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Derivatives
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2025
Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities Disclosure [Abstract]  
Derivatives

7. Derivatives

Risk Management Objective of Using Derivatives

The Company enters into derivative financial instruments to manage risks related to differences in the amount, timing, and duration of the Company’s known or expected cash receipts and its known or expected cash payments. The Bank also enters into interest rate derivative agreements as a service to certain qualifying customers. The Bank manages a matched book with respect to these customer derivatives in order to minimize its net interest rate risk exposure resulting from such agreements. In addition, the Bank also enters into risk participation agreements under which it may either sell or buy credit risk associated with a customer’s performance under certain interest rate derivative contracts related to loans in which participation interests have been sold to or purchased from other banks.

Fair Values of Derivative Instruments on the Balance Sheet

The table below presents the notional or contractual amounts and fair values of the Company’s derivative financial instruments as well as their classification on the consolidated balance sheets at June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024.

 

 

 

 

June 30, 2025

 

December 31, 2024

 

 

 

 

 

Notional or

 

 

 

Notional or

 

 

 

 

 

Type of

 

Contractual

 

Derivative (1)

 

Contractual

 

Derivative (1)

 

($ in thousands)

 

Hedge

 

Amount

 

Assets

 

Liabilities

 

Amount

 

Assets

 

Liabilities

 

Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interest rate swaps - variable rate loans

 

Cash Flow

 

$

1,625,000

 

$

4,041

 

$

26,809

 

$

1,350,000

 

$

 

$

48,022

 

Interest rate swaps - securities

 

Fair Value

 

 

477,500

 

 

26,530

 

 

 

 

477,500

 

 

39,647

 

 

 

  Total derivatives designated as hedging instruments

 

 

 

$

2,102,500

 

$

30,571

 

$

26,809

 

$

1,827,500

 

$

39,647

 

$

48,022

 

Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Interest rate swaps

 

N/A

 

$

4,732,198

 

$

82,944

 

$

83,132

 

$

4,926,461

 

$

108,702

 

$

108,761

 

Risk participation agreements

 

N/A

 

 

379,301

 

 

14

 

 

12

 

 

445,554

 

 

7

 

 

9

 

Interest rate-lock commitments on residential mortgage loans

 

N/A

 

 

40,167

 

 

1,026

 

 

 

 

25,526

 

 

 

 

383

 

Forward commitments to sell residential mortgage loans

 

N/A

 

 

14,957

 

 

 

 

269

 

 

27,465

 

 

420

 

 

 

To Be Announced (TBA) securities

 

N/A

 

 

34,500

 

 

2

 

 

196

 

 

15,250

 

 

88

 

 

1

 

Foreign exchange forward contracts

 

N/A

 

 

128,996

 

 

6,533

 

 

6,480

 

 

82,756

 

 

1,389

 

 

1,358

 

Visa Class B derivative contract

 

N/A

 

 

41,902

 

 

 

 

1,621

 

 

42,020

 

 

 

 

2,089

 

  Total derivatives not designated as hedging instruments

 

 

 

$

5,372,021

 

$

90,519

 

$

91,710

 

$

5,565,032

 

$

110,606

 

$

112,601

 

Total derivatives

 

 

 

$

7,474,521

 

$

121,090

 

$

118,519

 

$

7,392,532

 

$

150,253

 

$

160,623

 

Less: netting adjustment (2)

 

 

 

 

 

 

(50,007

)

 

(2

)

 

 

 

(76,413

)

 

 

Total derivative assets/liabilities

 

 

 

 

 

$

71,083

 

$

118,517

 

 

 

$

73,840

 

$

160,623

 

 

(1)
Derivative assets and liabilities are reported in other assets and other liabilities, respectively, in the consolidated balance sheets.
(2)
Represents balance sheet netting of derivative assets and liabilities for variation margin collateral held or placed with the same central clearing counterparty. See offsetting assets and liabilities for further information.

Cash Flow Hedges of Interest Rate Risk

The Company is party to various interest rate swap agreements designated and qualifying as cash flow hedges of the Company’s forecasted variable cash flows for pools of variable rate loans. For each agreement, the Company receives interest at a fixed rate and pays at a variable rate. The Company has terminated certain interest rate swaps designated as cash flow hedges prior to maturity. The net cash received/paid for these transactions was recorded as accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) and is being amortized into earnings through the original maturity dates of the respective contracts. The notional amounts of the active interest rate swap agreements at June 30, 2025 expire as follows: $50 million in 2025; $425 million in 2026; $825 million in 2027; $50 million in 2028 and $275 million in 2029.

Fair Value Hedges of Interest Rate Risk

Interest rate swaps on securities available for sale

The Company is party to forward-starting fixed payer swaps that convert the latter portion of the term of certain available for sale securities to a floating rate. These derivative instruments are designated as fair value hedges of interest rate risk. This strategy provides the Company with a fixed rate coupon during the front-end unhedged tenor of the bonds and results in a floating rate security during the back-end hedged tenor. At June 30, 2025, these single layer instruments have hedge start dates between January 2025 and July 2026, and maturity dates from December 2027 through March 2031. The fair value of the hedged item attributable to interest rate risk is presented in interest income along with the change in the fair value of the hedging instrument.

During the three and six months ending June 30, 2025, $40.0 million and $203.5 million, respectively, of fair value hedges became effective with the resulting net earnings recorded in interest income on the "Securities-taxable" line item on the Consolidated Statements of Income. Once effective, fair value hedges synthetically convert the notional portion of the hedged asset to a variable rate over the life of the hedge that is indexed to the federal funds effective rate.

The hedged available for sale securities are part of closed portfolios of pre-payable commercial mortgage backed securities. In accordance with ASC 815, prepayment risk may be excluded when measuring the change in fair value of such hedged items attributable to interest rate risk under the portfolio layer method. At June 30, 2025, the amortized cost basis of the closed portfolio of pre-payable commercial mortgage backed securities totaled $514.0 million, excluding any basis adjustment. The amount that represents the hedged items was $450.8 million and the basis adjustment associated with the hedged items was a loss totaling $26.7 million.

Derivatives Not Designated as Hedges

Customer interest rate derivative program

The Bank enters into interest rate derivative agreements, primarily rate swaps, with commercial banking customers to facilitate their risk management strategies. The Bank enters into offsetting agreements with unrelated financial institutions, thereby mitigating its net risk exposure resulting from such transactions. Because the interest rate derivatives associated with this program do not meet hedge accounting requirements, changes in the fair value of both the customer derivatives and the offsetting derivatives are recognized directly in earnings.

Risk participation agreements

The Bank also enters into risk participation agreements under which it may either assume or sell credit risk associated with a borrower’s performance under certain interest rate derivative contracts. In those instances where the Bank has assumed credit risk, it is not a direct counterparty to the derivative contract with the borrower and has entered into the risk participation agreement because it is a party to the related loan agreement with the borrower. In those instances in which the Bank has sold credit risk, it is the sole counterparty to the derivative contract with the borrower and has entered into the risk participation agreement because other banks participate in the related loan agreement. The Bank manages its credit risk under risk participation agreements by monitoring the creditworthiness of the borrower, based on the Bank’s normal credit review process.

Mortgage banking derivatives

The Bank also enters into certain derivative agreements as part of its mortgage banking activities. These agreements include interest rate lock commitments on prospective residential mortgage loans and forward commitments to sell loans to investors on either a best efforts or a mandatory delivery basis. The Company uses these forward sales commitments, which may include To Be Announced (“TBA”) security contracts, on the open market to protect the value of its rate locks and mortgage loans held for sale from changes in interest rates and pricing between the origination of the rate lock and the final sale of these loans. These instruments meet the definition of derivative financial instruments and are reflected in other assets and other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheets, with changes to the fair value recorded in noninterest income within the secondary mortgage market operations line item in the Consolidated Statements of Income.

The loans sold on a mandatory basis commit the Company to deliver a specific principal amount of mortgage loans to an investor at a specified price, by a specified date. If the Company fails to deliver the amount of mortgages necessary to fulfill the commitment by the specified date, we may be obligated to pay a pair-off fee, based on then-current market prices, to the investor/counterparty to compensate the investor for the shortfall. Mandatory delivery forward commitments include TBA security contracts on the open market to provide protection against changes in interest rates on the locked mortgage pipeline. The Company expects that mandatory delivery contracts, including TBA security contracts, will experience changes in fair value opposite to the changes in the fair value of derivative loan commitments. Certain assumptions, including pull through rates and rate lock periods, are used in managing the existing and future hedges. The accuracy of underlying assumptions could impact the ultimate effectiveness of any hedging strategies.

Forward commitments under best effort contracts commit the Company to deliver a specific individual mortgage loan to an investor if the loan to the underlying borrower closes. Generally, best efforts cash contracts have no pair-off risk regardless of market movement. The price the investor will pay the seller for an individual loan is specified prior to the loan being funded, generally the same day the Company enters into the interest rate lock commitment with the potential borrower. The Company expects that these best efforts forward loan sale commitments will experience a net neutral shift in fair value with related derivative loan commitments.

At the closing of the loan, the rate lock commitment derivative expires and the Company generally records a loan held for sale at fair value under the election of fair value option.

Customer foreign exchange forward contract derivatives

The Company enters into foreign exchange forward derivative agreements, primarily forward foreign currency contracts, with commercial banking customers to facilitate their risk management strategies. The Bank manages its risk exposure from such

transactions by entering into offsetting agreements with unrelated financial institutions. The Bank has not elected to designate these foreign exchange forward contract derivatives as hedges; as such, changes in the fair value of both the customer derivatives and the offsetting derivatives are recognized directly in earnings.

Visa Class B derivative contract

The Company is a member of Visa USA. In 2018, the Company sold the majority of its Visa Class B holdings, at which time it entered into a derivative agreement with the purchaser whereby the Company will make or receive cash payments whenever the conversion ratio of the Visa Class B shares into Visa Class A shares is adjusted. The conversion ratio changes when Visa deposits funds to a litigation escrow established by Visa to pay settlements for certain litigation, for which Visa is indemnified by Visa USA members. The Company is also required to make periodic financing payments to the purchaser until all of Visa’s covered litigation matters are resolved. Thus, the derivative contract extends until the end of Visa’s covered litigation matters, the timing of which is uncertain.

During the second quarter of 2024, Visa allowed Class B holders to convert some but not all of their Class B shares to Class A shares. As a result of this conversion event, the Bank and its counterparty agreed to modify the transaction agreement to reflect the partial exchange and include certain provisions related to conversion rate changes. The conversion plan approved by Visa requires a minimum of 12 months before another exchange event and thus extends the expected time for a full resolution of the matter.

The contract includes a contingent accelerated termination clause based on the credit ratings of the Company. The fair value of the liability associated with this contract was $1.6 million at June 30, 2025 and $2.1 million at December 31, 2024. Refer to Note 16 – Fair Value of Financial Instruments for discussion of the valuation inputs and process for this derivative liability.

Effect of Derivative Instruments on the Statements of Income

The effects of derivative instruments on the Consolidated Statements of Income for the three and six months ended June 30, 2025 and 2024 are presented in the table below.

 

 

 

 

Three Months Ended

 

 

Six Months Ended

 

($ in thousands)

 

Location of Gain (Loss) Recognized

 

June 30,

 

 

June 30,

 

Derivative Instruments:

 

in the Statements of Income:

 

2025

 

 

2024

 

 

2025

 

 

2024

 

Cash flow hedges:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   Variable rate loans

 

Interest income - loans

 

$

(8,735

)

 

$

(12,913

)

 

$

(17,195

)

 

$

(25,471

)

Fair value hedges:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Securities

 

Interest income - securities - taxable

 

 

4,690

 

 

 

3,114

 

 

 

8,600

 

 

 

6,222

 

Derivatives not designated as hedging:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   Residential mortgage banking

 

Noninterest income - secondary mortgage market operations

 

 

556

 

 

 

267

 

 

 

860

 

 

 

552

 

   Customer and all other instruments

 

Noninterest income - other noninterest income

 

 

1,969

 

 

 

(1,060

)

 

 

1,698

 

 

 

(3,862

)

Total loss

 

 

 

$

(1,520

)

 

$

(10,592

)

 

$

(6,037

)

 

$

(22,559

)

Credit Risk-Related Contingent Features

Certain of the Bank’s derivative instruments contain provisions allowing the financial institution counterparty to terminate the contracts in certain circumstances, such as the downgrade of the Bank’s credit ratings below specified levels, a default by the Bank on its indebtedness, or the failure of the Bank to maintain specified minimum regulatory capital ratios or its regulatory status as a well-capitalized institution. These derivative agreements also contain provisions regarding the posting of collateral by each party. At June 30, 2025, the Company was not in violation of any such provisions. The aggregate fair value of derivative instruments with credit risk-related contingent features that were in a net liability position at June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 was $21.9 million and $39.1 million, respectively, for which the Company had posted collateral of $22.3 million and $38.0 million, respectively.

Offsetting Assets and Liabilities

The Bank’s derivative instruments with certain counterparties contain legally enforceable netting provisions that allow for net settlement of multiple transactions to a single amount, which may be positive, negative, or zero. Agreements with certain bilateral counterparties require both parties to maintain collateral in the event that the fair values of derivative instruments exceed established exposure thresholds. For centrally cleared derivatives, the Company is subject to initial margin posting and daily variation margin

exchange with the central clearinghouses. Offsetting information in regards to all derivative assets and liabilities, including accrued interest, subject to these master netting agreements at June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 is presented in the following tables.

 

 

As of June 30, 2025

 

 

 

Gross

 

Gross Amounts Offset in the

 

Net Amounts Presented in the

 

 

Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statement of Financial Condition

 

($ in thousands)

 

Amounts
Recognized

 

Statement of Financial Condition

 

Statement of Financial Condition

 

 

Financial
Instruments

 

Cash
Collateral

 

Net
Amount

 

Derivative Assets

 

$

106,823

 

$

(51,710

)

$

55,113

 

 

$

45,328

 

$

46,229

 

$

56,014

 

Derivative Liabilities

 

$

45,328

 

$

 

$

45,328

 

 

$

45,328

 

$

 

$

 

 

 

 

As of December 31, 2024

 

 

 

Gross

 

Gross Amounts Offset in the

 

Net Amounts Presented in the

 

 

Gross Amounts Not Offset in the
Statement of Financial Condition

 

($ in thousands)

 

Amounts
Recognized

 

Statement of Financial Condition

 

Statement of Financial Condition

 

 

Financial
Instruments

 

Cash
Collateral

 

Net
Amount

 

Derivative Assets

 

$

149,808

 

$

(77,915

)

$

71,893

 

 

$

54,707

 

$

64,260

 

$

81,446

 

Derivative Liabilities

 

$

54,707

 

$

 

$

54,707

 

 

$

54,707

 

$

 

$

 

The Company has excess posted collateral compared to total exposure due to initial margin requirements for day-to-day rate volatility.