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Note 15 - Financial Derivatives
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2023
Notes to Financial Statements  
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities Disclosure [Text Block]

15. Financial Derivatives

 

The Company does not speculate on the future direction of interest rates. As part of the Company’s asset and liability management, however, the Company enters into financial derivatives to seek to mitigate exposure to interest rate risks related to its interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. The Company believes that these transactions, when properly structured and managed, may provide a hedge against inherent interest rate risk in our assets or liabilities and against risk in specific transactions. In such instances, the Company may protect its position. Other hedging transactions may be implemented using interest rate swaps, interest rate caps, floors, financial futures, forward rate agreements, and options on futures or bonds. Prior to considering any hedging activities, the Company seeks to analyze the costs and benefits of the hedge in comparison to other viable alternative strategies. All hedges will require an assessment of basis risk and must be approved by the Bancorp or the Bank’s Investment Committee.

 

The Company follows ASC Topic 815 that establishes accounting and reporting standards for financial derivatives, including certain financial derivatives embedded in other contracts, and hedging activities. It requires the recognition of all financial derivatives as assets or liabilities in the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheets and measurement of those financial derivatives at fair value. The accounting treatment of changes in fair value is dependent upon whether or not a financial derivative is designated as a hedge and, if so, the type of hedge. Fair value is determined using third-party models with observable market data. For derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, changes in fair value are recognized in other comprehensive income and are reclassified to earnings when the hedged transaction is reflected in earnings. For derivatives designated as fair value hedges, changes in the fair value of the derivatives are reflected in current earnings, together with changes in the fair value of the related hedged item if there is a highly effective correlation between changes in the fair value of the interest rate swaps and changes in the fair value of the underlying asset or liability that is intended to be hedged. If there is not a highly effective correlation between changes in the fair value of the interest rate swap and changes in the fair value of the underlying asset or liability that is intended to be hedged, then only the changes in the fair value of the interest rate swaps are reflected in the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

 

The Company offers various interest rate derivative contracts to its clients. When derivative transactions are executed with its clients, the derivative contracts are offset by paired trades with third-party financial institutions including with central counterparties (“CCP”). Certain derivative contracts entered with CCPs are settled-to-market daily to the extent the CCP’s rulebooks legally characterize the variation margin as settlement. Derivative contracts are intended to allow borrowers to lock in attractive intermediate and long-term fixed rate financing while not increasing the interest rate risk to the Company. These transactions are generally not linked to specific Company assets or liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheets or to forecasted transactions in a hedging relationship and, therefore, are economic hedges. The contracts are marked to market at each reporting period. The changes in fair values of the derivative contracts traded with third-party financial institutions are expected to be largely comparable to the changes in fair values of the derivative transactions executed with clients throughout the terms of these contracts, except for the credit valuation adjustment component.  The Company records credit valuation adjustments on derivatives to properly reflect the variances of credit worthiness between the Company and the counterparties, considering the effects of enforceable master netting agreements and collateral arrangements. As of June 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, the Company had outstanding interest rate derivative contracts with certain clients and third-party financial institutions with a notional amount of $640.4 million and $595.4 million, respectively, with a fair value of $50.0 million and $50.0 million, respectively, for both clients and third-party financial institutions. As of June 30, 2023, there were no interest rate swaps cleared through the CCP. As of December 31, 2022, the notional amount $205.6 million of interest rate swaps cleared through the CCP. Applying variation margin payments as settlement to CCP cleared derivative transactions resulted in a reduction in derivative asset fair values of $20.2 million as of December 31, 2022. The decrease in interest rate swaps cleared through the CCP is a result of the Company moving to SOFR based swaps and no longer entering into Libor based swaps that are cleared through CCP.

 

In May 2014, Bancorp entered into interest rate swap contracts in the notional amount of $119.1 million for a period of ten years. The objective of these interest rate swap contracts, which were designated as hedging instruments in cash flow hedges, was to hedge the quarterly interest payments on Bancorp’s $119.1 million of Junior Subordinated Debentures that had been issued to five trusts, throughout the ten-year period beginning in June 2014 and ending in June 2024, from the risk of variability of these payments resulting from changes in the three-month LIBOR interest rate. The Company early terminated these cash flow derivative swaps in 2022 and realized a gain of $4.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2022 and is recognizing the amount as a reduction of long-term debt interest expense over the remaining life of the swaps on a straight-line basis. As of December 31, 2022, the ineffective portion of these interest rate swaps was not significant. The periodic net settlement of the interest rate swaps included in interest expense was a net gain of $484 thousand for the three months ended June 30, 2022 and a net gain of $1.2 million for the six months ended June 30, 2022.

 

As of June 30, 2023, the Bank’s outstanding fair value interest rate swap contracts matched to individual fixed-rate commercial real estate loans had a notional amount of $90.0 million with a fair value of $6.1 million and various terms from three to ten years. These contracts have been designated as hedging instruments to hedge the risk of changes in the fair value of the underlying commercial real estate loans due to changes in interest rates. The swap contracts are structured so that the notional amounts reduce over time to match the contractual amortization of the underlying loan and allow prepayments with the same pre-payment penalty amounts as the related loan. As of June 30, 2023 and 2022, the ineffective portion of these interest rate swaps was not significant.

 

The Company has designated as a partial-term hedging election of $668.6 million notional with a fair value of $25.8 million as last-of-layer hedge on pools of loans with a notational value of $1.17 billion as of June 30, 2023. The loans are not expected to be affected by prepayment, defaults, or other factors affecting the timing and amount of cash flows under the last-of-layer method. The Company has entered into these pay-fixed and receive 1-Month LIBOR or 1-Month Term SOFR interest rate swaps to convert the last-of-layer $668.6 million portion of $1.17 billion fixed rate loan pools in order to reduce the Company’s exposure to higher interest rates for the last-of-layer tranches. As of June 30, 2023, the last-of-layer loan tranche had a fair value loss basis adjustment of $24.7 million. The interest rate swap converts this last-of-layer tranche into a floating rate instrument. The Company’s risk management objective with respect to this last-of-layer interest rate swap is to reduce interest rate exposure as to the last-of-layer tranche.

 

Interest rate swap contracts involve the risk of dealing with institutional derivative counterparties and their ability to meet contractual terms. Institutional counterparties must have a strong credit profile and be approved by the Company’s Board of Directors. The Company’s credit exposure on interest rate swaps is limited to the net favorable value and interest payments of all swaps by each counterparty. Credit exposure may be reduced by the amount of collateral pledged by the counterparty. Bancorp’s interest rate swaps have been assigned by the counterparties to a derivative clearing organization and daily margin is indirectly maintained with the derivative clearing organization. There was no cash collateral deposit posted by Bancorp related to fair value derivative contracts as of June 30, 2023 or December 31, 2022.

 

The notional amount and net unrealized loss of the Company’s fair value derivative financial instruments as of June 30, 2023, and December 31, 2022, were as follows:

 

  

June 30, 2023

  

December 31, 2022

 
  (In thousands) 

Fair value swap hedges:

 

 

 

Notional

 $758,655  $874,034 

Weighted average fixed rate-pay

  1.82%  2.12%

Weighted average variable rate spread

  0.38%  0.68%

Weighted average variable rate-receive

  5.19%  2.61%
         

Unrealized gain

 $31,954  $38,589 

 

  

Three months ended

  

Six months ended

 
  

June 30, 2023

  

June 30, 2022

  

June 30, 2023

  

June 30, 2022

 

Periodic net settlement of swaps (1)

 $7,070  $484  $13,406  $1,172 

 

(1) the amount of periodic net settlement of interest rate swaps was included in interest income.

 

 

Included in the total notional amount of $758.7 million of the fair value interest rate contracts entered into with financial counterparties as of June 30, 2023, was a notional amount of $448.1 million of interest rate swaps that cleared through the CCP. Applying variation margin payments as settlement to CCP cleared derivative transactions resulted in a reduction in derivative asset fair values of $18.8 million as of June 30, 2023.

 

The Company enters into foreign exchange forward contracts with various counterparties to mitigate the risk of fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates for foreign exchange certificates of deposit or foreign exchange contracts entered into with our clients. These contracts are not designated as hedging instruments and are recorded at fair value in our Consolidated Balance Sheets. Changes in the fair value of these contracts as well as the related foreign exchange certificates of deposit and foreign exchange contracts are recognized immediately in net income as a component of non-interest income. Period end gross positive fair values are recorded in other assets and gross negative fair values are recorded in other liabilities.

 

The notional amount and fair value of the Company’s derivative financial instruments not designated as hedging instruments as of June 30, 2023, and December 31, 2022, not including interest rate swaps cleared through the CCP, were as follows:

 

Derivative financial instruments not designated as hedging instruments:

 

June 30, 2023

  

December 31, 2022

 
  

(In thousands)

 

Notional amounts:

        

Forward, and swap contracts with positive fair value

 $890,093  $72,996 

Forward, and swap contracts with negative fair value

 $689,593  $170,213 

Fair value:

        

Forward, and swap contracts with positive fair value

 $50,663  $448 

Forward, and swap contracts with negative fair value

 $(50,647) $(942)