cover image: Book Value Risk Management of Banks: Limited Hedging, HTM Accounting, and Rising Interest Rates

20.500.12592/5qfv0ph

Book Value Risk Management of Banks: Limited Hedging, HTM Accounting, and Rising Interest Rates

29 Mar 2024

In the face of rising interest rates in 2022, banks mitigated interest rate exposure of the accounting value of their assets but left the vast majority of their long-duration assets exposed to interest rate risk. Data from call reports and SEC filings shows that only 6% of U.S. banking assets used derivatives to hedge their interest rate risk, and even heavy users of derivatives left most assets unhedged. The banks most vulnerable to asset declines and solvency runs decreased existing hedges, focusing on short-term gains but risking further losses if rates rose. Instead of hedging the market value risk of bank asset declines, banks used accounting reclassification to diminish the impact of interest rate increases on book capital. Banks reclassified $1 trillion in securities as held-to-maturity (HTM) which insulated these assets book values from interest rate fluctuations. More vulnerable banks were more likely to reclassify. Extending Jiang et al.’s (2023) solvency bank run model, we show that capital regulation could address run risk by encouraging capital raising, but its effectiveness depends on the regulatory capital definitions and can by eroded by the use of HTM accounting. Including deposit franchise value in regulatory capital calculations without considering run risk could weaken capital regulation’s ability to prevent runs. Our findings have implications for regulatory capital accounting and risk management practices in the banking sector.
financial institutions corporate finance asset pricing financial economics

Authors

João Granja, Erica Xuewei Jiang, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski, Amit Seru

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
This paper subsumes prior papers by Granja (2023) “Bank Fragility and Reclassification of Securities into HTM” and Jiang, Matvos, Piskorski, and Seru (2023) “Limited Hedging and Gambling for Resurrection by U.S. Banks During the 2022 Monetary Tightening?”. We thank John Cochrane, Peter DeMarzo, Darrell Duffie, Christian Leuz, seminar and conference participants at Stanford, Columbia and NBER Corporate Research Associates Symposium for helpful comments. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32293
Published in
United States of America

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