Title: Balance Sheet Strategies Beating the Curve
1Balance Sheet Strategies Beating the Curve
Don Ullmann Senior Vice President Financial
Strategies Group Keefe, Bruyette Woods, Inc.
2Key Topics
- The yield curveexperts cant predict it
mathematics cant predict it. - Do you want to base your ALCO decisions on your
predictions? - The investment portfolio is a considerable part
of your balance sheet. - Consider your security selections carefully.
- During a Fed tightening, funding decisions become
increasingly important. - In a difficult market environment, have the
courage to stay the course. - You will ultimately be rewarded for it.
3The Yield Curve Bear Flattening From the Front
End
4Market Expectation for Short Term Rates in March
02
5What Do Forward Rates Really Tell Us?
- Necessary for proper valuation of embedded
options. - NOTE forwards affect all models, including
prepayments. - Steepness also reflects many other
factorsrisk/reward and demand for funds. - Historically, forwards have rarely been good
predictor of rates. - Therefore, be aware of bets you are taking vs.
forward curve.
6Fed Funds History Future???
7Is the Worst Behind Us?
Note NIM is based on the top 50 banks ranked by
market capitalization. NIM is calculated as FTE
net interest income divided by average earning
assets. Excludes C, JPM, and BAC. Source SNL
DataSource and KBW Research.
- Competitive pressures and a flattening yield
curve have hurt margins - Rising rates may be helping offset pressure at
core deposit-funded banks - Significant earning asset growth should be hard
to fund this year without margin pressure
8Positioning the Balance SheetWhat Does Your
Balance Sheet Give You?
- Is your institution capital constrained? Do you
hold unencumbered collateral? - How deep is your deposit base? Do you have
pricing flexibility? - Are you asset sensitive or liability sensitive?
- What is the current composition of your net
interest margin?
9Lets Look at the Portfolio
- What percent of earnings assets does it dominate?
20 - How reliance on investment income as a source of
core earnings? 15 - What risks are being taken?
- How is it funded?
- What are the capital constraints?
- What is the asset allocation Liquidity vs. Core
holdings? - What is the investment philosophy? Active vs.
Passive?
10- The role of the investment portfolio will depend
on - The percentage of earning assets that it
dominates - 23 of earning assets as of 2Q05, down from 25.5
in 2Q04 - Its impact on the interest rate risk profile
- NIIHow is it funded?
- MVPEWhat mismatch is being taken?
- CashflowAre there reinvestment opportunities?
- The reliance on investment income as a source of
core earnings - 17 of interest income for 2Q05, down from 19 in
2Q04
- SOURCE SNL Data for Public Institutions
between 500mm - 10b in total assets
11Representative Bank Portfolio
- Performance
- Yield (non FTE) 4.15
- Avg. Life 3.7 years
- Duration 3.1 years
- Price Vol. 200bps 3.6 years
- Composition
- U.S. Govt/Agency 29.0
- Mortgages 57.0
- Municipals 8.8
- Corporates 5.1
- Cash Flow (two years)
- Flat 33.5
- 300bps 27.3
- -100bps 49.6
12Portfolio Summary
13Market Volatility
14Cashflow
15Driving Factors behind Portfolio
Sec. Holdings lt AVG
Sec. Holdings gt AVG
- Intermediate/Short Duration
- Not as reliant on portfolio
- Can layer in more cashflow with yield
- Longer Duration
- Need for earnings
- Risk profile lets you reach for earnings
Asset Sensitive
- Intermediate/Short Duration
- Limit Extension Risk
- Delicate balance between cashflow/earnings/risk
- Short Duration
- Strong cashflow
Liability Sensitive
16Spread Product has Outperformed, Positive
Contribution to AFS
Valuations have benefited by spread tightening
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18MBS IssuanceARM Share
Total ARMs Issuance for the FY-05 estimate
represents a 47 of total MBS Issuance and is an
8 increase over FY-04.
19ARM IssuanceNot Primarily a Curve Phenomenon
Hybrids Maintain 50 Origination Volume of Total
Mortgage Market
20Leverage Goes From the Sublime to the Ridiculous
21Conditions for Delevering
- High cost liabilities pressuring net interest
margin - Offsetting asset gains available
- Net interest margin improvement opportunity
greater than alternatives - Can achieve risk reduction in borrowings
- Ability to take losses vs. give-up in earnings
22Where has the activity been?
- Portfolio Cash flow has decreased significantly.
- Loan demand has been good
- Investments have been concentrated on the short
end of the curve. - - 4.75-5.25 with limited extension
- Portfolio management has been balance sheet and
interest rate risk driven - Improve cash flow
- Enhance earnings profile of portfolio
- Reduce market volatility and extension risk
- 4) Seeing a flurry of year end balance
sheet restructurings - - FNB, BANR, FCF, CBH, FCTR
23Recent Examples
- First Midwest Bancorp, FMBI
- Announced 200mm delevering on 12/22/05 (approx.
9 of securities a/o 9/30) - 6.4million loss, or 9 cents/share.
- Stock day prior at 36.51 stock day after at
36.21 - Comment These securities sales represent
important steps to better position ourselves for
current and expected market conditions, said
John OMeara, President and CEO. While this
action should reduce 2005 performance by 0.09
per diluted share, it should help maintain
margins prospectively. (FMBI press release) - Banner Corp., BANR
- Announced 200mm delevering on 12/05/05
(approximately 41 of securities a/o 9/30) - 8.9million loss, or .74 per share
- Stock day prior at 32.33 stock day after at
32.40 - Comment By strengthening our earnings from
core business areas, we have been able to place
less emphasis on the use of wholesale assets and
liabilities and now can accelerate this trend
through these restructuring(s). we anticipate
future benefits will include an expanded net
interest margin, an improved interest rate risk
position, stronger performance metrics, increased
profitability, and enhanced shareholder value,
said D.Michael Jones, President and CEO. (BANR
press release)
24Funding
- Wholesale Funding comprised 21 of Interest
Bearing Liabilities in 2Q05 - But this accounted for over 30 of Interest
Expense - Competition for deposits has been fierce
- There continue to be prepayment of FHLB Advances
at losses, reducing short term funding - With flat swap curve, little benefit to swapping
fixed gt floating - Seeing more creative funding structures
SOURCE SNL Data for Public Institutions
between 500mm - 10b in total assets
25Structured Repo - Overview
- Term and Structured Repo provide an alternative
source of funding - With Structured Repo, borrowers can create a
funding structure that fits their overall balance
sheet, economic outlook, and funding needs - By selling optionality, borrowers can reduce
their funding cost while quantifying the risk - With the advent of FAS 133, structured repo lets
borrowers achieve similar results without
directly accessing the derivatives market. - Structured Repo
- Floating to Fixed Alternatives
- Embedded Floors (Caps)
- Fixed Rate Callable
- For the sake of this discussion, we will use the
term callable to denote the counterparty having
the option to call the funding from the borrower.
26Structured Repo - Fixed Rate
- Structure
- Fixed rate during entire period with counterparty
having the option to call the structure at
various points in time. Rate is determined by - Maturity
- Call date and frequency
- Benefit
- Locks in fixed rate funding to call, and possibly
maturity depending on market conditions. Whether
to the call, or maturity, rate is typically less
than bullet structures to comparable maturities.
- Example
- 5 year non-call 2 year
- 25mm minimum
- Year 1-2 Rate fixed at 4.25.
- Years 3-5 Counterparty can call the funding
after initial 2 years. If not called, the
borrowing is callable quarterly until maturity
(one-time calls are also available) - As a reference
- 2 yr fixed bullet repo 4.84
- 5 yr fixed bullet repo 4.94
27Structured Repo - Floating gt Fixed
- Structure
- Initial period resets quarterly off floating rate
index, typically 3 month Libor, LESS a spread.
Spread is determined by a combination of factors - Maturity of borrowing
- First call date, and subsequent call frequency
- Fixed rate the borrowing converts to at first
call, OR, sub-libor spread during the initial
floating period - Benefit
- By adjusting the above terms, borrower can create
a funding structure that fits their balance
sheet, interest rate risk profile, and economic
outlook - Example
- 5 year non-call 1 year
- 25mm minimum
- Year 1 Borrower pays 3mL 124bps. Quarterly
resets. - Years 2-5 At beginning of year 2, rate converts
to 4.50 fixed rate. Counterparty can call the
funding at this point, or quarterly until
maturity. (one-time calls are also available) - If called, the borrower has benefited having
sub-libor funding for 1 yr - If not called, the average funding cost over the
5 yr period would be 3.90 - To highlight how adjusting the fixed rate coupon
can impact the spread to 3mL, see below table
28Structured Repo - Floating gt Fixed
1 yr repo rate adjusted for forward rates in year
2
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30Key Take-Aways
- Todays flat yield curve is unprecedented, and it
may or may not continue. - Portfolio considerations become even more
important in an environment offering little
incremental yield on the curve or from spread. - Creativity on the funding side may provide more
value to the bottom line that reaching on the
investment portfolio side. - Integrity of the ALCO process is critical to
performance.
31Financial Strategies Methodology
(2) FUNDING REVIEW
(1) PORTFOLIO REVIEW
- Product composition and characteristics
- Sector analysis
- Gain / Loss
- Yield analysis
- Volatility Analysis
- Price - Average life Duration
- Cashflow forecasting
- Term Structure Analysis
- Bullet
- Callable
- Floating
- Implicit value
- Market Value
(4) STRATEGIES
- Portfolio Restructurings
- Reposition risk / duration
- Enhance Earnings
- Improve Efficiency
- Wholesale Earnings
- Alternative use of capital
- Excess capital
- Cost of capital
- Risk/Reward strategies
(3) BALANCE SHEET IMPACT
- General risk profile
- Balance Sheet
- Income Statement
- Review of combined profile
- Assessing restructuring impact
32- Disclaimer
- This communication is not an offer to sell or a
solicitation to buy the securities mentioned. The
information relating to any company herein is
derived from publicly available sources and
Keefe, Bruyette Woods, Inc. makes no
representation as to the accuracy or completeness
of such information. KBW, its officers,
directors, and employees may from time to time
own the securities mentioned.