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Derivative Financial Instruments
3 Months Ended
Mar. 31, 2012
Derivative Financial Instruments [Abstract]  
Derivative Financial Instruments

Note 6. Derivative Financial Instruments

     To manage interest rate risk, the Company enters into interest rate swap contracts to adjust the amount of total debt that is subject to variable interest rates. Such contracts effectively fix the borrowing rates on floating rate debt to limit the exposure against the risk of rising interest rates. The Company does not enter into interest rate swap contracts for speculative or trading purposes and it has only entered into interest rate swap contracts with financial institutions that it believes are creditworthy counterparties. The Company monitors the financial institutions that are counterparties to its interest rate swap contracts and to the extent possible diversifies its swap contracts among various counterparties to mitigate exposure to any single financial institution.

     The Company's interest rate swap contracts are designated as cash flow hedges for accounting and tax purposes. The Company assesses, both at the hedge's inception and on an ongoing basis, hedge effectiveness based on the overall changes in the fair value of the interest rate swap contracts. Hedge effectiveness of the interest rate swap contracts is based on a hypothetical derivative methodology. Any ineffective portion of the interest rate swap contracts is recorded in current-period earnings.

     As of March 31, 2012, the Company had interest rate swap contracts outstanding with notional amounts aggregating $935,000, which includes interest rate swap contracts with notional amounts aggregating $200,000 that are effective beginning July 2012. The Company's outstanding interest rate swap contracts have varying maturities ranging from September 2015 to July 2017. At March 31, 2012, the Company's interest rate cash flow hedges were highly effective, in all material respects.

     The Company's risk management objective and strategy with respect to interest rate swap contracts is to protect the Company against adverse fluctuations in interest rates by reducing its exposure to variability in cash flows relating to interest payments on a portion of its outstanding debt. The Company is meeting its objective by hedging the risk of changes in its cash flows (interest payments) attributable to changes in the LIBOR index rate, the designated benchmark interest rate being hedged (the "hedged risk"), on an amount of the Company's debt principal equal to the then-outstanding swap notional. The forecasted interest payments are deemed to be probable of occurring.

     The fair values of the Company's derivative financial instruments included in the consolidated balance sheets are as follows:

  Liability Derivatives
 
  Balance Sheet Location Fair Value
    March 31,
2012
December 31,
2011
Derivatives designatedas hedging instruments:          
Interest rate swap contracts Other liabilities $ 19,911 $ 19,091
Total derivatives   $ 19,911 $ 19,091

 

     The amounts of the gains and losses related to the Company's derivative financial instruments designated as hedging instruments are as follows:

  Amount of Loss Recognized in
Other Comprehensive Income
("OCI") on Derivatives (Effective
Portion)
Location of Loss
Reclassified from
Accumulated OCI into
Earnings (Effective Portion)
Amount of Loss Reclassified
from Accumulated OCI into
Earnings (Effective Portion)(a )
  Three Months Ended March 31,   Three Months Ended March 31,
  2012 2011   2012 2011
 
Derivatives in Cash FlowHedging Relationships:                  
Interest rate swap contracts $ 2,934 $ - Interest expense $ 2,114 $ -

 

(a) There were no gains or losses recognized in earnings related to any ineffective portion of the hedging relationship or related to any amount excluded fromthe assessment of hedge effectiveness for the three months ended March 31, 2012 and 2011.