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Home > News & Events > Press Releases

Joint Press Release
November 07, 2014

Credit risk in the Shared National Credit
portfolio is high; leveraged lending remains a
concern
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Office of Comptroller of the Currency
For release at 1:00 p.m. EST
Share

The credit quality of large loan commitments owned by U.S. banking
organizations, foreign banking organizations (FBOs), and nonbanks is
generally unchanged in 2014 from the prior year, federal banking
agencies said Friday. In a supplemental report, the agencies highlighted
findings specific to leveraged lending, including serious deficiencies in
underwriting standards and risk management of leveraged loans.
The annual Shared National Credits (SNC) review found that the volume
of criticized assets remained elevated at $340.8 billion, or 10.1 percent
of total commitments, which approximately is double pre-crisis levels.
The stagnation in credit quality follows three consecutive years of
improvements. A criticized asset is rated special mention, substandard,
doubtful, or loss as defined by the agencies' uniform loan classification
standards. The SNC review was completed by the Federal Reserve
Board, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency.
Leveraged loans as reported by agent banks totaled $767 billion, or 22.6
percent of the 2014 SNC portfolio and accounted for $254.7 billion, or

74.7 percent, of criticized SNC assets. Material weaknesses in the
underwriting and risk management of leveraged loans were observed,
and 33.2 percent of leveraged loans were criticized by the agencies.
The leveraged loan supplement also identifies several areas where
institutions need to strengthen compliance with the March 2013
guidance, including provisions addressing borrower repayment capacity,
leverage, underwriting, and enterprise valuation. In addition, examiners
noted risk-management weaknesses at several institutions engaged in
leveraged lending including lack of adequate support for enterprise
valuations and reliance on dated valuations, weaknesses in credit
analysis, and overreliance on sponsor's projections.
Federal banking regulations require institutions to employ safe and
sound practices when engaging in commercial lending activities,
including leveraged lending. As a result of the SNC exam, the agencies
will increase the frequency of leveraged lending reviews to ensure the
level of risk is identified and managed.
In response to questions, the agencies also are releasing answers to
FAQs on the guidance. The questions cover expectations when defining
leveraged loans, supervisory expectations on the origination of non-pass
leveraged loans, and other topics. The FAQ document is intended to
advance industry and examiner understanding of the guidance, and
promote consistent application in policy formulation, implementation,
and regulatory supervisory assessments.
Other highlights of the 2014 SNC review:
Total SNC commitments increased by $379 billion to $3.39 trillion,
or 12.6 percent from the 2013 review. Total SNC outstanding
increased $206 billion to $1.57 trillion, an increase of 15.2
percent.
Criticized assets increased from $302 billion to $341 billion,
representing 10.1 percent of the SNC portfolio, compared with
10.0 percent in 2013. Criticized dollar volume increased 12.9
percent from the 2013 level.
Leveraged loans comprised 72.9 percent of SNC loans rated
special mention, 75.3 percent of all substandard loans, 81.6
percent of all doubtful loans, and 83.9 percent of all nonaccrual
loans.
Classified assets increased from $187 billion to $191 billion,
representing 5.6 percent of the portfolio, compared with 6.2
percent in 2013. Classified dollar volume increased 2.1 percent
from 2013.
Credits rated special mention, which exhibit potential weakness
and could result in further deterioration if uncorrected, increased
from $115 billion to $149 billion, representing 4.4 percent of the
portfolio, compared with 3.8 percent in 2013. Special mention
dollar volume increased 29.6 percent from the 2013 level.
The overall severity of classifications declined, with credits rated
as doubtful decreasing from $14.5 billion to $11.8 billion and
assets rated as loss decreasing slightly from $8 billion to $7.8

billion. Loans that were rated either doubtful or loss account for
0.6 percent of the portfolio, compared with 0.7 percent in the prior
review. Adjusted for losses, nonaccrual loans declined from $61
billion to $43 billion, a 27.8 percent reduction.
The distribution of credits across entity types--U.S. bank
organizations, FBOs, and nonbanks--remained relatively
unchanged. U.S. bank organizations owned 44.1 percent of total
SNC loan commitments, FBOs owned 33.5 percent, and
nonbanks owned 22.4 percent. Nonbanks continued to own a
larger share of classified (73.6 percent) and nonaccrual (76.7
percent) assets than their total share of the SNC portfolio (22.4
percent). Institutions insured by the FDIC owned 10.1 percent of
classified assets and 6.7 percent of nonaccrual loans.
The SNC program was established in 1977 to provide an efficient and
consistent review and analysis of SNCs. A SNC is any loan or formal
loan commitment, and asset such as real estate, stocks, notes, bonds,
and debentures taken as debts previously contracted, extended to
borrowers by a federally supervised institution, its subsidiaries, and
affiliates that aggregates $20 million or more and is shared by three or
more unaffiliated supervised institutions. Many of these loan
commitments also are participated with FBOs and nonbanks, including
securitization pools, hedge funds, insurance companies, and pension
funds.
In conducting the 2014 SNC Review, the agencies reviewed $975 billion
of the $3.39 trillion credit commitments in the portfolio. The sample was
weighted toward noninvestment grade and criticized credits. In preparing
the leveraged loan supplement, the agencies reviewed $623 billion in
commitments or 63.9 percent of leveraged borrowers, representing 81
percent of all leveraged loans by dollar commitments. The results of the
review and supplement are based on analyses prepared in the second
quarter of 2014 using credit-related data provided by federally
supervised institutions as of December 31, 2013, and March 31, 2014.
Attachments
SNC Review (PDF)
Leveraged Lending Supplement (PDF)
Leveraged Lending FAQ (PDF)

Media Contacts:
Federal Reserve
Board
FDIC
OCC

202-4522955
Greg
202-898Hernandez
6984
202-649Bryan Hubbard
6870

Eric Kollig

Last Update: November 07, 2014

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