1 / 0

Gold Medal Interest Rate Risk Policies

Gold Medal Interest Rate Risk Policies. Credit Union Association of the Dakotas June 28, 2012. Today’s Topic – Interest Rate Risk. A Short History of Interest Rate Risk (IRR) The New Environment Best Practices Q&A. Our perspective…. CliftonLarsonAllen

alyson
Download Presentation

Gold Medal Interest Rate Risk Policies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gold Medal Interest Rate Risk Policies

    Credit Union Association of the Dakotas June 28, 2012
  2. Today’s Topic – Interest Rate Risk A Short History of Interest Rate Risk (IRR) The New Environment Best Practices Q&A
  3. Our perspective… CliftonLarsonAllen Started in 1953 with a goal of total client service January 2012 merger Today, industry and service specialized CPA and Advisory firm ranked in the top 10 in the U.S. Number 1 provider of Credit Union audit services (source: Callahan & Associates)
  4. CliftonLarsonAllen Presenters Greg Schwartz, CPA Thomas Danielson, CPA
  5. Start History of IRR Guidance
  6. Real Estate Lending and Balance Sheet Management 99-CU-12 Credit unions should complete a comprehensive balance sheet risk assessment. Prudent interest rate risk management should be in place now to avoid excessive risk exposure in the future.
  7. Asset Liability Management Examination Procedures 00-CU-10 New examination procedures over the credit union’s risk measurement system and the underlying assumptions used in the risk assessment.
  8. Liability Management – Highly Rate Sensitive & Volatile Funding Sources 01-CU-08 You should analyze objectives before making decisions about how to deploy the recent inflow of funds. It is risky to make asset decisions without proper analysis of liability considerations.
  9. Managing Share Inflows in Uncertain Times 01-CU-19 Credit unions should exercise diligent management practices as they analyze available options and objectives in managing potential increased inflow of funds.
  10. Non-Maturity Shares and Balance Sheet Risk 03-CU-11 Credit unions should adopt sound policies and procedures when measuring the behavior of non-maturity shares.
  11. Real Estate Concentrations and IRR Management for Credit Unions With Large Positions in Fixed-Rate Mortgage Portfolios 03-CU-15 The current interest rate environment offers credit unions unique member service opportunities, but also balance sheet management challenges. We strongly caution credit unions to avoid a strategy of "wait-and-see" on interest rates when holding excessive risk in portfolio.
  12. Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk 10-CU-06 The adequacy and effectiveness of an institution’s IRR management process and the level of its IRR exposure are critical factors in the regulators’ evaluation of an institution’s sensitivity to changes in interest rates and capital adequacy.
  13. Interest Rate Risk Management FAQ 1/12/12 Covered Later
  14. Interest Rate Risk Policy and Program 2/2/12 The NCUA is issuing a final rule requiring Federally insured credit unions develop and adopt a written policy on interest rate risk management and a program to effectively implement that policy.
  15. Interest Rate Risk Policy and Program Issued February 2, 2012 Effective September 30, 2012 Needed because: Changes in balance sheet composition Increased uncertainty in the financial markets
  16. New Requirements Written policy on IRR management Written program to effectively implement the policy
  17. Applicability All Federally Insured Credit Unions (FICU) over $50 million in total assets All FICU between $10 and $50 million with a Supervisory Interest Rate Risk Threshold Ratio (SIRRT Ratio) over 100%
  18. Not Applicable FICU with less than $10 in total assets All FICU between $10 and $50 million with a SIRRT Ratio under 100%
  19. SIRRT Ratio SIRRT Ratio First Mortgage Loans + Investments with Maturities Over 5 Years Divided by Net Worth
  20. Who’s Affected NCUA estimates this will apply to 3,246 FICUs NCUA estimates 2,446 FICUs already have an IRR Policy, so update/modification efforts will be needed Remaining 800 FICUs will need to create a new policy and program
  21. IRR Policy

    IRR Policy
  22. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 1. Identify committees, persons or other parties responsible for review of the credit union’s IRR exposure.
  23. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 2. Direct appropriate actions to ensure management takes steps to manage IRR so that IRR exposures are identified, measured, monitored, and controlled.
  24. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 3. State the frequency with which management will report on measurement results to the board and in sufficient detail to assess the credit union’s IRR profile.
  25. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 4. Set limits for IRR exposures based on selected measures.
  26. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 5. Choose tests, such as interest rate shocks, that the credit union will perform using the selected measures.
  27. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 6. Provide for periodic review of material changes in IRR exposures and compliance with board approved policy and risk limits.
  28. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 7. Provide for assessment of the IRR impact of any new business activities prior to implementation.
  29. IRR Policy - 8 Required Elements 8. Provide for at least an annual evaluation of policy to determine whether it is still commensurate with the size, complexity, and risk profile of the credit union.
  30. IRR Oversight and Management Management responsibilities: Develop and maintain adequate IRR measurement systems Evaluate and understand IRR risk exposures Establish an appropriate system of internal controls Allocate sufficient resources for an effective IRR program Develop and support competent staff with technical expertise
  31. IRR Oversight and Management Management responsibilities (continued): Identify the procedures and assumptions involved in implementing the IRR measurement systems Establish clear lines of authority and responsibility for managing IRR Provide a sufficient set of reports to ensure compliance with policy
  32. IRR Measurement and Monitoring Risk Measurement Systems: Rely on assumptions that are reasonable and supportable Document any changes to assumptions based on observed information Monitor positions with uncertain maturities, rates, or cash flows Require IRR calculation techniques, measures, and tests to be sufficiently rigorous
  33. IRR Measurement and Monitoring Risk Measurement Methods: GAP analysis Income Simulation NCUA Asset Valuation tables NEV All are acceptable, depending on complexity
  34. Components of IRR Measurement Methods Chart of Accounts Should define a sufficient number of accounts to capture key IRR characteristics As complexity, risk exposure, and size increase – data should be increasingly disaggregated
  35. Internal Controls Separation of those responsible for the risk taking and risk measuring functions Periodically assess the overall IRR program Normally done by Internal Auditor
  36. Decision-Making Changing balance sheet structure Funding Pricing strategies Business planning
  37. Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management January 6, 2010
  38. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 1. How should financial institutions determine which IRR vendor models are appropriate? Consider: Ability to model current and planned products Automated vs. manual procedures Model transparency and validations Implementation and ongoing support
  39. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 2. If an institution implements a new strategy and later finds that its IRR measurement model cannot capture the risk exposure, could this raise significant supervisory concerns. Yes – considered an essential part of the due diligence process.
  40. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 3. What types of IRR measurement methodologies are institutions expected to use? Earnings focused Economic value of Capital New ones on a case-by-case basis
  41. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 4. Should institutions with non-complex balance sheets use earnings simulations to measure risk to earnings? All institutions are encouraged to use earnings simulations
  42. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 5. Should institutions perform rate shocks greater than +300 basis points Yes
  43. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 6. Should all institutions analyze risk other than repricing risk? Basis, yield curve, and options risk should be analyzed annually, or more often if particularly sensitive.
  44. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 7. Should institutions establish board-approved thresholds for monitoring each stress scenario they run? Management should establish limits, triggers, or thresholds for stress scenarios in order to compare risk measurement results with the institution’s risk tolerance.
  45. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 8. When no growth scenarios for measuring earnings simulations are mentioned, can you clarify what no growth means. Stable balance sheet A growing balance sheet can hide IRR risk Sound practice – contrast growth with no growth scenarios
  46. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 9. Most institutions use third-party tools to measure IRR. Can independent certifications/validations commissioned by model vendors satisfy supervisory expectations for model validations? No
  47. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 10. Can you provide some examples of effective back-testing practices? Isolating how key drivers varied from model to actual
  48. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ 11. Can an institution use industry estimates for non-maturity-deposit decay rates? Generally avoid industry estimates Can contract with an outside party to assist Should be subject to back-testing
  49. The Interagency Advisory on Interest Rate Risk Management - FAQ Regarding deposit decay-rate assumptions, what are some examples of a “market environment in which customer behaviors may not reflect the long-term economic fundamentals”? Flight to quality during times of stress (insured deposits). Deterrence value of prepayment penalties during times of near zero interest rates.
  50. Other - Best Practices Make it visual Use graphs and charts Use Green, Yellow, Red Light
  51. Quote “Data is not useful until it becomes information. We repeatedly underestimate how important a story is to help us make sense of the world” Seth Grodin – Marketing Guru
  52. IRR Report – Best Practice The current position The past position The average The variability The story
  53. The +400bp Shock – Best Practices Should we be modeling +400 parallel shifts? November 1980 Fed Funds went from 15.85% to 18.90% in one month. November 2000 Fed Funds went from 6.50 % to 1.82% by the end of the next year. At least six Fed Reserve Board Members are predicting a rapid rise in rates in 2015 or 2016.
  54. Stress-Testing Dos Know what you are measuring Leverage existing systems Summarize/benchmark the results Identify major assumptions Know what the assumptions are based on
  55. Stress-Testing Don’ts Think that you can predict it Obsess over precision Run more than a handful of tests Expect a right or wrong answer
  56. Summary Develop a IRR policy Develop a IRR program Prepare for the interest rate “Rise”
  57. Open Discussion and Questions
  58. Thank You

    Greg Schwartz, CPA Partner greg.schwartz@cliftonlarsonallen.com 612-376-4684
More Related