Subjective U.S. bank
forecasts to figure in loan loss reserves
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[June 15, 2016]
By David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. accounting
regulator plans to release new rules on Thursday that will change
how banks set aside money for bad loans, raising fresh questions
about the role of forecasts in their financial reports.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board's goal in setting up the
new framework for loan-loss reserves is simple: it wants to reduce
the likelihood that investors will get blindsided by a sudden deluge
of bad loans, as they did during the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
The new standard will require banks to start setting aside reserves
for losses as soon as they make a loan, estimating costs that are
"expected." Currently, they only set aside reserves when credit
quality deteriorates to the point where losses are "probable."
The fly in the ointment, analysts say, is the estimates will be
highly subjective. Bankers will have leeway to base their reserves
on forecasts of future economic conditions. Predictions about
factors like unemployment, oil prices and interest rates will vary
from bank to bank and inevitably affect quarterly results and
balance sheets.
"There is a trade-off there," said Vincent Papa, director of
financial reporting policy for the CFA Institute, which certifies
financial analysts. "There is a lot more discretion being granted."
FASB developed its upcoming standard over more than 10 years,
sketching out plans in public meetings and in material posted to the
board's website. The final version will be released on Thursday,
said spokeswoman Christine Klimek.
The International Accounting Standards Board, followed in Europe and
many other areas outside of the United States, modified its standard
two years ago, but did not go as far as the FASB.
Questions about loan-loss reserves are at the fore now. Reserves are
among the most important numbers in bank financial statements.
Because they are at historically low levels, analysts expect them to
rise. (For a graphic on loan-loss reserves at U.S. banks, click
here: http://tmsnrt.rs/213DbsI)
Big banks will get three-and-a-half years to adopt FASB's changes.
But even under current accounting standards, reserves are subjective
and can vary widely between banks, as shown by the way the industry
has prepared for losses from energy loans.
As of March 31, JPMorgan Chase & Co's reserves for losses on funded
energy loans were 6.3 percent of energy loans, sharply higher the
4.2 percent Citigroup Inc had set aside, according to calculations
by Goldman Sachs analysts and Citigroup disclosures. Both banks
could be just right, or could be stretched high, or low; analysts do
not know because they cannot see exactly how the respective loan
books differ.
Spokesmen for JPMorgan and Citigroup declined to comment for this
story. In public conference calls with analysts, JPMorgan Chief
Executive Jamie Dimon and Citigroup Chief Financial Officer John
Gerspach seemed to step in different directions when asked if they
were setting aside the right amounts for bad energy loans.
Dimon said in January, "We try to be very conservative, always. And,
so, we're not trying to put up as little as possible. You know me,
I'd put up more if I could. But accounting rules dictate what you
can do."
Gerspach, in April, pointed out that the bank in the past reserved
much more than needed. He said Citi was in the process of setting
"appropriate reserves."
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A Citibank ATM is seen in Los Angeles, California, March 10, 2015.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The banking industry has historically gone from reserving too little, to too
much and back again. Before the financial crisis, quarterly loan loss allowances
fell at the end of 2006 to a 21-year low of 1.07 percent of loans, according to
data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Low reserves made banks more
vulnerable to the losses that followed and made their financial statements less
credible at a time when they most needed investor confidence.
In the next three years the banks more than tripled reserves even as they wrote
off huge amounts of bad debt. Today, reserves are back down to 1.35 percent of
loans.
Lynn Turner, a former Securities and Exchange Commission chief accountant who
led a 1998 push to stop companies from piling up excess reserves to inflate
results later, said he does not believe the new standard will change much.
"The bottom line is that when times are tough, (banks) don't like to book
reserves," he said. "When times are really good they like to book them for
cookie jars that they can use in bad times."
In a December 2014 study, two economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
examined confidential records of how banks rated the chances of default for the
same loans. The authors, Matthew Plosser and Joćo A.C. Santos, found that banks
with relatively less capital tended to have sunnier views than stronger banks.
The bias was more apparent on loans that were not scrutinized publicly by credit
ratings agencies.
Hal Schroeder, a FASB board member, acknowledged in an interview that different
people will come up with different loss estimates of the same loans. But, he
said, investors will be better served by financial reports that can reflect what
the bankers see coming.
"The objective of this standard is to align the economics of lending with the
accounting," Schroeder said. "If you have an expectation of loss, why should
accounting ignore that?"
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Additional reporting by Dan Freed;
Editing by Lauren Tara LaCapra and Chris Reese)
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