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Watchlist
Account
U.S. Bancorp
USB
#256
Rank
$89.19 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$57.36
Share price
2.23%
Change (1 day)
25.21%
Change (1 year)
๐ฆ Banks
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Annual Reports (10-K)
U.S. Bancorp
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2023 Q3
U.S. Bancorp - 10-Q quarterly report FY2023 Q3
Text size:
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Table of Contents
US BANCORP \DE\
Yes
Yes
false
Q3
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--12-31
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#FeesAndCommissionsMortgageBankingAndServicing
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#FeesAndCommissionsMortgageBankingAndServicing
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#FeesAndCommissionsMortgageBankingAndServicing
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#FeesAndCommissionsMortgageBankingAndServicing
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#ReclassificationFromAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeCurrentPeriodBeforeTax
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#ReclassificationFromAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeCurrentPeriodBeforeTax
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#ReclassificationFromAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeCurrentPeriodBeforeTax
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#ReclassificationFromAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeCurrentPeriodBeforeTax
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#NoninterestIncome
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#NoninterestIncome
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#NoninterestIncome
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2023#NoninterestIncome
Includes only collateral pledged by the Company where counterparties have the right to sell or pledge the collateral.
Information related to obligations of state and political subdivisions is presented based upon yield to first optional call date if the security is purchased at a premium, and yield to maturity if the security is purchased at par or a discount.
Maturity calculations for obligations of state and political subdivisions are based on the first optional call date for securities with a fair value above par and the contractual maturity date for securities with a fair value equal to or below par.
Information related to asset and mortgage-backed securities included above is presented based upon weighted-average maturities that take into account anticipated future prepayments.
The weighted-average maturity of total held-to-maturity investment securities was 9.2 years at December 31, 2022, with a corresponding weighted-average yield of 2.18 percent. The weighted-average maturity of total available-for-sale investment securities was 7.4 years at December 31, 2022, with a corresponding weighted-average yield of 2.94 percent.
Weighted-average yields for obligations of state and political subdivisions are presented on a fully-taxable equivalent basis based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent. Yields on investment securities are computed based on amortized cost balances, excluding any premiums or discounts recorded related to the transfer of investment securities at fair value from available-for-sale to held-to-maturity.
Amortized cost excludes portfolio level basis adjustments of $(95) million.
At September 30, 2023, $558 million of loans 30–89 days past due and $2.0 billion of loans 90 days or more past due purchased and that could be purchased from Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”) mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, were classified as current, compared with $647 million and $2.2 billion at December 31, 2022, respectively.
Substantially all nonperforming loans at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, had an associated allowance for credit losses. The Company recognized interest income on nonperforming loans of $5 million and $4 million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $12 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022.
The par value of all shares issued and outstanding at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, was $1.00 per share.
Classified rating on consumer loans primarily based on delinquency status.
Represents the impact of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on the Company’s investment in foreign operations and related hedges.
At September 30, 2023, $263 million of loans 30-89 days past due and $64 million of loans 90 days or more past due purchased and that could be purchased from GNMA mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose payments are insured by the Federal Housing administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, were classified as current.
Represents loans receiving a payment delay and term extension for three months ended September 30, 2023. Includes $7 million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension and $1 million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for the nine months ended September 30, 2023.
Represents fair value hedge basis adjustments related to active portfolio layer method hedges of available-for-sale investment securities, which are not allocated to individual securities in the portfolio. For additional information, refer to note 13.
Includes $91 million of charge-offs in the first quarter of 2023 related to uncollectible amounts on acquired loans.
Includes $192 million of charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023.
Predominately all credit card loans are considered revolving loans. Includes an immaterial amount of revolving converted to term loans.
At September 30, 2023, $2.0 billion of GNMA loans 90 days or more past due and $963 million of modified GNMA loans whose repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs were classified with a pass rating, compared with $2.2 billion and $1.0 billion at December 31, 2022, respectively.
Determined based on the relative fair value of the related mortgage loans serviced.
Determined based on the relative fair value of the related mortgage loans.
Represents allowance for credit deteriorated and charged-off loans acquired from MUB.
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance which removed the separate recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings.
Service cost is included in compensation and employee benefits expense on the Consolidated Statement of Income. All other components are included in other noninterest expense on the Consolidated Statement of Income.
Includes an immaterial amount of revolving converted to term loans.
Includes $126 million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension, $9 million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction and term extension and $2 million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for three months ended September 30, 2023. Includes $268 million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension, $14 million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction and term extension and $7 million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for nine months ended September 30, 2023.
Represents $3.5 billion of noninterest-bearing additional cash held by MUB upon close of the acquisition to be delivered to MUFG on or prior to December 1, 2027, discounted at the Company’s 5-year unsecured borrowing rate as of the acquisition date, per authoritative accounting guidance.
Includes $117 million of charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023.
Percent of class total amounts expressed as a percent of total residential mortgage loan balances.
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Table of Contents
Table of Contents
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
Form
10-Q
☑
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
September 30,
2023
OR
☐
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from (not applicable)
Commission file number
1-6880
U.S. BANCORP
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware
41-0255900
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
800 Nicollet Mall
Minneapolis
,
Minnesota
55402
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
651
-
466-3000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
(not applicable)
(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each class
Trading
symbols
Name of each exchange
on which registered
Common Stock
, $.01 par value per share
USB
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/100th interest in a share of Series A
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrA
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/1,000th interest in a share of Series B
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrH
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/1,000th interest in a share of Series K
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrP
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/1,000th interest in a share of Series L
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrQ
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/1,000th interest in a share of Series M
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrR
New York Stock Exchange
Depositary Shares
(each representing 1/1,000th interest in a share of Series O
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock, par value $1.00)
USB PrS
New York Stock Exchange
0.850%
Medium-Term Notes
, Series X (Senior), due June 7, 2024
USB/24B
New York Stock Exchange
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months, and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
YES
☑ NO ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of
Regulation S-T
during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).
YES
☑ NO ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a
non-accelerated
filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in
Rule 12b-2
of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer
☑
Accelerated filer ☐
Non-accelerated
filer ☐
Smaller reporting company
☐
Emerging growth company
☐
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule
12b-2
of the Exchange Act).
YES ☐ NO
☑
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer’s classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.
Class
Outstanding as of October 31, 2023
Common Stock, $0.01 Par Value
1,557,012,406
shares
Table of Contents
Table of Contents and
Form 10-Q
Cross Reference Index
Part I — Financial Information
1) Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (Item 2)
4
a) Overview
4
b) Statement of Income Analysis
5
c) Balance Sheet Analysis
7
d)
Non-GAAP
Financial Measures
32
e) Critical Accounting Policies
33
f) Controls and Procedures (Item 4)
33
2) Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk/Corporate Risk Profile (Item 3)
9
a) Overview
9
b) Credit Risk Management
10
c) Residual Value Risk Management
21
d) Operational Risk Management
21
e) Compliance Risk Management
21
f) Interest Rate Risk Management
21
g) Market Risk Management
23
h) Liquidity Risk Management
24
i) Capital Management
26
3) Line of Business Financial Review
27
4) Financial Statements (Item 1)
34
Part II — Other Information
1) Legal Proceedings (Item 1)
82
2) Risk Factors (Item 1A)
82
3) Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds (Item 2)
82
4) Exhibits (Item 6)
82
5) Signature
83
6) Exhibits
84
“Safe Harbor” Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
This quarterly report on
Form 10-Q
contains forward-looking statements about U.S. Bancorp. Statements that are not historical or current facts, including statements about beliefs and expectations, are forward-looking statements and are based on the information available to, and assumptions and estimates made by, management as of the date hereof. These forward-looking statements cover, among other things, future economic conditions and the anticipated future revenue, expenses, financial condition, asset quality, capital and liquidity levels, plans, prospects and operations of U.S. Bancorp. Forward-looking statements often use words such as “anticipates,” “targets,” “expects,” “hopes,” “estimates,” “projects,” “forecasts,” “intends,” “plans,” “goals,” “believes,” “continue” and other similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as “will,” “may,” “might,” “should,” “would” and “could.”
Forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in forward-looking statements, including the following risks and uncertainties:
•
Deterioration in general business and economic conditions or turbulence in domestic or global financial markets, which could adversely affect U.S. Bancorp’s revenues and the values of its assets and liabilities, reduce the availability of funding to certain financial institutions, lead to a tightening of credit, and increase stock price volatility;
•
Turmoil and volatility in the financial services industry, including failures or rumors of failures of other depository institutions, which could affect the ability of depository institutions, including U.S. Bank National Association, to attract and retain depositors, and could affect the ability of financial services providers, including U.S. Bancorp, to borrow or raise capital;
•
Increases in Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) assessments due to bank failures;
•
Actions taken by governmental agencies to stabilize the financial system and the effectiveness of such actions;
•
Changes to regulatory capital, liquidity and resolution-related requirements applicable to large banking organizations in response to recent developments affecting the banking sector;
•
Changes to statutes, regulations, or regulatory policies or practices, including capital and liquidity requirements, and the enforcement and interpretation of such laws and regulations, and U.S. Bancorp’s ability to address or satisfy those requirements and other requirements or conditions imposed by regulatory entities;
U.S. Bancorp
1
Table of Contents
•
Changes in interest rates;
•
Increases in unemployment rates;
•
Deterioration in the credit quality of its loan portfolios or in the value of the collateral securing those loans;
•
Risks related to originating and selling mortgages, including repurchase and indemnity demands, and related to U.S. Bancorp’s role as a loan servicer;
•
Impacts of current, pending or future litigation and governmental proceedings;
•
Increased competition from both banks and
non-banks;
•
Effects of climate change and related physical and transition risks;
•
Changes in customer behavior and preferences and the ability to implement technological changes to respond to customer needs and meet competitive demands;
•
Breaches in data security;
•
Failures or disruptions in or breaches of U.S. Bancorp’s operational, technology or security systems or infrastructure, or those of third parties;
•
Failures to safeguard personal information;
•
Impacts of pandemics, including the
COVID-19
pandemic, natural disasters, terrorist activities, civil unrest, international hostilities and geopolitical events;
•
Impacts of supply chain disruptions, rising inflation, slower growth or a recession;
•
Failure to execute on strategic or operational plans;
•
Effects of mergers and acquisitions and related integration;
•
Effects of critical accounting policies and judgments;
•
Effects of changes in or interpretations of tax laws and regulations;
•
Management’s ability to effectively manage credit risk, market risk, operational risk, compliance risk, strategic risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk and reputation risk; and
•
The risks and uncertainties more fully discussed in the section entitled “Risk Factors” of U.S. Bancorp’s Form
10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, and subsequent filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
In addition, U.S. Bancorp’s acquisition of MUFG Union Bank, N.A. (“MUB”) presents risks and uncertainties, including, among others: the risk that the cost savings, any revenue synergies and other anticipated benefits of the acquisition may not be realized or may take longer than anticipated to be realized; and the possibility that the combination of MUB with U.S. Bancorp, including the integration of MUB, may be more costly or difficult to complete than anticipated or have unanticipated adverse results.
In addition, factors other than these risks also could adversely affect U.S. Bancorp’s results, and the reader should not consider these risks to be a complete set of all potential risks or uncertainties. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date hereof, and U.S. Bancorp undertakes no obligation to update them in light of new information or future events.
2
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Table 1
Selected Financial Data
Three Months Ended September 30
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars and Shares in Millions, Except Per Share Data)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income
$
4,236
$
3,827
10.7
%
$
13,285
$
10,435
27.3
%
Taxable-equivalent adjustment (a)
32
30
6.7
100
86
16.3
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis) (b)
4,268
3,857
10.7
13,385
10,521
27.2
Noninterest income
2,764
2,469
11.9
7,997
7,413
7.9
Total net revenue
7,032
6,326
11.2
21,382
17,934
19.2
Noninterest expense
4,530
3,637
24.6
13,654
10,863
25.7
Provision for credit losses
515
362
42.3
1,763
785
*
Income before taxes
1,987
2,327
(14.6
)
5,965
6,286
(5.1
)
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
463
511
(9.4
)
1,368
1,378
(.7
)
Net income
1,524
1,816
(16.1
)
4,597
4,908
(6.3
)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(1
)
(4
)
75.0
(15
)
(8
)
(87.5
)
Net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
1,523
$
1,812
(15.9
)
$
4,582
$
4,900
(6.5
)
Net income applicable to U.S. Bancorp common shareholders
$
1,412
$
1,718
(17.8
)
$
4,285
$
4,648
(7.8
)
Per Common Share
Earnings per share
$
.91
$
1.16
(21.6
)%
$
2.79
$
3.13
(10.9
)%
Diluted earnings per share
.91
1.16
(21.6
)
2.79
3.13
(10.9
)
Dividends declared per share
.48
.48
—
1.44
1.40
2.9
Book value per share (c)
29.74
27.39
8.6
Market value per share
33.06
40.32
(18.0
)
Average common shares outstanding
1,548
1,486
4.2
1,538
1,485
3.6
Average diluted common shares outstanding
1,549
1,486
4.2
1,538
1,486
3.5
Financial Ratios
Return on average assets
.91
%
1.22
%
.92
%
1.13
%
Return on average common equity
11.9
15.8
12.3
14.1
Net interest margin (taxable-equivalent basis) (a)
2.81
2.83
2.94
2.62
Efficiency ratio (b)
64.4
57.5
63.8
60.7
Net charge-offs as a percent of average loans outstanding
.44
.19
.50
.20
Average Balances
Loans
$
376,877
$
336,778
11.9
%
$
384,112
$
324,731
18.3
%
Loans held for sale
2,661
3,499
(23.9
)
2,564
4,214
(39.2
)
Investment securities (d)
163,236
164,851
(1.0
)
163,051
170,267
(4.2
)
Earning assets
605,245
541,666
11.7
608,891
536,131
13.6
Assets
663,999
588,764
12.8
667,481
582,067
14.7
Noninterest-bearing deposits
97,524
114,044
(14.5
)
113,556
120,893
(6.1
)
Deposits
512,291
456,769
12.2
506,633
455,829
11.1
Short-term borrowings
27,550
29,034
(5.1
)
39,364
23,825
65.2
Long-term debt
43,826
31,814
37.8
42,551
32,055
32.7
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
53,817
49,820
8.0
53,440
50,804
5.2
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Period End Balances
Loans
$
375,234
$
388,213
(3.3
)%
Investment securities
152,549
161,650
(5.6
)
Assets
668,039
674,805
(1.0
)
Deposits
518,358
524,976
(1.3
)
Long-term debt
43,074
39,829
8.1
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
53,113
50,766
4.6
Asset Quality
Nonperforming assets
$
1,310
$
1,016
28.9
%
Allowance for credit losses
7,790
7,404
5.2
Allowance for credit losses as a percentage of
period-end
loans
2.08
%
1.91
%
Capital Ratios
Common equity tier 1 capital
9.7
%
8.4
%
Tier 1 capital
11.2
9.8
Total risk-based capital
13.4
11.9
Leverage
7.9
7.9
Total leverage exposure
6.4
6.4
Tangible common equity to tangible assets (b)
5.0
4.5
Tangible common equity to risk-weighted assets (b)
7.0
6.0
Common equity tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets, reflecting the full implementation of the current expected credit losses methodology (b)
9.5
8.1
*
Not meaningful
(a)
Based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent for those assets and liabilities whose income or expense is not included for federal income tax purposes.
(b)
See
Non-GAAP
Financial Measures beginning on page 32.
(c)
Calculated as U.S. Bancorp common shareholders’ equity divided by common shares outstanding at end of the period.
(d)
Excludes unrealized gains and losses on
available-for-sale
investment securities and any premiums or discounts recorded related to the transfer of investment securities at fair value from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity.
U.S. Bancorp
3
Table of Contents
Management’s Discussion and Analysis
OVERVIEW
Earnings Summary
U.S. Bancorp and its subsidiaries (the “Company”) reported net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp of $1.5 billion for the third quarter of 2023, or $0.91 per diluted common share, compared with $1.8 billion, or $1.16 per diluted common share, for the third quarter of 2022. Return on average assets and return on average common equity were 0.91 percent and 11.9 percent, respectively, for the third quarter of 2023, compared with 1.22 percent and 15.8 percent, respectively, for the third quarter of 2022. The results for the third quarter of 2023 included the impact of $284 million of merger and integration-related charges associated with the acquisition of MUFG Union Bank, N.A. (“MUB”), which decreased diluted earnings per common share by $0.14.
Total net revenue for the third quarter of 2023 was $706 million (11.2 percent) higher than the third quarter of 2022, reflecting a 10.7 percent increase in net interest income and an 11.9 percent increase in noninterest income. The increase in net interest income from the third quarter of 2022 was primarily due to the impacts of rising interest rates on earning assets and the MUB acquisition. The increase in noninterest income reflected higher commercial products revenue, mortgage banking revenue, payment services revenue and trust and investment management fees.
Noninterest expense in the third quarter of 2023 was $893 million (24.6 percent) higher than the third quarter of 2022, reflecting merger and integration charges and operating expenses related to the MUB acquisition, including core deposit intangible amortization expense, as well as increases in compensation and employee benefits expense to support business growth.
The provision for credit losses for the third quarter of 2023 of $515 million was $153 million (42.3 percent) higher than the third quarter of 2022, driven by normalizing credit losses and commercial real estate credit quality. Net charge-offs in the third quarter of 2023 were $420 million, compared with $162 million in the third quarter of 2022. Refer to “Corporate Risk Profile” for further information on the provision for credit losses, net charge-offs, nonperforming assets and other factors considered by the Company in assessing the credit quality of the loan portfolio and establishing the allowance for credit losses.
Net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp for the first nine months of 2023 was $4.6 billion, or $2.79 per diluted common share, compared with $4.9 billion, or $3.13 per diluted common share, for the first nine months of 2022. Return on average assets and return on average common equity were 0.92 percent and 12.3 percent, respectively, for the first nine months of 2023, compared with 1.13 percent and 14.1 percent, respectively, for the first nine months of 2022. The results for the first nine months of 2023 included the impact of $838 million of merger and integration-related charges, $243 million of provision for credit losses and an additional $22 million of losses related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions. Combined, these items decreased diluted earnings per common share by $0.53.
Total net revenue for the first nine months of 2023 was $3.4 billion (19.2 percent) higher than the first nine months of 2022, reflecting a 27.3 percent increase in net interest income (27.2 percent on a taxable-equivalent basis) and a 7.9 percent increase in noninterest income. The increase in net interest income from the first nine months of 2022 was primarily due to the impacts of rising interest rates on earning assets and the MUB acquisition. The increase in noninterest income reflected higher commercial products revenue, trust and investment management fees and payment services revenue, partially offset by losses on securities.
Noninterest expense in the first nine months of 2023 was $2.8 billion (25.7 percent) higher than the first nine months of 2022, reflecting merger and integration charges and operating expenses related to the MUB acquisition, including core deposit intangible amortization expense, as well as increases in compensation and employee benefits expense to support business growth.
The provision for credit losses for the first nine months of 2023 of $1.8 billion was $978 million higher than the first nine months of 2022, driven by the impacts of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions, normalizing credit losses and increased economic uncertainty. Net charge-offs in the first nine months of 2023 were $1.4 billion, compared with $485 million in the first nine months of 2022. Refer to “Corporate Risk Profile” for further information on the provision for credit losses, net charge-offs, nonperforming assets and
4
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
other factors considered by the Company in assessing the credit quality of the loan portfolio and establishing the allowance for credit losses.
MUFG Union Bank Acquisition
On December 1, 2022, the Company acquired MUB’s core regional banking franchise from Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. (“MUFG”). Pursuant to the terms of the Share Purchase Agreement, the Company acquired all of the issued and outstanding shares of common stock of MUB for a purchase price consisting of $5.5 billion in cash and approximately 44 million shares of the Company’s common stock. The Company also received additional MUB cash of $3.5 billion upon completion of the acquisition, which is required to be repaid to MUFG on or prior to the fifth anniversary date of the completion of the purchase. On August 3, 2023, the Company completed a debt/equity conversion with MUFG. As a result, the Company repaid $936 million of its debt obligation from the proceeds of the issuance of 24 million shares of common stock of the Company to an affiliate of MUFG (the “Debt/Equity Conversion”). After the Debt/Equity Conversion, the Company had a remaining repayment obligation of $2.6 billion. On May 26, 2023, the Company merged MUB into U.S. Bank National Association (“USBNA”), the Company’s primary banking subsidiary. The Company’s results for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 reflect the full financial results of the acquired business.
STATEMENT OF INCOME ANALYSIS
Net Interest Income
Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis, was $4.3 billion in the third quarter and $13.4 billion in the first nine months of 2023, representing increases of $411 million (10.7 percent) and $2.9 billion (27.2 percent), respectively, compared with the same periods of 2022. The increases were primarily due to the impact of rising interest rates on earning assets and the acquisition of MUB. Average earning assets for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $63.6 billion (11.7 percent) and $72.8 billion (13.6 percent) higher, respectively, than the same periods of 2022, reflecting increases in loans and interest-bearing deposits with banks, partially offset by a decrease in investment securities. The net interest margin, on a taxable-equivalent basis, in the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 was 2.81 percent and 2.94 percent, respectively, compared with 2.83 percent and 2.62 percent in the third quarter and first nine months of 2022, respectively. The decrease in net interest margin in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, was primarily due to the impact of deposit mix and pricing, partially offset by the impact of higher rates on earning assets and the acquisition of MUB. The increase in net interest margin in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same period of the 2022, was primarily due to the impact of higher rates on earning assets and the acquisition of MUB, partially offset by the impact of deposit mix and pricing. Refer to the “Consolidated Daily Average Balance Sheet and Related Yields and Rates” table for further information on net interest income.
Average total loans in the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $40.1 billion (11.9 percent) and $59.4 billion (18.3 percent) higher, respectively, than the same periods of 2022. The increases were driven by growth in the Company’s legacy loan portfolio as well as balances from the MUB acquisition. Increases in residential mortgages, commercial real estate loans, commercial loans and credit card loans were partially offset by lower other retail loans. The increase in residential mortgages was driven by the impact related to the MUB acquisition, along with
on-balance
sheet loan activities and slower refinancing activity, partially offset by the impact of a sale of residential mortgages in the second quarter of 2023 as part of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions. The increase in commercial loans was primarily due to higher utilization driven by working capital needs of corporate customers, slower payoffs given higher volatility in the capital markets, as well as core growth and the impact related to the MUB acquisition. The increase in commercial real estate loans was driven by the impact of the MUB acquisition, while the increase in credit cards loans was primarily driven by higher spend volume and lower payment rates. The decrease in other retail loans was driven by lower auto loans primarily due to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions, along with lower installment loans and lower retail leasing balances, partially offset by higher home equity and second mortgages.
Average investment securities in the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $1.6 billion (1.0 percent) and $7.2 billion (4.2 percent) lower, respectively, than the same periods of 2022, driven by balance sheet repositioning and liquidity management in connection with the acquisition of MUB. The decrease from the prior year reflected sales of investment securities, partially offset by the impact of acquired MUB investment securities.
Average total deposits for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $55.5 billion (12.2 percent) and $50.8 billion (11.1 percent) higher, respectively, than the same periods of 2022. Average total savings deposits for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were
U.S. Bancorp
5
Table of Contents
Table 2
Noninterest Income
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Card revenue
$
412
$
391
5.4
%
$
1,194
$
1,128
5.9
%
Corporate payment products revenue
198
190
4.2
577
520
11.0
Merchant processing services
427
406
5.2
1,250
1,194
4.7
Trust and investment management fees
627
572
9.6
1,838
1,638
12.2
Service charges
334
317
5.4
982
984
(.2
)
Commercial products revenue
354
285
24.2
1,046
841
24.4
Mortgage banking revenue
144
81
77.8
403
423
(4.7
)
Investment products fees
70
56
25.0
206
177
16.4
Securities gains (losses), net
—
1
*
(29
)
38
*
Other
198
170
16.5
530
470
12.8
Total noninterest income
$
2,764
$
2,469
11.9
%
$
7,997
$
7,413
7.9
%
*
Not meaningful
$53.5 billion (17.5 percent) and $42.7 billion (14.0 percent) higher, respectively, than the same periods of 2022, driven by increases in Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking, and Consumer and Business Banking balances, including the impact of the MUB acquisition. Average time deposits for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $18.5 billion (51.2 percent) and $15.4 billion (52.6 percent) higher, respectively, than the same periods of the prior year, mainly due to the acquisition of MUB and increases in Consumer and Business Banking balances, partially offset by decreases in Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances. Changes in time deposits are primarily related to those deposits managed as an alternative to other funding sources, based largely on relative pricing and liquidity characteristics. Average noninterest-bearing deposits for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 were $16.5 billion (14.5 percent) and $7.3 billion (6.1 percent) lower, respectively, than the same periods of 2022, driven by decreases in Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances, partially offset by the impact of the MUB acquisition. Average noninterest-bearing deposits further decreased in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, due to decreases in Consumer and Business Banking balances.
Provision for Credit Losses
The provision for credit losses was $515 million in the third quarter and $1.8 billion in the first nine months of 2023, representing increases of $153 million (42.3 percent) and $978 million, respectively, from the same periods of 2022. The increases were driven by normalizing credit losses, commercial real estate credit quality and increased economic uncertainty. The provision for credit losses further increased in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same period of the prior year, due to the impact of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023. Net charge-offs increased $258 million in the third quarter and $957 million in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, reflecting higher charge-offs in most loan categories consistent with normalizing credit conditions and adverse conditions in commercial real estate. In addition, net charge-offs were higher in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of the prior year, due to charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions, along with charge-offs in the first quarter of 2023 related to the uncollectible amount of acquired loans, which were considered purchased credit deteriorated as of the date of the MUB acquisition. Refer to “Corporate Risk Profile” for further information on the provision for credit losses, net charge-offs, nonperforming assets and other factors considered by the Company in assessing the credit quality of the loan portfolio and establishing the allowance for credit losses.
Noninterest Income
Noninterest income was $2.8 billion in the third quarter and $8.0 billion in the first nine months of 2023, representing increases of $295 million (11.9 percent) and $584 million (7.9 percent), respectively, compared with the same periods of 2022. The increases over the prior year reflected stronger commercial products revenue, trust and investment management fees, payment services revenue and other noninterest income. The increase in noninterest income in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same period of the prior year, was partially offset by losses on the sale of securities. Commercial products revenue increased primarily due to higher trading revenue, commercial loan fees, corporate bond fees and the acquisition of MUB. Trust and investment management fees increased primarily due to the acquisition of MUB and core business growth. Payment services revenue increased due to higher card revenue driven by higher spend volume and favorable rates, and increased merchant processing
6
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Table 3
Noninterest Expense
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Compensation and employee benefits
$
2,615
$
2,260
15.7
%
$
7,907
$
6,755
17.1
%
Net occupancy and equipment
313
272
15.1
950
806
17.9
Professional services
127
131
(3.1
)
402
356
12.9
Marketing and business development
176
126
39.7
420
312
34.6
Technology and communications
511
427
19.7
1,536
1,267
21.2
Other intangibles
161
43
*
480
130
*
Other
343
336
2.1
1,121
998
12.3
Total before merger and integration charges
4,246
3,595
18.1
12,816
10,624
20.6
Merger and integration charges
284
42
*
838
239
*
Total noninterest expense
$
4,530
$
3,637
24.6
%
$
13,654
$
10,863
25.7
%
Efficiency ratio (a)
64.4
%
57.5
%
63.8
%
60.7
%
*
Not meaningful
(a)
See
Non-GAAP
Financial Measures beginning on page 32.
services revenue and corporate payment products revenue due to higher spend volume. Noninterest income further increased in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, mainly due to higher mortgage banking revenue driven by higher gain on sale margins and increases in mortgage servicing rights (“MSRs”) valuations, net of hedging activities.
Noninterest Expense
Noninterest expense was $4.5 billion in the third quarter and $13.7 billion in the first nine months of 2023, representing increases of $893 million (24.6 percent) and $2.8 billion (25.7 percent), respectively, over the same periods of 2022. The increases from the prior year reflected the impact of merger and integration charges, as well as operating expenses related to the MUB acquisition, higher compensation and employee benefits expense and higher other intangibles expense. Compensation and employee benefits expense increased primarily due to MUB expense as well as merit increases and hiring to support business growth. Other intangibles expense increased primarily due to the core deposit intangible created as a result of the MUB acquisition.
On May 11, 2023, the FDIC released a proposed rule that would impose special assessments to recover the losses to the deposit insurance fund resulting from the recent failures of other banking institutions. The Company expects the special assessments would be tax deductible. Although the proposal could change and the timing of accounting recognition is still under consideration, if the final rule is issued as proposed, the Company estimates it would recognize additional noninterest expense of approximately $650 million ($500 million
net-of-tax),
representing a potential 10 basis point reduction in the Company’s common equity tier 1 capital ratio, upon finalization of the rule.
Income Tax Expense
The provision for income taxes was $431 million (an effective rate of 22.0 percent) for the third quarter and $1.3 billion (an effective rate of 21.6 percent) for the first nine months of 2023, compared with $481 million (an effective rate of 20.9 percent) and $1.3 billion (an effective rate of 20.8 percent) for the same periods of 2022, respectively. For further information on income taxes, refer to Note 12 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
BALANCE SHEET ANALYSIS
Loans
The Company’s loan portfolio was $375.2 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $388.2 billion at December 31, 2022, a decrease of $13.0 billion (3.3 percent). The decrease was driven by lower other retail loans, commercial loans, commercial real estate loans and residential mortgages, partially offset by higher credit card loans.
Other retail loans decreased $9.2 billion (16.8 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, primarily due to decreases in auto loans and retail leasing balances. The decrease in auto loans was primarily driven by a sale of indirect auto loans as part of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023.
Commercial loans decreased $2.4 billion (1.7 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, primarily due to decreased demand as corporate customers accessed the capital markets.
Commercial real estate loans decreased $1.4 billion (2.4 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, primarily due to payoffs exceeding a reduced level of new originations.
Residential mortgages held in the loan portfolio decreased $790 million (0.7 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, driven by a sale of residential mortgages in the second quarter of 2023 as part of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions, partially offset by originations.
U.S. Bancorp
7
Table of Contents
Residential mortgages originated and placed in the Company’s loan portfolio include jumbo mortgages and branch-originated first lien home equity loans to borrowers with high credit quality.
Credit card loans increased $785 million (3.0 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, primarily driven by higher spend volume and lower payment rates.
The Company generally retains portfolio loans through maturity; however, the Company’s intent may change over time based upon various factors such as ongoing asset/liability management activities, assessment of product profitability, credit risk, liquidity needs, and capital implications. If the Company’s intent or ability to hold an existing portfolio loan changes, it is transferred to loans held for sale.
Loans Held for Sale
Loans held for sale, consisting primarily of residential mortgages to be sold in the secondary market, were $2.3 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $2.2 billion at December 31, 2022. The increase in loans held for sale was principally due to a higher level of mortgage loan closings in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the fourth quarter of 2022. Almost all of the residential mortgage loans the Company originates or purchases for sale follow guidelines that allow the loans to be sold into existing, highly liquid secondary markets, in particular in government agency transactions and to government-sponsored enterprises (“GSEs”).
Investment Securities
Investment securities totaled $152.5 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $161.7 billion at December 31, 2022. The $9.1 billion (5.6 percent) decrease was primarily due to $7.9 billion of net investment sales and maturities along with a $1.0 billion unfavorable change in net unrealized gains (losses) on
available-for-sale
investment securities.
The Company’s
available-for-sale
investment securities are carried at fair value with changes in fair value reflected in other comprehensive income (loss) unless a portion of a security’s unrealized loss is related to credit and an allowance for credit losses is necessary. At September 30, 2023, the Company’s net unrealized losses on
available-for-sale
investment securities were $9.5 billion ($7.1 billion
net-of-tax),
compared with $8.5 billion ($6.4 billion
net-of-tax)
at December 31, 2022. The unfavorable change in net unrealized gains (losses) was primarily due to decreases in the fair value of mortgage-backed and state and political securities as a result of changes in interest rates. Gross unrealized losses on
available-for-sale
investment securities totaled $9.6 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $8.6 billion at December 31, 2022. When evaluating credit losses, the Company considers various factors such as the nature of the investment security, the credit ratings or financial condition of the issuer, the extent of the unrealized loss, expected cash flows of the underlying collateral, the existence of any government or agency guarantees, and market conditions. At September 30, 2023, the Company had no plans to sell securities with unrealized losses, and believed it is more likely than not that it would not be required to sell such securities before recovery of their amortized cost.
Table 4
Investment Securities
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Amortized
Cost
Fair Value
Weighted-
Average
Maturity in
Years
Weighted-
Average
Yield (e)
Amortized
Cost
Fair Value
Weighted-
Average
Maturity in
Years
Weighted-
Average
Yield (e)
Held-to-maturity
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
1,345
$
1,283
2.5
2.85
%
$
1,344
$
1,293
3.3
2.85
%
Mortgage-backed securities (a)
83,997
69,076
9.5
2.19
87,396
76,581
9.3
2.17
Total
held-to-maturity
$
85,342
$
70,359
9.4
2.20
%
$
88,740
$
77,874
9.2
2.18
%
Available-for-sale
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
21,286
$
18,707
6.1
2.69
%
$
24,801
$
22,033
7.1
2.43
%
Mortgage-backed securities (a)
37,609
32,562
6.7
3.07
40,803
36,423
6.6
2.83
Asset-backed securities (a)
6,923
6,868
1.6
5.20
4,356
4,323
1.3
4.59
Obligations of state and political subdivisions (b) (c)
11,028
9,066
14.9
3.77
11,484
10,125
13.6
3.76
Other
4
4
1.7
1.89
6
6
.1
1.99
Total
available-for-sale
(d)
$
76,850
$
67,207
7.3
3.26
%
$
81,450
$
72,910
7.4
2.94
%
(a)
Information related to asset and mortgage-backed securities included above is presented based upon weighted-average maturities that take into account anticipated future prepayments.
(b)
Information related to obligations of state and political subdivisions is presented based upon yield to first optional call date if the security is purchased at a premium, and yield to maturity if the security is purchased at par or a discount.
(c)
Maturity calculations for obligations of state and political subdivisions are based on the first optional call date for securities with a fair value above par and the contractual maturity date for securities with a fair value equal to or below par.
(d)
Amortized cost excludes portfolio level basis adjustments of $(95) million at September 30, 2023.
(e)
Weighted-average yields for obligations of state and political subdivisions are presented on a fully-taxable equivalent basis based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent. Yields on investment securities are computed based on amortized cost balances, excluding any premiums or discounts recorded related to the transfer of investment securities at fair value from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity.
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Refer to Notes 4 and 15 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further information on investment securities.
Deposits
Total deposits were $518.4 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $525.0 billion at December 31, 2022. The $6.6 billion (1.3 percent) decrease in total deposits reflected a decrease in noninterest-bearing deposits, partially offset by increases in time deposits and total savings deposits. Noninterest-bearing deposits decreased $39.7 billion (28.8 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, primarily due to lower Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking, and Consumer and Business Banking balances. The decrease in noninterest-bearing deposits was driven by a product change for certain MUB retail checking accounts into interest checking accounts at conversion to create a better customer experience, as well as pricing pressures from rising interest rates. Time deposits increased $20.6 billion (62.5 percent) at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, driven by higher Consumer and Business Banking balances, partially offset by lower Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances. Changes in time deposits are primarily related to those deposits managed as an alternative to other funding sources, based largely on relative pricing and liquidity characteristics. Money market deposit balances increased $41.7 billion (28.2 percent), primarily due to higher Consumer and Business Banking, and Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances. Savings account balances decreased $24.7 billion (34.4 percent), driven by lower Consumer and Business Banking, and Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances. Interest checking balances decreased $4.5 billion (3.4 percent), primarily due to lower Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking balances.
Borrowings
The Company utilizes both short-term and long-term borrowings as part of its asset/liability management and funding strategies. Short-term borrowings, which include federal funds purchased, commercial paper, repurchase agreements, borrowings secured by high-grade assets and other short-term borrowings, were $21.9 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $31.2 billion at December 31, 2022. The $9.3 billion (29.8 percent) decrease in short-term borrowings was primarily due to decreases in short-term Federal Home Loan Bank (“FHLB”) advances. Long-term debt was $43.1 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $39.8 billion at December 31, 2022. The $3.2 billion (8.1 percent) increase was primarily due to $7.2 billion of medium-term note issuances, partially offset by $2.8 billion of bank note repayments and maturities and a $936 million repayment of the Company’s debt obligation to MUFG. Refer to the “Liquidity Risk Management” section for discussion of liquidity management of the Company.
CORPORATE RISK PROFILE
Overview
Managing risks is an essential part of successfully operating a financial services company. The Company’s Board of Directors has approved a risk management framework which establishes governance and risk management requirements for all risk-taking activities. This framework includes Company and business line risk appetite statements which set boundaries for the types and amount of risk that may be undertaken in pursuing business objectives and initiatives. The Board of Directors, primarily through its Risk Management Committee, oversees performance relative to the risk management framework, risk appetite statements, and other policy requirements.
The Executive Risk Committee (“ERC”), which is chaired by the Chief Risk Officer and includes the Chief Executive Officer and other members of the executive management team, oversees execution against the risk management framework and risk appetite statements. The ERC focuses on current and emerging risks, including strategic and reputation risks, by directing timely and comprehensive actions. Senior operating committees have also been established, each responsible for overseeing a specified category of risk.
Upon closing of the MUB acquisition, the Company’s risk management framework applied to the legal entities acquired from MUFG, including MUB, up until its merger into USBNA. Updates were made to align the acquired entities with the Company’s risk appetite and connect the elements of their respective risk governance and reporting into the Company’s existing risk management framework. Upon completing the merger of MUB into USBNA, which occurred on May 26, 2023, the MUB risk governance and reporting framework is no longer applicable.
The Company’s most prominent risk exposures are credit, interest rate, market, liquidity, operational, compliance, strategic, and reputation. Credit risk is the risk of loss associated with a change in the credit profile or the failure of a borrower or counterparty to meet its contractual obligations. Interest rate risk is the current or prospective risk to earnings and capital, or market valuations, arising from the impact of changes in interest rates. Market risk arises from fluctuations in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, and security prices that may result in changes in the values of financial
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instruments, such as trading and
available-for-sale
securities, mortgage loans held for sale (“MLHFS”), MSRs and derivatives that are accounted for on a fair value basis. Liquidity risk is the risk that financial condition or overall safety and soundness is adversely affected by the Company’s inability, or perceived inability, to meet its cash flow obligations in a timely and complete manner in either normal or stressed conditions. Operational risk is the risk to current or projected financial condition and resilience arising from inadequate or failed internal processes or systems, people (including human errors or misconduct), or adverse external events, including the risk of loss resulting from breaches in data security. Operational risk can also include the risk of loss due to failures by third parties with which the Company does business. Compliance risk is the risk that the Company may suffer legal or regulatory sanctions, financial losses, and reputational damage if it fails to adhere to compliance requirements and the Company’s compliance policies. Strategic risk is the risk to current or projected financial condition and resilience arising from adverse business decisions, poor implementation of business decisions, or lack of responsiveness to changes in the banking industry and operating environment. Reputation risk is the risk to current or anticipated earnings, capital, or franchise or enterprise value arising from negative public opinion. This risk may impair the Company’s competitiveness by affecting its ability to establish new relationships or services, or continue serving existing relationships. In addition to the risks identified above, other risk factors exist that may impact the Company. Refer to “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for a detailed discussion of these factors.
The Company’s Board and management-level governance committees are supported by a “three lines of defense” model for establishing effective checks and balances. The first line of defense, the business lines, manages risks in conformity with established limits and policy requirements. In turn, business line leaders and their risk officers establish programs to ensure conformity with these limits and policy requirements. The second line of defense, which includes the Chief Risk Officer’s organization as well as policy and oversight activities of corporate support functions, translates risk appetite and strategy into actionable risk limits and policies. The second line of defense monitors first line of defense conformity with limits and policies and provides reporting and escalation of emerging risks and other concerns to senior management and the Risk Management Committee of the Board of Directors. The third line of defense, internal audit, is responsible for providing the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors and senior management with independent assessment and assurance regarding the effectiveness of the Company’s governance, risk management and control processes.
Management regularly provides reports to the Risk Management Committee of the Board of Directors. The Risk Management Committee discusses with management the Company’s risk management performance and provides a summary of key risks to the entire Board of Directors, covering the status of existing matters, areas of potential future concern and specific information on certain types of loss events. The Risk Management Committee considers quarterly reports by management assessing the Company’s performance relative to the risk appetite statements and the associated risk limits, including:
•
Macroeconomic environment and other qualitative considerations, such as regulatory and compliance changes, litigation developments, geopolitical events, and technology and cybersecurity;
•
Credit measures, including adversely rated and nonperforming loans, leveraged transactions, credit concentrations and lending limits;
•
Interest rate and market risk, including market value and net income simulation, and trading-related Value at Risk (“VaR”);
•
Liquidity risk, including funding projections under various stressed scenarios;
•
Operational and compliance risk, including losses stemming from events such as fraud, processing errors, control breaches, breaches in data security or adverse business decisions, as well as reporting on technology performance, and various legal and regulatory compliance measures;
•
Capital ratios and projections, including regulatory measures and stressed scenarios; and
•
Strategic and reputation risk considerations, impacts and responses.
Credit Risk Management
The Company’s strategy for credit risk management includes well-defined, centralized credit policies, uniform underwriting criteria, and ongoing risk monitoring and review processes for all commercial and consumer credit exposures. The strategy also emphasizes diversification on a geographic, industry and customer level, regular credit examinations and management reviews of loans exhibiting deterioration of credit quality. In evaluating its credit risk, the Company considers changes, if any, in underwriting activities, the loan portfolio composition (including product mix and geographic, industry or customer-specific concentrations), collateral values, trends in loan performance and macroeconomic factors, such as changes in unemployment rates, gross domestic product
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levels, inflation, interest rates and consumer bankruptcy filings. The Risk Management Committee oversees the Company’s credit risk management process.
In addition, credit quality ratings, as defined by the Company, are an important part of the Company’s overall credit risk management and evaluation of its allowance for credit losses. Loans with a pass rating represent those loans not classified on the Company’s rating scale for problem credits, as minimal credit risk has been identified. Loans with a special mention or classified rating, including consumer lending and small business loans that are 90 days or more past due and still accruing, nonaccrual loans and loans in a junior lien position that are current but are behind a first lien position on nonaccrual, encompass all loans held by the Company that it considers to have a potential or well-defined weakness that may put full collection of contractual cash flows at risk. The Company’s internal credit quality ratings for consumer loans are primarily based on delinquency and nonperforming status, except for a limited population of larger loans within those portfolios that are individually evaluated. For this limited population, the determination of the internal credit quality rating may also consider collateral value and customer cash flows. Refer to Note 5 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further discussion of the Company’s loan portfolios including internal credit quality ratings. In addition, refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Credit Risk Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for a more detailed discussion on credit risk management processes.
The Company manages its credit risk, in part, through diversification of its loan portfolio which is achieved through limit setting by product type criteria, such as industry, and identification of credit concentrations. The Company categorizes its loan portfolio into two segments, which is the level at which it develops and documents a systematic methodology to determine the allowance for credit losses. The Company’s two loan portfolio segments are commercial lending and consumer lending.
The commercial lending segment includes loans and leases made to small business, middle market, large corporate, commercial real estate, financial institution,
non-profit
and public sector customers. Key risk characteristics relevant to commercial lending segment loans include the industry and geography of the borrower’s business, purpose of the loan, repayment source, borrower’s debt capacity and financial flexibility, loan covenants, and nature of pledged collateral, if any, as well as macroeconomic factors such as unemployment rates, gross domestic product levels, corporate bond spreads and long-term interest rates. These risk characteristics, among others, are considered in determining estimates about the likelihood of default by the borrowers and the severity of loss in the event of default. The Company considers these risk characteristics in assigning internal risk ratings to, or forecasting losses on, these loans, which are the significant factors in determining the allowance for credit losses for loans in the commercial lending segment.
The consumer lending segment represents loans and leases made to consumer customers, including residential mortgages, credit card loans, and other retail loans such as revolving consumer lines, auto loans and leases, home equity loans and lines, and student loans, a
run-off
portfolio. Home equity or second mortgage loans are junior lien
closed-end
accounts fully disbursed at origination. These loans typically are fixed rate loans, secured by residential real estate, with a
10-
or
15-year
fixed payment amortization schedule. Home equity lines are revolving accounts giving the borrower the ability to draw and repay balances repeatedly, up to a maximum commitment, and are secured by residential real estate. These include accounts in either a first or junior lien position. Typical terms on home equity lines in the portfolio are variable rates benchmarked to the prime rate, with a
10-year
draw period during which a minimum payment is equivalent to the monthly interest, followed by a
20-year
amortization period, respectively. At September 30, 2023, substantially all of the Company’s home equity lines were in the draw period. Key risk characteristics relevant to consumer lending segment loans primarily relate to the borrowers’ capacity and willingness to repay and include unemployment rates, consumer bankruptcy filings and other macroeconomic factors, customer payment history and credit scores, and in some cases, updated
loan-to-value
(“LTV”) information reflecting current market conditions on real estate-based loans. These and other risk characteristics are reflected in forecasts of delinquency levels, bankruptcies and losses which are the primary factors in determining the allowance for credit losses for the consumer lending segment.
The Company further disaggregates its loan portfolio segments into various classes based on their underlying risk characteristics. The two classes within the commercial lending segment are commercial loans and commercial real estate loans. The three classes within the consumer lending segment are residential mortgages, credit card loans and other retail loans.
The Company’s consumer lending segment utilizes several distinct business processes and channels to originate consumer credit, including traditional branch
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lending, mobile and
on-line
banking, indirect lending, alliance partnerships and correspondent banks. Each distinct underwriting and origination activity manages unique credit risk characteristics and prices its loan production commensurate with the differing risk profiles.
Residential mortgage originations are generally limited to prime borrowers and are performed through the Company’s branches, loan production offices, mobile and
on-line
services, and a wholesale network of originators. The Company may retain residential mortgage loans it originates on its balance sheet or sell the loans into the secondary market while retaining the servicing rights and customer relationships. Utilizing the secondary markets enables the Company to effectively reduce its credit and other asset/liability risks. For residential mortgages that are retained in the Company’s portfolio and for home equity and second mortgages, credit risk is managed by adherence to LTV and borrower credit criteria during the underwriting process.
The Company estimates updated LTV information on its outstanding residential mortgages quarterly, based on a method that combines automated valuation model updates and relevant home price indices. LTV is the ratio of the loan’s outstanding principal balance to the current estimate of property value. For home equity and second mortgages, combined
loan-to-value
(“CLTV”) is the combination of the first mortgage original principal balance and the second lien outstanding principal balance, relative to the current estimate of property value. Certain loans do not have an LTV or CLTV, primarily due to lack of availability of relevant automated valuation model and/or home price indices values, or lack of necessary valuation data on acquired loans.
The following tables provide summary information of residential mortgages and home equity and second mortgages by LTV at September 30, 2023:
Residential Mortgages
(Dollars in Millions)
Interest
Only
Amortizing
Total
Percent
of Total
Loan-to-Value
Less than or equal to 80%
$
13,974
$
86,231
$
100,205
87.1
%
Over 80% through 90%
210
6,264
6,474
5.6
Over 90% through 100%
12
931
943
.8
Over 100%
13
528
541
.5
No LTV available
1
12
13
—
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools (a)
—
6,879
6,879
6.0
Total
$
14,210
$
100,845
$
115,055
100.0
%
(a)
Represents loans purchased and loans that could be purchased from Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”) mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose payments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
Home Equity and Second Mortgages
(Dollars in Millions)
Lines
Loans
Total
Percent
of Total
Loan-to-Value
/ Combined
Loan-to-Value
Less than or equal to 80%
$
10,461
$
1,787
$
12,248
95.1
%
Over 80% through 90%
411
73
484
3.8
Over 90% through 100%
54
14
68
.5
Over 100%
40
6
46
.4
No LTV/CLTV available
32
1
33
.2
Total
$
10,998
$
1,881
$
12,879
100.0
%
Home equity and second mortgages were $12.9 billion at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, and included $2.7 billion of home equity lines in a first lien position and $10.2 billion of home equity and second mortgage loans and lines in a junior lien position. Loans and lines in a junior lien position at September 30, 2023, included approximately $3.1 billion of loans and lines for which the Company also serviced the related first lien loan, and approximately $7.1 billion where the Company did not service the related first lien loan. The Company was able to determine the status of the related first liens using information the Company has as the servicer of the first lien or information reported on customer credit bureau files. The Company also evaluates other indicators of credit risk for these junior lien loans and lines including delinquency, estimated average CLTV ratios and updated weighted-average credit scores in making its assessment of credit risk, related loss estimates and determining the allowance for credit losses.
The following table provides a summary of delinquency statistics and other credit quality indicators for the Company’s junior lien positions at September 30, 2023:
Junior Liens Behind
(Dollars in Millions)
Company Owned
or Serviced First
Lien
Third Party
First Lien
Total
Total
$
3,054
$
7,121
$
10,175
Percent 30 – 89 days past due
.52
%
.42
%
.45
%
Percent 90 days or more past due
.05
%
.08
%
.07
%
Weighted-average CLTV
71
%
68
%
69
%
Weighted-average credit score
784
785
785
See the “Analysis and Determination of the Allowance for Credit Losses” section for additional information on how the Company determines the allowance for credit losses for loans in a junior lien position.
Credit card and other retail loans are diversified across customer segments and geographies. Diversification in the credit card portfolio is achieved with broad customer relationship distribution through the Company’s and financial institution partners’ branches, retail and affinity partners, and digital channels.
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The following table provides a summary of the Company’s credit card loan balances disaggregated based upon updated credit score at September 30, 2023:
Percent
of Total (a)
Credit score > 660
86
%
Credit score < 660
14
No credit score
—
(a)
Credit score distribution excludes loans serviced by others.
Loan Delinquencies
Trends in delinquency ratios are an indicator, among other considerations, of credit risk within the Company’s loan portfolios. The entire balance of a loan account is considered delinquent if the minimum payment contractually required to be made is not received by the date specified on the billing statement. Delinquent loans purchased and loans that could be purchased from GNMA mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options, whose repayments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, are excluded from delinquency statistics.
Accruing loans 90 days or more past due totaled $569 million at September 30, 2023, compared with $491 million at December 31, 2022. Accruing loans 90 days or more past due are not included in nonperforming assets and continue to accrue interest because they are adequately secured by collateral, are in the process of collection and are reasonably expected to result in repayment or restoration to current status, or are managed in homogeneous portfolios with specified
charge-off
timeframes adhering to regulatory guidelines. The ratio of accruing loans 90 days or more past due to total loans was 0.15 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 0.13 percent at December 31, 2022.
Table 5
Delinquent Loan Ratios as a Percent of Ending Loan Balances
90 days or more past due
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Commercial
Commercial
.05
%
.07
%
Lease financing
—
—
Total commercial
.05
.07
Commercial Real Estate
Commercial mortgages
—
—
Construction and development
.01
.03
Total commercial real estate
—
.01
Residential Mortgages (a)
.11
.08
Credit Card
1.17
.88
Other Retail
Retail leasing
.05
.04
Home equity and second mortgages
.25
.28
Other
.09
.08
Total other retail
.13
.12
Total loans
.15
%
.13
%
90 days or more past due and nonperforming loans
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Commercial
.24
%
.19
%
Commercial real estate
1.33
.62
Residential mortgages (a)
.25
.36
Credit card
1.17
.88
Other retail
.41
.37
Total loans
.49
%
.38
%
(a)
Delinquent loan ratios exclude $2.0 billion at September 30, 2023, and $2.2 billion at December 31, 2022, of loans purchased and loans that could be purchased from GNMA mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose repayments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Including these loans, the ratio of residential mortgages 90 days or more past due and nonperforming to total residential mortgages was 2.00 percent at September 30, 2023, and 2.28 percent at December 31, 2022.
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The following table provides summary delinquency information for residential mortgages, credit card and other retail loans included in the consumer lending segment:
Amount
As a Percent of Ending
Loan Balances
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Residential Mortgages (a)
30-89
days
$
131
$
201
.11
%
.17
%
90 days or more
122
95
.11
.08
Nonperforming
161
325
.14
.28
Total
$
414
$
621
.36
.54
Credit Card
30-89
days
$
365
$
283
1.35
1.08
90 days or more
316
231
1.17
.88
Nonperforming
—
1
—
—
Total
$
681
$
515
2.51
1.96
Other Retail
Retail Leasing
30-89
days
$
22
$
27
.52
.49
90 days or more
2
2
.05
.04
Nonperforming
8
8
.19
.14
Total
$
32
$
37
.75
.67
Home Equity and Second Mortgages
30-89
days
$
65
$
65
.50
.51
90 days or more
32
36
.25
.28
Nonperforming
104
110
.81
.86
Total
$
201
$
211
1.56
1.64
Other (b)
30-89
days
$
167
$
217
.59
.59
90 days or more
26
28
.09
.08
Nonperforming
17
21
.06
.06
Total
$
210
$
266
.74
.73
(a)
Excludes $558 million of loans
30-89
days past due and $2.0 billion of loans 90 days or more past due at September 30, 2023, purchased and that could be purchased from GNMA mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options that continue to accrue interest, compared with $647 million and $2.2 billion at December 31, 2022, respectively.
(b)
Includes revolving credit, installment and automobile loans.
Modified Loans
In certain circumstances, the Company may modify the terms of a loan to maximize the collection of amounts due when a borrower is experiencing financial difficulties or is expected to experience difficulties in the near-term. In most cases the modification is either a concessionary reduction in interest rate, extension of the maturity date or reduction in the principal balance that would otherwise not be considered.
Modified loans accrue interest if the borrower complies with the revised terms and conditions and has demonstrated repayment performance at a level commensurate with the modified terms over several payment cycles, which is generally six months or greater.
The Company continues to work with customers to modify loans for borrowers who are experiencing financial difficulties. Many of the Company’s loan modifications are determined on a
case-by-case
basis in connection with ongoing loan collection processes. The modifications vary within each of the Company’s loan classes. Commercial lending segment modifications generally include extensions of the maturity date and may be accompanied by an increase or decrease to the interest rate. The Company may also work with the borrower to make other changes to the loan to mitigate losses, such as obtaining additional collateral and/or guarantees to support the loan.
The Company has also implemented certain residential mortgage loan modification programs. The Company modifies residential mortgage loans under Federal Housing Administration, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, and its own internal programs. Under these programs, the Company offers qualifying homeowners the opportunity to permanently modify their loan and achieve more affordable monthly payments. These modifications may include adjustments to interest rates, conversion of adjustable rates to fixed rates, extensions of maturity dates or deferrals of payments, capitalization of accrued interest and/or outstanding advances, or in limited situations, partial forgiveness of loan principal. In most instances, participation in residential mortgage loan modification programs requires the customer to complete a short-term trial period. A permanent loan modification is contingent on the customer successfully completing the trial period arrangement, and the loan documents are not modified until that time.
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Credit card and other retail loan modifications are generally part of distinct modification programs providing customers modification solutions over a specified time period, generally up to 60 months.
The Company also makes short-term modifications, in limited circumstances, to assist borrowers experiencing temporary hardships, including previously offering payment relief to borrowers that experienced financial hardship resulting directly from the effects of the
COVID-19
pandemic. Short-term consumer lending modification programs include payment reductions, deferrals of up to three past due payments, and the ability to return to current status if the borrower makes required payments. The Company may also make short-term modifications to commercial lending loans, with the most common modification being an extension of the maturity date of three months or less. Such extensions generally are used when the maturity date is imminent and the borrower is experiencing some level of financial stress, but the Company believes the borrower will pay all contractual amounts owed.
Nonperforming Assets
The level of nonperforming assets represents another indicator of the potential for future credit losses. Nonperforming assets include nonaccrual loans, modified loans not performing in accordance with modified terms and not accruing interest, modified loans that have not met the performance period required to return to accrual status, other real estate owned (“OREO”) and other nonperforming assets owned by the Company. Interest payments collected from assets on nonaccrual status are generally applied against the principal balance and not recorded as income. However, interest income may be recognized for interest payments if the remaining carrying amount of the loan is believed to be collectible.
At September 30, 2023, total nonperforming assets were $1.3 billion, compared to $1.0 billion at December 31, 2022. The $294 million (28.9 percent) increase in nonperforming assets was primarily due to higher nonperforming commercial real estate and commercial loans, partially offset by a decrease in nonperforming residential mortgages. The ratio of total nonperforming assets to total loans and other real estate was 0.35 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 0.26 percent at December 31, 2022.
OREO was $25 million at September 30, 2023, compared with $23 million at December 31, 2022, and was related to foreclosed properties that previously secured loan balances. These balances exclude foreclosed GNMA loans whose repayments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
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Table 6
Nonperforming Assets (a)
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Commercial
Commercial
$231
$139
Lease financing
25
30
Total commercial
256
169
Commercial Real Estate
Commercial mortgages
566
251
Construction and development
155
87
Total commercial real estate
721
338
Residential Mortgages (b)
161
325
Credit Card
—
1
Other Retail
Retail leasing
8
8
Home equity and second mortgages
104
110
Other
17
21
Total other retail
129
139
Total nonperforming loans (1)
1,267
972
Other Real Estate (c)
25
23
Other Assets
18
21
Total nonperforming assets
$1,310
$1,016
Accruing loans 90 days or more past due (b)
$569
$491
Period-end
loans (2)
$375,234
$388,213
Nonperforming loans to total loans (1)/(2)
.34
%
.25
%
Nonperforming assets to total loans plus other real estate (c)
.35
%
.26
%
Changes in Nonperforming Assets
(Dollars in Millions)
Commercial and
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Mortgages,
Credit Card and
Other Retail
Total
Balance December 31, 2022
$
509
$
507
$
1,016
Additions to nonperforming assets
New nonaccrual loans and foreclosed properties
982
124
1,106
Advances on loans
45
1
46
Total additions
1,027
125
1,152
Reductions in nonperforming assets
Paydowns, payoffs
(311
)
(98
)
(409
)
Net sales
(26
)
(18
)
(44
)
Return to performing status
(24
)
(176
)
(200
)
Charge-offs (d)
(197
)
(8
)
(205
)
Total reductions
(558
)
(300
)
(858
)
Net additions to (reductions in) nonperforming assets
469
(175
)
294
Balance September 30, 2023
$
978
$
332
$
1,310
(a)
Throughout this document, nonperforming assets and related ratios do not include accruing loans 90 days or more past due.
(b)
Excludes $2.0 billion at September 30, 2023, and $2.2 billion at December 31, 2022, of loans purchased and loans that could be purchased from GNMA Mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options that are 90 days or more past due that continue to accrue interest, as their repayments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
(c)
Foreclosed GNMA loans of $52 million at September 30, 2023, and $53 million at December 31, 2022, continue to accrue interest and are recorded as other assets and excluded from nonperforming assets because they are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
(d)
Charge-offs exclude actions for certain card products and loan sales that were not classified as nonperforming at the time the
charge-off
occurred.
16
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Table 7
Net Charge-offs as a Percent of Average Loans Outstanding
Three Months Ended September 30
2023
2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Average
Loan
Balance
Net
Charge-offs
Percent
Average
Loan
Balance
Net
Charge-offs
Percent
Commercial
Commercial
$
130,415
$
86
.26
%
$
123,745
$
24
.08
%
Lease financing
4,305
6
.55
4,774
3
.25
Total commercial
134,720
92
.27
128,519
27
.08
Commercial real estate
Commercial mortgages
42,665
49
.46
30,002
(6
)
(.08
)
Construction and development
11,588
—
—
10,008
—
—
Total commercial real estate
54,253
49
.36
40,010
(6
)
(.06
)
Residential mortgages
114,627
(3
)
(.01
)
84,018
(5
)
(.02
)
Credit card
26,883
220
3.25
24,105
119
1.96
Other retail
Retail leasing
4,436
2
.18
6,259
1
.06
Home equity and second mortgages
12,809
1
.03
11,142
(2
)
(.07
)
Other
29,149
59
.80
42,725
28
.26
Total other retail
46,394
62
.53
60,126
27
.18
Total loans
$
376,877
$
420
.44
%
$
336,778
$
162
.19
%
Nine Months Ended September 30
2023
2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Average
Loan
Balance
Net
Charge-offs
Percent
Average
Loan
Balance
Net
Charge-offs
Percent
Commercial
Commercial
$
131,777
$
215
.22
%
$
115,832
$
78
.09
%
Lease financing
4,382
14
.43
4,891
11
.30
Total commercial
136,159
229
.22
120,723
89
.10
Commercial real estate
Commercial mortgages
43,165
190
.59
29,506
(8
)
(.04
)
Construction and development
11,758
2
.02
10,035
3
.04
Total commercial real estate
54,923
192
.47
39,541
(5
)
(.02
)
Residential mortgages
116,167
110
.13
80,589
(20
)
(.03
)
Credit card
26,171
594
3.03
22,907
349
2.04
Other retail
Retail leasing
4,832
4
.11
6,689
2
.04
Home equity and second mortgages
12,779
(1
)
(.01
)
10,757
(7
)
(.09
)
Other
33,081
314
1.27
43,525
77
.24
Total other retail
50,692
317
.84
60,971
72
.16
Total loans
$
384,112
$
1,442
.50
%
$
324,731
$
485
.20
%
Analysis of Loan Net Charge-offs
Total loan net charge-offs were $420 million for the third quarter and $1.4 billion for the first nine months of 2023, compared with $162 million and $485 million, respectively, for the same periods of 2022. The year-over-year increases in net charge-offs reflected higher charge-offs in most loan categories consistent with normalizing credit conditions and adverse conditions in commercial real estate. In addition, net charge-offs were higher in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of the prior year, due to charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023, along with charge-offs in the first quarter of 2023 related to the uncollectible amount of acquired loans, which were considered purchased credit deteriorated as of the date of the MUB acquisition. The ratio of total loan net charge-offs to average loans outstanding on an annualized basis for the third quarter and first nine months of 2023 was 0.44 percent and 0.50 percent, respectively, compared with 0.19 percent and 0.20 percent, respectively, for the same periods of 2022. Excluding the impact of charge-offs related to the MUB acquisition and balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions, the ratio of total loan net charge-offs to average loans outstanding on an annualized basis for the first nine months of 2023 was
0.36
percent (see
Non-GAAP
Financial Measures beginning on page 32).
Analysis and Determination of the Allowance for Credit Losses
The allowance for credit losses is established for current expected credit losses on the Company’s loan and
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lease portfolio, including unfunded credit commitments. The allowance considers expected losses for the remaining lives of the applicable assets, inclusive of expected recoveries. The allowance for credit losses is increased through provisions charged to earnings and reduced by net charge-offs.
Management evaluates the appropriateness of the allowance for credit losses on a quarterly basis. Multiple economic scenarios are considered over a three-year reasonable and supportable forecast period, which includes increasing consideration of historical loss experience over years two and three. These economic scenarios are constructed with interrelated projections of multiple economic variables, and loss estimates are produced that consider the historical correlation of those economic variables with credit losses. After the forecast period, the Company fully reverts to long-term historical loss experience, adjusted for prepayments and characteristics of the current loan and lease portfolio, to estimate losses over the remaining life of the portfolio. The economic scenarios are updated at least quarterly and are designed to provide a range of reasonable estimates from better to worse than current expectations. Scenarios are weighted based on the Company’s expectation of economic conditions for the foreseeable future and reflect significant judgment and consideration of economic forecast uncertainty. Final loss estimates also consider factors affecting credit losses not reflected in the scenarios, due to the unique aspects of current conditions and expectations. These factors may include, but are not limited to, loan servicing practices, regulatory guidance, and/or fiscal and monetary policy actions.
Because business processes and credit risks associated with unfunded credit commitments are essentially the same as for loans, the Company utilizes similar processes to estimate its liability for unfunded credit commitments, which is included in other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheet. Both the allowance for loan losses and the liability for unfunded credit commitments are included in the Company’s analysis of credit losses and reported reserve ratios.
The allowance recorded for credit losses utilizes forward-looking expected loss models to consider a variety of factors affecting lifetime credit losses. These factors include, but are not limited to, macroeconomic variables such as unemployment rates, real estate prices, gross domestic product levels, inflation, interest rates, and corporate bond spreads, as well as loan and borrower characteristics, such as internal risk ratings on commercial loans and consumer credit scores, delinquency status, collateral type and available valuation information, consideration of
end-of-term
losses on lease residuals, and the remaining term of the loan, adjusted for expected prepayments. For each loan portfolio, including those loans modified under various loan modification programs, model estimates are adjusted as necessary to consider any relevant changes in portfolio composition, lending policies, underwriting standards, risk management practices, economic conditions or other factors that may affect the accuracy of the model. Expected credit loss estimates also include consideration of expected cash recoveries on loans previously
charged-off
or expected recoveries on collateral-dependent loans where recovery is expected through sale of the collateral at fair value less selling costs. Where loans do not exhibit similar risk characteristics, an individual analysis is performed to consider expected credit losses.
The allowance recorded for individually evaluated loans greater than $5 million in the commercial lending segment is based on an analysis utilizing expected cash flows discounted using the original effective interest rate, the observable market price of the loan, or the fair value of the collateral, less selling costs, for collateral-dependent loans as appropriate.
When evaluating the appropriateness of the allowance for credit losses for any loans and lines in a junior lien position, the Company considers the delinquency and modification status of the first lien. At September 30, 2023, the Company serviced the first lien on 30 percent of the home equity loans and lines in a junior lien position. The Company also considers the status of first lien mortgage accounts reported on customer credit bureau files when the first lien is not serviced by the Company. Regardless of whether the Company services the first lien, an assessment is made of economic conditions, problem loans, recent loss experience and other factors in determining the allowance for credit losses. Based on the available information, the Company estimated $196 million or 1.5 percent of its total home equity portfolio at September 30, 2023, represented
non-delinquent
junior liens where the first lien was delinquent or modified.
When a loan portfolio is purchased, the acquired loans are divided into those considered purchased with more than insignificant credit deterioration (“PCD”) and those not considered PCD. An allowance is established for each population and considers product mix, risk characteristics of the portfolio and delinquency status and refreshed LTV ratios when possible. PCD loans also consider whether the loan has experienced a
charge-off,
bankruptcy or significant deterioration since origination. The allowance established for purchased loans not considered PCD is recognized through provision expense upon acquisition, whereas the allowance established for loans considered PCD at acquisition is offset by an
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increase in the basis of the acquired loans. Any subsequent increases and decreases in the allowance related to purchased loans, regardless of PCD status, are recognized through provision expense, with charge-offs charged to the allowance. The Company had a total unpaid principal balance of $3.3 billion of PCD loans, primarily related to the MUB acquisition, included in its loan portfolio at September 30, 2023.
The Company’s methodology for determining the appropriate allowance for credit losses also considers the imprecision inherent in the methodologies used and allocated to the various loan portfolios. As a result, amounts determined under the methodologies described above are adjusted by management to consider the potential impact of other qualitative factors not captured in quantitative model adjustments which include, but are not limited to, the following: model imprecision, imprecision in economic scenario assumptions, and emerging risks related to either changes in the economic environment that are affecting specific portfolios, or changes in portfolio concentrations over time that may affect model performance. The consideration of these items results in adjustments to allowance amounts included in the Company’s allowance for credit losses for each loan portfolio.
Although the Company determined the amount of each element of the allowance separately and considers this process to be an important credit management tool, the entire allowance for credit losses is available for the entire loan portfolio. The actual amount of losses can vary significantly from the estimated amounts.
At September 30, 2023, the allowance for credit losses was $7.8 billion (2.08 percent of
period-end
loans), compared with an allowance of $7.4 billion (1.91 percent of
period-end
loans) at December 31, 2022. The allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2023 included a $62 million decrease due to a change in accounting principle adopted on January 1, 2023 related to discontinuing the separate recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings. The increase in the allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, was primarily driven by increased economic uncertainty, normalizing credit losses and commercial real estate credit quality. Economic uncertainty and recession risk have increased due to rising interest rates, inflationary concerns, market volatility and pressure on corporate earnings related to these factors. In addition to these broad economic factors, expected loss estimates consider various factors including customer specific information impacting changes in risk ratings, projected delinquencies and the impact of economic deterioration on selected borrowers’ liquidity and ability to repay.
The ratio of the allowance for credit losses to nonperforming loans was 615 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 762 percent at December 31, 2022. The ratio of the allowance for credit losses to annualized loan net charge-offs was 468 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 697 percent of full year 2022 net charge-offs at December 31, 2022.
Economic conditions considered in estimating the allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2023 included changes in projected gross domestic product and unemployment levels. These factors are evaluated through a combination of quantitative calculations using multiple economic scenarios and additional qualitative assessments that consider the high degree of economic uncertainty in the current environment. The projected unemployment rates for 2023 considered in the estimate range from 3.2 percent to 5.9 percent.
The following table summarizes the baseline forecast for key economic variables the Company used in its estimate of the allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022:
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
United States unemployment rate for the three months ending (a)
September 30, 2023
3.6
%
4.1
%
December 31, 2023
3.7
4.2
December 31, 2024
4.2
3.9
United States real gross domestic product for the three months ending (b)
September 30, 2023
2.1
%
.8
%
December 31, 2023
1.6
1.0
December 31, 2024
1.5
2.5
(a)
Reflects quarterly average of forecasted reported United States unemployment rate.
(b)
Reflects year-over-year growth rates.
The allowance for credit losses related to commercial lending segment loans increased $305 million during the first nine months of 2023, reflecting the impact of increased economic uncertainty, normalizing credit conditions and select commercial real estate loan deterioration.
The allowance for credit losses related to consumer lending segment loans increased $81 million during the first nine months of 2023, due to the impacts of economic uncertainty and normalizing credit performance, partially offset by reduced portfolio exposures and a decrease related to a change in accounting principle.
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Table 8
Summary of Allowance for Credit Losses
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
7,695
$
6,255
$
7,404
$
6,155
Change in accounting principle (a)
—
—
(62
)
—
Allowance for acquired credit losses (b)
—
—
127
—
Charge-Offs
Commercial
Commercial
102
51
261
146
Lease financing
8
5
22
18
Total commercial
110
56
283
164
Commercial real estate
Commercial mortgages
51
—
203
1
Construction and development
—
—
2
9
Total commercial real estate
51
—
205
10
Residential mortgages
1
2
126
9
Credit card
259
161
716
481
Other retail
Retail leasing
5
5
13
14
Home equity and second mortgages
5
2
10
7
Other
77
49
379
146
Total other retail
87
56
402
167
Total charge-offs (c)
508
275
1,732
831
Recoveries
Commercial
Commercial
16
27
46
68
Lease financing
2
2
8
7
Total commercial
18
29
54
75
Commercial real estate
Commercial mortgages
2
6
13
9
Construction and development
—
—
—
6
Total commercial real estate
2
6
13
15
Residential mortgages
4
7
16
29
Credit card
39
42
122
132
Other retail
Retail leasing
3
4
9
12
Home equity and second mortgages
4
4
11
14
Other
18
21
65
69
Total other retail
25
29
85
95
Total recoveries
88
113
290
346
Net Charge-Offs
Commercial
Commercial
86
24
215
78
Lease financing
6
3
14
11
Total commercial
92
27
229
89
Commercial real estate
Commercial mortgages
49
(6
)
190
(8
)
Construction and development
—
—
2
3
Total commercial real estate
49
(6
)
192
(5
)
Residential mortgages
(3
)
(5
)
110
(20
)
Credit card
220
119
594
349
Other retail
Retail leasing
2
1
4
2
Home equity and second mortgages
1
(2
)
(1
)
(7
)
Other
59
28
314
77
Total other retail
62
27
317
72
Total net charge-offs
420
162
1,442
485
Provision for credit losses
515
362
1,763
785
Balance at end of period
$
7,790
$
6,455
$
7,790
$
6,455
Components
Allowance for loan losses
$
7,218
$
6,017
Liability for unfunded credit commitments
572
438
Total allowance for credit losses (1)
$
7,790
$
6,455
Period-end
loans (2)
$
375,234
$
342,708
Nonperforming loans (3)
1,267
630
Allowance for Credit Losses as a Percentage of
Period-end
loans (1)/(2)
2.08
%
1.88
%
Nonperforming loans (1)/(3)
615
1,025
Nonperforming and accruing loans 90 days or more past due
424
631
Nonperforming assets
595
953
Annualized net charge-offs
468
1,004
(a)
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance which removed the separate recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings.
(b)
Allowance for purchased credit deteriorated and
charged-off
loans acquired from MUB.
(c)
Includes $91 million of commercial real estate charge-offs in the first quarter of 2023 related to uncollectible amounts on acquired loans. Includes $117 million of residential mortgage charge-offs and $192 million of other retail charge-offs in the second quarter of 2023 related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions.
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Residual Value Risk Management
The Company manages its risk to changes in the residual value of leased vehicles, office and business equipment, and other assets through disciplined residual valuation at the inception of a lease, diversification of its leased assets, regular residual asset valuation reviews and monitoring of residual value gains or losses upon the disposition of assets. As of September 30, 2023, no significant change in the amount of residual values or concentration of the portfolios had occurred since December 31, 2022. Refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Residual Value Risk Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on residual value risk management.
Operational Risk Management
The Company operates in many different businesses in diverse markets and relies on the ability of its employees and systems to process a high number of transactions. Operational risk is inherent in all business activities, and the management of this risk is important to the achievement of the Company’s objectives. Business lines have direct and primary responsibility and accountability for identifying, controlling, and monitoring operational risks embedded in their business activities, including those additional or increased risks created by economic and financial disruptions. The Company maintains a system of controls with the objective of providing proper transaction authorization and execution, proper system operations, proper oversight of third parties with whom it does business, safeguarding of assets from misuse or theft, and ensuring the reliability and security of financial and other data. Refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Operational Risk Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on operational risk management.
Compliance Risk Management
The Company may suffer legal or regulatory sanctions, material financial loss, or damage to its reputation through failure to comply with laws, regulations, rules, standards of good practice, and codes of conduct, including those related to compliance with Bank Secrecy Act/anti-money laundering requirements, sanctions compliance requirements as administered by the Office of Foreign Assets Control, consumer protection and other requirements. The Company has controls and processes in place for the assessment, identification, monitoring, management and reporting of compliance risks and issues, including those created or increased by economic and financial disruptions. Refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Compliance Risk Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on compliance risk management.
Interest Rate Risk Management
In the banking industry, changes in interest rates are a significant risk that can impact earnings and the safety and soundness of an entity. The Company manages its exposure to changes in interest rates through asset and liability management activities within guidelines established by its Asset Liability Management Committee (“ALCO”) and approved by the Board of Directors. The ALCO has the responsibility for approving and overseeing compliance with the ALCO management policies, including interest rate risk exposure. One way the Company measures and analyzes its interest rate risk is through net interest income simulation analysis.
Simulation analysis incorporates substantially all of the Company’s assets and liabilities and
off-balance
sheet instruments, together with forecasted changes in the balance sheet and assumptions that reflect the current interest rate environment. Through this simulation, management estimates the impact on net interest income of various interest rate changes that differ in the direction, amount and speed of change over time, as well as the shape of the yield curve. This simulation includes assumptions about how the balance sheet is likely to be affected by changes in loan and deposit growth. Assumptions are made to project interest rates for new loans and deposits based on historical analysis, management’s outlook and
re-pricing
strategies. These assumptions are reviewed and validated on a periodic basis with sensitivity analysis being provided for key variables of the simulation. The results are reviewed monthly by the ALCO and are used to guide asset/liability management strategies.
The Company manages its interest rate risk position by holding assets with desired interest rate risk characteristics on its balance sheet, implementing certain pricing strategies for loans and deposits and selecting derivatives and various funding and investment portfolio strategies. The Company also manages interest rate sensitivity by utilizing market value of equity modeling, which measures the degree to which the market values of the Company’s assets and liabilities and
off-balance
sheet instruments will change given a change in interest rates. Management measures the impact of changes in market values due to interest rates under a number of scenarios, including immediate and sustained parallel shifts, and flattening or steepening of the yield curve.
Table 9 summarizes the projected impact to net interest income over the next 12 months of various potential interest rate changes. The sensitivity of the
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21
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Table 9
Sensitivity of Net Interest Income
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Down 50 bps
Immediate
Up 50 bps
Immediate
Down 200 bps
Gradual
Up 200 bps
Gradual
Down 50 bps
Immediate
Up 50 bps
Immediate
Down 200 bps
Gradual
Up 200 bps
Gradual
Net interest income
(.40
)%
.70
%
(.63
)%
1.34
%
(.58
)%
.95
%
(2.02
)%
1.44
%
projected impact to net interest income over the next 12 months is dependent on balance sheet growth, product mix, deposit behavior, pricing and funding decisions. While the Company utilizes models and assumptions based on historical information and expected behaviors, actual outcomes could vary significantly. Net interest income sensitivities reflect the impact of current market expectations for interest rates, driving an increase in baseline projected net interest income. As market expectations are reflected in projected results, incremental interest rate sensitivity declines on a percentage basis.
Use of Derivatives to Manage Interest Rate and Other Risks
To manage the sensitivity of earnings and capital to interest rate, prepayment, credit, price and foreign currency fluctuations (asset and liability management positions), the Company enters into derivative transactions. The Company uses derivatives for asset and liability management purposes primarily in the following ways:
•
To convert fixed-rate debt and
available-for-sale
investment securities from fixed-rate payments to floating-rate payments;
•
To convert floating-rate loans and debt from floating-rate payments to fixed-rate payments;
•
To mitigate changes in value of the Company’s unfunded mortgage loan commitments, funded MLHFS and MSRs;
•
To mitigate remeasurement volatility of foreign currency denominated balances; and
•
To mitigate the volatility of the Company’s net investment in foreign operations driven by fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates.
In addition, the Company enters into interest rate, foreign exchange and commodity derivative contracts to support the business requirements of its customers (customer-related positions). The Company minimizes the market and liquidity risks of customer-related positions by either entering into similar offsetting positions with broker-dealers, or on a portfolio basis by entering into other derivative or
non-derivative
financial instruments that partially or fully offset the exposure from these customer-related positions. The Company may enter into derivative contracts that are either exchange-traded, centrally cleared through clearinghouses or
over-the-counter.
The Company does not utilize derivatives for speculative purposes.
The Company does not designate all of the derivatives that it enters into for risk management purposes as accounting hedges because of the inefficiency of applying the accounting requirements and may instead elect fair value accounting for the related hedged items. In particular, the Company enters into interest rate swaps, swaptions, forward commitments to buy
to-be-announced
securities (“TBAs”), U.S. Treasury and Eurodollar futures and options on U.S. Treasury futures to mitigate fluctuations in the value of its MSRs, but does not designate those derivatives as accounting hedges. Additionally, the Company uses forward commitments to sell TBAs and other commitments to sell residential mortgage loans at specified prices to economically hedge the interest rate risk in its residential mortgage loan production activities. The forward commitments to sell and the unfunded mortgage loan commitments on loans intended to be sold are considered derivatives under the accounting guidance related to accounting for derivative instruments and hedging activities. The Company has elected the fair value option for the MLHFS.
Derivatives are subject to credit risk associated with counterparties to the contracts. Credit risk associated with derivatives is measured by the Company based on the probability of counterparty default. The Company manages the credit risk of its derivative positions by diversifying its positions among various counterparties, by entering into master netting arrangements, and, where possible, by requiring collateral arrangements. The Company may also transfer counterparty credit risk related to interest rate swaps to third parties through the use of risk participation agreements. In addition, certain interest rate swaps, interest rate forwards and credit contracts are required to be centrally cleared through clearinghouses to further mitigate counterparty credit risk. The Company also mitigates the credit risk of its derivative positions, as well as the credit risk on loans or lending portfolios, through the use of credit contracts.
For additional information on derivatives and hedging activities, refer to Notes 13 and 14 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
LIBOR Transition
In July 2017, the United Kingdom’s Financial Conduct Authority (the “FCA”) announced that it would no longer require banks to submit rates for
22
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the London InterBank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) after 2021. As of July 3, 2023, all tenors of LIBOR have ceased to be published or representative. The Company holds financial instruments impacted by the discontinuance of LIBOR, including certain loans, investment securities, derivatives, borrowings and other financial instruments that use LIBOR as the benchmark rate. The Company also provides various services to customers in its capacities as trustee, servicer, and asset manager, which involve financial instruments that are similarly impacted by the discontinuance of LIBOR.
The Company has implemented its remediation strategy for its financial instruments associated with all LIBOR currencies and tenors and has established processes and procedures to address inquiries from customers and other third-parties regarding the LIBOR transition. The Company has applied the Adjustable Interest Rate (LIBOR) Act (the “LIBOR Act”) and the Regulations Implementing the LIBOR Act (Regulation ZZ) (the “Final Rules”) to substantially all financial instruments that are eligible. The LIBOR Act and Final Rules established a process for replacing LIBOR in existing LIBOR contracts that did not provide for the use of a clearly defined or practicable replacement benchmark rate by providing that a benchmark replacement identified by the Federal Reserve Board that is based on the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) replaces LIBOR as the benchmark for those contracts as a matter of law, without the need to be amended by the parties.
Because financial instruments will transition to an alternative reference rate (“ARR”) at the first reset date LIBOR is unavailable, many products will continue to accrue interest on LIBOR for a period of time after cessation, but these financial instruments all have a transition plan in place as of the cessation of LIBOR.
Refer to “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on potential risks that could adversely affect the Company’s financial results as a result of the LIBOR transition.
Market Risk Management
In addition to interest rate risk, the Company is exposed to other forms of market risk, principally related to trading activities which support customers’ strategies to manage their own foreign currency, interest rate risk, commodities risk and funding activities. For purposes of its internal capital adequacy assessment process, the Company considers risk arising from its trading activities, as well as the remeasurement volatility of foreign currency denominated balances included on its Consolidated Balance Sheet (collectively, “Covered Positions”), employing methodologies consistent with the requirements of regulatory rules for market risk. The Company’s Market Risk Committee (“MRC”), within the framework of the ALCO, oversees market risk management. The MRC monitors and reviews the Company’s Covered Positions and establishes policies for market risk management, including exposure limits for each portfolio. The Company uses a VaR approach to measure general market risk. Theoretically, VaR represents the statistical risk of loss the Company has to adverse market movements over a
one-day
time horizon. The Company uses the Historical Simulation method to calculate VaR for its Covered Positions measured at the ninety-ninth percentile using a
one-year
look-back period for distributions derived from past market data. The market factors used in the calculations include those pertinent to market risks inherent in the underlying trading portfolios, principally those that affect the Company’s corporate bond trading business, foreign currency transaction business, client derivatives business, loan trading business and municipal securities business, as well as those inherent in the Company’s foreign denominated balances and the derivatives used to mitigate the related measurement volatility. On average, the Company expects the
one-day
VaR to be exceeded by actual losses two to three times per year related to these positions. The Company monitors the accuracy of internal VaR models and modeling processes by back-testing model performance, regularly updating the historical data used by the VaR models and regular model validations to assess the accuracy of the models’ input, processing, and reporting components. All models are required to be independently reviewed and approved prior to being placed in use. If the Company were to experience market losses in excess of the estimated VaR more often than expected, the VaR models and associated assumptions would be analyzed and adjusted. VaR amounts reflect MUB beginning December 1, 2022, the day the acquisition transaction closed.
The average, high, low and
period-end
one-day
VaR amounts for the Company’s Covered Positions were as follows:
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Average
$
4
$
2
High
7
4
Low
3
1
Period-end
3
3
The Company did not experience any actual losses for its combined Covered Positions that exceeded VaR during the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022. The Company stress tests its market risk measurements to provide management with perspectives
U.S. Bancorp
23
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on market events that may not be captured by its VaR models, including worst case historical market movement combinations that have not necessarily occurred on the same date.
The Company calculates Stressed VaR using the same underlying methodology and model as VaR, except that a historical continuous
one-year
look-back period is utilized that reflects a period of significant financial stress appropriate to the Company’s Covered Positions. The period selected by the Company includes the significant market volatility of the last four months of 2008.
The average, high, low and
period-end
one-day
Stressed VaR amounts for the Company’s Covered Positions were as follows:
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Average
$
11
$
9
High
16
18
Low
6
6
Period-end
7
17
Valuations of positions in client derivatives and foreign currency activities are based on discounted cash flow or other valuation techniques using market-based assumptions. These valuations are compared to third-party quotes or other market prices to determine if there are significant variances. Significant variances are approved by senior management in the Company’s corporate functions. Valuation of positions in the corporate bond trading, loan trading and municipal securities businesses are based on trader marks. These trader marks are evaluated against third-party prices, with significant variances approved by senior management in the Company’s corporate functions.
The Company also measures the market risk of its hedging activities related to residential MLHFS and MSRs using the Historical Simulation method. The VaRs are measured at the ninety-ninth percentile and employ factors pertinent to the market risks inherent in the valuation of the assets and hedges. A
one-year
look-back period is used to obtain past market data for the models.
The average, high and low VaR amounts for the residential MLHFS and related hedges and the MSRs and related hedges were as follows:
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Residential Mortgage Loans Held For Sale and Related Hedges
Average
$
1
$
2
High
2
5
Low
—
1
Mortgage Servicing Rights and Related Hedges
Average
$
8
$
8
High
12
20
Low
2
3
Liquidity Risk Management
The Company’s liquidity risk management process is designed to identify, measure, and manage the Company’s funding and liquidity risk to meet its daily funding needs and to address expected and unexpected changes in its funding requirements. The Company engages in various activities to manage its liquidity risk. These activities include diversifying its funding sources, stress testing, and holding readily-marketable assets which can be used as a source of liquidity if needed. In addition, the Company’s profitable operations, sound credit quality and strong credit ratings and capital position have enabled it to develop a large and reliable base of core deposit funding within its market areas and in domestic and global capital markets.
The Company’s Board of Directors approves the Company’s liquidity policy. The Risk Management Committee of the Company’s Board of Directors oversees the Company’s liquidity risk management process and approves a contingency funding plan. The ALCO reviews the Company’s liquidity policy and limits, and regularly assesses the Company’s ability to meet funding requirements arising from adverse company-specific or market events.
The Company regularly projects its funding needs under various stress scenarios and maintains a contingency funding plan consistent with the Company’s access to diversified sources of contingent funding. The Company maintains a substantial level of total available liquidity in the form of
on-balance
sheet and
off-balance
sheet funding sources. These liquidity sources include cash at the Federal Reserve Bank and certain European central banks, unencumbered liquid assets, and capacity to borrow from the FHLB and at the Federal Reserve Bank’s Discount Window and new Bank Term Funding Program, created in 2023. Unencumbered liquid assets in the Company’s investment securities portfolio provide asset liquidity through the Company’s ability to sell the securities or pledge and borrow against them. Refer to Note 4 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements and “Balance Sheet Analysis” for further information on investment securities maturities and trends. Asset liquidity is further enhanced by the Company’s practice of pledging loans to access secured borrowing facilities through the FHLB and Federal Reserve Bank.
The following table summarizes the Company’s total available liquidity from
on-balance
sheet and
off-balance
sheet funding sources:
(Dollars in millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Cash held at the Federal Reserve Bank and other central banks
$
56,450
$
45,171
Available investment securities
32,892
132,052
Borrowing capacity from the Federal Reserve Bank and FHLB
221,039
125,682
Total available liquidity
$
310,381
$
302,905
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U.S. Bancorp
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The Company’s diversified deposit base provides a sizeable source of relatively stable and
low-cost
funding, while reducing the Company’s reliance on the wholesale markets. Total deposits were $518.4 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $525.0 billion at December 31, 2022. Refer to “Balance Sheet Analysis” for further information on the Company’s deposits.
Additional funding is provided by long-term debt and short-term borrowings. Long-term debt was $43.1 billion at September 30, 2023, and is an important funding source because of its multi-year borrowing structure. Short-term borrowings were $21.9 billion at September 30, 2023, and supplement the Company’s other funding sources. Refer to “Balance Sheet Analysis” for further information on the Company’s long-term debt and short-term borrowings.
In addition to assessing liquidity risk on a consolidated basis, the Company monitors the parent company’s liquidity. The parent company’s routine funding requirements consist primarily of operating expenses, dividends paid to shareholders, debt service, repurchases of common stock and funds used for acquisitions. The parent company obtains funding to meet its obligations from dividends collected from its subsidiaries and the issuance of debt and capital securities. The Company establishes limits for the minimal number of months into the future where the parent company can meet existing and forecasted obligations with cash and securities held that can be readily monetized. The Company measures and manages this limit in both normal and adverse conditions. The Company maintains sufficient funding to meet expected capital and debt service obligations for 24 months without the support of dividends from subsidiaries and assuming access to the wholesale markets is maintained. The Company maintains sufficient liquidity to meet its capital and debt service obligations for 12 months under adverse conditions without the support of dividends from subsidiaries or access to the wholesale markets. The parent company is currently in excess of required liquidity minimums.
At September 30, 2023, parent company long-term debt outstanding was $33.1 billion, compared with $27.0 billion at December 31, 2022. The increase was primarily due to $7.2 billion of medium-term note issuances, partially offset by a $936 million repayment of the Company’s debt obligation to MUFG. As of September 30, 2023, there was no parent company debt scheduled to mature in the remainder of 2023. Future debt maturities may be met through medium-term note and capital security issuances and dividends from subsidiaries, as well as from parent company cash and cash equivalents.
The Company is subject to a regulatory Liquidity Coverage Ratio (“LCR”) requirement which requires banks to maintain an adequate level of unencumbered high quality liquid assets to meet estimated liquidity needs over a
30-day
stressed period. At September 30, 2023, the Company was compliant with this requirement.
The Company is also subject to a regulatory Net Stable Funding Ratio (“NSFR”) requirement which requires banks to maintain a minimum level of stable funding based on the liquidity characteristics of their assets, commitments, and derivative exposures over a
one-year
time horizon. At September 30, 2023, the Company was compliant with this requirement.
Refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Liquidity Risk Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on liquidity risk management.
European Exposures
The Company provides merchant processing and corporate trust services in Europe either directly or through banking affiliations in Europe. Revenue generated from sources in Europe represented approximately 2 percent of the Company’s total net revenue for both the three and nine months ended September 30, 2023. Operating cash for these businesses is deposited on a short-term basis typically with certain European central banks. For deposits placed at other European banks, exposure is mitigated by the Company placing deposits at multiple banks and managing the amounts on deposit at any bank based on institution-specific deposit limits. At September 30, 2023, the Company had an aggregate amount on deposit with European banks of approximately $7.2 billion, predominately with the Central Bank of Ireland and Bank of England.
In addition, the Company provides financing to domestic multinational corporations that generate revenue from customers in European countries, transacts with various European banks as counterparties to certain derivative-related activities, and through a subsidiary, manages money market funds that hold certain investments in European sovereign debt. Any deterioration in economic conditions in Europe, including the impacts resulting from the Russia-Ukraine conflict, is not expected to have a significant effect on the Company related to these activities.
U.S. Bancorp
25
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Table 10
Regulatory Capital Ratios
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Basel III standardized approach:
Common equity tier 1 capital
$
44,655
$
41,560
Tier 1 capital
51,906
48,813
Total risk-based capital
61,737
59,015
Risk-weighted assets
462,250
496,500
Common equity tier 1 capital as a percent of risk-weighted assets (a)
9.7
%
8.4
%
Tier 1 capital as a percent of risk-weighted assets
11.2
9.8
Total risk-based capital as a percent of risk-weighted assets
13.4
11.9
Tier 1 capital as a percent of adjusted quarterly average assets (leverage ratio)
7.9
7.9
Tier 1 capital as a percent of total
on-
and
off-balance
sheet leverage exposure (total leverage exposure ratio)
6.4
6.4
(a)
The Company’s common equity tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets ratio, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology, was 9.5 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 8.1 percent at December 31, 2022. See Non-GAAP Financial Measures beginning on page 32.
Commitments, Contingent Liabilities and Other Contractual Obligations
The Company participates in many different contractual arrangements which may or may not be recorded on its balance sheet, with unrelated or consolidated entities, under which the Company has an obligation to pay certain amounts, provide credit or liquidity enhancements or provide market risk support. These arrangements include commitments to extend credit, letters of credit and various forms of guarantees. Refer to Note 16 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further information on guarantees and contingent liabilities. These arrangements also include any obligation related to a variable interest held in an unconsolidated entity that provides financing, liquidity, credit enhancement or market risk support. Refer to Note 6 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further information related to the Company’s interests in variable interest entities.
Capital Management
The Company is committed to managing capital to maintain strong protection for depositors and creditors and for maximum shareholder benefit. The Company also manages its capital to exceed regulatory capital requirements for banking organizations. To achieve its capital goals, the Company employs a variety of capital management tools, including dividends, common share repurchases, and the issuance of subordinated debt,
non-cumulative
perpetual preferred stock, common stock and other capital instruments. The regulatory capital requirements effective for the Company follow Basel III, with the Company being subject to calculating its capital adequacy as a percentage of risk-weighted assets under the standardized approach. Beginning in 2022, the Company began to phase into its regulatory capital requirements the cumulative deferred impact of its 2020 adoption of the accounting guidance related to the impairment of financial instruments based on the current expected credit losses (“CECL”) methodology plus 25 percent of its quarterly credit reserve increases during 2020 and 2021. This cumulative deferred impact will continue to be phased into the Company’s regulatory capital over the next two years, culminating with a fully phased in regulatory capital calculation beginning in 2025. Table 10 provides a summary of statutory regulatory capital ratios in effect for the Company at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022. All regulatory ratios exceeded regulatory “well-capitalized” requirements.
As a bank holding company with over $100 billion in total consolidated assets, the Company is subject to the Dodd-Frank Act’s enhanced prudential standards, as applied to “Category III” institutions under the federal banking regulators’ rules that tailor how enhanced prudential standards apply to large U.S. banking organizations (the “Tailoring Rules”). In connection with the Company’s acquisition of MUB, the Company committed to submit to the Federal Reserve quarterly implementation plans for complying with requirements associated with a “Category II” banking organization (i.e., institutions with $700 billion or more in total assets or $75 billion or more in cross-jurisdictional activities). The Company also committed to meet requirements applicable to Category II banking organizations by the earlier of (i) the date required under the Tailoring Rules; and (ii) December 31, 2024, if the Federal Reserve notifies the Company by January 1, 2024, that the Company must comply with those requirements. On October 16, 2023, the Federal Reserve granted the Company full relief from both of these commitments. As a result, the Company will continue to be subject to the regulatory capital requirements applicable to Category III institutions.
In July 2023, the U.S. federal bank regulatory authorities proposed a rule implementing the Basel Committee’s finalization of the post-crisis regulatory capital reforms. The proposal provides for a July 1, 2025 effective date, subject to a three-year transition period. The proposal incl
udes
the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book, which replaces the market risk rule, and introduces new standardized approaches for credit risk,
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U.S. Bancorp
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operational risk and credit valuation adjustment (CVA) risk, which would replace the current models-based approaches. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of the proposed rule and expects that any final rule would result in the Company being required to maintain increased levels of regulatory capital.
The Company believes certain other capital ratios are useful in evaluating its capital adequacy. The Company’s tangible common equity, as a percent of tangible assets and as a percent of risk-weighted assets determined in accordance with transitional regulatory capital requirements related to the CECL methodology under the standardized approach, was 5.0 percent and 7.0 percent, respectively, at September 30, 2023, compared with 4.5 percent and 6.0 percent, respectively, at December 31, 2022. In addition, the Company’s common equity tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets ratio, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology was 9.5 percent at September 30, 2023, compared with 8.1 percent at December 31, 2022. Refer to
“Non-GAAP
Financial Measures” beginning on page 32 for further information on these other capital ratios.
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity was $53.1 billion at September 30, 2023, compared with $50.8 billion at December 31, 2022. The increase was primarily the result of corporate earnings and the issuance of shares of common stock, partially offset by dividends paid and changes in unrealized gains and losses on
available-for-sale
investment securities included in other comprehensive income (loss). In the third quarter of 2023, the Company issued 24 million shares of common stock of the Company to an affiliate of MUFG for a purchase price of $936 million. The proceeds of the issuance were used to repay a portion of the Company’s $3.5 billion debt obligation to MUFG. See “MUFG Union Bank Acquisition” on page 5 for further information.
The Company announced on December 22, 2020 that its Board of Directors had approved an authorization to repurchase $3.0 billion of its common stock beginning January 1, 2021. The Company suspended all common stock repurchases at the beginning of the third quarter of 2021, except for those done exclusively in connection with its stock-based compensation programs, due to its acquisition of MUB. The Company will evaluate its share repurchases in connection with the potential capital requirements given the proposed regulatory capital rules and related landscape. Capital distributions, including dividends and stock repurchases, are subject to the approval of the Company’s Board of Directors and compliance with regulatory requirements.
The following table provides a detailed analysis of all shares of common stock of the Company purchased by the Company or any affiliated purchaser during the third quarter of 2023:
Period
Total Number
of Shares
Purchased
Average
Price Paid
Per Share
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
as Part of Publicly
Announced
Program
Approximate Dollar
Value of Shares
that May Yet Be
Purchased Under
the Program
(In Millions)
July
256,644
(a)
$
35.15
6,644
$
1,331
August
4,099
36.95
4,099
1,331
September
338
35.31
338
1,331
Total
261,081
(a)
$
35.18
11,081
$
1,331
(a)
Includes 250,000 shares of common stock purchased, at an average price per share of $35.05, in open-market transactions by U.S. Bank National Association, the Company’s banking subsidiary, in its capacity as trustee of the U.S. Bank 401(k) Savings Plan, which is the Company’s employee retirement savings plan.
Refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Capital Management” in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for further discussion on capital management.
LINE OF BUSINESS FINANCIAL REVIEW
The Company’s major lines of business are Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking, Consumer and Business Banking, Payment Services, and Treasury and Corporate Support. These operating segments are components of the Company about which financial information is prepared and is evaluated regularly by management in deciding how to allocate resources and assess performance.
Basis for Financial Presentation
Business line results are derived from the Company’s business unit profitability reporting systems by specifically attributing managed balance sheet assets, deposits and other liabilities and their related income or expense. Refer to Note 17 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further information on the business lines’ basis for financial presentation.
Designations, assignments and allocations change from time to time as management systems are enhanced, methods of evaluating performance or product lines change or business segments are realigned to better respond to the Company’s diverse customer base. During 2023, certain organization and methodology changes were made, including the Company combining its Wealth Management and Investment Services and Corporate and Commercial Banking lines of businesses to create the Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking line of business during the third quarter. Prior period results were restated and presented on a comparable basis.
U.S. Bancorp
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Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking provides core banking, specialized lending, transaction and payment processing, capital markets, asset management, and brokerage and investment related services to wealth, middle market, large corporate, government and institutional clients. Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking contributed $838 million of the Company’s net income in the third quarter and $2.8 billion in the first nine months of 2023, or a decrease of $107 million (11.3 percent) and an increase of $437 million (18.7 percent), respectively, compared with the same periods of 2022.
Net revenue increased $158 million (6.7 percent) in the third quarter and $1.5 billion (23.6 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022. Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis, increased $33 million (2.3 percent) in the third quarter and $1.0 billion (28.5 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to the impact of higher rates on the margin benefit from deposits and the acquisition of MUB. Noninterest income increased $125 million (13.8 percent) in the third quarter and $450 million (16.8 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to higher trust and investment management fees driven by the acquisition of MUB and core business growth, and higher commercial products revenue mainly due to higher trading revenue.
Noninterest expense increased $244 million (24.1 percent) in the third quarter and $824 million (27.3 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to higher compensation and employee benefits expense as a result of merit increases and core business growth, higher net shared services expense driven by investment in support of business growth and the impact of the MUB acquisition, including intangible amortization driven by the core deposit intangible, as well as higher FDIC insurance expense driven by an increase in the assessment base and rate along with the inclusion of MUB in the current year. The provision for credit losses increased $57 million (80.3 percent) in the third quarter and $84 million (46.7 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to commercial real estate credit quality.
Consumer and Business Banking
Consumer and Business Banking comprises consumer banking, small business banking and consumer lending. Products and services are delivered through banking offices, telephone servicing and sales,
on-line
services, direct mail, ATM processing, mobile devices, distributed mortgage loan officers, and intermediary relationships including auto dealerships, mortgage banks, and strategic business partners. Consumer and Business Banking contributed $550 million of the Company’s net income in the third quarter and $1.8 billion in the first nine months of 2023, or increases of $116 million (26.7 percent) and $480 million (37.6 percent), respectively, compared with the same periods of 2022.
Net revenue increased $450 million (22.2 percent) in the third quarter and $1.7 billion (29.3 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022. Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis, increased $352 million (20.8 percent) in the third quarter and $1.7 billion (35.0 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, due to the favorable impact of higher rates on the margin benefit from deposits and the acquisition of MUB. Noninterest income increased $98 million (29.5 percent) in the third quarter and $79 million (6.7 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to higher mortgage banking revenue driven by higher gain on sale margins and increases in MSRs valuations, net of hedging activities, along with the impact of the MUB acquisition.
Noninterest expense increased $329 million (23.4 percent) in the third quarter and $1.1 billion (25.8 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to higher net shared services expense due to investments in digital capabilities and higher compensation and employee benefits expense, and impact of the MUB acquisition, including intangible amortization driven by the core deposit intangible. The provision for credit losses decreased $33 million (80.5 percent) in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, due to recent strength in housing prices. The provision for credit losses increased $15 million in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of 2022, due to normalizing credit conditions.
Payment Services
Payment Services includes consumer and business credit cards, stored-value cards, debit cards, corporate, government and purchasing card services and merchant processing. Payment Services contributed $274 million of the Company’s net income in the third quarter and $968 million in the first nine months of 2023, or decreases of $60 million (18.0 percent) and $139 million (12.6 percent), respectively, compared with the same periods of 2022.
Net revenue increased $108 million (6.7 percent) in the third quarter and $304 million (6.4 percent) in the
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U.S. Bancorp
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first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022. Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis, increased $63 million (10.0 percent) in the third quarter and $121 million (6.5 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to higher loan yields driven by higher interest rates and customer revolve rates, along with higher loan balances, partially offset by higher funding costs. Noninterest income increased $45 million (4.5 percent) in the third quarter and $183 million (6.4 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, driven by higher card revenue due to higher spend volume and favorable rates, along with increased merchant processing services revenue and corporate payment products revenue due to higher spend volume.
Noninterest expense increased $75 million (8.4 percent) in the third quarter and $194 million (7.5 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, reflecting higher net shared services expense driven by investment in infrastructure and technology development, in addition to higher compensation and employee benefits expense due to merit increases and core business growth. The provision for credit losses increased $114 million (40.0 percent) in the third quarter and $297 million (46.7 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to normalizing credit conditions exhibited through increasing delinquency rates and lower consumer liquidity.
Treasury and Corporate Support
Treasury and Corporate Support includes the Company’s investment portfolios, funding, capital management, interest rate risk management, income taxes not allocated to the business lines, including most investments in
tax-advantaged
projects, and the residual aggregate of those expenses associated with corporate activities that are managed on a consolidated basis. Treasury and Corporate Support recorded net losses of $139 million in the third quarter and $922 million in the first nine months of 2023, compared with net income of $99 million and $174 million in the same periods of 2022, respectively.
Net revenue decreased $10 million (3.0 percent) in the third quarter and $87 million (9.0 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022. Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis, decreased $37 million (38.5 percent) in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, primarily due to higher funding costs, partially offset by higher yields on the investment securities portfolio and cash balances and the acquisition of MUB. Net interest income increased $41 million (16.5 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of 2022, primarily due to the acquisition of MUB, partially offset by higher funding costs. Noninterest income increased $27 million (11.4 percent) in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, primarily due to higher commercial products revenue. Noninterest income decreased $128 million (17.8 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of 2022, primarily due to lower securities gains, along with the impact of balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions.
Noninterest expense increased $245 million (75.2 percent) in the third quarter and $688 million (66.7 percent) in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the same periods of 2022, primarily due to merger and integration charges and operating expenses related to the acquisition of MUB, higher compensation and employee benefits expense reflecting merit increases and hiring to support business growth, and higher marketing and business development expense as the Company continues to invest in its national brand and global reach, partially offset by lower net shared services expense. The provision for credit losses increased $15 million (42.9 percent) in the third quarter of 2023, compared with the third quarter of 2022, primarily due to credit impairment realized on certain loan portfolios. The provision for credit losses increased $582 million in the first nine months of 2023, compared with the first nine months of 2022, primarily due to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions and increased economic uncertainty.
Income taxes are assessed to each line of business at a managerial tax rate of 25.0 percent with the residual tax expense or benefit to arrive at the consolidated effective tax rate included in Treasury and Corporate Support.
U.S. Bancorp
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Table 11
Line of Business Financial Performance
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and
Institutional Banking
Consumer and
Business Banking
Payment
Services
Three Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
1,472
$
1,439
2.3
%
$
2,045
$
1,693
20.8
%
$
692
$
629
10.0
%
Noninterest income
1,031
906
13.8
430
332
29.5
1,039
994
4.5
Total net revenue
2,503
2,345
6.7
2,475
2,025
22.2
1,731
1,623
6.7
Noninterest expense
1,258
1,014
24.1
1,734
1,405
23.4
967
892
8.4
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
1,245
1,331
(6.5
)
741
620
19.5
764
731
4.5
Provision for credit losses
128
71
80.3
8
41
(80.5
)
399
285
40.0
Income (loss) before income taxes
1,117
1,260
(11.3
)
733
579
26.6
365
446
(18.2
)
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
279
315
(11.4
)
183
145
26.2
91
112
(18.8
)
Net income (loss)
838
945
(11.3
)
550
434
26.7
274
334
(18.0
)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
838
$
945
(11.3
)
$
550
$
434
26.7
$
274
$
334
(18.0
)
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
175,579
$
154,473
13.7
$
157,357
$
142,640
10.3
$
38,954
$
35,819
8.8
Goodwill
4,638
3,612
28.4
4,515
3,241
39.3
3,333
3,292
1.2
Other intangible assets
921
314
*
5,154
3,726
38.3
339
405
(16.3
)
Assets
203,784
174,077
17.1
174,788
158,057
10.6
44,774
42,053
6.5
Noninterest-bearing deposits
66,083
77,471
(14.7
)
25,590
30,829
(17.0
)
2,796
3,312
(15.6
)
Interest-bearing deposits
206,622
178,080
16.0
196,374
161,778
21.4
101
171
(40.9
)
Total deposits
272,705
255,551
6.7
221,964
192,607
15.2
2,897
3,483
(16.8
)
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
22,831
18,334
24.5
15,763
12,431
26.8
9,442
8,255
14.4
Treasury and
Corporate Support
Consolidated
Company
Three Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
59
$
96
(38.5
)%
$
4,268
$
3,857
10.7
%
Noninterest income
264
237
11.4
2,764
2,469
11.9
Total net revenue
323
333
(3.0
)
7,032
6,326
11.2
Noninterest expense
571
326
75.2
4,530
3,637
24.6
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
(248
)
7
*
2,502
2,689
(7.0
)
Provision for credit losses
(20
)
(35
)
42.9
515
362
42.3
Income (loss) before income taxes
(228
)
42
*
1,987
2,327
(14.6
)
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
(90
)
(61
)
(47.5
)
463
511
(9.4
)
Net income (loss)
(138
)
103
*
1,524
1,816
(16.1
)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(1
)
(4
)
75.0
(1
)
(4
)
75.0
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
(139
)
$
99
*
$
1,523
$
1,812
(15.9
)
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
4,987
$
3,846
29.7
$
376,877
$
336,778
11.9
Goodwill
—
—
—
12,486
10,145
23.1
Other intangible assets
11
—
*
6,425
4,445
44.5
Assets
240,653
214,577
12.2
663,999
588,764
12.8
Noninterest-bearing deposits
3,055
2,432
25.6
97,524
114,044
(14.5
)
Interest-bearing deposits
11,670
2,696
*
414,767
342,725
21.0
Total deposits
14,725
5,128
*
512,291
456,769
12.2
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
5,781
10,800
(46.5
)
53,817
49,820
8.0
*
Not meaningful
30
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and
Institutional Banking
Consumer and
Business Banking
Payment
Services
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
4,691
$
3,650
28.5
%
$
6,413
$
4,752
35.0
%
$
1,991
$
1,870
6.5
%
Noninterest income
3,122
2,672
16.8
1,256
1,177
6.7
3,027
2,844
6.4
Total net revenue
7,813
6,322
23.6
7,669
5,929
29.3
5,018
4,714
6.4
Noninterest expense
3,844
3,020
27.3
5,295
4,210
25.8
2,795
2,601
7.5
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
3,969
3,302
20.2
2,374
1,719
38.1
2,223
2,113
5.2
Provision for credit losses
264
180
46.7
30
15
*
933
636
46.7
Income (loss) before income taxes
3,705
3,122
18.7
2,344
1,704
37.6
1,290
1,477
(12.7
)
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
927
781
18.7
586
426
37.6
322
370
(13.0
)
Net income (loss)
2,778
2,341
18.7
1,758
1,278
37.6
968
1,107
(12.6
)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
2,778
$
2,341
18.7
$
1,758
$
1,278
37.6
$
968
$
1,107
(12.6
)
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
177,081
$
145,594
21.6
$
163,905
$
141,276
16.0
$
37,942
$
33,820
12.2
Goodwill
4,634
3,638
27.4
4,512
3,248
38.9
3,328
3,312
.5
Other intangible assets
972
295
*
5,378
3,515
53.0
361
435
(17.0
)
Assets
203,358
163,392
24.5
181,595
156,904
15.7
43,928
40,536
8.4
Noninterest-bearing deposits
74,003
84,200
(12.1
)
33,638
30,722
9.5
3,052
3,459
(11.8
)
Interest-bearing deposits
198,702
169,892
17.0
185,476
162,528
14.1
104
166
(37.3
)
Total deposits
272,705
254,092
7.3
219,114
193,250
13.4
3,156
3,625
(12.9
)
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
22,246
17,758
25.3
16,236
12,324
31.7
9,181
8,129
12.9
Treasury and
Corporate Support
Consolidated
Company
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
Percent
Change
2023
2022
Percent
Change
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
290
$
249
16.5
%
$
13,385
$
10,521
27.2
%
Noninterest income
592
720
(17.8
)
7,997
7,413
7.9
Total net revenue
882
969
(9.0
)
21,382
17,934
19.2
Noninterest expense
1,720
1,032
66.7
13,654
10,863
25.7
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
(838
)
(63
)
*
7,728
7,071
9.3
Provision for credit losses
536
(46
)
*
1,763
785
*
Income (loss) before income taxes
(1,374
)
(17
)
*
5,965
6,286
(5.1
)
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
(467
)
(199
)
*
1,368
1,378
(.7
)
Net income (loss)
(907
)
182
*
4,597
4,908
(6.3
)
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(15
)
(8
)
(87.5
)
(15
)
(8
)
(87.5
)
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
(922
)
$
174
*
$
4,582
$
4,900
(6.5
)
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
5,184
$
4,041
28.3
$
384,112
$
324,731
18.3
Goodwill
—
—
—
12,474
10,198
22.3
Other intangible assets
19
—
*
6,730
4,245
58.5
Assets
238,600
221,235
7.8
667,481
582,067
14.7
Noninterest-bearing deposits
2,863
2,512
14.0
113,556
120,893
(6.1
)
Interest-bearing deposits
8,795
2,350
*
393,077
334,936
17.4
Total deposits
11,658
4,862
*
506,633
455,829
11.1
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
5,777
12,593
(54.1
)
53,440
50,804
5.2
*
Not meaningful
U.S. Bancorp
31
Table of Contents
NON-GAAP
FINANCIAL MEASURES
In addition to capital ratios defined by banking regulators, the Company considers various other measures when evaluating capital utilization and adequacy, including:
•
Tangible common equity to tangible assets,
•
Tangible common equity to risk-weighted assets, and
•
Common equity tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology.
These capital measures are viewed by management as useful additional methods of evaluating the Company’s utilization of its capital held and the level of capital available to withstand unexpected negative market or economic conditions. Additionally, presentation of these measures allows investors, analysts and banking regulators to assess the Company’s capital position relative to other financial services companies. These capital measures are not defined in generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”), or are not currently effective or defined in banking regulations. In addition, certain of these measures differ from currently effective capital ratios defined by banking regulations principally in that the currently effective ratios, which are subject to certain transitional provisions, temporarily exclude the impact of the 2020 adoption of accounting guidance related to impairment of financial instruments based on the CECL methodology. As a result, these capital measures disclosed by the Company may be considered
non-GAAP
financial measures. Management believes this information helps investors assess trends in the Company’s capital adequacy.
The Company also discloses net interest income and related ratios and analysis on a taxable-equivalent basis, which may also be considered
non-GAAP
financial measures. The Company believes this presentation to be the preferred industry measurement of net interest income as it provides a relevant comparison of net interest income arising from taxable and
tax-exempt
sources. In addition, certain performance measures, including the efficiency ratio and net interest margin utilize net interest income on a taxable-equivalent basis.
The Company also discloses the net charge-off ratio excluding notable items related to the acquisition of MUB, and other balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken by the Company. Management believes this measure enhances comparability with prior periods.
There may be limits in the usefulness of these measures to investors. As a result, the Company encourages readers to consider the consolidated financial statements and other financial information contained in this report in their entirety, and not to rely on any single financial measure.
The following table shows the Company’s calculation of these
non-GAAP
financial measures:
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Total equity
$
53,578
$
51,232
Preferred stock
(6,808
)
(6,808
)
Noncontrolling interests
(465
)
(466
)
Goodwill (net of deferred tax liability) (1)
(11,470
)
(11,395
)
Intangible assets (net of deferred tax liability), other than mortgage servicing rights
(2,370
)
(2,792
)
Tangible common equity (a)
32,465
29,771
Common equity tier 1 capital, determined in accordance with transitional regulatory capital requirements related to the CECL methodology implementation
44,655
41,560
Adjustments (2)
(867
)
(1,299
)
Common equity tier 1 capital, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology (b)
43,788
40,261
Total assets
668,039
674,805
Goodwill (net of deferred tax liability) (1)
(11,470
)
(11,395
)
Intangible assets (net of deferred tax liability), other than mortgage servicing rights
(2,370
)
(2,792
)
Tangible assets (c)
654,199
660,618
Risk-weighted assets, determined in accordance with transitional regulatory capital requirements related to the CECL methodology implementation (d)
462,250
496,500
Adjustments (3)
(736
)
(620
)
Risk-weighted assets, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology (e)
461,514
495,880
Ratios
Tangible common equity to tangible assets (a)/(c)
5.0
%
4.5
%
Tangible common equity to risk-weighted assets (a)/(d)
7.0
6.0
Common equity tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets, reflecting the full implementation of the CECL methodology (b)/(e)
9.5
8.1
32
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
(Dollars in Millions)
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
2023
2022
2023
2022
Net interest income
$
4,236
$
3,827
$
13,285
$
10,435
Taxable-equivalent adjustment (4)
32
30
100
86
Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis
4,268
3,857
13,385
10,521
Net interest income, on a taxable-equivalent basis (as calculated above)
4,268
3,857
13,385
10,521
Noninterest income
2,764
2,469
7,997
7,413
Less: Securities gains (losses), net
—
1
(29
)
38
Total net revenue, excluding net securities gains (losses) (f)
7,032
6,325
21,411
17,896
Noninterest expense (g)
4,530
3,637
13,654
10,863
Efficiency ratio (g)/(f)
64.4
%
57.5
%
63.8
%
60.7
%
Net charge-offs
$
1,442
Less: Notable items (5)
400
Net charge-offs, excluding notable items
1,042
Annualized net charge-offs, excluding notable items (h)
1,393
Average loan balances (i)
384,112
Net
charge-off
ratio, excluding notable items (h)/(i)
.36
%
(1)
Includes goodwill related to certain investments in unconsolidated financial institutions per prescribed regulatory requirements.
(2)
Includes the estimated increase in the allowance for credit losses related to the adoption of the CECL methodology net of deferred taxes.
(3)
Includes the impact of the estimated increase in the allowance for credit losses related to the adoption of the CECL methodology.
(4)
Based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent for those assets and liabilities whose income or expense is not included for federal income tax purposes.
(5)
Notable items for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 included $309 million of net charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions and $91 million of net charge-offs related to the uncollectible amount of acquired MUB loans, which were considered purchased credit deteriorated as of the date of acquisition.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The accounting and reporting policies of the Company comply with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States and conform to general practices within the banking industry. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions. The Company’s financial position and results of operations can be affected by these estimates and assumptions, which are integral to understanding the Company’s financial statements. Critical accounting policies are those policies management believes are the most important to the portrayal of the Company’s financial condition and results, and require management to make estimates that are difficult, subjective or complex. Most accounting policies are not considered by management to be critical accounting policies. Management has discussed the development and the selection of critical accounting policies with the Company’s Audit Committee. Those policies considered to be critical accounting policies relate to the allowance for credit losses, fair value estimates, MSRs, and income taxes. These accounting policies are discussed in detail in “Management’s Discussion and Analysis — Critical Accounting Policies” and the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022.
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including its principal executive officer and principal financial officer, the Company has evaluated the effectiveness of the design and operation of its disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in
Rules 13a-15(e)
and
15d-15(e)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”)). Based upon this evaluation, the principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that, as of the end of the period covered by this report, the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures were effective.
During the most recently completed fiscal quarter, there was no change made in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in
Rules 13a-15(f)
and
15d-15(f)
under the Exchange Act) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
U.S. Bancorp
33
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Balance Sheet
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
(Unaudited)
Assets
Cash and due from banks
$
64,354
$
53,542
Investment securities
Held-to-maturity
(fair value $
70,359
and $
77,874
, respectively)
85,342
88,740
Available-for-sale
($
292
and $
858
pledged as collateral, respectively) (a)
67,207
72,910
Loans held for sale (including $
2,263
and $
1,849
of mortgage loans carried at fair value, respectively)
2,336
2,200
Loans
Commercial
133,319
135,690
Commercial real estate
54,131
55,487
Residential mortgages
115,055
115,845
Credit card
27,080
26,295
Other retail
45,649
54,896
Total loans
375,234
388,213
Less allowance for loan losses
(
7,218
)
(
6,936
)
Net loans
368,016
381,277
Premises and equipment
3,616
3,858
Goodwill
12,472
12,373
Other intangible assets
6,435
7,155
Other assets (including $
2,585
and $
702
of trading securities at fair value pledged as collateral, respectively) (a)
58,261
52,750
Total assets
$
668,039
$
674,805
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity
Deposits
Noninterest-bearing
$
98,006
$
137,743
Interest-bearing (including $
444
of time deposits carried at fair value at September 30, 2023)
420,352
387,233
Total deposits
518,358
524,976
Short-term borrowings
21,900
31,216
Long-term debt
43,074
39,829
Other liabilities
31,129
27,552
Total liabilities
614,461
623,573
Shareholders’ equity
Preferred stock
6,808
6,808
Common stock, par value $
0.01
a share—authorized:
4,000,000,000
shares; issued: 9/30/23 and 12/31/22—
2,125,725,742
shares
21
21
Capital surplus
8,684
8,712
Retained earnings
74,023
71,901
Less cost of common stock in treasury: 9/30/23—
568,744,300
shares; 12/31/22—
594,747,484
shares
(
24,168
)
(
25,269
)
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
(
12,255
)
(
11,407
)
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
53,113
50,766
Noncontrolling interests
465
466
Total equity
53,578
51,232
Total liabilities and equity
$
668,039
$
674,805
(a)
Includes only collateral pledged by the Company where counterparties have the right to sell or pledge the collateral.
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
34
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Statement of Income
(Dollars and Shares in Millions, Except Per Share Data)
(Unaudited)
Three Months
Ended September 30
Nine Months
Ended September 30
2023
2022
2023
2022
Interest Income
Loans
$
5,700
$
3,603
$
16,582
$
9,071
Loans held for sale
42
49
111
163
Investment securities
1,152
867
3,303
2,390
Other interest income
860
209
2,248
347
Total interest income
7,754
4,728
22,244
11,971
Interest Expense
Deposits
2,580
534
6,024
791
Short-term borrowings
450
169
1,639
247
Long-term debt
488
198
1,296
498
Total interest expense
3,518
901
8,959
1,536
Net interest income
4,236
3,827
13,285
10,435
Provision for credit losses
515
362
1,763
785
Net interest income after provision for credit losses
3,721
3,465
11,522
9,650
Noninterest Income
Card revenue
412
391
1,194
1,128
Corporate payment products revenue
198
190
577
520
Merchant processing services
427
406
1,250
1,194
Trust and investment management fees
627
572
1,838
1,638
Service charges
334
317
982
984
Commercial products revenue
354
285
1,046
841
Mortgage banking revenue
144
81
403
423
Investment products fees
70
56
206
177
Securities gains (losses), net
—
1
(
29
)
38
Other
198
170
530
470
Total noninterest income
2,764
2,469
7,997
7,413
Noninterest Expense
Compensation and employee benefits
2,615
2,260
7,907
6,755
Net occupancy and equipment
313
272
950
806
Professional services
127
131
402
356
Marketing and business development
176
126
420
312
Technology and communications
511
427
1,536
1,267
Other intangibles
161
43
480
130
Merger and integration charges
284
42
838
239
Other
343
336
1,121
998
Total noninterest expense
4,530
3,637
13,654
10,863
Income before income taxes
1,955
2,297
5,865
6,200
Applicable income taxes
431
481
1,268
1,292
Net income
1,524
1,816
4,597
4,908
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(
1
)
(
4
)
(
15
)
(
8
)
Net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
1,523
$
1,812
$
4,582
$
4,900
Net income applicable to U.S. Bancorp common shareholders
$
1,412
$
1,718
$
4,285
$
4,648
Earnings per common share
$
.91
$
1.16
$
2.79
$
3.13
Diluted earnings per common share
$
.91
$
1.16
$
2.79
$
3.13
Average common shares outstanding
1,548
1,486
1,538
1,485
Average diluted common shares outstanding
1,549
1,486
1,538
1,486
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
U.S. Bancorp
35
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
(Dollars in Millions)
(Unaudited)
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
2023
2022
2023
2022
Net income
$
1,524
$
1,816
$
4,597
$
4,908
Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) on investment securities
available-for-sale
(
1,881
)
(
2,810
)
(
1,036
)
(
14,325
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) on derivative hedges
(
349
)
(
232
)
(
610
)
(
134
)
Foreign currency translation
3
(
8
)
21
(
11
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) on retirement plans
(
1
)
—
—
—
Reclassification to earnings of realized (gains) losses
170
186
475
337
Income taxes related to other comprehensive income (loss)
521
725
302
3,576
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
(
1,537
)
(
2,139
)
(
848
)
(
10,557
)
Comprehensive income (loss)
(
13
)
(
323
)
3,749
(
5,649
)
Comprehensive (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(
1
)
(
4
)
(
15
)
(
8
)
Comprehensive income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
(
14
)
$
(
327
)
$
3,734
$
(
5,657
)
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
36
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Statement of Shareholders’ Equity
U.S. Bancorp Shareholders
(Dollars and Shares in Millions, Except Per
Share Data) (Unaudited)
Common
Shares
Outstanding
Preferred
Stock
Common
Stock
Capital
Surplus
Retained
Earnings
Treasury
Stock
Accumulated
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
Total U.S.
Bancorp
Shareholders’
Equity
Noncontrolling
Interests
Total
Equity
Balance June 30, 2022
1,486
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,555
$
70,772
$
(
27,190
)
$
(
10,361
)
$
48,605
$
464
$
49,069
Net income (loss)
1,812
1,812
4
1,816
Other comprehensive income (loss)
(
2,139
)
(
2,139
)
(
2,139
)
Preferred stock dividends (a)
(
85
)
(
85
)
(
85
)
Common stock dividends ($
.48
per share)
(
717
)
(
717
)
(
717
)
Issuance of common and treasury stock
(
1
)
2
1
1
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
—
(
4
)
(
4
)
Net other changes in noncontrolling interests
—
1
1
Stock option and restricted stock grants
36
36
36
Balance September 30, 2022
1,486
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,590
$
71,782
$
(
27,188
)
$
(
12,500
)
$
47,513
$
465
$
47,978
Balance June 30, 2023
1,533
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,742
$
73,355
$
(
25,189
)
$
(
10,718
)
$
53,019
$
465
$
53,484
Net income (loss)
1,523
1,523
1
1,524
Other comprehensive income (loss)
(
1,537
)
(
1,537
)
(
1,537
)
Preferred stock dividends (b)
(
102
)
(
102
)
(
102
)
Common stock dividends ($
.48
per share)
(
753
)
(
753
)
(
753
)
Issuance of common and treasury stock
24
(
99
)
1,022
923
923
Purchase of treasury stock
(
1
)
(
1
)
(
1
)
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
—
(
1
)
(
1
)
Stock option and restricted stock grants
41
41
41
Balance September 30, 2023
1,557
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,684
$
74,023
$
(
24,168
)
$
(
12,255
)
$
53,113
$
465
$
53,578
Balance December 31, 2021
1,484
$
6,371
$
21
$
8,539
$
69,201
$
(
27,271
)
$
(
1,943
)
$
54,918
$
469
$
55,387
Net income (loss)
4,900
4,900
8
4,908
Other comprehensive income (loss)
(
10,557
)
(
10,557
)
(
10,557
)
Preferred stock dividends (c)
(
228
)
(
228
)
(
228
)
Common stock dividends ($
1.40
per share)
(
2,091
)
(
2,091
)
(
2,091
)
Issuance of preferred stock
437
437
437
Issuance of common and treasury stock
3
(
120
)
138
18
18
Purchase of treasury stock
(
1
)
(
55
)
(
55
)
(
55
)
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
—
(
8
)
(
8
)
Net other changes in noncontrolling interests
—
(
4
)
(
4
)
Stock option and restricted stock grants
171
171
171
Balance September 30, 2022
1,486
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,590
$
71,782
$
(
27,188
)
$
(
12,500
)
$
47,513
$
465
$
47,978
Balance December 31, 2022
1,531
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,712
$
71,901
$
(
25,269
)
$
(
11,407
)
$
50,766
$
466
$
51,232
Change in accounting principle (d)
46
46
46
Net income (loss)
4,582
4,582
15
4,597
Other comprehensive income (loss)
(
848
)
(
848
)
(
848
)
Preferred stock dividends (e)
(
273
)
(
273
)
(
273
)
Common stock dividends ($
1.44
per share)
(
2,233
)
(
2,233
)
(
2,233
)
Issuance of common and treasury stock
27
(
215
)
1,146
931
931
Purchase of treasury stock
(
1
)
(
45
)
(
45
)
(
45
)
Distributions to noncontrolling interests
—
(
15
)
(
15
)
Net other changes in noncontrolling interests
—
(
1
)
(
1
)
Stock option and restricted stock grants
187
187
187
Balance September 30, 2023
1,557
$
6,808
$
21
$
8,684
$
74,023
$
(
24,168
)
$
(
12,255
)
$
53,113
$
465
$
53,578
(a)
Reflects dividends declared per share on the Company’s Series A, Series B, Series J, Series K, Series L, Series M, Series N and Series O
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock of $
902.622
, $
223.611
, $
662.50
, $
343.75
, $
234.375
, $
250.00
, $
231.25
and $
281.25
, respectively.
(b)
Reflects dividends declared per share on the Company’s Series A, Series B, Series J, Series K, Series L, Series M, Series N and Series O
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock of $
1,684.00
, $
394.167
, $
662.50
, $
343.75
, $
234.375
, $
250.00
, $
231.25
, and $
281.25
respectively.
(c)
Reflects dividends declared per share on the Company’s Series A, Series B, Series J, Series K, Series L, Series M, Series N and Series O
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock of $
2,662.344
, $
663.542
, $
1,325.00
, $
1,031.25
, $
703.125
, $
750.00
, $
693.75
and $
768.75
, respectively.
(d)
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance which removed the separate recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings. Upon adoption, the Company reduced its allowance for credit losses and increased retained earnings net of deferred taxes through a cumulative-effect adjustment.
(e)
Reflects dividends declared per share on the Company’s Series A, Series B, Series J, Series K, Series L, Series M, Series N and Series O
Non-Cumulative
Perpetual Preferred Stock of $
4,733.948
, $
1,103.862
, $
1,325.00
, $
1,031.25
, $
703.125
, $
750.00
, $
693.75
and $
843.75
, respectively.
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
U.S. Bancorp
37
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows
(Dollars in Millions)
(Unaudited)
Nine Months Ended
September 30
2023
2022
Operating Activities
Net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
4,582
$
4,900
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities
Provision for credit losses
1,763
785
Depreciation and amortization of premises and equipment
288
255
Amortization of intangibles
480
130
(Gain) loss on sale of loans held for sale
26
136
(Gain) loss on sale of securities and other assets
9
(
173
)
Loans originated for sale, net of repayments
(
21,637
)
(
26,357
)
Proceeds from sales of loans held for sale
21,164
28,701
Other, net
1,356
5,854
Net cash provided by operating activities
8,031
14,231
Investing Activities
Proceeds from sales of
available-for-sale
investment securities
8,135
15,392
Proceeds from maturities of
held-to-maturity
investment securities
4,742
4,148
Proceeds from maturities of
available-for-sale
investment securities
4,828
12,407
Purchases of
held-to-maturity
investment securities
(
924
)
(
6,941
)
Purchases of
available-for-sale
investment securities
(
4,857
)
(
19,377
)
Net
decrease
(
increase
)
in loans outstanding
2,946
(
30,380
)
Proceeds from sales of loans
5,622
3,050
Purchases of loans
(
900
)
(
1,932
)
Net increase in securities purchased under agreements to resell
(
1,731
)
(
37
)
Other, net
(
736
)
(
3,407
)
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities
17,125
(
27,077
)
Financing Activities
Net (decrease) increase in deposits
(
6,245
)
15,065
Net
(decrease)
increase in short-term borrowings
(
9,887
)
13,270
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt
7,254
5,631
Principal payments or redemption of long-term debt
(
3,906
)
(
5,398
)
Proceeds from issuance of preferred stock
—
437
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
942
16
Repurchase of preferred stock
—
(
1,100
)
Repurchase of common stock
(
45
)
(
55
)
Cash dividends paid on preferred stock
(
238
)
(
213
)
Cash dividends paid on common stock
(
2,219
)
(
2,060
)
Net cash
(used in)
provided by financing activities
(
14,344
)
25,593
Change in cash and due from banks
10,812
12,747
Cash and due from banks at beginning of period
53,542
28,905
Cash and due from banks at end of period
$
64,354
$
41,652
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
38
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(Unaudited)
Note 1
Basis of Presentation
The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the instructions to
Form 10-Q
and, therefore, do not include all information and notes necessary for a complete presentation of financial position, results of operations and cash flow activity required in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States. In the opinion of management of U.S. Bancorp (the “Company”), all adjustments (consisting only of normal recurring adjustments) necessary for a fair statement of results for the interim periods have been made. These financial statements and notes should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and notes included in the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022. Certain amounts in prior periods have been reclassified to conform to the current period presentation.
Note 2
Accounting Changes
Reference Interest Rate Transition
In March 2020, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued accounting guidance, providing temporary optional expedients and exceptions to the guidance in United States generally accepted accounting principles on contract modifications and hedge accounting, to ease the financial reporting burdens related to the expected market transition from the London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) and other interbank offered rates to alternative reference rates. Under the guidance, a company can elect not to apply certain modification accounting requirements to contracts affected by reference rate transition, if certain criteria are met. A company that makes this election would not be required to remeasure the contracts at the modification date or reassess a previous accounting determination. This guidance also permits a company to elect various optional expedients that would allow it to continue applying hedge accounting for hedging relationships affected by reference rate transition, if certain criteria are met. The guidance is effective upon issuance and generally can be applied through December 31, 2024. The Company is applying certain optional expedients and exceptions for cash flow hedges and will continue to evaluate these for eligible contract modifications and hedging relationships.
Fair Value Hedging – Portfolio Layer Method
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance, issued by the FASB in March 2022, related to fair value hedge accounting of portfolios of financial assets. This guidance permits a company to designate multiple hedging relationships on a single closed portfolio, resulting in a larger portion of the interest rate risk associated with such a portfolio being eligible to be hedged. The guidance also expands the scope of the method to include non-prepayable financial assets and clarifies other technical questions from the original accounting guidance. The adoption of this guidance was not material to the Company’s financial statements.
Financial Instruments – Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance on a modified retrospective basis, issued by the FASB in March 2022, related to the recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings (“TDRs”) by creditors. This guidance removes the separate recognition and measurement requirements for TDRs by replacing them with a requirement for a company to apply existing accounting guidance to determine whether a modification results in a new loan or a continuation of an existing loan. This guidance also replaces existing TDR disclosures with similar but more expansive disclosures for certain modifications of receivables made to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty. Further, this guidance also requires companies to disclose current-period gross write-offs by year of origination for financing receivables. The adoption of this guidance was not material to the Company’s financial statements.
Accounting for Tax Credit Investments Using the Proportional Amortization Method
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance on a modified retrospective basis, issued by the FASB in March 2023, related to the accounting for tax credit investments. This guidance allows the Company to elect to account for tax credit investments using the proportional amortization method on a
program-by-program
basis if certain conditions are met, regardless of the program from which the income tax credits are received. The adoption of this guidance was not material to the Company’s financial statements.
U.S. Bancorp
39
Table of Contents
Note 3
Business Combinations
MUFG Union Bank Acquisition
On December 1, 2022, the Company acquired MUB’s core regional banking franchise from MUFG. Pursuant to the terms of the Share Purchase Agreement, the Company acquired all of the issued and outstanding shares of common stock of MUB for a purchase price consisting of $
5.5
billion in cash and approximately
44
million shares of common stock of the Company. Under the terms of the Share Purchase Agreement, the purchase price was based on MUB having a tangible book value of $
6.25
billion at the closing of the acquisition. At the closing of the acquisition, MUB had $
3.5
billion of tangible book value over the $
6.25
billion target, consisting of additional cash. The additional cash received is required to be repaid to MUFG on or prior to the fifth anniversary date of the completion of the purchase, in accordance with the terms of the Share Purchase Agreement. As such, it is recognized as debt at the parent company. On August 3, 2023, the Company repaid $
936
million of its debt obligation from the proceeds of the issuance of
24
million shares of common stock of the Company to an affiliate of MUFG. The acquisition has been accounted for as a business combination. Accordingly, the assets acquired and liabilities assumed from MUB were recorded at fair value as of the acquisition date. The determination of fair value requires management to make estimates about discount rates, future expected cash flows, market conditions and other future events that are highly subjective in nature and subject to change. Fair value estimates related to the assets and liabilities from MUB are subject to adjustment for up to one year after the closing date of the acquisition as additional information becomes available. Valuations subject to adjustment include certain other assets.
In connection with the transaction, the Company recorded within noninterest expense nonrecurring merger and integration charges of $
284
million in the third quarter and $
838
million in the first nine months of 2023, compared with $
42
million and $
239
million in same periods of 2022, respectively. These expenses were primarily comprised of personnel, legal, advisory and technology related costs.
The following table includes the fair value of consideration transferred and the preliminary fair value of the identifiable tangible and intangible assets and liabilities from MUB:
December 1, 2022 (Dollars in Millions)
Acquisition consideration
Cash
$
5,500
Market value of shares of common stock
2,014
Total consideration transferred at acquisition close date
7,514
Discounted liability to MUFG (a)
2,944
Total
$
10,458
Fair Value of MUB assets and liabilities
Assets
Cash and due from banks
$
17,754
Investment securities
22,725
Loans held for sale
2,220
Loans
53,395
Less allowance for loan losses
(
463
)
Net loans
52,932
Premises and equipment
646
Other intangible assets (excluding goodwill)
2,808
Other assets
4,764
Total assets
$
103,849
Liabilities
Deposits
$
86,110
Short-term borrowings
4,777
Long-term debt
2,584
Other liabilities
2,246
Total liabilities
95,717
Less: Net assets
$
8,132
Goodwill
$
2,326
(a)
Represents $
3.5
billion of noninterest-bearing additional cash held by MUB upon close of the acquisition to be delivered to MUFG on or prior to December 1, 2027, discounted at the Company’s
5-year
unsecured borrowing rate as of the acquisition date, per authoritative accounting guidance.
Preliminary goodwill of $
2.3
billion recorded in connection with the transaction resulted from the reputation, operating model and expertise of MUB. The amount of goodwill recorded reflects the increased market share and related synergies that are expected to result from the acquisition, and represents the excess purchase price over the
40
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
estimated fair value of the net assets from MUB. The goodwill was allocated to the Company’s business segments on a preliminary basis and is not deductible for income tax purposes. Refer to Note 11 in the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for the amount of goodwill allocated to each business segment in connection with the transaction.
For further information on the fair value and unpaid principal balance of loans from the MUB acquisition, as well as the methods used to determine the fair values of the significant assets acquired and liabilities assumed, refer to Note 3 in the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022.
During the first quarter of 2023, the Company completed the divestiture of three MUB branches to HomeStreet Bank, a wholly owned subsidiary of HomeStreet, Inc., to satisfy regulatory requirements related to the acquisition. There were approximately $
400
million in deposits and $
22
million in loans divested as part of this transaction.
Note 4
Investment Securities
The Company’s
held-to-maturity
investment securities are carried at historical cost, adjusted for amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts. The Company’s
available-for-sale
investment securities are carried at fair value with unrealized net gains or losses reported within accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in shareholders’ equity.
The amortized cost, gross unrealized holding gains and losses, and fair value of
held-to-maturity
and
available-for-sale
investment securities were as follows:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Amortized
Cost
Unrealized
Gains
Unrealized
Losses
Fair Value
Amortized
Cost
Unrealized
Gains
Unrealized
Losses
Fair Value
Held-to-maturity
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
1,345
$
—
$
(
62
)
$
1,283
$
1,344
$
—
$
(
51
)
$
1,293
Mortgage-backed securities
Residential agency
82,297
—
(
14,851
)
67,446
85,693
2
(
10,810
)
74,885
Commercial agency
1,700
—
(
70
)
1,630
1,703
1
(
8
)
1,696
Total
held-to-maturity
$
85,342
$
—
$
(
14,983
)
$
70,359
$
88,740
$
3
$
(
10,869
)
$
77,874
Available-for-sale
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
21,286
$
—
$
(
2,579
)
$
18,707
$
24,801
$
1
$
(
2,769
)
$
22,033
Mortgage-backed securities
Residential agency
28,891
2
(
3,279
)
25,614
32,060
8
(
2,797
)
29,271
Commercial
Agency
8,711
—
(
1,769
)
6,942
8,736
—
(
1,591
)
7,145
Non-agency
7
—
(
1
)
6
7
—
—
7
Asset-backed securities
6,923
8
(
63
)
6,868
4,356
5
(
38
)
4,323
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
11,028
10
(
1,972
)
9,066
11,484
12
(
1,371
)
10,125
Other
4
—
—
4
6
—
—
6
Total
available-for-sale,
excluding portfolio level basis adjustments
76,850
20
(
9,663
)
67,207
81,450
26
(
8,566
)
72,910
Portfolio level basis adjustments (a)
(
95
)
—
95
—
—
—
—
—
Total
available-for-sale
$
76,755
$
20
$
(
9,568
)
$
67,207
$
81,450
$
26
$
(
8,566
)
$
72,910
(a)
Represents fair value hedge basis adjustments related to active portfolio layer method hedges of
available-for-sale
investment securities, which are not allocated to individual securities in the portfolio. For additional information, refer to Note 13.
Investment securities with a fair value of $
19.4
billion at September 30, 2023, and $
15.3
billion at December 31, 2022, were pledged to secure public, private and trust deposits, repurchase agreements and for other purposes required by contractual obligation or law. Included in these amounts were securities where the Company and certain counterparties have agreements granting the counterparties the right to sell or pledge the securities. Investment securities securing these types of arrangements had a fair value of $
292
million at September 30, 2023, and $
858
million at December 31, 2022.
U.S. Bancorp
41
Table of Contents
The
following table provides information about the amount of interest income from taxable and
non-taxable
investment securities:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Taxable
$
1,074
$
793
$
3,067
$
2,171
Non-taxable
78
74
236
219
Total interest income from investment securities
$
1,152
$
867
$
3,303
$
2,390
The following table provides information about the amount of gross gains and losses realized through the sales of
available-for-sale
investment securities:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Realized gains
$
—
$
1
$
65
$
78
Realized losses
—
—
(
94
)
(
40
)
Net realized gains (losses)
$
—
$
1
$
(
29
)
$
38
Income tax on net realized gains (losses)
$
—
$
—
$
(
7
)
$
9
The Company conducts a regular assessment of its
available-for-sale
investment securities with unrealized losses to determine whether all or some portion of a security’s unrealized loss is related to credit and an allowance for credit losses is necessary. If the Company intends to sell or it is more likely than not the Company will be required to sell an investment security, the amortized cost of the security is written down to fair value. When evaluating credit losses, the Company considers various factors such as the nature of the investment security, the credit ratings or financial condition of the issuer, the extent of the unrealized loss, expected cash flows of underlying collateral, the existence of any government or agency guarantees, and market conditions. The Company measures the allowance for credit losses using market information where available and discounting the cash flows at the original effective rate of the investment security. The allowance for credit losses is adjusted each period through earnings and can be subsequently recovered. The allowance for credit losses on the Company’s
available-for-sale
investment securities was immaterial at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022.
At September 30, 2023, certain investment securities had a fair value below amortized cost.
The following table shows the gross unrealized losses excluding portfolio level basis adjustments and fair value of the Company’s
available-for-sale
investment securities with unrealized losses, aggregated by investment category and length of time the individual investment securities have been in continuous unrealized loss positions, at September 30, 2023:
Less Than 12 Months
12 Months or Greater
Total
(Dollars in Millions)
Fair
Value
Unrealized
Losses
Fair Value
Unrealized
Losses
Fair Value
Unrealized
Losses
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
672
$
(
8
)
$
16,568
$
(
2,571
)
$
17,240
$
(
2,579
)
Mortgage-backed securities
Residential agency
3,085
(
56
)
22,385
(
3,223
)
25,470
(
3,279
)
Commercial
Agency
—
—
6,942
(
1,769
)
6,942
(
1,769
)
Non-agency
6
(
1
)
—
—
6
(
1
)
Asset-backed securities
5,929
(
63
)
—
—
5,929
(
63
)
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
1,813
(
129
)
7,001
(
1,843
)
8,814
(
1,972
)
Other
—
—
4
—
4
—
Total investment securities
$
11,505
$
(
257
)
$
52,900
$
(
9,406
)
$
64,405
$
(
9,663
)
42
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
These unrealized losses primarily relate to changes in interest rates and market spreads subsequent to purchase of these
available-for-sale
investment securities. U.S. Treasury and agencies securities and agency mortgage-backed securities are issued, guaranteed or otherwise supported by the United States government. The Company’s obligations of state and political subdivisions are generally high grade. Accordingly, the Company does not consider these unrealized losses to be credit-related and an allowance for credit losses is not necessary. In general, the issuers of the investment securities are contractually prohibited from prepayment at less than par, and the Company did not pay significant purchase premiums for these investment securities. At September 30, 2023, the Company had no plans to sell investment securities with unrealized losses, and believes it is more likely than not it would not be required to sell such investment securities before recovery of their amortized cost.
During the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, the Company did not purchase any investment securities that had more-than-insignificant credit deterioration.
All of the Company’s
held-to-maturity
investment securities are U.S. Treasury and agencies securities and highly rated agency mortgage-backed securities that are guaranteed or otherwise supported by the United States government and have no history of credit losses. Accordingly, the Company does not expect to incur any credit losses on
held-to-maturity
investment securities and has
no
allowance for credit losses recorded for these securities.
U.S. Bancorp
43
Table of Contents
The following table provides information about the amortized cost, fair value and yield by maturity date of the investment securities outstanding at September 30, 2023:
(Dollars in Millions)
Amortized
Cost
Fair
Value
Weighted-
Average
Maturity in
Years
Weighted-
Average
Yield (e)
Held-to-maturity
U.S. Treasury and Agencies
Maturing in one year or less
$
50
$
49
.6
2.67
%
Maturing after one year through five years
1,295
1,234
2.6
2.85
Maturing after five years through ten years
—
—
—
—
Maturing after ten years
—
—
—
—
Total
$
1,345
$
1,283
2.5
2.85
%
Mortgage-Backed Securities (a)
Maturing in one year or less
$
20
$
19
.7
4.67
%
Maturing after one year through five years
1,347
1,318
2.6
4.59
Maturing after five years through ten years
57,099
47,115
9.3
2.17
Maturing after ten years
25,531
20,624
10.3
2.12
Total
$
83,997
$
69,076
9.5
2.19
%
Total
held-to-maturity
(b)
$
85,342
$
70,359
9.4
2.20
%
Available-for-sale
U.S. Treasury and Agencies
Maturing in one year or less
$
9
$
9
.2
5.24
%
Maturing after one year through five years
6,376
6,049
3.4
3.16
Maturing after five years through ten years
13,089
11,361
6.7
2.55
Maturing after ten years
1,812
1,288
11.0
2.02
Total
$
21,286
$
18,707
6.1
2.69
%
Mortgage-Backed Securities (a)
Maturing in one year or less
$
135
$
131
.8
2.52
%
Maturing after one year through five years
8,571
7,846
3.1
2.45
Maturing after five years through ten years
27,049
23,053
7.6
3.24
Maturing after ten years
1,854
1,532
10.9
3.49
Total
$
37,609
$
32,562
6.7
3.07
%
Asset-Backed Securities (a)
Maturing in one year or less
$
1,714
$
1,683
.2
4.25
%
Maturing after one year through five years
4,731
4,706
1.7
5.35
Maturing after five years through ten years
478
479
5.5
7.07
Maturing after ten years
—
—
—
—
Total
$
6,923
$
6,868
1.6
5.20
%
Obligations of State and Political
Subdivisions (c) (d)
Maturing in one year or less
$
36
$
36
.6
7.96
%
Maturing after one year through five years
381
378
3.3
5.74
Maturing after five years through ten years
507
472
7.8
4.43
Maturing after ten years
10,104
8,180
15.8
3.65
Total
$
11,028
$
9,066
14.9
3.77
%
Other
Maturing in one year or less
$
—
$
—
—
—
%
Maturing after one year through five years
4
4
1.7
1.89
Maturing after five years through ten years
—
—
—
—
Maturing after ten years
—
—
—
—
Total
$
4
$
4
1.7
1.89
%
Total
available-for-sale
(b) (f)
$
76,850
$
67,207
7.3
3.26
%
(a)
Information related to asset and mortgage-backed securities included above is presented based upon weighted-average maturities that take into account anticipated future prepayments.
(b)
The weighted-average maturity of total
held-to-maturity
investment securities was
9.2
years at December 31, 2022, with a corresponding weighted-average yield of
2.18
percent. The weighted-average maturity of total
available-for-sale
investment securities was
7.4
years at December 31, 2022, with a corresponding weighted-average yield of
2.94
percent.
(c)
Information related to obligations of state and political subdivisions is presented based upon yield to first optional call date if the security is purchased at a premium, and yield to maturity if the security is purchased at par or a discount.
(d)
Maturity calculations for obligations of state and political subdivisions are based on the first optional call date for securities with a fair value above par and the contractual maturity date for securities with a fair value equal to or below par.
(e)
Weighted-average yields for obligations of state and political subdivisions are presented on a fully-taxable equivalent basis based on a federal income tax rate of
21
percent. Yields on investment securities are computed based on amortized cost balances, excluding any premiums or discounts recorded related to the transfer of investment securities at fair value from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity.
(f)
Amortized cost excludes portfolio level basis adjustments of $(
95
) million.
44
U.S. Bancorp
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Note 5
Loans and Allowance for Credit Losses
The composition of the loan portfolio, by class and underlying specific portfolio type, was as follows:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Amount
Percent
of Total
Amount
Percent
of Total
Commercial
Commercial
$
129,040
34.4
%
$
131,128
33.8
%
Lease financing
4,279
1.1
4,562
1.2
Total commercial
133,319
35.5
135,690
35.0
Commercial Real Estate
Commercial mortgages
42,473
11.3
43,765
11.3
Construction and development
11,658
3.1
11,722
3.0
Total commercial real estate
54,131
14.4
55,487
14.3
Residential Mortgages
Residential mortgages
107,875
28.8
107,858
27.8
Home equity loans, first liens
7,180
1.9
7,987
2.0
Total residential mortgages
115,055
30.7
115,845
29.8
Credit Card
27,080
7.2
26,295
6.8
Other Retail
Retail leasing
4,271
1.2
5,519
1.4
Home equity and second mortgages
12,879
3.4
12,863
3.3
Revolving credit
3,766
1.0
3,983
1.0
Installment
14,145
3.8
14,592
3.8
Automobile
10,588
2.8
17,939
4.6
Total other retail
45,649
12.2
54,896
14.1
Total loans
$
375,234
100.0
%
$
388,213
100.0
%
The Company had loans of $
122.6
billion at September 30, 2023, and $
134.6
billion at December 31, 2022, pledged at the Federal Home Loan Bank, and loans of $
83.5
billion at September 30, 2023, and $
85.8
billion at December 31, 2022, pledged at the Federal Reserve Bank.
Originated loans are reported at the principal amount outstanding, net of unearned interest and deferred fees and costs, and any partial charge-offs recorded. Purchased loans are recorded at fair value at the date of purchase. Net unearned interest and deferred fees and costs on originated loans and unamortized premiums and discounts on purchased loans amounted to $
2.7
billion at September 30, 2023 and $
3.1
billion at December 31, 2022. The Company evaluates purchased loans for more-than-insignificant deterioration at the date of purchase in accordance with applicable authoritative accounting guidance. Purchased loans that have experienced more-than-insignificant deterioration from origination are considered purchased credit deteriorated loans. All other purchased loans are considered
non-purchased
credit deteriorated loans.
Allowance for Credit Losses
The allowance for credit losses is established for current expected credit losses on the Company’s loan and lease portfolio, including unfunded credit commitments. The allowance considers expected losses for the remaining lives of the applicable assets, inclusive of expected recoveries. The allowance for credit losses is increased through provisions charged to earnings and reduced by net charge-offs. Management evaluates the appropriateness of the allowance for credit losses on a quarterly basis.
Multiple economic scenarios are considered over a three-year reasonable and supportable forecast period, which includes increasing consideration of historical loss experience over years two and three. These economic scenarios are constructed with interrelated projections of multiple economic variables, and loss estimates are produced that consider the historical correlation of those economic variables with credit losses. After the forecast period, the Company fully reverts to long-term historical loss experience, adjusted for prepayments and characteristics of the current loan and lease portfolio, to estimate losses over the remaining life of the portfolio. The economic scenarios are updated at least quarterly and are designed to provide a range of reasonable estimates, from better to worse than current expectations. Scenarios are weighted based on the Company’s expectation of economic conditions for the foreseeable future and reflect significant judgment and consideration of economic forecast uncertainty. Final loss estimates also consider factors affecting credit losses not reflected in the scenarios, due to the unique aspects of current conditions and expectations. These factors may include, but are not limited to, loan servicing practices, regulatory guidance, and/or fiscal and monetary policy actions.
U.S. Bancorp
45
Table of Contents
The allowance recorded for credit losses utilizes forward-looking expected loss models to consider a variety of factors affecting lifetime credit losses. These factors include, but are not limited to, macroeconomic variables such as unemployment rates, real estate prices, gross domestic product levels, inflation, interest rates and corporate bonds spreads, as well as loan and borrower characteristics, such as internal risk ratings on commercial loans and consumer credit scores, delinquency status, collateral type and available valuation information, consideration of
end-of-term
losses on lease residuals, and the remaining term of the loan, adjusted for expected prepayments. For each loan portfolio, including those loans modified under various loan modification programs, model estimates are adjusted as necessary to consider any relevant changes in portfolio composition, lending policies, underwriting standards, risk management practices, economic conditions or other factors that would affect the accuracy of the model. Expected credit loss estimates also include consideration of expected cash recoveries on loans previously
charged-off
or expected recoveries on collateral dependent loans where recovery is expected through sale of the collateral at fair value less selling costs. Where loans do not exhibit similar risk characteristics, an individual analysis is performed to consider expected credit losses. The allowance recorded for individually evaluated loans greater than $5 million in the commercial lending segment is based on an analysis utilizing expected cash flows discounted using the original effective interest rate, the observable market price of the loan, or the fair value of the collateral, less selling costs, for collateral-dependent loans as appropriate. For smaller commercial loans collectively evaluated for impairment, historical loss experience is also incorporated into the allowance methodology applied to this category of loans.
The Company’s methodology for determining the appropriate allowance for credit losses also considers the imprecision inherent in the methodologies used and allocated to the various loan portfolios. As a result, amounts determined under the methodologies described above are adjusted by management to consider the potential impact of other qualitative factors not captured in the quantitative model adjustments which include, but are not limited to
,
the following: model imprecision, imprecision in economic scenario assumptions, and emerging risks related to either changes in the environment that are affecting specific portfolios, or changes in portfolio concentrations over time that may affect model performance. The consideration of these items results in adjustments to allowance amounts included in the Company’s allowance for credit losses for each loan portfolio.
The Company also assesses the credit risk associated with
off-balance
sheet loan commitments, letters of credit, investment securities and derivatives. Credit risk associated with derivatives is reflected in the fair values recorded for those positions. The liability for
off-balance
sheet credit exposure related to loan commitments and other credit guarantees is included in other liabilities. Because business processes and credit risks associated with unfunded credit commitments are essentially the same as for loans, the Company utilizes similar processes to estimate its liability for unfunded credit commitments.
The results of the analysis are evaluated quarterly to confirm the estimates are appropriate for each specific loan portfolio, as well as the entire loan portfolio, as the entire allowance for credit losses is available for the entire loan portfolio.
46
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Activity in the allowance for credit losses by portfolio class was as follows:
Three Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Mortgages
Credit
Card
Other
Retail
Total
Loans
2023
Balance at beginning of period
$
2,209
$
1,473
$
899
$
2,185
$
929
$
7,695
Add
Provision for credit losses
(
14
)
266
(
49
)
285
27
515
Deduct
Loans
charged-off
110
51
1
259
87
508
Less recoveries of loans
charged-off
(
18
)
(
2
)
(
4
)
(
39
)
(
25
)
(
88
)
Net loan charge-offs (recoveries)
92
49
(
3
)
220
62
420
Balance at end of period
$
2,103
$
1,690
$
853
$
2,250
$
894
$
7,790
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
1,896
$
973
$
658
$
1,746
$
982
$
6,255
Add
Provision for credit losses
97
(
7
)
38
222
12
362
Deduct
Loans
charged-off
56
—
2
161
56
275
Less recoveries of loans
charged-off
(
29
)
(
6
)
(
7
)
(
42
)
(
29
)
(
113
)
Net loan charge-offs (recoveries)
27
(
6
)
(
5
)
119
27
162
Balance at end of period
$
1,966
$
972
$
701
$
1,849
$
967
$
6,455
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate
Residential
Mortgages
Credit
Card
Other
Retail
Total
Loans
2023
Balance at beginning of period
$
2,163
$
1,325
$
926
$
2,020
$
970
$
7,404
Add
Change in accounting principle (a)
—
—
(
31
)
(
27
)
(
4
)
(
62
)
Allowance for acquired credit losses (b)
—
127
—
—
—
127
Provision for credit losses
169
430
68
851
245
1,763
Deduct
Loans
charged-off
283
205
126
716
402
1,732
Less recoveries of loans
charged-off
(
54
)
(
13
)
(
16
)
(
122
)
(
85
)
(
290
)
Net loan charge-offs (recoveries)
229
192
110
594
317
1,442
Balance at end of period
$
2,103
$
1,690
$
853
$
2,250
$
894
$
7,790
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
1,849
$
1,123
$
565
$
1,673
$
945
$
6,155
Add
Provision for credit losses
206
(
156
)
116
525
94
785
Deduct
Loans
charged-off
164
10
9
481
167
831
Less recoveries of loans
charged-off
(
75
)
(
15
)
(
29
)
(
132
)
(
95
)
(
346
)
Net loan charge-offs (recoveries)
89
(
5
)
(
20
)
349
72
485
Balance at end of period
$
1,966
$
972
$
701
$
1,849
$
967
$
6,455
(a)
Effective January 1, 2023, the Company adopted accounting guidance which removed the separate recognition and measurement of troubled debt restructurings.
(b)
Represents allowance for credit deteriorated and
charged-off
loans acquired from MUB.
The increase in the allowance for credit losses at September 30, 2023, compared with December 31, 2022, was primarily driven by increasing economic uncertainty, normalizing credit conditions and select commercial real estate loan deterioration.
U.S. Bancorp
47
Table of Contents
The following table provides a summary of loans
charged-off
by portfolio class and year of origination:
(Dollars in Millions)
Commercial
Commercial
Real Estate (a)
Residential
Mortgages (b)
Credit
Card
Other
Retail (c)
Total
Loans
Three Months Ended September 30, 2023
Originated in 2023
$
22
$
20
$—
$—
$
5
$
47
Originated in 2022
11
—
—
—
17
28
Originated in 2021
17
27
—
—
13
57
Originated in 2020
4
—
—
—
6
10
Originated in 2019
4
—
—
—
6
10
Originated prior to 2019
10
4
1
—
13
28
Revolving
42
—
—
259
27
328
Total charge-offs
$
110
$
51
$
1
$
259
$
87
$
508
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2023
Originated in 2023
$
29
$
20
$—
$—
$
51
$
100
Originated in 2022
51
88
—
—
116
255
Originated in 2021
25
44
5
—
70
144
Originated in 2020
14
—
8
—
31
53
Originated in 2019
11
3
16
—
26
56
Originated prior to 2019
38
50
97
—
26
211
Revolving
115
—
—
716
54
885
Revolving converted to term
—
—
—
—
28
28
Total charge-offs
$
283
$
205
$
126
$
716
$
402
$
1,732
Note: Year of origination is based on the origination date of a loan, or for existing loans the date when the maturity date, pricing or commitment amount is amended.
(a)
Includes $
91
million of charge-offs in the first quarter of 2023 related to uncollectible amounts on acquired loans.
(b)
Includes $
117
million of charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023.
(c)
Includes $
192
million of charge-offs related to balance sheet repositioning and capital management actions taken in the second quarter of 2023.
Credit Quality
The credit quality of the Company’s loan portfolios is assessed as a function of net credit losses, levels of nonperforming assets and delinquencies, and credit quality ratings as defined by the Company.
For all loan portfolio classes, loans are considered past due based on the number of days delinquent except for monthly amortizing loans which are classified delinquent based upon the number of contractually required payments not made (for example, two missed payments is considered 30 days delinquent). When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status, unpaid accrued interest is reversed, reducing interest income in the current period.
Commercial lending segment loans are generally placed on nonaccrual status when the collection of principal and interest has become 90 days past due or is otherwise considered doubtful. Commercial lending segment loans are generally fully charged down if unsecured by collateral or partially charged down to the fair value of the collateral securing the loan, less costs to sell, when the loan is placed on nonaccrual.
Consumer lending segment loans are generally
charged-off
at a specific number of days or payments past due. Residential mortgages and other retail loans secured by
1-4
family properties are generally charged down to the fair value of the collateral securing the loan, less costs to sell, at 180 days past due. Residential mortgage loans and lines in a first lien position are placed on nonaccrual status in instances where a partial
charge-off
occurs unless the loan is well secured and in the process of collection. Residential mortgage loans and lines in a junior lien position secured by
1-4
family properties are placed on nonaccrual status at 120 days past due or when they are behind a first lien that has become 180 days or greater past due or placed on nonaccrual status. Any secured consumer lending segment loan whose borrower has had debt discharged through bankruptcy, for which the loan amount exceeds the fair value of the collateral, is charged down to the fair value of the related collateral and the remaining balance is placed on nonaccrual status. Credit card loans continue to accrue interest until the account is
charged-off.
Credit cards are
charged-off
at 180 days past due. Other retail loans not secured by
1-4
family properties are
charged-off
at 120 days past due; and revolving consumer lines are
charged-off
at 180 days past due. Similar to credit cards, other retail loans are generally not placed on nonaccrual status because of the relative short period of time to
charge-off.
Certain retail customers having financial difficulties may have the terms of their credit card and other loan agreements modified to require only principal payments and, as such, are reported as nonaccrual.
For all loan classes, interest payments received on nonaccrual loans are generally recorded as a reduction to a loan’s carrying amount while a loan is on nonaccrual and are recognized as interest income upon payoff of the loan. However, interest income may be recognized for interest payments if the remaining carrying amount of the loan is believed to be collectible. In certain circumstances, loans in any class may be restored to accrual status, such as when a loan has demonstrated sustained repayment performance or no amounts are past due and prospects for future payment are no longer in doubt; or when the loan becomes well secured and is in the process of collection. Loans where there
48
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
has been a partial
charge-off
may be returned to accrual status if all principal and interest (including amounts previously
charged-off)
is expected to be collected and the loan is current.
The following table provides a summary of loans by portfolio class, including the delinquency status of those that continue to accrue interest, and those that are nonperforming:
Accruing
(Dollars in Millions)
Current
30-89 Days
Past Due
90 Days or
More Past Due
Nonperforming (b)
Total
September 30, 2023
Commercial
$
132,678
$
315
$
70
$
256
$
133,319
Commercial real estate
53,369
40
1
721
54,131
Residential mortgages (a)
114,641
131
122
161
115,055
Credit card
26,399
365
316
—
27,080
Other retail
45,206
254
60
129
45,649
Total loans
$
372,293
$
1,105
$
569
$
1,267
$
375,234
December 31, 2022
Commercial
$
135,077
$
350
$
94
$
169
$
135,690
Commercial real estate
55,057
87
5
338
55,487
Residential mortgages (a)
115,224
201
95
325
115,845
Credit card
25,780
283
231
1
26,295
Other retail
54,382
309
66
139
54,896
Total loans
$
385,520
$
1,230
$
491
$
972
$
388,213
(a)
At September 30, 2023, $
558
million of loans 30–89 days past due and $
2.0
billion of loans 90 days or more past due purchased and that could be purchased from Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”) mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, were classified as current, compared with $
647
million and $
2.2
billion at December 31, 2022, respectively.
(b)
Substantially all nonperforming loans at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, had an associated allowance for credit losses. The Company recognized interest income on nonperforming loans of $
5
million and $
4
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $
12
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022.
At September 30, 2023, the amount of foreclosed residential real estate held by the Company, and included in other real estate owned (“OREO”), was $
25
million, compared with $
23
million at December 31, 2022. These amounts excluded $
52
million and $
54
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively, of foreclosed residential real estate related to mortgage loans whose payments are primarily insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs. In addition, the amount of residential mortgage loans secured by residential real estate in the process of foreclosure at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, was $
784
million and $
1.1
billion, respectively, of which $
538
million and $
830
million, respectively, related to loans purchased and that could be purchased from Government National Mortgage Association (“GNMA”) mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
The Company classifies its loan portfolio classes using internal credit quality ratings on a quarterly basis. These ratings include pass, special mention and classified, and are an important part of the Company’s overall credit risk management process and evaluation of the allowance for credit losses. Loans with a pass rating represent those loans not classified on the Company’s rating scale for problem credits, as minimal credit risk has been identified. Special mention loans are those loans that have a potential weakness deserving management’s close attention. Classified loans are those loans where a well-defined weakness has been identified that may put full collection of contractual cash flows at risk. It is possible that others, given the same information, may reach different reasonable conclusions regarding the credit quality rating classification of specific loans.
U.S. Bancorp
49
Table of Contents
The following table provides a summary of the Company’s internal credit quality rating of loans by portfolio class and year of origination:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Criticized
Criticized
(Dollars in Millions)
Pass
Special
Mention
Classified (a)
Total
Criticized
Total
Pass
Special
Mention
Classified (a)
Total
Criticized
Total
Commercial
Originated in 2023
$
35,634
$
725
$
710
$
1,435
$
37,069
$ —
$ —
$ —
$ —
$ —
Originated in 2022
45,120
502
293
795
45,915
61,229
245
315
560
61,789
Originated in 2021
10,681
82
176
258
10,939
26,411
159
78
237
26,648
Originated in 2020
3,476
47
157
204
3,680
7,049
68
138
206
7,255
Originated in 2019
1,653
5
113
118
1,771
3,962
51
210
261
4,223
Originated prior to 2019
4,293
42
110
152
4,445
8,986
64
129
193
9,179
Revolving (b)
28,020
346
1,134
1,480
29,500
25,888
344
364
708
26,596
Total commercial
128,877
1,749
2,693
4,442
133,319
133,525
931
1,234
2,165
135,690
Commercial real estate
Originated in 2023
7,676
367
1,749
2,116
9,792
—
—
—
—
—
Originated in 2022
12,594
211
1,339
1,550
14,144
14,527
206
519
725
15,252
Originated in 2021
9,951
303
386
689
10,640
13,565
171
99
270
13,835
Originated in 2020
4,088
41
112
153
4,241
6,489
97
117
214
6,703
Originated in 2019
5,149
105
381
486
5,635
6,991
251
304
555
7,546
Originated prior to 2019
6,596
53
369
422
7,018
9,639
138
875
1,013
10,652
Revolving
2,627
3
31
34
2,661
1,489
—
10
10
1,499
Total commercial real estate
48,681
1,083
4,367
5,450
54,131
52,700
863
1,924
2,787
55,487
Residential mortgages (c)
Originated in 2023
8,056
—
1
1
8,057
—
—
—
—
—
Originated in 2022
29,113
—
9
9
29,122
28,452
—
—
—
28,452
Originated in 2021
36,675
1
9
10
36,685
39,527
—
7
7
39,534
Originated in 2020
14,995
—
10
10
15,005
16,556
—
8
8
16,564
Originated in 2019
5,981
—
17
17
5,998
7,222
—
18
18
7,240
Originated prior to 2019
19,937
1
250
251
20,188
23,658
—
397
397
24,055
Total residential mortgages
114,757
2
296
298
115,055
115,415
—
430
430
115,845
Credit card (d)
26,765
—
315
315
27,080
26,063
—
232
232
26,295
Other retail
Originated in 2023
4,033
—
1
1
4,034
—
—
—
—
—
Originated in 2022
5,990
—
9
9
5,999
9,563
—
6
6
9,569
Originated in 2021
11,274
—
14
14
11,288
15,352
—
12
12
15,364
Originated in 2020
5,212
—
9
9
5,221
7,828
—
11
11
7,839
Originated in 2019
2,012
—
8
8
2,020
3,418
—
13
13
3,431
Originated prior to 2019
2,422
—
14
14
2,436
3,689
—
31
31
3,720
Revolving
13,748
—
98
98
13,846
14,029
—
98
98
14,127
Revolving converted to term
756
—
49
49
805
800
—
46
46
846
Total other retail
45,447
—
202
202
45,649
54,679
—
217
217
54,896
Total loans
$
364,527
$
2,834
$
7,873
$
10,707
$
375,234
$
382,382
$
1,794
$
4,037
$
5,831
$
388,213
Total outstanding commitments
$
765,095
$
3,866
$
9,635
$
13,501
$
778,596
$
772,804
$
2,825
$
5,041
$
7,866
$
780,670
Note: Year of origination is based on the origination date of a loan, or for existing loans the date when the maturity date, pricing or commitment amount is amended.
(a)
Classified rating on consumer loans primarily based on delinquency status.
(b)
Includes an immaterial amount of revolving converted to term loans.
(c)
At September 30, 2023, $
2.0
billion of GNMA loans 90 days or more past due and $
963
million of modified GNMA loans whose repayments are insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs were classified with a pass rating, compared with $
2.2
billion and $
1.0
billion at December 31, 2022, respectively.
(d)
Predominately all credit card loans are considered revolving loans. Includes an immaterial amount of revolving converted to term loans.
Loan Modifications
In certain circumstances, the Company may modify the terms of a loan to maximize the collection of amounts due when a borrower is experiencing financial difficulties or is expected to experience difficulties in the near-term. The Company recognizes interest on modified loans if full collection of contractual principal and interest is expected. The effects of modifications on credit loss expectations, such as improved payment capacity, longer expected lives and other factors, are considered when measuring the allowance for credit losses. Modification performance, including redefault rates and how these compare to historical losses, are also considered. Modifications generally do not result in significant changes to the Company’s allowance for credit losses.
50
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The following table provides a summary of loan balances at September 30, 2023, which were modified during the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2023, by portfolio class and modification granted:
(Dollars in Millions)
Interest Rate
Reduction
Payment
Delay
Term
Extension
Multiple
Modifications (a)
Total
Modifications
Percent of
Class Total
Three Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
$
16
$
—
$
98
$
—
$
114
.1
%
Commercial real estate
—
—
426
9
435
.8
Residential mortgages (b)
—
58
6
1
65
.1
Credit card
117
—
—
—
117
.4
Other retail
2
12
39
—
53
.1
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
135
70
569
10
784
.2
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools (b)
—
455
75
127
657
.6
Total loans
$
135
$
525
$
644
$
137
$
1,441
.4
%
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
$
36
$
—
$
213
$
—
$
249
.2
%
Commercial real estate
—
—
527
9
536
1.0
Residential mortgages (b)
—
221
21
17
259
.2
Credit card
268
1
—
—
269
1.0
Other retail
6
20
113
2
141
.3
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
310
242
874
28
1,454
.4
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools (b)
—
1,020
211
261
1,492
1.3
Total loans
$
310
$
1,262
$
1,085
$
289
$
2,946
.8
%
(a)
Includes $
126
million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension, $
9
million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction and term extension and $
2
million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for three months ended September 30, 2023. Includes $
268
million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension, $
14
million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction and term extension and $
7
million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for nine months ended September 30, 2023.
(b)
Percent of class total amounts expressed as a percent of total residential mortgage loan balances.
Loan modifications included in the table above exclude trial period arrangements offered to customers and secured loans to consumer borrowers that have had debt discharged through bankruptcy where the borrower has not reaffirmed the debt during the periods presented. At September 30, 2023, the balance of loans modified in trial period arrangements was $
50
million, while the balance of secured loans to consumer borrowers that have had debt discharged through bankruptcy was not material.
The following table summarizes the effects of loan modifications made to borrowers on loans modified during the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2023:
(Dollars in Millions)
Weighted-Average
Interest Rate
Reduction
Weighted-Average
Months of Term
Extension
Three Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
21.5
%
13
Commercial real estate
—
11
Residential mortgages
.9
99
Credit card
15.4
—
Other retail
9.1
2
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
.5
121
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
21.0
%
10
Commercial real estate
—
10
Residential mortgages
1.3
109
Credit card
15.1
—
Other retail
7.8
4
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
.6
98
Note: The weighted-average payment deferral for all portfolio classes was less than $1 million for both the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2023. Forbearance payments are required to be paid at the end of the original term loan.
For the commercial lending segment, modifications generally result in the Company working with borrowers on a
case-by-case
basis. Commercial and commercial real estate modifications generally include extensions of the maturity date and may be accompanied by an increase or decrease to the interest rate. In addition, the Company may work with the borrower in identifying other changes that mitigate loss to the Company, which may include additional collateral or guarantees to support the loan. To a lesser extent, the Company may provide an interest rate reduction.
Modifications for the consumer lending segment are generally part of programs the Company has initiated. The Company modifies residential mortgage loans under Federal Housing Administration, United States Department of Veterans Affairs, or its own internal programs. Under these programs, the Company offers qualifying homeowners the
U.S. Bancorp
51
Table of Contents
opportunity to permanently modify their loan and achieve more affordable monthly payments. These modifications may include adjustments to interest rates, conversion of adjustable rates to fixed rates, extension of maturity dates or deferrals of payments, capitalization of accrued interest and/or outstanding advances, or in limited situations, partial forgiveness of loan principal. In most instances, participation in residential mortgage loan modification programs requires the customer to complete a short-term trial period. A permanent loan modification is contingent on the customer successfully completing the trial period arrangement, and the loan documents are not modified until that time.
Credit card and other retail loan modifications are generally part of distinct modification programs providing customers experiencing financial difficulty with modifications whereby balances may be amortized up to 60 months, and generally include waiver of fees and reduced interest rates.
Loans that receive a forbearance plan generally remain in default until they are no longer delinquent as the result of the payment of all past due amounts or the borrower receiving a term extension or modification. Therefore, loans only receiving forbearance plans are not included in the table below.
The following table provides a summary of loan balances at September 30, 2023, which were modified during the nine months ended September 30, 2023, by portfolio class and delinquency status:
(Dollars in Millions)
Current
30-89 Days
Past Due
90 Days or
More Past Due
Total
Commercial
$
223
$
11
$
14
$
248
Commercial real estate
347
1
189
537
Residential mortgages (a)
1,089
15
14
1,118
Credit card
192
54
22
268
Other retail
106
15
7
128
Total loans
$
1,957
$
96
$
246
$
2,299
(a)
At September 30, 2023, $
263
million of loans
30-89
days past due and $
64
million of loans 90 days or more past due purchased and that could be purchased from GNMA mortgage pools under delinquent loan repurchase options whose payments are insured by the Federal Housing administration or guaranteed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, were classified as current.
The following table provides a summary of loans that defaulted (fully or partially
charged-off
or became 90 days or more past due) that were modified during the nine months ended September 30, 2023.
(Dollars in Millions)
Interest Rate
Reduction
Payment
Delay
Term
Extension
Multiple
Modifications (a)
Three Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
$
2
$
—
$
—
$
—
Residential mortgages
—
4
1
—
Credit card
10
—
—
—
Other retail
—
—
4
—
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
12
4
5
—
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
—
20
9
6
Total loans
$
12
$
24
$
14
$
6
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2023
Commercial
$
3
$
—
$
—
$
—
Residential mortgages
—
5
1
1
Credit card
15
—
—
—
Other retail
—
—
5
—
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
18
5
6
1
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
—
23
10
7
Total loans
$
18
$
28
$
16
$
8
(a)
Represents loans receiving a payment delay and term extension for three months ended September 30, 2023. Includes $
7
million of total loans receiving a payment delay and term extension and $
1
million of total loans receiving an interest rate reduction, payment delay and term extension for the nine months ended September 30, 2023.
As of September 30, 2023, the Company had $
210
million of commitments to lend additional funds to borrowers whose terms of their outstanding owed balances have been modified.
52
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Prior Period Troubled Debt Restructuring Information
The following table provides a summary of loans modified as troubled debt restructurings for the periods presented by portfolio class:
(Dollars in Millions)
Number
of Loans
Pre-Modification
Outstanding
Loan
Balance
Post-Modification
Outstanding
Loan
Balance
Three Months Ended September 30, 2022
Commercial
552
$
34
$
35
Commercial real estate
24
23
23
Residential mortgages
283
84
85
Credit card
11,632
63
64
Other retail
479
14
13
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
12,970
218
220
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
421
61
62
Total loans
13,391
$
279
$
282
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
Commercial
1,567
$
122
$
108
Commercial real estate
61
45
42
Residential mortgages
1,489
418
417
Credit card
29,667
161
163
Other retail
1,963
75
70
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
34,747
821
800
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
1,164
163
167
Total loans
35,911
$
984
$
967
The following table provides a summary of troubled debt restructured loans that defaulted (fully or partially
charged-off
or became 90 days or more past due) for the periods presented, that were modified as troubled debt restructurings within 12 months previous to default:
(Dollars in Millions)
Number
of Loans
Amount
Defaulted
Three Months Ended September 30, 2022
Commercial
186
$
15
Commercial real estate
5
6
Residential mortgages
67
8
Credit card
2,117
11
Other retail
73
1
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
2,448
41
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
113
17
Total loans
2,561
$
58
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
Commercial
575
$
21
Commercial real estate
10
8
Residential mortgages
180
18
Credit card
5,478
29
Other retail
216
3
Total loans, excluding loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
6,459
79
Loans purchased from GNMA mortgage pools
282
42
Total loans
6,741
$
121
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53
Table of Contents
Note 6
Accounting for Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Variable Interest Entities
The Company transfers financial assets in the normal course of business. The majority of the Company’s financial asset transfers are residential mortgage loan sales primarily to government-sponsored enterprises (“GSEs”), transfers of
tax-advantaged
investments, commercial loan sales through participation agreements, and other individual or portfolio loan and securities sales.
In accordance with the accounting guidance for asset transfers, the Company considers any ongoing involvement with transferred assets in determining whether the assets can be derecognized from the balance sheet. Guarantees provided to certain third parties in connection with the transfer of assets are further discussed in Note 16.
For loans sold under participation agreements, the Company also considers whether the terms of the loan participation agreement meet the accounting definition of a participating interest. With the exception of servicing and certain performance-based guarantees, the Company’s continuing involvement with financial assets sold is minimal and generally limited to market customary representation and warranty clauses. Any gain or loss on sale depends on the previous carrying amount of the transferred financial assets, the consideration received, and any liabilities incurred in exchange for the transferred assets. Upon transfer, any servicing assets and other interests that continue to be held by the Company are initially recognized at fair value.
For further information on MSRs, refer to Note 7. On a limited basis, the Company may acquire and package high-grade corporate bonds for select corporate customers, in which the Company generally has no continuing involvement with these transactions. Additionally, the Company is an authorized GNMA issuer and issues GNMA securities on a regular basis. The Company has no other asset securitizations or similar asset-backed financing arrangements that are
off-balance
sheet.
The Company previously provided financial support primarily through the use of waivers of trust and investment management fees associated with various unconsolidated registered money market funds it manages. The Company discontinued providing this support beginning in the third quarter of 2022 due to rising interest rates. The Company provided $
65
million of support to the funds during the nine months ended September 30, 2022.
The Company is involved in various entities that are considered to be variable interest entities (“VIEs”). The Company’s investments in VIEs are primarily related to investments promoting affordable housing, community development and renewable energy sources. Some of these
tax-advantaged
investments support the Company’s regulatory compliance with the Community Reinvestment Act. The Company’s investments in these entities generate a return primarily through the realization of federal and state income tax credits, and other tax benefits, such as tax deductions from operating losses of the investments, over specified time periods. These tax credits are recognized as a reduction of tax expense or, for investments qualifying as investment tax credits, as a reduction to the related investment asset. The Company recognized federal and state income tax credits related to its affordable housing and other
tax-advantaged
investments in tax expense of $
148
million and $
111
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $
435
million and $
336
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively. The Company also recognized $
238
million and $
117
million of investment tax credits for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and $
474
million and $
292
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively. The Company recognized $
134
million and $
102
million of expenses related to all of these investments for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, which were primarily included in tax expense. The Company recognized $
399
million and $
310
million of expenses related to all of these investments for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, which were primarily included in tax expense.
The Company is not required to consolidate VIEs in which it has concluded it does not have a controlling financial interest, and thus is not the primary beneficiary. In such cases, the Company does not have both the power to direct the entities’ most significant activities and the obligation to absorb losses or the right to receive benefits that could potentially be significant to the VIEs.
The Company’s investments in these unconsolidated VIEs are carried in other assets on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. The Company’s unfunded capital and other commitments related to these unconsolidated VIEs are generally carried in other liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. The Company’s maximum exposure to loss from these unconsolidated VIEs include the investment recorded on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheet, net of unfunded capital commitments, and previously recorded tax credits which remain subject to recapture by taxing authorities based on compliance features required to be met at the project level. While the Company believes potential losses from these investments are remote, the maximum exposure was determined by assuming a scenario where the community-based business and housing projects completely fail and do not meet certain government compliance requirements resulting in recapture of the related tax credits.
54
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Table of Contents
The following table provides a summary of investments in community development and
tax-advantaged
VIEs that the Company has not consolidated:
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30,
2023
December 31,
2022
Investment carrying amount
$
6,488
$
5,452
Unfunded capital and other commitments
3,186
2,416
Maximum exposure to loss
10,058
9,761
The Company also has noncontrolling financial investments in private investment funds and partnerships considered to be VIEs, which are not consolidated. The Company’s recorded investment in these entities, carried in other assets on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, was approximately $
210
million at September 30, 2023 and $
177
million at December 31, 2022. The maximum exposure to loss related to these VIEs was $
320
million at September 30, 2023 and $
310
million at December 31, 2022, representing the Company’s investment balance and its unfunded commitments to invest additional amounts.
The Company also held senior notes of $
5.9
billion as
available-for-sale
investment securities at September 30, 2023, compared with $
3.4
billion at December 31, 2022. These senior notes were issued by third-party securitization vehicles that held $
6.8
billion at September 30, 2023 and $
4.0
billion at December 31, 2022 of indirect auto loans that collateralize the senior notes. These VIEs are not consolidated by the Company.
The Company’s individual net investments in unconsolidated VIEs, which exclude any unfunded capital commitments, ranged from less than $
1
million to $
126
million at September 30, 2023, compared with less than $
1
million to $
116
million at December 31, 2022.
The Company is required to consolidate VIEs in which it has concluded it has a controlling financial interest.
The Company sponsors entities to which it transfers its interests in
tax-advantaged
investments to third parties. At September 30, 2023, approximately $
5.9
billion of the Company’s assets and $
4.4
billion of its liabilities included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet were related to community development and
tax-advantaged
investment VIEs which the Company has consolidated, primarily related to these transfers. These amounts compared to $
5.9
billion and $
4.2
billion, respectively, at December 31, 2022.
The majority of the assets of these consolidated VIEs are reported in other assets, and the liabilities are reported in long-term debt and other liabilities. The assets of a particular VIE are the primary source of funds to settle its obligations. The creditors of the VIEs do not have recourse to the general credit of the Company. The Company’s exposure to the consolidated VIEs is generally limited to the carrying value of its variable interests plus any related tax credits previously recognized or transferred to others with a guarantee.
In addition, the Company sponsors a municipal bond securities tender option bond program. The Company controls the activities of the program’s entities, is entitled to the residual returns and provides liquidity and remarketing arrangements to the program. As a result, the Company has consolidated the program’s entities. At September 30, 2023, $
941
million of
available-for-sale
investment securities and $
333
million of short-term borrowings on the Consolidated Balance Sheet were related to the tender option bond program, compared with $
1.5
billion of
available-for-sale
investment securities and $
1.0
billion of short-term borrowings at December 31, 2022.
U.S. Bancorp
55
Table of Contents
Note 7
Mortgage Servicing Rights
The Company capitalizes MSRs as separate assets when loans are sold and servicing is retained. MSRs may also be purchased from others. The Company carries MSRs at fair value, with changes in the fair value recorded in earnings during the period in which they occur. The Company serviced $
232.3
billion of residential mortgage loans for others at September 30, 2023, and $
243.6
billion at December 31, 2022, including subserviced mortgages with no corresponding MSR asset. Included in mortgage banking revenue are the MSR fair value changes arising from market rate and model assumption changes, net of the value change in derivatives used to economically hedge MSRs. These changes resulted in net losses of $
3
million and $
19
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and net losses of $
45
million and $
35
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively. Loan servicing and ancillary fees, not including valuation changes, included in mortgage banking revenue were $
176
million and $
190
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022 respectively, and $
553
million and $
561
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
Changes in fair value of capitalized MSRs are summarized as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
3,633
$
3,707
$
3,755
$
2,953
Rights purchased
1
1
3
7
Rights capitalized
106
134
301
473
Rights sold (a)
(
292
)
—
(
440
)
1
Changes in fair value of MSRs
Due to fluctuations in market interest rates (b)
219
153
265
810
Due to revised assumptions or models (c)
16
(
5
)
—
(
26
)
Other
changes
in
fair
value
(d)
(
101
)
(
121
)
(
302
)
(
349
)
Balance at end of period
$
3,582
$
3,869
$
3,582
$
3,869
(a)
MSRs sold include those having a negative fair value, resulting from the loans being severely delinquent.
(b)
Includes changes in MSR value associated with changes in market interest rates, including estimated prepayment rates and anticipated earnings on escrow deposits.
(c)
Includes changes in MSR value not caused by changes in market interest rates, such as changes in assumed cost to service, ancillary income and option adjusted spread, as well as the impact of any model changes.
(d)
Primarily the change in MSR value from passage of time and cash flows realized (decay), but also includes the impact of changes to expected cash flows not associated with changes in market interest rates, such as the impact of delinquencies.
The estimated sensitivity to changes in interest rates of the fair value of the MSR portfolio and the related derivative instruments was as follows:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Down
100 bps
Down
50 bps
Down
25 bps
Up
25 bps
Up
50 bps
Up
100 bps
Down
100 bps
Down
50 bps
Down
25 bps
Up
25 bps
Up
50 bps
Up
100 bps
MSR portfolio
$
(
264
)
$
(
120
)
$
(
57
)
$
51
$
96
$
172
$
(
334
)
$
(
153
)
$
(
73
)
$
66
$
125
$
224
Derivative instrument hedges
262
117
55
(
49
)
(
93
)
(
169
)
337
153
73
(
67
)
(
127
)
(
236
)
Net sensitivity
$
(
2
)
$
(
3
)
$
(
2
)
$
2
$
3
$
3
$
3
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
(
2
)
$
(
12
)
The fair value of MSRs and their sensitivity to changes in interest rates is influenced by the mix of the servicing portfolio and characteristics of each segment of the portfolio. The Company’s servicing portfolio consists of the distinct portfolios of government-insured mortgages, conventional mortgages and Housing Finance Agency (“HFA”) mortgages. The servicing portfolios are predominantly comprised of fixed-rate agency loans with limited adjustable-rate or jumbo mortgage loans. The HFA servicing portfolio is comprised of loans originated under state and local housing authority program guidelines which assist purchases by first-time or
low-
to moderate-income homebuyers through a favorable rate subsidy, down payment and/or closing cost assistance on government- and conventional-insured mortgages.
56
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
The following table provides a summary of the Company’s MSRs and related characteristics by portfolio:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
HFA
Government
Conventional (d)
Total
HFA
Government
Conventional (d)
Total
Servicing portfolio (a)
$
46,729
$
25,756
$
151,691
$
224,176
$
44,071
$
23,141
$
172,541
$
239,753
Fair value
$
795
$
539
$
2,248
$
3,582
$
725
$
454
$
2,576
$
3,755
Value (bps) (b)
170
209
148
160
165
196
149
157
Weighted-average servicing fees (bps)
36
44
26
30
36
42
27
30
Multiple (value/servicing fees)
4.74
4.76
5.77
5.34
4.56
4.69
5.52
5.20
Weighted-average note rate
4.43
%
4.16
%
3.75
%
3.94
%
4.16
%
3.81
%
3.52
%
3.67
%
Weighted-average age (in years)
4.3
5.5
4.1
4.3
4.0
5.7
3.7
3.9
Weighted-average expected prepayment (constant prepayment rate)
8.8
%
9.4
%
7.7
%
8.1
%
7.4
%
8.5
%
7.8
%
7.8
%
Weighted-average expected life (in years)
7.9
7.2
7.5
7.5
8.8
7.6
7.5
7.7
Weighted-average option adjusted spread (c)
5.4
%
5.9
%
4.6
%
4.9
%
7.6
%
6.9
%
5.1
%
5.8
%
(a)
Represents principal balance of mortgages having corresponding MSR asset.
(b)
Calculated as fair value divided by the servicing portfolio.
(c)
Option adjusted spread is the incremental spread added to the risk-free rate to reflect optionality and other risk inherent in the MSRs.
(d)
Represents loans sold primarily to GSEs.
Note 8
Preferred Stock
At September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, the Company had authority to issue
50
million shares of preferred stock. The number of shares issued and outstanding and the carrying amount of each outstanding series of the Company’s preferred stock were as follows:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Shares
Issued and
Outstanding
Liquidation
Preference
Discount
Carrying
Amount
Shares
Issued and
Outstanding
Liquidation
Preference
Discount
Carrying
Amount
Series A
12,510
$
1,251
$
145
$
1,106
12,510
$
1,251
$
145
$
1,106
Series B
40,000
1,000
—
1,000
40,000
1,000
—
1,000
Series J
40,000
1,000
7
993
40,000
1,000
7
993
Series K
23,000
575
10
565
23,000
575
10
565
Series L
20,000
500
14
486
20,000
500
14
486
Series M
30,000
750
21
729
30,000
750
21
729
Series N
60,000
1,500
8
1,492
60,000
1,500
8
1,492
Series O
18,000
450
13
437
18,000
450
13
437
Total preferred stock (a)
243,510
$
7,026
$
218
$
6,808
243,510
$
7,026
$
218
$
6,808
(a)
The par value of all shares issued and outstanding at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, was $
1.00
per share.
U.S. Bancorp
57
Table of Contents
Note 9
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
Shareholders’ equity is affected by transactions and valuations of asset and liability positions that require adjustments to accumulated other comprehensive income (loss). The reconciliation of the transactions affecting accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) included in shareholders’ equity is as follows:
Three Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Investment
Securities
Available-For-
Sale
Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
on Investment
Securities
Transferred
From Available-
For-Sale
to
Held-To-Maturity
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Derivative Hedges
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Retirement Plans
Foreign
Currency
Translation
Total
2023
Balance at beginning of period
$
(
5,716
)
$
(
3,737
)
$
(
294
)
$
(
941
)
$
(
30
)
$
(
10,718
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses)
(
1,881
)
—
(
349
)
(
1
)
—
(
2,231
)
Foreign currency translation adjustment (a)
—
—
—
—
3
3
Reclassification to earnings of realized (gains) losses
—
144
28
(
2
)
—
170
Applicable income taxes
474
(
37
)
82
2
—
521
Balance at end of period
$
(
7,123
)
$
(
3,630
)
$
(
533
)
$
(
942
)
$
(
27
)
$
(
12,255
)
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
(
7,058
)
$
(
1,890
)
$
4
$
(
1,378
)
$
(
39
)
$
(
10,361
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses)
(
2,810
)
—
(
232
)
—
—
(
3,042
)
Transfer of securities from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity
3,032
(
3,032
)
—
—
—
—
Foreign currency translation adjustment (a)
—
—
—
—
(
8
)
(
8
)
Reclassification to earnings of realized (gains) losses
(
1
)
147
8
32
—
186
Applicable income taxes
(
56
)
730
57
(
8
)
2
725
Balance at end of period
$
(
6,893
)
$
(
4,045
)
$
(
163
)
$
(
1,354
)
$
(
45
)
$
(
12,500
)
(a)
Represents the impact of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on the Company’s investment in foreign operations and related hedges.
Nine Months Ended September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Investment
Securities
Available-For-
Sale
Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
on Investment
Securities
Transferred
From
Available-
For-Sale to
Held-To-Maturity
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Derivative Hedges
Unrealized Gains
(Losses) on
Retirement Plans
Foreign
Currency
Translation
Total
2023
Balance at beginning of period
$
(
6,378
)
$
(
3,933
)
$
(
114
)
$
(
939
)
$
(
43
)
$
(
11,407
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses)
(
1,036
)
—
(
610
)
—
—
(
1,646
)
Foreign currency translation adjustment (a)
—
—
—
—
21
21
Reclassification to earnings of realized (gains) losses
29
406
46
(
6
)
—
475
Applicable income taxes
262
(
103
)
145
3
(
5
)
302
Balance at end of period
$
(
7,123
)
$
(
3,630
)
$
(
533
)
$
(
942
)
$
(
27
)
$
(
12,255
)
2022
Balance at beginning of period
$
540
$
(
935
)
$
(
85
)
$
(
1,426
)
$
(
37
)
$
(
1,943
)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses)
(
14,325
)
—
(
134
)
—
—
(
14,459
)
Transfer of securities from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity
4,413
(
4,413
)
—
—
—
—
Foreign currency translation adjustment (a)
—
—
—
—
(
11
)
(
11
)
Reclassification to earnings of realized (gains) losses
(
38
)
250
29
96
—
337
Applicable income taxes
2,517
1,053
27
(
24
)
3
3,576
Balance at end of period
$
(
6,893
)
$
(
4,045
)
$
(
163
)
$
(
1,354
)
$
(
45
)
$
(
12,500
)
(a)
Represents the impact of changes in foreign currency exchange rates on the Company’s investment in foreign operations and related hedges.
58
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Additional detail about the impact to net income for items reclassified out of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) and into earnings is as follows:
Impact to Net Income
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
Affected Line Item in the
Consolidated Statement of Income
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Unrealized gains (losses) on investment securities
available-for-sale
Realized gains (losses) on sale of investment securities
$
—
$
1
$
(
29
)
$
38
Securities gains (losses), net
—
—
7
(
9
)
Applicable income taxes
—
1
(
22
)
29
Net-of-tax
Unrealized gains (losses) on investment securities transferred from
available-for-sale
to
held-to-maturity
Amortization of unrealized gains (losses)
(
144
)
(
147
)
(
406
)
(
250
)
Interest income
37
37
103
63
Applicable income taxes
(
107
)
(
110
)
(
303
)
(
187
)
Net-of-tax
Unrealized gains (losses) on derivative hedges
Realized gains (losses) on derivative hedges
(
28
)
(
8
)
(
46
)
(
29
)
Net interest income
8
2
12
7
Applicable income taxes
(
20
)
(
6
)
(
34
)
(
22
)
Net-of-tax
Unrealized gains (losses) on retirement plans
Actuarial gains (losses) and prior service cost (credit) amortization
2
(
32
)
6
(
96
)
Other noninterest expense
(
1
)
8
(
2
)
24
Applicable income taxes
1
(
24
)
4
(
72
)
Net-of-tax
Total impact to net income
$
(
126
)
$
(
139
)
$
(
355
)
$
(
252
)
Note 10
Earnings Per Share
The components of earnings per share were:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars and Shares in Millions, Except Per Share Data)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Net income attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
1,523
$
1,812
$
4,582
$
4,900
Preferred dividends
(
102
)
(
85
)
(
273
)
(
228
)
Earnings allocated to participating stock awards
(
9
)
(
9
)
(
24
)
(
24
)
Net income applicable to U.S. Bancorp common shareholders
$
1,412
$
1,718
$
4,285
$
4,648
Average common shares outstanding
1,548
1,486
1,538
1,485
Net effect of the exercise and assumed purchase of stock awards
1
—
—
1
Average diluted common shares outstanding
1,549
1,486
1,538
1,486
Earnings per common share
$
.91
$
1.16
$
2.79
$
3.13
Diluted earnings per common share
$
.91
$
1.16
$
2.79
$
3.13
Options outstanding at September 30, 2023 to purchase
3
million common shares for the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2023, respectively, and outstanding at September 30, 2022 to purchase
1
million common shares for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 were not included in the computation of diluted earnings per share because they were antidilutive.
Note 11
Employee Benefits
The components of net periodic benefit cost for the Company’s retirement plans were:
Three Months Ended September 30
Nine Months Ended September 30
Pension Plans
Postretirement
Welfare Plans
Pension Plans
Postretirement
Welfare Plans
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
Service cost
$
56
$
69
$
—
$
—
$
168
$
206
$
—
$
—
Interest cost
93
62
1
—
278
185
2
—
Expected return on plan assets
(
137
)
(
119
)
(
1
)
—
(
410
)
(
358
)
(
2
)
—
Prior service cost (credit) amortization
—
(
1
)
(
1
)
—
(
1
)
(
2
)
(
2
)
(
2
)
Actuarial loss (gain) amortization
1
35
(
2
)
(
2
)
3
105
(
6
)
(
5
)
Net periodic benefit cost (a)
$
13
$
46
$
(
3
)
$
(
2
)
$
38
$
136
$
(
8
)
$
(
7
)
(a)
Service cost is included in
compensation and
employee benefits expense on the Consolidated Statement of Income. All other components are included in other noninterest expense on the Consolidated Statement of Income.
U.S. Bancorp
59
Table of Contents
Note 12
Income Taxes
The components of income tax expense were:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Federal
Current
$
416
$
427
$
1,076
$
1,052
Deferred
(
51
)
(
51
)
(
50
)
(
46
)
Federal income tax
365
376
1,026
1,006
State
Current
62
150
277
328
Deferred
4
(
45
)
(
35
)
(
42
)
State income tax
66
105
242
286
Total income tax provision
$
431
$
481
$
1,268
$
1,292
A reconciliation of expected income tax expense at the federal statutory rate of
21
percent to the Company’s applicable income tax expense follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Tax at statutory rate
$
411
$
482
$
1,232
$
1,302
State income tax, at statutory rates, net of federal tax benefit
85
91
270
259
Tax effect of
Tax credits and benefits, net of related expenses
(
96
)
(
79
)
(
236
)
(
231
)
Tax-exempt
income
(
40
)
(
30
)
(
115
)
(
87
)
Other items
71
17
117
49
Applicable income taxes
$
431
$
481
$
1,268
$
1,292
The Company’s income tax returns are subject to review and examination by federal, state, local and foreign government authorities. On an ongoing basis, numerous federal, state, local and foreign examinations are in progress and cover multiple tax years. As of September 30, 2023, federal tax examinations for all years ending through December 31, 2016 are completed and resolved. The Company’s tax returns for the years ended December 31, 2017 through December 31, 2020 are under examination by the Internal Revenue Service. The years open to examination by foreign, state and local government authorities vary by jurisdiction.
The Company’s net deferred tax asset was $
6.7
billion at September 30, 2023 and $
6.3
billion at December 31, 2022.
60
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
Note 13
Derivative Instruments
In the ordinary course of business, the Company enters into derivative transactions to manage various risks and to accommodate the business requirements of its customers. The Company recognizes all derivatives on the Consolidated Balance Sheet at fair value in other assets or in other liabilities. On the date the Company enters into a derivative contract, the derivative is designated as either a fair value hedge, cash flow hedge, net investment hedge, or a designation is not made as it is a customer-related transaction, an economic hedge for asset/liability risk management purposes or another stand-alone derivative created through the Company’s operations (“free-standing derivative”). When a derivative is designated as a fair value, cash flow or net investment hedge, the Company performs an assessment, at inception and, at a minimum, quarterly thereafter, to determine the effectiveness of the derivative in offsetting changes in the value or cash flows of the hedged item(s).
Fair Value Hedges
These derivatives are interest rate swaps the Company uses to hedge the change in fair value related to interest rate changes of its underlying
available-for-sale
investment securities and fixed-rate debt. Changes in the fair value of derivatives designated as fair value hedges, and changes in the fair value of the hedged items, are recorded in earnings.
Cash Flow Hedges
These derivatives are interest rate swaps the Company uses to hedge the forecasted cash flows from its underlying variable-rate loans and debt. Changes in the fair value of derivatives designated as cash flow hedges are recorded in other comprehensive income (loss) until the cash flows of the hedged items are realized. If a derivative designated as a cash flow hedge is terminated or ceases to be highly effective, the gain or loss in other comprehensive income (loss) is amortized to earnings over the period the forecasted hedged transactions impact earnings. If a hedged forecasted transaction is no longer probable, hedge accounting is ceased and any gain or loss included in other comprehensive income (loss) is reported in earnings immediately, unless the forecasted transaction is at least reasonably possible of occurring, whereby the amounts remain within other comprehensive income (loss). At September 30, 2023, the Company had $
533
million
(net-of-tax)
of realized and unrealized losses on derivatives classified as cash flow hedges recorded in other comprehensive income (loss), compared with $
114
million
(net-of-tax)
of realized and unrealized losses at December 31, 2022. The estimated amount to be reclassified from other comprehensive income (loss) into earnings during the next 12 months is a loss of $
182
million
(net-of-tax).
All cash flow hedges were highly effective for the three months ended September 30, 2023.
Net Investment Hedges
The Company uses forward commitments to sell specified amounts of certain foreign currencies, and
non-derivative
debt instruments, to hedge the volatility of its net investment in foreign operations driven by fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates. The carrying amount of
non-derivative
debt instruments designated as net investment hedges was $
1.2
billion at September 30, 2023 and $
1.3
billion at December 31, 2022.
Other Derivative Positions
The Company enters into free-standing derivatives to mitigate interest rate risk and for other risk management purposes. These derivatives include forward commitments to sell
to-be-announced
securities (“TBAs”) and other commitments to sell residential mortgage loans, which are used to economically hedge the interest rate risk related to mortgage loans held for sale (“MLHFS”) and unfunded mortgage loan commitments. The Company also enters into interest rate swaps, swaptions, forward commitments to buy TBAs, U.S. Treasury and Eurodollar futures and options on U.S. Treasury futures to economically hedge the change in the fair value of the Company’s MSRs. The Company enters into foreign currency forwards to economically hedge remeasurement gains and losses the Company recognizes on foreign currency denominated assets and liabilities. The Company also enters into interest rate swaps as economic hedges of fair value option elected deposits. In addition, the Company acts as a seller and buyer of interest rate
,
foreign exchange
and commodity
contracts for its customers. The Company mitigates the market and liquidity risk associated with these customer derivatives by entering into similar offsetting positions with broker-dealers, or on a portfolio basis by entering into other derivative or
non-derivative
financial instruments that partially or fully offset the exposure to earnings from these customer-related positions. The Company’s customer derivatives and related hedges are monitored and reviewed by the Company’s Market Risk Committee, which establishes policies for market risk management, including exposure limits for each portfolio. The Company also has derivative contracts that are created through its operations, including certain unfunded mortgage loan commitments and swap agreements related to the sale of a portion of its Class B common and preferred shares of Visa Inc. Refer to Note 15 for further information on these swap agreements. The Company uses credit derivatives to economically hedge the credit risk on its derivative positions and loan portfolios.
U.S. Bancorp
61
Table of Contents
The following table summarizes the asset and liability management derivative positions of the Company:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Notional
Value
Fair Value
Notional
Value
Fair Value
(Dollars in Millions)
Assets
Liabilities
Assets
Liabilities
Fair value hedges
Interest rate contracts
Receive fixed/pay floating swaps
$
9,550
$
—
$
—
$
17,400
$
—
$
9
Pay fixed/receive floating swaps
19,264
—
—
5,542
—
—
Cash flow hedges
Interest rate contracts
Receive fixed/pay floating swaps
23,700
—
—
14,300
—
—
Net investment hedges
Foreign exchange forward contracts
824
5
1
778
—
—
Other economic hedges
Interest rate contracts
Futures and forwards
Buy
2,945
4
15
3,546
10
18
Sell
4,851
26
7
7,522
20
38
Options
Purchased
7,385
329
—
11,434
346
—
Written
3,707
12
100
7,849
7
148
Receive fixed/pay floating swaps
5,055
—
1
9,215
—
3
Pay fixed/receive floating swaps
4,595
—
—
9,616
—
—
Foreign exchange forward contracts
622
2
1
962
2
6
Equity contracts
209
—
7
361
—
10
Credit contracts
1,425
—
—
330
—
—
Other (a)
2,767
11
121
1,908
11
190
Total
$
86,899
$
389
$
253
$
90,763
$
396
$
422
(a)
Includes derivative liability swap agreements related to the sale of a portion of the Company’s Class B common and preferred shares of Visa Inc. The Visa swap agreements had a total notional value and fair value of $
2.0
billion and $
119
million at September 30, 2023, respectively, compared to $
1.8
billion and $
190
million at December 31, 2022, respectively. In addition, includes short-term underwriting purchase and sale commitments with total notional values of $
671
million at September 30, 2023, and $
13
million at December 31, 2022.
The following table summarizes the customer-related derivative positions of the Company:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Notional
Value
Fair Value
Notional
Value
Fair Value
(Dollars in Millions)
Assets
Liabilities
Assets
Liabilities
Interest rate contracts
Receive fixed/pay floating swaps
$
354,783
$
146
$
7,358
$
301,690
$
309
$
5,689
Pay fixed/receive floating swaps
326,646
2,763
116
316,133
2,323
206
Other (a)
82,379
13
50
40,261
3
16
Options
Purchased
112,927
1,583
—
103,489
1,794
5
Written
107,595
1
1,622
99,923
6
1,779
Futures
Buy
—
—
—
3,623
—
4
Sell
—
—
—
2,376
8
—
Foreign exchange rate contracts
Forwards, spots and swaps
114,004
2,523
2,202
134,666
3,010
2,548
Options
Purchased
806
29
—
954
22
—
Written
806
—
29
954
—
22
Commodity contracts
Swaps
2,063
61
56
—
—
—
Options
Purchased
2,811
128
128
—
—
—
Credit contracts
13,769
1
7
10,765
1
8
Total
$
1,118,589
$
7,248
$
11,568
$
1,014,834
$
7,476
$
10,277
(a)
Primarily represents floating rate interest rate swaps that pay based on differentials between specified interest rate indexes.
62
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The table below shows the effective portion of the gains (losses) recognized in other comprehensive income (loss) and the gains (losses) reclassified from other comprehensive income (loss) into earnings
(net-of-tax):
Three Months Ended September 30
Nine Months Ended September 30
Gains (Losses)
Recognized in
Other
Comprehensive
Income
(Loss)
Gains (Losses)
Reclassified
from Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
into Earnings
Gains (Losses)
Recognized in
Other
Comprehensive
Income
(Loss)
Gains (Losses)
Reclassified
from Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
into Earnings
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
Asset and Liability Management Positions
Cash flow hedges
Interest rate contracts
$
(
259
)
$
(
173
)
$
(
20
)
$
(
6
)
$
(
453
)
$
(
100
)
$
(
34
)
$
(
22
)
Net investment hedges
Foreign exchange forward contracts
15
37
—
—
6
63
—
—
Non-derivative
debt instruments
24
56
—
—
7
139
—
—
Note:
The Company does not exclude components from effectiveness testing for cash flow and net investment hedges.
The table below shows the effect of fair value and cash flow hedge accounting on the Consolidated Statement of Income:
Three Months Ended September 30
Nine Months Ended September 30
Interest Income
Interest Expense
Interest Income
Interest Expense
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
Total amount of income and expense line items presented in the Consolidated Statement of Income in which the effects of fair value or cash flow hedges are recorded
$
7,754
$
4,728
$
3,518
$
901
$
22,244
$
11,971
$
8,959
$
1,536
Asset and Liability Management Positions
Fair value hedges
Interest rate contract derivatives
428
180
(
359
)
457
584
511
(
230
)
491
Hedged items
(
431
)
(
179
)
359
(
460
)
(
589
)
(
510
)
232
(
495
)
Cash flow hedges
Interest rate contract derivatives
(
21
)
—
7
8
(
21
)
—
25
29
Note:
The Company does not exclude components from effectiveness testing for fair value and
cash
flow
hedges. The Company reclassified losses of $
7
million and $
25
million into earnings during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2023, respectively, as a result of realized
cash
flows
on discontinued cash flow hedges, compared with $
8
million and $
29
million during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022, respectively. No amounts were reclassified into earnings on discontinued cash flow hedges because it is probable the original hedged forecasted cash flows will not occur.
The table below shows cumulative hedging adjustments and the carrying amount of assets and liabilities designated in fair value hedges:
Carrying Amount of the Hedged Assets
and Liabilities
Cumulative Hedging Adjustment (a)
(Dollars in Millions)
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Line Item in the Consolidated Balance Sheet
Available-for-sale
investment securities (b)
$
10,222
$
4,937
$
(
1,017
)
$
(
552
)
Long-term debt
9,176
17,190
(
327
)
(
142
)
(a)
The cumulative hedging adjustment related to discontinued hedging relationships on
available-for-sale
investment securities and long-term debt was $(
362
) million and $(
18
) million, respectively, at September 30, 2023, compared with $(
392
) million and $
399
million at December 31, 2022, respectively.
(b)
Includes amounts related to
available-for-sale
investment securities currently designated as the hedged item in a fair value hedge using the portfolio layer method. At September 30, 2023, the amortized cost of the closed portfolios used in these hedging relationships was $
5.8
billion, of which $
5.1
billion was designated as hedged. At September 30, 2023, the cumulative amount of basis adjustments associated with these hedging relationships was $(
95
) million.
U.S. Bancorp
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The table below shows the gains (losses) recognized in earnings for other economic hedges and the customer-related positions:
Location of Gains (Losses)
Recognized in Earnings
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Asset and Liability Management Positions
Other economic hedges
Interest rate contracts
Futures and forwards
Mortgage banking revenue
$
18
$
142
$
56
$
439
Purchased and written options
Mortgage banking revenue
74
(
28
)
89
(
69
)
Swaps
Mortgage banking revenue/Other noninterest
income/Interest
e
xpense
(
241
)
(
118
)
(
221
)
(
569
)
Foreign exchange forward contracts
Other noninterest income
8
12
(
5
)
13
Equity contracts
Compensation expense
(
1
)
(
1
)
(
4
)
(
4
)
Credit contracts
Commer
c
ial
products revenu
e
3
—
3
—
Other
Other noninterest income
1
(
154
)
—
(
154
)
Customer-Related Positions
Interest rate contracts
Swaps
Commercial products revenue
103
26
198
73
Purchased and written options
Commercial products revenue
7
6
7
10
Futures
Commercial products revenue
—
7
(
1
)
31
Foreign exchange rate contracts
Forwards, spots and swaps
Commercial products revenue
19
40
118
75
Purchased and written options
Commercial products revenue
—
—
—
1
Commodity contracts
Swaps
Commercial products revenue
3
—
5
—
Credit contracts
Commercial products revenue
—
(
1
)
(
1
)
21
Derivatives are subject to credit risk associated with counterparties to the derivative contracts. The Company measures that credit risk using a credit valuation adjustment and includes it within the fair value of the derivative. The Company manages counterparty credit risk through diversification of its derivative positions among various counterparties, by entering into derivative positions that are centrally cleared through clearinghouses, by entering into master netting arrangements and, where possible, by requiring collateral arrangements. A master netting arrangement allows two counterparties, who have multiple derivative contracts with each other, the ability to net settle amounts under all contracts, including any related collateral, through a single payment and in a single currency. Collateral arrangements generally require the counterparty to deliver collateral (typically cash or U.S. Treasury and agency securities) equal to the Company’s net derivative receivable, subject to minimum transfer and credit rating requirements.
The Company’s collateral arrangements are predominately bilateral and, therefore, contain provisions that require collateralization of the Company’s net liability derivative positions. Required collateral coverage is based on net liability thresholds and may be contingent upon the Company’s credit rating from two of the nationally recognized statistical rating organizations. If the Company’s credit rating were to fall below credit ratings thresholds established in the collateral arrangements, the counterparties to the derivatives could request immediate additional collateral coverage up to and including full collateral coverage for derivatives in a net liability position. The aggregate fair value of all derivatives under collateral arrangements that were in a net liability position at September 30, 2023, was $
3.5
billion. At September 30, 2023, the Company had $
3.0
billion of cash posted as collateral against this net liability position.
Note 14
Netting Arrangements for Certain Financial Instruments and Securities Financing Activities
The Company’s derivative portfolio consists of bilateral
over-the-counter
trades, certain interest rate derivatives and credit contracts required to be centrally cleared through clearinghouses per current regulations, and exchange-traded positions which may include U.S. Treasury and Eurodollar futures or options on U.S. Treasury futures. Of the Company’s $
1.2
trillion total notional amount of derivative positions at September 30, 2023, $
554.9
billion related to bilateral
over-the-counter
trades, $
648.8
billion related to those centrally cleared through clearinghouses and $
1.8
billion related to those that were exchange-traded.
The Company’s derivative contracts typically include offsetting rights (referred to as netting arrangements), and depending on expected volume, credit risk, and counterparty preference, collateral maintenance may be required.
For all derivatives under collateral support arrangements, fair value is determined daily and, depending on the collateral maintenance requirements, the Company and a counterparty may receive or deliver collateral, based upon the net fair value of all derivative positions between the Company and the
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counterparty. Collateral is typically cash, but securities may be allowed under collateral arrangements with certain counterparties. Receivables and payables related to cash collateral are included in other assets and other liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, along with the related derivative asset and liability fair values. Any securities pledged to counterparties as collateral remain on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. Securities received from counterparties as collateral are not recognized on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, unless the counterparty defaults. In general, securities used as collateral can be sold, repledged or otherwise used by the party in possession. No restrictions exist on the use of cash collateral by either party. Refer to Note 13 for further discussion of the Company’s derivatives, including collateral arrangements.
As part of the Company’s treasury and broker-dealer operations, the Company executes transactions that are treated as securities sold under agreements to repurchase or securities purchased under agreements to resell, both of which are accounted for as collateralized financings. Securities sold under agreements to repurchase include repurchase agreements and securities loaned transactions. Securities purchased under agreements to resell include reverse repurchase agreements and securities borrowed transactions. For securities sold under agreements to repurchase, the Company records a liability for the cash received, which is included in short-term borrowings on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. For securities purchased under agreements to resell, the Company records a receivable for the cash paid, which is included in other assets on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
Securities transferred to counterparties under repurchase agreements and securities loaned transactions continue to be recognized on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, are measured at fair value, and are included in investment securities or other assets. Securities received from counterparties under reverse repurchase agreements and securities borrowed transactions are not recognized on the Consolidated Balance Sheet unless the counterparty defaults. The securities transferred under repurchase and reverse repurchase transactions typically are U.S. Treasury and agency securities, residential agency mortgage-backed securities or corporate debt securities. The securities loaned or borrowed typically are corporate debt securities traded by the Company’s primary broker-dealer subsidiary. In general, the securities transferred can be sold, repledged or otherwise used by the party in possession. No restrictions exist on the use of cash collateral by either party. Repurchase/reverse repurchase and securities loaned/borrowed transactions expose the Company to counterparty risk. The Company manages this risk by performing assessments, independent of business line managers, and establishing concentration limits on each counterparty. Additionally, these transactions include collateral arrangements that require the fair values of the underlying securities to be determined daily, resulting in cash being obtained or refunded to counterparties to maintain specified collateral
levels.
The following table summarizes the maturities by category of collateral pledged for repurchase agreements and securities loaned transactions:
(Dollars in Millions)
Overnight and
Continuous
Less Than
30 Days
30-89
Days
Greater Than
90 Days
Total
September 30, 2023
Repurchase agreements
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
1,777
$—
$—
$—
$
1,777
Residential agency mortgage-backed securities
291
—
—
—
291
Corporate debt securities
598
—
—
—
598
Total repurchase agreements
2,666
—
—
—
2,666
Securities loaned
Corporate debt securities
212
—
—
—
212
Total securities loaned
212
—
—
—
212
Gross amount of recognized liabilities
$
2,878
$—
$—
$—
$
2,878
December 31, 2022
Repurchase agreements
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
147
$—
$—
$—
$
147
Residential agency mortgage-backed securities
846
—
—
—
846
Corporate debt securities
439
—
—
—
439
Total repurchase agreements
1,432
—
—
—
1,432
Securities loaned
Corporate debt securities
120
—
—
—
120
Total securities loaned
120
—
—
—
120
Gross amount of recognized liabilities
$
1,552
$—
$—
$—
$
1,552
U.S. Bancorp
65
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The Company executes its derivative, repurchase/reverse repurchase and securities loaned/borrowed transactions under the respective industry standard agreements. These agreements include master netting arrangements that allow for multiple contracts executed with the same counterparty to be viewed as a single arrangement. This allows for net settlement of a single amount on a daily basis. In the event of default, the master netting arrangement provides for
close-out
netting, which allows all of these positions with the defaulting counterparty to be terminated and net settled with a single payment amount.
The Company has elected to offset the assets and liabilities under netting arrangements for the balance sheet presentation of the majority of its derivative counterparties. The netting occurs at the counterparty level, and includes all assets and liabilities related to the derivative contracts, including those associated with cash collateral received or delivered. The Company has not elected to offset the assets and liabilities under netting arrangements for the balance sheet presentation of repurchase/reverse repurchase and securities loaned/borrowed transactions.
The following tables provide information on the Company’s netting adjustments, and items not offset on the Consolidated Balance Sheet but available for offset in the event of default:
Gross
Recognized
Assets
Gross Amounts
Offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet (a)
Net Amounts
Presented on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Gross Amounts Not Offset on the
Consolidated Balance Sheet
Net Amount
(Dollars in Millions)
Financial
Instruments (b)
Collateral
Received (c)
September 30, 2023
Derivative assets (d)
$
7,613
$
(
4,515
)
$
3,098
$
(
785
)
$
—
$
2,313
Reverse repurchase agreements
1,838
—
1,838
(
591
)
(
1,245
)
2
Securities borrowed
1,694
—
1,694
—
(
1,634
)
60
Total
$
11,145
$
(
4,515
)
$
6,630
$
(
1,376
)
$
(
2,879
)
$
2,375
December 31, 2022
Derivative assets (d)
$
7,852
$
(
5,427
)
$
2,425
$
(
231
)
$
(
80
)
$
2,114
Reverse repurchase agreements
107
—
107
(
102
)
(
5
)
—
Securities borrowed
1,606
—
1,606
—
(
1,548
)
58
Total
$
9,565
$
(
5,427
)
$
4,138
$
(
333
)
$
(
1,633
)
$
2,172
(a)
Includes $
3.2
billion and $
3.0
billion of cash collateral related payables that were netted against derivative assets at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.
(b)
For derivative assets this includes any derivative liability fair values that could be offset in the event of counterparty default; for reverse repurchase agreements this includes any repurchase agreement payables that could be offset in the event of counterparty default; for securities borrowed this includes any securities loaned payables that could be offset in the event of counterparty default.
(c)
Includes the fair value of securities received by the Company from the counterparty. These securities are not included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet unless the counterparty defaults.
(d)
Excludes $
24
million and $
20
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively, of derivative assets not subject to netting arrangements.
Gross
Recognized
Liabilities
Gross Amounts
Offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet (a)
Net Amounts
Presented on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Gross Amounts Not Offset on the
Consolidated Balance Sheet
Net Amount
(Dollars in Millions)
Financial
Instruments (b)
Collateral
Pledged (c)
September 30, 2023
Derivative liabilities (d)
$
11,698
$
(
4,307
)
$
7,391
$
(
785
)
$
—
$
6,606
Repurchase agreements
2,666
—
2,666
(
591
)
(
2,071
)
4
Securities loaned
212
—
212
—
(
208
)
4
Total
$
14,576
$
(
4,307
)
$
10,269
$
(
1,376
)
$
(
2,279
)
$
6,614
December 31, 2022
Derivative liabilities (d)
$
10,506
$
(
4,551
)
$
5,955
$
(
231
)
$
—
$
5,724
Repurchase agreements
1,432
—
1,432
(
102
)
(
1,325
)
5
Securities loaned
120
—
120
—
(
118
)
2
Total
$
12,058
$
(
4,551
)
$
7,507
$
(
333
)
$
(
1,443
)
$
5,731
(a)
Includes $
3.0
billion and $
2.1
billion of cash collateral related receivables that were netted against derivative liabilities at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.
(b)
For derivative liabilities this includes any derivative asset fair values that could be offset in the event of counterparty default; for repurchase agreements this includes any reverse repurchase agreement receivables that could be offset in the event of counterparty default; for securities loaned this includes any securities borrowed receivables that could be offset in the event of counterparty default.
(c)
Includes the fair value of securities pledged by the Company to the counterparty. These securities are included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet unless the Company defaults.
(d)
Excludes $
123
million and $
193
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively, of derivative liabilities not subject to netting arrangements.
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Note 15
Fair Values of Assets and Liabilities
The Company uses fair value measurements for the initial recording of certain assets and liabilities, periodic remeasurement of certain assets and liabilities, and disclosures. Derivatives, trading and
available-for-sale
investment securities, MSRs, certain time deposits and substantially all MLHFS are recorded at fair value on a recurring basis. Additionally, from time to time, the Company may be required to record at fair value other assets on a nonrecurring basis, such as loans held for sale, loans held for investment and certain other assets. These nonrecurring fair value adjustments typically involve application of
lower-of-cost-or-fair
value accounting or impairment write-downs of individual assets. Other financial instruments, such as
held-to-maturity
investment securities, loans, the majority of time deposits, short-term borrowings and long-term debt, are accounted for at amortized cost. See “Fair Value of Financial Instruments” in this Note for further information on the estimated fair value of these other financial instruments. In accordance with disclosure guidance, certain financial instruments, such as deposits with no defined or contractual maturity, receivables and payables due in one year or less, insurance contracts and equity investments not accounted for at fair value, are excluded from this Note.
Fair value is defined as the exchange price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. A fair value measurement reflects all of the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability, including assumptions about the risk inherent in a particular valuation technique, the effect of a restriction on the sale or use of an asset and the risk of nonperformance.
The Company groups its assets and liabilities measured at fair value into a three-level hierarchy for valuation techniques used to measure financial assets and financial liabilities at fair value. This hierarchy is based on whether the valuation inputs are observable or unobservable. These levels are:
•
Level 1 — Quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities. Level 1 includes U.S. Treasury securities, as well as exchange-traded instruments.
•
Level 2 — Observable inputs other than Level 1 prices, such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities; quoted prices in markets that are not active; or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities. Level 2 includes debt securities that are traded less frequently than exchange-traded instruments and which are typically valued using third party pricing services; derivative contracts and other assets and liabilities, including securities, and certain time deposits, whose value is determined using a pricing model with inputs that are observable in the market or can be derived principally from or corroborated by observable market data; and MLHFS whose values are determined using quoted prices for similar assets or pricing models with inputs that are observable in the market or can be corroborated by observable market data.
•
Level 3 — Unobservable inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the fair value of the assets or liabilities. Level 3 assets and liabilities include financial instruments whose values are determined using pricing models, discounted cash flow methodologies, or similar techniques, as well as instruments for which the determination of fair value requires significant management judgment or estimation. This category includes MSRs and certain derivative contracts.
Valuation Methodologies
The valuation methodologies used by the Company to measure financial assets and liabilities at fair value are described below. In addition, the following section includes an indication of the level of the fair value hierarchy in which the assets or liabilities are classified. Where appropriate, the descriptions include information about the valuation models and key inputs to those models. During the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, there were no significant changes to the valuation techniques used by the Company to measure fair value.
Available-For-Sale
Investment Securities
When quoted market prices for identical securities are available in an active market, these prices are used to determine fair value and these securities are classified within Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy. Level 1 investment securities include U.S. Treasury and exchange-traded securities.
For other securities, quoted market prices may not be readily available for the specific securities. When possible, the Company determines fair value based on market observable information, including quoted market prices for similar securities, inactive transaction prices, and broker quotes. These securities are classified within Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy. Level 2 valuations are generally provided by a third-party pricing service. Level 2 investment securities are predominantly agency mortgage-backed securities, certain other asset-backed securities, obligations of state and political subdivisions and agency debt securities.
U.S. Bancorp
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Mortgage Loans Held For Sale
MLHFS measured at fair value, for which an active secondary market and readily available market prices exist, are initially valued at the transaction price and are subsequently valued by comparison to instruments with similar collateral and risk profiles. MLHFS are classified within Level 2. Included in mortgage banking revenue were net losses of $
28
million and $
144
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, and net losses of $
61
million and $
442
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, from the changes to fair value of these MLHFS under fair value option accounting guidance. Changes in fair value due to instrument specific credit risk were immaterial. Interest income for MLHFS is measured based on contractual interest rates and reported as interest income on the Consolidated Statement of Income. Electing to measure MLHFS at fair value reduces certain timing differences and better matches changes in fair value of these assets with changes in the value of the derivative instruments used to economically hedge them without the burden of complying with the requirements for hedge accounting.
Time Deposits
The Company elects the fair value option to account for certain time deposits that are hedged with derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting. Electing to measure these time deposits at fair value reduces certain timing differences and better matches changes in fair value of these deposits with changes in the value of the derivative instruments used to economically hedge them. The time deposits measured at fair value are valued using a discounted cash flow model that utilizes market observable inputs and are classified within Level 2. Included in interest expense on deposits were net
gain
s of $
1
million for the three months and nine months ended September 30, 2023 from the changes in fair value of time deposits under fair value option accounting guidance.
Mortgage Servicing Rights
MSRs are valued using a discounted cash flow methodology, and are classified within Level 3. The Company determines fair value of the MSRs by projecting future cash flows for different interest rate scenarios using prepayment rates and other assumptions, and discounts these cash flows using a risk adjusted rate based on option adjusted spread levels. There is minimal observable market activity for MSRs on comparable portfolios and, therefore, the determination of fair value requires significant management judgment. Refer to Note 7 for further information on MSR valuation assumptions.
Derivatives
The majority of derivatives held by the Company are executed
over-the-counter
or centrally cleared through clearinghouses and are valued using market standard cash flow valuation techniques. The models incorporate inputs, depending on the type of derivative, including interest rate curves, foreign exchange rates and volatility. All derivative values incorporate an assessment of the risk of counterparty nonperformance, measured based on the Company’s evaluation of credit risk including external assessments of credit risk. The Company monitors and manages its nonperformance risk by considering its ability to net derivative positions under master netting arrangements, as well as collateral received or provided under collateral arrangements. Accordingly, the Company has elected to measure the fair value of derivatives, at a counterparty level, on a net basis. The majority of the derivatives are classified within Level 2 of the fair value hierarchy, as the significant inputs to the models, including nonperformance risk, are observable. However, certain derivative transactions are with counterparties where risk of nonperformance cannot be observed in the market and, therefore, the credit valuation adjustments result in these derivatives being classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy.
The Company also has other derivative contracts that are created through its operations, including commitments to purchase and originate mortgage loans and swap agreements executed in conjunction with the sale of a portion of its Class B common and preferred shares of Visa Inc. (the “Visa swaps”). The mortgage loan commitments are valued by pricing models that include market observable and unobservable inputs, which result in the commitments being classified within Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The unobservable inputs include assumptions about the percentage of commitments that actually become a closed loan and the MSR value that is inherent in the underlying loan value. The Visa swaps require payments by either the Company or the purchaser of the Visa Inc. Class B common and preferred shares when there are changes in the conversion rate of the Visa Inc. Class B common and preferred shares to Visa Inc. Class A common and preferred shares, respectively, as well as quarterly payments to the purchaser based on specified terms of the agreements. Management reviews and updates the Visa swaps fair value in conjunction with its review of Visa Inc. related litigation contingencies, and the associated escrow funding. The expected litigation resolution impacts the Visa Inc. Class B common share to Visa Inc. Class A common share conversion rate, as well as the ultimate termination date for the Visa swaps. Accordingly, the Visa swaps are classified within Level 3. Refer to Note 16 for further information on the Visa Inc. restructuring and related card association litigation.
Significant Unobservable Inputs of Level 3 Assets and Liabilities
The following section provides information to facilitate an understanding of the uncertainty in the fair value measurements for the Company’s Level 3 assets and liabilities recorded at fair value on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
68
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This section includes a description of the significant inputs used by the Company and a description of any interrelationships between these inputs. The discussion below excludes nonrecurring fair value measurements of collateral value used for impairment measures for loans and OREO. These valuations utilize third party appraisal or broker price opinions, and are classified as Level 3 due to the significant judgment involved.
Mortgage Servicing Rights
The significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the Company’s MSRs are expected prepayments and the option adjusted spread that is added to the risk-free rate to discount projected cash flows. Significant increases in either of these inputs in isolation would have resulted in a significantly lower fair value measurement. Significant decreases in either of these inputs in isolation would have resulted in a significantly higher fair value measurement. There is no direct interrelationship between prepayments and option adjusted spread. Prepayment rates generally move in the opposite direction of market interest rates. Option adjusted spread is generally impacted by changes in market return requirements.
The following table shows the significant valuation assumption ranges for MSRs at September 30, 2023:
Minimum
Maximum
Weighted-
Average (a)
Expected prepayment
6
%
16
%
8
%
Option adjusted spread
4
11
5
(a)
Determined based on the relative fair value of the related mortgage loans serviced.
Derivatives
The Company has two distinct Level 3 derivative portfolios: (i) the Company’s commitments to purchase and originate mortgage loans that meet the requirements of a derivative and (ii) the Company’s asset/liability and customer-related derivatives that are Level 3 due to unobservable inputs related to measurement of risk of nonperformance by the counterparty. In addition, the Company’s Visa swaps are classified within Level 3.
The significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the Company’s derivative commitments to purchase and originate mortgage loans are the percentage of commitments that actually become a closed loan and the MSR value that is inherent in the underlying loan value. A significant increase in the rate of loans that close would have resulted in a larger derivative asset or liability. A significant increase in the inherent MSR value would have resulted in an increase in the derivative asset or a reduction in the derivative liability. Expected loan close rates and the inherent MSR values are directly impacted by changes in market rates and will generally move in the same direction as interest rates.
The following table shows the significant valuation assumption ranges for the Company’s derivative commitments to purchase and originate mortgage loans at September 30, 2023:
Minimum
Maximum
Weighted-
Average (a)
Expected loan close rate
35
%
100
%
79
%
Inherent MSR value (basis points per loan)
58
194
118
(a)
Determined based on the relative fair value of the related mortgage loans.
The significant unobservable input used in the fair value measurement of certain of the Company’s asset/liability and customer-related derivatives is the credit valuation adjustment related to the risk of counterparty nonperformance. A significant increase in the credit valuation adjustment would have resulted in a lower fair value measurement. A significant decrease in the credit valuation adjustment would have resulted in a higher fair value measurement. The credit valuation adjustment is impacted by changes in market rates, volatility, market implied credit spreads, and loss recovery rates, as well as the Company’s assessment of the counterparty’s credit position. At September 30, 2023, the minimum, maximum and weighted-average credit valuation adjustment as a percentage of the net fair value of the counterparty’s derivative contracts prior to adjustment was
0
percent,
3,348
percent and
4
percent, respectively.
The significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the Visa swaps are management’s estimate of the probability of certain litigation scenarios occurring, and the timing of the resolution of the related litigation loss estimates in excess, or shortfall, of the Company’s proportional share of escrow funds. An increase in the loss estimate or a delay in the resolution of the related litigation would have resulted in an increase in the derivative liability. A decrease in the loss estimate or an acceleration of the resolution of the related litigation would have resulted in a decrease in the derivative liability.
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The following table summarizes the balances of assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis:
(Dollars in Millions)
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Netting
Total
September 30, 2023
Available-for-sale
securities
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
14,112
$
4,595
$
—
$
—
$
18,707
Mortgage-backed securities
Residential agency
—
25,614
—
—
25,614
Commercial
Agency
—
6,942
—
—
6,942
Non-agency
—
6
—
—
6
Asset-backed securities
—
6,868
—
—
6,868
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
—
9,066
—
—
9,066
Other
—
4
—
—
4
Total
available-for-sale
14,112
53,095
—
—
67,207
Mortgage loans held for sale
—
2,263
—
—
2,263
Mortgage servicing rights
—
—
3,582
—
3,582
Derivative assets
4
6,253
1,380
(
4,515
)
3,122
Other assets
406
2,006
—
—
2,412
Total
$
14,522
$
63,617
$
4,962
$
(
4,515
)
$
78,586
Time deposits
$
—
$
444
$
—
$
—
$
444
Derivative liabilities
—
6,685
5,136
(
4,307
)
7,514
Short-term borrowings and other liabilities (a)
309
1,644
—
—
1,953
Total
$
309
$
8,773
$
5,136
$
(
4,307
)
$
9,911
December 31, 2022
Available-for-sale
securities
U.S. Treasury and agencies
$
13,723
$
8,310
$
—
$
—
$
22,033
Mortgage-backed securities
Residential agency
—
29,271
—
—
29,271
Commercial
Agency
—
7,145
—
—
7,145
Non-agency
—
7
—
—
7
Asset-backed securities
—
4,323
—
—
4,323
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
—
10,124
1
—
10,125
Other
—
6
—
—
6
Total
available-for-sale
13,723
59,186
1
—
72,910
Mortgage loans held for sale
—
1,849
—
—
1,849
Mortgage servicing rights
—
—
3,755
—
3,755
Derivative assets
9
6,608
1,255
(
5,427
)
2,445
Other assets
248
1,756
—
—
2,004
Total
$
13,980
$
69,399
$
5,011
$
(
5,427
)
$
82,963
Derivative liabilities
$
4
$
6,241
$
4,454
$
(
4,551
)
$
6,148
Short-term borrowings and other liabilities (a)
125
1,564
—
—
1,689
Total
$
129
$
7,805
$
4,454
$
(
4,551
)
$
7,837
Note:
Excluded from the table above are equity investments without readily determinable fair values. The Company has elected to carry these investments at historical cost, adjusted for impairment and any changes resulting from observable price changes for identical or similar investments of the issuer. The aggregate carrying amount of these equity investments was $
132
million and $
104
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively. The Company recorded a $
5
million impairment on these equity investments during the first nine months ended 2023, and the cumulative impairment on these equity investments is $
5
million. The Company has not recorded adjustments for observable price changes on these equity investments during the first nine months of 2023, or on a cumulative basis.
(a)
Primarily represents the Company’s obligation on securities sold short required to be accounted for at fair value per applicable accounting guidance.
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The following table presents the changes in fair value for all assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) for the three months ended September 30:
(Dollars in Millions)
Beginning
of Period
Balance
Net Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Net Income
Net Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
Purchases
Sales
Principal
Payments
Issuances
Settlements
End
of Period
Balance
Net Change
in Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Relating to
Assets and
Liabilities
Held at End
of Period
2023
Mortgage servicing rights
$
3,633
$
134
(a)
$
—
$
1
$
(
292
)
$
—
$
106
(c)
$
—
$
3,582
$
134
(a)
Net derivative assets and liabilities
(
3,419
)
(
1,315
) (b)
—
25
(
9
)
—
—
962
(
3,756
)
(
693
) (d)
2022
Available-for-sale
securities
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
1
$
—
Total
available-for-sale
1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1
—
Mortgage servicing rights
3,707
27
(a)
—
1
—
—
134
(c)
—
3,869
27
(a)
Net derivative assets and liabilities
(
2,175
)
(
2,398
) (e)
—
259
(
29
)
—
11
456
(
3,876
)
(
1,978
) (f)
(a)
Included in mortgage banking revenue.
(b)
Approximately $
35
million, $(
1.4
) billion and $
1
million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
(c)
Represents MSRs capitalized during the period.
(d)
Approximately $
11
million, $(
705
) million and $
1
million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
(e)
Approximately $(
95
) million, $(
2.1
) billion and $(
154
) million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
(f)
Approximately $(
78
) million, $(
1.7
) billion and $(
154
) million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
The following table presents the changes in fair value for all assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) for the nine months ended September 30:
(Dollars in Millions)
Beginning
of Period
Balance
Net Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Net Income
Net Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Other
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
Purchases
Sales
Principal
Payments
Issuances
Settlements
End
of Period
Balance
Net Change
in Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Relating to
Assets and
Liabilities
Held at End
of Period
2023
Available-for-sale
securities
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Total
available-for-sale
1
—
—
—
—
(
1
)
—
—
—
—
Mortgage servicing rights
3,755
(
37
) (a)
—
3
(
440
)
—
301
(c)
—
3,582
(
37
) (a)
Net derivative assets and liabilities
(
3,199
)
(
3,558
) (b)
—
430
(
28
)
—
—
2,599
(
3,756
)
(
1,925
) (d)
2022
Available-for-sale
securities
Asset-backed securities
$
7
$
—
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
(
4
)
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Obligations of state and political subdivisions
1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1
—
Total
available-for-sale
8
—
(
3
)
—
(
4
)
—
—
—
1
—
Mortgage servicing rights
2,953
435
(a)
—
7
1
—
473
(c)
—
3,869
435
(a)
Net derivative assets and liabilities
799
(
5,759
) (e)
—
351
(
30
)
—
11
752
(
3,876
)
(
4,240
) (f)
(a)
Included in mortgage banking revenue.
(b)
Approximately $
133
million and $(
3.7
) billion included in mortgage banking revenue and commercial products revenue, respectively.
(c)
Represents MSRs capitalized during the period.
(d)
Approximately $
11
million and $(
1.9
) billion included in mortgage banking revenue and commercial products revenue, respectively.
(e)
Approximately $(
198
) million, $(
5.4
) billion and $(
154
) million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
(f)
Approximately $(
78
) million, $(
4.0
) billion and $(
154
) million included in mortgage banking revenue, commercial products revenue and other noninterest income, respectively.
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The Company is also required periodically to measure certain other financial assets at fair value on a nonrecurring basis. These measurements of fair value usually result from the application of
lower-of-cost-or-fair
value accounting or write-downs of individual assets.
The following table summarizes the balances as of the measurement date of assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis, and still held as of the reporting date:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Loans (a)
$
—
$
—
$
173
$
173
$
—
$
—
$
97
$
97
Other assets (b)
—
—
24
24
—
—
21
21
(a)
Represents the carrying value of loans for which adjustments were based on the fair value of the collateral, excluding loans fully
charged-off.
(b)
Primarily represents the fair value of foreclosed properties that were measured at fair value based on an appraisal or broker price opinion of the collateral subsequent to their initial acquisition.
The following table summarizes losses recognized related to nonrecurring fair value measurements of individual assets or portfolios:
Three Months Ended
September 30
Nine Months Ended
September 30
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Loans (a)
$
71
$
2
$
281
$
35
Other assets (b)
1
1
2
12
(a)
Represents write-downs of loans which were based on the fair value of the collateral, excluding loans fully
charged-off.
(b)
Primarily represents related losses of foreclosed properties that were measured at fair value subsequent to their initial acquisition.
Fair Value Option
The following table summarizes the differences between the aggregate fair value carrying amount of the assets and liabilities for which the fair value option has been elected and the aggregate remaining contractual principal balance outstanding:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
(Dollars in Millions)
Fair
Value
Carrying
Amount
Contractual
Principal
Outstanding
Carrying
Amount Over
(Under) Contractual
Principal Outstanding
Fair
Value
Carrying
Amount
Contractual
Principal
Outstanding
Carrying
Amount Over
(Under) Contractual
Principal Outstanding
Total loans (a)
$
2,263
$
2,266
$
(
3
)
$
1,849
$
1,848
$
1
Time deposits
444
445
(
1
)
—
—
—
(a)
Includes nonaccrual loans
of
$
1
million
ca
rri
ed at
fair value
with
contractual principal outstanding
of $
1
million
at September 30, 2023 and $
1
million
car
ried at
fair value
with contractual principal outstanding
of $
1
million
at December 31, 2022
.
I
ncludes
loans 90 days or more past due of
$
3
million
carried at fair value with contractual principal outstanding
of
$
3
million at September 30, 2023 and $
1
million
carried at fair value with contractual principal outstanding of $
1
million at December 31, 2022.
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
The following section summarizes the estimated fair value for financial instruments accounted for at amortized cost as of September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022. In accordance with disclosure guidance related to fair values of financial instruments, the Company did not include assets and liabilities that are not financial instruments, such as the value of goodwill, long-term relationships with deposit, credit card, merchant processing and trust customers, other purchased intangibles, premises and equipment, deferred taxes and other liabilities. Additionally, in accordance with the disclosure guidance, receivables and payables due in one year or less, insurance contracts, equity investments not accounted for at fair value, and deposits with no defined or contractual maturities are excluded.
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The estimated fair values of the Company’s financial instruments are shown in the table below:
September 30, 2023
December 31, 2022
Carrying
Amount
Fair Value
Carrying
Amount
Fair Value
(Dollars in Millions)
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Total
Financial Assets
Cash and due from banks
$
64,354
$
64,354
$
—
$
—
$
64,354
$
53,542
$
53,542
$
—
$
—
$
53,542
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements
1,847
—
1,847
—
1,847
356
—
356
—
356
Investment securities
held-to-maturity
85,342
1,283
69,076
—
70,359
88,740
1,293
76,581
—
77,874
Loans held for sale (a)
73
—
—
73
73
351
—
—
351
351
Loans
368,016
—
—
356,814
356,814
381,277
—
—
368,874
368,874
Other (b)
2,369
—
1,710
659
2,369
2,962
—
2,224
738
2,962
Financial Liabilities
Time deposits (c)
53,100
—
52,934
—
52,934
32,946
—
32,338
—
32,338
Short-term borrowings (d)
19,947
—
19,612
—
19,612
29,527
—
29,145
—
29,145
Long-term debt
43,074
—
40,377
—
40,377
39,829
—
37,622
—
37,622
Other (d)
5,196
—
1,314
3,882
5,196
5,137
—
1,500
3,637
5,137
(a)
Excludes mortgages held for sale for which the fair value option under applicable accounting guidance was elected.
(b)
Includes investments in Federal Reserve Bank and Federal Home Loan Bank stock and
tax-advantaged
investments.
(c)
Excludes time deposits for which the fair value option under applicable accounting guidance was elected.
(d)
Excludes the Company’s obligation on securities sold short required to be accounted for at fair value per applicable accounting guidance.
(d)
Includes operating lease liabilities and liabilities related to
tax-advantaged
investments.
The fair value of unfunded commitments, deferred
non-yield
related loan fees, standby letters of credit and other guarantees is approximately equal to their carrying value. The carrying value of unfunded commitments, deferred
non-yield
related loan fees and standby letters of credit was $
604
million and $
498
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively. The carrying value of other guarantees was $
202
million and $
241
million at September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.
Note 16
Guarantees and Contingent Liabilities
Visa Restructuring and Card Association Litigation
The Company’s Payment Services business issues credit and debit cards and acquires credit and debit card transactions through the Visa U.S.A. Inc. card association or its affiliates (collectively “Visa”). In 2007, Visa completed a restructuring and issued shares of Visa Inc. common stock to its financial institution members in contemplation of its initial public offering (“IPO”) completed in the first quarter of 2008 (the “Visa Reorganization”). As a part of the Visa Reorganization, the Company received its proportionate number of shares of Visa Inc. common stock, which were subsequently converted to Class B shares of Visa Inc. (“Class B shares”).
Visa U.S.A. Inc. (“Visa U.S.A.”) and MasterCard International (collectively, the “Card Brands”) are defendants in antitrust lawsuits challenging the practices of the Card Brands (the “Visa Litigation”). Visa U.S.A. member banks have a contingent obligation to indemnify Visa Inc. under the Visa U.S.A. bylaws (which were modified at the time of the restructuring in October 2007) for potential losses arising from the Visa Litigation. The indemnification by the Visa U.S.A. member banks has no specific maximum amount. Using proceeds from its IPO and through reductions to the conversion ratio applicable to the Class B shares held by Visa U.S.A. member banks, Visa Inc. has funded an escrow account for the benefit of member financial institutions to fund their indemnification obligations associated with the Visa Litigation. The receivable related to the escrow account is classified in other liabilities as a direct offset to the related Visa Litigation contingent liability.
In October 2012, Visa signed a settlement agreement to resolve class action claims associated with the multidistrict interchange litigation pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (the “Multi-District Litigation”). The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the approval of that settlement and remanded the matter to the district court. Thereafter, the case was split into two putative class actions, one seeking damages (the “Damages Action”) and a separate class action seeking injunctive relief only (the “Injunctive Action”). In September 2018, Visa signed a new settlement agreement, superseding the original settlement agreement, to resolve the Damages Action. The Damages Action settlement has received final court approval and is now resolved. The Injunctive Action, which generally seeks changes to Visa rules, is still pending.
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Other Guarantees and Contingent Liabilities
The following table is a summary of other guarantees and contingent liabilities of the Company at September 30, 2023:
(Dollars in Millions)
Collateral
Held
Carrying
Amount
Maximum
Potential
Future
Payments
Standby letters of credit
$
—
$
22
$
10,707
Third party borrowing arrangements
—
—
11
Securities lending indemnifications
8,360
—
8,123
Asset sales
—
99
8,631
(a)
Merchant processing
883
82
148,691
Tender option bond program guarantee
941
—
997
Other
—
21
1,947
(a)
The maximum potential future payments do not include loan sales where the Company provides standard representation and warranties to the buyer against losses related to loan underwriting documentation defects that may have existed at the time of sale that generally are identified after the occurrence of a triggering event such as delinquency. For these types of loan sales, the maximum potential future payments is generally the unpaid principal balance of loans sold measured at the end of the current reporting period. Actual losses will be significantly less than the maximum exposure, as only a fraction of loans sold will have a representation and warranty breach, and any losses on repurchase would generally be mitigated by any collateral held against the loans.
Merchant Processing
The Company, through its subsidiaries, provides merchant processing services. Under the rules of credit card associations, a merchant processor retains a contingent liability for credit card transactions processed. This contingent liability arises in the event of a billing dispute between the merchant and a cardholder that is ultimately resolved in the cardholder’s favor. In this situation, the transaction is “charged-back” to the merchant and the disputed amount is credited or otherwise refunded to the cardholder. If the Company is unable to collect this amount from the merchant, it bears the loss for the amount of the refund paid to the cardholder.
The Company currently processes card transactions in the United States, Canada and Europe through wholly-owned subsidiaries. In the event a merchant was unable to fulfill product or services subject to future delivery, such as airline tickets, the Company could become financially liable for refunding the purchase price of such products or services purchased through the credit card associations under the charge-back provisions. Charge-back risk related to these merchants is evaluated in a manner similar to credit risk assessments and, as such, merchant processing contracts contain various provisions to protect the Company in the event of default. At September 30, 2023, the value of airline tickets purchased to be delivered at a future date through card transactions processed by the Company was $
12.9
billion. The Company held collateral of $
736
million in escrow deposits, letters of credit and indemnities from financial institutions, and liens on various assets. In addition to specific collateral or other credit enhancements, the Company maintains a liability for its implied guarantees associated with future delivery. At September 30, 2023, the liability was $
60
million primarily related to these airline processing arrangements.
Asset Sales
The Company regularly sells loans to GSEs as part of its mortgage banking activities. The Company provides customary representations and warranties to GSEs in conjunction with these sales. These representations and warranties generally require the Company to repurchase assets if it is subsequently determined that a loan did not meet specified criteria, such as a documentation deficiency or rescission of mortgage insurance. If the Company is unable to cure or refute a repurchase request, the Company is generally obligated to repurchase the loan or otherwise reimburse the GSE for losses. At September 30, 2023, the Company had reserved $
14
million for potential losses from representation and warranty obligations, compared with $
17
million at December 31, 2022. The Company’s reserve reflects management’s best estimate of losses for representation and warranty obligations. The Company’s repurchase reserve is modeled at the loan level, taking into consideration the individual credit quality and borrower activity that has transpired since origination. The model applies credit quality and economic risk factors to derive a probability of default and potential repurchase that are based on the Company’s historical loss experience, and estimates loss severity based on expected collateral value. The Company also considers qualitative factors that may result in anticipated losses differing from historical loss trends.
As of September 30, 2023 and December 31, 2022, the Company had $
15
million and $
39
million, respectively, of unresolved representation and warranty claims from GSEs. The Company does not have a significant amount of unresolved claims from investors other than GSEs.
Litigation and Regulatory Matters
The Company is subject to various litigation and regulatory matters that arise in the ordinary course of its business. The Company establishes reserves for such matters when potential losses become probable and can be reasonably
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estimated. The Company believes the ultimate resolution of existing legal and regulatory matters will not have a material adverse effect on the financial condition, results of operations or cash flows of the Company. However, in light of the uncertainties inherent in these matters, it is possible that the ultimate resolution of one or more of these matters may have a material adverse effect on the Company’s results from operations for a particular period, and future changes in circumstances or additional information could result in additional accruals or resolution in excess of established accruals, which could adversely affect the Company’s results from operations, potentially materially.
Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities Litigation
Starting in 2011, the Company and other large financial institutions have been sued in their capacity as trustee for residential mortgage–backed securities trusts for losses arising out of the 2008 financial crisis. In the lawsuits brought against the Company, the investors and a monoline insurer allege that the Company’s banking subsidiary, U.S. Bank National Association (“USBNA”), as trustee caused them to incur substantial losses by failing to enforce loan repurchase obligations and failing to abide by appropriate standards of care after events of default allegedly occurred. The plaintiffs in these matters seek monetary damages in unspecified amounts and most also seek equitable relief.
Regulatory Matters
The Company is continually subject to examinations, inquiries and investigations in areas of heightened regulatory scrutiny, such as compliance, risk management, third-party risk management and consumer protection. For example, as part of an industry-wide inquiry, certain broker-dealer, registered investment advisor, and swap dealer subsidiaries of the Company received from the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission requests for information concerning compliance with record retention requirements relating to electronic business communications. The Company is in resolution discussions with the SEC, although there can be no assurance as to the outcome of these discussions. Also, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and another federal regulator have been investigating the Company’s administration of unemployment insurance benefit prepaid debit cards during the pandemic timeframe and are considering potential enforcement actions. The Company is cooperating fully with all pending examinations, inquiries and investigations, any of which could lead to administrative or legal proceedings or settlements. Remedies in these proceedings or settlements may include fines, penalties, restitution or alterations in the Company’s business practices (which may increase the Company’s operating expenses and decrease its revenue).
Outlook
Due to their complex nature, it can be years before litigation and regulatory matters are resolved. The Company may be unable to develop an estimate or range of loss where matters are in early stages, there are significant factual or legal issues to be resolved, damages are unspecified or uncertain, or there is uncertainty as to a litigation class being certified or the outcome of pending motions, appeals or proceedings. For those litigation and regulatory matters where the Company has information to develop an estimate or range of loss, the Company believes the upper end of the range of reasonably possible losses in aggregate, in excess of any reserves established for matters where a loss is considered probable, will not be material to its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows. The Company’s estimates are subject to significant judgment and uncertainties, and the matters underlying the estimates will change from time to time. Actual results may vary significantly from the current estimates.
Note 17
Business Segments
Within the Company, financial performance is measured by major lines of business based on the products and services provided to customers through its distribution channels. These operating segments are components of the Company about which financial information is prepared and is evaluated regularly by management in deciding how to allocate resources and assess performance. The Company has
the following
reportable operating segments:
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking provides core banking, specialized lending, transaction and payment processing, capital markets, asset management, and brokerage and investment related services to wealth, middle market, large corporate, government and institutional clients.
Consumer and Business Banking
Consumer and Business Banking comprises consumer banking, small business banking and consumer lending. Products and services are delivered through banking offices, telephone servicing and sales,
on-line
services, direct mail, ATM processing, mobile devices, distributed mortgage loan officers, and intermediary relationships including auto dealerships, mortgage banks, and strategic business partners.
Payment Services
Payment Services includes consumer and business credit cards, stored-value cards, debit cards, corporate, government and purchasing card services and merchant processing.
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Treasury and Corporate Support
Treasury and Corporate Support includes the Company’s investment portfolios, funding, capital management, interest rate risk management, income taxes not allocated to business segments, including most investments in
tax-advantaged
projects, and the residual aggregate of those expenses associated with corporate activities that are managed on a consolidated basis.
Basis of Presentation
Business segment results are derived from the Company’s business unit profitability reporting systems by specifically attributing managed balance sheet assets, deposits and other liabilities and their related income or expense. The allowance for credit losses and related provision expense are allocated to the business segments according to the volume and credit quality of the loan balances managed, but with the impact of changes in economic forecasts recorded in Treasury and Corporate Support. Goodwill and other intangible assets are assigned to the business segments based on the mix of business of an entity acquired by the Company. Within the Company, capital levels are evaluated and managed centrally; however, capital is allocated to the business segments to support evaluation of business performance. Business segments are allocated capital on a risk-adjusted basis considering economic and regulatory capital requirements. Generally, the determination of the amount of capital allocated to each business segment includes credit allocations following a Basel III regulatory framework. Interest income and expense is determined based on the assets and liabilities managed by the business segment. Because funding and asset/liability management is a central function, funds transfer-pricing methodologies are utilized to allocate a cost of funds used or credit for funds provided to all business segment assets and liabilities, respectively, using a matched funding concept. Also, each business unit is allocated the taxable-equivalent benefit of
tax-exempt
products. The residual effect on net interest income of asset/liability management activities is included in Treasury and Corporate Support. Noninterest income and expenses directly managed by each business segment, including fees, service charges, salaries and benefits, and other direct revenues and costs are accounted for within each segment’s financial results in a manner similar to the consolidated financial statements. Occupancy costs are allocated based on utilization of facilities by the business segments. Generally, operating losses are charged to the business segment when the loss event is realized in a manner similar to a loan
charge-off.
Noninterest expenses incurred by centrally managed operations or business segments that directly support another business segment’s operations are charged to the applicable business segment based on its utilization of those services, primarily measured by the volume of customer activities, number of employees or other relevant factors. These allocated expenses are reported as net shared services expense within noninterest expense. Certain activities that do not directly support the operations of the business segments or for which the business segments are not considered financially accountable in evaluating their performance are not charged to the business segments. The income or expenses associated with these corporate activities, including merger and integration charges, are reported within the Treasury and Corporate Support business segment. Income taxes are assessed to each business segment at a standard tax rate with the residual tax expense or benefit to arrive at the consolidated effective tax rate included in Treasury and Corporate Support.
Designations, assignments and allocations change from time to time as management systems are enhanced, methods of evaluating performance or product lines change or business segments are realigned to better respond to the Company’s diverse customer base. During 2023, certain organization and methodology changes were made, including the Company combining its Wealth Management and Investment Services and Corporate and Commercial Banking lines of businesses to create the Wealth, Corporate, Commercial and Institutional Banking line of business during the third quarter. Prior period results were restated and presented on a comparable basis.
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Business segment results for the three months ended September 30 were as follows:
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial
and Institutional Banking
Consumer and
Business Banking
Payment
Services
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
1,472
$
1,439
$
2,045
$
1,693
$
692
$
629
Noninterest income
1,031
906
430
332
1,039
(a)
994
(a)
Total net revenue
2,503
2,345
2,475
2,025
1,731
1,623
Noninterest expense
1,258
1,014
1,734
1,405
967
892
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
1,245
1,331
741
620
764
731
Provision for credit losses
128
71
8
41
399
285
Income (loss) before income taxes
1,117
1,260
733
579
365
446
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
279
315
183
145
91
112
Net income (loss)
838
945
550
434
274
334
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
838
$
945
$
550
$
434
$
274
$
334
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
175,579
$
154,473
$
157,357
$
142,640
$
38,954
$
35,819
Other earning assets
6,458
4,737
2,688
3,043
5
392
Goodwill
4,638
3,612
4,515
3,241
3,333
3,292
Other intangible assets
921
314
5,154
3,726
339
405
Assets
203,784
174,077
174,788
158,057
44,774
42,053
Noninterest-bearing deposits
66,083
77,471
25,590
30,829
2,796
3,312
Interest-bearing deposits
206,622
178,080
196,374
161,778
101
171
Total deposits
272,705
255,551
221,964
192,607
2,897
3,483
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
22,831
18,334
15,763
12,431
9,442
8,255
Treasury and
Corporate Support
Consolidated
Company
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
59
$
96
$
4,268
$
3,857
Noninterest income
264
237
2,764
(b)
2,469
(b)
Total net revenue
323
333
7,032
(c)
6,326
(c)
Noninterest expense
571
326
4,530
3,637
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
(
248
)
7
2,502
2,689
Provision for credit losses
(
20
)
(
35
)
515
362
Income (loss) before income taxes
(
228
)
42
1,987
2,327
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
(
90
)
(
61
)
463
511
Net income (loss)
(
138
)
103
1,524
1,816
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(
1
)
(
4
)
(
1
)
(
4
)
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
(
139
)
$
99
$
1,523
$
1,812
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
4,987
$
3,846
$
376,877
$
336,778
Other earning assets
219,217
196,716
228,368
204,888
Goodwill
—
—
12,486
10,145
Other intangible assets
11
—
6,425
4,445
Assets
240,653
214,577
663,999
588,764
Noninterest-bearing deposits
3,055
2,432
97,524
114,044
Interest-bearing deposits
11,670
2,696
414,767
342,725
Total deposits
14,725
5,128
512,291
456,769
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
5,781
10,800
53,817
49,820
(a)
Presented net of related rewards and rebate costs and certain partner payments of $
762
million and $
754
million for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
(b)
Includes revenue generated from certain contracts with customers of $
2.2
billion and $
2.1
billion for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
(c)
The Company, as a lessor, originates retail and commercial leases either directly to the consumer or indirectly through dealer networks. Under these arrangements, the Company recorded $
185
million and $
190
million of revenue for the three months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, primarily consisting of interest income on sales-type and direct financing leases.
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77
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Business segment results for the nine months ended September 30 were as follows:
Wealth, Corporate, Commercial
and Institutional Banking
Consumer and
Business Banking
Payment
Services
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
4,691
$
3,650
$
6,413
$
4,752
$
1,991
$
1,870
Noninterest income
3,122
2,672
1,256
1,177
3,027
(a)
2,844
(a)
Total net revenue
7,813
6,322
7,669
5,929
5,018
4,714
Noninterest expense
3,844
3,020
5,295
4,210
2,795
2,601
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
3,969
3,302
2,374
1,719
2,223
2,113
Provision for credit losses
264
180
30
15
933
636
Income (loss) before income taxes
3,705
3,122
2,344
1,704
1,290
1,477
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
927
781
586
426
322
370
Net income (loss)
2,778
2,341
1,758
1,278
968
1,107
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
2,778
$
2,341
$
1,758
$
1,278
$
968
$
1,107
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
177,081
$
145,594
$
163,905
$
141,276
$
37,942
$
33,820
Other earning assets
6,386
4,682
2,462
3,330
126
810
Goodwill
4,634
3,638
4,512
3,248
3,328
3,312
Other intangible assets
972
295
5,378
3,515
361
435
Assets
203,358
163,392
181,595
156,904
43,928
40,536
Noninterest-bearing deposits
74,003
84,200
33,638
30,722
3,052
3,459
Interest-bearing deposits
198,702
169,892
185,476
162,528
104
166
Total deposits
272,705
254,092
219,114
193,250
3,156
3,625
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
22,246
17,758
16,236
12,324
9,181
8,129
Treasury and
Corporate Support
Consolidated
Company
(Dollars in Millions)
2023
2022
2023
2022
Condensed Income Statement
Net interest income (taxable-equivalent basis)
$
290
$
249
$
13,385
$
10,521
Noninterest income
592
720
7,997
(b)
7,413
(b)
Total net revenue
882
969
21,382
(c)
17,934
(c)
Noninterest expense
1,720
1,032
13,654
10,863
Income (loss) before provision and income taxes
(
838
)
(
63
)
7,728
7,071
Provision for credit losses
536
(
46
)
1,763
785
Income (loss) before income taxes
(
1,374
)
(
17
)
5,965
6,286
Income taxes and taxable-equivalent adjustment
(
467
)
(
199
)
1,368
1,378
Net income (loss)
(
907
)
182
4,597
4,908
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests
(
15
)
(
8
)
(
15
)
(
8
)
Net income (loss) attributable to U.S. Bancorp
$
(
922
)
$
174
$
4,582
$
4,900
Average Balance Sheet
Loans
$
5,184
$
4,041
$
384,112
$
324,731
Other earning assets
215,805
202,578
224,779
211,400
Goodwill
—
—
12,474
10,198
Other intangible assets
19
—
6,730
4,245
Assets
238,600
221,235
667,481
582,067
Noninterest-bearing deposits
2,863
2,512
113,556
120,893
Interest-bearing deposits
8,795
2,350
393,077
334,936
Total deposits
11,658
4,862
506,633
455,829
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
5,777
12,593
53,440
50,804
(a)
Presented net of related rewards and rebate costs and certain partner payments of $
2.2
billion for both the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022.
(b)
Includes revenue generated from certain contracts with customers of $
6.6
billion and $
6.0
billion for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively.
(c)
The Company, as a lessor, originates retail and commercial leases either directly to the consumer or indirectly through dealer networks. Under these arrangements, the Company recorded $
554
million and $
582
million of revenue for the nine months ended September 30, 2023 and 2022, respectively, primarily consisting of interest income on sales-type and direct financing leases.
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Note 18
Subsequent Events
The Company has evaluated the impact of events that have occurred subsequent to September 30, 2023 through the date the consolidated financial statements were filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. Based on this evaluation, the Company has determined none of these events were required to be recognized or disclosed in the consolidated financial statements and related notes.
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79
Table of Contents
U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Daily Average Balance Sheet and Related Yields and Rates (a)
For the Three Months Ended September 30
2023
2022
2023 v 2022
(Dollars in Millions) (Unaudited)
Average
Balances
Interest
Yields and
Rates
Average
Balances
Interest
Yields and
Rates
% Change
Average
Balances
Assets
Investment securities
$
163,236
$
1,172
2.87
%
$
164,851
$
888
2.15
%
(1.0
)%
Loans held for sale
2,661
42
6.28
3,499
49
5.61
(23.9
)
Loans (b)
Commercial
134,720
2,254
6.64
128,519
1,230
3.80
4.8
Commercial real estate
54,253
854
6.25
40,010
428
4.25
35.6
Residential mortgages
114,627
1,078
3.76
84,018
687
3.27
36.4
Credit card
26,883
886
13.07
24,105
676
11.13
11.5
Other retail
46,394
642
5.49
60,126
592
3.91
(22.8
)
Total loans
376,877
5,714
6.02
336,778
3,613
4.26
11.9
Interest-bearing deposits with banks
53,100
742
5.55
29,130
151
2.05
82.3
Other earning assets
9,371
118
5.01
7,408
58
3.16
26.5
Total earning assets
605,245
7,788
5.12
541,666
4,759
3.50
11.7
Allowance for loan losses
(7,266
)
(5,885
)
(23.5
)
Unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities
(8,241
)
(6,862
)
(20.1
)
Other assets
74,261
59,845
24.1
Total assets
$
663,999
$
588,764
12.8
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity
Noninterest-bearing deposits
$
97,524
$
114,044
(14.5
)%
Interest-bearing deposits
Interest checking
132,560
370
1.11
113,364
54
.19
16.9
Money market savings
177,340
1,638
3.66
125,389
350
1.11
41.4
Savings accounts
50,138
25
.19
67,782
2
.01
(26.0
)
Time deposits
54,729
547
3.97
36,190
128
1.41
51.2
Total interest-bearing deposits
414,767
2,580
2.47
342,725
534
.62
21.0
Short-term borrowings
Federal funds purchased
277
4
5.07
442
2
2.01
(37.3
)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
2,919
32
4.36
2,130
7
1.25
37.0
Commercial paper
7,558
73
3.85
7,301
18
.99
3.5
Other short-term borrowings
16,796
343
8.09
19,161
143
2.96
(12.3
)
Total short-term borrowings
27,550
452
6.50
29,034
170
2.33
(5.1
)
Long-term debt
43,826
488
4.42
31,814
198
2.47
37.8
Total interest-bearing liabilities
486,143
3,520
2.87
403,573
902
.89
20.5
Other liabilities
26,049
20,863
24.9
Shareholders’ equity
Preferred equity
6,808
6,808
—
Common equity
47,009
43,012
9.3
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
53,817
49,820
8.0
Noncontrolling interests
466
464
.4
Total equity
54,283
50,284
8.0
Total liabilities and equity
$
663,999
$
588,764
12.8
Net interest income
$
4,268
$
3,857
Gross interest margin
2.25
%
2.61
%
Gross interest margin without taxable-equivalent increments
2.23
%
2.59
%
Percent of Earning Assets
Interest income
5.12
%
3.50
%
Interest expense
2.31
.67
Net interest margin
2.81
%
2.83
%
Net interest margin without taxable-equivalent increments
2.79
%
2.81
%
(a)
Interest and rates are presented on a fully taxable-equivalent basis based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent.
(b)
Interest income and rates on loans include loan fees. Nonaccrual loans are included in avera
ge loa
n balances.
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U.S. Bancorp
Consolidated Daily Average Balance Sheet and Related Yields and Rates (a)
For the Nine Months Ended September 30
2023
2022
2023 v 2022
(Dollars in Millions) (Unaudited)
Average
Balances
Interest
Yields and
Rates
Average
Balances
Interest
Yields and
Rates
% Change
Average
Balances
Assets
Investment securities
$
163,051
$
3,364
2.75
%
$
170,267
$
2,449
1.92
%
(4.2
)%
Loans held for sale
2,564
111
5.77
4,214
163
5.17
(39.2
)
Loans (b)
Commercial
136,159
6,452
6.33
120,723
2,653
2.94
12.8
Commercial real estate
54,923
2,504
6.09
39,541
1,053
3.56
38.9
Residential mortgages
116,167
3,215
3.69
80,589
1,937
3.21
44.1
Credit card
26,171
2,508
12.81
22,907
1,827
10.66
14.2
Other retail
50,692
1,947
5.13
60,971
1,629
3.57
(16.9
)
Total loans
384,112
16,626
5.78
324,731
9,099
3.74
18.3
Interest-bearing deposits with banks
49,495
1,904
5.14
30,030
222
.99
64.8
Other earning assets
9,669
344
4.76
6,889
125
2.43
40.4
Total earning assets
608,891
22,349
4.90
536,131
12,058
3.00
13.6
Allowance for loan losses
(7,094
)
(5,766
)
(23.0
)
Unrealized gain (loss) on investment securities
(7,708
)
(6,229
)
(23.7
)
Other assets
73,392
57,931
26.7
Total assets
$
667,481
$
582,067
14.7
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity
Noninterest-bearing deposits
$
113,556
$
120,893
(6.1
)%
Interest-bearing deposits
Interest checking
129,980
965
.99
115,095
83
.10
12.9
Money market savings
159,178
3,841
3.23
122,943
523
.57
29.5
Savings accounts
59,251
61
.14
67,632
6
.01
(12.4
)
Time deposits
44,668
1,157
3.46
29,266
179
.82
52.6
Total interest-bearing deposits
393,077
6,024
2.05
334,936
791
.32
17.4
Short-term borrowings
Federal funds purchased
475
16
4.63
770
4
.65
(38.3
)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
2,873
84
3.91
2,035
9
.62
41.2
Commercial paper
7,880
193
3.27
6,691
22
.44
17.8
Other short-term borrowings
28,136
1,351
6.42
14,329
213
1.99
96.4
Total short-term borrowings
39,364
1,644
5.58
23,825
248
1.40
65.2
Long-term debt
42,551
1,296
4.07
32,055
498
2.07
32.7
Total interest-bearing liabilities
474,992
8,964
2.52
390,816
1,537
.53
21.5
Other liabilities
25,028
19,088
31.1
Shareholders’ equity
Preferred equity
6,808
6,746
.9
Common equity
46,632
44,058
5.8
Total U.S. Bancorp shareholders’ equity
53,440
50,804
5.2
Noncontrolling interests
465
466
(.2
)
Total equity
53,905
51,270
5.1
Total liabilities and equity
$
667,481
$
582,067
14.7
Net interest income
$
13,385
$
10,521
Gross interest margin
2.38
%
2.47
%
Gross interest margin without taxable-equivalent increments
2.36
%
2.45
%
Percent of Earning Assets
Interest income
4.90
%
3.00
%
Interest expense
1.96
.38
Net interest margin
2.94
%
2.62
%
Net interest margin without taxable-equivalent increments
2.92
%
2.60
%
(a)
Interest and rates are presented on a fully taxable-equivalent basis based on a federal income tax rate of 21 percent.
(b)
Interest income and rates on loans include loan fees. Nonaccrual loans are included in average loan balances.
U.S. Bancorp
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Part II — Other Information
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
— See the information set forth in “Litigation and Regulatory Matters” in Note 16 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements on page 74 of this Report, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
— There are a number of factors that may adversely affect the Company’s business, financial results or stock price. Refer to “Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2022, for discussion of these risks.
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
— See the information set forth in the “Capital Management” section on page 27 of this Report for information regarding shares repurchased by the Company during the third quarter of 2023, which is incorporated herein by reference.
On August 3, 2023, the Company issued 24 million shares of common stock of the Company to an affiliate of MUFG for a purchase price of $936 million. The proceeds of the issuance were used to repay a portion of the Company’s $3.5 billion debt obligation to MUFG. See “MUFG Union Bank Acquisition” on page 5 of this Report for further information.
Item 6. Exhibits
3.1
Restated Certificate of Incorporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to the Company’s Form
8-K
filed on April 20, 2022).
3.2
Amended and Restated Bylaws (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Form
8-K
filed on October 19, 2023).
10.1
Amended and Restated Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of August 3, 2023, by and between U.S. Bancorp and MUFG Bank, Ltd. (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Form
8-K
filed on August 3, 2023).
31.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Rule
13a-14(a)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
31.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Rule
13a-14(a)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
32
Certification of Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. section 1350 as adopted pursuant to section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
101
The following financial statements from the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2023, formatted in Inline XBRL: (i) Consolidated Balance Sheet, (ii) Consolidated Statement of Income, (iii) Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income, (iv) Consolidated Statement of Shareholders’ Equity, (v) Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows and (vi) Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, tagged as blocks of text and including detailed tags.
104
Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the Inline XBRL document and included in Exhibit 101).
82
U.S. Bancorp
Table of Contents
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
U.S. BANCORP
By:
/s/ L
ISA
R. S
TARK
Dated: November 1, 2023
Lisa R. Stark
Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer and Duly Authorized Officer)
U.S. Bancorp
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EXHIBIT 31.1
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
RULE 13a-14(a)
UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
I, Andrew Cecere, certify that:
(1)
I have reviewed this Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q
of U.S. Bancorp;
(2)
Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
(3)
Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
(4)
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
13a-15(e)
and
15d-15(e))
and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
13a-15(f)
and
15d-15(f))
for the registrant and have:
(a)
designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
(b)
designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
(c)
evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
(d)
disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
(5)
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
(a)
all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
(b)
any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
/
S
/ A
NDREW
C
ECERE
Andrew Cecere
Chief Executive Officer
Dated: November 1, 2023
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EXHIBIT 31.2
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
RULE 13a-14(a)
UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
I, John C. Stern, certify that:
(1)
I have reviewed this Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q
of U.S. Bancorp;
(2)
Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;
(3)
Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;
(4)
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
13a-15(e)
and
15d-15(e))
and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules
13a-15(f)
and
15d-15(f))
for the registrant and have:
(a)
designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;
(b)
designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;
(c)
evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and
(d)
disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the registrant’s most recent fiscal quarter (the registrant’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and
(5)
The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):
(a)
all significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and
(b)
any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.
/
S
/ J
OHN
C. S
TERN
John C. Stern
Chief Financial Officer
Dated: November 1, 2023
U.S. Bancorp
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EXHIBIT 32
CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350,
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO
SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the undersigned, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of U.S. Bancorp, a Delaware corporation (the “Company”), do hereby certify that:
(1)
The Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2023 (the “Form
10-Q”)
of the Company fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
(2)
The information contained in the Form
10-Q
fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.
/s/ A
NDREW
C
ECERE
/s/ J
OHN
C. S
TERN
Andrew Cecere
Chief Executive Officer
Dated: November 1, 2023
John C. Stern
Chief Financial Officer
86
U.S. Bancorp
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Corporate Information
Executive Offices
U.S. Bancorp
800 Nicollet Mall
Minneapolis, MN 55402
Common Stock Transfer Agent and Registrar
Computershare acts as our transfer agent and registrar, dividend paying agent and dividend reinvestment plan administrator, and maintains all shareholder records for the Company. Inquiries related to shareholder records, stock transfers, changes of ownership, lost stock certificates, changes of address and dividend payment should be directed to the transfer agent at:
Computershare
P.O. Box 505000
Louisville, KY 40233
Phone:
888-778-1311
or
201-680-6578
(international calls)
computershare.com/investor
Registered or Certified Mail:
Computershare
462 South 4th Street, Suite 1600
Louisville, KY 40202
Telephone representatives are available weekdays from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Central Time, and automated support is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Specific information about your account is available on Computershare’s Investor Center website.
Independent Auditor
Ernst & Young LLP serves as the independent auditor for U.S. Bancorp’s financial statements.
Common Stock Listing and Trading
U.S. Bancorp common stock is listed and traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol USB.
Dividends and Reinvestment Plan
U.S. Bancorp currently pays quarterly dividends on our common stock on or about the 15th day of January, April, July and October, subject to approval by our Board of Directors. U.S. Bancorp shareholders can choose to participate in a plan that provides automatic reinvestment of dividends and/or optional cash purchase of additional shares of U.S. Bancorp common stock. For more information, please contact our transfer agent, Computershare.
Investor Relations Contact
George Andersen
Senior Vice President, Director of Investor Relations
george.andersen@usbank.com
Phone:
612-303-3620
Financial Information
U.S. Bancorp news and financial results are available through our website and by mail.
Website
For information about U.S. Bancorp, including news, financial results, annual reports and other documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, visit usbank.com and click on
About Us
.
Mail
At your request, we will mail to you our quarterly earnings, news releases, quarterly financial data reported on Form
10-Q,
Form
10-K
and additional copies of our annual reports. Please contact:
U.S. Bancorp Investor Relations
800 Nicollet Mall
Minneapolis, MN 55402
investorrelations@usbank.com
Phone:
866-775-9668
Media Requests
David R. Palombi
Global Chief Communications Officer
Public Affairs and Communications
david.palombi@usbank.com
Phone:
612-303-3167
Privacy
U.S. Bancorp is committed to respecting the privacy of our customers and safeguarding the financial and personal information provided to us. To learn more about the U.S. Bancorp commitment to protecting privacy, visit usbank.com and click on
Privacy.
Ethics
At U.S. Bancorp, our commitment to high ethical standards guides everything we do. Demonstrating this commitment through our words and actions is how each of us does the right thing every day for our customers, shareholders, communities and each other. Our ethical culture has been recognized by the Ethisphere Institute, which again named us to its World’s Most Ethical Companies
®
list.
For details about our Code of Ethics and Business Conduct, visit usbank.com and click on
About Us
and then
Investor Relations
then
Corporate Governance
, and then
Governance Documents
.
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
At U.S. Bancorp, embracing diversity, championing equity and fostering inclusion are business imperatives. We view everything we do through a diversity, equity and inclusion lens to deepen our relationships with our stakeholders: our employees, customers, shareholders and communities.
Our employees bring their whole selves to work. We respect and value each other’s differences, strengths and perspectives, and we strive to reflect the communities we serve. This makes us stronger, more innovative and more responsive to our diverse customers’ needs.
Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action
U.S. Bancorp and our subsidiaries are committed to providing Equal Employment Opportunity to all employees and applicants for employment. In keeping with this commitment, employment decisions are made based on abilities, not race, color, religion, creed, citizenship, national origin or ancestry, gender, age, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, marital status, gender identity or expression, genetic information or any other factors protected by law. The Company complies with municipal, state and federal fair employment laws, including regulations applying to federal contractors.
U.S. Bancorp, including each of our subsidiaries, is an equal opportunity employer committed to creating a diverse workforce.
Accessibility
U.S. Bancorp is committed to providing ready access to our products and services so all of our customers, including people with disabilities, can succeed financially. To learn more, visit usbank.com and click on
Accessibility
.
This report has been produced on recycled paper.