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Summary of Significant Accounting Policies (Tables)
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2018
Accounting Policies [Abstract]  
Schedule of New Accounting Pronouncements and Changes in Accounting Principles
Standard
 
Description
 
Adoption Date
 
Effect on the financial statements
ASU No. 2014-09 - Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606)
                                                                                               
ASU No. 2016-08 - Principal versus Agent Considerations

ASU No. 2016-10 - Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing

ASU No. 2016-12 - Narrow-scope Improvements and Practical Expedients ("Updates to Topic 606")

ASU No. 2016-20 - Technical Corrections and Improvements to Topic 606, Revenue from Contracts with Customers

ASU No. 2017-13 - Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606): Amendments to SEC Paragraphs Pursuant to the Staff Announcement at the July 20, 2017 EITF Meeting and Rescission of Prior SEC Staff Announcements and Observer Comments

ASU No. 2017-14 - Income Statement - Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606) (SEC Update)


 
The core principle of the Updates to Topic 606 is that an entity recognizes revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. The standard is intended to clarify and converge the revenue recognition principles under GAAP and International Financial Reporting Standards and to streamline revenue recognition requirements in addition to expanding required revenue recognition disclosures.
 
January 1, 2018 under the modified retrospective method
 
A large majority of the Corporation's revenue is derived from net interest income, which is excluded from the scope of the guidance. Following detailed review of the Corporation's revenue streams not derived from net interest income on financial assets and liabilities, management identified the recognition of gains from other real estate sales financed by the Corporation to be in the scope of this amended guidance. Effective January 1, 2018, revenue for new seller financed other real estate owned sales is determined according to the Updates to Topic 606. If all qualifications are met, gains associated with the sales will be recognized into income at the time of closing and therefore not deferred. The cumulative effect of the Updates to Topic 606 increased retained earnings by $1.2 million upon adoption. The comparative information has not been restated and continues to be reported under the accounting standards in effect for those periods. Additional required disclosures have been included in Note 16, Revenue from Contracts with Customers. The adoption is not expected to have a material impact on the Corporation's net income on an ongoing basis. Refer to Note 7, Other Real Estate Owned and Repossessed Assets, for further detail.
Standard
 
Description
 
Adoption Date
 
Effect on the financial statements
ASU No. 2016-01 - Financial Instruments - Overall (Subtopic 825-10): Recognition and Measurement of Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities ("ASU 2016-01")
 
ASU 2016-01 amended current guidance by: (i) requiring equity investments with readily determinable fair values to be measured at fair value with changes in fair value recognized in net income, (ii) allowing an entity to measure equity investments that do not have readily determinable fair values at either fair value or cost minus impairment, changes in measurement is recognized in net income, (iii) simplifying impairment assessment of equity investments without readily determinable fair values by requiring a qualitative assessment to identify impairment, (iv) eliminating the requirement to disclose the methods and assumptions used to estimate the fair value of financial instruments measured at amortized cost; (v) requiring the use of exit price notion when measuring the fair value of financial instruments; (vi) requiring recognition of changes in the fair value related to instrument-specific credit risk in other comprehensive income if financial liabilities are measured at fair value, (vii) requiring separate presentation in financial statements by measurement category, and (viii) clarifying that an entity should evaluate the need for valuation allowance on deferred tax assets related to available-for-sale securities in combination with the entity’s other deferred tax assets.
 
January 1, 2018 using a modified retrospective approach with the exception of disclosure requirements which are adopted on a prospective basis
 
The Corporation identified available-for-sale investment securities qualifying as equity investments in the securities portfolio at January 1, 2018. The adoption resulted in recognizing the unrealized fair value related to the identified equity investments as a cumulative effect to retained earnings of $0.3 million. In addition, the Corporation updated disclosures related to the fair value of financial instruments to the use of the exit price notion. Refer to Note 3, Fair Value Measurements and Note 4, Investment Securities, for further detail.
ASU No. 2016-15, Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Classification of Certain Cash Receipts as Cash Payments ("ASU 2016-15")
 
ASU 2016-15 was issued to reduce diversity in practice and prevent financial statement restatements by clarifying the presentation and classification of cash receipts and cash payments within the statement of cash flows. Cash flow issues include: debt prepayment or debt extinguishment costs, settlement of insurance claims, proceeds from the settlement of corporate-owned and bank-owned life insurance policies, distribution received from equity method investees, beneficial interests in securitization transactions and separately identifiable cash flows and application of the predominance principle.

 
January 1, 2018 using retrospective application
 
The adoption did not have a material effect on the presentation of our Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, as current policies are either already in-line with the clarifications in the updated guidance, or the related cash flows are not material.
ASU No. 2017-07 - Compensation - Retirement Benefits (Topic 715): Improving the Presentation of Net Periodic Pension Cost ("ASU 2017-07")
 
ASU 2017-07 improves the income statement presentation of net periodic benefit cost for an entity's pension and postretirement plans. The standard requires employers to disaggregate current service costs from other components of net benefit cost and present it with other compensation cost. Additionally net benefit cost becomes eligible for capitalization.
 
January 1, 2018 using the retrospective transition method
 
The adoption resulted in a reclassification of $1.7 million and $0.6 million of net periodic income from salaries, wages and employee benefits expense to other expenses on the Consolidated Statements of Income during the year ended December 31, 2017 and 2016, respectively.
ASU No. 2017-12, Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): Targeted Improvement to Account for Hedging Activities ("ASU 2017-12")
 
ASU 2017-12 eliminates the separate measurement of hedge ineffectiveness as well as the benchmark interest rate concept when applying hedge risk to variable-rate instruments. It also allows a company to elect to perform subsequent effectiveness assessments qualitatively if the initial quantitative hedge effectiveness assessment is found to be highly effective.
 
January 1, 2018
 
The early adoption resulted in a cumulative adjustment from opening retained earnings to accumulated other comprehensive income of $3 thousand, which represented all previously recognized hedge ineffectiveness.
Standard
 
Description
 
Adoption Date
 
Effect on the financial statements
ASU No. 2018-15 - Intangible-Goodwill and Other-Internal-Use Software (Subtopic 350-40): Customer's Accounting for Implementation Costs Incurred in a Cloud Computing Arrangement That Is a Service Contract ("ASU 2018-15")
 
ASU 2018-15 clarifies the accounting treatment for implementation costs for hosting arrangements that are service contracts. The amendments in this update align the requirements for capitalizing implementation costs incurred in a hosting arrangement that is a service contract with the requirements for capitalizing implementation costs incurred to develop or obtain internal use software in accordance with subtopic 350-40. Under this guidance costs for implementation activities during the development stage shall be capitalized. The said capitalized-costs shall be expensed over the term of the hosting arrangement.
 
Third quarter of 2018 applied retrospectively
 
The early adoption in the third quarter did not have a material effect on the Consolidated Financial Statements.