By Michael Rapoport 

Banks are shuffling big chunks of their securities portfolios around the balance sheet to shield capital levels from rising interest rates.

The moves, also encouraged by recent changes by regulators in bank-capital requirements, mean that billions of dollars in bonds and other debt held by banks have gone from being available for sale at a moment's notice to being parked in an area of their books where they can't easily be traded.

In the 18 months ended Dec. 31, U.S. banks moved $293 billion of their securities investments to the "held to maturity" bucket on their balance sheets, according to data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. that covers more than 6,500 banks.

That 84% increase since June 30, 2013, means that about $640 billion, or one in five dollars in banks' securities portfolios, can't be sold easily, up from about one in nine dollars in mid-2013.

The change shields banks' capital if interest rates move higher, as many expect them to later this year, but could put them in a bind if financial conditions deteriorate and they need to raise cash fast.

"Held to maturity has grown by just leaps and bounds," said Greg Hertrich, head of U.S. depository strategies for Nomura Securities International.

Last Wednesday, the Federal Reserve opened the door to raising the federal-funds target rate for the first time since 2006 by dropping an assurance that it would remain "patient" before acting. Higher rates will likely make banks' lending businesses more profitable by increasing the spread between the rate at which they borrow and the rate at which they lend. But the shift of investments shows banks also are looking to protect themselves against the potential pitfalls of higher rates.

When rates rise, the value of the debt securities that make up most of banks' portfolios will fall because the relatively low rates on existing bonds will look unattractive compared with the higher yields on new bonds.

If a security is held to maturity, its loss of value doesn't affect banks' capital levels. Under the alternative, "available for sale," the biggest banks must count gains and losses in the prices of those securities as part of their Tier 1 common equity, a key measure of regulatory capital under new global bank-capital rules known as Basel III.

That makes available for sale less attractive and held to maturity more enticing.

The big shift in securities portfolios shows banks increasingly striving to keep their financial ratios strong in a new rising-interest-rate environment, while also being responsive to new regulations.

But some warn that banks' decision to move assets could limit their flexibility later in raising cash.

Once banks put securities into the held-to-maturity bucket, they generally aren't permitted under accounting rules to take them out and sell them.

It is "not in the best interests for the bank," to move securities into the held-to-maturity bucket, said Gerard Cassidy, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets. "They're just going to restrict themselves" and leave themselves "handcuffed."

Banks respond that they have big buffers of cash and other securities that they could sell freely if needed.

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., for example, has moved $49.3 billion of its securities into the held-to-maturity bucket since mid-2013. Wells Fargo & Co. has moved $55.5 billion there over the same period. Both banks had less than $10 million as of mid-2013.

Regional banks have gone even further, analysts said, in part because they don't have big trading businesses that heighten the need to stay flexible and keep cash on hand.

U.S. Bancorp had about 45% of its securities portfolio in held to maturity and Capital One Financial Corp. had 36%, as of the end of 2014. By contrast, big national banks on average had only about 15%.

Spokesmen for Capital One and U.S. Bancorp declined to comment.

The trend is likely to continue, analysts said, partly because Basel III requirements encouraging banks to hold more liquid securities still are being phased in.

"We've only seen the beginning," said Anthony Carfang, a partner and director at Treasury Strategies, a consulting firm.

Banks say they have made the moves partly because of the new regulatory initiatives as well as a desire to keep their capital ratios from bouncing up and down with rate moves.

J.P. Morgan said in its latest annual report in February that its shift of securities stemmed from both a desire "to reduce the impact of price volatility...and certain capital measures under Basel III."

If rates fall, putting more assets in held to maturity will keep capital levels lower than they would be otherwise, because banks will be forgoing gains they could have earned on their securities

Capital ratios have grown in importance since the financial crisis because they are used by the Federal Reserve to measure a bank's financial health and in the case of large banks, to help determine whether a bank can increase dividends and share buybacks.

Profits are also affected, albeit indirectly. Holding a security to maturity allows a bank to ignore fluctuations in market prices in a profit metric known as "other comprehensive income," which over time can trickle down to a company's bottom line.

Moving securities out of the held-to-maturity bucket isn't unheard of.

In 2011, Citigroup Inc. reclassified and later sold $12.7 billion in securities out of held to maturity, as part of an effort to meet new regulatory capital requirements.

Citi had previously moved those securities into held to maturity in 2008, in response to deteriorating market conditions during the financial crisis.

Citigroup declined to comment.

The shift "comes as a concession to corporate flexibility," said Kamal Hosein, head of fixed income strategies for securities firm Sterne Agee & Leach Inc. Mr. Hosein says he thinks it's "ridiculous" that a shift prompted in part by a requirement seeking increased financial flexibility for banks could actually limit banks' ability to sell some securities.

Access Investor Kit for Capital One Financial Corp.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US14040H1059

Access Investor Kit for Citigroup, Inc.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US1729674242

Access Investor Kit for JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Visit http://www.companyspotlight.com/partner?cp_code=P479&isin=US46625H1005

Citigroup (NYSE:C)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2024 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Citigroup Charts.
Citigroup (NYSE:C)
Historical Stock Chart
From Apr 2023 to Apr 2024 Click Here for more Citigroup Charts.