Loan pricing: a pricing approach based on risk.
Bexley, James B. ; Ashorn, Leroy W. ; James, Joe F. 等
ABSTRACT
Loan pricing is one of the most critical decisions facing financial
institution managers. Competition has forced management to continuously
review loan pricing with a "sharper pencil" in light of
stiffer competition for a share of the available loan pool. If the
institution is to be successful and ensure continued profitable
existence, there must be a balance between loan loss control and pricing
to generate profitability. This study looks at the loan pricing dilemma
from a risk management perspective that minimizes the number of
calculations required to arrive at the risk factor.
INTRODUCTION
In the past, substantial lip service has been given to the impact
of poor loan decisions upon a bank's profitability. In light of the
substantial number of bank failures and declining bank earnings suffered
across the nation during the 1980s and 1990s, this lip service obviously
was not heeded. When talking of a one percent loan default rate, there
is a notion that one percent is not statistically significant. However,
the reality of a $100 million bank with a 65% loan-to-deposit ratio and
a one percent loan loss equates to a $650,000 impact. Furthermore, a
$100 million bank earning a return on average assets of 1.2% would
return $1.2 million annually. Now, if there is a one percent loan loss
in the $100 million bank which earned $1.2 million, it would be
necessary to look at the impact of a reduction in either the loan loss
reserve or the charge to earnings, to replenish the loss to the reserve.
In either case, the result would be an impact on net earnings reducing
the return from $1.2 million to $550,000. In this example, a one percent
loss from loans could cost the bank over 50% of its normal earnings!
DEALING WITH THE FOUR CATEGORIES OF RISK
In looking at the loan pricing aspect of a bank from an
asset/liability standpoint or risk scenario, several concepts should be
instantly considered by the bank practitioner. Prior to establishing a
strategy for developing a pricing model, much consideration should be
given to the various means of measuring risks. Hempel, et al (1994, pp.
67-68), has developed an excellent concept of measuring risk based on
four categories of risk identified as liquidity risk, interest rate
risk, capital risk, and credit risk.
The element of liquidity risk addresses the bank's ability to
consciously deal with shortfalls in the supply of money either through
excess withdrawals or substantial commitments of the bank's funds
for loans and other income-producing devices. Therefore, the liquidity
of the bank is paramount to being able to stay in business given the
approximate 14 to 1 leverage to capital ratio in the average bank. In
considering liquidity, the following formula will give you the liquidity
risk:
Liquidity Risk = Short Term Securities / Bank deposits
In recent years, most banks have purchased or developed
sophisticated modeling packages that give a detailed picture of the
various scenarios that would exist for a bank given differing economic
conditions. In examining the interest rate risk, the concern lies with
the assets of the bank that are subject to interest sensitivity as
opposed to balancing these elements with the liabilities, which are also
interest-sensitive. In a perfect world, assets and liabilities would be
balanced at an equal level. Needless to say, banks do not exist in a
perfect world and, as a result, we find the need to constantly look at
the bank's position in each scenario. To measure interest rate
risk, the following formula should be utilized:
Interest Rate Risk = Interest Sensitive Assets / Interest Sensitive
Liabilities
In determining the make-up of interest-sensitive assets, you should
include short-term securities and all variable rate loans. Transaction
deposits, short-term time and savings deposits, and short-term
borrowings should be treated as interest-sensitive liabilities.
A risk that is often taken for granted, which is critical to the
foundation integrity of a bank, is that of credit risk. In looking at
credit risk, we are seeking to determine the basic exposure of the bank
in all areas of credit extension. In the previous example of the bank
with a one percent loan loss, it becomes very clear that credit risk
evaluation is essential to the viability of the bank. The formula for
credit risk is arrived at as follows:
Credit Risk = Medium Loans / Assets
Medium loans would be those loans having average loss potential as
opposed to those loans of extremely high or extremely low quality.
Although, there is an element of judgment in determining what are medium
loans most banks have classified their levels of risk on the loan
portfolio in order to easily establish those loans with average loss
potential.
Capital risk addresses how much the bank's assets may decline
before the depositors, creditors, and shareholders are put at risk. The
more capital the bank has, the better the cushion to absorb loss to the
bank's at-risk assets. The formula associated with capital risk is
as follows:
Capital Risk = Capital / Risk Assets
RETURN OBJECTIVES
Banks have traditionally based their pricing either on what the
competition was doing or on what the market would bear. It has become
obvious that, in the current competitive environment, those old methods
will not work. Before setting pricing parameters, the bank should set
some basic return objectives such as return on average assets, return on
average equity, and net interest margin. Equally important to meeting
the objectives is the establishment of a loan-to-deposit ratio.
Why should the bank be concerned with return on average assets and
return on average equity since these are in reality end-result or
"big picture" considerations? The answer is very simple. If it
is not focused on the desired end-result, the bank cannot ensure a
sufficient volume of loans priced at the rate desired in order to reach
its goal until it is too late to do anything about the results. In
addition, if the desired goal has been established, the bank has a
yardstick against which to measure results. The formulas for return on
average assets and return on average equity are as follows:
Return on Average Assets = Net Income / Average Assets
Return on Average Equity = Net Income / Average Equity
The net interest margin continues to be impacted by the competition
for good loans and considers the interest earned on loans less the
interest paid for the money. The formula for net interest margin is as
follows:
Net Interest Margin = ( Interest Income - Interest Expense ) /
Earning Assets
It is obvious that, as rates become more competitive, there are
only so many loans to be divided up among all of the banks and the other
entities that have invaded what was for years a market dominated by
banks. At the same time, the investor has more options than ever before
concerning where to invest his or her money for optimum return. What we
see in this picture is the bank being squeezed to pay more for its
deposits and charge less for its loans. This equates to a reduced net
interest margin. The only way to avoid the impact of such a problem is
the competitively price loans with deposit or fee requirements and to
strategically price deposits in such a way to avoid being the highest
bidder. For example, look at deposit pricing in the market and price at
approximately 10% above the average price paid for deposits.
COMPETITION AND PRICING
For years the small-to middle-sized banks escaped the competitive
pricing challenges facing the large, regional banks. Given the
competition for quality loans from within the banking community as well
as the non-banking entities, bankers everywhere must now be creative and
price loans off of London Interbank Offer Rate, as well as their
time-tested base or prime rates, if they have any hope of staying
competitive. Gone are the days when a bank in some small market could
assume that it had a "lock" on a loan merely because there was
not another bank within miles. Mass communications, computer banking,
and the Internet have brought Wall Street and the world to every Main
Street, U.S.A. Koch (1995, p. 763) stated, "The fact that loan
losses were so high during the 1980s revealed that loans were not priced
high enough to compensate for default risk, as well as other risks, and
the cost of operating the bank." We agree with Koch and would point
out that, since the 1980s, competition has increased. Should banks and
other financial institutions fail to price their loans in such a way as
to ensure compensation for all of the known risks, they stand to repeat
the errors of the 1980s.
HISTORICAL PRICING METHODS
Banks have historically priced their loans utilizing several
traditional methods. For years the primary method for loan product
pricing was using a variation of a bank's prime lending rate or a
regional money center bank's prime rate. This method implied that
the bank's best customer (whether judged by risk or deposit
balances) was given the prime lending rate. All other customers were
priced either at prime or some variation of prime, plus a given
percentage rate. This method dominated loan pricing until the
mid-to-late 1970s when several occurrences caused the method to lose
popularity. First, the competition for quality loans drove the money
center banks to look to more exotic pricing methods to attract the
large, blue-chip companies. This new methodology based off of LIBOR was
then embraced by banks in Middle America. The second occurrence was a
series of lawsuits challenging banks' use of the prime rate as the
principal method for pricing loans.
Today, in lieu of a prime rate, banks are utilizing the term
"base rate" as the rate on which they price their loans. While
many banks continue to use the base rate or prime rate (disavowing that
it is the best or lowest rate), banks continue to search for a method of
loan pricing that incorporates risk and at the same time allows the bank
to obtain a reasonable profit index.
CUSTOMER PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS
In the quest for a method of lending money that would price the
product being sold by the bank similar to an industrial product, large
money center banks and regional banks turned to customer profitability
analysis as a means to include all the costs for bank loans and services
as well as a profit margin. For the most part, smaller community banks
stayed with base rate pricing due to the cost and complexity of
establishing and maintaining accurate costs for products and services.
This method required an accurate costing of all the bank's
products, which was then applied to individual customers on an activity
or volume basis. At the same time, the customers were given credit for
balances maintained and charged for the cost of reserves and several
other items.
COMPENSATING BALANCES
For years, bankers have tried to recognize the deposit balances
maintained by their commercial loan customers and give credit, either
formally or informally, for those balances when setting a rate for a
loan to the customers who maintain deposit balances. This method has
been utilized by more community banks than the large money center banks
or regional banks. Banks utilizing this method would usually establish a
peg or base rate and, depending on how large a balance the customer
maintained, the bank would make the loan at the peg or base rate or at a
rate of some percentage over the peg or base rate. Some banks would also
try to allow for risk as they set the rate, but the calculation was less
than scientific.
FEE-BASED LENDING
As competition for loans heated up, corporate financial officers
saw an opportunity to play one bank against another. These corporate
financiers told the banks in ever-increasing numbers that they preferred
to pay a fee rather than be required to maintain what to them amounted
to unproductive compensating balances. As Koch (1995, p. 771) pointed
out in his discussion of fee income for banks, banks developed three
distinct methods of utilizing special fees in the pricing of loans.
Those methods (usually some amount less than 1%) were facility fees,
commitment fees, and conversion fees. Facility fees were utilized to
charge the customer a fee for making funds available, whether they were
utilized or not. On the other hand, a commitment fee is charged only on
that portion of the committed funds that are not drawn down. Conversion
fees were charged on those loans which were converted to another type of
loan.
RISK-BASED PRICING
With the concentration by both regulators and bankers on risk
management, the time has come for banks to price their loans based on
some measure of risk related to loan price or reward to the bank.
Several authors support this position although they arrive at the
concept in differing ways. Sinkey (1998 pp. 420-422) believes that you
should score the creditworthiness of the borrower using a statistical
model. Koch (1995, p. 778) is of the opinion that banks have generally
underpriced loans because they have understated risk, and therefore,
they should identify both expected and unexpected losses, incorporating
both in the risk charge for a loan. While we certainly agree that both
Sinkey and Koch have developed scholarly and workable approaches to the
incorporation of risk, we are more concerned with developing a pricing
mechanism that can be utilized equally well by the small community bank
and the large regional bank. Our method would assign a numeric value to
the various segments of the loan portfolio to be converted to a pricing
factor that would be added to a pre-established loan rate based on
conventional pricing methods. Possible risk categories to implement the
start-up of a risk pricing scenario are as follows:
Risk Defined
Price Risk Within Category
1 0 Cash or CD Secured, or Government Guaranteed Loan
2 +0.25% Loans Secured by Stock, Cash Value Life Insurance, or
Corporate Bonds
3 +0.45% Average Risk Loans Secured by Real Estate,
Receivables, etc.
4 +0.75% Above Average Risk Loans to Firms with Slightly
Deteriorating Profitabilities, etc.
We would then adjust the risk rates on a historical moving average
basis that would be gathered from loss experience in the various grade
categories (based on the grade category the loss originated from not
where it went to loss). After several years, a migration analysis or
historical moving average would be used, much like that currently used
on calculations of historical loan loss reserve as required under
Banking Circular 201.
For example, let's assume that the bank had set a rate of base
+0.50% for a loan with a risk category 2. In our risk pricing scenario,
we would add an additional 0.25% to the conventional pricing. Assume
that, instead of category 2, the risk were category 4. We would then add
0.75%, which would make the loan price out at base rate plus 1.25%.
CONCLUSION
Regardless of the method chosen, risk must be an integral part of
the loan pricing scenario to adequately compensate the bank for credit
exposure.
Utilizing the risk based pricing method, a bank over several years
time would have a reasonably accurate means of pricing to incorporate
risk.
REFERENCES
Hempel, G., Simonson, D., & Coleman, A. (1994) Bank Management
Text and Cases; 4th Edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Koch, T. (1995) Bank Management; 3rd Edition. Austin: The Dryden
Press; Harcourt Brace College Publishers.
Sinkey, Jr., J. (1998) Commercial Bank Financial Management; 5th
Edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
James B. Bexley, Sam Houston State University
Leroy W. Ashorn, Sam Houston State University
Joe F. James, Sam Houston State University