Interest Rate Risk at MCCU

Author
Robert Tokle
Region
North America
Topic
Strategy & General Management
Accounting & Finance
Length
5 pages
Keywords
interest rates
interest-rate-risk
asset-liability management
gap analysis
fisher effect
interest
Student Price
$4.00
Target Audience
Undergraduate Students

Sue Smith was a board member of Midwestern Community Credit Union (MCCU) in 2013, when short-term interest rates were near zero due to an easy Federal Reserve monetary policy following the 2007-2009 recession. Smith remembered the S&L crisis of the early 1980s, when many S&Ls failed due to an interest rate mismatch of holding long-term fixed-rate mortgages as their main asset, while funding them by short-term savings deposits. As interest rates increased, some S&Ls were paying more on deposits than earnings from mortgage loans, and a large number of S&Ls went out of business. MCCU hired a new vendor and the vendor proposed a complicated asset-liability model that included interest rate risk. Smith was surprised the model predicted MCCU might benefit in an increasing interest rate environment. She decided to analyze the accuracy of the vendor’s model from several perspectives in order to make board policy recommendations.

Learning Outcomes
  1. Apply the economic concept of “interest-rate risk,” and how it can affect depository institutions.
  2. Apply the economic concept expressed by the “Fisher Effect,” and how it can affect depository institutions.
  3. Evaluate using basic gap analysis the change in a depository institution’s net income for a given change of interest rates, and evaluate the appropriateness of this model.
  4. Analyze how the financial historical data of a depository institution can be use used to improve the modeling in a more advanced ALM analysis.