legalized the recreational use of pot. "For this to really work, it needs to be in the banking system."

In recent weeks, the relevant federal agencies have signaled that they intend to provide more clarity to banks — though it's unclear when they will do so, how far they will go, and whether their guidance will provide sufficient comfort to nervous financial services executives.

Involved in the deliberations are the Justice Department, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Federal Reserve Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency as well as NCUA.

Their discussions hold important ramifications for banks not just in Colorado and Washington, but also in 18 other states, plus the District of Columbia, where pot is sold for medicinal use. Nationwide, the state-regulated markets for marijuana are currently worth an estimated $1.44 billion annually, according to a recent report by ArcView Market Research.

Skittish About Services
Many credit unions and banks are skittish about providing banking services to pot sellers and growers because federal law outlaws the possession of marijuana, even though some states allow it. No one believes that Congress is going to eliminate that fundamental conflict anytime soon.

So the question is: will federal regulators be able to provide credit unions and banks and that are interested in the pot business a high enough level of assurance that they won't get in trouble for establishing ties.

Marijuana businesses have long struggled to secure banking relationships, but the issue has taken on greater prominence since voters in Colorado and Washington approved the recreational pot measures. Both state laws go into effect next year.

In August, the Justice Department said that marijuana enforcement would be a low priority in states that meet certain criteria, signaling a desire on the part of the Obama Administration to defer in large part to the states. But the Justice Department memo did not address the complicated issues that banks face.

In October, Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper and Washington Gov. Jay Inslee asked federal financial services regulators to issue guidance that would move more pot businesses into the banking system. They want marijuana producers, processors and retailers to operate like any other legal business — accepting payments by debit and credit card, making deposits, and paying suppliers by check or via automated clearing house network.

The two Democratic governors suggested that banks should be required to do extra due diligence to ensure that anti-money laundering laws are not violated.

"Access to the banking system by these state-licensed businesses is a necessary component in ensuring a highly regulated marijuana system that will accurately track funds, prevent criminal involvement, and promote public safety," the two governors wrote in a letter to regulators.

At a Senate hearing earlier this year, King County, Wash., Sheriff John Urquhart testified that unless pot businesses can open bank accounts, there's likely to be more crime.

"Cash-only businesses are prime targets for armed robberies, and cash-only businesses are very difficult to audit, leading to possible tax evasion, wage theft and diversion of the resources we need to protect public safety," he said.

People who work in the marijuana business say that the industry's reliance on cash causes logistical hassles and sparks concern about employees' physical safety.

"We have female members of our industry who have to walk into the [Internal Revenue Service] branch with tens of thousands of dollars of cash," says Steve Fox, lobbyist for the National Cannabis Industry Association.

Taking Risks
That said, some financial institutions have been willing to take the risks involved with providing services to marijuana businesses, likely because such accounts carry lucrative fees. A Fincen report from last year, later made public, reported that 87 banks in Colorado had business relationships with marijuana dispensary businesses between June 2011 and September 2012.

In recent letters and speeches, federal regulators have made clear that they are at least considering taking action.

During a Nov. 19 speech, Fincen Director Jennifer Shasky Calvery said that her agency has initiated discussions with Justice Department officials. A Treasury official also acknowledged what he called "the need for additional clarity" in a letter last month.

Top officials at the NCUA, the Fed, the FDIC and the OCC have recently stated that they will wait for Fincen and the Justice Department to reach an agreed-upon approach before considering whether to issue their own guidance.

Whatever steps are ultimately taken would likely affect state-regulated markets for both medicinal and recreational pot.

Some in the financial services industry doubt there's anything the federal government can do — short of a change in the law — that would overcome worries about the pot business. Reps. Ed Perlmutter, D-Colo., is sponsoring legislation that would protect financial institutions, but it has attracted only 24 co-sponsors and remains in a House subcommittee.

Perlmutter was realistic about the bill's chances earlier this fall. "I don't see it passing this year," he told Credit Union Journal. "But at least we can get the debate going."

For some industry experts, the question is: is guidance really enough? Others say that the impact of any regulatory guidance will hinge on its specific language.

And at the end of the day - or in this case the Congressional session — most insiders and experts acknowledge that many credit unions and banks will stay away from the pot business, no matter what the guidance states.


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