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1 Swaps – Meeting Demand for Fixed-Rate Loans Bob Newman, CFA March 19-20, 2014
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2 Derivatives – The Perception
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3 Derivatives – The Reality Interest rate transactions are a highly effective and efficient way to manage financial risk Most interest rate transactions are not overly complex or opaque The interest rate derivatives market is highly liquid with broad bank participation
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4 LIBOR Fixed Rate What is an Interest Rate Swap? An agreement between two parties in which one party agrees to pay a fixed rate of interest and the other agrees to pay a floating rate of interest on an agreed upon notional amount No principal changes hands, simply an exchange (“swap”) of interest payments for a set period of time Swap rate is derived from market expectations LIBOR is the foundation of the swap market A swap agreement is a separate contract from the loan Borrower Bank
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5 Issue: Long-Term Fixed-Rate Loan Pricing Borrower Perspective Market interest rates hovering near all-time lows Rumblings of rate increases in the air + = Borrowers demanding long-term fixed-rate pricing
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6 Issue: Long-Term Fixed-Rate Loan Pricing Bank Perspective Market interest rates hovering near all-time lows Margin compression due to loans re-pricing + = Banks willing to accommodate borrowers out 10 yrs or longer
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7 Can Swaps Solve This Problem? Swaps can help, but…… Swaps are a powerful tool to manage interest rate risk… Convert 10-15y fixed to L + spread …but not a “magic bullet”: Swaps cannot convert an unprofitable fixed-rate into a PROFITABLE floating rate “What are our peers doing that we’re not doing?”
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8 Borrower Fixed Rate Loan 4.75% FHLB Fixed Rate Advance 3.25% Match-Funded Fixed-Rate Loan – FHLB A Fixed-Rate Loan Funded with a Matching FHLB Advance Matching FHLB advance rate for 15y/15y structure = 3.25% Market prepayment penalty for early extinguishment Fixed-Rate Loan for 15y/15y structure = 4.75% Bank nets a spread of 1.50% Potential risk of loss on prepayment unless penalty matches FHLB advance Would an interest rate swap provide a different answer? $5mm Loan Bank Net Spread = 1.50% Loan Terms $5 million loan 15 year term 15 year amortization Minimum Spread = 1.50%
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9 Short-term Funding Swapped to Fixed “Synthetic” Match Funding Dealer Bank FHLB 1m LIBOR 2.75% Advance Terms $5 million FHLB funding 15 year maturity 15 year amortization Monthly pay FHLB Funding Swap 1-month advance Key Considerations – Cash Flow Hedge Funding, or suitable replacement debt, must remain outstanding through the life of the swap Matching swap and debt terms exactly minimizes/ eliminates ineffectiveness 1.Bank borrows $5 million in wholesale funding from FHLB monthly and rolls the advance 2.Bank executes a pay-fixed swap at 2.75% and receives 1- month LIBOR for fifteen years 3.FHLB 1-month advance rate is converted to 2.75% 15- year funding via the swap (+/- basis difference) 4.The 2.75% 15-year swap rate compares favorably to the FHLB 15-year advance rate of 3.25% 5.Save 50 bps by funding short and using swap to lock rate 6.Swap provides Bank with 2-way prepay make-whole instead of 1-way penalty in term fixed-rate advance
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10 Borrower Fixed Rate Loan 4.75% Fixed Rate Swap 4.75% 1mL + 200 bps Fixed-Rate Loan Swapped to Floating Behind the Scenes Fixed-rate loan is effectively converted to a floating rate 15y/15y LIBOR swap rate = 2.75% today 4.75% fixed = 1mL + 2.00% floating (2.16% yield today) No fee income recognized – all economics built-into spread over LIBOR Loan hedged with swap needs market-based prepay provision Essentially embedding the worst feature of direct swap into the loan $5mm Loan Premium BankDealer Bank
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11 Loan Terms $5 million loan 15 year term, L + 175bps 15 year amortization PV01 = $3,840 Back-to-Back Swap Program Sell the Swap to the Borrower 1.Borrower enters into loan with Bank, paying L + 1.75% 2.Borrower executes “retail” swap with Bank, paying fixed at 4.75% and receiving L + 1.75% (offsetting the loan payment) 3.Bank enters into “wholesale” swap with Dealer Bank, passing on fixed rate exposure, leaving Bank with variable rate loan 4.4.75% is 25 bps higher than what Dealer Bank expects to receive; therefore, Dealer Bank pays Bank the present value of 25 basis points or $96,000 5.All-in economics = 200 bps spread (175 in margin; 25 PV in non-interest income) Dealer Bank BankBorrower (Loan) LIBOR + 1.75% 4.75% (Retail Swap) LIBOR + 1.75% 4.75% (Wholesale Swap) $96,000 (25 bps x $3,840) Pricing as of 3/18/14
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12 Summary Direct Match-Funding with FHLB 50 basis points more expensive due to liquidity premium in term fixed advance Swaps (borrower gets lower rate / bank gets better spread): Directly with Borrowers Fee income opportunity More explaining/documentation for borrower Eligibility requirements and suitability/sophistication Fixed-Rate Loan (behind the scenes) No fee income / hedge accounting designation and testing Need market-based prepayment language Balance Sheet Hedge Works best with short-term borrowings / market-linked funding Hedge accounting designation and testing
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13 How Do I “Break Ground” on Hedging? Lay the Foundation Board and Management Education Hedging Policy and Approval Set up Swap Counterparty – Documentation Regulatory/Accounting groundwork Assess IRR / Borrower Demand-Suitability Build the House Balance Sheet Hedging Program Structure-Execute-Designate-Document Borrower-Facing Swap Program Implementation-Training Product “on shelf”
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14 Questions?
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15 Chatham Financial Corp. 235 Whitehorse Lane Kennett Square, PA 19348 Bob Newman, CFA 610.925.3137 bnewman@chathamfinancial.com Contact Information www.chathamfinancial.com
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