Crisis-hit Wall Street checks in to Zandi's 'impairment
studio'
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[May 29, 2020] By
David Henry
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Wall Street
doesn't know where the world economy is heading, it books a session at
Mark Zandi's "impairment studio".
Faced with a pandemic-fueled recession with few historical comparisons
and a new accounting rule requiring lenders to total up expected losses
even before borrowers default, scores of U.S. banks are relying on
forecasts from Zandi, the chief economist of Moody's Analytics, to help
with their calculations.
The exercise is critical to billions of dollars in quarterly earnings
and one that, depending on the actions of regulators, could hit capital
levels enough to choke a recovery.
"It feels like we're in the center of the universe," Zandi, 61, told
Reuters. "But, at the moment, the economy is at the center of
everything."
Even Zandi, who has been in economic forecasting for 30 years and has
made countless appearances before Congress as an expert witness, says he
was thrown by the coronavirus crisis.
He scrambled to update forecasts for the U.S. economy as countries
around the world went into lockdown.
"March was an incredibly difficult month," said the economist, who is
widely quoted in the U.S. media and a familiar face on business channel
CNBC.
Moody's Analytics, a unit of Moody’s Corp, says some 170 institutions
around the globe get forecasts from Zandi and his team through a product
called "ImpairmentStudio," a platform that helps clients calculate what
their loan losses might be based on a range of different economic
forecasts.
At least 59 U.S. lenders, including Truist Financial Corp,, the
country's eighth biggest by assets, and smaller lenders have said they
used Moody's scenarios, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods research shows.
While bigger lenders have stayed mum about Moody's, a bank economist who
declined to be named said they check their numbers against Zandi's
forecasts.
The chief financial officer of a regional bank, who asked not to be
named, added: "We get the benefit of our analysts knowing what we are
doing because we are in the pack using Moody's.
"The product is pretty good and it is as close to a standard as exists."
Zandi's reputation as an independent-minded economist also helps. He has
testified before congress more times than he can remember and, despite
working on a presidential bid by the late Republican John McCain, was
considered by President Obama as a contender to run the Federal Housing
Finance Agency in 2013.
"He's not out there cheerleading and he's not doing gloom," said a
second banker, who declined to be named.
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Mark Zandi, of Moody’s Analytics, poses in an undated photograph
obtained by Reuters on May 27, 2020. Moody’s Analytics/Handout via
REUTERS
MULTIPLE SCENARIOS
The pandemic struck just as the new accounting standard kicked in. The old one
allowed lenders to wait to write-down values until losses were clear. That delay
had led to doubts about banks' strength during the last financial crisis.
Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Wells Fargo & Co
increased their reserves for loan losses by $16 billion in the first quarter,
pulverizing profits.
During earnings calls, analysts pressed for details on which economic forecasts
banks had used.
For those that acknowledged using Moody's, the analysts wanted to know, for
example, if they had closed their books using Zandi’s March 27 updated baseline
forecast that showed second-quarter U.S. gross domestic product falling at an
annual rate of 18%. And, had they made adjustments or blended in any of Moody's
more pessimistic or optimistic scenarios?
Answers were vague.
Since then, Zandi’s mid-April forecast showed the second-quarter rate of GDP at
-30% and mid-May at -33%.
Analysts will be watching for the mid-June forecast for possible indications of
additional loss expenses in the second quarter, said Brian Kleinhanzl of KBW.
The new accounting rule says banks must use "reasonable and supportable"
forecasts, but there is a lot of flexibility on what scenarios they adopt and
the choice can be material.
A Moody’s study in April applied one of its more optimistic scenarios to a
sample of commercial real estate loans and found expected credit losses would be
25% less than its base case scenario. A more pessimistic scenario resulted in
290% greater losses.
"Given the high amount of uncertainty in the economy, it turns out you can come
up with multiple scenarios and they are all reasonable and supportable,"
Kleinhanzl said.
(Editing by Carmel Crimmins)
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