OCC's Quarterly Report On Bank Trading and Derivatives Activities Third Quarter 2011
OCC's Quarterly Report On Bank Trading and Derivatives Activities Third Quarter 2011
OCC's Quarterly Report On Bank Trading and Derivatives Activities Third Quarter 2011
OCCs Quarterly Report on Bank Trading and Derivatives Activities Third Quarter 2011
Executive Summary
Insured U.S. commercial banks reported trading revenues of $13.1 billion in the third quarter, 78% higher than in the second quarter, and 214% higher than $4.2 billion in the third quarter of 2010. Revenues in the third quarter were a record, but overstate actual trading performance due to the inclusion of a significant amount of revenues that were unrelated to core trading activities. Trading risk exposure, as measured by Value-at-Risk (VaR), decreased in the third quarter as dealers actively reduced risk in the face of increasing global financial risks. Aggregate average VaR at the 5 largest trading companies declined 6.1% from the second quarter to $673 million. VaR in the third quarter 2011 was 8.8% lower than a year ago. Credit exposure from derivatives increased sharply in the third quarter. Net current credit exposure increased 39%, or $141 billion, to $504 billion, due to declining interest rates. The notional amount of derivatives held by insured U.S. commercial banks decreased $1.4 trillion, or 0.6%, from the second quarter of 2011 to $248 trillion. Notional derivatives are 5.7% higher than at the same time last year. Derivative contracts remain concentrated in interest rate products, which comprise 82% of total derivative notional amounts. Credit derivatives, which represent 6.3% of total derivatives notionals, rose 3% to $15.7 trillion. The OCCs quarterly report on trading revenues and bank derivatives activities is based on Call Report information provided by all insured U.S. commercial banks and trust companies, reports filed by U.S. financial holding companies, and other published data. A total of 1,088 insured U.S. commercial banks reported derivatives activities at the end of the third quarter, an increase of 17 banks from the prior quarter. Derivatives activity in the U.S. banking system continues to be dominated by a small group of large financial institutions. Five large commercial banks represent 96% of the total banking industry notional amounts and 85% of industry net current credit exposure. The OCC and other supervisors have examiners on-site at the largest banks to continuously evaluate the credit, market, operational, reputation, and compliance risks of bank derivatives activities. In addition to the OCCs onsite supervisory activities, the OCC continues to work with other financial supervisors and major market participants to address infrastructure issues in OTC derivatives, including development of objectives and milestones for stronger trade processing and improved market transparency across all OTC derivatives categories.
Revenues
Insured U.S. commercial banks reported $13.1 billion in trading revenues in the third quarter, 78% higher than in the second quarter, and 214% higher than $4.2 billion in the third quarter of 2010. Trading revenues in the third quarter were the highest on record, surpassing the former record of $9.8 billion from the first quarter of 2009. However, trading revenues include two components that can, and did in the third quarter, distort actual
trading performance. First, some banks reported gains and losses on hedges of mortgage servicing assets as trading revenues. In the third quarter, a sharp decline in interest rates reduced the value of the mortgage servicing asset (MSA), which large banks typically hedge by taking positions that would increase in value when interest rates decline. These hedges produced significant gains in the third quarter, offsetting the declines in value of the MSA. The hedge gains were reflected in trading revenues for interest rate products, but the charges for MSA impairment are reported as a component of servicing (i.e., non-trading, or other) income. Second, as noted in previous reports, the credit adjusted values of derivative payables and receivables can have a large impact on trading revenues when credit spreads change materially, as was also the case in the third quarter. Adjustments to the fair value of derivative receivables and payables reflect changes to both bank and counterparty credit spreads. Bank credit spreads increased materially during the third quarter, as the credit crisis in Europe weighed on the markets perception of the credit strength of banks, not only in Europe but also in the United States. Rising bank credit spreads reduce the value of derivatives payables. Under current accounting rules, banks recognize the declining value of their derivatives liabilities as trading gains. As a result of these non-trading factors, reported trading revenues, particularly for interest rate products, do not provide an accurate reflection of trading performance. Absent the noise from MSA hedge gains and derivatives liability valuation adjustments (DVA), which contributed approximately $8 billion in revenues, trading revenues in the third quarter exhibited the seasonal slowing pattern often observed during the last half of the year. The seasonal weakening in client demand was exacerbated by concerns over the prospects for the global economy given increasing stress in Europe. Foreign exchange, equity and commodity revenues, however, were materially stronger, both when measured against the second quarter of 2011 and against the third quarter of 2010. Commercial Bank Trading Revenue
Bank Trading Revenue $ in millions Interest Rate Foreign Exchange Equity Commodity & Other Credit Total Trading Revenues 3Q11 6,789 2,595 1,534 565 1,633 13,116 2Q11 4,320 491 736 304 1,507 7,357 Change 3Q11 vs. 2Q11 2,469 2,104 799 260 126 5,759 % Change 3Q11 vs. 2Q11 57% 429% 109% 85% 8% 78% Change 3Q11 vs. 3Q10 2,574 3,642 1,164 470 1,090 8,940 % Change 3Q11 vs. 3Q10 61% 348% 314% 498% 201% 214%
Bank Trading Revenue $ in millions Interest Rate Foreign Exchange Equity Commodity & Other Credit* Total Trading Revenues
ALL Quarters Since Q4 1996 Avg Hi Low 1,463 9,099 (3,420) 1,489 4,261 (1,535) 415 1,829 (1,229) 158 789 (320) N/A 2,707 (11,780)
8 Quarters Hi Low 6,789 (1,188) 4,261 (1,047) 1,534 144 565 (25) 2,707 (485)
*Credit trading revenues became reportable in 1Q07. Highs and lows are for available quarters only.
$10,000
$8,000
$7,357
($ millions)
$6,789
$6,000
$4,000
$(2,000)
Equity
3Q11 2Q11
Credit
Total
Data Source: Call Reports. Note: Beginning 1Q07, credit exposures are broken out as a separate category.
Holding Company Trading Revenues1 To get a more complete picture of trading revenues in the banking system, it is useful to review consolidated holding company trading performance. As illustrated in the table that follows, consolidated holding company trading revenues of $14 billion in the third quarter of 2011 were 18% lower than in the second quarter, but 15% higher ($1.8 billion) than the third quarter of 2010.
Holding Co. Trading Revenue $ in millions Interest Rate Foreign Exchange Equity Commodity & Other Credit Total HC Trading Revenues 3Q11 6,579 5,160 (2,673) 2,141 2,792 13,998 2Q11 4,477 1,158 5,218 1,411 4,762 17,026
Change % Change 3Q11 vs. 3Q11 vs. 2Q11 2Q11 2,102 47% 4,002 346% (7,891) -151% 730 52% (1,970) -41% (3,028) -18%
Change % Change 3Q11 vs. 3Q11 vs. 3Q10 3Q10 2,482 61% 7,236 349% (7,979) -150% 829 63% (781) -22% 1,787 15%
Prior to the financial crisis, bank trading revenues typically ranged from 60-80% of consolidated holding company trading revenues. Since the financial crisis, and the adoption of bank charters by the former investment banks, the percentage of bank trading revenues to consolidated company revenues has fallen into a range of 30-50%. This decline reflects the significant amount of the trading activity by the former investment banks that, while included in holding company results, remains outside the insured commercial bank. More generally, insured commercial banks have more limited legal authorities than do their holding companies, particularly in commodity and equity products.
1
The OCCs Quarterly Report on Bank Trading and Derivatives Activities focuses on the activity and performance of insured commercial banks. Discussion of consolidated bank holding company activity and performance is limited to this section, as well as the data in Table 2.
In the third quarter, however, the distortion introduced by gains on mortgage servicing asset hedges in the bank (where the mortgage servicing asset is held), as well as losses in equity trading activities outside the bank, changed the recent pattern of the contribution of bank trading revenues to holding company revenues. Bank trading revenues were 94% of consolidated company trading revenues in the third quarter, compared to 43% in the second quarter. It is unlikely for bank trading revenues to consistently represent such a large share of total company trading revenues. First, the impact of mortgage servicing asset hedges, an issue unique to banks, which hold the MSA, should diminish. Second, normalization of equity trading revenues, which are concentrated at the holding company, will influence the bank/company revenue ratio. Equity trading revenues were a drag on third quarter holding company trading revenues, as banking companies sustained $2.7 billion of losses, compared to revenues of $5.2 billion and $5.3 billion during the second quarter of 2011 and the third quarter of 2010 respectively.
Credit Risk
Credit risk is a significant risk in bank derivatives trading activities. The notional amount of a derivative contract is a reference amount from which contractual payments will be derived, but it is generally not an amount at risk. The credit risk in a derivative contract is a function of a number of variables, such as whether counterparties exchange notional principal, the volatility of the underlying market factors (interest rate, currency, commodity, equity or corporate reference entity), the maturity and liquidity of the contract, and the creditworthiness of the counterparty. Credit risk in derivatives differs from credit risk in loans due to the more uncertain nature of the potential credit exposure. With a funded loan, the amount at risk is the amount advanced to the borrower. The credit risk is unilateral; the bank faces the credit exposure of the borrower. However, in most derivatives transactions, such as swaps (which make up the bulk of bank derivatives contracts), the credit exposure is bilateral. Each party to the contract may (and, if the contract has a long enough tenor, probably will) have a current credit exposure to the other party at various points in time over the contracts life. Moreover, because the credit exposure is a function of movements in market factors, banks do not know, and can only estimate, how much the value of the derivative contract might be at various points of time in the future. The first step to measuring credit exposure in derivative contracts involves identifying those contracts where a bank would lose value if the counterparty to a contract defaulted today. The total of all contracts with positive value (i.e., derivatives receivables) to the bank is the gross positive fair value (GPFV) and represents an initial measurement of credit exposure. The total of all contracts with negative value (i.e., derivatives payables) to the bank is the gross negative fair value (GNFV) and represents a measurement of the exposure the bank poses to its counterparties.
$ in billions Interest Rates FX Equity Commodity Credit Total Gross Positive Fair Values 3Q11 2Q11 Change %Change 4,735 3,047 1,688 55% 636 454 182 40% 93 73 20 28% 66 55 10 19% 490 313 177 57% 6,021 3,942 2,078 53% Gross Negative Fair Values 3Q11 2Q11 Change %Change 4,642 2,958 1,684 57% 603 438 165 38% 87 73 14 20% 65 55 10 18% 473 305 169 55% 5,871 3,829 2,041 53%
Gross positive fair values (i.e., derivatives receivables) increased 53%, or $2.1 trillion, to $6 trillion in the third quarter. Receivables from interest rate contracts, which make up 79% of gross derivatives receivables (and hence are the dominant source of credit exposure), increased 55%, or $1.7 trillion. The large increase in receivables from interest rate contracts resulted from a sharp decline in market interest rates associated with increasing concerns about credit problems in Europe. The 10-year swap rate, for example, fell from 3.28% to 2.11% during the quarter. Because banks hedge the market risk of their derivatives portfolios, the increase in gross positive fair values was offset by a similar increase in gross negative fair values (i.e., derivatives payables). Derivatives payables increased 53%, or $2 trillion, to $5.9 trillion, led by a 57% increase in payables on interest rate contracts.
For a portfolio of contracts with a single counterparty where the bank has a legally enforceable bilateral netting agreement, contracts with negative values may be used to offset contracts with positive values. This process generates a net current credit exposure (NCCE), as shown in the example below: Counterparty A Portfolio Contracts With Positive Value Contracts With Negative Value Total Contracts # of Contracts 6 4 10 Value of Contracts $500 $350 $150 Credit Measure/Metric Gross Positive Fair Value Gross Negative Fair Value Net Current Credit Exposure (NCCE) to Counterparty A
A banks net current credit exposure across all counterparties will therefore be the sum of the gross positive fair values for counterparties without legally certain bilateral netting arrangements (this may be due to the use of non-standardized documentation or jurisdiction considerations) and the bilaterally netted current credit exposure for counterparties with legal certainty regarding the enforceability of netting agreements. Net current credit exposure is the primary metric used by the OCC to evaluate credit risk in bank derivatives activities. NCCE for insured U.S. commercial banks increased 39% ($141 billion) to $504 billion in the third quarter, as the $2.1 trillion increase in gross receivables (GPFV) exceeded the $1.9 trillion increase in the dollar amount of netting benefits. NCCE peaked at $800 billion at the end of 2008, during the financial crisis, when interest rates had plunged and credit spreads were very high. NCCE during the third quarter of 2011 was the fourth highest on record, behind only the fourth quarter of 2008 and the first two quarters of 2009, at the peak of the financial crisis. Legally enforceable netting agreements allowed banks to reduce GPFV exposures by 91.6% ($5.5 trillion) in the third quarter, up from 90.8% in the second quarter. The 91.6% netting benefit percentage is the second highest on record, trailing only the 91.9% from the second quarter of 2010, and precluded an even greater gain in NCCE.
$ in billions Gross Positive Fair Value (GPFV) Netting Benefits Netted Current Credit Exposure (NCCE) Potential Future Exposure (PFE) Total Credit Exposure (TCE) Netting Benefit % 10 Year Interest Swap Rate Dollar Index Spot Credit Derivative Index - North America Inv Grade Credit Derivative Index - High Volatility Russell 3000 Index Fund (RAY) Dow Jones-UBS Commodity Index (DJUBS)
Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding.
3Q11 6,021 5,517 504 795 1,299 91.6% 2.11% 78.6 134.4 245.1 666.0 140.2
2Q11 3,942 3,579 364 821 1,185 90.8% 3.28% 74.3 92.7 159.9 790.0 158.1
Change 2,078 1,938 141 (26) 114 0.9% -1.17% 4.3 41.6 85.2 (124.0) (17.9)
% 53% 54% 39% -3% 10% 1% -36% 6% 45% 53% -16% -11%
The second step in evaluating credit risk involves an estimation of how much the value of a given derivative contract might change in the banks favor over the remaining life of the contract; this is referred to as the potential future exposure (PFE). PFE decreased 3% ($26 billion) in the third quarter to $795 billion, due to a decline in the notional amount of interest rate contracts. The total credit exposure (PFE plus the net current credit exposure) increased 10% in the third quarter to $1.3 trillion. The distribution of NCCE in the banking system is concentrated in banks/securities firms (55%) and corporations (38%). Exposure to hedge funds, sovereign governments and monoline financial firms is very small (7% in total). However, the sheer size of aggregate counterparty exposures results in the potential for major losses even in sectors where exposure is a small percentage of the total. For example, notwithstanding
the minimal share of NCCE to monolines, banks suffered material losses on these exposures during the credit crisis. Because banks have taken credit charges (via credit valuation adjustments) to completely write down their monoline exposures, current credit exposures to monolines are now virtually 0% of total net current credit exposure. Sovereign credit exposures are also a small component (5%) of net current credit exposure and, like monoline exposures, are largely unsecured. These exposures are an increasing area of focus for bank supervisors as they review counterparty credit risk.
Net Current Credit Exposure By Counterparty Type as a % of Total NCCE Total Commercial Banks Top 5 Commercial Banks Banks & Securities Firms 55% 57% Monoline Financial Firms 0% 0% Hedge Funds 2% 2% Sovereign Governments 5% 5% Corp and All Other Counterparties 38% 36% Total 100% 100%
A more risk sensitive measure of credit exposure would also consider the value of collateral held against counterparty exposures. Commercial banks with total assets greater than $10 billion report the fair value of collateral held against various classifications of counterparty exposure. Reporting banks held collateral against 64% of total NCCE at the end of the third quarter, down from 71% in the second quarter of 20112. Credit exposures to banks/securities firms and hedge funds are well secured. Banks held collateral against 86% of their current exposure to banks and securities firms, down from 92% in the second quarter. Hedge fund exposures have always been very well secured, because banks take initial margin on transactions with hedge funds, in addition to fully securing any current credit exposure. In the third quarter, however, although coverage of hedge funds remains very high at 179% of current exposure, it did fall sharply from 294% in the second quarter, as hedge funds drew down idle balances to preserve liquidity and reduce their credit exposures to banks. Collateral coverage of corporate, monoline and sovereign exposures is much less than for financial institutions and hedge funds.
FV of Collateral to Net Current Credit Exposure Banks & Securities Firms 86% Monoline Financial Firms 5% Hedge Funds 179% Sovereign Governments 15% Corp and All Other Counterparties 32% Overall FV/NCCE 64%
Collateral quality held by banks is very high and liquid, with 78% held in cash (both U.S. dollar and non-dollar), and an additional 10% held in U.S. Treasuries and government agencies.
Fair Value of Collateral Collateral Compostion (%) Cash U.S. Dollar 46.9% Cash Other 31.3% U.S. Treas Securities 3.4% U.S. Gov't Agency 7.0% Corp Bonds 0.4% Equity Securities 0.6% All Other Collateral 10.5% Total 100.0%
During the third quarter, concerns about the credit quality of European banks and sovereign debt, as well as the deteriorating outlook for global economic growth, created significant uncertainty, and volatility, in financial markets. Credit spreads increased and market participants became less willing to assume each others credit risks. Investors aggressively bought government bonds in markets, like the United States and Germany, in a flight-to-quality. Investor preference for the safest assets drove key interest rates lower, which caused sharp increases in derivatives receivables and NCCE. Key credit performance metrics for derivatives reflect the deteriorating environment at the end of the third quarter, in both past due derivatives contracts and chargeoffs. The fair value of derivatives contracts past due 30 days or more increased 141% to $77 million. Notwithstanding this large increase, past-due derivative contracts represented only 0.02% of NCCE. Banks charged-off $89 million in derivatives receivables in the third quarter, up from $71 million in the second quarter. In addition, this report restates first quarter charge-offs, which were originally reported as $74 million. Amended regulatory reports now show actual charge-offs to be $1.6 billion. The large increase in charge-offs in the first quarter reflects the settlement of hedging transactions with a monoline insurer covering commercial mortgage-backed securities. As noted above, these monoline exposures had been written down via credit valuation adjustments, expenses similar to loan loss provisions, to reflect the credit deterioration of the counterparty. The large, revised, first quarter charge-off of a nearly-fully reserved exposure therefore had a de minimus financial statement impact.
Some of the collateral figures for 2Q11 have been restated due to amended call reports.
In the third quarter, 22 banks reported charge-offs of derivatives exposures, down from 23 in the second quarter. Charge-offs in the third quarter of 2011 represented 0.02% of the net current credit exposure from derivative contracts, the same as in the second quarter. [See Graph 5c.] For comparison purposes, Commercial and Industrial (C&I) loan net charge-offs increased $7 million, less than 1%, to $2.3 billlion, in the third quarter. Net C&I charge-offs were 0.19% of total C&I loans in the third quarter, down from 0.20% in the second quarter. The level of charge-offs of derivatives credit exposures is typically much less than for C&I exposures. Two factors account for the historically favorable charge-off performance of derivatives. First, the credit quality of the typical derivatives counterparty is higher than the credit quality of the typical C&I borrower. Second, most of the large credit exposures from derivatives, whether from other dealers, large non-dealer banks, or hedge funds are collateralized daily, typically by cash and/or government securities. The large first quarter charge-off, which nearly doubled the previous peak of $847 million in the fourth quarter of 2008, represented the lingering effect of legacy credit exposures associated with the financial crisis, as banks continue to negotiate settlements with their monoline counterparties. Unlike most participants in the derivatives market, monoline financial insurers did not post collateral to secure their exposures. The unsecured nature of these exposures explains the large first quarter write-off. To the extent banks have fully reserved these exposures via credit valuation adjustment charges, however, recognizing the charge-off does not have a material financial statement or earnings impact.
Market Risk
Banks control market risk in trading operations primarily by establishing limits against potential losses. Valueat-Risk (VaR) is a statistical measure that banks use to quantify the maximum expected loss, over a specified horizon and at a certain confidence level, in normal markets. It is important to emphasize that VaR is not the maximum potential loss; it provides a loss estimate at a specified confidence level. A VaR of $50 million at 99% confidence measured over one trading day, for example, indicates that a trading loss of greater than $50 million in the next day on that portfolio should occur only once in every 100 trading days under normal market conditions. Since VaR does not measure the maximum potential loss, banks stress test trading portfolios to assess the potential for loss beyond the VaR measure. Banks and supervisors have been working to expand the use of stress analyses to complement the VaR risk measurement process that is typically used when assessing a banks exposure to market risk.
$ in millions JPMorgan Chase & Co. $53 $58 ($5) -9% $182,287 $17,370 0.03% 0.3% Citigroup Inc. Bank of America Corp. $164 $229 ($66) -29% $230,252 ($2,238) 0.1% -7.3% The Goldman Sachs Group $102 $101 $1 1% $70,088 $8,354 0.1% 1.2% Morgan Stanley
Average VaR 3Q11 Average VaR 2Q11 Change in Avg VaR 3Q11 vs 2Q11 % Change in Avg VaR 3Q11 vs 2Q11 9-30-11 Equity Capital 2010 Net Income Avg VaR 3Q11 / Equity Avg VaR 3Q11 / 2010 Net Income
Data Source: 10K & 10Q SEC Reports.
The large trading banks disclose average VaR data in published financial reports. To provide perspective on the market risk of trading activities, it is useful to compare the VaR numbers over time, and to equity capital and net income. As shown in the table above, market risks reported by the five largest banking companies, as measured by VaR, are small as a percentage of their capital. Because of mergers, and VaR measurement systems incorporating higher volatility price changes throughout the credit crisis (compared to the very low volatility environment prior to the crisis), bank VaR measures had generally increased throughout the credit crisis. After the peak of the financial crisis, as more normal market conditions emerged and volatility declined, bank VaR measures have broadly trended lower. Aggregate VaR measures fell during the third quarter at the major dealers, notwithstanding an increase in financial markets volatility, as dealers actively worked to reduce risk given the backdrop of European sovereign and financial institution credit concerns. Aggregate average VaR at the five large dealer banking companies of $673 million fell 6.1% from the second quarter, and was 8.8% lower than in the third quarter of 2010.
Because of methodological differences in calculating VaR, readers are cautioned that a higher VaR figure at a particular bank may not necessarily imply that the bank has more trading risk than another bank with a lower VaR. For example, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley calculate VaR using a 95% confidence interval. If those firms used a 99% confidence interval, as does Bank of America and Citigroup, their VaR estimates would be meaningfully higher. The data series used to measure risk also is an important factor in the calculated risk measure. Firms using a longer period over which to measure risk may include the higher volatility period of the financial crisis, and therefore their measured VaR will be higher than firms that use a less volatile data series. Indeed, one major reason for the decline in VaR at large trading firms is the lower volatility environment that has prevailed since the end of the financial crisis. The VaR measure for a single portfolio of exposures will be different if the time period used to measure risk is not the same. To test the effectiveness of VaR measurement systems, trading institutions track the number of times that daily losses exceed VaR estimates. Under the Market Risk Rule that establishes regulatory capital requirements for U.S. commercial banks with significant trading activities, a banks capital requirement for market risk is based on its VaR measured at a 99% confidence level and assuming a 10-day holding period. Banks back-test their VaR measure by comparing the actual daily profit or loss to the VaR measure. The results of the back-test determine the size of the multiplier applied to the VaR measure in the risk-based capital calculation. The multiplier adds a safety factor to the capital requirements. An exception occurs when a dealer has a daily loss in excess of its VaR measure. Some banks disclose the number of such exceptions in their published financial reports. Because of the unusually high market volatility and large write-downs in CDOs during the financial crisis, as well as poor market liquidity, a number of banks experienced back-test exceptions and therefore an increase in their capital multiplier. Currently, however, none of the large dealer banks hold additional capital for market risk based upon an increased multiplier, as the incidence of back-test exceptions no longer requires it.
Credit Derivatives
Credit derivatives rose 3% in the third quarter to $15.7 trillion. Credit derivatives outstanding remain below the peak of $16.4 trillion in the first quarter of 2008. From year-end 2003 to 2008, credit derivative contracts grew at a 100% compounded annual growth rate. Industry efforts to eliminate offsetting trades (trade compression), as well as reduced demand for structured products, has led to a decline in credit derivative notionals. Tables 11 and 12 provide detail on individual bank holdings of credit derivatives by product and maturity, as well as the credit quality of the underlying reference entities. As shown in the first chart below, credit default swaps are the dominant product at 97% of all credit derivatives notionals. [See charts below, Tables 11 and 12, and Graph 10.]
3Q11 Credit Derivatives Composition by Product Type
3Q11 Credit Derivatives Composition by Maturity & Quality of Underlying Reference Entity
Data Source: Call Reports. Note: Beginning 1Q07, credit exposures are broken out as a separate category.
Contracts referencing investment grade entities with maturities from 1-5 years represent the largest segment of the market at 42% of all credit derivatives notionals, down from 43% at end of the second quarter of 2011.
Contracts of all tenors that reference investment grade entities are 60% of the market, the same as in the second quarter. [See chart on right above.] The notional amount for the 35 insured U.S. commercial banks that sold credit protection (i.e., assumed credit risk) was $7.7 trillion, up 2.7% ($202 billion) from the second quarter. The notional amount for the 30 banks that purchased credit protection (i.e., hedged credit risk) was $7.9 trillion, an increase of 3% ($232 billion). [See Tables 1, 3, 11 and 12 and Graphs 2, 3 and 4.]
Notionals
Changes in notional volumes are generally reasonable reflections of business activity, and therefore can provide insight into potential revenue and operational issues. However, the notional amount of derivatives contracts does not provide a useful measure of either market or credit risks. The notional amount of derivatives contracts held by insured U.S. commercial banks in the third quarter fell by $1.4 trillion (0.6%) to $248 trillion from the second quarter. Derivatives notionals fell due to a 1% ($2.5 trillion) drop in interest rate contracts, a reflection of both declining client activity in the third quarter, as well as industry trade compression exercises, which reduce the volume of existing contracts. The notional amount of derivatives is 5.7% higher than a year ago. The five banks with the most derivatives activity hold 96% of all derivatives, while the largest 25 banks account for nearly 100% of all contracts. [See Tables 3, 5 and Graph 4.]
Percentage Total Notionals by Type - 3Q11
Percentage Total Notionals by Type - 2Q11
Note: Beginning 1Q07, credit exposures are broken out as a separate category.
Interest rate contracts comprise 82% of total derivatives. FX and credit derivatives are 11% and 6%, respectively, of total notionals.
3Q11 $ in billions Interest Rate Contracts Foreign Exchange Contracts Equity Contracts Commodity/Other Credit Derivatives Total 202,107 26,795 1,786 1,602 15,661 247,952 2Q11 204,620 26,483 1,654 1,352 15,227 249,337 $ Change (2,513) 312 131 250 434 (1,386) % Change -1% 1% 8% 19% 2.8% -0.6% % of Total Derivatives 81.5% 10.8% 0.7% 0.6% 6.3% 100%
Swap contracts, at 63% of total notional derivatives, unchanged from the second quarter, continue to represent the bulk of derivative contracts.
3Q11 $ in billions Futures & Forwards Swaps Options Credit Derivatives Total 39,791 156,132 36,368 15,661 247,952 2Q11 41,097 156,054 36,958 15,227 249,337 $ Change (1,306) 78 (590) 434 (1,386) % Change -3% 0% -2% 3% -0.6% % of Total Derivatives 16% 63% 15% 6% 100%
10
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Bilateral Netting: A legally enforceable arrangement between a bank and a counterparty that creates a single legal obligation covering all included individual contracts. This means that a banks receivable or payable, in the event of the default or insolvency of one of the parties, would be the net sum of all positive and negative fair values of contracts included in the bilateral netting arrangement. Credit Derivative: A financial contract that allows a party to take, or reduce, credit exposure (generally on a bond, loan or index). Our derivatives survey includes over-the-counter (OTC) credit derivatives, such as credit default swaps, total return swaps, and credit spread options. Derivative: A financial contract whose value is derived from the performance of underlying market factors, such as interest rates, currency exchange rates, commodity, credit, and equity prices. Derivative transactions include a wide assortment of financial contracts including structured debt obligations and deposits, swaps, futures, options, caps, floors, collars, forwards and various combinations thereof. Gross Negative Fair Value: The sum total of the fair values of contracts where the bank owes money to its counterparties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses the banks counterparties would incur if the bank defaults and there is no netting of contracts, and no bank collateral was held by the counterparties. Gross negative fair values associated with credit derivatives are included. Gross Positive Fair Value: The sum total of the fair values of contracts where the bank is owed money by its counterparties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses a bank could incur if all its counterparties default and there is no netting of contracts, and the bank holds no counterparty collateral. Gross positive fair values associated with credit derivatives are included. Net Current Credit Exposure (NCCE): For a portfolio of derivative contracts, NCCE is the gross positive fair value of contracts less the dollar amount of netting benefits. On any individual contract, current credit exposure (CCE) is the fair value of the contract if positive, and zero when the fair value is negative or zero. NCCE is also the net amount owed to banks if all contracts were immediately liquidated. Notional Amount: The nominal or face amount that is used to calculate payments made on swaps and other risk management products. This amount generally does not change hands and is thus referred to as notional. Over-the-Counter Derivative Contracts: Privately negotiated derivative contracts that are transacted off organized exchanges. Potential Future Exposure (PFE): An estimate of what the current credit exposure (CCE) could be over time, based upon a supervisory formula in the agencies risk-based capital rules. PFE is generally determined by multiplying the notional amount of the contract by a credit conversion factor that is based upon the underlying market factor (e.g., interest rates, commodity prices, equity prices, etc.) and the contracts remaining maturity. However, the risk-based capital rules permit banks to adjust the formulaic PFE measure by the net to gross ratio, which proxies the risk-reduction benefits attributable to a valid bilateral netting contract. PFE data in this report uses the amounts upon which banks hold risk-based capital. Total Credit Exposure (TCE): The sum total of net current credit exposure (NCCE) and potential future exposure (PFE). Total Risk-Based Capital: The sum of tier 1 plus tier 2 capital. Tier 1 capital consists of common shareholders equity, perpetual preferred shareholders equity with noncumulative dividends, retained earnings, and minority interests in the equity accounts of consolidated subsidiaries. Tier 2 capital consists of subordinated debt, intermediate-term preferred stock, cumulative and long-term preferred stock, and a portion of a banks allowance for loan and lease losses.
11
Graph 1
Total Notionals
Dealer (Trading)
120 100 80 60 40
Credit Derivatives
2009 2010 2011
20 0
2005 Q1 Total Derivative Notionals Dealer (Trading) End User (Non-Trading) Credit Derivatives 91.1 85.5 2.5 3.1 Q2 96.2 89.6 2.5 4.1 Q3 Q4 Q1
2006 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1
2007 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1
2009 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1
2010 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1
98.8 101.5 110.2 119.2 126.2 131.5 145.8 153.6 173.6 165.6 180.3 182.1 175.8 91.1 2.6 5.1 93.0 102.1 110.1 115.3 119.6 131.8 138.1 155.3 147.2 161.1 163.9 157.1 2.6 5.8 2.6 5.5 2.6 6.6 3.0 7.9 2.8 9.0 2.9 11.1 2.6 12.9 2.8 15.4 2.6 15.9 2.8 16.4 2.8 15.5 2.6 16.1
203.5 204.3 212.8 216.5 223.4 234.7 231.2 244.0 249.3 187.6 189.2 196.8 200.1 207.5 218.1 215.2 225.2 229.8 2.4 13.4 2.1 2.0 2.0 14.4 2.0 13.9 2.1 14.5 1.9 14.2 3.9 14.9 4.3 15.2
13.0 14.0
Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Total derivative notionals are now reported after including credit derivatives, for which regulatory reporting does not differentiate between trading and non-trading. Data Source: Call Reports.
$ Trillions
Graph 2
280,000
240,000
200,000
160,000
120,000
80,000
40,000
0 4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 40Q4 4Q05 4Q06 4Q07 4Q08 4Q09 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
$ in Billions
4Q01
4Q02
4Q03
4Q04
4Q06 14,877
4Q07 18,967
4Q08 22,512
4Q09 26,493
4Q10 35,709
1Q11 39,081
2Q11 41,097
3Q11 39,791
9,313 11,374 11,393 11,373 25,645 32,613 44,083 56,411 10,032 11,452 14,605 17,750 395 635 1,001 2,347
131,706 142,011 149,247 152,736 156,054 156,132 30,267 15,897 30,267 14,036 32,075 14,150 37,275 14,899 36,958 15,227 36,368 15,661
*In billions of dollars, notional amount of total: futures, exchange traded options, over the counter options, forwards, and swaps. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data Source: Call Reports
$ Billions
Graph 3
3Q11 Distribution
0.6%
Credit Derivatives
240
0.7%
Commodities Equities
200
6.3% 10.8%
$ Trillions
120
81.5%
80
40
Interest Rate Commodities Foreign Exch Credit Derivatives Equities
0 4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 4Q04 4Q05 4Q06 4Q07 4Q08 4Q09 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
$ in Billions Interest Rate Foreign Exch Equities Commodities Credit Derivatives TOTAL
*In billions of dollars, notional amount of total: futures, exchange traded options, over the counter options, forwards, and swaps. As of 2Q06 equities and commodities types are shown as separate categories. They were previously shown as Other Derivs. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data Source: Call Reports
Graph 4
Swaps
Options
Credit Derivatives
200
250
300
*In billions of dollars, notional amount of total: futures, exchange traded options, over the counter options, forwards, and swaps. In 1Q11, HSBC replaced Wells Fargo as one of the top five commercial banks in derivatives. See Table 1. Data Source: Call Reports
Graph 5A
500
250
Citibank, N.A.
300
400
200
250
50
0 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
0 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
% 500 450
1,200
1,000
800
600
250 200
400
150 100 50
200
0 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
323 283 290 265 266 257 267 265 275 274 285
169 137 135 151 161 162 172 174 182 182 187
213 209 203 180 180 171 194 180 183 203 195
1048 921 858 766 672 690 638 629 781 788 801
475 304 213 192 185 183 172 167 168 168 200
286 207 311 284 267 293 289 261 318 323 334
In 1Q11, HSBC replaced Wells Fargo as one of the top five commercial banks in derivatives. See Table 1. Beginning in the 2Q09, the methodology to calculate the Credit Risk Exposure to Capital ratio for the Top 5 category was adjusted to a summing methodology. Data Source: Call Reports
Graph 5B
95 90 85 80 75 70
% Netting Benefit
Netting Benefit
65 60 55 50 45
*Note: The netting benefit is defined as: $ amount of netting benefits/gross positive fair value. Data Source: Call Reports
1Q02 2Q02 3Q02 4Q02 1Q03 2Q03 3Q03 4Q03 1Q04 2Q04 3Q04 4Q04 1Q05 2Q05 3Q05 4Q05 75.7 76.2 79.9 81.5 81.7 83.3 83.8 81.7 84.2 83.1 84.3 83.7 83.9 86.9 84.7 84.9
1Q06 2Q06 3Q06 4Q06 1Q07 2Q07 3Q07 4Q07 1Q08 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 84.9 85.4 85.5 84.7 85.2 86.4 83.9 84.8 85.6 85.3 84.3 88.7 89.0 88.0 89.7 90.2
1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11 91.0 91.9 92.1 91.1 90.4 90.8 91.6
Graph 5C
1750 1550
0.50
0.40
% Netted Current Credit Exposure (line)
1350
Charge-offs in $ millions (bars)
1150 950
0.30
0.20 750 550 350 0.00 150 (50) 1Q98 1Q99 1Q00 1Q01 1Q02 1Q03 1Q04 1Q05 1Q06 1Q07 1Q08 1Q09 1Q10 1Q11 (0.10) 0.10
Note: The figures are for each quarter alone, not year-to-date. The 1Q11 charge-off figure was adjusted in 3Q11 to reflect an amended Call Report. Data Source: Call Reports.
Graph 6A
15,000
10,000
5,000
-5,000
-10,000
-15,000 1Q07 2Q07 3Q07 4Q07 1Q08 2Q08 3Q08 4Q08 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
$ Millions
2Q11 4,320 491 736 304 1,507 7,357 3Q11 6,789 2,595 1,534 565 1,633 13,116
$ Millions
Interest Rate Foreign Exchange Equity Comdty & Other Credit Total Trading Revenue*
(8,958) (3,154)
* Note: The trading revenue figures above are for cash and derivative activities. Revenue figures are for each quarter alone, not year-to-date. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data Source: Call Reports
Quarterly Trading Revenue as a Percentage of Gross Revenue Cash & Derivative Positions
Top 5 Insured U.S. Commercial Banks by Derivative Holdings 1Q09 3Q11
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A
%
Graph 6B
Citibank, N.A.
40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
15
25
10
15
-5
-5
-15
-10
-25
-15 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
-35
80
20 10
60
0 -10
40
20
-50 -60
0 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 4Q09 1Q10 2Q10 3Q10 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
-70
13 9 14 3 16 12 5 6 14 14 36
8 -1 3 2 6 4 5 2 6 6 9
8 -2 -2 -12 12 14 5 2 9 11 15
HSBC
69 63 59 72 71 53 61 7 54 58 57
-4 7 16 -1 9 13 12 -3 11 9 -62
Top 5 Banks 12 4 5 1 10 11 6 4 11 12 22
All Banks 6 3 4 1 5 4 3 2 5 5 9
*Note that the trading revenue figures above are for cash and derivative activities. Revenue figures are quarterly, not year-to-date numbers. In 1Q11, HSBC replaced Wells Fargo as one of the top five commercial banks in derivatives. See Table 1. Gross Revenue equals interest income plus non-interest income. Data Source: Call Reports
Graph 7
180,000
01Q4
02Q4
03Q4
04Q4
05Q4
06Q4
07Q4
08Q4
09Q4
10Q1
4Q01
4Q02
4Q03
4Q04
4Q05
4Q06
4Q07
4Q08
4Q09
4Q10
1Q11
2Q11
3Q11
25,000
Foreign Exchange: > 5 yrs Foreign Exchange: 1-5 yr Foreign Exchange: < 1 yr
20,000 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 4Q04 4Q05 4Q06 4Q07 4Q08 4Q09 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
IR: < 1 yr IR: 1-5 yr IR: > 5 yrs FX: < 1 yr FX: 1-5 yr FX: > 5 yrs
4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 4Q04 4Q05 4Q06 4Q07 10,357 12,972 13,573 15,914 18,482 29,546 39,083 11,809 14,327 20,400 25,890 27,677 31,378 37,215 7,523 9,733 13,114 16,489 19,824 23,270 27,720 3,785 4,040 4,470 5,348 5,681 7,690 11,592 661 829 1,114 1,286 1,354 1,416 1,605 492 431 577 760 687 593 619
Note: Figures above exclude foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, basis swaps, and any other contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements. Data Source: Call Reports
$ Billions
$ Billions
Graph 8
250 200
100 50 0 4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 4Q04 4Q05 4Q06 4Q07 4Q08 4Q09 4Q10 1Q11 2Q11 3Q11
35
Prec Met: > 5 yrs Prec Met: 1-5 yr Prec Met: < 1 yr
30 25 20 15 10 5 0
4Q01
4Q02
4Q03
4Q04
4Q05
4Q06
4Q07
4Q08
4Q09
4Q10
1Q11
2Q11
3Q11
4Q01 Gold: < 1 yr Gold: 1-5 yr Gold: > 5 yrs Prec Met: < 1 yr Prec Met: 1-5 yr Prec Met: > 5 yrs 31 26 7 2 0 0
4Q02 36 28 8 3 0 0
4Q03 40 32 5 4 0 0
4Q04 35 31 2 4 1 0
4Q05 42 27 1 9 1 0
4Q06 40 36 1 10 2 0
4Q07 72 37 3 11 2 0
4Q08 78 27 2 8 2 0
4Q09 74 25 1 12 1 0
4Q10 162 29 1 17 2 0
1Q11 109 27 1 24 4 0
2Q11 89 31 1 20 4 0
3Q11 113 33 1 24 5 0
Note: Figures above exclude foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, basis swaps, and any other contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements. Data Source: Call Reports
$ Billions
$ Billions
150
Graph 9
4Q01
4Q02
4Q03
4Q04
4Q05
4Q06
4Q07
4Q08
4Q09
4Q10
1Q11
2Q11
3Q11
2,400
Equity: > 5 yrs Equity: < 1 yr Equity: 1-5 yr
4Q01
4Q02
4Q03
4Q04
4Q05
4Q06
4Q07
4Q08
4Q09
4Q10
1Q11
2Q11
3Q11
4Q01 4Q02 4Q03 4Q04 Oth Comm: < 1 yr Oth Comm: 1-5 yr Oth Comm: > 5 yrs Equity: < 1 yr Equity: 1-5 yr Equity: > 5 yrs 28 23 2 124 195 23 55 35 9 127 249 25 41 102 14 197 674 84 68 206 40 273 736 140
4Q06 4Q07 185 235 20 341 221 45 205 298 23 473 297 70
Note: Figures above exclude foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, basis swaps, and any other contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements. Data Source: Call Reports
Graph 10
Notional Amounts of Credit Derivative Contracts by Credit Quality and Maturity Insured U.S. Commercial Banks 1Q07 3Q11
20,000
Sub-Investment Grade
Investment Grade
18,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0
1Q07
2Q07
3Q07
4Q07
1Q08
2Q08
3Q08
4Q08
1Q09
2Q09
3Q09
4Q09
1Q10
2Q10
3Q10
4Q10
1Q11
2Q11
3Q11
$ Billions
3Q11 1,119 6,507 1,699 9,326 1,024 4,131 1,180 6,336 939
$ Billions Investment Grade: < 1 yr Investment Grade: 1-5 yr Investment Grade: > 5 yrs Subtotal Investment Grade Sub-Investment Grade: < 1 yr Sub-Investment Grade: 1-5 yr Sub-Investment Grade: > 5 yrs Subtotal Sub-Investment Grade Overall Total
1Q07 281
2Q07 328
3Q07 307
4Q07 304
1Q08 319
2,768 3,359 3,545 3,860 4,088 1,917 2,210 2,154 2,138 2,127 164 537 144 629 158 621 149 543 134 672
4,966 5,898 6,006 6,302 6,534 11,012 11,036 10,339 1,201 1,405 1,416 1,400 1,608 1,901 2,178 2,195 2,092 2,414
6,867 8,075 8,201 8,394 8,948 15,365 15,888 15,656 14,389 13,440 12,986 14,036 14,364 13,876 14,472 14,150 14,899 15,227 15,661
*Note: Figures above exclude foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, basis swaps, and any other contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements. Notional amounts as reported in Schedules RC-L and RC-R of Call reports. As of March 31, 2006, the Call Report began to include maturity breakouts for credit derivatives. Data Source: Call Reports
TABLE 1 NOTIONAL AMOUNT OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN WELLS FARGO BANK NA MORGAN STANLEY BANK NA STATE STREET BANK&TRUST CO BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSN SUNTRUST BANK NORTHERN TRUST CO REGIONS BANK U S BANK NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK NATIONAL ASSN FIFTH THIRD BANK BRANCH BANKING&TRUST CO KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSN UNION BANK NATIONAL ASSN ALLY BANK RBS CITIZENS NATIONAL ASSN BOKF NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN DEUTSCHE BANK TR CO AMERICAS BMO HARRIS BANK NA
STATE OH SD NC NY VA SD UT MA NY DE GA IL AL OH DE OH NC OH CA UT RI OK ME NY IL
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 1,142,254 66,793 203,490 251,529 261,236 166,486 83,195 125,488 319,449 187,535 112,475 162,170 86,565 83,539 79,376 107,564 24,859 13,404 45,806 94,206 $8,519,086 2,626,495 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 3,921,372 2,064,468 1,469,244 1,405,490 375,035 302,901 264,302 156,818 112,089 75,975 71,533 70,831 67,573 50,811 44,081 40,649 32,494 32,151 28,005 27,607 $247,590,827 360,714 247,951,541
TOTAL FUTURES (EXCH TR) $1,296,354 431,802 1,681,402 848,677 75,486 217,589 0 73,741 33,839 61,719 29,466 0 5,486 200 0 198 1,071 3,137 5,420 0 0 455 0 0 0 $4,766,042 10,439 4,776,481
TOTAL OPTIONS (EXCH TR) $1,898,031 1,654,150 643,951 738,777 104,988 90,031 64 0 31,373 15,050 28,546 0 0 1,500 0 429 0 13 0 0 0 989 0 0 0 $5,207,892 2,539 5,210,430
TOTAL FORWARDS (OTC) $10,985,076 6,998,084 9,138,213 3,405,737 936,541 1,132,408 521,756 952,367 349,626 20,674 23,002 256,376 71,215 49,415 9,467 11,666 15,748 8,758 2,099 14,873 6,797 24,921 8,661 301 1,030 $34,944,811 69,604 35,014,415
TOTAL SWAPS (OTC) $45,335,952 34,220,622 35,176,872 33,324,621 2,443,806 1,943,681 1,514,352 369,993 705,192 227,023 173,357 7,740 76,267 49,323 63,512 32,305 40,502 47,981 30,208 16,640 30,871 3,482 23,490 23,292 23,331 $155,904,416 227,470 156,131,886
TOTAL OPTIONS (OTC) $9,636,263 9,300,067 3,418,068 7,584,599 178,098 445,522 4,314 73,038 284,989 46,997 44,975 101 3,227 9,088 1,171 25,916 13,510 4,733 13,024 12,569 2,100 2,647 0 464 3,152 $31,108,632 48,514 31,157,147
TOTAL CREDIT DERIVATIVES (OTC) $6,199,907 3,002,476 5,064,530 551,308 702,939 92,141 23,982 105 471 3,572 3,555 86 623 2,563 1,825 1,017 0 2,951 60 0 881 0 0 3,948 93 $15,659,034 2,149 15,661,183
SPOT FX $811,954 870,398 535,012 2,708 74,945 22,720 53,891 30,090 60,303 922 401 16,939 94 2,993 6 573 66 745 663 0 108 7 0 0 69 $2,485,606 1,954 2,487,559
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Credit derivatives have been included in the sum of total derivatives. Credit derivatives have been included as an "over the counter" category, although the Call Report does not differentiate by market currently. Note: Before the first quarter of 1995 total derivatives included spot foreign exchange. Beginning in the first quarter, 1995, spot foreign exchange was reported separately. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L
TABLE 2 NOTIONAL AMOUNT OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS TOP 25 HOLDING COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
HOLDING COMPANY JPMORGAN CHASE & CO. BANK OF AMERICA CORPORATION MORGAN STANLEY CITIGROUP INC. GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP, INC., THE HSBC NORTH AMERICA HOLDINGS INC. WELLS FARGO & COMPANY STATE STREET CORPORATION BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON CORPORATION, THE TAUNUS CORPORATION ALLY FINANCIAL INC. PNC FINANCIAL SERVICES GROUP, INC., THE SUNTRUST BANKS, INC. METLIFE, INC. NORTHERN TRUST CORPORATION REGIONS FINANCIAL CORPORATION U.S. BANCORP TD BANK US HOLDING COMPANY RBC USA HOLDCO CORPORATION FIFTH THIRD BANCORP CAPITAL ONE FINANCIAL CORPORATION KEYCORP BB&T CORPORATION UNIONBANCAL CORPORATION CITIZENS FINANCIAL GROUP, INC.
STATE NY NC NY NY NY NY CA MA NY NY MI PA GA NY IL AL MN ME NY OH VA OH NC CA RI
TOTAL ASSETS $2,289,240 2,221,387 794,939 1,935,992 949,330 345,972 1,304,945 207,176 322,980 380,647 181,956 269,555 172,584 785,230 96,098 129,762 330,141 199,563 95,840 114,905 200,148 89,406 167,677 84,014 130,661 $13,800,146
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $76,194,324 73,928,242 55,082,419 54,703,632 51,364,076 4,423,429 3,860,850 1,469,277 1,388,718 957,645 711,842 375,588 304,453 278,891 264,902 158,589 113,436 108,126 85,271 75,363 72,031 71,754 67,415 50,907 48,497 $326,159,678
FUTURES (EXCH TR) $1,766,120 2,729,072 161,250 270,745 1,500,167 80,081 229,674 73,750 33,879 85,001 95,934 62,161 29,658 22,907 0 5,486 200 0 710 198 300 3,232 1,071 5,420 0 $7,157,015
OPTIONS (EXCH TR) $2,018,340 1,425,585 1,242,291 3,583,517 2,510,935 124,988 96,727 0 31,729 118,786 2,520 15,050 28,546 0 0 0 1,500 0 8,331 429 0 13 0 0 0 $11,209,287
FORWARDS (OTC) $11,378,643 12,645,102 7,327,899 7,475,868 4,929,126 939,003 1,156,366 952,391 349,339 503,427 76,768 20,785 23,002 39,983 256,376 71,215 49,465 18,128 70,361 11,666 5,156 8,758 15,748 2,195 6,797 $48,333,566
SWAPS (OTC) $45,254,577 46,849,192 34,078,118 31,058,239 28,781,839 2,398,709 1,859,058 369,993 688,342 170,116 483,916 227,023 172,357 95,684 8,340 77,674 50,863 87,002 4,794 36,136 66,531 50,998 39,146 30,208 38,132 $192,976,988
OPTIONS (OTC) $9,578,804 6,136,736 6,610,388 9,323,734 9,369,661 178,096 435,658 73,038 284,958 47,698 52,674 46,997 47,336 106,867 101 3,591 9,087 1,171 228 25,916 44 5,802 11,450 13,024 2,554 $42,365,614
CREDIT DERIVATIVES (OTC) $6,197,840 4,142,555 5,662,473 2,991,529 4,272,348 702,552 83,367 105 471 32,617 30 3,572 3,555 13,450 86 623 2,321 1,825 847 1,017 0 2,951 0 60 1,013
SPOT FX $811,750 283,201 382,250 814,663 253,642 74,930 22,849 30,090 60,326 2,265 0 922 401 0 16,939 94 2,993 6 0 573 1 745 66 567 108
$24,117,208 $2,759,380
Note: Currently, the Y-9 report does not differentiate credit derivatives by contract type. Credit derivatives have been included in the sum of total derivatives. Note: Prior to the first quarter of 2005, total derivatives included spot foreign exchange. Beginning in that quarter, spot foreign exchange has been reported separately. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies, FR Y- 9, schedule HC-L
TABLE 3 DISTRIBUTION OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN WELLS FARGO BANK NA MORGAN STANLEY BANK NA STATE STREET BANK&TRUST CO BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSN SUNTRUST BANK NORTHERN TRUST CO REGIONS BANK U S BANK NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK NATIONAL ASSN FIFTH THIRD BANK BRANCH BANKING&TRUST CO KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSN UNION BANK NATIONAL ASSN ALLY BANK RBS CITIZENS NATIONAL ASSN BOKF NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN DEUTSCHE BANK TR CO AMERICAS BMO HARRIS BANK NA
STATE OH SD NC NY VA SD UT MA NY DE GA IL AL OH DE OH NC OH CA UT RI OK ME NY IL
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 1,142,254 66,793 203,490 251,529 261,236 166,486 83,195 125,488 319,449 187,535 112,475 162,170 86,565 83,539 79,376 107,564 24,859 13,404 45,806 94,206 $8,519,086 2,626,495 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 3,921,372 2,064,468 1,469,244 1,405,490 375,035 302,901 264,302 156,818 112,089 75,975 71,533 70,831 67,573 50,811 44,081 40,649 32,494 32,151 28,005 27,607 $247,590,827 360,714 247,951,541 (%) 99.9 0.1 100.0
PERCENT EXCH TRADED CONTRACTS (%) 4.2 3.8 4.2 3.4 4.1 7.8 0.0 5.0 4.6 20.5 19.2 0.0 3.5 1.5 0.0 0.9 1.5 4.7 10.7 0.0 0.0 4.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 $9,973,934 12,977 9,986,911 (%) 4.0 0.0 4.0
PERCENT OTC CONTRACTS (%) 95.8 96.2 95.8 96.6 95.9 92.2 100.0 95.0 95.4 79.5 80.8 100.0 96.5 98.5 100.0 99.1 98.5 95.3 89.3 100.0 100.0 95.6 100.0 100.0 100.0 $237,616,893 347,737 237,964,630 (%) 95.8 0.1 96.0
PERCENT INT RATE CONTRACTS (%) 77.1 81.6 82.3 94.5 62.3 89.0 0.3 22.4 74.1 96.2 89.3 2.7 99.2 75.2 87.9 65.0 99.2 83.5 78.8 96.8 82.6 85.8 70.9 59.8 90.2 $201,791,714 315,570 202,107,283 (%) 81.4 0.1 81.5
PERCENT FOREIGN EXCH CONTRACTS (%) 11.5 11.9 8.3 4.3 20.3 4.6 98.5 74.7 25.3 2.8 3.3 97.3 0.4 22.4 9.7 28.5 0.8 11.0 6.3 0.0 15.3 0.5 29.1 26.1 3.4 $26,762,971 32,103 26,795,074 (%) 10.8 0.0 10.8
PERCENT OTHER CONTRACTS (%) 3.1 1.1 0.2 0.0 1.6 4.0 0.0 2.9 0.5 0.1 6.2 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.0 5.1 0.0 1.2 14.7 3.2 0.0 13.8 0.0 0.0 6.0 $3,377,108 10,892 3,388,001 (%) 1.4 0.0 1.4
PERCENT CREDIT DERIVATIVES (%) 8.2 5.4 9.2 1.2 15.8 2.3 1.2 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.2 0.0 0.4 2.3 2.4 1.4 0.0 4.4 0.1 0.0 2.2 0.0 0.0 14.1 0.3 $15,659,034 2,149 15,661,183 (%) 6.3 0.0 6.3
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TC: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BKS &TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BKs & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL FOR COMMERCIAL BANKs & TCs: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BANKs & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Currently, the Call Report does not differentiate credit derivatives by over the counter or exchange traded. Credit derivatives have been included in the "over the counter" category as well as in the sum of total derivatives here. Note: "Foreign Exchange" does not include spot fx. Note: "Other" is defined as the sum of commodity and equity contracts. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L
TABLE 4 CREDIT EQUIVALENT EXPOSURES TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN WELLS FARGO BANK NA MORGAN STANLEY BANK NA STATE STREET BANK&TRUST CO BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSN SUNTRUST BANK NORTHERN TRUST CO REGIONS BANK U S BANK NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK NATIONAL ASSN FIFTH THIRD BANK BRANCH BANKING&TRUST CO KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSN UNION BANK NATIONAL ASSN ALLY BANK RBS CITIZENS NATIONAL ASSN BOKF NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN DEUTSCHE BANK TR CO AMERICAS BMO HARRIS BANK NA
STATE OH SD NC NY VA SD UT MA NY DE GA IL AL OH DE OH NC OH CA UT RI OK ME NY IL
TOTAL TOTAL ASSETS DERIVATIVES $1,826,387 $75,351,583 1,300,674 55,607,201 1,466,417 55,123,036 104,514 46,453,719 203,675 4,441,859 1,142,254 3,921,372 66,793 2,064,468 203,490 1,469,244 251,529 1,405,490 261,236 375,035 166,486 302,901 83,195 264,302 125,488 156,818 319,449 112,089 187,535 75,975 112,475 71,533 162,170 70,831 86,565 67,573 83,539 50,811 79,376 44,081 107,564 40,649 24,859 32,494 13,404 32,151 45,806 28,005 94,206 27,607 $8,519,086 2,626,495 11,145,581 $247,590,827 360,714 247,951,541
BILATERALLY TOTAL CREDIT (%) TOTAL NETTED CURRENT POTENTIAL EXPOSURE TOTAL CREDIT RISK-BASED CREDIT FUTURE FROM ALL EXPOSURE CAPITAL EXPOSURE EXPOSURE CONTRACTS TO CAPITAL $133,405 $196,668 $183,748 $380,416 285 134,991 93,752 169,641 263,393 195 155,908 71,318 219,775 291,093 187 20,018 36,353 124,075 160,428 801 21,956 10,890 33,030 43,920 200 117,861 30,894 22,531 53,425 45 10,007 1,089 8,659 9,748 97 13,488 15,582 14,685 30,267 224 15,120 8,415 5,263 13,678 90 32,714 4,346 1,109 5,455 17 17,048 3,392 1,394 4,786 28 6,231 6,266 2,697 8,963 144 14,191 1,004 245 1,249 9 31,901 1,672 217 1,889 6 14,511 2,537 766 3,303 23 14,111 1,981 668 2,649 19 17,822 1,689 436 2,125 12 11,668 1,200 83 1,282 11 9,827 946 812 1,758 18 13,333 190 219 409 3 10,473 1,177 300 1,477 14 2,564 333 283 616 24 1,206 967 381 1,348 112 9,636 1,439 802 2,241 23 10,084 762 275 1,037 10 $840,074 298,274 1,138,348 $494,861 9,326 504,186 $792,094 2,617 794,711 $1,286,955 11,943 1,298,898 153 4 114
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Commercial banks also hold on-balance sheet assets in volumes that are multiples of bank capital. For example: EXPOSURES FROM OTHER ASSETS ALL COMMERCIAL BANKS 1-4 FAMILY MORTGAGES C&I LOANS SECURITIES NOT IN TRADING ACCOUNT EXPOSURE TO RISK BASED CAPITAL 159% 94% 191%
Note: Total credit exposure is defined as the credit equivalent amount from derivative contracts (RC-R line 54), which is the sum of netted current credit exposure and PFE. Note: The total credit exposure to capital ratio is calculated using risk based capital (tier one plus tier two capital). Note: Currently, the Call Report does not differentiate credit derivatives by contract type. Credit derivatives have been included in the sum of total derivatives here. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Note: Beginning in 2Q09, the methodology to calculate the Credit Risk Exposure to Capital ratio for the aggregated categories (Top 25, Other and Overall Total) was adjusted to a summing methodology. Data source: Call Reports, Schedule RC-R.
TABLE 5 NOTIONAL AMOUNTS OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS HELD FOR TRADING TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $69,151,676 52,604,725 50,058,506 45,902,411 3,738,920 $221,456,238 10,834,121 232,290,359
TOTAL HELD FOR TRADING & MTM $68,912,077 52,292,492 47,684,443 45,895,235 3,700,918 $218,485,165 9,487,756 227,972,921
% HELD FOR TRADING & MTM 99.7 99.4 95.3 100.0 99.0 98.7 87.6 98.1
TOTAL % NOT FOR NOT FOR TRADING TRADING MTM MTM $239,599 0.3 312,233 0.6 2,374,062 4.7 7,176 0.0 38,002 1.0 $2,971,073 1,346,365 4,317,438 1.3 12.4 1.9
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Currently, the Call Report does not differentiate between traded and not-traded credit derivatives. Credit derivatives have been excluded from the sum of total derivatives here. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L
TABLE 6 GROSS FAIR VALUES OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
TRADING GROSS GROSS POSITIVE NEGATIVE FAIR VALUE* FAIR VALUE** $1,809,428 $1,766,226 1,060,343 1,044,452 1,347,226 1,337,295 883,989 833,483 86,492 86,652 $5,187,478 196,718 5,384,197 $5,068,107 198,502 5,266,609
NOT FOR TRADING GROSS GROSS POSITIVE NEGATIVE FAIR VALUE* FAIR VALUE** $9,796 $2,951 9,130 11,209 98,579 98,784 642 5 75 1,840 $118,222 28,175 146,396 $114,789 15,849 130,638
CREDIT DERIVATIVES GROSS GROSS POSITIVE NEGATIVE FAIR VALUE* FAIR VALUE** $196,579 $192,472 104,253 97,510 145,810 141,616 17,541 16,679 18,396 17,882 $482,579 7,649 490,228 $466,159 7,274 473,434
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Currently, the Call Report does not differentiate between traded and non-traded credit derivatives. Credit derivatives have been included in the sum of total derivatives here. Numbers may not sum due to rounding. *Market value of contracts that have a positive fair value as of the end of the quarter. **Market value of contracts that have a negative fair value as of the end of the quarter. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L
TABLE 7 TRADING REVENUES FROM CASH INSTRUMENTS AND DERIVATIVES TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS NOTE: REVENUE FIGURES ARE FOR THE QUARTER (NOT YEAR-TO-DATE)
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
TOTAL TRADING REV FROM CASH & OFF BAL SHEET POSITIONS $7,808 2,688 1,591 706 (79) $12,714 402 13,116
TRADING REV FROM INT RATE POSITIONS $5,337 1,287 922 (675) 77 $6,948 (159) 6,789
TRADING REV FROM FOREIGN EXCH POSITIONS $87 880 199 672 (145) $1,693 902 2,595
TRADING REV FROM EQUITY POSITIONS $1,155 80 143 0 125 $1,504 31 1,534
TRADING REV FROM COMMOD & OTH POSITIONS $452 (9) 44 0 41 $528 37 565
TRADING REV FROM CREDIT POSITIONS $777 450 282 709 (177) $2,041 (408) 1,633
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Effective in the first quarter of 2007, trading revenues from credit exposures are reported separately, along with the four other types of exposures. The total derivatives column includes credit exposures. Note: Trading revenue is defined here as "trading revenue from cash instruments and off balance sheet derivative instruments." Note: Numbers may not sum due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RI
TABLE 8 NOTIONAL AMOUNTS OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS BY CONTRACT TYPE & MATURITY TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
INT RATE MATURITY < 1 YR $34,281,105 23,778,798 11,405,780 23,552,984 752,965 $93,771,632 1,598,905 95,370,537
INT RATE MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS $9,010,570 7,819,928 6,541,232 8,325,277 1,095,817 $32,792,823 1,335,526 34,128,350
INT RATE MATURITY > 5 YRS $6,497,240 5,429,341 4,722,459 6,889,924 558,235 $24,097,198 867,583 24,964,781
INT RATE ALL MATURITIES $49,788,915 37,028,067 22,669,470 38,768,185 2,407,016 $150,661,653 3,802,015 154,463,668
FOREIGN EXCH MATURITY < 1 YR $6,649,067 4,909,369 3,058,282 435,681 615,382 $15,667,781 3,551,993 19,219,774
FOREIGN EXCH MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS $703,704 409,326 725,333 786,612 123,900 $2,748,875 241,427 2,990,302
FOREIGN EXCH MATURITY > 5 YRS $219,769 160,469 342,467 664,563 50,037 $1,437,305 37,108 1,474,413
FOREIGN EXCH ALL MATURITIES $7,572,540 5,479,164 4,126,083 1,886,856 789,319 $19,853,961 3,830,528 23,684,489
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Figures above exclude any contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements, such as foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, and basis swaps. Therefore, the total notional amount of derivatives by maturity will not add to the total derivatives figure in this table. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-R
TABLE 9 NOTIONAL AMOUNTS OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS BY CONTRACT TYPE & MATURITY TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Figures above exclude any contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements, such as foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, and basis swaps. Therefore, the total notional amount of derivatives by maturity will not add to the total derivatives figure in this table. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-R
TABLE 10 NOTIONAL AMOUNTS OF DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS BY CONTRACT TYPE & MATURITY TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
OTHER COMM MATURITY < 1 YR $207,784 40,433 4,771 13,396 161 $266,545 30,547 297,093
OTHER COMM MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS $189,063 17,037 737 0 0 $206,837 21,710 228,547
OTHER COMM MATURITY > 5 YRS $25,270 973 0 0 0 $26,243 2,142 28,385
OTHER COMM ALL MATURITIES $422,117 58,443 5,508 13,396 161 $499,625 54,399 554,024
EQUITY MATURITY < 1 YR $222,244 97,342 27,880 0 6,897 $354,363 20,996 375,359
EQUITY MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS $145,349 48,273 18,347 24 7,365 $219,358 22,616 241,974
EQUITY MATURITY > 5 YRS $43,464 28,422 15,403 76 4,313 $91,677 6,066 97,743
EQUITY ALL MATURITIES $411,057 174,037 61,629 100 18,575 $665,399 49,678 715,077
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Figures above exclude any contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements, such as foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, and basis swaps. Therefore, the total notional amount of derivatives by maturity will not add to the total derivatives figure in this table. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-R
TABLE 11 NOTIONAL AMOUNTS OF CREDIT DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS BY CONTRACT TYPE & MATURITY TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN
STATE OH SD NC NY VA
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 $4,901,666 6,243,915 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $75,351,583 55,607,201 55,123,036 46,453,719 4,441,859 $236,977,398 10,974,144 247,951,541
TOTAL CREDIT DERIVATIVES $6,199,907 3,002,476 5,064,530 551,308 702,939 $15,521,160 140,022 15,661,183
MATURITY < 1 YR $494,631 168,328 354,646 34,429 53,065 $1,105,099 14,180 1,119,279
CREDIT DERIVATIVES INVESTMENT GRADE MATURITY MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS > 5 YRS $2,843,232 $881,959 918,904 216,767 2,321,671 519,951 190,955 34,207 189,599 33,931 $6,464,361 43,129 6,507,491 $1,686,815 12,089 1,698,904
ALL MATURITIES $4,219,822 1,303,999 3,196,269 259,591 276,594 $9,256,275 69,399 9,325,674
MATURITY < 1 YR $393,150 218,227 238,733 85,005 79,683 $1,014,798 9,453 1,024,250
CREDIT DERIVATIVES SUB-INVESTMENT GRADE MATURITY MATURITY 1 - 5 YRS > 5 YRS $1,236,549 $350,386 1,193,880 286,370 1,190,085 439,445 191,658 15,054 282,088 64,573 $4,094,260 36,956 4,131,216 $1,155,827 24,215 1,180,043
ALL MATURITIES $1,980,085 1,698,477 1,868,262 291,717 426,345 $6,264,885 70,624 6,335,509
TOP 5 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
Note: Figures above exclude any contracts not subject to risk-based capital requirements, such as foreign exchange contracts with an original maturity of 14 days or less, futures contracts, written options, and basis swaps. Therefore, the total notional amount of derivatives by maturity will not add to the total derivatives figure in this table. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Note: Beginning in 2Q10, HSBC replaced Wells Fargo as one of the top five commerical banks in derivatives. See Table 1. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L and RC-R
TABLE 12 DISTRIBUTION OF CREDIT DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS AND TRUST COMPANIES IN DERIVATIVES SEPTEMBER 30, 2011, $ MILLIONS
RANK 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
BANK NAME JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NA CITIBANK NATIONAL ASSN BANK OF AMERICA NA GOLDMAN SACHS BANK USA HSBC BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN WELLS FARGO BANK NA MORGAN STANLEY BANK NA STATE STREET BANK&TRUST CO BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON PNC BANK NATIONAL ASSN SUNTRUST BANK NORTHERN TRUST CO REGIONS BANK U S BANK NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK NATIONAL ASSN FIFTH THIRD BANK BRANCH BANKING&TRUST CO KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSN UNION BANK NATIONAL ASSN ALLY BANK RBS CITIZENS NATIONAL ASSN BOKF NATIONAL ASSN TD BANK USA NATIONAL ASSN DEUTSCHE BANK TR CO AMERICAS BMO HARRIS BANK NA
STATE OH SD NC NY VA SD UT MA NY DE GA IL AL OH DE OH NC OH CA UT RI OK ME NY IL
TOTAL ASSETS $1,826,387 1,300,674 1,466,417 104,514 203,675 1,142,254 66,793 203,490 251,529 261,236 166,486 83,195 125,488 319,449 187,535 112,475 162,170 86,565 83,539 79,376 107,564 24,859 13,404 45,806 94,206 $8,519,086 2,626,495 11,145,581
TOTAL DERIVATIVES $69,151,676 52,604,725 50,058,506 45,902,411 3,738,920 3,829,231 2,040,486 1,469,139 1,405,019 371,462 299,346 264,217 156,195 109,525 74,150 70,515 70,831 64,622 50,751 44,081 39,769 32,494 32,151 24,057 27,513 $231,931,793 358,565 232,290,359
TOTAL CREDIT DERVATIVES $6,199,907 3,002,476 5,064,530 551,308 702,939 92,141 23,982 105 471 3,572 3,555 86 623 2,563 1,825 1,017 0 2,951 60 0 881 0 0 3,948 93 $15,659,034 2,149 15,661,183 (%) 100.0 0.0 100.0
TOTAL CREDIT DERIVATIVES BOUGHT $3,069,938 1,551,949 2,555,133 325,334 343,281 46,333 21,705 105 469 1,740 1,994 86 115 870 1,766 296 0 1,557 0 0 0 0 0 3,948 51 $7,926,670 1,289 7,927,958 (%) 50.6 0.0 50.6 SOLD $3,129,969 1,450,527 2,509,397 225,974 359,658 45,808 2,277 0 2 1,832 1,562 0 508 1,693 59 722 0 1,394 60 0 881 0 0 0 42 $7,732,364 860 7,733,224 (%) 49.4 0.0 49.4
CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS $3,027,703 1,517,593 2,533,223 260,149 330,358 42,678 21,705 105 469 330 614 86 0 413 1,766 0 0 1,557 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 $7,738,751 30 7,738,781 (%) 49.4 0.0 49.4
BOUGHT TOTAL RETURN CREDIT SWAPS OPTIONS $14,931 $17,724 27,815 6,541 416 21,494 4,410 4,168 12,923 0 150 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,378 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,948 0 0 0 $65,971 55 66,026 (%) 0.4 0.0 0.4 $49,927 0 49,927 (%) 0.3 0.0 0.3
SOLD OTHER CREDIT DERIVATIVES $9,580 0 0 56,607 0 3,505 0 0 0 1,410 1 0 115 458 0 296 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 48 $72,021 1,204 73,224 (%) 0.5 0.0 0.5 CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS $3,035,539 1,437,144 2,489,474 218,444 342,423 41,430 2,277 0 2 164 177 0 0 250 59 0 0 1,269 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 $7,568,656 46 7,568,703 (%) 48.3 0.0 48.3 TOTAL RETURN SWAPS $314 4,566 1,554 4,434 17,235 385 0 0 0 0 1,378 0 0 0 0 0 0 125 60 0 0 0 0 0 0 $30,050 0 30,050 (%) 0.2 0.0 0.2 CREDIT OPTIONS $17,394 8,817 18,370 3,089 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 $47,670 0 47,670 (%) 0.3 0.0 0.3 OTHER CREDIT DERIVATIVES $76,722 0 0 7 0 3,993 0 0 0 1,668 6 0 508 1,443 0 722 0 0 0 0 881 0 0 0 38 $85,988 814 86,802 (%) 0.5 0.0 0.6
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES
TOP 25 COMMERCIAL BANKS & TC: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BANKS &TCs WITH DERIVATIVES OTHER COMMERCIAL BANKS & TCs: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BANKs & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES TOTAL AMOUNT FOR COMMERCIAL BANKs & TCs: % OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL BANKs & TCs WITH DERIVATIVES Note: Credit derivatives have been excluded from the sum of total derivatives here. Note: Numbers may not add due to rounding. Data source: Call Reports, schedule RC-L