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By Marianne Cacciola, Financial Strategist
Recent financial headlines regarding the current liquidity crisis
and the devaluing of asset prices have spurred a flight to quality
in the bond market which has driven interest rates down to recent
lows. The 10-year treasury yield has just turned the corner on 3.83
percent, a level it has not seen since the spring of 2003. History
undoubtedly teaches a valuable lesson, if we care to take note. A
revisit to the start of the last Federal Reserve tightening cycle
in mid-2004 reveals how savings accounts became sensitive to the
CD “bribe” and large balances migrated into the short-term
CD buckets at a high marginal cost. There is an opportunity now to
extend the duration of your funding at historically reasonable rates
so that when the next tightening cycle begins, your institution will
be in a position where it will not need to chase CDs to maintain
balances.
Amid the turmoil, Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston Classic advance
rates across the curve are at two-year lows, presenting member
institutions with an opportunity to ladder in cheaper funding in
the declining rate environment. Since it is imprudent to believe
that you will recognize the bottom of the interest-rate cycle when
it arrives, the best practice may be to capture value by structuring
advances out the yield curve as the dynamics of the market change.
Now is an opportune time to gain extension on the funding side
of the balance sheet and fill the gap between assets and liabilities.
Today’s two-year Classic advance rate of 3.80 percent currently
represents the trough of the advance curve, and is priced 130 basis
points below the average rate of the last two years. The five-year
Classic advance rate of 4.16 percent is priced 105 basis points
below the average rate of the last two years.
A simple step to reduce the overall cost of funds would be to
immediately reduce CD rates in line with your institution’s
assumptions regarding rate changes. A typical example of a reprice
assumption is for every 100 basis point decrease in rates, the
expected impact on CD rates is a decrease of 90 basis points. The
Fed has reduced the federal funds rate by 75 basis points, therefore
in this example you would expect posted CD rates to decrease by
68 basis points. Another pricing benchmark would be to price CD
rates to a comparable term on the FHLB Boston advance curve.
It may be valuable to review your institution’s asset liability
model assumptions for deposit reprice activity in falling rate
environments to determine if your institution is reacting as projected,
and also to ensure that you have fully assessed the impact of competitive
pricing pressure. When the competition heats up and you can’t
afford to keep up, then it is a great time to turn to FHLB Boston
to supplement your funding needs with an affordable alternative.
FHLB Boston is committed to helping members take advantage of
market opportunities. Please contact our Member Financial Strategies
department at 617-292-9644 to speak with a strategist about producing
a funding model based on your institution’s unique funding
requirements.
We offer aggressively priced specials each Wednesday on two-,
three- and five-year terms. Please contact the Money Desk at 800-357-3452
for the most up-to-date pricing.
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