Any bank or trust company organized under the laws of this state is authorized to invest not to exceed 20 percent of its capital and surplus in the capital stock of any agricultural credit corporation organized under the laws of this state, and entitled to discount privileges with any federal intermediate bank organized under the laws of the United States.
Any such bank or trust company may invest not to exceed five percent of its capital and surplus in shares of stock in small business investment companies organized under the provisions of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958.
The bank or trust company may invest an amount not to exceed ten percent of its capital and surplus in shares of stock in any banks or bank holding companies wherein the stock of the banks or bank holding companies is owned exclusively by bank holding companies or banks.
Any such bank or trust company may make equity or debt investments in limited partnerships, limited liability companies, corporations, or projects designed primarily to promote community welfare, such as the rehabilitation or development of economically depressed residential, commercial, or industrial areas. A bank or trust company investment in any one limited partnership, limited liability company, corporation, or project shall not exceed five percent of its capital and surplus and its aggregate investment in all such limited partnerships, limited liability companies, corporations, or projects shall not exceed ten percent of its capital and surplus.
In the absence of an express provision to the contrary, whenever any statute, rule, charter, trust indenture, authorizing resolution, or other instrument governing the investment of funds of a banking institution, as defined in section 48.01, subdivision 2, directs, requires, authorizes, or permits direct investment in certain obligations, investment in these obligations may be made either directly or in the form of securities of, or other interests in, an investment company registered under the Federal Investment Company Act of 1940, whose shares are registered under the Federal Securities Act of 1933.
Shares of investment companies whose portfolios contain investments which are subject to limits under other state law or rule as direct investments may only be held in an amount not in excess of 20 percent of the banks' capital stock and paid in surplus in each such investment company. These obligations shall be carried at the lower of cost or market on the banks' books and adjusted to market on a quarterly basis.
Any bank may invest in the voting stock of the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation created pursuant to the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987, Public Law 100-233, in an amount not to exceed the greater of ten percent of the bank's capital and surplus or the amount required by the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation for the bank to qualify for its participation in the corporation's programs.
A state bank or trust company may invest in any securities that are authorized investments for national banks on May 27, 1989, subject to the same restrictions as apply to national banks. The commissioner may authorize a state bank or trust company to invest in any securities that become authorized investments for national banks after May 27, 1989, subject to the same restrictions as apply to national banks. This authority is in addition to the investment authority granted to state banks under other provisions of state law.
A subsidiary may be organized solely for purposes of liquidating assets in a reorganization subject to the following conditions:
Minn. Stat. § 48.61
(7677-1) 1935 c 174; 1963 c 153 s 9; 1969 c 772 s 6; 1974 c 421 s 1; 1980 c 445 s 1; 1981 c 116 s 1; 1982 c 632 s 2; 1985 c 187 s 1; 1985 c 248 s 70; 1987 c 349 art 1 s 17, 18; 1988 c 631 s 4; 1989 c 129 s 2; 1989 c 341 art 2 s 1; 1993 c 257 s 21-23; 1995 c 202 art 1 s 10; art 2 s 19; 1997 c 157 s 28, 29; 2001 c 56 s 6