Commercial Bank Risk Management: An Analysis of The Process: Financial Institutions Center

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Financial Commercial Bank Risk

Institutions Management: an Analysis of the


Center Process

by
Anthony M. Santomero

95-11-C
THE WHARTON FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS CENTER

The Wharton Financial Institutions Center provides a multi-disciplinary research approach to


the problems and opportunities facing the financial services industry in its search for
competitive excellence. The Center's research focuses on the issues related to managing risk
at the firm level as well as ways to improve productivity and performance.

The Center fosters the development of a community of faculty, visiting scholars and Ph.D.
candidates whose research interests complement and support the mission of the Center. The
Center works closely with industry executives and practitioners to ensure that its research is
informed by the operating realities and competitive demands facing industry participants as
they pursue competitive excellence.

Copies of the working papers summarized here are available from the Center. If you would
like to learn more about the Center or become a member of our research community, please
let us know of your interest.

Anthony M. Santomero
Director

The Working Paper Series is made possible by a generous


grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Commercial Bank Risk Management:
An Analysis of the Process 1

This Version: February 28, 1997

Abstract: Throughout the past year, on-site visits to financial service firms were conducted
to review and evaluate their financial risk management systems. The commercial banking
analysis covered a number of North American super-regionals and quasi-money center
institutions as well as several firms outside the U.S. The information obtained covered both
the philosophy and practice of financial risk management. This paper outlines the results of
this investigation. It reports the state of risk management techniques in the industry. It
reports the standard of practice and evaluates how and why it is conducted in the particular
way chosen. In addition, critiques are offered where appropriate. We discuss the problems
which the industry finds most difficult to address, shortcomings of the current methodology
used to analyze risk, and the elements that are missing in the current procedures of risk
management.

JEL Classification codes : G2, G1, L2

Key words : risk management, financial risk, banking

1
Anthony M. Santomero is the Richard K. Mellon Professor of Finance at the Wharton School.

This paper was presented at the Wharton Financial Institutions Center Conference on Risk Management in
Banking, October 13-15, 1996. The author acknowledges helpful comments and suggestions received at workshops
at INSEAD, Universita Bocconi, University of Karlsruhe, Stockholm School of Economics, and the Federal
Reserve. Specific thanks to R. Eisenbeis, D. Babbel, G. Oldfield and R. Herring.
I. Introduction

The past decade has seen dramatic losses in the banking industry. Firms that had been performing

well suddenly announced large losses due to credit exposures that turned sour, interest rate positions taken,

or derivative exposures that may or may not have been assumed to hedge balance sheet risk. In response to

this, commercial banks have almost universally embarked upon an upgrading of their risk management and

control systems.

Coincidental to this activity, and in part because of our recognition of the industry's vulnerability to

financial risk, the Wharton Financial Institutions Center, with the support of the Sloan Foundation, has been

involved in an analysis of financial risk management processes in the financial sector. Through the past

academic year, on-site visits were conducted to review and evaluate the risk management systems and the

process of risk evaluation that is in place. In the banking sector, system evaluation was conducted covering

many of North America's super-regionals and quasi-money center commercial banks, as well as a number of

major investment banking firms. These results were then presented to a much wider array of banking firms

for reaction and verification.

The purpose of the present paper is to outline the findings of this investigation. It reports the state of

risk management techniques in the industry -- questions asked, questions answered and questions left

unaddressed by respondents.1 This report can not recite a litany of the approaches used within the industry,

nor can it offer an evaluation of each and every approach. Rather, it reports the standard of practice and

evaluates how and why it is conducted in the particular way chosen. But, even the best practice employed

within the industry is not good enough in some areas. Accordingly, critiques also will be offered where

appropriate. The paper concludes with a list of questions that are currently unanswered, or answered

imprecisely in the current practice employed by this group of relatively sophisticated banks. Here, we discuss

the problems which the industry finds most difficult to address, shortcomings of the current methodology used

1
A companion paper reports on risk management practices for insurance firms. See Babbel and Santomero (1997).

1
to analyze risk and the elements that are missing in the current procedures of risk management and risk

control.

II. Risk As a Central Ingredient To the Industry's Franchise

A. What Type of Risk Is Being Considered ?

Commercial banks are in the risk business. In the process of providing financial services, they assume

various kinds of financial risks. Over the last decade our understanding of the place of commercial banks

within the financial sector has improved substantially. Over this time, much has been written on the role of

commercial banks in the financial sector, both in the academic literature2 and in the financial press3. These

arguments will be neither reviewed nor enumerated here. Suffice it to say that market participants seek the

services of these financial institutions because of their ability to provide market knowledge, transaction

efficiency and funding capability. In performing these roles they generally act as a principal in the

transaction,. As such, they use their own balance sheet to facilitate the transaction and to absorb the risks

associated with it.

To be sure, there are activities performed by banking firms which do not have direct balance sheet

implications. These services include agency and advisory activities such as (i) trust and investment

management, (ii) private and public placements through "best efforts" or facilitating contracts, (iii) standard

underwriting through Section 20 Subsidiaries of the holding company, or (iv) the packaging, securitizing,

distributing and servicing of loans in the areas of consumer and real estate debt primarily. These items are

absent from the traditional financial statement because the latter rely on generally accepted accounting

procedures rather than a true economic balance sheet. Nonetheless, the overwhelming majority of the risks

facing the banking firm is in on-balance-sheet businesses. It is in this area that the discussion of risk

2
There are amply reviews of the role of banks within the financial sector. See, for example, Bhattacharya and
Thakor (1993), Santomero (1984), or more recently Allen and Santomero (1997).

3
There are many surveys and articles here. See, for example, Economist (1993), Salomon Brothers and Goldman
Sachs Equity Research Reports on the banking sector.

2
management and the necessary procedures for risk management and control has centered. Accordingly, it is

here that our review of risk management procedures will concentrate.

B. What Kinds Of Risks Are Being Absorbed ?

The risks contained in the bank's principal activities, i.e., those involving its own balance sheet and

its basic business of lending and borrowing, are not all borne by the bank itself. In many instances the

institution will eliminate or mitigate the financial risk associated with a transaction by proper business

practices; in others, it will shift the risk to other parties through a combination of pricing and product design.

The banking industry recognizes that an institution need not engage in business in a manner that

unnecessarily imposes risk upon it; nor should it absorb risk that can be efficiently transferred to other

participants. Rather, it should only manage risks at the firm level that are more efficiently managed there than

by the market itself or by their owners in their own portfolios. In short, it should accept only those risks that

are uniquely a part of the bank's array of services. Elsewhere, Oldfield and Santomero (1997), it has been

argued that risks facing all financial institutions can be segmented into three separable types, from a

management perspective. These are:

(i) risks that can be eliminated or avoided by simple business practices,

(ii) risks that can be transferred to other participants, and,

(iii) risks that must be actively managed at the firm level.

In the first of these cases, the practice of risk avoidance involves actions to reduce the chances of

idiosyncratic losses from standard banking activity by eliminating risks that are superfluous to the institution's

business purpose. Common risk avoidance practices here include at least three types of actions. The

standardization of process, contracts and procedures to prevent inefficient or incorrect financial decisions is

the first of these. The construction of portfolios that benefit from diversification across borrowers and that

reduce the effects of any one loss experience is another. Finally, the implementation of incentive-compatible

contracts with the institution's management to require that employees be held accountable is the third. In each

3
case the goal is to rid the firm of risks that are not essential to the financial service provided, or to absorb only

an optimal quantity of a particular kind of risk.

There are also some risks that can be eliminated, or at least substantially reduced through the technique

of risk transfer. Markets exist for many of the risks borne by the banking firm. Interest rate risk can be

transferred by interest rate products such as swaps or other derivatives. Borrowing terms can be altered to

effect a change in their duration. Finally, the bank can buy or sell financial claims to diversify or concentrate

the risks that result in from servicing its client base. To the extent that the financial risks of the assets created

by the firm are understood by the market, these assets can be sold at their fair value. Unless the institution has

a comparative advantage in managing the attendant risk and/or a desire for the embedded risk they contain,

there is no reason for the bank to absorb such risks, rather than transfer them.

However, there are two classes of assets or activities where the risk inherent in the activity must and

should be absorbed at the bank level. In these cases, good reasons exist for using firm resources to manage

bank level risk. The first of these includes financial assets or activities where the nature of the embedded risk

may be complex and difficult to communicate to third parties. This is the case when the bank holds complex

and proprietary assets that have thin, if not non-existent, secondary markets. Communication in such cases

may be more difficult or expensive than hedging the underlying risk.4 Moreover, revealing information about

the customer may give competitors an undue advantage. The second case included proprietary positions that

are accepted because of their risks, and their expected return. Here, risk positions that are central to the

bank's business purpose are absorbed because they are the raison d'etre of the firm. Credit risk inherent in

the lending activity is a clear case in point, as is market risk for the trading desk of banks active in certain

markets. In all such circumstances, risk is absorbed and needs to be monitored and managed efficiently by

the institution. Only then will the firm systematically achieve its financial performance goal.

This point has been made in a different context by both Santomero and Trester (1997) and
4

Berger and Udell (1993).

4
C. Why Do Banks Manage These Risks At All ?

It seems appropriate for any discussion of risk management procedures to begin with why these firms

manage risk. According to standard economic theory, managers of value maximizing firms ought to maximize

expected profit without regard to the variability around its expected value. However, there is now a growing

literature on the reasons for active risk management including the work of Stulz (1984), Smith, Smithson and

Wolford (1990), and Froot, Sharfstein and Stein (1993) to name but a few of the more notable contributions.

In fact, the recent review of risk management reported in Santomero (1995) lists dozens of contributions to

the area and at least four distinct rationales offered for active risk management. These include managerial self-

interest, the non-linearity of the tax structure, the costs of financial distress and the existence of capital market

imperfections. Any one of these justify the firms' concern over return variability, as the above-cited authors

demonstrate.

D. How Are These Risks Managed ?

In light of the above, what are the necessary procedures that must be in place to carry out adequate

risk management? In essence, what techniques are employed to both limit and manage the different types of

risk, and how are they implemented in each area of risk control? It is to these questions that we now turn.

After reviewing the procedures employed by leading firms, an approach emerges from an examination of

large-scale risk management systems. The management of the banking firm relies on a sequence of steps to

implement a risk management system. These can be seen as containing the following four parts:

5
(i) standards and reports,
(ii) position limits or rules,
(iii) investment guidelines or strategies,
(iv) incentive contracts and compensation.

In general, these tools are established to measure exposure, define procedures to manage these exposures, limit

individual positions to acceptable levels, and encourage decision makers to manage risk in a manner that is

consistent with the firm's goals and objectives. To see how each of these four parts of basic risk management

techniques achieves these ends, we elaborate on each part of the process below. In Section IV we illustrate how

these techniques are applied to manage each of the specific risks facing the banking community.

(i) Standards and Reports

The first of these risk management techniques involves two different conceptual activities, i.e.,

standard setting and financial reporting. They are listed together because they are the sine qua non of any risk

system. Underwriting standards, risk categorizations, and standards of review are all traditional tools of risk

management and control. Consistent evaluation and rating of exposures of various types are essential to

understand the risks in the portfolio, and the extent to which these risks must be mitigated or absorbed.

The standardization of financial reporting is the next ingredient. Obviously outside audits, regulatory

reports, and rating agency evaluations are essential for investors to gauge asset quality and firm level risk.

These reports have long been standardized, for better or worse. However, the need here goes beyond public

reports and audited statements to the need for management information on asset quality and risk posture. Such

internal reports need similar standardization and much more frequent reporting intervals, with daily or weekly

reports substituting for the quarterly GAAP periodicity.

(ii) Position Limits and Rules

A second technique for internal control of active management is the use of position limits,

and/or minimum standards for participation. In terms of the latter, the domain of risk taking is restricted to

only those assets or counterparties that pass some prespecified quality standard. Then, even for those

investments that are eligible, limits are imposed to cover exposures to counterparties, credits, and overall

6
position concentrations relative to various types of risks. While such limits are costly to establish and

administer, their imposition restricts the risk that can be assumed by any one individual, and therefore by the

organization as a whole. In general, each person who can commit capital will have a well-defined limit. This

applies to traders, lenders, and portfolio managers. Summary reports show limits as well as current exposure

by business unit on a periodic basis. In large organizations with thousands of positions maintained, accurate

and timely reporting is difficult, but even more essential.

(iii) Investment Guidelines and Strategies

Investment guidelines and recommended positions for the immediate future are the third

technique commonly in use. Here, strategies are outlined in terms of concentrations and commitments to

particular areas of the market, the extent of desired asset-liability mismatching or exposure, and the need to

hedge against systematic risk of a particular type.

The limits described above lead to passive risk avoidance and/or diversification, because managers

generally operate within position limits and prescribed rules. Beyond this, guidelines offer firm level advice

as to the appropriate level of active management, given the state of the market and the willingness of senior

management to absorb the risks implied by the aggregate portfolio. Such guidelines lead to firm level hedging

and asset-liability matching. In addition, securitization and even derivative activity are rapidly growing

techniques of position management open to participants looking to reduce their exposure to be in line with

management's guidelines.

(iv) Incentive Schemes

To the extent that management can enter incentive compatible contracts with line managers

and make compensation related to the risks borne by these individuals, then the need for elaborate and costly

controls is lessened. However, such incentive contracts require accurate position valuation and proper internal

control systems.5 Such tools which include position posting, risk analysis, the allocation of costs, and setting

5
The recent fiasco at Barings is an illustration of this point .

7
of required returns to various parts of the organization are not trivial. Notwithstanding the difficulty, well-

designed systems align the goals of managers with other stakeholders in a most desirable way.6 In fact, most

financial debacles can be traced to the absence of incentive compatibility, as the cases of the deposit insurance

and maverick traders so clearly illustrate.

III. Risks In Providing Banking Services

How are these techniques of risk management employed by the commercial banking sector? To explain

this, one must begin by enumerating the risks which the banking industry has chosen to manage and illustrate

how the four-step procedure outlined is applied in each area. The risks associated with the provision of banking

services differ by the type of service rendered. For the sector as a whole, however the risks can be broken

into six generic types: systematic or market risk, credit risk, counterparty risk, liquidity risk, operational risk,

and legal risks. Here, we will discuss each of the risks facing the banking institution, and in Section IV we

will indicate how they are managed.

Systematic risk is the risk of asset value change associated with systematic factors. It is sometimes

referred to as market risk, which is in fact a somewhat imprecise term. By its nature, this risk can be hedged,

but cannot be diversified completely away. In fact, systematic risk can be thought of as undiversifiable risk.

All investors assume this type of risk, whenever assets owned or claims issued can change in value as a result

of broad economic factors. As such, systematic risk comes in many different forms. For the banking sector,

however, two are of greatest concern, namely variations in the general level of interest rates and the relative

value of currencies.

Because of the bank's dependence on these systematic factors, most try to estimate the impact of these

particular systematic risks on performance, attempt to hedge against them and thus limit the sensitivity to

variations in undiversifiable factors. Accordingly, most will track interest rate risk closely. They measure

6
See Jensen and Meckling (1976), and Santomero (1984) for discussions of the shortcomings in simple linear
risk sharing incentive contracts for assuring incentive compatibility between principals and agents.

8
and manage the firm's vulnerability to interest rate variation, even though they can not do so perfectly. At

the same time, international banks with large currency positions closely monitor their foreign exchange risk

and try to manage, as well as limit, their exposure to it.

In a similar fashion, some institutions with significant investments in one commodity such as oil,

through their lending activity or geographical franchise, concern themselves with commodity price risk. Others

with high single-industry concentrations may monitor specific industry concentration risk as well as the forces

that affect the fortunes of the industry involved.

Credit risk arises from non-performance by a borrower. It may arise from either an inability or an

unwillingness to perform in the pre-committed contracted manner. This can affect the lender holding the loan

contract, as well as other lenders to the creditor. Therefore, the financial condition of the borrower as well

as the current value of any underlying collateral is of considerable interest to its bank.

The real risk from credit is the deviation of portfolio performance from its expected value.

Accordingly, credit risk is diversifiable, but difficult to eliminate completely. This is because a portion of the

default risk may, in fact, result from the systematic risk outlined above. In addition, the idiosyncratic nature

of some portion of these losses remains a problem for creditors in spite of the beneficial effect of

diversification on total uncertainty. This is particularly true for banks that lend in local markets and ones that

take on highly illiquid assets. In such cases, the credit risk is not easily transferred, and accurate estimates of

loss are difficult to obtain.

Counterparty risk comes from non-performance of a trading partner. The non-performance may arise

from a counterparty's refusal to perform due to an adverse price movement caused by systematic factors, or

from some other political or legal constraint that was not anticipated by the principals. Diversification is the

major tool for controlling nonsystematic counterparty risk.

Counterparty risk is like credit risk, but it is generally viewed as a more transient financial risk

associated with trading than standard creditor default risk. In addition, a counterparty's failure to settle a trade

9
can arise from other factors beyond a credit problem.

Liquidity risk can best be described as the risk of a funding crisis. While some would include the need

to plan for growth and unexpected expansion of credit, the risk here is seen more correctly as the potential for

a funding crisis. Such a situation would inevitably be associated with an unexpected event, such as a large

charge off, loss of confidence, or a crisis of national proportion such as a currency crisis.

In any case, risk management here centers on liquidity facilities and portfolio structure. Recognizing

liquidity risk leads the bank to recognize liquidity itself as an asset, and portfolio design in the face of illiquidity

concerns as a challenge.

Operational risk is associated with the problems of accurately processing, settling, and taking or

making delivery on trades in exchange for cash. It also arises in record keeping, processing system failures

and compliance with various regulations. As such, individual operating problems are small probability events

for well-run organizations but they expose a firm to outcomes that may be quite costly.

Legal risks are endemic in financial contracting and are separate from the legal ramifications of credit,

counterparty, and operational risks. New statutes, tax legislation, court opinions and regulations can put

formerly well-established transactions into contention even when all parties have previously performed

adequately and are fully able to perform in the future. For example, environmental regulations have radically

affected real estate values for older properties and imposed serious risks to lending institutions in this area.

A second type of legal risk arises from the activities of an institution's management or employees. Fraud,

violations of regulations or laws, and other actions can lead to catastrophic loss, as recent examples in the thrift

industry have demonstrated.

All financial institutions face all these risks to some extent. Non-principal, or agency activity involves

operational risk primarily. Since institutions in this case do not own the underlying assets in which they trade,

systematic, credit and counterparty risk accrues directly to the asset holder. If the latter experiences a

financial loss, however, legal recourse against an agent is often attempted. Therefore, institutions engaged in

10
only agency transactions bear some legal risk, if only indirectly.

Our main interest, however, centers around the businesses in which the bank participates as a

principal, i.e., as an intermediary. In these activities, principals must decide how much business to originate,

how much to finance, how much to sell, and how much to contract to agents. In so doing, they must weigh

both the return and the risk embedded in the portfolio. Principals must measure the expected profit and

evaluate the prudence of the various risks enumerated to be sure that the result achieves the stated goal of

maximizing shareholder value.

IV. Bank Risk Management Systems

The banking industry has long viewed the problem of risk management as the need to control four of

the above risks which make up most, if not all, of their risk exposure, viz., credit, interest rate, foreign

exchange and liquidity risk. While they recognize counterparty and legal risks, they view them as less central

to their concerns.7 Where counterparty risk is significant, it is evaluated using standard credit risk procedures,

and often within the credit department itself. Likewise, most bankers would view legal risks as arising from

their credit decisions or, more likely, proper process not employed in financial contracting.

Accordingly, the study of bank risk management processes is essentially an investigation of how they manage

these four risks. In each case, the procedure outlined above is adapted to the risk considered so as to

standardize, measure, constrain and manage each of these risks. To illustrate how this is achieved, this review

of firm-level risk management begins with a discussion of risk management controls in each area. The more

difficult issue of summing over these risks and adding still other, more amorphous, ones such as legal,

regulatory or reputational risk, will be left to the end.

A. Credit Risk Management Procedures

In presenting the approach employed to manage credit risk, we refer to the four-step process outlined

7
Some banking firms would also list regulatory and reputational risk in their set of concerns. Nonetheless, all
would recognize the first four as key, and all would devote most of their risk management resources to constraining
these key areas of exposure.

11
in Section II D above, drawing different pieces from different organizations. The institutions are not named,

but are selected because of the representative nature of their documentation of the process.

We begin with standards and reports. As noted above, each bank must apply a consistent evaluation

and rating scheme to all its investment opportunities in order for credit decisions to be made in a consistent

manner and for the resultant aggregate reporting of credit risk exposure to be meaningful. To facilitate this,

a substantial degree of standardization of process and documentation is required. This has lead to standardized

ratings across borrowers and a credit portfolio report that presents meaningful information on the overall

quality of the credit portfolio. In Table 1, a credit-rating procedure is presented that is typical of those

employed within the commercial banking industry.

The form reported here is a single rating system where a single value is given to each loan, which

relates to the borrower's underlying credit quality. At some institutions, a dual system is in place where both

the borrower and the credit facility are rated. In the latter, attention centers on collateral and covenants, while

in the former, the general credit worthiness of the borrower is measured. Some banks prefer such a dual

system, while others argue that it obscures the issue of recovery to separate the facility from the borrower in

such a manner. In any case, the reader will note that in the reported system all loans are rated using a single

numerical scale ranging between 1 and 10.8 For each numerical category, a qualitative definition of the

borrower and the loan's quality is offered and an analytic representation of the underlying financials of the

borrower is presented. Such an approach, whether it is a single or a dual rating system allows the credit

committee some comfort in its knowledge of loan asset quality at any moment of time. It requires only that

new loan officers be introduced to the system of loan ratings, through training and apprenticeship to achieve

a standardization of ratings throughout the bank.

Given these standards, the bank can report the quality of its loan portfolio at any time, along the lines

8
There is nothing unique about 10 grades. Some have 8, others have 12. The most important thing here is that
there are sufficient gradations to permit accurate characterization of the underlying risk profile of a loan, or a
portfolio of loans.

12
of the report presented in Table 2. Notice that total receivables, including loans, leases and commitments and

derivatives, are reported in a single format. Assuming the adherence to standards, the entirety of the firm's

credit quality is reported to senior management monthly via this reporting mechanism. Changes in this

report from one period to another occur for two reasons, viz., loans have entered or exited the system, or the

rating of individual loans has changed over the intervening time interval. The first reason is associated with

standard loan turnover. Loans are repaid and new loans are made. The second cause for a change in the

credit quality report is more substantive. Variations over time indicate changes in loan quality and expected

loan losses from the credit portfolio. In fact, credit quality reports should signal changes in expected loan

losses, if the rating system is meaningful. Studies by Moody's on their rating system have illustrated the

relationship between credit rating and ex post default rates.9 A similar result should be expected from internal

bank-rating schemes of this type as well. However, the lack of available industry data to do an appropriate

aggregate migration study does not permit the industry the same degree of confidence in their expected loss

calculations.

For this type of credit quality report to be meaningful, all credits must be monitored, and reviewed

periodically. It is, in fact, standard for all credits above some dollar volume to be reviewed on a quarterly

or annual basis to ensure the accuracy of the rating associated with the lending facility. In addition, a material

change in the conditions associated either with the borrower or the facility itself, such as a change in the value

of collateral, will trigger a re-evaluation. This process, therefore, results in a periodic but timely report card

on the quality of the credit portfolio and its change from month to month.

Generally accepted accounting principles require this monitoring. The credit portfolio is subject to

fair value accounting standards, which have recently been tightened by The Financial Accounting Standards

Board (FASB). Commercial banks are required to have a loan loss reserve account ( a contra-asset) which

9
See Moody's (1996) and Santomero and Babbel (1997) for evidence of the relationship between credit rating and
default rates.

13
accurately represents the diminution in market value from known or estimated credit losses. As an industry,

banks have generally sought estimates of expected loss using a two-step process, including default probability,

and an estimate of loss given default. This approach parallels the work of Moody's referred to above.10 At

least quarterly, the level of the reserve account is re-assessed, given the evidence of loss exposure driven

directly from the credit quality report, and internal studies of loan migration through various quality ratings.11

Absent from the discussion thus far is any analysis of systematic risk contained in the portfolio.

Traditionally mutual funds and merchant banks have concerned themselves with such risk exposure, but the

commercial banking sector has not. This appears to be changing in light of the recent substantial losses in real

estate and similar losses in the not-too-distant past in petrochemicals. Accordingly, many banks are beginning

to develop concentration reports, indicating industry composition of the loan portfolio. This process was

initially hampered by the lack of a simple industry index. SIC codes were employed at some institutions, but

most found them unsatisfactory. Recently, however, Moody's has developed a system of 34 industry groups

that may be used to report concentrations. Table 3 reports such an industry grouping to illustrate the kind of

concentration reports that are emerging as standard in the banking industry. Notice that the report indicates

the portfolio percentages by sector, as well as commitments to various industries. For the real estate portfolio,

geography is also reported, as Table 4 suggests. While this may be insufficient to capture total geographic

concentration, it is a beginning.

For the investment management community, concentrations are generally benchmarked against some

market indexes, and mutual funds will generally report not only the absolute percentage of their industry

10
See Altman (1993) for a discussion of both the FASB standards and the methods employed to evaluate the level
of the reserve account.

11
Accurately estimating loan losses from a loan quality report is, in fact, quite difficult because of the limited
information available to the bank on future loan losses and the change in loan quality over time. To see how the
statistical properties of the time series of loan ratings can be used to obtain loan loss estimates, see Kim and
Santomero (1993).

14
concentration, but also their positions relative to the broad market indexes. Unfortunately, there is no

comparable benchmark for the loan portfolio. Accordingly, firms must weigh the pros and cons of

specialization and concentration by industry group and establish subjective limits on their overall exposure.

This is generally done with both guidelines and limits set by senior management. Such a report is not the result

of any analytical exercise to evaluate the potential downside loss, but rather a subjective evaluation of

management's tolerance, based upon rather imprecise recollections of previous downturns. In addition, we

are seeing the emergence of a portfolio manager to watch over the loan portfolio's degree of concentration and

exposure to both types of risk concentration discussed above.

Most organizations also will report concentration by individual counterparty. To be meaningful,

however, this exposure must be bankwide and include all related affiliates. Both of these requirements are not

easily satisfied. For large institutions, a key relationship manager must be appointed to assure that overall bank

exposure to a particular client is captured and monitored. This level of data accumulation is never easy,

particularly across time zones. Nonetheless, such a relationship report is required to capture the disparate

activity from many parts of the bank. Transaction with affiliated firms need to be aggregated and maintained

in close to real time.

An example of this type of report is offered here as Table 5, drawn from one particular client report.

Each different lending facility is reported. In addition, the existing lines of credit, both used and open, need

to be reported as well. Generally, this type of credit risk exposure or concentration report has both an upper

and lower cut-off value so that only concentrations above a minimum size are recorded, and no one credit

exposure exceeds its predetermined limit. The latter, an example of the second technique of risk management

is monitored and set by the credit committee for the relationship as a whole.

B. Interest Rate Management Procedures

The area of interest rate risk is the second area of major concern and on-going risk monitoring and

management. Here, however, the tradition has been for the banking industry to diverge somewhat from other

15
parts of the financial sector in their treatment of interest rate risk. Most commercial banks make a clear

distinction between their trading activity and their balance sheet interest rate exposure.

Investment banks generally have viewed interest rate risk as a classic part of market risk, and have

developed elaborate trading risk management systems to measure and monitor exposure. For large commercial

banks and European-type universal banks that have an active trading business, such systems have become a

required part of the infrastructure. But, in fact, these trading risk management systems vary substantially from

bank to bank and generally are less real than imagined. In many firms, fancy value-at-risk models, now

known by the acronym VaR, are up and running. But, in many more cases, they are still in the

implementation phase. In the interim, simple ad hoc limits and close monitoring substitute for elaborate real-

time systems. While this may be completely satisfactory for institutions that have little trading activity and

work primarily on behalf of clients, the absence of adequate trading systems elsewhere in the industry is a bit

distressing.

For institutions that do have active trading businesses, value-at-risk has become the standard approach.

This procedure has recently been publicly displayed with the release of Riskmetrics by J. P. Morgan, but

similar systems are in place at other firms. In that much exists in the public record about these systems12, there

is little value to reviewing this technique here. Suffice it to say that the daily, weekly, or monthly volatility

of the market value of fixed-rate assets are incorporated into a measure of total portfolio risk analysis along

with equity's market risk, and that of foreign-denominated assets.

For balance sheet exposure to interest rate risk, commercial banking firms follow a different drummer

-- or is it accountant? Given the generally accepted accounting procedures (GAAP) established for bank assets,

as well as the close correspondence of asset and liability structures, commercial banks tend not to use market

value reports, guidelines or limits. Rather, their approach relies on cash flow and book values, at the expense

of market values. Asset cash flows are reported in various repricing schedules along the line of Table 6. This

12
See, for example, the work of , Jorion (1997), Marshall and Siegel (1996), Fallon (1996), and Phelan (1997).

16
system has been labelled traditionally a "gap reporting system", as the asymmetry of the repricing of assets

and liabilities results in a gap. This has classically been measured in ratio or percentage mismatch terms over

a standardized interval such as a 30-day or one-year period.

This is sometimes supplemented with a duration analysis of the portfolio, as seen in Table 7.

However, many assumptions are necessary to move from cash flows to duration. Asset categories that do not

have fixed maturities, such as prime rate loans, must be assigned a duration measure based upon actual

repricing flexibility. A similar problem exists for core liabilities, such as retail demand and savings balances.

Nonetheless, the industry attempts to measure these estimates accurately, and include both on- and off-balance

sheet exposures in this type of reporting procedure. The result of this exercise is a rather crude approximation

of the duration gap.13

Most banks, however, have attempted to move beyond this gap methodology. They recognize that

the gap and duration reports are static, and do not fit well with the dynamic nature of the banking market,

where assets and liabilities change over time and spreads fluctuate. In fact, the variability of spreads is largely

responsible for the highly profitable performance of the industry over the last two years. Accordingly, the

industry has added the next level of analysis to their balance sheet interest rate risk management procedures.

Currently, many banks are using balance sheet simulation models to investigate the effect of interest

rate variation on reported earnings over one-, three- and five-year horizons. These simulations, of course,

are a bit of science and a bit of art. They require relatively informed repricing schedules, as well as estimates

of prepayments and cash flows. In terms of the first issue, such an analysis requires an assumed response

function on the part of the bank to rate movement, in which bank pricing decisions in both their local and

national franchises are simulated for each rate environment. In terms of the second area, the simulations

require precise prepayment models for proprietary products, such as middle market loans, as well as standard

13
See Saunders (1996) or Hempel, Simonson and Coleman (1994) for a discussion of duration gap, its
construction and its usefulness.

17
products such as residential mortgages or traditional consumer debt. In addition, these simulations require yield

curve simulation over a presumed relevant range of rate movements and yield curve shifts.

Once completed, the simulation reports the resultant deviations in earnings associated with the rate

scenarios considered. Whether or not this is acceptable depends upon the limits imposed by management,

which are usually couched in terms of deviations of earnings from the expected or most likely outcome. This

notion of Earnings At Risk, EaR, is emerging as a common benchmark for interest rate risk. However, it is

of limited value as it presumes that the range of rates considered is correct, and/or the bank's response

mechanism contained in the simulation is accurate and feasible. Nonetheless, the results are viewed as

indicative of the effect of underlying interest rate mismatch contained in the balance sheet. Reports of these

simulations, such as contained in Table 8, are now commonplace in the industry.

Because of concerns over the potential earnings outcomes of the simulations, treasury officials often

make use of the cash, futures and swap markets to reduce the implied earnings risk contained in the bank's

embedded rate exposure. However, as has become increasingly evident, such markets contain their own set

of risks. Accordingly, every institution has an investment policy in place which defines the set of allowable

assets and limits to the bank's participation in any one area; see, for example, Table 9. All institutions restrict

the activity of the treasury to some extent by defining the set of activities it can employ to change the bank's

interest rate position in both the cash and forward markets. Some are willing to accept derivative activity, but

all restrict their positions in the swap caps and floors market to some degree to prevent unfortunate surprises.

As reported losses by some institutions mount in this area, however, investment guidelines are becoming

increasingly circumspect concerning allowable investment and hedging alternatives.

C. Foreign Exchange Risk Mananagement Procedures

In this area there is considerable difference in current practice. This can be explained by the different

franchises that coexist in the banking industry. Most banking institutions view activity in the foreign exchange

market beyond their franchise, while others are active participants. The former will take virtually no principal

18
risk, no forward open positions, and have no expectations of trading volume. Within the latter group, there

is a clear distinction between those that restrict themselves to acting as agents for corporate and/or retail clients

and those that have active trading positions.

The most active banks in this area have large trading accounts and multiple trading locations. And,

for these, reporting is rather straightforward. Currencies are kept in real time, with spot and forward positions

marked-to-market. As is well known, however, reporting positions is easier than measuring and limiting risk.

Here, the latter is more common than the former. Limits are set by desk and by individual trader, with

monitoring occurring in real time by some banks, and daily closing at other institutions. As a general

characterization, those banks with more active trading positions tend to have invested in the real-time VaR

systems discussed above, but there are exceptions.

Limits are the key elements of the risk management systems in foreign exchange trading as they are

for all trading businesses. As Table 10 illustrates by example, it is fairly standard for limits to be set by

currency for both the spot and forward positions in the set of trading currencies. At many institutions, the

derivation of exposure limits has tended to be an imprecise and inexact science. For these institutions, risk

limits are set currency-by-currency by subjective variance tolerance. Others, however, do attempt to derive

the limits using a method that is analytically similar to the approach used in the area of interest rate risk.

Even for banks without a VaR system in place, stress tests are done to evaluate the potential loss

associated with changes in the exchange rate. This is done for small deviations in exchange rates as shown in

Table 10, but it also may be investigated for historical maximum movements. The latter is investigated in two

ways. Either historical events are captured, and worse-case scenario simulated, or the historical events are

used to estimate a distribution from which the disturbances are drawn. In the latter case, a one or two standard

deviation change in the exchange rate is considered. While some use these methods to estimate volatility, until

recently most did not use covariability in setting individual currency limits, or in the aggregating exposure

across multiple correlated currencies.

19
Incentive systems for foreign exchange traders are another area of significant differences between the

average commercial bank and its investment banking counterpart. While, in the investment banking

community trader performance is directly linked to compensation, this is less true in the banking industry.

While some admit to significant correlation between trader income and trading profits, many argue that there

is absolutely none. This latter group tends to see such linkages leading to excess risk taking by traders who

gain from successes but do not suffer from losses. Accordingly, to their way of thinking, risk is reduced by

separating foreign exchange profitability and trader compensation.

D. Liquidity Risk Management Procedures

Two different notions of liquidity risk have evolved in the banking sector. Each has some validity.

The first, and the easiest in most regards, is a notion of liquidity risk as a need for continued funding. The

counterpart of standard cash management, this liquidity need is forecastable and easily analyzed. Yet, the

result is not worth much. In today's capital market banks of the sort considered here have ample resources for

growth and recourse to additional liabilities for unexpectedly high asset growth. Accordingly, attempts to

analyze liquidity risk as a need for resources to facilitate growth, or honor outstanding credit lines are of little

relevance to the risk management agenda pursued here.

The liquidity risk that does present a real challenge is the need for funding when and if a sudden crisis

arises. In this case, the issues are very different from those addressed above. Standard reports on liquid assets

and open lines of credit, which are germane to the first type of liquidity need, are substantially less relevant

to the second. Rather, what is required is an analysis of funding demands under a series of "worst case"

scenarios. These include the liquidity needs associated with a bank-specific shock, such as a severe loss, and

a crisis that is system-wide. In each case, the bank examines the extent to which it can be self-supporting in

the event of a crisis, and tries to estimate the speed with which the shock will result in a funding crisis.

Reports center on both features of the crisis with Table 11 illustrating one bank's attempt to estimate the

immediate funding shortfall associated with a downgrade. Other institutions attempt to measure the speed with

20
which assets can be liquidated to respond to the situation using a report that indicates the speed with which the

bank can acquire needed liquidity in a crisis. Response strategies considered include the extent to which the

bank can accomplish substantial balance sheet shrinkage and estimates are made of the sources of funds that

will remain available to the institution in a time of crisis. Results of such simulated crises are usually

expressed in days of exposure, or days to funding crisis.

Such studies are, by their nature, imprecise but essential to efficient operation in the event of a

substantial change in the financial conditions of the firm. As a result, regulatory authorities have increasingly

mandated that a liquidity risk plan be developed by members of the industry. Yet, there is a clear distinction

among institutions, as to the value of this type of exercise. Some attempt to develop careful funding plans and

estimate their vulnerability to the crisis with considerable precision. They contend that, either from prior

experience or attempts at verification, they could and would use the proposed plan in a time of crisis. Others

view this planning document as little more than a regulatory hurdle. While some actually invest in backup

lines without "material adverse conditions" clauses, others have little faith in their ability to access them in a

time of need.

21
E. Other Risks Considered But Not Modeled

Beyond the basic four financial risks, viz., credit, interest rate, foreign exchange and liquidity risk,

banks have a host of other concerns as was indicated above. Some of these, like operating risk, and/or system

failure, are a natural outgrowth of their business and banks employ standard risk avoidance techniques to

mitigate them. Standard business judgment is used in this area to measure the costs and benefits of both risk

reduction expenditures and system design, as well as operational redundancy. While generally referred to as

risk management, this activity is substantially different from the management of financial risk addressed here.

Yet, there are still other risks, somewhat more amorphous, but no less important. In this latter

category are legal, regulatory, suitability, reputational and environmental risk. In each of these risk areas,

substantial time and resources are devoted to protecting the firm's franchise value from erosion. As these risks

are less financially measurable, they are generally not addressed in any formal, structured way. Yet, they are

not ignored at the senior management level of the bank.

VI. Risk Aggregation and the Knowledge of Total Exposure

Thus far, the techniques used to measure, report, limit, and manage the risks of various types have

been presented. In each of these cases, a process has been developed, or at least has evolved, to measure the

risk considered, and techniques have been deployed to control each of them. The extent of the differences

across risks of different types is quite striking. The credit risk process is a qualitative review of the

performance potential of different borrowers. It results in a rating, periodic re-evaluation at reasonable

intervals through time, and on-going monitoring of various types or measures of exposure. Interest rate risk

is measured, usually weekly, using on- and off-balance sheet exposure. The position is reported in repricing

terms, using gap, as well as effective duration, but the real analysis is conducted with the benefit of simulation

techniques. Limits are established and synthetic hedges are taken on the basis of these cash flow earnings

forecasts. Foreign exchange or general trading risk is monitored in real time with strict limits and

22
accountability. Here again, the effects of adverse rate movements are analyzed by simulation using ad hoc

exchange rate variations, and/or distributions constructed from historical outcomes. Liquidity risk, on the

other hand, more often than not, is dealt with as a planning exercise, although some reasonable work is done

to analyze the funding effect of adverse news.

The analytical approaches that are subsumed in each of these analyses are complex, difficult and not

easily communicated to non-specialists in the risk considered. The bank, however, must select appropriate

levels for each risk and select or, at least articulate, an appropriate level of risk for the organization as a

whole. How is this being done?

The simple answer is "not very well." Senior management often is presented with a myriad of reports

on individual exposures, such as specific credits, and complex summaries of the individual risks, as outlined

above. The risks are not dimensioned in similar ways, and management's technical expertise to appreciate

the true nature of both the risks themselves and the analyses conducted to illustrate the bank's exposure is

limited. Accordingly, over time, the managers of specific risks have gained increased authority and autonomy.

In light of recent losses, however, things are beginning to change.

As the organizational level, overall risk management is being centralized into a Risk Management

Committee, headed by someone designated as the Senior Risk Manager. The purpose of this institutional

response is to empower one individual or group with the responsibility to evaluate overall firm-level risk, and

determine the best interest of the bank as a whole. At the same time, this group is holding line officers more

accountable for the risks under their control, and the performance of the institution in that risk area. Activity

and sales incentives are being replaced by performance compensation, which is based not on business volume,

but on overall profitability.

At the analytical level, aggregate risk exposure is receiving increased scrutiny. To do so, however,

requires the summation of the different types of risks outlined above. This is accomplished in two distinct,

23
but related ways. The first of these, pioneered by Bankers Trust, is the RAROC system of risk analysis.14

In this approach, risk is measured in terms of variability of outcome. Where possible, a frequency distribution

of returns is estimated, from historical data, and the standard deviation of this distribution is estimated. Capital

is allocated to activities as a function of this risk or volatility measure. Then, the risky position is required to

carry an expected rate of return on allocated capital which compensates the firm for the associated incremental

risk. By dimensioning all risk in terms of loss distributions, and allocating capital by the volatility of the

proposed activity, risk is aggregated and priced in one and the same exercise.

A second approach is similar to the RAROC, but depends less on a capital allocation scheme and more

on cash flow or earnings effects of the implied risky position. This was referred to as the Earnings At Risk

methodology above, when employed to analyze interest rate risk. When market values are used, the approach

becomes identical to the VaR methodology employed for trading exposure. This method can be used to

analyze total firm-level risk in a similar manner to the RAROC system. Again, a frequency distribution of

returns for any one type of risk can be estimated from historical data. Extreme outcomes can then be

estimated from the tail of the distribution. Either a worst-case historical example is used for this purpose, or

a one- or two standard deviation outcome is considered. Given the downside outcome associated with any risk

position, the firm restricts its exposure so that, in the worst-case scenario, the bank does not lose more than

a certain percentage of current income or market value. Therefore, rather than moving from volatility of

value through capital, this approach goes directly to the current earnings implications from a risky position.

The approach, however, has two very obvious shortcomings. If EaR is used, it is cash flow based, rather than

market value driven. And, in any case, it does not directly measure the total variability of potential outcomes

through an a priori distribution specification. Rather it depends upon a subjectively prespecified range of the

risky environments to drive the worst-case scenario.

14
See Salomon Brothers (1993) and Wee and Lee (1995) for the most complete public information on Bankers
Trust RAROC systems.

24
Both measures, however, attempt to treat the issue of trade-offs among risks, using a common

methodology to transform the specific risks to firm-level exposure. In addition, both can examine the

correlation of different risks and the extent to which they can, or should be viewed as, offsetting. As a

practical matter, however, most, if not all, of these models do not view this array of risks as a standard

portfolio problem. Rather, they separately evaluate each risk and aggregate total exposure by simple addition.

As a result, much is lost in the aggregation. Perhaps over time this issue will be addressed.

VI. Areas Where Further Work Will Improve the Methodology

The banking industry is clearly evolving to a higher level of risk management techniques and

approaches than had been in place in the past. Yet, as this review indicates, there is significant room for

improvement. Before the areas of potential value added are enumerated, however, it is worthwhile to reiterate

an earlier point. The risk management techniques reviewed here are not the average, but the techniques used

by firms at the higher end of the market. The risk management approaches at smaller institutions, as well as

larger but relatively less sophisticated ones, are less precise and significantly less analytic. In some cases they

would need substantial upgrading to reach the level of those reported here. Accordingly, our review should

be viewed as a glimpse at best practice, not average practices.

Nonetheless, the techniques employed by those that define the industry standard could use some

improvement. By category, recommended areas where additional analytic work would be desirable are listed

below.

A. CREDIT RISK

The evaluation of credit rating continues to be an imprecise process. Over time, this approach needs
to be standardized across institutions and across borrowers. In addition, its rating procedures need to
be made compatible with rating systems elsewhere in the capital market.

Credit losses, currently vaguely related to credit rating, need to be closely tracked. As in the bond
market, credit pricing, credit rating and expected loss ought to be demonstrably closer. However, the
industry currently does not have a sufficiently broad data base on which to perform the migration
analysis that has been studied in the bond market.

25
The issue of optimal credit portfolio structure warrants further study. In short, analysis is needed to
evaluate the diversification gains associated with careful portfolio design. At this time, banks appear
to be too concentrated in idiosyncratic areas, and not sufficiently managing their credit concentrations
by either industrial or geographic areas.

B. INTEREST RATE RISK

While simulation studies have substantially improved upon gap management, the use of book value
accounting measures and cash flow losses continues to be problematic. Movements to improve this
methodology will require increased emphasis on market-based accounting. However, such a reporting
mechanism must be employed on both sides of the balance sheet, not just the asset portfolio.

The simulations also need to incorporate the advances in dynamic hedging that are used in complex
fixed income pricing models. As it stands, these simulations tend to be rather simplistic, and scenario
testing rather limited.

C. FOREIGN EXCHANGE RISK

The VaR approach to market risk is a superior tool. Yet, much of the banking industry continues to
use rather ad hoc approaches in setting foreign exchange and other trading limits. This approach can
and should be used to a greater degree than it is currently.

D. LIQUIDITY RISK

Crisis models need to be better linked to operational details. In addition, the usefulness of such
exercises is limited by the realism of the environment considered.

If liquidity risk is to be managed, the price of illiquidity must be defined and built into illiquid
positions. While this logic has been adopted by some institutions, this pricing of liquidity is not
commonplace.

E. OTHER RISKS

As banks move more off balance sheet, the implied risk of these activities must be better integrated
into overall risk management and strategic decision making. Currently, they are ignored when bank
risk management is considered.

26
F. AGGREGATION OF RISKS

There has been much discussion of the RAROC and VaR methodologies as an approach to capture
total risk management. Yet, frequently, the decisions to accept risk and the pricing of the risky
position are separated from risk analysis. If aggregate risk is to be controlled, these parts of the
process need to be integrated better within the banking firm.

Both aggregate risk methodologies presume that the time dimensions of all risks can be viewed as
equivalent. A trading risk is similar to a credit risk, for example. This appears problematic when
market prices are not readily available for some assets and the time dimensions of different risks are
dissimilar. Yet, thus far no one firm has tried to address this issue adequately.

Finally, operating such a complex management system requires a significant knowledge of the risks
considered and the approaches used to measure them. It is inconceivable that Boards of Directors and
even most senior managers have the level of expertise necessary to operate the evolving system. Yet
government regulators seem to have no idea of the level of complexity, and attempt to increase
accountability even as the requisite knowledge to control various parts of the firm increases.

27
References

Allen, F. and Santomero, A. “The Theory of Financial Intermediation,” Journal of Banking and Finance , 1997,
forthcoming.

Altman, E. “Valuation, Loss Reserves and the Pricing of Corporate Bank Loans,” Journal of Commercial Bank
Lending, August 1993, 8-25.

Babbel, D. And Santomero , A. “Financial Risk Management by Insurers: An Analysis of the Process,” Journal
of Risk and Insurance, June 1997 forthcoming.

Berger, A. and Udell, G. “ Relationship Lending and Lines of Credit in Small Firm Finance,” Journal of Business,
July 1995.

Berger, A. and Udell, G. “Securitization, Risk, and the Liquidity Problem in Banking,” Structural Change in
Banking, M. Klausner and L. White, editors, Irwin Publishers, Illinois, 1993.

Bhattacharya, S. and A. Thakor, “Contemporary Banking Theory,” Journal of Financial Intermediation , 1993.

Economist, “A Survey of International Banking,” April 10, 1993.

Fallon, W., “Calculating Value-at-Risk,” Working Paper 96-49, Wharton Financial Institutions Center, Th e
Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 1996.

Froot, K., D. Scharfstein, and J. Stein, “Risk Management: Coordinating Investment and Financing Policies,”
Journal of Finance, December, 1993.

Furash, E., “Organizing the Risk Management Process In Large Banks,” Risk Management Planning Seminar,
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, Washington,D.C., September29, 1994.

Jensen M. and W.Meckling, “Theory of the Firm: Managerial B ehavior Agency Costs and Ownership Structure,”
Journal of Financial Economics 3, p.305-60.

Jorion, P., Value at Risk: The New Benchmark for Control Mar ket Risk, Irwin Professional Publications, Illinois,
1997.

Kim, D. and A.Santomero, “Forecasting Required Loan Loss Reserves,” Journal of Economics and Business,
August, 1993.

Marshall, C. and M.Siegel, “Value at Risk: Implementing a R isk Measurement Standard,” Working Paper 96-47,
Wharton Financial Institutions Center, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, 1996.

Moody’s Investor Service, Corporate Bond Defaults and Default Rates 1970-1995 , Moody’s Special Report ,
1996.

Morsman, E. Commercial Loan Portfolio Management , Robert Morris Associates, Philadelphia, 1993.

28
Oldfield, G. and A.Santomero, “The Place of Risk Management in Financial Institutions,” Sloan Management
Review, Summer 1997 forthcoming.

Phelan, M. “Probability and Statistics Applied to the Practice of Financial Risk Management: The Case of JP
Morgan’s RiskMetrics TM,” Journal of Financial Services Research , June 1997.

Salomon Brothers, “Bankers Trust New York Corporation - Risk Managment,” United States Equity Research,
February 1993.

Santomero, A. “Modeling the Banking Firm: A Survey,” Journal of Money, Credit and Banking , November,
1984.

Santomero, A. “Financial Risk Management: The Whys and Hows,” Journal of Financial Markets, Institutions
and Investments, 4, 1995.

Santomero, A. and D.Babbel Financial Markets, Instruments, and Institutions , Irwin Publishers, Illinois, 1996.

Santomero, A. and J.Trester, “Structuring Deposit Insurance for a United Europe,” European Financial
Management, 1997 forthcoming.

Saunders, A. Financial Institutions Management: A Modern Perspective , Irwin Publishers, Illinois, 1996.

Smith, C., C.Smithson, and D.Wilford, Strategic Risk Management (Institutional Investor Series in Finance) ,
Harper and Row, New York, 1990.

Stultz, R., “Optimal Hedging Policies,” Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 19, 1984.

Wee, L. and Lee, J., RAROC and Risk Management--Quantifying the Risks of Business , Bankers Trust New
York Corporation, 1995.

29
TABLE 1
A TYPICAL CREDIT RATING SYSTEM

The following are definitions of the risk levels of Borrowing Facility:

1. Substantially Risk Free


Borrowers of unquestioned credit standing at the pinnacle of credit quality. Basically,
governments of major industrialized countries, a few major world class banks and a few
multinational corporations.

2. Minimal Risk
Borrowers of the highest quality. Almost no risk in lending to this class. Cash flows
over at least 5 years demonstrate exceptionally large and/or stable margins of protection and
balance sheets are very conservative, strong and liquid. Projected cash flows (including
anticipated credit extensions) will continue a strong trend, and provide continued wide
margins of protection, liquidity and debt service coverage. Excellent asset quality and
management. Typically large national corporations.

3. Modest Risk
Borrowers in the lower end of the high quality range. Very good asset quality and liquidity;
strong debt capacity and coverage; very good management. The credit extension is considered
definitely sound; however, elements may be present which suggest the borrower may not be
free from temporary impairments sometime in the future. Typically larger regional or national
corporations.

4. Below Average Risk


The high end of the medium range between the definitely sound and those situations where
risk characteristics begin to appear. The margins of protection are satisfactory, but
susceptible to more rapid deterioration than class 3 names. Some elements of reduced
strength are present in such areas as liquidity, stability of margins and cash flows,
concentration of assets, dependence upon one type of business, cyclical trends, etc., which
may adversely affect the borrower. Typically good regional or excellent local companies.

5. Average Risk
Borrowers with smaller margins of debt service coverage and where definite elements of
reduced strength exist. Satisfactory asset quality and liquidity; good debt capacity and
coverage; and good management in all critical positions. These names have sufficient margins
of protection and will qualify as acceptable borrowers; however, historic earnings and/or cash
flow patterns may be sometimes unstable. A loss year or a declining earnings trend may not
be uncommon. Typically solid local companies. May or may not require collateral in the
course of normal credit extensions.

6. Management Attention Risk


Borrowers who are beginning to demonstrate above average risk through declining
earnings trends, strained cash flow, increasing leverage, and/or weakening market
fundamentals. Also, borrowers which are currently performing as agreed but could be
adversely impacted by developing factors such as, but not limited to: Deteriorating industry
conditions, operating problems, pending litigation of a significant nature, or declining
collateral quality/adequacy. Such borrowers or weaker typically require collateral in normal
credit extensions.
TABLE 1: A TYPICAL CREDIT RATING SYSTEM
Page 2

Borrowers generally have somewhat strained liquidity; limited debt capacity and coverage;
and some management weakness. Such borrowers may be highly leveraged companies which
lack required margins or less leveraged companies with an erratic earnings records.
Significant declines in earnings, frequent requests for waivers of covenants and extensions,
increased reliance on bank debt, and slowing trade payments are some events which may
occasion this categorization.

7. Potential Weakness
Borrower exhibits potential credit weakness or a downward trend which, if not checked or
corrected, will weaken the asset or inadequately protect the bank’s position. While
potentially weak, the borrower is currently marginally acceptable; no loss of principal or
interest is envisioned. Included could be turnaround situations, as well as those previously
rated 6 or 5, names that have shown deterioration, for whatever reason, indicating a
downgrading from the better categories. These are names that have been or would normally
be criticized “Special Mention” by regulatory authorities.

8. Definite Weakness; No Loss


A borrower with well defined weakness(es) that jeopardize the orderly liquidation of the debt.
Borrowers that have been or would normally be classified “Substandard” by regulatory
authorities. A substandard loan is inadequately protected by the current sound worth and
paying capacity of the obligor. Normal repayment from this borrower is in jeopardy, although
no loss of principal is envisioned. There is a distinct possibility that a partial loss of interest
and/or principal will occur if the deficiencies are not corrected.

9. Potential Loss
A borrower classified here has all weaknesses inherent in the one classified above with the
added provision that the weaknesses make collection of debt in full, on the basis of currently
existing facts, conditions, and values, highly questionable and improbable. Serious problems
exist to the point where a partial loss of principal is likely. The possibility of loss is extremely
high, but because of certain important, reasonably specific pending factors, which may work
to the advantage and strengthening of the assets, its classification as an estimated loss is
deferred until its more exact status may be determined. Pending factors include proposed
merger, acquisition, or liquidation, capital injection, perfecting liens on additional collateral,
and refinancing plans.

10. Loss
Borrowers deemed incapable of repayment of unsecured debt. Loans to such borrowers are
considered uncollectible and of such little value that their continuance as active assets of the
bank is not warranted. This classification does not mean that the loan has absolutely no
recovery or salvage value, but rather it is not practical or desirable to defer writing off this
basically worthless asset even though partial recovery may be effected in the future.
TABLE 2
BANK LEVEL LOAN CREDIT QUALITY REPORT

RISK RATING
RATING 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 TOTAL

TYPE RESERVABLES
1a. COMMERCIAL LOANS AND LEASES 2 4 201 252 511 2,000 3,374 937 1,856 231 48 9,426 1a
1b. CONSUMER LOANS 0 5,139 0 0 1,629 521 65 15 45 0 0 7,414 1b
1c. OTHER LOANS AND LEASES 481 481 1c
TOTAL LOANS AND LEASES 2 5,143 201 252 2,140 2,521 3,920 952 1,901 231 48 17,311
LOANS
AND 1d. LESS: GROSS COMMERCIAL LOAN C/O 0 -17 -47 -64 1d
LEASES ESTIMATE
1e. LESS: GROSS COMMERCIAL LOAN C/O -24 0 0 -24 1e
ESTIMATE
TOTAL LOAN AND LEASE CHARGE-OFFS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -24 -17 -47 -89
LOANS AND LEASE RESERVABLES 2 5,143 201 252 2,140 2,521 3,920 952 1,877 214 0 17,222
2a. OREO 184 12 6 202 2a

OREO 2b. LESS: OREO CHARGE-OFF ESTIMATE 0 0 -6 -6 2b


OREO RESERVABLES 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 184 11 1 196
3a. UNUSED COMMITMENTS 1,959 1,959 980 980 5,878 3a
@ 50% 0 0 0 980 980 490 490 0 0 0 0 2,939
3b. COMMERCIAL LETTERS OF CREDIT 0 1 1 3 19 51 83 5 2 0 0 165 3b
@ 20% 0 0 0 1 4 10 17 1 1 0 0 33
3c. STAND-BY LETTERS OF CREDIT 18 1 27 44 76 141 183 78 50 15 0 632 3c

CONTINGENT @ 100% 18 1 27 44 76 141 183 78 50 15 0 632


EXPOSURE
3d. SWAPS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3d
@ 100% OF CREDIT EQUIVALENT 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
EXPOSURE
3e. BANKER'S ACCEPTANCES 0 0 0 13 1 47 80 6 0 0 0 146 3e
@ 100% 0 0 0 13 1 47 80 6 0 0 0 146
CONTINGENT EXPOSURE RESERVABLES 18 1 27 1,037 1,060 688 770 85 51 15 0 3,751

RESERVABLES TOTAL RESERVABLES 20 5,144 288 1,288 3,200 3,209 4,690 1,037 2,111 240 1 21,169

All items in millions of dollars


TABLE 3
CREDIT EXPOSURE BY 34 MINOR INDUSTRY SECTORS

Outstandings Unfunded Commitments


Commitments Utili-
MOODY'S GROUP % of Term Risk % of Term Risk % of Term Risk zation
Total to Rating Total to Rating Total to Rating Rate
Mat. Mat. Mat.

Aerospace and Defense 0.5 2.8 4.8 0.9 2.7 3.6 0.7 2.7 4.1 42

Automobile 2.8 2.9 4.5 2.6 1.8 3.6 2.7 2.4 4.1 60

Banking 3.1 1.3 3.6 14 1.3 2.6 7.7 1.3 2.8 23

Beverage, Food and Tobacco 4.3 2.9 4.7 4.7 2 3.3 4.5 2.5 4.1 55

Buildings and Real Estate 24.2 3 5 10.6 1.7 4.2 18.5 2.7 4.8 76

Cargo Transport 2.5 5.8 4.7 1.9 1.8 3.1 2.2 4.4 4.1 64

Chemicals, Plastics and Rubber 2.3 2 4.4 2.7 1.8 3.6 2.5 1.9 4 53

Containers, Packaging and Glass 0.7 2.4 5 0.6 2.2 4 0.7 2.3 4.6 61

Diversified Natural Resources, Precious 0.7 1.6 5.1 0.6 1 4.8 0.7 1.4 5 59
Metals and Minerals
Diversified/Conglomerate Manufacturing 0.6 2.7 4.7 0.6 2.5 4.3 0.6 2.6 4.5 59

Diversified/Conglomerate Sevice 5.1 2.2 4.3 2.9 0.9 3.6 4.1 1.8 4.1 71

Ecological 0.6 2.6 4.3 0.6 2.3 4 0.6 2.5 4.2 55

Electronics 2.5 2 4.4 5 1.7 3.9 3.6 1.8 4.1 41

Farming and Agriculture 2.8 2.4 4.7 1.6 1.1 3.5 2.3 2 4.4 71

Finance 3.4 3.3 3.5 3.6 1.3 2.5 3.5 2.4 3.1 56

Government 1.4 3.3 4.2 0.8 2 2.9 1.1 2.9 3.8 69

Grocery 0.9 3.2 5 1 2.4 3.8 0.9 2.8 4.4 53

Healthcare, Education and Childcare 5.1 3.3 4.6 5.2 1.9 3.6 5.2 2.7 4.2 57

Home/Office Furnishings, Housewares, 2.2 2.1 4.6 2 1.4 3.7 2.1 1.8 4.3 60
Durable Consum. Prod.s
Hotels, Motels, Inns and Gaming 1.3 3.4 5.3 0.4 4.2 4.3 1 3.6 5.1 82

Insurance 1.6 2.5 3.4 4 1.2 2 2.6 1.7 2.5 36

Leisure, Amusement, Motion Pictures, 2.7 3.1 4.6 2.3 2.3 3.6 2.6 2.8 4.2 62
Entertainment
Machinery 2.7 2.3 4.7 2.4 1.6 3.8 2.6 2 4.4 60
(Non-Agri.,Non-Constr.,Non-Elec.)
Mining, Steel, Iron, Non-Precious Metals 2.9 1.9 4.8 2.8 1.7 4 2.9 1.8 4.4 59

Oil and Gas 2.6 4.1 4.1 3.4 2.6 3.6 3 3.3 3.9 52

Other 2.2 3.3 4.7 1 2.5 3.2 1.6 3.1 4.3 76

Personal/Non-Durable Consumer Prod.s 1.6 1.9 4.7 1.7 2.1 3.6 1.6 1.9 4.2 56

Personal, Food and Miscellaneous Serv.s 1.2 2.7 4.7 0.7 1.3 3.7 1 2.3 4.5 71

Printing, Publishing and Broadcasting 6.4 2.7 4.8 5.1 2.9 3.5 5.9 2.8 4.3 63

Retail Stores 2.3 2.1 4.3 3.7 1.8 3.5 2.9 2 3.8 46

Telecommunications 1 2.9 4.2 2 1.9 2.6 1.4 2.3 3.2 40

Textiles and Leather 2.5 1.6 4.6 2 1.6 4.1 2.3 1.6 4.4 63

Transportation 1.8 3.1 4.3 1.6 2.3 3.4 1.7 2.8 4 60

Utilities 1.6 2.9 3.5 4.7 1.9 2.7 2.9 2.2 2.9 32

"% of total" is the percentage concentration in loan portfolio at the end of the reporting period.
"Term to mat" is the term to maturity in years, as a weighted average of industry group.
"Risk Rating" is based upon a ten point scale.
TABLE 4
COMPOSITION OF LOAN PORTFOLIO BY GEOGRAPHIC AREA
Distribution of domestic commercial real estate loans by region

Geographic Region

Project Type Central Southeast Midwest West Southwest Northeast Total


Atlantic
Office complexes $196 $46 $46 $36 $12 $6 $342

Retail 155 70 45 22 11 - 303

Hotels 72 49 10 6 12 - 149

Industrial 50 2 2 5 3 - 62

Apartments 31 - 17 - 3 - 51

Undeveloped land 6 18 10 9 - - 43

Health care 11 9 - 4 4 - 28

Residential 17 - - 3 4 - 24

Other project types 56 - - - - - 56

Total $594 $194 $130 $85 $49 $6 $1,058

All items in millions of dollars


TABLE 5
EXPOSURE SUMMARY FOR ONE SPECIFIC EXISTING FACILITY

PRODUCT/PURPOSE RISK APPROVED FACILITIES LOAN PRICING DOCUMENT


RATING AMOUNT IN USE DATE

STRUCTURE INDEX
/RATE /SPREAD

A Advised Line of Credit 6 5,000 2

Finance A/R and Inventory 5/30/95

Limit: Loans Revolving 3,000 2,000 Variable Base

Finance Accounts Receivable plus 50

Limit: LC's/ Revolving 2,000 0

Finance Accounts Receivable

B Commercial Mortage 6 3,000 3,000 Fixed -- 3

Acquire Commercial Property 7% -- 1/2/95

C Commercial Mortgage 5 1,629 1,629 Fixed -- 1

Renovate Commercial Property 8% -- 3/10/95

D Miscellaneous Credit 5/5 900 100 Variable Base-FFB 0

9/31/94 plus 50

Total Credit Availability (TCA) 10,529 6,729

E Related Exposure
(Not included in TCA):

Advised Line of Credit 6 200 0 Variable Base 0

Finance Accounts Receivable plus 100 --

All units in thousands of US dollars


TABLE 6
INTEREST RATE SENSITIVITY
TYPICAL GAP REPORT

Prime
loans
and
funding 0-3 >3-6 >6-12 >1-5 Non-
source months months months years >5 years market Total
ASSETS

Investment Securities $ - $533 $711 $3,085 $7,354 $1,315 $40 $13,058

Federal funds sold and - 1,668 - - - - - 1,668


securities purchased under
resale agreements
Loans:

Commercial 4,015 1,747 316 125 222 66 412 6,912

Real estate 1-4 family 115 1,565 1,223 913 2,519 1,024 99 7,458
first mortgages
Other real estate mortgages 2,572 2,171 591 537 1,478 359 578 8,286

Real estate construction 732 112 1 12 18 - 235 1,110

Consumer 729 4,071 226 303 628 93 2,053 8,103

Lease financing - 85 94 175 850 8 - 1,212

Foreign: - 18 - - - - - 18
Total Loans (2) 8,163 9,769 3,162 2,065 5,715 1,550 3,386 33,099

Other earning assets: - - - - - - 52 52


Total earning assets 8,163 11,990 3,162 5,150 13,069 2,865 3,478 47,877

Noninterest-earning assets: - - - - - - 4,636 4,636


Total assets 8,163 11,990 3,162 5,150 13,069 2,865 8,114 52,513

All units in millions of US dollars (Table continued on next page)


TABLE 6 continued

Prime loans
and funding >3-6 >6-12 Non-
source 0-3 months months months >1-5 years >5 years market Total
LIABILITIES AND
STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY

Deposits:

Interest-bearing checks $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $ - $4,789 $4,789

Savings deposits - - - - - - $2,544 $2,544

Market rate savings 8,163 5,905 1,005 2,011 - - - 17,084

Saving certificates - 2,128 1,357 1,069 2,437 150 14 7,155

Other time deposits - 65 13 31 191 13 2 315

Deposits in foreign offices: - 38 - - - - - 38


Total interest bearing deposits 8,163 8,163 2,375 3,111 2,628 163 7,349 31,925

Federal funds purchased and


securities sold under repurchase
agreements - 1,079 - - - - - 1,079

Commercial paper and other


short-term borrowings - 188 - - - - - 188

Senior debt - 1,527 26 318 343 42 - 2,256

Subordinated debt - 1,895 - - - - 70 1,965


Total liabilities 8,163 12,825 2,401 3,429 2,971 205 7,419 37,413

Noninterest-bearing liabilities - - - - - - 10,785 10,785

Stockholders' equity - - - - - - 4,315 4,315

Total liability and


stockholders'equity 8,163 12,825 2,401 3,429 2,971 205 22,519 52,513
Gap before interest rate
financial contracts - -835.00 761 1,721 10,098 2,660 -14,405 -

Interest-bearing interest rate


swaps - -652.00 193 214 245 - - -
Gap adjusted for interest rate
financial contracts $ - ($1,487) $954 $1,935 $10,343 $2,660 $14,405 $ -
Cumulative gap $ - ($1,487) $533 $1,402 $11,745 $14,405 $ -
Adjustments:

Exclude noninterest-earning assets,


noninterest-bearing liabilities and
stockholders'equity - - - - - - $10,464

Move interest-bearing checking and


savings deposits from nonmarket to
shortest maturity - -7333 - - - - $7,333
Adjusted cumulative gap $ - ($8,820) ($7,866) ($5,931) $4,412 $7,072 $10,464

(1) The nonmarket column consists of marketable equities securities.

(2) The nonmarket column consists of nonaccrual loans of $1,494 million, fixed-rate credit card loans of $2,062 million (including $39 million in
commercial credit card loans) and overdrafts of $130 million.
TABLE 7
A DURATION ANALYSIS OF INTEREST RATE RISK EXPOSURE

On Balance Sheet Off Balance Sheet Combined On & Off


Effective Adjusted
As of December 31, 1995 Duration Notional Net Adjusted Effective
$ (millions) Balance Rate Years Amount(1) Spread Rate Duration
Assets:
Variable rate prime loans $16,179.00 6.75(%) 0.29 $15,133.00 2.07(%) 8.73(%) 1.74
Other variable
loans/investments 14,963.00 7.00 0.19 0.00 7.01 0.19
Total variable rate assets 31,342.00 6.90 0.24 15,133.00 2.07 7.91 1.00
Fixed rate loans 27,889.00 9.64 2.19 58.00 -5.15 9.63 2.19
Other fixed investements 12,259.00 6.82 2.95 1,205.00 -1.49 6.67 2.82
Total fixed rate assets 40,148.00 8.78 2.42 1,263.00 -1.66 8.73 2.38
Other assets 8,629.00 1.34 0.00 1.34
Total assets $79,919.00 7.10 1.45 $16,396.00 1.78 7.47 1.73
Liabilities:
Contractually repriceable $27,479.00 2.41 2.08 $5,638.00 1.98 2.00 1.73
Variable borrowings 10,250.00 2.76 0.05 198.00 -8.90 2.93 0.08
Total variable liabilities 37,729.00 2.51 1.53 5,836.00 1.61 2.26 1.28
Total fixed liabilities 20,003.00 4.61 1.49 8,624.00 2.33 3.61 0.75
Non-interest bearing DDA 13,677.00 3.42 0.00 3.42
Total deposits/borrowings 71,409.00 2.62 1.88 14,460.00 2.04 2.21 1.54
Other liabilities 1,476.00 0.06 0.00 0.06
Total liabilities $72,885.00 2.57 1.84 $14,460.00 2.04 2.17 1.51

(1) $5.6 billion of basis swaps are excluded from variable rate prime notional amounts, but included in effective
duration calculations.
TABLE 8
NET INTEREST MARGIN SIMULATION

Rate Scenario

Unchanged +100 bps +200 bps Limit -200 bps Limit

12 Months Net Interest


Income:

(a) W/ Deposit rates


unchanged from 9/94 $1,577.00 $1,560.50 $1,540.80 $1,545.40
Total earning assets 32,892 32,912 32,420 32,346
Net rate 4.79(%) 4.74(%) 4.75(%) 4.78(%)
Change in net interest income -16.50 -36.20 +/- 78.90 -31.60 +/- 78.9
% Net interest income -1.0(%) -2.3(%) +/- 5.0(%) -2.0(%) +/- 5.0(%)
(b) W/ Deposit rates reflecting
50 basis point tightening in
unchanged $1,551.00 $1,560.50 $1,540.80 $1,545.40
Total earning assets 32,892 32,912 32,420 32,346
Net rate 4.72(%) 4.74(%) 4.75(%) 4.78(%)
Change in net interest income 9.50 -10.20 +/- 78.90 -5.60 +/- 78.9
% Net interest income 0.6(%) -0.6(%) +/- 5.0(%) -0.4(%) +/- 5.0(%)
Portfolio Equity:

Market value $5,727.00 $5,241.00 $6,109.00


Change in market value -486 +/- 857 382 +/- 857
% Shareholder's equity 11.1(%) +/- 20.0(%) 8.7(%) +/- 20.0(%)
Duration (years) 4.20 4.30 2.90
TABLE 9
INVESTMENT POLICY

A. Introduction

The purpose of this policy is to provide the basis for the bank to responsibly manage the
investments in accordance with the philosophy and objectives stated below. Unless stated
otherwise, the terms “investment” and “investment portfolio” will refer to both cash
management activities and longer-term investment securities. The term “capital “ will refer
to the sum of Undivided Earnings, Paid in Capital, Regular Reserve, and the Allowance for
Loan Losses.

B. Investment Philosophy

The bank recognizes a fiduciary responsibility to customers to invest all funds prudently and
in accordance with ethical and prevailing legal standards. It recognizes that the investment
portfolio must complement the loan portfolio and together they must be matched with
liabilities. In addition, the policy will support the overall business and asset/liability strategies
of the institution.

Certain general tenets apply to the investment portfolio. Safety of assets is of primary
concern. In all cases, only high quality investments will be purchased. The investment
portfolio should provide adequate, but not excessive liquidity in meeting member demand for
funds. Reasonable portfolio diversification should be pursued to ensure that the bank does
not have excessive concentration of individual securities, security types or security
characteristics. The investment portfolio will be managed on a “buy and hold” basis.
However, periodic sales of investment securities are permissible to meet operational cash
needs or to restructure the portfolio mix in accordance with changes in investment strategy.
In all cases, investments must meet all criteria stated in the Federal Law, the Rules and
Regulations of the Regulators, and all requirements of our bonding company. Investment
performance in all classifications will be monitored on a frequent and regular basis to ensure
that objectives are attained and guidelines adhered to.

C. Investment Authority

Authority for investments is the responsibility of the Board Directors. The Board shall
designate the Chief Executive Officer and the Chief Financial Officer to act on its behalf and
in accordance with this policy. The Chief Financial Officer, in conjunction with wither the
Controller or the Financial Analysis Manager, shall oversee the day-to-day operations of the
investment portfolio and have specific investment and transaction execution authority.

Quarterly, the activity for safety and sound the Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial
Officer and the Financial Consultants will review the past quarter’s investment activity for
safety and soundness.

D. Investment Objectives and Guidelines


Firm investments shall be managed at two levels: cash management needs and longer-term
investment activities. In all cases, safety of funds shall take precedence over yield and its
attendant risks, and the only financial instruments which may be purchased are those which
in the opinion of the Chief Financial Officer pose no significant credit risk. All investment
activity is to be guided by the criteria specified in this policy.

1. The funds of the bank can be invested in the following types of instruments with
qualifications as provided:

a. United States Treasury obligations will have a maximum maturity of three


years.

b. United States Agency Securities (excluding MBS) shall be limited to a


maximum maturity of three years.

c. Mortgage Backed Securities issues by or fully guaranteed as to principal and


interest by the Federal National Mortgage Association, Government National
Mortgage Association, or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
These investments will primarily be one year ARMs and five year balloons,
but three year ARMs and seven year balloons may be purchased. Individual
issues shall not exceed $50 million in value at the time of purchase.

d. Private Issue Mortgage Back Securities. Before authorizing a purchase of


this type, the Chief Financial Officer shall review a prospectus to determine
whether the investment is permissible. Total private issue Mortgage Related
Securities purchased shall not exceed $50 million. The minimum credit rating
of these securities at the time of purchase must be AA or equivalent.
Individual securities shall not exceed $10 million in value at the time of
purchase.

e. Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Agreements, but only with a Federally


Insured Bank on the approved bank list, with both parties acting in the
capacity of principal. Maturities will be no longer than 180 days and the
securities will be delivered to a third-party safekeeping agent.

f. Fed Funds sold shall be conducted only with approved banks. Total Fed
Funds sold to a single institution shall not exceed $50 million. Term Fed
Funds shall not exceed one year in maturity.

g. Certificates of Deposit issued only by approved banks with a maximum


maturities not to exceed one (1) year. Total certificates deposited in a single
institution shall not exceed $50 million.

h. Bankers’Acceptances issues only by approved banks. Total Bankers’


Acceptances purchased from a single issuing institution shall not exceed $50
million.

i. Yankeedollar or Eurodollar deposits only in approved banks. Total


Yankeedollar or Eurodollar deposits in a single institution shall not exceed
$50 million.

j. Money Market mutual funds that invest in CDs, Repurchase Agreements,


Banker’s Acceptances, Agency Notes, etc., and that which conform to Federal
rules and regulations. Mortgage Backed Securities mutual funds that invest
in agency and private issue MBS. The objective of the MBS fund must be
current income, capital preservation, and minimal fund price volatility.
Investments in the money market mutual fund will be limited to $100 million
on and investments in the MBS mutual fund will be limited to $25 million.

Deliverable securities purchased will be delivered (either physically or via the Federal
Reserve Bank wire system) simultaneously with the release of cash. Such delivery
will be made to a third party for safekeeping, whether to a custodian or to a trust
account maintained. At a minimum, the contracted safekeeping agent or trustee will
provide written confirmation of each transaction to us and a monthly listing of all
securities in its account.

The Chief Financial Officer shall maintain an approved list(s) of banks and other
financial institutions with which the bank may conduct investment transactions. The
list may include several of the largest domestic banks and U.S. domiciled subsidiaries
of foreign institutions which are federally insured and carry a minimum credit rating
of “B/C” by Keefe, Bruyette and Woods. The bank will minimize the risk associated
with executing securities transactions by limiting the securities brokers/dealers with
which it does business to those who are primary dealers recognized and approved by
the Federal Reserve System. The Chief Financial Officer will make
additions/deletions from the list(s) as appropriate.

2. Cash Management

a. The objective of the firm’s cash management policy is to provide sufficient


liquidity each day to meet operating cash needs, member demand for funds, and minimum
balance requirements for the Federal Reserve Account.

b. Cash management funds shall be maintained to meet the withdrawal and


lending needs of the customers. The amount of funds will be continually
evaluated depending upon lending trends and withdrawal experience, and
other external factors deemed appropriate.

c. The Chief Financial Officer, Financial Analysis Manger, or Controller, or


Accounting Supervisor shall execute these cash management activities and the Chief Financial
Officer shall review these transactions.

3. Investment Portfolio

The management objective of the firm’s Investment Portfolio is to provide maximum


return within the bounds of safety of principal and interest, liquidity, and asset liability
management demand. Each specific investment decision will be evaluated with
respect to such issues as expected return, credit risk, liquidity, effect on the
investment portfolio, impact on asset/liability needs, and proper safekeeping. The
Chief Financial Officer, Controller, or Financial Analysis manager will execute
investment portfolio transactions.

4. Prohibited Activities

The following activities are prohibited:

a. Cash forward agreements to buy when the delivery date is in excess of ninety
(90) days from the trade date.

b. Standby commitments to purchase or sell a security at a future date whereby


the buyer is required to accept delivery of the security at the option of the
seller.

c. Adjusted to trading, meaning any method or transaction used to defer a loss


whereby the bank sells a security to a vendor at a price above its current
market price and simultaneously purchases or commits to purchase from that
vendor another security above its current market price.

d. Short sales of securities not owned by the bank.

e. Futures trading.

E. Maturity Structure

The maturity structure of the investment portfolio will be managed in accordance with asset
liability management needs, market conditions, and the objectives of this Policy Statement.

It is the responsibility of the Chief Financial Officer to constantly monitor the maturity
structure of the investment portfolio and implement modifications in the average maturity and
makeup of the portfolio. These modifications will be based on Asset/Liability Management
concerns (i.e., price risk, liquidity risk, reinvestment risk) and changing market conditions.

F. FASB 115 Compliance

In order to comply with the FASB 115, the bank will classify its investments as Trading,
Held-to-Maturity, and Available-for-Sale. All Fed Funds and mutual fund accounts will be
classified as Trading Accounts. All balloon MBS securities, FHLB stock, and other fixed rate
investments with a maturity of greater than one year at the time of purchase will be classified
as Held-to-Maturity.

The remainder of the portfolio will be classified as Held-to-Maturity. The bank has the
positive intent and ability to hold these to maturity. These securities will not be sold in
response to changes in market interest rates. The bank normally has $20 million in Fed Funds
and has a line of credit with the FHLB of over $50 million. Given our asset size, $200 million
of instantly accessible cash is more than adequate liquidity for any possible scenario.

G. Sovereign and Exchange Rate Risk

The bank will not invest in any foreign banking institutions or securities denominated in
currencies other that U.S. Dollar and therefore will not incur any Sovereign or Exchange Rate
Risk.

H. Modifications to Policy

The Chief Financial Officer is responsible for recommending changes to this policy.

Approved by the Board of Directors


TABLE 10
GLOBAL FOREIGN EXCHANGE TRADING LIMITS

CURRENCY TYPE CURRENCY NET POSITION NET OVERALL DAYLIGHT FX FORWARD RISK POINTS (US$ Equivalent)
SHORT CURRENCY CURRENCY
NAME POSITION POSITION
(2 x NET)
LIMIT INCR./ LIMIT INCR./ CAP = 85,000 SENSITIVITY
(DECR.) (DECR.) TO A 25 B.P.
OVERALL MED-LONG TERM
CHANGE IN
0 - 10 YRS. 2 - 10 YRS.
INTEREST
LIMIT INCREASE LIMIT DECREASE RATES
MAJOR CURRENCIES 540.00 -60.00
U.S. DOLLAR USD 275.00 150.00 55,000.00 23,000 3,000 -4,000 5,729,167
CANADIAN DOLLAR CAD 220.00 840.00 25,000 2,720 2,000 -3,000 2,604,167
POUND STERLING GBP 210.00 420.00 14,500 7,220 500 -1,500 1,510,417
SWISS FRANC CHF 185.00 370.00 6,000 900 500 -1,000 625,000
GERMAN MARK DEM 280.00 15.00 560.00 16,000 3,800 500 -1,500 1,666,667
DUTCH GUILDER NLG 60.00 120.00 3,000 2,040 312,500
JAPANESE YEN JPY 210.00 420.00 14,600 6,000 500 -1,500 1,520,833
ITALIAN LIRE ITL 70.00 5.00 140.00 2,200 1,240 229,167
FRENCH FRANC FRF 90.00 10.00 180.00 8,300 5,500 500 -500 864,583
BELGIAN FRANC BEF 65.00 10.00 130.00 3,000 2,160 312,500
AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR AUD 60.00 120.00 2,600 1,040 270,833
EUROPEAN CURRENCY XEU 65.00 130.00 7,150 6,670 744,792
UNIT (ECU)
MINOR CURRENCIES 160.00 60.00
ARGENTINIAN AUSTRAL ARP 5.00 10.00
AUSTRIAN SCHILLING ATS 30.00 10.00 60.00 750 510 78,125
BAHAMIAN DOLLAR BSD 2.00 4.00
BAHRAIN DINAR BHD 2.00 4.00
BARBADOS DOLLAR BBD 2.00 4.00
BERMUDA DOLLAR BMD 2.00 4.00
BRAZIL CRUZADO BRC 5.00 10.00
CAYMAN DOLLAR KYD 2.00 4.00
CHINESE RENMINBI CNY 9.00 18.00 120 12,500
DANISH KRONE DKK 45.00 5.00 90.00 1,000 640 104,167
E.CARIBBEAN DOLLAR XCD 2.00 4.00
FIJI DOLLAR FJD 8.00 16.00 72 7,500
FINNISH MARKKA FIM 30.00 14.00 60.00 250 130 26,042
GREEK DRACHMA GRD 10.00 8.00 20.00
TABLE 11
ONE DAY FALLOUT FUNDING SCENARIO

CATEGORY: OVERNIGHT FUNDS AVAILABLE

Rating Movement Downward to: Total Change Pct. Change

Thomson Bankwatch B $16,229

Thomson Bankwatch B/C $13,365 ($2,864) (17.65%)

Thomson Bankwatch C $6,291 ($9,938) (61.24%)

CATEGORY: TERM FUNDS AVAILABLE

Rating Movement Downward Total Change Pct. Change

Thomson Bankwatch B $19,299

Thomson Bankwatch B/C $17,020 ($2,209) (11.49%)

Thomson Bankwatch C $12,458 ($6,771) (35.21%)

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