Nevada Code § 662.065

Investments in private securities; limitation
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1. As used in this section, private
security means a marketable obligation in the form of a bond, note or
debenture which is commonly regarded as an investment security. It does not
include investments which are predominantly speculative in nature.
2. A bank may purchase a private security
for its own account when in its prudent banking judgment, which may be based in
part upon estimates which it believes to be reliable, it determines that:
(a) There is adequate evidence that the obligor
will be able to perform all that it undertakes to perform in connection with
the security, including all debt service requirements; and
(b) The security may be sold with reasonable
promptness at a price which corresponds reasonably to its fair value.
3. A bank may purchase a private security
for its own account, although its judgment with respect to the obligors
ability to perform is based predominantly upon estimates which it believes to
be reliable. Although the appraisal of the prospects of any obligor will
generally be based in part upon estimates, it is the purpose of this subsection
to permit a bank to exercise a broader range of judgment with respect to a more
restricted portion of its investment portfolio. This authority may be exercised
not only in the absence of a record of performance, but also when there are
prospects for improved performance.
4. A bank may, as a factor in reaching its
prudent banking judgment with respect to a private security, consider a ruling
published by the Commissioner on the eligibility of the private security for
purchase. Consideration must be given to the possibility that circumstances on
which the ruling was based may have changed since the time of the ruling.
5. Subject to the limitations set forth in NRS 662.155 , the investment in any
private securities of any one obligor may at no time be more than 25 percent of
the stockholders or members equity of the bank.

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