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Bank Management




             RISK IN FINANCIAL
             INTERMEDIATION


                  Session 6

William Chittenden edited and updated the PowerPoint slides for this edition.
Fundamental risks :
 Credit risk
 Liquidity risk
 Market risk
 Operational risk
 Capital or solvency risk
 Off-Balance Sheet Activities
 Foreign Exchange Risk
 Sovereign Risk
 Legal risk
 Reputational risk
Credit risk
…the potential variation in net income and
market value of equity resulting from
nonpayment or delayed payment on loans
and securities
 Three Question need to be addressed:
  1.   What has been the loss experience?
  2.   What amount of losses do we expect?
  3.   How prepared is the bank?
Credit ratios to consider
 What has been the loss experience?
   Net loss to average total LN&LS
   Gross losses to average total LN&LS
   Recoveries to avg. total LN&LS
   Recoveries to prior period losses
   Net losses by type of LN&LS
 What amount of losses do we expect?
   Non-current LN&LS to total loans
   Total Past/Due LN&LS - including nonaccrual
   Non-current & restruc LN&LS / Gross LN&LS
   Current - Non-current & restruc/ Gr LN&LS
   Past due loans by loan type
Credit ratios to consider (continued)
 How prepared are we?
   Provision for loan loss to: average
    assets and average total LN&LS
   LN&LS Allowance to: net losses and
    total LN&LS
   Earnings coverage of net loss
Liquidity risk
…the variation in net income and market value of
equity caused by a bank's difficulty in obtaining cash
at a reasonable cost from either the sale of assets or
new borrowings
    Banks can acquire liquidity in two distinct
     ways:
    1.   By liquidation of assets
            Composition of loans & investments
            Maturity of loans & investments
            Percent of loans and investments pledged
             as collateral
    2.   By borrowing
            Core deposits
            Volatile deposits
            Asset quality & stockholders’ equity
Market risk
…the risk to a financial institution’s
condition resulting from adverse movements
in market rates or prices

 Market risk arises from changes in:
   Interest rates
   Foreign exchange rates
   Equity, commodity and security prices
Interest rate risk
…the potential variability in a bank's net
interest income and market value of equity
due to changes in the level of market
interest rates
Example: Rs.100,000 Car loan
              4 year fixed-rate car loan at  8.5%
              1 year FD at                   4.5%
                     Spread                  4.0%
But for How long?
 Funding GAP
  GAP = RSA - RSL,
  where RSA = amount of assets expected to reprice in a
  give period of time.
 In this example:
  GAP1yr = Rs. 0 – Rs.100,000 = - Rs.100,000
                   This is a negative GAP.
Foreign exchange risk
… the risk to a financial institution’s
condition resulting from adverse movements
in foreign exchange rates

 Foreign exchange risk arises from changes
  in foreign exchange rates that affect the
  values of assets, liabilities, and off-balance
  sheet activities denominated in currencies
  different from the bank’s domestic (home)
  currency.
 This risk is also often found in off-balance
  sheet loan commitments and guarantees
  denominated in foreign currencies; foreign
  currency translation risk
Foreign exchange risk

 Foreign currency trading dominates direct portfolio
    investments. Trading volume may look very large but overall
    net exposure positions can be relatively small.
   Net exposure i = (FX asset i - FX liabilities i) + (FX bought i -
    FX sold i )
                       = Net foreign assets i + Net FX bought i
   where
               i       = I th currency
Foreign exchange risk


 An FI can match its foreign currency assets to its liabilities in a given
  currency and match buys and sells in its trading book in that foreign
  currency to avoid FX risk.
 Or it can offset its imbalance in its foreign asset-liability portfolio by
  an opposing imbalance in its trading book so that its net exposure
  position in that currency would be zero.
Foreign exchange risk

 A positive net exposure position implies a FI is net long in a currency
  and faces the risk that foreign currency falls in value against the
  domestic currency. Failure to maintain a fully balanced position in
  any given currency exposes a FI to fluctuations in the FX rate of that
  currency against the dollar.
 The greater the FI's exposure in a foreign currency and greater that
  currency's exchange rate volatility, greater the loss or gain potential
  to an FI's earnings.
Foreign exchange risk


 Spot market for FX: The market in which
  foreign currency is traded for immediate
  delivery.
 Forward market for FX: The market in which
  foreign currency is traded for future
  delivery.
 Net exposure: The degree to which a bank is
  net long or net short in a given currency.
Foreign exchange risk

 Net long in a currency: Holding more assets than liabilities in a
    currency.
   Open position: An unhedged position in a particular currency.
   FX risks arise through mismatching foreign currency or foreign
    asset-liability positions in individual currencies. These mismatches
    can be profitable if FX forecasts prove to be correct.
   Unexpected outcomes and volatility can impose significant losses on
    an FI.
   These risks can be minimised by hedging through matched foreign
    asset-liability books, through forward contracts and hedging through
    foreign asset and liability portfolio diversification.
Equity and security price risk
…change in market prices, interest rates and
foreign exchange rates affect the market values of
equities, fixed income securities, foreign currency
holdings, and associated derivative and other off-
balance sheet contracts.

 Large banks must conduct value-at-
  risk analysis to assess the risk of loss
  with their trading account portfolios.
Operational risk
…measures the cost efficiency of the bank's
activities; i.e., expense control or productivity;
also measures whether the bank has the proper
procedures and systems in place .
  Typical ratios focus on:
     total assets per employee
     total personnel expense per employee
     Non-interest expense ratio
  There is no meaningful way to estimate the
   likelihood of fraud or other contingencies
   from published data.
  A bank’s operating risk is closely related to
   its operating policies and processes and
   whether it has adequate controls.
Operational & Technology Risk

 OPERATING COST AND TECHNOLOGY RISK
 Financial risk is only one part of the risk profile of a
  modern FI. They also have regular operations that
  result in additional costs and revenues. They also
  have to use various factors of production like
  labour, capital and other inputs optimally. Cost of
  these production factors has a direct bearing on the
  profitability and solvency of an FI.
Operational & Technology Risk

 An efficient technological base for an FI can result
  in:
 1. Lower costs by combining labour and capital in a
  more efficient mix
 2. Increased revenues by allowing a broader array
  of financial services to be produced or innovated
  and sold to customers.
 Technology has the potential to increase FI's net
  interest margin i.e. the difference between interest
  income and interest expense and other net income.
Operational & Technology Risk

Impact of technology on Banking:
 * Faster reconciliation of accounts
 * Electronic fund transfer
 * Electronic initiation and transmission of letters of credit
 * Portfolio insurance
 * Faster clearance of cheques
 * Note counting machines
 * Automatic Teller Machines
 * Home banking
 * Treasury management software
 * Payment of telephone and electricity bills
Operational & Technology Risk

 Technological advances allow an FI to offer such products to
    its customers which have potential to earn higher profits.
   The investment in many of these products is risky.
   Innovations may fail to attract sufficient business in relation
    to initial cash outlay.
   Innovations in financial sectors get imitated fast.
   One benefit of technology is that it allows FI to cross-market
    both new and existing products to customers.
   Technology increases the rate of innovation of new products.
   It improves the quality of service and lowers its cost. This is
    possible due to economies of scale and economies of scope.
Operational & Technology Risk


 Improvement in technology has contributed more risk to
  financial system
 Daylight Overdraft Risk: Bank's reserve account becomes
  negative within the banking day. Risk of bank failure during
  the transaction time is a major risk.
 International Technology Transfer Risk: Between 1974 and
  1994 there has been a dramatic change in the position of
  American Banks. Not one American bank figured in top twenty
  in 1994 while top 20 positions were occupied by American
  banks in 1974 inspite of heavy investment in technology and
  financial services innovations in U S.
OFF-BALANCE-SHEET
ACTIVITIES

   Off-balance-sheet activities have both risk increasing and risk reducing
    attributes.
   They are an important source of fee income for many FIs.
   They are less obvious and invisible to all but the very informed investor or
    regulator.
   In economic terms they are contingent assets and liabilities that affect the
    future rather than current shape of an FI's balance sheet.
   They have a direct impact on the future profitability and solvency
    performance of the FI.
   Their efficient management is central to controlling overall exposure in a
    modern FI.
   An activity is an off-balance-sheet asset if, when a contingent event occurs,
    the off-balance-sheet item moves onto the asset side of the balance-sheet.
    Similarly, when an item moves to liability side of balance-sheet on a
    contingent event it is called an off-balance-sheet liability.
OFF-BALANCE-SHEET
ACTIVITIES

 The major types of off-balance-sheet activities for
    banks are:
   * Loan Commitments
   * Letter of Credits
   * Bank Guarantees including DPGs
   * Futures, Forward contracts, Swaps and Options
   * Underwriting Commitments
   Although off-balance-sheet activities can be risk
    increasing, they can also be used to hedge on-
    balance-sheet exposures resulting in lower risk as
    well as generating fee income to the FI.
Sovereign Risk

 Mexican crisis and Asian meltdown confirms the importance of
  assessing the country or sovereign risk of a borrowing country in
  making lending or other investment decision like buying foreign
  bonds or equity.
 If a borrower refuses or is unable to repay its loans the lender would
  probably seek to reschedule the promised interest and principal
  payments on the loan into the future. Continued inability to pay
  would result in liquidation of the firm's assets.
 Consider lending to a first class borrower in a foreign country.
Sovereign Risk

 The corporation may be doing well and repaying its debt as
  per repayment schedule.
 However, the foreign exchange reserves of the country are
  precarious and in order to conserve the foreign exchange
  reserves, the government of that country refuses to allow any
  further debt repayment in hard currency to outside creditors.
 This puts the foreign borrower automatically into default even
  though the company is a good credit risk.
 These types of government action pose sovereign risk which
  is independent of the credit standing of the individual loan to
  the borrower.
Sovereign Risk


 Unlike legal remedy in case of domestic bankrupcy courts,
  there is no international bankruptcy court to which the lender
  can take the foreign government. Lender's legal remedies to
  offset a sovereign country's default or moratoria decisions are
  very limited.
 This means that making a lending decision to a party residing
  in a foreign country is a two step decision.
 First, lender must assess the underlying credit quality of the
  borrower and set an appropriate credit risk premium.
 Second, lenders must assess the sovereign risk quality of the
  country in which the borrower resides. Even if the credit risk
  is assessed as good but the sovereign risk is bad, the loan
  should not be made.
Sovereign Risk

 A sovereign's negative decisions to its debt
  obligations or the obligations of its public and
  private organisation may take two forms:
 Repudiation: an outright cancellation of all current
  and future debt obligations by a borrower. They
  were very common before the second world war.
 Rescheduling: A country declares a moratorium or
  delay on its current and future debt obligations and
  then seeks to ease credit terms by rescheduling
  debt maturity and renegotiation of interest rates.
Capital risk
… closely tied to asset quality and a bank's
overall risk profile
 The more risk taken, the greater is the
  amount of capital required.
 Appropriate risk measures include all the
  risk measures discussed earlier as well as
  ratios measuring the ratio of:
   Tier 1 capital and total risk based capital to
    risk weighted assets
   Equity capital to total assets
   Dividend payout, and growth rate in tier 1
    capital
Definitions of capital
 Tier 1 capital is:
    Total common equity capital plus
     noncumulative preferred stock, plus minority
     interest in unconsolidated subsidiaries, less
     ineligible intangibles.
 Risk-weighted assets are:
    The total of risk-adjusted assets where the
     risk weights are based on four risk classes of
     assets.
 Importantly, a bank's dividend policy affects
  its capital risk by influencing retained
  earnings.
Legal risk
…the potential that unenforceable contracts,
lawsuits, or adverse judgments can disrupt or
otherwise negatively affect the operations or
condition of the banking organization

 Legal risk includes:
   Compliance risks
   Strategic risks
   General liability issues
Reputational risk
 Reputational risk is the potential that
 negative publicity regarding an
 institution’s business practices,
 whether true or not, will cause a
 decline in the customer base, costly
 litigation, or revenue reductions.
Strategies for Maximizing
Shareholder Wealth
 Asset Management
    Composition and Volume
 Liability Management
    Composition and Volume
 Management of off-balance sheet activities
 Net interest margin management
 Credit risk management
 Liquidity management
 Management of non-interest expense
 Securities gains/losses management
 Tax management
CAMELS
 Capital Adequacy
   Measures bank’s ability to maintain
    capital commensurate with the bank’s
    risk
 Asset Quality
   Reflects the amount of credit risk with
    the loan and investment portfolios
 Management Quality
   Reflects management’s ability to
    identify, measure, monitor, and control
    risks
CAMELS (continued)
 Earnings
   Reflects the quantity, trend, and quality
    of earnings
 Liquidity
   Reflects the sources of liquidity and
    funds management practices
 Sensitivity to market risk
   Reflects the degree to which changes
    in market prices and rates adversely
    affect earnings and capital
CAMELS Ratings
 Regulators assign a rating of 1 (best)
 to 5 (worst) in each of the six
 categories and an overall composite
 rating
  1  or 2 indicates a fundamentally sound
    bank
   3 indicates that a bank shows some
    underlying weakness that should be
    corrected
   4 or 5 indicates a problem bank
Performance Characteristics of Banks
by Business Concentration and Size
 Wholesale Banks
   Focus on loans for the largest
    commercial customers and purchase
    substantial funds from corporate and
    government depositors
 Retail Banks
   Focus on consumer, small business,
    mortgage, and agriculture loans and
    obtain deposits form individuals and
    small businesses
Financial Statement Manipulation

 Off-balance sheet activities
   Enron and “Special-Purpose Vehicles”
 Window dressing
   Eliminate Fed borrowing prior to
    financial statement reporting date
   Increase asset size prior to year-end
 Preferred stock
   Meets capital requirements but causes
    NIM, NI, ROE, and ROA to be
    overstated
Financial Statement Manipulation
(continued)
 Non-performing loans
   Banks may lend borrower funds to
    make payments on past due loans,
    understating non-performance status
 Allowance for loan losses
   Management discretion and IRS
    regulations may be in conflict
Financial Statement Manipulation
(continued)
 Securities gains and losses
   Banks often classify all investment
    securities as “available for sale,”
    overstating any true “gains or losses”
 Non-recurring sales of assets
   This type of transaction is not part of
    the bank’s daily activities and typically
    cannot be repeated; thus it overstates
    earnings

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Bank Risk Management: Understanding Credit, Liquidity, Market and Operational Risks

  • 1. Bank Management RISK IN FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION Session 6 William Chittenden edited and updated the PowerPoint slides for this edition.
  • 2. Fundamental risks :  Credit risk  Liquidity risk  Market risk  Operational risk  Capital or solvency risk  Off-Balance Sheet Activities  Foreign Exchange Risk  Sovereign Risk  Legal risk  Reputational risk
  • 3. Credit risk …the potential variation in net income and market value of equity resulting from nonpayment or delayed payment on loans and securities  Three Question need to be addressed: 1. What has been the loss experience? 2. What amount of losses do we expect? 3. How prepared is the bank?
  • 4. Credit ratios to consider  What has been the loss experience?  Net loss to average total LN&LS  Gross losses to average total LN&LS  Recoveries to avg. total LN&LS  Recoveries to prior period losses  Net losses by type of LN&LS  What amount of losses do we expect?  Non-current LN&LS to total loans  Total Past/Due LN&LS - including nonaccrual  Non-current & restruc LN&LS / Gross LN&LS  Current - Non-current & restruc/ Gr LN&LS  Past due loans by loan type
  • 5. Credit ratios to consider (continued)  How prepared are we?  Provision for loan loss to: average assets and average total LN&LS  LN&LS Allowance to: net losses and total LN&LS  Earnings coverage of net loss
  • 6. Liquidity risk …the variation in net income and market value of equity caused by a bank's difficulty in obtaining cash at a reasonable cost from either the sale of assets or new borrowings  Banks can acquire liquidity in two distinct ways: 1. By liquidation of assets  Composition of loans & investments  Maturity of loans & investments  Percent of loans and investments pledged as collateral 2. By borrowing  Core deposits  Volatile deposits  Asset quality & stockholders’ equity
  • 7. Market risk …the risk to a financial institution’s condition resulting from adverse movements in market rates or prices  Market risk arises from changes in:  Interest rates  Foreign exchange rates  Equity, commodity and security prices
  • 8. Interest rate risk …the potential variability in a bank's net interest income and market value of equity due to changes in the level of market interest rates Example: Rs.100,000 Car loan 4 year fixed-rate car loan at 8.5% 1 year FD at 4.5% Spread 4.0% But for How long?  Funding GAP GAP = RSA - RSL, where RSA = amount of assets expected to reprice in a give period of time.  In this example: GAP1yr = Rs. 0 – Rs.100,000 = - Rs.100,000 This is a negative GAP.
  • 9. Foreign exchange risk … the risk to a financial institution’s condition resulting from adverse movements in foreign exchange rates  Foreign exchange risk arises from changes in foreign exchange rates that affect the values of assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet activities denominated in currencies different from the bank’s domestic (home) currency.  This risk is also often found in off-balance sheet loan commitments and guarantees denominated in foreign currencies; foreign currency translation risk
  • 10. Foreign exchange risk  Foreign currency trading dominates direct portfolio investments. Trading volume may look very large but overall net exposure positions can be relatively small.  Net exposure i = (FX asset i - FX liabilities i) + (FX bought i - FX sold i )  = Net foreign assets i + Net FX bought i  where  i = I th currency
  • 11. Foreign exchange risk  An FI can match its foreign currency assets to its liabilities in a given currency and match buys and sells in its trading book in that foreign currency to avoid FX risk.  Or it can offset its imbalance in its foreign asset-liability portfolio by an opposing imbalance in its trading book so that its net exposure position in that currency would be zero.
  • 12. Foreign exchange risk  A positive net exposure position implies a FI is net long in a currency and faces the risk that foreign currency falls in value against the domestic currency. Failure to maintain a fully balanced position in any given currency exposes a FI to fluctuations in the FX rate of that currency against the dollar.  The greater the FI's exposure in a foreign currency and greater that currency's exchange rate volatility, greater the loss or gain potential to an FI's earnings.
  • 13. Foreign exchange risk  Spot market for FX: The market in which foreign currency is traded for immediate delivery.  Forward market for FX: The market in which foreign currency is traded for future delivery.  Net exposure: The degree to which a bank is net long or net short in a given currency.
  • 14. Foreign exchange risk  Net long in a currency: Holding more assets than liabilities in a currency.  Open position: An unhedged position in a particular currency.  FX risks arise through mismatching foreign currency or foreign asset-liability positions in individual currencies. These mismatches can be profitable if FX forecasts prove to be correct.  Unexpected outcomes and volatility can impose significant losses on an FI.  These risks can be minimised by hedging through matched foreign asset-liability books, through forward contracts and hedging through foreign asset and liability portfolio diversification.
  • 15. Equity and security price risk …change in market prices, interest rates and foreign exchange rates affect the market values of equities, fixed income securities, foreign currency holdings, and associated derivative and other off- balance sheet contracts.  Large banks must conduct value-at- risk analysis to assess the risk of loss with their trading account portfolios.
  • 16. Operational risk …measures the cost efficiency of the bank's activities; i.e., expense control or productivity; also measures whether the bank has the proper procedures and systems in place .  Typical ratios focus on:  total assets per employee  total personnel expense per employee  Non-interest expense ratio  There is no meaningful way to estimate the likelihood of fraud or other contingencies from published data.  A bank’s operating risk is closely related to its operating policies and processes and whether it has adequate controls.
  • 17. Operational & Technology Risk  OPERATING COST AND TECHNOLOGY RISK  Financial risk is only one part of the risk profile of a modern FI. They also have regular operations that result in additional costs and revenues. They also have to use various factors of production like labour, capital and other inputs optimally. Cost of these production factors has a direct bearing on the profitability and solvency of an FI.
  • 18. Operational & Technology Risk  An efficient technological base for an FI can result in:  1. Lower costs by combining labour and capital in a more efficient mix  2. Increased revenues by allowing a broader array of financial services to be produced or innovated and sold to customers.  Technology has the potential to increase FI's net interest margin i.e. the difference between interest income and interest expense and other net income.
  • 19. Operational & Technology Risk Impact of technology on Banking:  * Faster reconciliation of accounts  * Electronic fund transfer  * Electronic initiation and transmission of letters of credit  * Portfolio insurance  * Faster clearance of cheques  * Note counting machines  * Automatic Teller Machines  * Home banking  * Treasury management software  * Payment of telephone and electricity bills
  • 20. Operational & Technology Risk  Technological advances allow an FI to offer such products to its customers which have potential to earn higher profits.  The investment in many of these products is risky.  Innovations may fail to attract sufficient business in relation to initial cash outlay.  Innovations in financial sectors get imitated fast.  One benefit of technology is that it allows FI to cross-market both new and existing products to customers.  Technology increases the rate of innovation of new products.  It improves the quality of service and lowers its cost. This is possible due to economies of scale and economies of scope.
  • 21. Operational & Technology Risk  Improvement in technology has contributed more risk to financial system  Daylight Overdraft Risk: Bank's reserve account becomes negative within the banking day. Risk of bank failure during the transaction time is a major risk.  International Technology Transfer Risk: Between 1974 and 1994 there has been a dramatic change in the position of American Banks. Not one American bank figured in top twenty in 1994 while top 20 positions were occupied by American banks in 1974 inspite of heavy investment in technology and financial services innovations in U S.
  • 22. OFF-BALANCE-SHEET ACTIVITIES  Off-balance-sheet activities have both risk increasing and risk reducing attributes.  They are an important source of fee income for many FIs.  They are less obvious and invisible to all but the very informed investor or regulator.  In economic terms they are contingent assets and liabilities that affect the future rather than current shape of an FI's balance sheet.  They have a direct impact on the future profitability and solvency performance of the FI.  Their efficient management is central to controlling overall exposure in a modern FI.  An activity is an off-balance-sheet asset if, when a contingent event occurs, the off-balance-sheet item moves onto the asset side of the balance-sheet. Similarly, when an item moves to liability side of balance-sheet on a contingent event it is called an off-balance-sheet liability.
  • 23. OFF-BALANCE-SHEET ACTIVITIES  The major types of off-balance-sheet activities for banks are:  * Loan Commitments  * Letter of Credits  * Bank Guarantees including DPGs  * Futures, Forward contracts, Swaps and Options  * Underwriting Commitments  Although off-balance-sheet activities can be risk increasing, they can also be used to hedge on- balance-sheet exposures resulting in lower risk as well as generating fee income to the FI.
  • 24. Sovereign Risk  Mexican crisis and Asian meltdown confirms the importance of assessing the country or sovereign risk of a borrowing country in making lending or other investment decision like buying foreign bonds or equity.  If a borrower refuses or is unable to repay its loans the lender would probably seek to reschedule the promised interest and principal payments on the loan into the future. Continued inability to pay would result in liquidation of the firm's assets.  Consider lending to a first class borrower in a foreign country.
  • 25. Sovereign Risk  The corporation may be doing well and repaying its debt as per repayment schedule.  However, the foreign exchange reserves of the country are precarious and in order to conserve the foreign exchange reserves, the government of that country refuses to allow any further debt repayment in hard currency to outside creditors.  This puts the foreign borrower automatically into default even though the company is a good credit risk.  These types of government action pose sovereign risk which is independent of the credit standing of the individual loan to the borrower.
  • 26. Sovereign Risk  Unlike legal remedy in case of domestic bankrupcy courts, there is no international bankruptcy court to which the lender can take the foreign government. Lender's legal remedies to offset a sovereign country's default or moratoria decisions are very limited.  This means that making a lending decision to a party residing in a foreign country is a two step decision.  First, lender must assess the underlying credit quality of the borrower and set an appropriate credit risk premium.  Second, lenders must assess the sovereign risk quality of the country in which the borrower resides. Even if the credit risk is assessed as good but the sovereign risk is bad, the loan should not be made.
  • 27. Sovereign Risk  A sovereign's negative decisions to its debt obligations or the obligations of its public and private organisation may take two forms:  Repudiation: an outright cancellation of all current and future debt obligations by a borrower. They were very common before the second world war.  Rescheduling: A country declares a moratorium or delay on its current and future debt obligations and then seeks to ease credit terms by rescheduling debt maturity and renegotiation of interest rates.
  • 28. Capital risk … closely tied to asset quality and a bank's overall risk profile  The more risk taken, the greater is the amount of capital required.  Appropriate risk measures include all the risk measures discussed earlier as well as ratios measuring the ratio of:  Tier 1 capital and total risk based capital to risk weighted assets  Equity capital to total assets  Dividend payout, and growth rate in tier 1 capital
  • 29. Definitions of capital  Tier 1 capital is:  Total common equity capital plus noncumulative preferred stock, plus minority interest in unconsolidated subsidiaries, less ineligible intangibles.  Risk-weighted assets are:  The total of risk-adjusted assets where the risk weights are based on four risk classes of assets.  Importantly, a bank's dividend policy affects its capital risk by influencing retained earnings.
  • 30. Legal risk …the potential that unenforceable contracts, lawsuits, or adverse judgments can disrupt or otherwise negatively affect the operations or condition of the banking organization  Legal risk includes:  Compliance risks  Strategic risks  General liability issues
  • 31. Reputational risk  Reputational risk is the potential that negative publicity regarding an institution’s business practices, whether true or not, will cause a decline in the customer base, costly litigation, or revenue reductions.
  • 32. Strategies for Maximizing Shareholder Wealth  Asset Management  Composition and Volume  Liability Management  Composition and Volume  Management of off-balance sheet activities  Net interest margin management  Credit risk management  Liquidity management  Management of non-interest expense  Securities gains/losses management  Tax management
  • 33. CAMELS  Capital Adequacy  Measures bank’s ability to maintain capital commensurate with the bank’s risk  Asset Quality  Reflects the amount of credit risk with the loan and investment portfolios  Management Quality  Reflects management’s ability to identify, measure, monitor, and control risks
  • 34. CAMELS (continued)  Earnings  Reflects the quantity, trend, and quality of earnings  Liquidity  Reflects the sources of liquidity and funds management practices  Sensitivity to market risk  Reflects the degree to which changes in market prices and rates adversely affect earnings and capital
  • 35. CAMELS Ratings  Regulators assign a rating of 1 (best) to 5 (worst) in each of the six categories and an overall composite rating 1 or 2 indicates a fundamentally sound bank  3 indicates that a bank shows some underlying weakness that should be corrected  4 or 5 indicates a problem bank
  • 36. Performance Characteristics of Banks by Business Concentration and Size  Wholesale Banks  Focus on loans for the largest commercial customers and purchase substantial funds from corporate and government depositors  Retail Banks  Focus on consumer, small business, mortgage, and agriculture loans and obtain deposits form individuals and small businesses
  • 37. Financial Statement Manipulation  Off-balance sheet activities  Enron and “Special-Purpose Vehicles”  Window dressing  Eliminate Fed borrowing prior to financial statement reporting date  Increase asset size prior to year-end  Preferred stock  Meets capital requirements but causes NIM, NI, ROE, and ROA to be overstated
  • 38. Financial Statement Manipulation (continued)  Non-performing loans  Banks may lend borrower funds to make payments on past due loans, understating non-performance status  Allowance for loan losses  Management discretion and IRS regulations may be in conflict
  • 39. Financial Statement Manipulation (continued)  Securities gains and losses  Banks often classify all investment securities as “available for sale,” overstating any true “gains or losses”  Non-recurring sales of assets  This type of transaction is not part of the bank’s daily activities and typically cannot be repeated; thus it overstates earnings