Should You Be Marking Loans To Market? | SouthState Correspondent Division (2024)

Available-for-sale securities are reported at fair value, and any unrealized gains and losses are included in accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) in the equity section of the balance sheet. The AOCI is an accounting adjustment meant to reflect the economic value of assets and is the process of “marking loans to market.” That same adjustment can be applied to banks’ fixed-rate loans for economic value analysis to better understand value creation and allocation, prioritize future business activity, and better deploy capital. In this article, we explore what signals marking your loans to market might send.

A Short History of Asset Marks

It was back in August of 2007 when credit spreads started to widen. It started first in housing and then reverberated through each sector in succession – consumer credit, small business credit, corporate receivables, commercial real estate, and then bank loans. By late 2007, liquidity started to dry up and credit spreads were materially wider. Banks had enough liquidity so it didn’t really matter in terms of day-to-day operations. However, the public markets were another story. Without liquidity, finance companies and investment banks had to draw on their lines. Capital got scarce. By 2008, there were a variety of failures as a result of liquidity – Bear Sterns, Lehman Brothers, and more. Spreads gapped out and the economy, including every bank, had an asset liquidity problem and then a credit problem. If only banks would have heeded the warning in 2007.

Today’s Environment

Fast forward to today. S&P Global estimates that in 2022, AOCI has reduced the tangible equity ratio at community banks (below $10B in assets) by an average of 1.99% (from 10.74% to 8.75%). However, community banks hold approximately 23.5% of assets in securities and 63% of assets in loans. Further, of all loans at community banks, approximately 71% are fixed-rate loans. The average contractual term of a community bank’s loan portfolio is around four years. Therefore, community banks are experiencing approximately six to eight times higher negative AOCI from their loan portfolios than their securities portfolio.

If you are a bank investment portfolio manager, you have likely already been adjusting the duration, convexity, and liquidity of your investment portfolio. You see the negative mark-to-market, largely caused by interest rates, and you have been adjusting accordingly. Marking your investments to current value provides a consistent and actionable feedback loop. As rates move up, risks get embodied in the portfolio’s performance and bankers act to mitigate that risk. Unfortunately, loans are not the same.

Economic Importance of Loan Portfolio and Marking Loans To Market

The graph below shows loan repricing buckets for three asset-sized groups of banks: under $1B, $1B to $3B, and over $25B in assets. In summary, smaller banks have a higher percentage of fixed-rate loans than larger ones, as noted by the black-colored brackets. The percentage of fixed-rate loans has increased for community banks over the past four years. In contrast, larger banks have more loans in the variable bucket, and their fixed-rate loan portfolio has held steady in the past four years.

Should You Be Marking Loans To Market? | SouthState Correspondent Division (1)

The graph below shows the change in interest rates across the entire curve over the last year. The biggest increase in rates is at the short end (4.20% increase over one year for 2-year rates), and the smallest increase is at the long end (2.03% increase over year for 30-year rates). It is the level of rates and the shape of the yield curve that impacts the value of loans that can be revealed when marking loans to market.

Should You Be Marking Loans To Market? | SouthState Correspondent Division (2)

Each basis point increase in rates decreases the lifetime value of a fixed-rate loan to a bank. Marking loans to mark would be the same process as the AOCI for fixed-rate securities. The longer the fixed rate, the more sensitive the loan is to negative economic adjustment. The output below shows the economic value of a one basis point increase in the cost of funds for a 25-year due five-year fixed rate loan. That value is $446. We can calculate that value for different structures.

Should You Be Marking Loans To Market? | SouthState Correspondent Division (3)

We can further calculate the AOCI for various term fixed-rate loans based on interest rate movement over the last year. The table below shows the negative AOCI when loans when marking loans to market of various fixed-rate loans with different contractual terms given interest rate movements over the past year.

$1mm Fixed Rate Term Loan (25yr am)Loan AOCI Adjustment
2yrs($81,060)
3yrs($104,574)
4yrs($120,834)
5yrs($139,532)
7yrs($162,641)
10yrs($202,055)
15yrs($249,133)
20yrs($527,370)

This table shows that a $1mm in principal, 25-year amortizing loan, with now a five-year maturity, in the last year, recognized a negative AOCI of approximately $140k, and the economic value of that loan is $860k (a 14% reduction in economic value). A $1mm in principal 20-year maturity loan in the last year had a negative AOCI of $527k (a 52.7% reduction in economic value). Note that this reduction of economic value dwarfs the current credit spread movement that we have seen. Spread movement has been on the order of about ten basis points over this time period. Spread movement we point out, that is largely driven by higher interest rates.

Marking Your Loans To Market

Most bankers will be surprised to learn of the amount of economic reduction in loan value with fixed-rate coupons under increasing interest rates as a result of marking their loans to market. Further, most bankers will point out that these fixed-rate loans protect the bank when interest rates are falling, as they may do in the future. However, that is not what happens empirically.

Because few of these term loans have prepayment provisions, and almost none have enforceable prepayment provisions when collateral is sold, when interest rates fall, the vast majority of credit-worthy borrowers simply refinance their loans. This has been the pattern in almost every decreasing interest rate environment. The upshot is that banks are creating negative convexity in their loan portfolio – allowing borrowers to refinance fixed-rate loans when rates are dropping and getting reduced economic value on fixed-rate loans when rates are rising. As a result, banks experience sub-optimal loan performance that they never see and often don’t correct for.

Now, you may not want to actually be marking loans to market and running the result through the income statement, but the concept holds. If bankers did see the current mark value of their loans we contend they would be much more reactive to interest rate, credit, and liquidity risk. The result would be a more proactive bank and a bank with not only better loan performance, but better bank performance.

Tags:ALCO, AOCI, IRR, Loan PerformancePublished: 11/07/22 by Chris Nichols

Should You Be Marking Loans To Market? | SouthState Correspondent Division (2024)

FAQs

Are loans mark to market? ›

MTM allows banks to mark up retained loans to their market prices because the retained loans are of good quality in a separating equilibrium. In other words, the more accurate measurement of the retained loans under MTM coincides with the higher valuation.

How do arc loans work? ›

ARC loans are intended to provide immediate capital to small businesses to make payments (principal and interest) on existing debt and thus allow business owners to sustain and retain jobs. ARC loans are interest-free to the borrower and carry a 100% guarantee from the SBA.

What is an interest rate mark? ›

The interest rate mark is driven by the difference in the weighted average discount rate and weighted average interest rate of the subject portfolio.

What are the cons of mark-to-market? ›

The Downsides to Mark-to-Market (MTM)

Additionally, taxing unrealized income creates liquidity problems: if a taxpayer's assets appreciate, but they do not hold much cash, they may have to sell off stock just to pay capital gains taxes. This could in turn create problems for businesses as well.

What is the risk of mark-to-market? ›

In mark-to-market, problems may occur when market-based measurements do not give the true value of an underlying asset. Problems occur mainly when a company or financial institution is forced to calculate selling prices of its assets and liabilities during unfavourable conditions, such as a financial crisis.

How does ARC make profit? ›

An Asset Reconstruction Company is a specialized financial institution that buys the NPAs or bad assets from banks and financial institutions so that the latter can clean up their balance sheets. In other words, ARCs are in the business of buying bad loans from banks.

How does the arc get money? ›

The work of The Arc is made possible by our generous funding partners and corporate sponsors. Their support helps us build a more inclusive world. If you're interested in becoming a funder or sponsor, we encourage you to explore partnership options.

What is the minimum fund for ARC? ›

7.1 To commence the business of securitisation or asset reconstruction, an ARC is required to have a minimum net owned fund (NOF) of ₹300 crore and thereafter, on an ongoing basis.

Is mark-to-market required? ›

Thus, FAS 157 applies in the cases above where a company is required or elects to record an asset or liability at fair value. The rule requires a mark to "market", rather than to some theoretical price calculated by a computer — a system often criticized as "mark to make-believe".

Is mark-to-market accounting legal? ›

Suffice it to say, though mark-to-market accounting is an approved and legal method of accounting, it was one of the means that Enron used to hide its losses and appear in good financial health.

What is an example of mark-to-market? ›

Suppose a trader takes a long position in an oil futures contract at $60 per barrel. If the price rises to $65, the contract is marked to market, and the trader's account is credited with the gain. On the other hand, if the price drops to $55, the trader's account is debited with the loss.

Do banks use mark-to-market? ›

For years, banks have been required to designate a separate trading account for those securities they do not intend to hold to maturity and to mark such securities to market.

What is an example of mark-to-market accounting? ›

If an investor owns 10 shares of a stock purchased for $4 per share, and that stock now trades at $6, the "mark-to-market" value of the shares is equal to (10 shares * $6), or $60, whereas the book value might (depending on the accounting principles used) equal only $40.

Do banks mark bonds to market? ›

As explained before, if a bank holds bonds in the available-for-sale category, they must be marked to market each quarter—yet unrealized gains or losses on such bonds do not affect the bank's regulatory capital.

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