2021 Strategic Planning Conference
This FlippingBook contains the presentations from the 2021 Strategic Planning Conference.
2021 Strategic Planning Meeting
September 2 0-2 4 , 2021
@ www.csbs.org � @csbsnews
CONFERENCE OF STATE BANK SUPERVISORS
1129 20th Street NW / 9th Floor / Washington, DC 20036 / (202) 296-2840
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2021 Strategic Planning Meeting
Melanie Hall, CSBS Chair, Commissioner, Montana Division of Banking and Financial Institutions Tom Fite, CSBS Chair ‐ Elect, Director, Indiana Department of Financial Institutions John Ryan , President & CEO, CSBS Margaret Liu, Executive Vice President, Strategic Engagement, CSBS Cassie Solomon, President, The New Group Consulting
Partnerships & Preempting Preemption Objectives Partnerships Objective: Leverage partnerships with our state and federal counterparts and collaborate with those we regulate and their vendors. Goals: 1. States are the assumed entry-point by fintech companies 2. Most of the federal agencies are routinely using data collected and maintained in NMLS and SES
Partnerships & Preempting Preemption Objectives Preempting Preemption Objective: Empower a strong, efficient, and assertive state system of financial regulation that results in fewer calls for federal preemption. Goals: 1. No state to federal charter conversions
2. Routinely performing coordinated multistate exams 3. No federal charters or licenses for non-bank entities
Collaboration with State Regulatory Community During COVID
Mary Gallagher , Commissioner, Massachusetts Division of Banks Kevin Allard , Superintendent, Ohio Department of Banking
Building Strong & Effective Partnerships. All Begins with Trust.
Trust & Building Successful Partnerships Presenters
Tom Fite (CSBS Chair-Elect)
Cheryl Swans (VP of Talent and Organization Development @ CSBS)
What is Trust… It’s (you) choosing to be vulnerable and to take risks. James Davis, Professor of Strategic Management & Chairman of the Management Department at Utah State University
Ken Blanchard’s ABCD Trust Model Factors that affect trustworthiness…
A – ABLE Demonstrates competence. Able to do the work that needs to be done.
B – BELIEVABLE Acts with integrity. Honest, respectful, sincere, and dependable.
“Blanchard’s ABCDs of trust says that trustworthy people are: Able , Believable , Connected and Dependable . You feel (personally) included at work, make better leaders and build better relationships. These skills can be learned .”
ABCD of TRUST
C – CONNECTED Cares about others. Listens well, open, empathetic and interested in others.
D – DEPENDABLE Honors commitments. Do what you say you’ll do, when you said you’d do it.
Build Your Reputation as a Trustworthy Leader
Pre-Read Reflection & Our Key Take-Aways…
by Ron Carucci
The Trust Continuum
Blind Trust “I trust everyone until they PROVE untrustworthy”
Blind Mistrust “I trust no one until they prove trustworthy.”
Reality Testing Trust
Reality Testing Trust = Tested Expectations Yvonne Agazarian 1997
Concept research and shared by Beulah Trey PhD (CEO Vector Group Consulting)
Test How You Build Trust (Six Key Steps)
TEST EXPECTATIONS On ‐ going assessment of mutually agreed upon expectations (how is it going?)
KNOW YOUR EXPECTATIONS State goals of the partnership.
LEARN ABOUT THE OTHERS Clarify expectations (yours and theirs).
COMMUNICATE RESULTS Be aware & recognize an increase and/or decrease in trust?
AGREE ON SHARED EXPECTATIONS
COMMIT TO NEXT STEPS Acknowledge challenges, discuss & share concerns, manage expectations, agree to commitments.
Identify and agree on partnership goals and how to handle ‘recovery’.
Beulah Trey PhD (CEO Vector Group Consulting)
Pre-Read Reflection & Our Key Take-Aways… “Someone who is silent for the whole conversation and then jumps in with a suggestion may not be seen as credible.” “Someone who seems combative or critical and then tries to give advice may not be seen as trustworthy.”
What Great Listeners Actually Do
by Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman
How Does Psychological Safety Fit In… • Frame “issues” as a learning opportunity . View as an experiment . Outcome shouldn’t be exclusively about output but instead learning how to do it better. • Acknowledge your own fallibility . Be willing to admit mistakes or that you don’t know the answer. Encourage others to do the same. • Model curiosity and ask questions. Be curious, ask others what they think, and ask them to contribute. Create a “safe space” so others will want to ask questions, listen attentively and speak up.
Dr Amy Edmondson explains these core principles in her book, The Fearless Organization .
When forming and building partnerships… • Establish shared expectations ; state goals of the partnership. • Practice active listening . • Agree on shared expectations. • Communicate openly & with sincerity; revisit mutually agreed upon expectations and discuss progress. • Acknowledge and celebrate “wins” & “lessons learned”.
Thank you!
CSBS Strategic Planning The 3C's – Climate Risk, Cryptocurrency and Cybersecurity
The 3C's – Climate Risk, Cryptocurrency and Cybersecurity
Jim Cooper , Executive Vice President, Policy, CSBS
The 3 C’s
Climate
Crypto
Cyber
Questions to consider for the breakouts It is 2031, what is the state regulatory system doing regarding (Climate Risk/Cryptocurrency/Cybersecurity)?
How did we get to that point?
Do you see your agency as having a role?
What would you like CSBS to begin doing or not do?
Cyber The Outlook and Risks
• Cyber threats are accelerating and becoming more sophisticated. • Cybersecurity risks are a priority. • Staying ahead of the cyber criminal and state actors is a challenge. • Recruiting, training, and retaining IT professionals is a constant problem. • Information sharing between state and federal regulators should be improved.
Cyber - What have we done so far?
State Response
CSBS Activities • Educate • Convene • Collaborate • Develop Standards • Advocate
• Routine exams • Nonbank supervision a public priority • Active training • Third ‐ party service providers
• Statutory Changes • Coordinating efforts • Industry Outreach
Crypto The Outlook and Risks
• Market is Growing to nearly $2 Trillion • Potentially starts to reshape the way people borrow, save, and invest. • Broad concerns about: • Illicit finance • Tax avoidance • Data protection • Disintermediation • Regulatory Gaps, Silos, and Regulatory arbitrage
SEC Chair Gensler: “We (SEC) need additional congressional authorities to prevent transactions, products and platforms from falling between regulatory cracks,”
Crypto - What have we done so far?
State Response
CSBS Response • Educate • Convene • Develop Standards • Advocate
• Beginning to train • Convening • Regulatory approaches vary • Specific License • Special Purpose Institutions
• Activity Based licensure • Authorizing custodians
Climate The Outlook and Risks
• The severity and frequency of extreme weather events are increasing. • Physical risks risk from hurricanes, flood, drought and wildfire threaten asset values. • Transition risks result from a shift toward a lower carbon economy. • Data is limited but evolving.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen called climate change “an existential threat” and the biggest emerging risk to the health of the U.S. financial system, pledging to marshal regulatory forces to guard against its harmful effects.
Climate - What have we done so far?
State Response
CSBS Response Beginning to Educate and Convene • Prepared a Literature Review • Various briefings on federal actions
Overall, the response varies: • States are always first responders. • Evaluate disaster recovery capabilities. • States issued guidance on Climate Risk. • District 1 working group in formation. • Participation in FSOC activities .
Climate - What have we done so far?
State Response
CSBS Response Beginning to Educate and Convene • Prepared a Literature Review • Various briefings on federal actions
Overall, the response varies: • States are always first responders. • Evaluate disaster recovery capabilities. • States issued guidance on Climate Risk. • District 1 working group in formation. • Participation in FSOC activities .
Questions to consider for the breakouts It is 2031, what is the state regulatory system doing regarding (Climate Risk/Cryptocurrency/Cybersecurity)?
How did we get to that point?
Do you see your agency as having a role?
What would you like CSBS to begin doing or not do?
MSB One Company, One Exam CSBS Strategic Planning
“ I think the worst thing we can do is do nothing, to continue as we’ve always been without facing the preemption challenge and the fintech environment challenge head on. If we do nothing, that’s the biggest threat we face.”
Panel Objectives
Highlight the progress of the MSB OCOE Initiative and how it has enhanced other components of Networked Supervision. Provide a holistic view of the MSB initiatives underway and what opportunities they present to the state system.
Defining Networked Supervision
Regulatory Workforce
CSBS will serve as a platform for state financial regulators to collaborate on the supervision of the firms they regulate. States will bring their knowledge and experience of working at the local level to form the collective intelligence of the network. CSBS will provide the technology and data for states to efficiently know the financial health and compliance of the firms they regulate.
Networked Supervision
Supervisory Tools
Data Utilization
Components of MSB Networked Supervision
Why are We Changing? To empower a strong and assertive state system of financial regulation that will reduce regulatory burden, create new efficiencies, and improve the overall effectiveness of the state system. Why now? State Regulators must consider how constant disruption due to emerging technologies, big data, artificial intelligence and automation will impact their organization, customers, tools and partnerships What is the risk of not changing? If state supervision does not improve, the state system will risk their ability to supervise these entities to the federal government.
The Purpose of MSB One Company, One Exam
To transform a 50 ‐ state system into an inclusive national system using common policies to prioritize work based on risk and resource availability. This will empower a strong, efficient, and assertive state system of financial regulation.
2021 MSB OCOE Highlights
Different States have participated as Joint States
States have indicated they will accept an ROE of an OCOE exam in lieu of an independent exam for a total of 145 accepted ROE's
States led these exams
OCOE Exams have taken place
The average exam consist of 4 states
As of 9/17/2021
2016-2021State MSB Examination Comparison
Number of Companies
Companies Examined
Year
Exams Conducted % Examined Redundant Exams % Redundant
2021 (To date)
7%
313
119
129
38%
10
32%
2020
275
175
258
64%
83
40%
2019
265
167
278
63%
111
45%
2018
253
160
292
63%
132
43%
2017
251
164
289
65%
125
48%
2016
243
153
293
63%
140
As of 9/17/2021
The Enabling Feature of Networked Supervision is the Model Law
MMLA
People
NMLS Modernization
Money Transmitter Model Law
One Company, One Exam
Technology
Systems
SES
The Need for Common Standards
States continue to have different standards for the same situation States with substantially similar standards continue to utilize different requirements Independent processes for nationally operating companies persist
“Create a federal money transmitter license. State money transmitter laws date back to the days when Wells Fargo actually operated a stagecoach and the federal government played a minimal role in financial regulation. There’s no good case for maintaining state-specific money transmitter regulation particularly given the number of large, national money transmitters . There’s no obvious benefit from the 50-state regime, as the substantive requirements are materially similar. Money transmitters that operate nationally merely end up complying with the strictest of regimes. A federal money transmitter license, coupled with some sort of federal insurance for funds held by money transmitters (such as balances in a PayPal or Venmo account) would be a simple move that would help reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens.”
‐ Adam Levitin’s recommendations to the House Financial Services Committee
The Future of MSB Supervision
A streamlined supervisory system • Exam cycles based on risk and resource availability • National standards and common policies • Harmonized regulation that relies on technology and data analytics The Vision
Current Environment
A manual supervisory system
• Calendar year exam cycles • 50 sets of standards and varying policies • Independent regulation hindered by state specific requirements
How to be the Agent for Change Leadership
Work hard on outreach to states that don't participate regularly in CSBS. We all need to be on board.
We need to urgently visualize the future now and not be afraid of letting go of what we are familiar with today . Put what we visualized here in writing so that we can use it to educate and influence our stakeholders at home.
Change Leadership By Terrie Szucs
Poll Question
When you think of effective Change Leadership what does it look like? Type words or phrases to describe
Our Focus Today
Change Leadership Defined
Actions and Behaviors
Connecting to ADKAR
Next Up—How to Apply
Strategic Planning and Change
Good business leaders create a vison, articulate the vision, passionately own the vision, and relentlessly drive it to completion ‐‐ Jack Welch
Strategic Planning: • Creates Change • Guides CSBS and the agencies • Identifies and focuses on who we want to be and how we get there
Change Leadership : • Equips the agency to bring the changes to life to achieve the strategies • Delivers change outcomes through bringing the people/employees along • Demonstrating commitment by ensuring the people side of the changes have the right effort, time and resources
Change Management versus Change Leadership
•
• No. 1 contributor to change success
Change Leadership is a Verb
ADKAR Refresher
ADKAR: • Equips leadersw ith the rightstrategiesand tools • Enables leadersand change m anagem entresources to focustheiractivitieson w hatw ildrive individual change and therefore achieve agency results • Providesindividualsw ith the rightinform ation • Createsm otivation and ability to successfuly m ove through changesin the agency
The Prosci ADKAR® Model | Prosci
ADKAR-ing “becoming a good change leader/sponsor”
What does Change Leadership look like?
• Getting past the head nod • Demonstrating commitment • Remaining Visible throughout • Demonstrating support and advocacy • Championing the change • Influencing others
• Asking probing questions • Setting strategic direction • Focusing on What, Why, How actually matter • Building trust • Showing up everyday
In Life, change is inevitable. In business, change is vital ‐‐ Warren Bennis
Poll Question
What would you like CSBS to provide you/your agency around change and change leadership to support the priorities?
Connecting ADKAR to Networked Supervision
How high is your/your agency AWARENESS of the need to change to meet this objective?
How great is your/your agency DESIRE to support, participate and engage?
Do you/your agency have the right level of KNOWLEDGE to implement networked supervision?
How strong is your/your agency ABILITY to demonstrate the necessary skills and behaviors of networked supervision?
What kind of REINFORCEMENT do you need to commit and embrace this change?
How can we apply what we just heard about change leadership to network supervision? How can you/will you lead these changes in your agency? How can CSBS support?
Additional Resources
Broad Change Management Topics: Change Management Articles | Prosci Change Management Free Downloads | Prosci
Sponsor Role: Primary Sponsor's Role and Importance (prosci.com) Change Leaders, Do You Have Authority on Your Side? (prosci.com)
CSBS Innovation Station: Iowa Report and Crowd Sourced Analytics Development
Tracy Bergmann, Chief Examiner – Iowa Division of Banking Brennan Zubrick, Senior Director, Analytics and Research – CSBS September 20, 2021
• Background • Data Analytics Uses
IowaDivisionof Banking DataAnalytics “Journey”
• Exit Meeting Data • Examination Report Information • Presentations • Public Website Charts/Graphs • Assess Impact of New Regulatory Proposals • The “Iowa Report”
IowaDivisionof Banking DataAnalytics“Journey”
Strategic Planning
CSBS Data Working Group
Form Exploratory Task Force
Internal Use
Brainstorming And Testing
Implementation And Adoption
Kick ‐ off Meeting With CSBS
CSBS Support
CSBS Self ‐ Service Feature
Exit Meeting • Liquid Assets • Reliance on Wholesale Funding • Risk of Falling Below Well Capitalized • Asset Quality Problems • Interest Rate Risk
ExaminationReport • Utilize Charts to “tell the story” • Provide Greater Insight • Historical Perspective • Comparisons to State and National Peers
(Fake report for illustrativepurposes only)
Presentations • Standard set of charts • Updated easily • Add new charts to fit audience and talking points
IDOBPublicWebsite • 32 charts • Published Quarterly • Comparisons to FDIC Community Banks • State Chartered Bank Data (CSBS Chart Pack)
Assess Impact of New Regulatory Proposals Community Bank Leverage Ratio (CBLR)
“IowaReport” Pre-ExamPlanning • Asset Quality • Capital
• Earnings • Liquidity • Interest Rate Risk
“IowaReport” Features • 96 Charts/Graphs • Customizable Time Periods/Horizons • Peer Comparisons • Calculation Glossary • Training Tool
34 REPORT PAGES
• Open “Iowa Report” in My Reports (without data) • Enter FDIC cert # and “play” report • Export to PDF (entire dossier)
• Combine Assets, Capital & Earnings, and Liquidity & IRR reports in Acrobat • Save as one report, share and analyze
“Iowa Report” Step by Step Instructions tell you how to: • Sign into the CSBS Data Analytics platform • Open, Export, and Combine the “Iowa Report”
“Iowa Report” How do we plan to use it:
Through the remainder of the year: • EIC will use it in the exam planning process • Submit report to RM and BA with PEPR • Provide feedback When given the thumbs up: • Share with bankers
Iowa Report
How to access user guide for Prep Dashboard/Iowa Report 1. Visit https://csbs.org/data 2. Click “All CSBS Analytics Training and Education Resources” 3. Click “Prep Dashboard”/ “Iowa Report”
How to access Prep Dashboard / Iowa Report
1. Visit https://csbs.org/data 2. Click “Login to CSBS BI” 3. Enter credentials 4. Click “Bank Data” 5. Click “Member Created Reports” 6. Click “Iowa Report” Folder
Let’s take a closer look at the “Iowa Report”
Assets
Bank Profile - Cover - Overview
BANK PROFILE Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
CONTENTS * Asset information (including size and growth) * Capital and concentrations
* Earnings * Liquidity * Interest Rate Risk
DATA SOURCE: Call Reports PEER INFORMATION: Comparisons are made to MEDIAN ratios for all U.S. banks and the state of the selected bank. Chart colors are consistent throughout the report. Bank = Purple State median = Blue All U.S. banks median = orange DATE FILTERS: Slider format within the Chapter filter is used to select a date range for all charts using a data range. Drop-down format is used when only one quarter should be selected.
Check-boxes format is used for ratios based on cumulative year-to-date earnings and loss figures. The suggestion for these is to select Q4 of prior years and the current quarter.
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Assets
Bank Profile - Asset Size & Growth - Overview
ASSET SIZE & GROWTH
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Asset Size - Bank vs. State Median
Asset Growth
$120M
Quarter
2021Q2
Total Assets
State Median
$100M
$240M
$80M
$208,808,500
$200M
$60M
$160M
$40M Total Assets
$120M
$108,573,000
$20M
$80M
$40M
2008Q2
2008Q4
2009Q2
2009Q4
2010Q2
2010Q4
2011Q2
2011Q4
2012Q2
2012Q4
2013Q2
2013Q4
2014Q2 Quarter
2014Q4
2015Q2
2015Q4
2016Q2
2016Q4
2017Q2
2017Q4
2018Q2
2018Q4
2019Q2
2019Q4
2020Q2
2020Q4
2021Q2
Asset Growth Rate
35.0% 30.0% 25.0% 20.0% 15.0% 10.0% 5.0% 0.0% (5.0%) (10.0%) (15.0%)
31.7%
23.9%
22.7%
18.5%
16.0%
18.6%
20.8%
17.5%
12.8%
9.2% 9.3% 7.8%
8.9%
14.1%
11.1%
Metrics
7.5%
8.6%
8.5%
8.2%
6.7%
3.9%
3.1%
8.4%
Bank State All Banks
1.5%
3.8%
0.3%
0.5%
2.7%
1.7%
1.3%
(0.2%)
(1.0%)
1.3% 1.1%
1.0%
(1.8%)
0.2%
(0.5%)
(1.4%)
(4.3%)
(2.7%)
(5.5%)
(3.6%)
(6.8%)
(10.0%)
(7.7%)
(11.8%)
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2010Q4
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Asset Size Date
The risk management practices suggested in regulatory guidance are often based on the size and risk profile of a bank, making it important to be aware of the relative size of a bank. Something to keep in mind is that it can be difficult to achieve asset growth without taking on risk. E.g. loosening loan underwriting standards to grow loan volume, funding asset growth with wholesale sources, etc.
2021Q2
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Assets
Bank Profile - Asset Mix - Overview
ASSET MIX
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Asset Mix (% of Assets)
Asset Mix Over Time
100%
Q...
2021Q2
80%
9.0%
60%
Metrics
13.5%
Other Highly Liquid Securities Loans
1.9%
40%
20%
75.6%
2008Q2
2008Q4
2009Q2
2009Q4
2010Q2
2010Q4
2011Q2
2011Q4
2012Q2
2012Q4
2013Q2
2013Q4
2014Q2
2014Q4
2015Q2
2015Q4
2016Q2
2016Q4
2017Q2
2017Q4
2018Q2
2018Q4
2019Q2
2019Q4
2020Q2
2020Q4
2021Q2
Asset Mix - Subject Bank vs. State Averages
Q...
2021Q2
Loans-Bank
Loans-State
Securities-Bank
Securities-State
Highly Liquid-Bank Highly Liquid-State
Other-Bank
Other-State
10.0% 40.0% 30.0% 20.0% 80.0% 70.0% 60.0% 50.0%
75.6%
58.7%
20.2%
16.5%
13.5%
9.0%
4.4%
1.9%
Asset Mix Date
Evaluating the overall asset mix can provide insight into the risk profile of a bank. Loans are generally the highest-risk asset category.
2021Q2
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Assets
Bank Profile - Loan Growth - Overview
LOAN GROWTH
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Loan Volume by Category
100M
80M
Metrics
60M
Other Agricultural Consumer 1-4 Family Commercial CRE
40M
20M
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2010Q4
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Loan Growth Rate
50.0%
49.2%
42.3%
41.3%
35.9%
40.0%
30.0%
28.9% 24.6%
28.5%
21.9%
20.8%
20.0%
14.4%
22.2%
12.5%
Metrics
18.7%
14.3%
10.8%
10.0%
9.4%
4.8% 3.9%
7.5%
Bank State All Banks
3.3%
10.1%
4.0%
(0.6%)
2.0%
0.7%
(3.9%)
0.0%
(4.6%)
1.2% (0.6%)
(6.6%)
(3.5%)
(4.0%)
(1.4%)
(2.0%)
(3.1%)
(4.0%)
(8.9%)
(10.0%)
(8.9%)
(10.3%)
(10.7%)
(14.5%)
(20.0%)
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2010Q4
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
If strong loan growth is occuring, consider how this is being achieved. E.g. loosening underwriting standards, new market areas or new lending niche, etc.
4 / 17
Assets
Bank Profile - Loan Concentrations - Overview
POSSIBLE LENDING CONCENTRATIONS (% of Tier 1 Capital + ALLL)
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Possible Concentrations (% of Tier One Capital + ALLL)
Q...
2021Q2
CRE
Agricultural
Commercial
156%
140%
100%
60%
29%
20%
7%
Concentration Levels Over Time
450% 350% 250% 150% 50% 100% 20% CRE Agricultural Commercial 60% 20% 100% 60%
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2010Q4
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Concentration Level Date
The horizontal dotted lines correspond to the concentration threshold of 100% of Tier One Capital and reserves. Note that for this calculation CRE does not include owner occupied properties.
2021Q2
7 / 17
Assets
Bank Profile - CRE Mix & Growth - Overview
CRE MIX & GROWTH
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Commercial Real Estate Mix (% of Total CRE)
CRE Loan Volume and Mix Over Time
32M
CRE Mix and Subsets Date
28M
2021Q2
24M
■ Multifamily
20M
■ Non Owner Occ.
16M
■ Owner Occ.
12M
5.1%
■ Other Construction
8M
12.1%
4M
■ 1-4 Family Const.
9.5%
2008Q2
2008Q4
2009Q2
2009Q4
2010Q2
2010Q4
2011Q2
2011Q4
2012Q2
2012Q4
2013Q2
2013Q4
2014Q2
2014Q4
2015Q2
2015Q4
2016Q2
2016Q4
2017Q2
2017Q4
2018Q2
2018Q4
2019Q2
2019Q4
2020Q2
2020Q4
2021Q2
CRE Subsets as % of Tier 1 Capital + ALLL
56.4%
Q...
2021Q2
Construction
Non Owner Occupied
Multifamily
16.9%
140%
126%
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
21%
20%
9%
For the chart showing CRE subsets as a percentage of capital, construction loans include both 1-4 family construction and other construction and land development loans. Owner occupied CRE loans are not included in this chart.
8 / 17
Assets
Bank Profile - AQ Ratios - Level - Overview
ASSET QUALITY RATIOS - LEVEL
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Texas Ratio
Nonaccrual to Total Loans
Q...
2021Q2
Q...
2021Q2
0.35%
3.38%
0.32%
3.50%
3.34%
0.30%
3.00%
0.25%
2.50%
2.12%
0.20%
2.00%
0.16%
0.15%
1.50%
0.12%
0.10%
1.00%
0.05%
0.50%
Bank
State
All Banks
Bank
State
All Banks
ALLL to Total Loans
Total Past Due (>30 Days) to Total Loans
Q...
2021Q2
Q...
2021Q2
0.76%
0.10% 0.30% 0.20% 0.40% 0.80% 0.70% 0.60% 0.50%
1.35%
0.20% 0.40% 0.60% 0.80% 1.00% 1.20% 1.40%
1.31%
0.67%
0.67%
0.92%
Bank
State
All Banks
Bank
State
All Banks
Date for Asset Quality Ratios
High levels of delinquent and nonaccrual loans are often a sign of asset quality problems. Call Report Instructions state loans should be placed on nonaccrual status if they are over 90 days past due unless they are both well-secured and in the process of collection.
2021Q2
12 / 17
Assets
Bank Profile - Calculations - Overview
ASSETS - CALCULATIONS GLOSSARY
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Asset Size & Asset Growth Asset Growth Rate Asset Mix
Total assets (UBPR2170) Total assets growth rate (UBPR7316) • Loans = Net loans (UBPRE348) • Securities = All AFS & HTM securities (UBPRE352+UBPRE353) • Highly Liquid = Interest-bearing balances, Federal Funds Sold, Cash & due; (UBPRE349 + UBPRE350 + UBPRE355) • Other = Trading Assets, Premises & fixed assets, Other real estate owned, Other assets (UBPRE351 + UBPRE356 + UBPRE357 + UBPRE358)
Loan Volume Loan Growth Rate Loan Mix Non-Construction Real Estate Loans Land Development Loans CRE Mix and Volume
Same as Asset Mix Net loans and leases growth rate (UBPRE027) Same as Asset Mix Non-Construction Real Estate Loans % of Loans = Real estate loans/average loans less Construction and development loans/average loans (UBPRE420 - UBPRE414) Land Development Loans % of Loans = Other construction and land development loans/average loans (UBPRE394) 1-4 family construction (RCONF158), Other construction and land development loans (RCONF159), Owner occupied (RCONF160), Non owner occupied (RCONF161), and Multifamily loans (RCON1460) Farmland loans (RCON1420) and Agricultural production and other loans to farmers (RCON1590) Farmland (UBPRE880); Agricultural loans (UBPRE886) • CRE = Non-owner occupied commercial real estate (UBPRD647) • Agricultural = Farmland (UBPRE880) and Agricultural loans (UBPRE886) • Commercial = Commercial and industrial loans (UBPRE887) Net loss to average total loans (UBPRE019) Losses by loan type (each as percent of loan type): Construction (UBPRE019); Non-construction CRE = nonfarm nonresidential and multifamily (UBPRE404 + UBPRE405); Commercial (UBPRE408); 1-4 Family (UBPRE401); Consumer (UBPRE410); Agricultural = Farmland and agricultural (UBPRE400 + UBPRE407) Current year loan recoveries / prior year gross loan losses (UBPRE388) Restructured loans + Nonaccrual loans + Other real estate owned / Equity capital + ALLL (UBPRE026) Nonaccrual loans / Total loans (UBPRE542) Past due loans / Total loans (UBPRE547) Allowance for loan and lease losses / Total loans (UBPRE023) Other Real Estate Owned / Average Total Assets (UBPRE130 / RCON3368) - this is a custom ratio RIAD5415 • U.S. Treasury & Agency bonds (UBPRM027) • Municipal bonds (UBPRM028 • Pass-through mortgage-backed securities (UBPRM029) • Collateralized mortgage obligations (UBPRM030) • Commerical MBS (UBPRM031) • Asset-backed securities (UBPRM032) • Corporates & other domestic debt securities (UBPRM034) • Other securities = Structured financial products + Foreign debt securities + Mutual funds and other marketable securities (UBPRM033 + UBPRM035 + UBPRM036) Construction and development (UBPRD490); Non-owner occupied commercial real estate (UBPRE392); Multifamily (UBPR E881)
CRE Subsets % of Tier 1 Capital + ALLL
Agricultural Mix and Volume Ag Subsets % of Tier 1 Capital + ALLL Concentrations
Loan Loss History
Recoveries to Prior Credit Losses Texas Ratio Nonaccrual to Total Loans Total Past Due to Total Loans ALLL to Total Loans OREO / Average Total Assets OREO Gains/Losses Securities Mix
16 / 17
Capital & Earnings
Bank Profile - Capital - Level - Overview
CAPITAL RATIOS - LEVEL
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Tier One Leverage Ratio
Total Capital Ratio
2021Q2
2021Q2
Qu...
Qu...
Bank
State
All Banks
Bank
State
All Banks
16.07%
10.11%
15.47%
9.85%
14.82%
9.42%
10.00%
14.00% 10.00%
6.00%
6.00% 2.00%
2.00%
Tier One Capital Ratio
Common Equity Tier One Ratio
2021Q2
2021Q2
Qu...
Qu...
Bank
State
All Banks
Bank
State
All Banks
14.96%
14.92%
14.36%
14.36%
13.78%
13.78%
14.00%
10.00% 14.00%
6.00% 10.00%
Constant 6.50%
2.00% 6.00%
2.00%
Tier One Leverage Ratio = Tier One Capital / Average Total Assets Total Capital Ratio = Total Capital / Risk Weighted Assets Tier One Capital Ratio = Tier One Capital / Risk Weighted Assets Common Equity Tier One Ratio = Common Equity Tier One Capital / Risk Weighted Assets
Capital Ratios Date
2021Q2
Using risk-weighted assets as a denominator requires banks with riskier assets to have a higher amount of capital. Low risk assets (e.g. cash, interest-bearing bank balances, U.S. Treasury and Agency bonds, Municipal general obligation bonds) carry low risk weightings such as 0% or 20%. Higher risk assets (e.g. several loan categories and corporate bonds) carry higher risk weightings such as 100%. Banks can opt into the Community Bank Leverage Ratio framework to avoid the burden of reporting risk-weighted assets. The risk-weighted capital ratios will not populate for these banks. To be eligible for this framework, a bank must be less than $10 billion in assets, maintain a Tier One Leverage above 9%, and off-balance sheet exposures cannot exceed 25% of assets. The horizontal dotted lines in the charts reflect Prompt Corrective Action well capitalized thresholds. The consequences of falling below well capitalized are severe and include limitations on the use of brokered and high-rate deposits. Keep in mind the level of minimum capital plus the full conservation buffer is 50 basis points higher than well capitalized for the three risk-based capital ratios. Falling below the conservation buffer affects the ability to pay dividends and discretionary payments to executive officers.
1 / 13
Capital & Earnings
Bank Profile - Ratios Glossary - Overview
CAPITAL - CALCULATIONS GLOSSARY
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Tier One Leverage Ratio Total Capital Ratio Tier One Capital Ratio Common Equity Tier One Ratio Dividends to Net Income Retained Earnings to Average Total Equity Equity Capital Growth Rate
Tier One Capital / Average Total Assets (UBPRD486) Total Capital / Risk Weighted Assets (UBPRD488) Tier One Capital / Risk Weighted Assets (UBPRD487) Common Equity Tier One Capital / Risk Weighted Assets (UBPRR029) UBPR7402
UBPRE025 UBPRE635
Equity Growth Less Asset Growth
UBPRE636
EARNINGS - CALCULATIONS GLOSSARY Return on Average Assets (Adjusted Subchapter S)
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Net income (adjusted for Subchapter S tax status) / Average Total Assets (UBPRE012)
Return on Equity
Net Income / Average Bank Equity (UBPRE630)
Net Income
UBPR4340
Net Interest Margin
One Quarter Annualized Net Interest Income / Average Earning Assets (UBPRE680)
Yield on Assets
One Quarter Annualized Interest Income / Average Earning Assets (UBPRE678)
Cost of Funds
One Quarter Annualized Interest Expense / Average Earning Assets (UBPRE679)
Loans to Total Assets
UBPRE024
Yield on Loans (Tax Equivalent)
One Quarter Annualized Interest and fees on loans plus the tax benefit on tax-exempt loan income / Average Total Loans (UBPRE686)
Yield on Securities (Tax Equivalent)
One Quarter Annualized Income on investment securities plus the estimated tax benefit on tax exempt Municipals / Average Total Securities (UBPRE694)
Noninterest Income/Average Assets
UBPRE004 • Deposit service charges (RIAD4080) • Mortgage banking = Net servicing fees and Loan and lease net gains/losses (RIADB492 + RIAD5416) •Investment Advisory/Insurance/Trust = Investment banking and advisory income, Insurance commisions and fee income, and Income from fiduciary activities (UBPRB490 + UBPRE080 + RIAD4070) • Other = Other noninterest income, Other net gains/losses, and securitization income (RIADB497 + UBPRE081 + UBPR7452).
Noninterest Income Amounts
Overhead to Average Assets Overhead Costs Less Noninterest Income/Average Assets Efficiency Ratio Personnel Expenses/Average Assets Occupancy Expenses/Average Assets Other Operating Expenses/Average Assets Provisions/Average Assets Realized Bond Gains/Losses/Average Assets
UBPRE005 UBPRE087
Total Overhead Expenses / Net Interest Income (tax equivalent) + Noninterest Income (UBPRE088) UBPR7400 UBPRE084 UBPRE085 UBPRE006 UBPRE008
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Liquidity & Interest Rate Risk
Bank Profile - Liquidity - On-Balance Sheet - Overview
LIQUIDITY - ON-BALANCE SHEET
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Liquid Assets to Total Assets
35%
30%
30%
29%
25%
22% 25%
20%
20%
19%
Metrics
17%
17%
15%
Bank State All Banks
12% 11%
11% 10%
10%
12% 15% 13%
9%
7% 8% 8% 8%
9%
10%
5% 3% 3% 5% 4%
8% 8%
8% 7% 5% 3%
7%
5%
2% 4% 4% 3% 4%
3% 3%
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2010Q4
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Liquid Assets to Total Assets (Breakout by Type)
Net Loans to Assets Ratio
87% 90%
32%
90%
85%
85%
28%
83% 84% 84%
85%
81%
80% 81% 81%
80%
81% 82%
24%
79%
80%
78% 77% 79% 76% 77%
79%
20%
Metrics
76%
75%
74%
74%
Metrics
73%
16% 12%
71%
FFS Unpl. Sec IBB Cash
70%
69% 70%
Bank State All Banks
65%
8%
64%
60%
60%
4%
59%
2010Q4
2013Q4
2016Q4
2019Q4
2010Q2
2016Q4
2018Q4
2020Q4
2008Q2
2008Q4
2009Q2
2009Q4
2010Q2
2011Q2
2011Q4
2012Q2
2012Q4
2013Q2
2014Q2
2014Q4
2015Q2
2015Q4
2016Q2
2017Q2
2017Q4
2018Q2
2018Q4
2019Q2
2020Q2
2020Q4
2021Q2
2008Q2
2008Q4
2009Q2
2009Q4
2010Q4
2011Q2
2011Q4
2012Q2
2012Q4
2013Q2
2013Q4
2014Q2
2014Q4
2015Q2
2015Q4
2016Q2
2017Q2
2017Q4
2018Q2
2019Q2
2019Q4
2020Q2
2021Q2
• For these charts, liquid assets include: unpledged securities, Federal Funds sold, interest-bearing bank balances, and cash & due. • Keep in mind there is some nuance with liquid assets. For example, small nonrated Municipal bonds might be difficult to sell or pledge, and some loans could be sold fairly easily (e.g. government guaranteed SBA or FSA loans, conforming 1-4 family loans). • Since loans are generally illiquid, the Loans to Assets Ratio will typically move inversely of changes in liquid assets. For example, higher loan volume as a percentage of assets would lead to a lower amount of liquid assets as a percentage of assets.
1 / 12
Liquidity & Interest Rate Risk
Bank Profile - Liquidity - Funding Cont'd - Overview
LIQUIDITY - FUNDING (continued)
Fidelity Bank (West Des Moines, Iowa)
Funding Amounts Over Time (Granular)
100M
80M
Metrics
FFP Other Borrowings FHLB Listing Service Brokered Deposits
60M
40M
20M
TCD>Ins Limit Core Deposits
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Funding Amounts Over Time (Broad)
100M
80M
60M
Metrics
40M
Wholesale Core Dep & TCDs>250M
20M
2008Q2
2008Q3
2008Q4
2009Q1
2009Q2
2009Q3
2009Q4
2010Q1
2010Q2
2010Q3
2011Q1
2011Q2
2011Q3
2011Q4
2012Q1
2012Q2
2012Q3
2012Q4
2013Q1
2013Q2
2013Q3
2013Q4
2014Q1
2014Q2
2014Q3
2014Q4
2015Q1
2015Q2
2015Q3
2015Q4
2016Q1
2016Q2
2016Q3
2016Q4
2017Q1
2017Q2
2017Q3
2017Q4
2018Q1
2018Q2
2018Q3
2018Q4
2019Q1
2019Q2
2019Q3
2019Q4
2020Q1
2020Q2
2020Q3
2020Q4
2021Q1
2021Q2
Funding is a critical aspect of liquidity. Local core deposits are preferable as these are generally more stable and lower cost than wholesale funding. It is easier for banks operating in areas with more local deposits than loan demand to maintain a solid amount of liquid assets. Banks which struggle to obtain local deposits often rely on wholesale sources to fund growth.
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