- It is becoming widely expected that interest rates will rise in the coming year. In recent weeks the 10 year US bond has risen from about 1.50% to 1.80%. Using the appendix for chapter 2 on Webster Bank and Bank of America, how do you suppose these banks will fare if their financial situation has not changed, and the rising interest rate environment becomes true. In your answer, assume that short term interest rates will rise 0.25% more than long-term interest rates in the coming year. That is if long-term rates (i.e. greater than 5 years to maturity) rise by 0.5%, short term rates will rise by 0.75% .
Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 1 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis WHY EVALUATE THE PERFORMANCE OF COMMERCIAL BANKS? Unlike other private corporations, commercial banks (CBs) are unique in the special services they perform (e.g., assistance in the implementation of monetary policy) and the level of regulatory attention they receive. CBs are, as a result, unique in the types of assets and liabilities they hold. Like any for-profit corporation, however, the ultimate measure of a CB's performance is the value of its common equity to its shareholders. This appendix discusses the financial statements of these institutions. Managers, stockholders, depositors, regulators, and other parties use performance, earnings, and other measures obtained from financial statements to evaluate commercial banks. For example, the In The News box looks at how regulators use financial statement data to evaluate the overall safety and soundness of a bank. As we proceed through the appendix, notice the extent to which regulators' evaluation of the overall safety and soundness of a bank (or their assignment of a so-called CAMELS rating) depends on financial statement data. Given the extensive level of regulation and the accompanying requirements for public availability of financial information, the financial statements of commercial banks are ideal candidates to use in examining the performance of depository institutions. This appendix uses commercial banks to illustrate a return on equity (ROE) framework as a method of evaluating depository institutions' profitability. The ROE framework decomposes this frequently used measure of profitability into its various component parts to identify existing or potential financial management and risk exposure problems.1 The fact that bank size and/or niche (i.e., the financial market segment the bank specializes in servicing) may affect the evaluation of financial statements is also highlighted. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF COMMERCIAL BANKS report of condition Balance sheet of a commercial bank reporting information at a single point in time. report of income Income statement of a commercial bank reporting revenues, expenses, net profit or loss, and cash dividends over a period of time. Financial information on commercial banks is reported in two basic documents. The report of condition (or balance sheet) presents financial information on a bank's assets, liabilities, and equity capital. The balance sheet reports a bank's condition at a single point in time. The report of income (or the income statement) presents the major categories of revenues and expenses (or costs) and the net profit or loss for a bank over a period of time. Financial statements of commercial banks must be submitted to regulators and stockholders at the end of each calendar quarterMarch, June, September, and December. The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC), based in Washington, D.C., prescribes uniform principles, standards, and report forms for depository institutions.2 All financial institutions, and particularly commercial banks, are also engaging in an increased level of off-balance-sheet (OBS) activities. These activities 1 This decomposition is often termed DuPont analysis. The financial statements reported by banks use book value accounting concepts; i.e., assets, liabilities, and equity accounts are generally reported at their original cost or book value. An alternative accounting method frequently discussed for use by banks is market value accounting. 2 sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 1 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 2 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis In the News The CAMELS Evaluation Components The Uniform Financial Institutions Rating System (UFIRS) was adopted by the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) on November 13, 1979. Under the 1997 revision of the UFIRS, each financial institution is assigned a composite rating based on an evaluation and rating of six essential components of an institution's financial condition and operations that are summarized in a composite \"CAMELS\" rating. The acronym CAMELS stands for Capital Adequacy, Asset Quality, Management, Earnings, Liquidity, and Sensitivity to Market Risk. An institution's Capital Adequacy is evaluated in relation to the volume of risk assets; the volume of marginal and inferior quality assets; the bank's growth experience, plan and prospects; and the strength of management. Consideration is also given to an institution's capital ratios relative to its peer group, its earnings retention, its dividend policies and its access to capital markets or other appropriate sources of financial assistance. Asset Quality is evaluated by the level, distribution, and severity of adversely classified assets; the level and distribution of nonaccrual and reduced-rate assets; the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses; and management's demonstrated ability to administer and collect problem credits. In addition, examiners evaluate the volume of concentrations of credit, trends in asset quality, volume of out-of-territory loans, level and severity of other real estate held, and the bank's underwriting standards. Management is evaluated against virtually all factors considered necessary to operate the bank within accepted banking practices and in a safe and sound manner. Thus, management is evaluated in relation to technical competence; leadership and administrative ability; compliance with banking regulations and statutes; adequacy of, and compliance with, internal policies and controls; and whether the board has a plan covering management succession. The assessment of management also takes into account the quality of internal controls, operating procedures and all lending, investment, and other operating policies. Finally, examiners review and assess the composition, experience level, abilities and involvement of the officers, directors and shareholders. Earnings are evaluated with respect to their ability to cover losses and provide adequate capital protection; trends; peer group comparisons; the quality and composition of net income; and the degree of reliance on interest-sensitive funds. Consideration is also given to the bank's dividend payout ratio, the rate of growth of retained earnings and the adequacy of bank capital. The adequacy of provisions to the allowance for loan losses, and the extent to which extraordinary items, securities transactions and tax effects contribute to net income, are also assessed. Liquidity is evaluated in relation to the volatility of deposits; the frequency and level of borrowings, use of brokered deposits, technical competence relative to the structure of liabilities, availability of assets readily convertible into cash; and access to money markets or other ready sources of funds. The overall effectiveness of asset-liability management is considered, as well as the adequacy of, and compliance with, established liquidity policies. The nature, volume, and anticipated use of credit commitments are also factors that are weighed. The Sensitivity to Market Risk component reflects the degree to which changes in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, commodity prices, or equity prices can adversely affect a financial institution's earnings or economic capital. When evaluating this component consideration should be given to: management's ability to identify, measure, monitor, and control market risk; the institution's size; the nature and complexity of its activities; and the adequacy of its capital and earnings in relation to its level of market risk exposure. CAMELS ratings range from 1 to 5. Composite \"1\"Institutions in this group are basically sound in every respect. Composite \"2\"Institutions in this group are fundamentally sound, but may reflect modest weaknesses correctable in the normal course of business. Composite \"3\"Institutions in this category exhibit financial, operational or compliance weaknesses ranging from moderately severe to unsatisfactory. Composite \"4\"Institutions in this group have an immoderate volume of serious financial weaknesses or a combination of other conditions that are unsatisfactory. Composite \"5\"This category is reserved for institutions with an extremely high immediate or near term probability of failure. Source: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, DOS Manual of Examination Policies, June 2012. www.fdic.gov sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 2 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B www.websteronline.com retail bank A bank that focuses its business activities on consumer banking relationships. wholesale bank A bank that focuses its business activities on commercial banking relationships. www.bankofamerica.com Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 3 produce income (and sometimes losses) for the FI that are reported on the income statement. This appendix summarizes off-balance-sheet activities (and the risks involved with such activities). To evaluate the performance of commercial banks, we use two financial services holding companies3 of varying sizes and market niches: Webster Financial Corporation and Bank of America Corporation. Webster Financial Corporation (WBS) is a publicly traded commercial bank holding company headquartered in Waterbury, Connecticut. In 2010, it had $17.69 billion in assets (among the 75 largest banks in the United States). Webster Financial Corp. offers products in both consumer and business banking, including mortgage loans, insurance, financial planning, and trust and investment services in Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island through more than 180 banking offices, more than 500 ATMs, telephone banking, and the Internet. The bank owns an asset-based lending firm (Webster Business Credit Corporation), and an equipment finance company (Webster Capital Finance), and provides health savings account trustee and administrative services through HSA Bank, a division of Webster Bank. WBS, by emphasizing retail banking, has been an efficient and profitable bank. Retail banks focus on individual consumer banking relationships, such as residential mortgages and consumer loans on the asset side of the portfolio, and individual demand, NOW, savings, and time deposits on the liability side. In contrast, wholesale banks focus their business activities on business banking relationships; they hold more business loans and fewer mortgages and consumer loans and use fewer consumer deposits and more purchased funds than retail banks do. Most large banks have both a retail side and a wholesale side of businessthese two strategies are not mutually exclusive. Bank of America Corporation (BOA), headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, was at one time the nation's largest bank holding company, with holding company assets of $2,370.59 billion and bank assets of $1,787.61 billion as of 2010. Bank of America operates nationally and internationally with more than 5,900 offices in the United States and offices in 40 countries supporting approximately 57 million clients. The bank offers products in many business lines, including retail and wholesale banking, investment and trust management, and credit card company business. Bank of America has created the nation's largest ATM network, with 18,000 ATMs serving more than 29 million active users. It is one of the nation's largest debit card issuers, it is the nation's leading small business lender, and it is the number one institution in number of relationships, investment banking, treasury management, syndications, secured and unsecured credit, and leasing to middle-market U.S. companies. Balance Sheet Structure www.fdic.gov Table 2B-1 presents 2010 balance sheet information for the two commercial bank holding companies (hereafter called banks). As stated in the body of the chapter, many banks are owned by parent bank holding companies. One-bank holding companies control only one subsidiary commercial bank: multiple-bank holding companies control two or more subsidiary commercial banks (see Chapter 20). 3 The U.S. Congress passed the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999, which opened the door for the creation of full-service financial institutions in the United States. A financial services holding company can engage in banking activities, insurance activities, and securities activities. Thus, while we examine financial institutions by functional area, the financial services holding company (which combines many activities in a single financial institution) has become the dominant form of financial institution in terms of total assets. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 3 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 4 Appendix 2B TABLE 2B-1 Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis Balance Sheet for Two Commercial Banks (in millions of dollars) Webster Financial* Bank of America* Assets 1. Vault cash 2. Deposits at Federal Reserve 3. Deposits at other financial institutions 4. Cash items in process of collection 5. Cash and due from depository institutions 6. Federal funds sold and RPs 7. U.S. Treasury and U.S. agency securities 8. Securities issued by slates and political subdivisions 9. Mortgage-backed securities 10. Other debt and equity securities 11. Investment securities 12. Commercial and industrial loans 13. Loans secured by real estate 14. Consumer loans 15. Other loans 16. Leases 17. Gross loans and leases 18. Less: Unearned income 19. Reserve for loan and lease losses 20. Net loans and leases 21. Premises and fixed assets 22. Other real estate owned 23. Intangible assets 24. Other 25. Other assets 26. Total assets $ 68.46 80.03 40.45 28.27 $ 217.21 1.44 4,228.62 674.47 334.74 138.35 $ 5,377.62 2,558.05 8,109.07 34.65 41.46 111.32 $10,854.55 344.09 $10,510.46 164.86 27.13 561.74 832.87 1,586.60 $17,691.89 $ 8,380.71 117,003.87 17,369.90 9,927.32 $ 152,681.80 73,322.09 242,813.12 6,963.46 35,869.20 83,909.70 $ 442,877.57 154,253.39 514,881.22 241,529.47 39,340.94 17,221.58 $ 967,226.60 44,607.54 $ 922,619.06 11,785.41 3,448.59 98,775.81 155,417.74 $ 269,427.55 $1,787,605.98 $ $ Liabilities and Equity Capital 27. Demand deposits 28. NOW accounts 29. MMDAs 30. Other savings deposits 31. Deposits in foreign offices 32. Retail CDs 33. Core deposits 34. Wholesale CDs 35. Total deposits 36. Federal funds purchased and RPs 37. Other borrowed funds 38. Subordinated notes and debentures 39. Other liabilities 40. Total liabilities 41. Preferred stock 42. Common stock 43. Surplus and paid-in capital 44. Retained earnings 45. Total equity capital 46. Total liabilities and equity capital 407.53 197.10 5,082.57 4,304.27 78.64 2,409.09 $12,479.20 1,274.39 $13,753.59 948.30 679.72 177.48 163.94 $15,723.03 0.00 1,690.51 278.35 $ 1,968.86 $17,691.89 108,229.03 23,124.43 354,480.84 272,815.25 181,456.91 82,382.93 $ 1,022,489.39 75,079.75 $ 1,097,569.14 142,465.19 255,228.80 27,056.01 44,664.63 $ 1,566,983.77 4,296.84 193,759.15 22,566.22 $ 220,622.21 $ 1,787,605.98 * Values are taken from the 2010 FDIC report of condition data tapes and are available at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation website. www.fdic.gov sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 4 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 5 The financial statements reported in this chapter are for the consolidated multiple-bank holding company, which includes the parent holding company plus bank subsidiaries. These data are taken from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Call Reports, available at the FDIC website. Pay particular attention to the fact that, unlike manufacturing corporations, the majority of a commercial bank's assets are financial assets rather than physical or fixed assets (such as buildings or machines). Additionally, a relatively large portion of a commercial bank's liabilities are shot-term deposits and borrowings. In general, banks have higher leverage than manufacturing corporations do. Assets correspondent bank A bank that provides services to another commercial bank. A bank's assets are grouped into four major subcategories: (1) cash and due from depository institutions, (2) investment securities, (3) loans and leases, and (4) other assets. Investment securities and loans and leases are the bank's earning assets. Cash and due from depository institutions (item 5 in Table 2B-1) consists of vault cash, deposits at the Federal Reserve (the central bank), deposits at other financial institutions, and cash items in the process of collection. None of these items generates much income for the bank, but each is held because they perform specific functions. Cash and Due from Depository Institutions. Vault cash (item 1) is composed of the currency and coin needed to meet customer withdrawals. Deposits at the Federal Reserve (item 2) are used primarily to meet legal reserve requirements (see Chapter 18), to assist in check clearing, wire transfers, and the purchase or sale of Treasury securities. Deposits at other financial institutions (item 3) are primarily used to purchase services from those institutions. These banks generally purchase services such as check collection, check processing, fed funds trading, and investment advice from correspondent banks (see below). Cash items in the process of collection (item 4) are checks written against accounts at other institutions that have been deposited at the bank. Credit is given to the depositor of these checks only after they clear. Investment Securities. Investment securities (item 11 in Table 2B-1) consist of federal funds sold, repurchase agreements (RPs or repos), U.S. Treasury and agency securities, securities issued by states and political subdivisions (municipals), mortgage-backed securities, and other debt and equity securities. These securities generate some income for the bank and are used for liquidity risk management purposes. Investment securities are highly liquid,4 have low default risk, and can usually be traded in secondary markets. Banks generally maintain significant amounts of these securities to ensure that they can easily meet liquidity needs that arise unexpectedly. However, because the revenue generated from investment securities is low compared to that from loans and leases, many (particularly larger) banks attempt to minimize the amount of investment securities they hold. Short-maturity (less than one year to maturity) investments include federal funds sold and repurchase agreements (item 6), and U.S. Treasury bills and agency securities (item 7). Returns on these investments vary directly with changes in market interest rates. Although banks with excess cash reserves invest some of this in interest-earning liquid assets such as T-bills and short-term securities, they have the option to lend excess reserves for short intervals to other banks seeking increased 4 Not all of a bank's investment securities can be sold immediately. Some securities, such as U.S. Treasury securities and municipals, can be pledged against certain types of borrowing by the bank and, therefore, must remain on the bank's books until the debt obligation is removed or another security is pledged as collateral. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 5 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 6 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis www.ginniemae.gov www.fanniemae.com www.freddiemac.com short-term funding. The interbank market for excess reserves is called the federal funds (fed funds) market. In the United States, federal funds are short-term uncollateralized loans made by one bank to another; more than 90 percent of such transactions have maturities of one day. Repurchase agreements (RPs or repos) can be viewed as collateralized federal funds transactions. In a federal funds transaction, the bank with excess reserves sells fed funds for one day to the purchasing bank. The next day, the purchasing bank returns the fed funds plus one day's interest, reflecting the fed funds rate. Since credit risk exposure exists for the selling bank, because the purchasing bank may be unable to repay the fed funds the next day, the seller may seek collateral backing for the one-day fed funds loan. In an RP transaction, the funds-selling bank receives government securities as collateral from the funds-purchasing bankthat is, the funds-purchasing bank temporarily exchanges securities for cash. The next day, this transaction is reversedthe funds purchasing bank sends back the fed funds it borrowed plus interest (the RP rate); it receives in return (or repurchases) its securities used as collateral in the transaction. Long-maturity investments such as U.S. Treasury bonds and U.S. agency securities (item 7), municipals (item 8), mortgage-backed securities (item 9), and most other securities (item 10) usually offer somewhat higher expected returns than short-maturity investments since they are subject to greater interest rate risk exposure. U.S. Treasury securities and Government National Mortgage Association (agency) bonds are fully backed by the U.S. government and thus carry no default risk. Other U.S. government agency securities, such as those of the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, are not directly backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government and therefore carry some default risk. Municipal securities held by commercial banks are generally high-rated, investment-grade (i.e., low-risk) securities, issued by municipalities as either general obligation or revenue bonds.5 Interest paid on municipals is exempt from federal income tax obligations. Mortgage-backed securities include items such as collateralized mortgage obligations and mortgage-backed bonds. Other investment securities include investment-grade corporate bonds, foreign debt securities, and securities such as U.S. Treasury securities and municipals held for short-term trading purposes. These trading account securities earn interest for the bank and generate capital gains or losses from changes in the market values of these securities.6 Loans and Leases. Loans and leases (items 12-16 in Table 2B-1) are the major asset items on a bank's balance sheet and generate the largest flow of revenue income. However, these items are also the least liquid asset items and the major sources of credit and liquidity risk for most banks. Loans are categorized as commercial and industrial (C&I) loans (item 12), loans secured by real estate (item 13), individual or consumer loans (item 14), and other loans (item 15). Leases (item 16) are used as alternatives to loans when the bank, as owner of a physical asset, allows a customer to use an asset in return for periodic lease payments. Commercial and Industrial Loans. C&I loans are used to finance a firm's capital needs, equipment purchases, and plant expansion. They can be made in quite small 5 Payments of principal and interest on general obligation bonds are backed by the full faith, credit, and taxing authority of the issuer. Payments of principal and interest on revenue bonds are backed only by the revenues generated from the facility or project that the proceeds of the bonds are financing. 6 Investment securities included in the bank's trading portfolio and designated as trading securities or available-for-sale securities are listed on the balance sheet at their market value. All other items on the balance sheet are listed at their book values. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 6 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 7 amounts such as $100,000 to small businesses or in packages as large as $10 million or more to major corporations. Commercial loans can be made at either fixed rates or floating rates of interest. The interest rate on a fixed-rate loan is set at the beginning of the contract period. This rate remains in force over the loan contract period no matter what happens to market rates. The interest rate on a floating-rate loan can be adjusted periodically according to a formula so that the interest rate risk is transferred in large part from the bank to the borrower. As might be expected, longer-term loans are more likely to be made under floating-rate contracts than are relatively short-term loans. In addition, commercial loans can be made for periods as short as a few weeks to as long as eight years or more. Traditionally, shortterm commercial loans (those with an original maturity of one year or less) are used to finance firms' working capital needs and other short-term funding needs, while long-term commercial loans are used to finance credit needs that extend beyond one year, such as the purchase of real assets (machinery), new venture start-up costs, and permanent increases in working capital. Commercial loans can be secured or unsecured. A secured loan (or asset-backed loan) is backed by specific assets of the borrower, while an unsecured loan (or junior debt) gives the lender only a general claim on the assets of the borrower should default occur. Real Estate Loans. Real estate loans are primarily mortgage loans and some revolving home equity loans. For banks (as well as savings institutions), residential mortgages are the largest component of the real estate loan portfolio; until recently, however, commercial real estate mortgages had been the fastest-growing component of real estate loans. Residential mortgages are very long-term loans with an average maturity of approximately 20 years. As with C&I loans, the characteristics of residential mortgage loans differ widely. These include the size of loan, the loanto-value ratio, and the maturity of the mortgage. Other important characteristics are the mortgage interest (or commitment) rate and fees and charges on the loan, such as commissions, discounts, and points paid by the borrower or the seller to obtain the loan. In addition, the mortgage rate differs according to whether the mortgage has a fixed rate or a floating rate, also called an adjustable rate. Consumer Loans. A third major category of loans is the individual or consumer loanfor example, personal and auto loans. Commercial banks, finance companies, retailers, savings banks, and gas companies also provide consumer loan financing through credit cards such as Visa, MasterCard, and proprietary credit cards issued by companies such as Sears and AT&T. Other Loans. Other loans include a wide variety of borrowers and types such as loans to nonbank financial institutions, state and local governments, foreign banks, and sovereign governments. Each loan category entails a wide variety of characteristics that must be evaluated to determine the risk involved, whether the bank should grant the loan, and, if so, at what price. We discuss the evaluation methods in Chapter 10. Unearned Income and Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses. Unearned income (item 18) and the allowance (reserve) for loan and lease losses (item 19) are contra-asset accounts that are deducted from gross loans and leases on the balance sheet to create net loans and leases (item 20). Unearned income is the amount of income that the bank has received on a loan from a customer but has not yet recorded as income on the income statement. Over the life of the loan, the bank earns (or accrues) interest income and accordingly transfers it out of unearned sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 7 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 8 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis net write-offs Actual loan losses less loan recoveries. earning assets Investment securities plus net loans and leases. income into interest income. The allowance for loan and lease losses is an estimate by the bank's management of the amount of the gross loans (and leases) that will not be repaid to the bank. Although the maximum amount of the reserve is influenced by tax laws, the bank's management actually sets the level based on loan growth and recent loan loss experience. The allowance for loan losses is an accumulated reserve that is adjusted each period as management recognizes the possibility of additional bad loans and makes appropriate provisions for such losses. Actual losses are then deducted from, and recoveries are added to (referred to as net write-offs), their accumulated loan and lease loss reserve balance. Investment securities plus net loans and leases are the earning assets of a depository institution. It is these items on the balance sheet that generate interest income and some of the noninterest income described below. Other Assets. Other assets on the bank's balance sheet (item 25) consist of items such as premises and fixed assets (item 21), other real estate owned (collateral seized on defaulted loansitem 22), intangible assets (i.e., goodwill and mortgage servicing rightsitem 23), and other (i.e., deferred taxes, prepaid expenses, and mortgage servicing fees receivableitem 24). These accounts are generally a small part of the bank's overall assets. Liabilities NOW accounts Negotiable order of withdrawal accounts are similar to demand deposits but pay interest when a minimum balance is maintained. MMDAs Money market deposit accounts with retail savings account and some limited checking account features. other savings deposits All savings accounts other than MMDAs. A bank's liabilities consist of various types of deposit accounts and other borrowings used to fund the investments and loans on the asset side of the balance sheet. Liabilities vary in terms of their maturity, interest payments, check-writing privileges, and deposit insurance coverage. Deposits. Demand deposits (item 27) are transaction accounts held by individuals, corporations, partnerships, and governments that pay no explicit interest. Corporations are prohibited from using deposits other than demand deposits (e.g., NOW accounts) for transaction account purposes. This group therefore constitutes the major holders of demand deposits. Since 1980, all banks in the United States have been able to offer checkable deposits that pay interest and are withdrawable on demand; they are called negotiable order of withdrawal accounts, or NOW accounts7 (item 28). The major distinction between these instruments and traditional demand deposits is that these instruments require the depositor to maintain a minimum account balance to earn interest. If the minimum balance falls below some level, such as $500, the account formally converts to a status equivalent to a demand deposit and earns no interest. Also, there are restrictions on corporations holding NOW accounts. Money market deposit accounts or MMDAs (item 29) are an additional liability instrument that banks can use. To make banks competitive with the money market mutual funds offered by groups such as Vanguard and Fidelity, the MMDAs they offer must be liquid. In the United States, MMDAs are checkable but subject to restrictions on the number of checks written on each account per month, the number of preauthorized automatic transfers per month, and the minimum denomination of the amount of each check. In addition, MMDAs impose minimum balance requirements on depositors. The Federal Reserve does not require banks to hold cash reserves against MMDAs. Accordingly, banks generally pay higher rates on MMDAs than on NOW accounts. Other savings deposits (item 30) are all savings accounts other than MMDAs (i.e., regular passbook accounts) with no set maturity and no check-writing privileges. Like MMDAs, savings accounts currently carry zero reserve requirements. 7 sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 8 Super-NOW accounts have very similar features to NOW accounts but require a larger minimum balance. 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B retail CDs Time deposits with a face value below $100,000. wholesale CDs Time deposits with a face value of $100,000 or more. negotiable instrument An instrument whose ownership can be transferred in the secondary market. brokered deposits Wholesale CDs obtained through a brokerage house. Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 9 Some banks separate foreign from domestic deposits on the balance sheet (item 31). Foreign deposits are not explicitly covered by FDIC-provided deposit insurance guarantees. These deposits are generally large and held by corporations with a high level of international transactions and activities. The major categories of time deposits are retail certificates of deposit (CDs) and wholesale CDs. Retail CDs (item 32) are fixed-maturity instruments with face values under $100,000. Although the size, maturity, and rates on these CDs are negotiable, most banks issue standardized retail CDs. Wholesale CDs (item 34) were created by banks in the early 1960s as a contractual mechanism to allow depositors to liquidate their position in these CDs by selling them in the secondary market rather than having to hold them to maturity or requesting that the bank cash in the deposit early (which involves a penalty cost for the depositor). Thus, a depositor can sell a relatively liquid instrument without causing adverse liquidity risk exposure for the bank. Consequently, the unique feature of wholesale CDs is not so much their large minimum denomination size of $100,000 or more but the fact that they are negotiable instruments. That is, they can be resold by title assignment in a secondary market to other investors. This means, for example, that if IBM had bought a $1 million three-month CD from J.P. Morgan Chase, but for unexpected liquidity reasons needed funds after only one month passed, it could sell this CD to another outside investor in the secondary market. This does not impose any obligation on J.P. Morgan Chase in terms of an early funds withdrawal request. Wholesale CDs obtained through a brokerage or investment house rather than directly from a customer are referred to as brokered deposits.8 CDs held in foreign offices and denominated in dollars are referred to as Eurodollar deposits. Borrowed Funds. The liabilities described above are all deposit liabilities, reflecting deposit contracts issued by banks in return for cash. However, banks not only fund their assets by issuing deposits but borrow in various markets for purchased funds. Since the funds generated from these purchases are not deposits, they are subject to neither reserve requirements (as with demand deposits and NOW accounts) nor deposit insurance premium payments to the FDIC (as with all the domestic deposits described earlier).9 The largest market available for purchased funds is the federal funds market (item 36). As we discussed earlier, a bank with excess reserves can sell them in the fed funds market, recording them as an asset on the balance sheet. The bank that purchases fed funds shows them as a liability on its balance sheet. As with the fed funds market, the RP market (item 36) is a highly liquid and flexible source of funds for banks needing to increase their liabilities and to offset deposit withdrawals. Moreover, like fed funds, these transactions can be rolled over each day if the counterparty is willing. The major difference in flexibility of liability management for fed funds and RPs is that a fed funds transaction can be entered into at virtually any time in the banking day. In general, it is difficult to transact an RP borrowing late in the day since the bank sending the fed funds must be satisfied with the type and quality of the securities' 8 These are often purchased in $100,000 increments. For example, a broker may receive $1 million from an investor and break this up into 10 lots of $100,000 CDs that are placed (brokered out) at 10 different banks. Thus, effectively, the full $1 million is covered by FDIC deposit insurance. 9 Foreign deposits are not subject to deposit insurance premiums. However, in the exceptional event of a very large failure in which all deposits are protected, under the 1991 FDICIA, the FDIC is required to levy a charge on surviving large banks proportional to their total asset size. To the extent that assets are partially funded by foreign liabilities, this is an implied premium on foreign deposits. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 9 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 10 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis core deposits Deposits of the bank that are stable over short periods of time and thus provide a long-term funding source to a bank. purchased funds Rate-sensitive funding sources of the bank. collateral proposed by the borrowing bank. Although this collateral is normally T-bills, T-notes, T-bonds, and mortgage-backed securities, the maturities and other features, such as callability or coupons, may be unattractive to the fund seller. Fed funds and RPs have been the major sources of borrowed funds, but banks have utilized other borrowing (item 37) sources to supplement their flexibility in liability management. Four of these sources are bankers' acceptances (BAs), commercial paper, medium-term notes, and discount window loans. Banks often convert off-balance-sheet letters of credit into on-balance-sheet BAs by discounting the letter of credit when the holder presents it for acceptance. In addition, these BAs may be resold to money market investors. As a result, BA sales to the secondary market are an additional funding source. Although a bank subsidiary itself cannot issue commercial paper, its parent holding company canthat is, Citigroup can issue commercial paper but Citibank cannot. This provides banks owned by holding companiesmost of the largest banks in the United Stateswith an additional funding source, since the holding company can \"downstream\" funds generated from its commercial paper sales to its bank subsidiary. Finally, banks facing temporary liquidity crunches can borrow from the central bank's discount window at the discount rate. Since this rate is not market determined and usually lies below fed funds and government security rates, it offers a very attractive borrowing opportunity to a bank with deficient reserves as the reserve maintenance period comes to an end. A number of banks in search of stable sources of funds with low withdrawal risk have begun to issue subordinated notes and debentures (item 38), often in the five- to seven-year range. These notes are especially attractive because they are subject to neither reserve requirements nor deposit insurance premiums, and some can serve as (Tier II) capital for the bank to satisfy Federal Reserve regulations regarding minimum capital requirements. Some banks separate core deposits from purchased funds on their balance sheets. The stable deposits of the bank are referred to as core deposits (item 33). These deposits are not expected to be withdrawn over short periods of time and are therefore a more permanent source of funding for the bank. Core deposits are also the cheapest funds banks can use to finance their assets. Because they are both a stable and low-cost source of funding, core deposits are the most frequently used source of funding by commercial banks. Core deposits generally are defined as demand deposits, NOW accounts, MMDAs, other savings accounts, and retail CDs. Purchased funds are more expensive and/or volatile sources of funds because they are highly rate sensitivethese funds are more likely to be immediately withdrawn or replaced as rates on competitive instruments change. Further, interest rates on these funds, at any point in time, are generally higher than rates on core deposits. Purchased funds are generally defined as brokered deposits, wholesale CDs, deposits at foreign offices, fed funds purchased, RPs, and subordinated notes and debentures. Other Liabilities. Banks also list other liabilities (item 39) that do not require interest to be paid. These items consist of accrued interest, deferred taxes, dividends payable, minority interests in consolidated subsidies, and other miscellaneous claims. Equity Capital The bank's equity capital (item 45) consists mainly of preferred (item 41) and common (item 42) stock (listed at par value), surplus or additional paid-in capital (item 43), and retained earnings (item 44). Regulations require banks to hold a minimum level of equity capital to act as a buffer against losses from their on- and off-balance-sheet assets. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 10 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 11 Off-Balance-Sheet Assets and Liabilities Off-balance-sheet (OBS) items are contingent assets and liabilities that may affect the future status of a financial institution's balance sheet. OBS activities are less obvious and often invisible to financial statement readers because they usually appear \"below the bottom line,\" frequently as footnotes to accounts. As part of the quarterly financial reports submitted to regulators, schedule L lists the notional dollar size of OBS activities of banks. We briefly summarized the OBS activities of commercial banks in Chapter 2. In this appendix, we introduce the items as they appear off the FI's balance sheet. Although OBS activities are now an important source of fee income for many FIs, they have the potential to produce positive as well as negative future cash flows. Some OBS activities can involve risks that add to the institution's overall risk exposure; others can hedge or reduce their interest rate, credit, and foreign exchange risks. A depository institution's performance and solvency are also affected by the management of these items. Off-balance-sheet activities can be grouped into four major categories: loan commitments, letters of credit, loans sold, and derivative securities. The OBS activities for Webster Financial and Bank of America are reported in Table 2B-2. Loan Commitments loan commitment Contractual commitment to loan to a firm a certain maximum amount at given interest rate terms. up-front fee The fee charged for making funds available through a loan commitment. These days, most commercial and industrial loans are made by firms that take down (or borrow against) prenegotiated lines of credit or loan commitments rather than borrow cash immediately in the form of spot loans. A loan commitment agreement (item 1 in Table 2B-2) is a contractual commitment by a bank or another FI (such as an insurance company) to loan to a customer a certain maximum amount (say, $10 million) at given interest rate terms (say, 12 percent). The loan commitment agreement also defines the length of time over which the borrower has the option to take down this loan. In return for making this loan commitment, the bank may charge an up-front fee (or facility fee) of, say, 1/8 percent of the commitment size, or $12,500 in this example. In addition, the bank must stand ready to supply the full $10 million at any time over the commitment periodfor example, one year. Meanwhile, the borrower has a valuable option to take down TABLE 2B-2 Off-Balance-Sheet Activities for Two Commercial Banks (in millions of dollars) Webster Financial* Bank of America* $ 3,610.16 10.27 147.88 $ 1,266,314.53 2,942.80 94,015.32 112,562.41 $ 7,817.06 51.87 1,198.05 $12,835.29 $10,115,367.94 4,113,717.90 29,991,985.88 4,694,042.23 $50,390,949.01 Commitments and Contingencies 1. Loan commitments 2. Commercial letters of credit 3. Standby letters of credit 4. Loans sold Notional Amounts for Derivatives 5. Forwards and futures 6. Options 7. Interest rate swaps 8. Credit derivatives 9. Total * Values are taken from the 2010 FDIC Report of Condition data tapes available at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation website. www.fdic.gov Notional amounts reflect the face value of the contracts entered into. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 11 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 12 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis FIGURE 2B-1 Loan Commitment Transaction commitment fee The fee charged on the unused component of a loan commitment. 0 6 Months 1 Year Loan Commitment Agreement Begins Off Balance Sheet; No Change Made On Balance Sheet. Take Down $8m of Loan Commitment; Loans Increase by $8m On Balance Sheet; $2m Commitment Remains Off Balalnce Sheet. Loan Commitment Period Ends and Is Removed Off Balance Sheet; No Change On Balance Sheet. any amount between $0 and $10 million over the commitment period. The bank may also charge the borrower a commitment fee on any unused commitment balances at the end of the period. In this example, if the borrower takes down only $8 million over the year and the fee on unused commitments is 1/4 percent, the bank generates additional revenue of 1/4 percent times $2 million, or $5,000. Note that only when the borrower actually draws on the commitment do the loans made under the commitment appear on the balance sheet. Thus, only when the $8 million loan is taken down exactly halfway through the one-year commitment period (i.e., six months later) does the balance sheet show the creation of a new $8 million loan. We illustrate the transaction in Figure 2B-1. When the $10 million commitment is made at time 0, nothing shows on the balance sheet. Nevertheless, the bank must stand ready to supply the full $10 million in loans on any day within the one-year commitment periodat time 0 a new contingent claim on the resources of the bank is created. At time 6 months, when the $8 million is drawn down, the balance sheet will reflect this as an $8 million loan. Commercial Letters of Credit and Standby Letters of Credit commercial letters of credit Contingent guarantees sold by an FI to underwrite the trade or commercial performance of the buyers of the guarantees. standby letters of credit Guarantees issued to cover contingencies that are potentially more severe and less predictable than contingencies covered under trade-related or commercial letters of credit. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 12 In selling commercial letters of credit (LCsitem 2 in Table 2B-2) and standby letters of credit (SLCsitem 3) for fees, banks add to their contingent future liabilities. Both LCs and SLCs are essentially guarantees to underwrite performance that a depository institution sells to the buyers of the guarantees (such as a corporation). In economic terms, the depository institution that sells LCs and SLCs is selling insurance against the frequency or severity of some particular future event occurring. Further, similar to the different lines of insurance sold by propertycasualty insurers, LC and SLC contracts differ as to the severity and frequency of their risk exposures. We look next at the risk exposure from engaging in LC and SLC activities off the balance sheet. Commercial Letters of Credit. Commercial letters of credit are widely used in both domestic and international trade. For example, they ease the shipment of grain between a farmer in Iowa and a purchaser in New Orleans or the shipment of goods between a U.S. importer and a foreign exporter. The bank's role is to provide a formal guarantee that payment for goods shipped or sold will be forthcoming regardless of whether the buyer of the goods defaults on payment. We show a very simple LC example in Figure 2B-2 for an international transaction between a U.S. importer and a German exporter. Suppose that the U.S. importer sent an order for $10 million worth of machinery to a German exporter, as shown in step 1 of Figure 2B-2. However, the German exporter may be reluctant to send the goods without some assurance or guarantee of being paid once the goods are shipped. The U.S. importer may promise to pay 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B FIGURE 2B-2 Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 13 1 U.S. Importer Simple Letter of Credit Transaction German Exporter 3 2 2 U.S. Bank for the goods in 90 days, but the German exporter may feel insecure either because it knows little about the creditworthiness of the U.S. importer or because the U.S. importer has a low credit rating (i.e., B or BB). To persuade the German exporter to ship the goods, the U.S. importer may have to turn to a large U.S. bank with which it has developed a long-term customer relationship. In its role as a lender and monitor, the U.S. bank can better appraise the U.S. importer's creditworthiness. The U.S. bank can issue a contingent payment guaranteethat is, an LC to the German exporter on the importer's behalfin return for an LC fee paid by the U.S. importer. In our example, the bank would send the German exporter an LC guaranteeing payment for the goods in 90 days regardless of whether the importer defaults on its obligation to the German exporter (step 2 in Figure 2B-2). Implicitly, the bank is replacing the U.S. importer's credit risk with its own credit risk guarantee. For this substitution to work effectively, the bank, in guaranteeing payment, must have a higher credit standing or better credit quality reputation than the U.S. importer. Once the bank issues the LC and sends it to the German exporter, the exporter ships the goods to the U.S. importer (step 3 in Figure 2B-2).10 The probability is very high that in 90 days' time the U.S. importer will pay the German exporter for the goods sent and the bank keeps the LC fee as profit. The fee is perhaps 10 basis points of the face value of the letter of credit, or $10,000 in this example. A small probability exists, however, that the U.S. importer will be unable to pay the $10 million in 90 days and will default. Then the bank is obliged to make good on its guarantee. The cost of such a default could mean that the bank must pay $10 million, although it would have a creditor's claim against the importer's assets to offset this loss. Clearly, the fee should exceed the expected default risk on the LC, which equals the probability of default times the expected payout on the LC after adjusting for the bank's ability to reclaim assets from the defaulting importer and any monitoring costs. Standby Letters of Credit Standby letters of credit perform an insurance function similar to commercial and trade letters of credit. The structure and type of risk covered differ, however. FIs may issue SLCs to cover contingencies that are potentially more severe, less predictable or frequent, and not necessarily trade related. These contingencies include performance bond guarantees by which an FI may guarantee that a real estate development will be completed in some interval of time. Alternatively, the FI may offer default guarantees to back an issue of commercial paper or municipal revenue bonds to allow issuers to achieve a higher credit rating and a lower funding cost than otherwise. 10 sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 13 The German exporter may also receive a banker's acceptance written against the letter of credit. 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 14 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis Without credit enhancements, for example, many firms would be unable to borrow in the commercial paper market or would have to borrow at a higher funding cost. P1 borrowers, who offer the highest quality commercial paper, normally pay 40 basis points less than P2 borrowers, the next quality grade. By paying a fee of perhaps 25 basis points to a bank, an FI guarantees to pay commercial paper purchasers' principal and interest on maturity should the issuing firm itself be unable to pay. The SLC backing of commercial paper issues normally results in the paper's placement in the lowest default risk class (P1) and the issuer's savings of up to 15 basis points on issuing costs40 basis points (the P2 P1 spread) minus the 25-basis-point SLC fee equals 15 basis points. Note that in selling the SLCs, banks are competing directly with another of their OBS products, loan commitments. Rather than buying an SLC from a bank to back a commercial paper issue, the issuing firm might pay a fee to a bank to supply a loan commitment. This loan commitment would match the size and maturity of the commercial paper issuefor example, a $100 million ceiling and 45-day maturity. If, on maturity, the commercial paper issuer had insufficient funds to repay the commercial paper holders, the issuer has the right to take down the $100 million loan commitment and to use these funds to meet repayments on the commercial paper. Often, the up-front fees on such loan commitments are less than those on SLCs; therefore, many firms issuing commercial paper prefer to use loan commitments. Finally, remember that U.S. banks are not the only issuers of SLCs. Not surprising, property-casualty insurers have an increasingly important business line of performance bonds and financial guarantees. The growth in these lines for property-casualty insurers has come at the expense of U.S. banks. Moreover, foreign banks increasingly are taking a share of the U.S. market in SLCs. The reason for the loss in this business line by U.S. banks is that to sell guarantees such as SLCs credibly, the seller must have a better credit rating than the customer. In recent years, few U.S. banks or their parent holding companies have had AA ratings or better. Other domestic FIs and foreign banks, on the other hand, have more often had AA ratings or better. High credit ratings not only make the guarantor more attractive from the buyer's perspective, but also make the guarantor more competitive because its cost of funds is lower than that of less creditworthy FIs. Loans Sold loans sold Loans originated by the bank and then sold to other investors that can be returned to the originating institution. recourse The ability to put an asset or loan back to the seller should the credit quality of that asset deteriorate. sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 14 Loans sold (item 4 in Table 2B-2) are loans that a bank has originated and then sold to other investors that may be returned (sold with recourse) to the originating institution in the future if the credit quality of the loans deteriorates. We discuss the types of loans that banks sell, their incentives to sell, and the way in which they can sell them in more detail in Chapter 25. Banks and other FIs increasingly originate loans on their balance sheets, but rather than holding the loans to maturity, they quickly sell them to outside investors. These outside investors include other banks, insurance companies, mutual funds, or even corporations. In acting as loan originators and loan sellers, banks are operating more as loan brokers than as traditional asset transformers. When an outside party buys a loan with absolutely no recourse to the seller of the loan should the loan eventually go bad, loan sales have no OBS contingent liability implications for banks. Specifically, no recourse means that if the loan the bank sells should go bad, the buyer of the loan must bear the full risk of loss. In particular, the buyer cannot go back to the seller or originating bank to seek payment on the bad loan. Suppose that the loan is sold with recourse. Then, loan sales present a long-term off-balance-sheet or contingent credit risk to the seller. 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis 15 Essentially, the buyer of the loan holds an option to put the loan back to the seller, which the buyer can exercise should the credit quality of the purchased loan materially deteriorate. In reality, the recourse or nonrecourse nature of loan sales is often ambiguous. For example, some have argued that banks generally are willing to repurchase bad no-recourse loans to preserve their reputations with their customers. Obviously, reputation concerns may extend the size of a selling bank's contingent liabilities from OBS activities. Derivative Contracts derivative securities Futures, forward, swap, and option positions taken by the FI for hedging or other purposes. Derivative securities (items 5 to 8 in Table 2B-2) are the futures, forward, swap, and option positions taken by a bank for hedging and other purposes. Banks can be either users of derivative contracts for hedging and other purposes or dealers that act as middlemen in trades with customers for a fee. It has been estimated that some 1,064 U.S. banks use derivatives and that five large dealer banks J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanleyaccount for some 95 percent of the derivatives that user banks hold.11 Contingent credit risk is likely to be present when banks expand their positions in futures, forward, swap, and option contracts. This risk relates to the fact that the counterparty to one of these contracts may default on payment obligations, leaving the bank unhedged and having to replace the contract at today's interest rates, prices, or exchange rates, which may be relatively unfavorable. In addition, such defaults are most likely to occur when the counterparty is losing heavily on the contract and the bank is in the money on the contract. This type of default risk is much more serious for forward contracts than for futures contracts. This is because forward contracts are nonstandard contracts entered into bilaterally by negotiating parties, such as two banks, and all cash flows are required to be paid at one time (on contract maturity). Thus, they are essentially over-the-counter (OTC) arrangements with no external guarantees should one or the other party default on the contract. By contrast, futures contracts are standardized contracts guaranteed by organized exchanges such as the New York Futures Exchange (NYFE). Futures contracts, like forward contracts, make commitments to deliver foreign exchange (or some other asset) at some future date. If a counterparty were to default on a futures contract, however, the exchange would assume the defaulting party's position and payment obligations. Option contracts can also be traded over the counter (OTC) or bought/sold on organized exchanges. If the options are standardized options traded on exchanges, such as bond options, they are virtually default risk free.12 If they are specialized options purchased OTC, such as interest rate caps, some elements of default risk exist.13 Similarly, swaps are OTC instruments normally susceptible to default risk.14 In general, default risk on OTC contracts increases with the time to maturity of the contract and the fluctuation of underlying prices, interest rates, or exchange rates.15 11 See OCC Bank Derivative Report. Note that the options still can be subject to interest rate risk. 13 Under an interest rate cap, the seller, in return for a fee, promises to compensate the buyer should interest rates rise above a certain level. If rates rise much more than expected, the cap seller may have an incentive to default to truncate the losses. Thus, selling a cap is similar to a bank's selling interest rate risk insurance. 14 In a swap, two parties contract to exchange interest rate payments or foreign exchange payments. If interest rates (or foreign exchange rates) move a good deal, one party can face considerable future loss exposure, creating incentives to default. 15 Reputational considerations and the need for future access to markets for hedging deter the incentive to default. However, most empirical evidence suggests that derivative contracts have reduced FI risk. 12 sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 15 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages 16 Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis Other Fee-Generating Activities Commercial banks engage in other fee-generating activities that cannot be easily identified from analyzing their on- and off-balance-sheet accounts. These include trust services, processing services, and correspondent banking. Trust Services The trust department of a commercial bank holds and manages assets for individuals or corporations. Only the largest banks have sufficient staff to offer trust services. Individual trusts represent about one-half of all trust assets managed by commercial banks. These trusts include estate assets and assets delegated to bank trust departments by less financially sophisticated investors. Pension fund assets are the second largest group of assets managed by the trust departments of commercial banks. The banks manage the pension funds, act as trustees for any bonds held by the pension funds, and act as transfer and disbursement agents for the pension funds. Processing Services Commercial banks have traditionally provided financial data processing services for their business customers. These services include managing a customer's accounts receivable and accounts payable. Similarly, bank cash management services include the provision of lockbox services where customers of a firm send payments to a post office box managed by a bank, which opens, processes, collects, and deposits checks within a very short time (sometimes as short as one hour) in the business customer's account. Banks also provide personalized services for both large and small companies, including moving funds from savings accounts that earn interest to transactions accounts that do not earn interest as firms need to make payments. The larger commercial banks have broadened their range of business services to include management consulting, data processing, and information systems or other technological services. Information systems and software marketed by commercial banks assist clients in collecting, analyzing, and reporting data effectively and efficiently. Correspondent Banking Correspondent banking is the provision of banking services to other banks that do not have the staff resources to perform the service themselves. These services include check clearing and collection, foreign exchange trading, hedging services, and participation in large loan and security issuances. Correspondent banking services are generally sold as a package of services. Payment for the services is generally in the form of noninterest bearing deposits held at the bank offering the correspondent services. Income Statement See Table 2B-3 for the report of income or income statement for Webster Financial and Bank of America for 2010. The report of income identifies the interest income and expenses, net interest income, provision for loan losses, noninterest income and expenses, income before taxes and extraordinary items, and net income for the banks earned from the on- and off-balance-sheet activities described above. As we discuss the income statement, notice the direct relationship between it and the balance sheet (both on- and off-). The composition of an FI's assets and liabilities, combined with the interest rates earned or paid on them, directly determines the interest income and expense on the income statement. In addition, because the assets and sau34809_app02B_001-033.indd 16 27/08/13 11:48 AM Rev. Confirming Pages Appendix 2B Commercial Banks' Financial Statements and Analysis TABLE 2B-3 Income Statement for Two Commercial Banks for 2010 (in millions of dollars) Webster Financial 17 Bank of America* Interest Income 1. Income on C&I loans 2. Income on real estate loans 3. Income on consumer loans 4. Income on other loans 5. Income on leases 6. Interest and fees on loans and leases 7. Interest on deposits at other institutions 8. Interest on fed funds and RPs 9. Interest on U.S. Treasury and agency securities 10. Interest on mortgage-backed securities 11. Interest on municipals and other debt and equity securities 12. Interest income on investment securities 13. Total interest income $121.54 365.13 3.13 1.13 5.80 $496.73 0.53 0.00 0.72 175.90 36.38 $213.53 $710.26 $ 5,332.13 23,270.89 19,044.47 5,820.26 1,077.33 $54,545.08 514.15 630.18 1,529.20 8,654.28 2,678.51 $14,006.32 $68,551.40 $ 0.59 53.57 0.48 45.84 25.99 $126.47 16.25 18.33 5.57 $166.62 $543.64 $150.00 $ 147.34 1,457.47 578.59 1,782.71 546.67 $ 4,512.78 604.96 4,867.84 335.04 $10,320.62 $58,230.78 $34,707.48 $ 7.65 75.05 (2.50) 0.00 0.00 7.13 11.21 7.76 82.82 $189.12 $ 1,527.26 7,477.74 3,625.63 1,086.52 285.96 376.55 6,595.75 1,250.32 10,606.07 $32,831.80 $232.23 101.17 209.94 $543.34 $ 39.42 (0.48) $ 39.90 $18,846.44 5,071.92 18,010.70 $41,929.06 $14,426.04 4,435.34 $ 9,990.70 Interest Expense 14. Interest on NOW accounts 15. Interest on MMDA accounts and other savings 16. Interest on foreign deposits 17. Interest on retail CDs 18. Interest on wholesale CDs 19. Interest on deposit accounts 20. Interest on fed funds and RPs 21. Interest on other borrowed funds 22. Interest on subordinated notes and debentures 23. Total interest expense 24. Net interest income 25. Provision for loan losses Noninterest Income 26. Income from fiduciary ac