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Short-Term Borrowings And Long-Term Debt
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2020
Short-Term Borrowings And Long-Term Debt [Abstract]  
Short-Term Borrowings And Long-Term Debt Note 7—Short-Term Borrowings and Long-Term Debt

Short-term borrowings consist of securities sold under agreements to repurchase, federal funds purchased and other borrowings. At September 30, 2020, the balance of securities sold under agreements to repurchase was $9,309,000 compared to $7,925,000 at December 31, 2019. At September 30, 2020 and December 31, 2019, there were no other short-term borrowings.

The following table presents a summary of long-term debt as of September 30, 2020 and December 31, 2019. PeoplesBank’s long-term debt obligations to the FHLBP are fixed rate instruments. Under terms of a blanket collateral agreement with the FHLBP, the obligations are secured by FHLBP stock and PeoplesBank qualifying loan receivables, principally real estate secured loans.

September 30,

December 31,

(dollars in thousands)

2020

2019

PeoplesBank’s obligations:

Federal Home Loan Bank of Pittsburgh (FHLBP)

Due March 2020, 1.86%

$

0

$

10,000

Due June 2020, 1.87%

0

15,000

Due June 2020, 2.70%

0

10,000

Due June 2021, 2.81%

10,000

10,000

Due June 2021, 2.14%

15,000

15,000

Due May 2022, 2.93%

10,000

10,000

Total FHLBP

$

35,000

$

70,000

Codorus Valley Bancorp, Inc. obligations:

Junior subordinated debt

Due 2034, 2.27%, floating rate based on 3 month

LIBOR plus 2.02%, callable quarterly

3,093

3,093

Due 2036, 1.82% floating rate based on 3 month

LIBOR plus 1.54%, callable quarterly

7,217

7,217

Total junior subordinated debt

$

10,310

$

10,310

Lease obligations included in long-term debt:

Finance lease liabilities

1,303

1,322

Total long-term debt

$

46,613

$

81,632

At September 30, 2020 and December 31, 2019, municipal deposit letters of credit issued by the FHLBP on behalf of PeoplesBank naming applicable municipalities as beneficiaries were $42,000,000. The letters of credit took the place of securities pledged to the municipalities for their deposits maintained at PeoplesBank.

In June 2006, Codorus Valley formed CVB Statutory Trust No. 2, a wholly-owned special purpose subsidiary whose sole purpose was to facilitate a pooled trust preferred debt issuance of $7,217,000. In November 2004, Codorus Valley formed CVB Statutory Trust No. 1 to facilitate a pooled trust preferred debt issuance of $3,093,000. The Corporation owns all of the common stock of these nonbank subsidiaries, and the debentures are the sole assets of the Trusts. The accounts of both Trusts are not consolidated for financial reporting purposes in accordance with FASB ASC 810. For regulatory capital purposes, all of the Corporation’s trust preferred securities qualified as Tier 1 capital for all reported periods. Trust preferred securities are subject to capital limitations under the FDIC’s risk-based capital guidelines. The Corporation used the net proceeds from these offerings to fund its operations.