PNC Bank 2013 Annual Report Download - page 140

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R
EPURCHASE
A
ND
R
ESALE
A
GREEMENTS
Repurchase and resale agreements are treated as collateralized
financing transactions and are carried at the amounts at which
the securities will be subsequently reacquired or resold,
including accrued interest, as specified in the respective
agreements. Our policy is to take possession of securities
purchased under agreements to resell. We monitor the market
value of securities to be repurchased and resold and additional
collateral may be obtained where considered appropriate to
protect against credit exposure. We have elected to account
for structured resale agreements at fair value.
O
THER
C
OMPREHENSIVE
I
NCOME
Other comprehensive income consists, on an after-tax basis,
primarily of unrealized gains or losses, excluding OTTI
attributable to credit deterioration, on investment securities
classified as available for sale, unrealized gains or losses on
derivatives designated as cash flow hedges, and changes in
pension and other postretirement benefit plan liability
adjustments. Details of each component are included in
Note 20 Other Comprehensive Income.
T
REASURY
S
TOCK
We record common stock purchased for treasury at cost. At
the date of subsequent reissue, the treasury stock account is
reduced by the cost of such stock on the first-in, first-out
basis.
D
ERIVATIVE
I
NSTRUMENTS
A
ND
H
EDGING
A
CTIVITIES
We use a variety of financial derivatives as part of our overall
asset and liability risk management process to help manage
interest rate, market and credit risk inherent in our business
activities. Interest rate and total return swaps, swaptions,
interest rate caps and floors and futures contracts are the
primary instruments we use for interest rate risk management.
Financial derivatives involve, to varying degrees, interest rate,
market and credit risk. We manage these risks as part of our
asset and liability management process and through credit
policies and procedures. We seek to minimize counterparty
credit risk by entering into transactions with only high-quality
institutions, establishing credit limits, and generally requiring
bilateral netting and collateral agreements.
We recognize all derivative instruments at fair value as either
Other assets or Other liabilities on the Consolidated Balance
Sheet and the related cash flows in the Operating Activities
section of the Consolidated Statement Of Cash Flows.
Adjustments for counterparty credit risk are included in the
determination of fair value. The accounting for changes in the
fair value of a derivative instrument depends on whether it has
been designated and qualifies as part of a cash flow or net
investment hedging relationship. For all other derivatives,
changes in fair value are recognized in Noninterest income.
We utilize a net presentation for derivative instruments on the
Consolidated Balance Sheet taking into consideration the
effects of legally enforceable master netting agreements. Cash
collateral exchanged with counterparties is also netted against
the applicable derivative exposures by offsetting obligations to
return, or rights to reclaim, cash collateral against the fair
values of the net derivatives being collateralized.
For those derivative instruments that are designated and
qualify as accounting hedges, we designate the hedging
instrument, based on the exposure being hedged, as a fair
value hedge, a cash flow hedge or a hedge of the net
investment in a foreign operation.
We formally document the relationship between the hedging
instruments and hedged items, as well as the risk management
objective and strategy, before undertaking an accounting
hedge. To qualify for hedge accounting, the derivatives and
related hedged items must be designated as a hedge at
inception of the hedge relationship. For accounting hedge
relationships, we formally assess, both at the inception of the
hedge and on an ongoing basis, if the derivatives are highly
effective in offsetting designated changes in the fair value or
cash flows of the hedged item. If it is determined that the
derivative instrument is not highly effective, hedge accounting
is discontinued.
For derivatives that are designated as fair value hedges (i.e.,
hedging the exposure to changes in the fair value of an asset
or a liability attributable to a particular risk, such as changes
in LIBOR), changes in the fair value of the hedging
instrument are recognized in earnings and offset by also
recognizing in earnings the changes in the fair value of the
hedged item attributable to the hedged risk. To the extent the
change in fair value of the derivative does not offset the
change in fair value of the hedged item, the difference or
ineffectiveness is reflected in the Consolidated Income
Statement in the same financial statement category as the
hedged item.
For derivatives designated as cash flow hedges (i.e., hedging
the exposure to variability in expected future cash flows), the
effective portions of the gain or loss on derivatives are
reported as a component of Accumulated other comprehensive
income (loss) and subsequently reclassified to interest income
in the same period or periods during which the hedged
transaction affects earnings. The change in fair value
attributable to the ineffective portion of the hedging
instrument is recognized immediately in Noninterest income.
For derivatives designated as a hedge of net investment in a
foreign operation, the effective portions of the gain or loss on
the derivatives are reported as a component of Accumulated
other comprehensive income (loss). The change in fair value
attributable to the ineffective portion of the hedging
instrument is recognized immediately in Noninterest income.
122 The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. – Form 10-K