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QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
February 29, 2024
or
¨
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from
to
Commission File Number:
1-7102
__________________________________
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES
COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
__________________________________
District of Columbia
52-0891669
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
20701 Cooperative Way,
Dulles,
Virginia
,
20166
(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code:
(703)
467-1800
__________________________________
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of Each Class
Trading Symbol(s)
Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered
7.35% Collateral Trust Bonds, due 2026
NRUC 26
New York Stock Exchange
5.50% Subordinated Notes, due 2064
NRUC
New York Stock Exchange
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes
x
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).
Yes
x
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer
¨
Accelerated filer
¨
Non-accelerated filer
x
Smaller reporting company
¨
Emerging growth company
¨
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section13(a) of the Exchange Act.
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes
☐
No
x
The Registrant is a tax-exempt cooperative and therefore does
no
t issue capital stock.
Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (“MD&A”)
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended February 29, 2024 (“this Report”) contains certain statements that are considered “forward-looking statements” as defined in and within the meaning of the safe-harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements do not represent historical facts or statements of current conditions. Instead, forward-looking statements represent management’s current beliefs and expectations, based on certain assumptions and estimates made by, and information available to, management at the time the statements are made, regarding our future plans, strategies, operations, financial results or other events and developments, many of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain and outside our control. Forward-looking statements are generally identified by the use of words such as “intend,” “plan,” “may,” “should,” “will,” “project,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “expect,” “continue,” “potential,” “opportunity” and similar expressions, whether in the negative or affirmative. All statements about future expectations or projections, including statements about loan volume, the adequacy of the allowance for credit losses, operating income and expenses, leverage and debt-to-equity ratios, borrower financial performance, impaired loans, and sources and uses of liquidity, are forward-looking statements. Although we believe the expectations reflected in our forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, actual results and performance may differ materially from our forward-looking statements. Therefore, you should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statement and should consider the risks and uncertainties that could cause our current expectations to vary from our forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, legislative changes that could affect our tax status and other matters, demand for our loan products, lending competition, changes in the quality or composition of our loan portfolio, changes in our ability to access external financing, changes in the credit ratings on our debt, valuation of collateral supporting impaired loans, charges associated with our operation or disposition of foreclosed assets, nonperformance of counterparties to our derivative agreements, economic conditions and regulatory or technological changes within the rural electric industry, the costs and impact of legal or governmental proceedings involving us or our members, general economic conditions, governmental monetary and fiscal policies, the occurrence and effect of natural disasters, including severe weather events or public health emergencies, and the factors listed and described under “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2023 (“2023 Form 10-K”), as well as any risk factors identified under “Part II—Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Report. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and, except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect the impact of events, circumstances or changes in expectations that arise after the date any forward-looking statement is made.
INTRODUCTION
As of February 29, 2024, our financial statements included the consolidated accounts of National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation (“CFC”) and National Cooperative Services Corporation (“NCSC”). On December 1, 2023, Rural Telephone Finance Cooperative (“RTFC”), which was consolidated into our financial statements in prior periods, completed the sale of its business to NCSC (hereon referred to as the “RTFC sale transaction”). The sale was accounted for pursuant to ASC 805-50 “Transactions between Entities under Common Control
.” Followin
g the RTFC sale transaction, our principal operations are currently organized for management reporting purposes into two business segments, which are based on the accounts of each of the legal entities included in our consolidated financial statements: CFC and NCSC.
We provide additional information on the RTFC sale transaction under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
CFC is a member-owned, nonprofit finance cooperative association with a principal purpose of providing financing to its members to supplement the loan programs of the Rural Utilities Service (“RUS”) of the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”). CFC extends loans to its rural electric members for construction, acquisitions, system and facility repairs and maintenance, enhancements and ongoing operations to support the goal of electric distribution and generation and transmission (“power supply”) systems of providing reliable, affordable power to the customers they service. CFC also provides its members and associates with credit enhancements in the form of letters of credit and guarantees of debt obligations. As a Section 501(c)(4) tax-exempt, member-owned cooperative, CFC’s objective is not to maximize profit, but rather to offer members cost-based financial products and services. The interest rates on lending products offered to our
member borrowers reflect our funding costs plus a spread to cover operating expenses and estimated credit losses, while also generating sufficient earnings to cover interest owed on our debt obligations and achieve certain financial target goals. Because CFC is a tax-exempt cooperative, we cannot issue equity securities as a source of funding. CFC’s primary funding sources consist of a combination of public and private issuances of debt securities, member investments and retained equity.
NCSC is a member-owned taxable cooperative that is permitted to provide financing to two types of members: NCSC electric and NCSC telecommunication. NCSC electric members consist of members of CFC, government or quasi-government entities which own electric utility systems that meet the Rural Electrification Act definition of “rural,” and for-profit and nonprofit entities that are owned, operated or controlled by, or provide significant benefits to certain members of CFC. NCSC telecommunication members, formerly RTFC members, consist of rural telecommunications members and their affiliates. See “Item 1. Business” in our
2023
Form 10-K for additional information on the business structure, principal purpose, members and core business activities of each of these classes of members. Unless stated otherwise, references to “we,” “our” or “us” relate to CFC and its consolidated entities. All references to members within this document include members, associates and affiliates of CFC and its consolidated entities, except where indicated otherwise.
The following MD&A is intended to enhance the understanding of our consolidated financial statements by providing material information that we believe is relevant in evaluating our results of operations, financial condition and liquidity and the potential impact of material known events or uncertainties that, based on management’s assessment, are reasonably likely to cause the financial information included in this Report not to be necessarily indicative of our future financial performance. Management monitors a variety of key indicators and metrics to evaluate our business performance. We discuss these key measures and factors influencing changes from period to period. Our MD&A is provided as a supplement to, and should be read in conjunction with, the unaudited consolidated financial statements included in this Report, our audited consolidated financial statements and related notes for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2023 (“fiscal year 2023”) included in our 2023 Form 10-K and additional information, including the risk factors discussed under “Item 1A. Risk Factors,” contained in our 2023 Form 10-K, as well as additional information contained elsewhere in this Report.
Our fiscal year begins on June 1 and ends on May 31. Reference to “Q3 FY2024” and “YTD FY2024” refer to three and nine months ended February 29, 2024, respectively. Reference to “Q3 FY2023” and “YTD FY2023” refer to three and nine months ended February 28, 2023, respectively.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Our reported financial results are determined in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States (“U.S. GAAP”) and are subject to period-to-period volatility due to changes in market conditions and differences in the way our financial assets and liabilities are accounted for under U.S. GAAP. Our financial assets and liabilities expose us to interest-rate risk, therefore we use derivatives, primarily interest rate swaps, to economically hedge and manage the interest-rate sensitivity mismatch between our financial assets and liabilities. We are required under U.S. GAAP to carry derivatives at fair value on our consolidated balance sheets; however, the financial assets and liabilities for which we use derivatives to economically hedge are carried at amortized cost. Changes in interest rates and the shape of the swap curve result in periodic fluctuations in the fair value of our derivatives, which may cause volatility in our earnings because we do not apply hedge accounting for our interest rate swaps. As a result, the mark-to-market changes in our interest rate swaps are recorded in earnings. The majority of our derivative portfolio consists of pay-fixed swaps with longer maturities, leading to derivative losses when interest rates decline and derivative gains when interest rates rise. This earnings volatility generally is not indicative of the underlying economics of our business, as the derivative forward fair value gains or losses recorded each period may or may not be realized over time, depending on the terms of our derivative instruments and future changes in market conditions that impact the periodic cash settlement amounts of our interest rate swaps.
Therefore, management uses non-GAAP financial measures, which we refer to as “adjusted” measures, to evaluate financial pe
rformance. Our key non-GAAP financial measures are adjusted net income, adjusted net interest income, adjusted interest expense, adjusted net interest yield, adjusted times interest earned ratio (“TIER”), adjusted debt-to-equity ratio and members’ equity. The most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures are net income, net interest income, interest expense, net interest yield, TIER, debt-to-equity ratio, and CFC equity, respectively.
The primary adjustments we make to calculate these non-GAAP financial measures consist of (i) adjusting interest expense and net interest income to include the impact of net periodic derivative cash settlements income (expense) amounts; (ii) adjusting net income, total liabilities and total equity to exclude the non-cash impact of the accounting for derivative financial instruments; (iii) adjusting total
liabilities to exclude the amount that funds CFC member loans guaranteed by RUS, subordinated deferrable debt and members’ subordinated certificates; (iv) adjusting total equity to include subordinated deferrable debt and members’ subordinated certificates and
exclude cumulative derivative forward value gains and losses and accumulated other comprehensive income (“AOCI”); and (v) adjusting CFC equity to exclude derivative forward value gains and losses and AOCI.
We believe our non-GAAP financial measures, which should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for measures determined in conformity with U.S. GAAP, provide meaningful information and are useful to investors because management evaluates performance based on these metrics for purposes of (i) establishing short- and long-term performance goals; (ii) budgeting and forecasting; (iii) comparing period-to-period operating results, analyzing changes in results and identifying potential trends; and (iv) making compensation decisions. In addition, certain of the financial covenants in our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements and debt indentures are based on non-GAAP financial measures, as the forward fair value gains and losses related to our interest rate swaps that are excluded from our non-GAAP financial measures do not affect our cash flows, liquidity or ability to service our debt. Our non-GAAP financial measures may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies due to differences in the way that these measures are calculated. We provide a reconciliation of our non-GAAP adjusted measures to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP measures in the section “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations.”
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Reported Results
Net Income and TIER
The table below shows our net income and TIER for the periods presented and the variance between these periods. We provide a more detailed discussion of our reported results under the section “Consolidated Results of Operations.”
Tab
le 1: N
et Income and TIER
(Dollars in thousands)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
Change
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
Change
Net income
$
31,189
$
163,217
$
(132,028)
$
407,508
$
514,855
$
(107,347)
TIER
1.09
1.58
(0.49)
1.41
1.70
(0.29)
Q3 FY2024
versus
Q3 FY2023
The decrease in net income was primarily driven by:
•
An unfavorable shift from gains to losses recorded in our derivative portfolio of $121 million, primarily attributable to decreases in interest rates across the entire swap curve during
Q3 FY2024. In comparison, the i
nterest rates across the swap curve increased during
Q3 FY2023
;
•
A decrease in net interest income of $7 million, attributable to a decrease in the net interest yield of 14 basis points, or 16%, to 0.74%, partially offset by an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,266 million, or 7%;
•
A reduction in the benefit for credit losses of $5 million. We recorded a benefit for credit losses of $6 million for Q3 FY2024 compared to $11 million for Q3 FY2023, resulting primarily from decreases in the asset-specific allowance for both periods; and
•
An increase in operating and other non-interest expenses of $5 million;
Partially offset by:
•
A favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities of $6 million, primarily due to period-to-period market fluctuations
in fair value.
The decrease in net income was primarily driven by:
•
A decrease in derivative gains of $64 million, primarily attributable to less pronounced increases in the medium- and longer-term swap interest rates during
YTD FY2024 compared t
o YTD FY2023;
•
A decrease in net interest income of $53 million, attributable to a decrease in the net interest yield of 28 basis points, or 27%, to 0.76%, partially offset by an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,243 million, or 7%; and
•
An increase in operating and other non-interest expenses of
$16 million;
Partially offset by:
•
A favorable shift from provision to benefit for credit losses of $9 million. We recorded a benefit for credit losses of $5 million for YTD FY2024, resulting primarily from a decrease in the asset-specific allowance, partially offset by an increase in the collective allowance due to loan portfolio growth. In comparison, we recorded a provision for credit losses of $4 million for YTD FY2023, driven primarily by increases in the collective allowance a
nd in the asset-specific allowance;
•
A favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities of $14 million, primarily due to period-to-period market fluctuations in fair value; and an increase in fee and other income of $3 million.
The decreases in TIER for Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, compared to Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, were primarily driven by increased interest expense during Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024.
Debt-to-Equity Ratio
Our debt-to-equity ratio decreased to 11.52 as of February 29, 2024, from 12.14 as of May 31, 2023, primarily due to an increase in equity res
ulting from our reported net income of $408 million for YTD FY2024, which was partially offset by a decrease in equity of $10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements, of which
$72 million was paid to members in September 2023 and
$41 million
was paid from CFC to RTFC in December 2023 in connection with the RTFC sale transaction, which is discussed further
under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
Non-GAAP Adjusted Results
Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted TIER
The table below shows our adjusted net income and adjusted TIER for the periods presented and the variance between these periods. Our financial goals focus on earning an annual minimum adjusted TIER of 1.10. We provide a more detailed discussion of our non-GAAP adjusted results under the section “Consolidated Results of Operations.”
Table 2: Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted TIER
(Dollars in thousands)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
Change
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
Change
Adjusted Net income
$
88,006
$
79,543
$
8,463
$
224,136
$
184,820
$
39,316
Adjusted TIER
1.29
1.30
(0.01)
1.25
1.26
(0.01)
Q3 FY2024
versus
Q3 FY2023
The increase in adjusted net income was primarily driven by:
•
An increase in adjusted net interest income of $13 million, driven by the combined impact of an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,266 million, or 7%, and an increase in the adjusted net interest yield of 7 basis points, or 6%, to 1.18%; and
•
A favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities of $6 million;
•
A reduction in the benefit for credit losses of $5 million; and
•
An increase in operating and other non-interest expenses of $5 million.
YTD FY2024
versus
YTD FY2023
The increase in adjusted net income was primarily driven by:
•
An increase in adjusted net interest income of $29 million, driven by the combined impact of an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,243 million, or 7%, and an increase in the adjusted net interest yield of 4 basis points, or 4%, to 1.13%;
•
A favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our investment securities of $14 million;
•
A favorable shift from provision to benefit for credit losses of $9 million; and an increase in fee and other income of $3 million;
Partially offset by:
•
An increase in operating and oth
er non-interest expenses of $16 million.
Adjusted Debt-to-Equity Ratio
Our financial goals focus on maintaining an adjusted debt-to-equity ratio at approximately 6-to-1 or below. The adjusted debt-to-equity ratio increased
to 6.29 as of February 29, 2024 from 6.04 as of May 31, 2023,
due to an increase in adjusted liabilities resulting from additional borrowings to fund growth in our loan portfolio, partially offset by an increase in adjusted equity. The increase in adjusted equity was primarily due to our adjusted net income of $224 million for YTD FY2024, partially offset by a decrease in equity of
$10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements
, as discussed above.
Lending and Credit Quality
We segregate our loan portfolio into segments based on the borrower member class, which consists of CFC distribution, CFC power supply, CFC statewide and associate, NCSC electric and NCSC telecommunications (“telecom”). Prior to the RTFC sale transaction on December 1, 2023, NCSC electric and NCSC telecom were referred to as NCSC and RTFC, respectively.
Loans to members totaled $34,412 million as of February 29, 2024, an increase of $1,880 million, or 6%, from May 31, 2023, reflecting net increases in long-term and line of credit loan
s of $1,473 million and $407 million, respectively. Our loan portfolio composition remained largely unchanged from May 31, 2023 with 78% of loans outstanding to CFC distribution borrowers, 16% to CFC power supply borrowers,
3%
to NCSC electric borrowers, 2% to NCSC telecom borrowers, and
1% to
CFC statewide and associate borrowers as of February 29, 2024.
We believe the overall credit quality of our loan portfolio remained strong as of February 29, 2024.
We had no loan charge-offs or recoveries during
Q3 FY2024 and
Q3 FY2023. W
e recorded
$1 million in net loan recoveries to previously charged-off loan amounts
during YTD FY2024.
In comparison, we experienced net charge-offs totaling
$15 million
during YTD FY2023, which resulted in an annualized net charge-off rate of 0.06% for YTD FY2023.
We had one loan totaling $85 million classified as nonperforming as of February 29, 2024. In comparison, we had two loans totaling $89 million classified as nonperforming as of May 31, 2023.
The reduction was due to the receipt of $4 million in payments to pay off one
nonperforming loan. In March 2024, we received a $36 million payment on the outstanding nonperforming loan, which reduced its balance to $49 million as of the date of this Report.
Our allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio decreased to $49 million and 0.14%, respectively, as of February 29, 2024, from $53 million and 0.16%, respectively, as of May 31, 2023.
The $4 million decrease in the allowance for credit losses reflected a reduction in the asset-specific allowance of $8 million, partially offset by an increase in the collective allowance of $4 million.
Total debt outstanding increased $1,542 million, or 5%, to $32,541 million as of February 29, 2024, primarily due to borrowings to fund the increase in loans to members. We issued
an aggregate principal amount of long-term dealer medium-term notes
totaling $1,850 million during Q3 FY2024, of which $1,550 million was at an average fixed interest rate of 4.87% with an average term of five years and $300 million was at a floating interest rate with a term of three years. We also issued $100 million of 7.125% subordinated deferrable debt due in 2053 during Q3 FY2024.
Outstanding dealer commercial paper was $899 million as of February 29, 2024.
During YTD FY2024, Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”), S&P Global Inc.(“S&P”) and Moody’s Investors Service (“Moody’s”) affirmed CFC’s credit ratings and stable outlook.
Our available liquidity consists of cash and cash equivalents, investments in debt securities and availability under committed bank revolving line of credit agreements, committed loan facilities under the USDA Guaranteed Underwriter Program (“Guaranteed Underwriter Program”), and a revolving note purchase agreement with the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (“Farmer Mac”). As of February 29, 2024, our available liquidity totaled $6,595 million and was $358 million below our total scheduled debt obligations over the next 12 months of $6,953 million. In addition to our existing available liquidity, we expect to receive
$1,535 million fr
om scheduled long-term loan principal payments over the next 12 months.
We believe we can continue to roll over our member short-term investments of $3,206 million based on our expectation that our members will continue to reinvest their excess cash primarily in short-term investment products offered by CFC. Our members historically have maintained a relatively stable level of short-term investments in CFC. Member short-term investments in CFC have averaged $3,543 million over the last 12 fiscal quarter-end reporting periods. Our available liquidity as of February 29, 2024 was $2,848 million in excess of, or 1.8 times over, our total scheduled debt obligations, excluding member short-term investments, over the next 12 months of $3,747 million.
Outlook
As further described below in the “Liquidity Risk—Projected Near-Term Sources and Uses of Funds” section, we currently anticipate net long-term loan growth of $1,847 million over the next 12 months. We also expect that our
variable-rate line of credit loans outstanding will remain
at approximately the current level over the same period.
In March 2024, the Federal Open Market Committee (“FOMC”) of the Federal Reserve signaled the expectation of no additional increases in the federal funds rate. The FOMC expects the U.S. economy to remain strong in 2024, with the median projected Gross Domestic Product (“GDP”) growth rate at 2.1% in 2024, up from 1.4% in its December 2023 projection. In addition, the Federal Reserve revised higher its inflation expectations and lowered its expected unemployment rate in 2024. Despite an improved economic outlook and inflation remaining above the 2% long-term target, the FOMC projects 75 basis points of federal funds rate cuts in 2024, bringing the target rate to 4.6% by December 31, 2024. Consensus market outlook for interest rates indicates declining interest rates across the yield curve in 2024. Although the yield curve is expected to remain inverted throughout calendar year 2024, given the expected drop in short-term interest rates, the yield curve inversion is expected to narrow in 2024.
Projected Reported Results
Based on our current forecast assumptions, including the yield curve forecast noted above, we project:
•
A slight increase in our reported net interest income. However, we expect a decrease in our reported net interest yield over the next 12 months compared to the 12-month period ended February 29, 2024. See “Market Risk—Interest Rate Risk Assessment” for an additional discussion.
Projected Non-GAAP Adjusted Results
Based on our current forecast assumptions, including the yield curve forecast noted above, we project:
•
Decreases in our adjusted net interest income and adjusted net interest yield over the next 12 months relative to the 12-month period ended
February 29, 2024
,
primarily due to the current yield curve assumptions and our balance sheet position.
See “Market Risk—Interest Rate Risk Assessment” for an additional discussion.
•
Decreases in our adjusted net income and adjusted TIER over the next 12 months, primarily attributable to increased operating expenses and a projected decrease in adjusted net interest income.
•
Our adjusted debt-to-equity ratio will remain above our target of 6-to-1, primarily due to the projected increase in total debt outstanding to fund anticipated growth in our loan portfolio.
As stated above, we exclude the impact of unrealized derivative forward fair value gains and losses from our non-GAAP financial measures. As the majority of our swaps are long-term with an average remaining life of approximately 15 years as of February 29, 2024
, the unrealized periodic derivative forward value gains and losses are largely based on future expected changes in l
onger-term interest rates, which we are unable to accurately predict for each reporting period over the next 12 months. Due to the difficulty in predicting these unrealized amounts, we are unable to provide without unreasonable effort a reconciliation of our forward-looking adjusted financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures.
CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
This section provides a comparative discussion of our consolidated results of operations between Q3 FY2024 and Q3 FY2023, and between YTD FY2024 and YTD FY2023. Following this section, we provide a discussion and analysis of material changes between amounts reported on our consolidated balance sheets as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. You should read these sections together with our “Executive Summary—Outlook” where we discuss trends and other factors that we expect will affect our future results of operations.
Net Interest Income
Net interest income, which is our largest source of revenue, represents the difference between the interest income earned on our interest-earning assets and the interest expense on our interest-bearing liabilities. Our net interest yield represents the difference between the yield on our interest-earning assets and the cost of our interest-bearing liabilities plus the impact of non-interest bearing funding. We expect net interest income and our net interest yield to fluctuate based on changes in interest rates and changes in the amount and composition of our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. We do not fund each individual loan with specific debt. Rather, we attempt to minimize costs and maximize efficiency by proportionately funding large aggregated amounts of loans.
Table 3 presents average balances for each major category of our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities, the interest income earned or interest expense incurred, and the average yield or cost. Table 3 also presents non-GAAP adjusted interest expense, adjusted net interest income and adjusted net interest yield, which reflect the inclusion of net accrued periodic derivative cash settlements expense in interest expense. We provide reconciliations of our non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures under “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations.”
Other assets, less allowance for credit losses
(3)
1,104,821
938,222
Total assets
(3)
$
35,294,629
$
32,885,407
Liabilities:
Commercial paper
$
2,524,302
$
103,923
5.50
%
$
2,886,202
$
70,735
3.28
%
Other short-term borrowings
1,820,469
71,056
5.21
2,160,816
45,299
2.80
Short-term borrowings
(4)
4,344,771
174,979
5.38
5,047,018
$
116,034
3.07
Medium-term notes
7,372,069
222,095
4.02
5,991,902
134,477
3.00
Collateral trust bonds
7,387,453
210,911
3.81
7,295,834
199,421
3.65
Guaranteed Underwriter Program notes payable
6,801,552
161,862
3.18
6,236,285
133,107
2.85
Farmer Mac notes payable
3,634,622
116,259
4.27
3,086,668
74,601
3.23
Other notes payable
2,130
72
4.52
4,015
72
2.40
Subordinated deferrable debt
1,201,501
60,831
6.76
986,589
38,656
5.24
Subordinated certificates
1,213,384
40,136
4.42
1,233,109
40,253
4.36
Total interest-bearing liabilities
$
31,957,482
$
987,145
4.13
%
$
29,881,420
$
736,621
3.30
%
Other liabilities
(3)
557,082
663,999
Total liabilities
(3)
32,514,564
30,545,419
Total equity
(3)
2,780,065
2,339,988
Total liabilities and equity
(3)
$
35,294,629
$
32,885,407
Net interest spread
(5)
0.49
%
0.82
%
Impact of non-interest bearing funding
(6)
0.27
0.22
Net interest income/net interest yield
(7)
$
194,633
0.76
%
$
247,843
1.04
%
Adjusted net interest income/adjusted net interest yield:
Interest income
$
1,181,778
4.62
%
$
984,464
4.12
%
Interest expense
987,145
4.13
736,621
3.30
Add: Net periodic derivative cash settlements interest (income) expense
(8)
(94,978)
(1.65)
(12,650)
(0.22)
Adjusted interest expense/adjusted average cost
(9)
$
892,167
3.73
%
$
723,971
3.24
%
Adjusted net interest spread
(7)
0.89
0.88
Impact of non-interest bearing funding
(6)
0.24
0.21
Adjusted net interest income/adjusted net interest yield
(10)
$
289,611
1.13
%
$
260,493
1.09
%
___________________________
(1)
Interest income on long-term, fixed-rate loans includes loan conversion fees, which are generally deferred and recognized as interest income using the effective interest method.
(2)
Consists of late payment fees and net amortization of deferred loan fees and loan origination costs.
(3)
The average balance represents average monthly balances, which is calculated based on the month-end balance as of the beginning of the reporting period and the balances as of the end of each month included in the specified reporting period.
(4)
Short-term borrowings reported on our consolidated balance sheets consist of borrowings with an original contractual maturity of one year or less. However, short-term borrowings presented in Table
3 consist of commercial paper, select notes, daily liquidity fund notes and secured borrowings under repurchase agreemen
ts. Short-term borrowings presented on our consolidated balance sheets related to medium-term notes, Farmer Mac notes payable and other notes payable are reported in the respective category for presentation purposes in Table
3
. The period-end amounts reported as short-term borrowings on our consolidated balances sheets, which are excluded from the calculation of average short-term borrowings presented in Table
3
, totaled $982 million and $853 million as of February 29, 2024 and February 28, 2023, respectively.
(5)
Net interest spread represents the difference between the average yield on total average interest-earning assets and the average cost of total average interest-bearing liabilities. Adjusted net interest spread represents the difference between the average yield on total average interest-earning assets and the adjusted average cost of total average interest-bearing liabilities.
(6)
Includes other liabilities and equity.
(7)
Net interest yield is calculated based on annualized net interest income for the period divided by total average interest-earning assets for the period.
(8)
Represents the impact of net periodic contractual interest amounts on our interest rate swaps during the period. This amount is added to interest expense to derive non-GAAP adjusted interest expense. The average (benefit)/cost associated with derivatives is calculated based on the annualized net periodic swap settlement interest amount during
the period divided by the average outstanding notional amount of derivatives during the period. The average outstanding notional amount of interest rate swaps was $7,568 million and $7,555 million for
Q3 FY2024
and
Q3 FY2023
, respectively. The average outstanding notional amount of interest rate swaps was $7,675 million and $7,762 million for the YTD FY2024 and
YTD FY2023
, respectively.
(9)
Adjusted interest expense consists of intere
st expense plus net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income (expense) during the period. Net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income (expense) is reported on our consolidated statements of operations as a component of derivative gains (losses). Adjusted average cost is calculated based on annualized adjusted interest expense for the period divided by total average interest-bearing liabilities during the period.
(10)
Adjusted net interest yield is calculated based on annualized adjusted net interest income for the period divided by total average interest-earning assets for the period.
Table 4 displays the change in net interest income between periods and the extent to which the variance for each category of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities is attributable to: (i) changes in volume, which represents the change in the average balances of our interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities or volume and (ii) changes in the rate, which represents the change in the average interest rates of these assets and liabilities. The table also presents the change in adjusted net interest income between periods.
Table 4: Rate/Volume Analysis of Changes in Interest Income/Interest Expense
Q3 FY2024
versus
Q3 FY2023
YTD FY2024
versus
YTD FY2023
Total
Variance Due To:
(1)
Total
Variance Due To:
(1)
(Dollars in thousands)
Variance
Volume
Rate
Variance
Volume
Rate
Interest income:
Long-term fixed-rate loans
$
36,328
$
21,599
$
14,729
$
92,046
$
49,152
$
42,894
Long-term variable-rate loans
1,648
(735)
2,383
19,152
3,335
15,817
Line of credit loans
16,645
6,149
10,496
79,556
21,408
58,148
Other, net
(42)
—
(42)
(114)
—
(114)
Total loans
54,579
27,013
27,566
190,640
73,895
116,745
Cash, time deposits and investment securities
3,964
631
3,333
6,674
(762)
7,436
Total interest income
58,543
27,644
30,899
197,314
73,133
124,181
Interest expense:
Commercial paper
10,405
1,933
8,472
33,188
(8,812)
42,000
Other short-term borrowings
2,986
(3,618)
6,604
25,757
(7,100)
32,857
Short-term borrowings
13,391
(1,685)
15,076
58,945
(15,912)
74,857
Medium-term notes
27,168
14,318
12,850
87,618
31,128
56,490
Collateral trust bonds
(3,298)
(4,523)
1,225
11,490
2,690
8,800
Guaranteed Underwriter Program notes payable
8,485
3,994
4,491
28,755
12,199
16,556
Farmer Mac notes payable
12,028
6,619
5,409
41,658
13,324
28,334
Other notes payable
13
(3)
16
—
(34)
34
Subordinated deferrable debt
7,530
3,036
4,494
22,175
8,464
13,711
Subordinated certificates
(7)
(183)
176
(117)
(607)
490
Total interest expense
65,310
21,573
43,737
250,524
51,252
199,272
Net interest income (expense)
$
(6,767)
$
6,071
$
(12,838)
$
(53,210)
$
21,881
$
(75,091)
Adjusted net interest income:
Interest income
$
58,543
$
27,644
$
30,899
$
197,314
$
73,133
$
124,181
Interest expense
65,310
21,573
43,737
250,524
51,252
199,272
Net periodic derivative cash settlements interest expense (income)
(2)
(19,708)
(188)
(19,520)
(82,328)
130
(82,458)
Adjusted interest expense
(3)
45,602
21,385
24,217
168,196
51,382
116,814
Adjusted net interest income
$
12,941
$
6,259
$
6,682
$
29,118
$
21,751
$
7,367
____________________________
(1)
The changes for each category of interest income and interest expense represent changes in either average balances (volume) or average rates for both interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. We allocate the amount attributable to the combined impact of volume and rate to the rate variance.
(2)
For the net periodic derivative cash settlements interest amount, the variance due to average volume represents the change in the net periodic derivative cash settlements interest amount resulting from the change in the average notional amount of derivative contracts outstanding. The variance due to average rate represents the change in the net periodic derivative cash settlements amount resulting from the net difference between the average rate paid and the average rate received for interest rate swaps during the period.
(3)
See “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations” for additional information on our adjusted non-GAAP financial measures.
Reported net interest income of $65 million for Q3 FY2024 decreased $7 million, or 9%, from Q3 FY2023, driven by a decrease in the net interest yield of 14 basis points, or 16%, to 0.74%, partially offset by an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,266 million, or 7%.
•
Average Interest-Earning Assets
: The increase in average interest-earning assets of 7% was attributable to growth in average total loans of $2,188 million, or 7%, driven primarily by an increase in average long-term fixed-rate loans of $1,848 million and an increase in average line of credit loans of $397 million
, as members continued to advance loans to fund capital expenditures and for working capital purposes.
•
Net Interest Yield:
The decrease in the net interest yield of 14 basis points, or 16%, was primarily attributable to the combined impact of an increase in our average cost of borrowings of 53 basis points to 4.24%, which was partially offset by an increase in the average yield on interest-earning assets of 36 basis points to 4.71% and an increase in the benefit from non-interest bearing funding of 3 b
asis points to 0.27%. Our average yield on interest-earning assets and average cost of borrowings rose mainly due to the sustained increase in the federal funds rate, which increased 75 basis points since February 28, 2023. The increase in average yields on line of credit and variable-rate loans was the primary driver for the increase in the average yield on interest-earning assets. Meanwhile, our average cost of borrowings increased due to higher interest rates on our short-term and variable-rate borrowings.
Reported net interest income of $195 million for
YTD FY2024
decreased $53 million, or 21%, from
YTD FY2023
, driven by a decrease in the net interest yield of 28 basis points, or 27%, to 0.76%, partially offset by an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,243 million, or 7%.
•
Average Interest-Earning Assets:
The increase in average interest-earning assets of 7% was attributable to growth in average total loans of $2,282 million, or 7%, driven primarily by an increase in average long-term fixed-rate loans of $1,578 million and an increase in average line of credit loans of $612 million, as members continued to advance loans to fund capital expenditures and for working capital purposes.
•
Net Interest Yield:
The decrease in the net interest yield of 28 basis points, or 27%, was primarily attributable to the combined impact of an increase in our average cost of borrowings of 83 basis points to 4.13%, which was partially offset by an increase in the average yield on interest-earning assets of 50 basis points to 4.62% and an increase in the benefit from non-interest bearing funding of 5 basis points to 0.27%. As mentioned above, the increases in the average cost of borrowings and average yield on interest-earning assets were driven by the continued increase in the federal funds rate.
Adjusted Net Interest Income
Adjusted net interest income of $103 million for Q3 FY2024 increased $13 million, or 14%, from Q3 FY2023, driven by the combined impact of an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,266 million, or 7%, and an increase in the adjusted net interest yield of 7 basis points, or 6%, to 1.18%.
•
Average Interest-Earning Assets:
The increase in average interest-earning assets of 7% during Q3 FY2024 was driven by the growth in average total loans of $2,188 million, or 7%, attributable primarily to the increases in average long-term fixed-rate and line of credit loans as discussed above.
•
Adjusted
Net Interest Yield
: The adjusted net interest yield increased to 1.18%, reflecting the combined impact of an increase in the average yield on interest-earning assets of 36 basis points to 4.71% and an increase in the benefit from non-interest bearing funding of 2 basis points to 0.24%, partially offset by an increase in our adjusted average cost of borrowings of 31 basis points to 3.77%. The increases in both average yield on interest-earning assets and adjusted average cost of borrowings were attributable to the continued high interest-rate environment since
February 28, 2023
, as discussed above.
Adjusted net interest income of $290 million for YTD FY2024 increased $29 million, or 11%, from YTD FY2023, driven by the combined impact of an increase in average interest-earning assets of $2,243 million, or 7%, and an increase in the adjusted net interest yield of 4 basis points, or 4%, to 1.13%.
•
Average Interest-Earning Assets:
The increase in average interest-earning assets of 7% during YTD FY2024 was driven by the growth in average total loans of $2,282 million, or 7%, attributable primarily to increases in average long-term fixed-rate and line of credit loans as discussed above.
•
Adjusted Net Interest Yield:
The increase in the adjusted net interest yield of 4 basis points, or 4%, reflected the combined impact of an increase in the average yield on interest-earning assets of 50 basis points to 4.62% and an increase in the benefit from non-interest bearing funding of 3 basis points to 0.24%, partially offset by an increase in our adjusted average cost of borrowings of 49 basis points to 3.73%. We discuss above the primary drivers for the increases in the average yield on interest-earning assets and adjusted average cost of borrowings.
Derivative Cash Settlements
We include the net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income (expense) amounts on our interest rate swaps in the calculation of our adjusted average cost of borrowings, which, as a result, also impacts the calculation of adjusted net interest income and adjusted net interest yield. Because our derivative portfolio consists of a higher proportion of pay-fixed swaps than receive-fixed swaps, the net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income (expense) amounts generally change based on changes in the floating interest amount received each period. When floating rates increase during the period, the floating interest amounts received on our pay-fixed swaps increase and, conversely, when floating rates decrease, the floating interest amounts received on our pay-fixed swaps decrease. We recorded net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income of $38 million for
Q3 FY2024
compared with $19 million for
Q3 FY2023, and
net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income of $95 million for
YTD FY2024
compared with $13 million for
YTD FY2023. The increases in
derivative cash settlements interest income
were due to the
higher floating rates in
Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, compared to Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, respectively.
See “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations” for additional information on our non-GAAP financial measures, including a reconciliation of these measures to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures.
Provision for Credit Losses
Our provision for credit losses each period is driven by changes in our measurement of lifetime expected credit losses for our loan portfolio recorded in the allowance for credit losses. Our allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio was $49 million and 0.14%, respectively, as of February 29, 2024. In comparison, our allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio was $53 million and 0.16%, respectively, as of May 31, 2023.
We recorded a benefit for credit losses of $6 million and
$11 million
f
or
Q3 FY2024 and
Q3 FY2023, respectively,
primarily from
reductions in the asset-specific allowances for a nonperforming CFC power supply loan attributable to increases in the expected payments on the loan for both periods.
We recorded a benefit for credit losses of
$5 million
for
YTD FY2024,
resulting from a decrease of
$8 million
in the asset-specific allowance for a nonperforming CFC power supply loan and a recovery of $1 million attributable to additional loan payments received from Brazos Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (“Brazos”) and its wholly-owned subsidiary Brazos Sandy Creek Electric Cooperative Inc. (“Brazos Sandy Creek”), partially offset by an increase of
$4 million
in the collective allowance due to loan portfolio growth and a slight decline in the overall credit quality and risk profile of our loan portfolio.
We recorded a provision for credit losses of $4 million for YTD FY2023,
driven primarily by increases in the collective allowance, primarily due to loan portfolio growth, and in the asset-specific allowance for loans to Brazos, Brazos Sandy Creek, and for a nonperforming CFC power supply loan.
We discuss our methodology for estimating the allowance for credit losses in “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies—Allowance for Credit Losses—Current Methodology” in our 2023 Form 10-K. We also provide additional information on our allowance for credit losses below under section “Credit Risk—Allowance for Credit Losses” and “Note 5—Allowance for Credit Losses” in this Report.
Non-interest income consists of fee and other income, gains and losses on derivatives not accounted for in hedge accounting relationships and gains and losses on equity and debt investment securities, which consists of both unrealized and realized gains and losses.
Table 5 presents the components of non-interest income (loss) recorded in our consolidated statements of operations.
Table 5: Non-Interest Income (Loss)
(Dollars in thousands)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
Non-interest income components:
Fee and other income
$
5,025
$
5,326
$
16,173
$
13,548
Derivative gains (losses)
(18,475)
102,308
278,350
342,685
Investment securities gains (losses)
4,140
(1,402)
8,916
(5,574)
Total non-interest income (loss)
$
(9,310)
$
106,232
$
303,439
$
350,659
The variance in non-interest income was primarily attributable to changes in the derivative gains (losses) recognized in our consolidated statements of operation
s. In addition, we experienced a favorable shift from losses to gains recorded on our debt and equity investment securities of $6 million and $14 million for Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, respectively, compared with Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023. We ex
pect period-to-period market fluctuations in the fair value of our equity and debt investment securities, which we report together with realized gains and losses from the sale of investment securities on our consolidated statements of operations.
Derivative Gains (Losses)
As of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, our derivatives portfolio included interest rate swap agreements not designated for hedge accounting, comprised of pay-fixed swaps and receive-fixed swaps, with the benchmark variable rate for the floating rate payments based on daily compounded SOFR as of February 29, 2024. Additionally, Treasury locks may be used to manage the interest rate risk assoc
iated with future debt issuance or repricing and are typically designated as cash flow hedges.
The total notional amount for our interest rate swaps was
$7,345 million and $7,816 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The portfolio was primarily composed of longer-dated pay-fixed swaps, which accounted for approximately 81% and 78% of the outstanding notional amount as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Consequently, changes in medium- and longer-term swap rates generally have a more pronounced impact on the net fair value of our swap portfolio. As of February 29, 2024, the average remaining maturity of our pay-fixed and receive-fixed swaps was 18 years and two years, respectively, compared to 19 years and three years, respectively, as of February 28, 2023.
Table 6 presents the components of net derivative gains (losses) recorded in our consolidated statements of operations. Derivative cash settlements interest income (expense) represents the net periodic contractual interest amount for our interest-rate swaps during the reporting period. Derivative forward value gains (losses) represent the change in fair value of our interest rate swaps during the applicable reporting period due to changes in expected future interest rates over the remaining life of our derivative contracts.
We recorded derivative losses of $18 million for Q3 FY2024
, primarily attributable to decreases in interest rates across the entire swap curve during
Q3 FY2024
. In comparison, we recorded derivative gains of $102 million for
Q3 FY2023
, attributable to increases in interest rates across the entire swap curve during the period.
We recorded derivative gains of $278 million for YTD FY2024
, primarily attributable to increases in the medium- and longer-term swap interest rates during
YTD FY2024
. In comparison, we recorded derivative gains of $343 million for
YTD FY2023
, attributable to more pronounced increases in interest rates across the entire swap curve during the period.
In January 2023, we executed two Treasury lock agreements with an aggregate notional amount of $300 million to hedge interest rate risk on anticipated debt issuances. The agreements, which were scheduled to mature on December 2023, were designated as a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction. In February 2023, we terminated the Treasury locks and recorded a settlement gain of $8 million in AOCI. As the hedged forecasted transaction did not occur in the time period specified in the hedge documentation, we reclassified the $8 million gain from AOCI to earnings as a component of derivative gains (losses) on our consolidated statements of operations during Q3 FY2024.
We present comparative swap curves, which depict the relationship between swap rates at varying maturities, for our reported periods in Table 7 below.
Comparative Swap Curves
Table 7 below provides comparative swap curves as of February 29, 2024, November 30, 2023, May 31, 2023, February 28, 2023, November 30, 2022, and May 31, 2022.
See “Note 9—Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities” for additional information on our derivative instruments. Also refer to “Note 14—Fair Value Measurement” to the Consolidated Financial Statements in our 2023 Form 10-K for information on how we measure the fair value of our derivative instruments.
Non-Interest Expense
Non-interest expense consists of salaries and employee benefit expense, general and administrative expenses, gains and losses on the early extinguishment of debt and other miscellaneous expenses. Table 8 presents the components of non-interest expense recorded in our consolidated statements of operations.
Table 8: Non-Interest Expense
(Dollars in thousands)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
Non-interest expense components:
Salaries and employee benefits
$
(16,706)
$
(14,808)
$
(49,126)
$
(42,792)
Other general and administrative expenses
(13,283)
(10,507)
(43,878)
(35,289)
Operating expenses
(29,989)
(25,315)
(93,004)
(78,081)
Losses on early extinguishment of debt
(33)
—
(998)
—
Other non-interest expense
(287)
(298)
(715)
(975)
Total non-interest expense
$
(30,309)
$
(25,613)
$
(94,717)
$
(79,056)
Non-interest expense of $30 million and $95 million for Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, respectively, increased $5 million, or 18% and $16 million, or 20%, respectively, from Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023,
primarily attributable to an increase in operating expenses, driven by higher expenses r
eco
rded for salaries and benefits, information technology, and depreciation and amortization expenses. During the three months ended August 31, 2023 (“Q1 FY2024”), we redeemed $100 million of our $400 million subordinated deferrable debt due 2043
, at par plus accrued interest. As a result, we recognized $1 million of losses on early extinguishment of debt related to the unamortized debt issuance costs.
Net Income (Loss) Attributable to Noncontrolling Interests
Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests represents 100% of the results of operations of NCSC and RTFC, as the members of NCSC and RTFC own or control 100% of the interest in their respective companies.
On December 1, 2023, RTFC completed the sale of its business to NCSC and subsequently
CFC concluded that it is no longer the primary beneficiary of RTFC and accordingly, deconsolidated RTFC from it
s
consolidated financial statements. The fluctuations in net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests are primarily due to changes in the fair value of NCSC’s derivative instruments recognized in NCSC’s earnings.
We recorded net loss attributable to noncontrolling interests of less than $1 million for both Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024. In comparison, we recorded net income attributable to noncontrolling interests of less than $1 million and $1 million for Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, respectively.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET ANALYSIS
Total assets increased $1,880 million, or 6%, to $35,892 million as of February 29, 2024, primarily due to growth in our loan portfolio. We experienced an increase in total liabilities of $1,601 million, or 5%, to $33,024 million as of February 29, 2024, largely due to the issuances of debt to fund the growth in our loan portfolio. Total equity increased $279 million to $2,868 million as of February 29, 2024, primarily attributable to our reported net income of $408 million for YTD FY2024, which was partially offset by a decrease in equity of
$10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements
during the period.
Below is a discussion of changes in the major components of our assets and liabilities during YTD FY2024. Period-end balance sheet amounts may vary from average balance sheet amounts due to liquidity and balance sheet management activities that are intended to manage our liquidity requirements and market risk exposure in accordance with our risk appetite framework.
Loan Portfolio
We segregate our loan portfolio into segments, by legal entity, based on the borrower member class, which consists of CFC distribution, CFC power supply, CFC statewide and associate, NCSC electric and NCSC telecom. We offer both long-term and line of credit loans to our borrowers. Under our long-term loan facilities, a borrower may select a fixed interest rate or a variable interest rate at the time of each loan advance. Line of credit loans are revolving loan facilities and generally have a variable interest rate. We describe and provide additional information on our member classes under “Item 1. Business—Members” and information about our loan programs and loan product types under “Item 1. Business—Loan and Guarantee Programs” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Loans Outstanding
Loans to members totaled $34,412 million and $32,532 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Loans to CFC distribution, power supply, and statewide and associate borrowers accounted for 95% and 96% of total loans to members as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The increase in loans to members of $1,880 million, or 6%, from May 31, 2023
, was primarily attributable to net increases in long-term and line of credit loans of $1,473 million and $407 million, respectively. The $407 million increase in line of credit loans was primarily attributable to funding provided for higher working capital requirements from our members and bridge loan financing. We
experienced increases in CFC distribution loans, CFC power supply loans, CFC statewide and associate loans, NCSC electric and NCSC telecom loans of $1,439 million, $294 million, $58 million, $28 million and $61 million, respectively.
Long-term loan advances totaled $2,680 million during
YTD FY2024
, of which approximately 95% was provided to members for capital expenditures and approximately 5% was provided for other purposes, primarily business acquisitions. In comparison, long-term loan advances totaled $2,460 million during
YTD FY2023
, of which approximately 94% was provided to members for capital expenditures and approximately 2% was provided for the refinancing of loans made by other lenders. Of the $2,680 million total long-term loans advanced during the
YTD FY2024
, $2,494 million were fixed-rate loan advances with a weighted average fixed-rate term of 12 years. In comparison, of the $2,460 million total long-term loans advanced during
YTD FY2023
, $2,135 million were fixed-rate loan advances with a weighted average fixed-rate term of 18 years.
Our aggregate loans outstanding to CFC electric distribution cooperative members relating to broadband projects, which we started tracking in October 2017, increased to an estimated $2,867 million as of February 29, 2024, from approximately $2,355 million as of May 31, 2023.
We provide information on the credit performance and risk profile of our loan portfolio below under the section “Credit Risk—
Loan Portfolio Credit Risk.
” Also refer to
“Note 4—Loans” for addition information on our loans to members.
Debt
We utilize both short-term borrowings and long-term debt as part of our funding strategy and asset/liability interest rate risk management. We seek to maintain diversified funding sources, including our members, affiliates, the capital markets and other funding sources, across products, programs and markets to manage funding concentrations and reduce our liquidity or debt rollover risk. Our funding sources include a variety of secured and unsecured debt securities, in a wide range of maturities, to our members, affiliates, the capital markets and other funding sources.
Debt Outstanding
Table 9 displays the composition, by product type, of our outstanding debt as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. Table 9 also displays the composition of our debt based on several additional selected attributes.
(2)
Includes fixed-rate debt that has been swapped to a variable rate, net of any variable-rate debt that has been swapped to a fixed rate. Also includes commercial paper notes, which generally have maturities of less than 90 days. The interest rate on commercial paper notes does not change once the note has been issued; however, the interest rate for new commercial paper issuances changes daily.
(3)
Borrowings with an original contractual maturity of one year or less are classified as short-term borrowings. Borrowings with an original contractual maturity of greater than one year are classified as long-term debt.
(4)
Consists of long-term debt, subordinated deferrable debt and total members’ subordinated debt reported on our consolidated balance sheets. Maturity classification is based on the original contractual maturity as of the date of issuance of the debt.
We issue debt primarily to fund growth in our loan portfolio. As such, our debt outstanding generally increases and decreases in response to member loan demand. Total debt outstanding increased $1,542 million, or 5%, to $32,541 million as of February 29, 2024, due to borrowings to fund the increase in loans to members
. Outstanding dealer commercial paper was $899 million as of February 29, 2024. W
e provide additional information on our financing activities for the YTD FY2024 in the below section “Liquidity Risk” of this Report.
Member Investments
Debt securities issued to our members represent an important, stable source of funding. Table 10 displays member debt outstanding, by product type, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 10: Debt—Member Investments
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Change
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
% of Total
(1)
Amount
% of Total
(1)
Member investment product type:
Commercial paper
$
1,158,861
56
%
$
1,017,431
44
%
$
141,430
Select notes
1,285,682
100
1,630,799
100
(345,117)
Daily liquidity fund notes
279,548
100
238,329
100
41,219
Medium-term notes
819,406
9
731,809
11
87,597
Members’ subordinated certificates
1,198,115
100
1,223,126
100
(25,011)
Total member investments
$
4,741,612
$
4,841,494
$
(99,882)
Percentage of total debt outstanding
15
%
16
%
____________________________
(1)
Represents outstanding debt attributable to members for each debt product type as a percentage of the total outstanding debt for each debt product type.
Member investments accounted for 15% and 16% of total debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Over the last twelve fiscal quarters, our member investments have averaged $5,054 million, calculated based on outstanding member investments as of the end of each fiscal quarter during the period.
Short-Term Borrowings
Short-term borrowings consist of borrowings with an original contractual maturity of one year or less and do not include the current portion of long-term debt. Short-term borrowings increased to $4,605 million as of February 29, 2024, from $4,546 million as of May 31, 2023,
primarily driven by an increase in short-term notes payable
advanced under the Farmer Mac revolving purchase agreement
, partially offset by decreases in outstanding dealer commercial paper and short-term member investments
. Short-term borrowings accounted for 14% and 15% of total debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
See “Liquidity Risk” below and “Note 6—Short-Term Borrowings” for information on the composition of our short-term borrowings.
Long-Term and Subordinated Debt
Long-term debt, defined as debt with an original contractual maturity term of greater than one year, primarily consists of medium-term notes, collateral trust bonds, notes payable under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and notes payable under the Farmer Mac revolving note purchase agreement. Subordinated debt consists of subordinated deferrable debt and
members’ subordinated certificates. Our subordinated deferrable debt and members’ subordinated certificates have original contractual maturity terms of greater than one year.
Long-term and subordinated debt increased to $27,937 million as of February 29, 2024, from $26,453 million as of May 31, 2023, primarily due to net increase of $2,003 million in medium term notes, $233 million in notes payable under the Farmer Mac revolving purchase agreement, $123 million in notes payable under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program, partially offset by repayments of $855 million of collateral trust bonds
.
Long-term and subordinated debt accounted for 86% and 85% of total debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
We provide additional information on our long-term debt below under the “Liquidity Risk” section and in “Note 7—Long-Term Debt” and “Note 8—Subordinated Deferrable Debt” of this Report.
Equity
Table 11 presents the components of total CFC equity and total equity as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 11: Equity
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Equity components:
Membership fees and educational fund:
Membership fees
$
969
$
969
Educational fund
1,735
2,565
Total membership fees and educational fund
2,704
3,534
Patronage capital allocated
867,633
1,006,115
Members’ capital reserve
1,227,505
1,202,152
Total allocated equity
2,097,842
2,211,801
Unallocated net income (loss):
Prior fiscal year-end cumulative derivative forward value gains
(1)
342,624
92,363
Year-to-date derivative forward value gains
(1)
182,472
250,261
Period-end cumulative derivative forward value gains
(1)
525,096
342,624
Other unallocated net income (loss)
224,589
(709)
Unallocated net income
749,685
341,915
CFC retained equity
2,847,527
2,553,716
Accumulated other comprehensive income
853
8,343
Total CFC equity
2,848,380
2,562,059
Noncontrolling interests
19,481
27,190
Total equity
$
2,867,861
$
2,589,249
____________________________
(1)
Represents derivative forward value gains (losses) for CFC only, as total CFC equity does not include the noncontrolling interests of the variable interest entities, which we are required to consolidate. We present the consolidated total derivative forward value gains (losses) in Table 28 in the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations” section below. Also, see “Note 14—Business Segments” for the statements of operations for CFC.
The in
crease in total equity of $279 million to $2,868 million as of February 29, 2024 was attributable to our reported net income of $408 million for YTD FY2024, partially offset by
a decrease in equity of
$10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements, as discussed above under “Executive Summary.”
We are subject to District of Columbia law governing cooperatives, under which CFC is required to make annual allocations of net earnings, if any, in accordance with the provisions of the District of Columbia statutes. We describe the allocation requirements under “Item 7. MD&A—Consolidated Balance Sheet Analysis—Equity—Allocation and Retirement of Patronage Capital” in our 2023 Form 10-K. The amount of patronage capital allocated each year by CFC’s Board of Directors is based on non-GAAP adjusted net income, which excludes the impact of derivative forward value gains (losses). We provide a reconciliation of our adjusted net income to our reported net income and an explanation of the adjustments below in “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations.”
In May 2023, the CFC Board of Directors authorized the allocation of $1 million of net earnings for fiscal year 2023 to the cooperative educational fund. In July 2023, the CFC Board of Directors authorized the allocation of fiscal year 2023 adjusted net income as follows: $110 million to members in the form of patronage capital and $140 million to the members’ capital reserve.
In July 2023, the CFC Board of Directors also authorized the retirement of patronage capital totaling $72 million, of which $55 million represented 50% of the patronage capital allocation for fiscal year 2023, and $17 million represented the portion of the allocation from fiscal year 1998 net earnings that has been held for 25 years pursuant to the CFC Board of Directors’ policy. This amount was returned to members in cash in September 2023. The remaining portion of the patronage capital allocation for fiscal year 2023 will be retained by CFC for 25 years pursuant to the guidelines adopted by the CFC Board of Directors in June 2009.
In connection with the RTFC sale transaction, the CFC Board of Directors approved the early retirement of $66 million of allocated but unretired CFC patronage capital to RTFC at a discounted amount of $41 million
,
which was paid from CFC to RTFC in December 2023 and the remaining $25 million was allocated to CFC
members
’
capital reserve as of February 29, 2024. We provide additional information on the RTFC sale transaction under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT
Overview
CFC has an Enterprise Risk Management (“ERM”) framework that is designed to identify, assess, monitor and manage the risks we assume in conducting our activities to serve the financial needs of our members. We face a variety of risks that can significantly affect our financial performance, liquidity, reputation and ability to meet the expectations of our members, investors and other stakeholders. As a financial services company, the major categories of risk exposures inherent in our business activities include credit risk, liquidity risk, market risk and operational risk. These risk categories are summarized below.
•
Credit risk
is the risk that a borrower or other counterparty will be unable to meet its obligations in accordance with agreed-upon terms.
•
Liquidity risk
is the risk that we will be unable to fund our operations and meet our contractual obligations or that we will be unable to fund new loans to borrowers at a reasonable cost and tenor in a timely manner.
•
Market risk
is the risk that changes in market variables, such as movements in interest rates, may adversely affect the match between the timing of the contractual maturities, repricing and prepayments of our financial assets and the related financial liabilities funding those assets.
•
Operational risk
is the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal controls, processes, systems, human error or external events, including natural disasters or public health emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Operational risk also includes cybersecurity risk, compliance risk, fiduciary risk, reputational risk and litigation risk.
Effective risk management is critical to our overall operations and to achieving our primary objective of providing cost-based financial products to our rural electric members while maintaining the sound financial results required for investment-
grade credit ratings on our rated debt instruments. Accordingly, we have a risk-management framework that is intended to govern the principal risks we face in conducting our business and the aggregate amount of risk we are willing to accept, referred to as risk tolerance as well as risk limits and related guidelines, in the context of CFC’s mission and strategic objectives and initiatives. We provide a discussion of our risk management framework in our 2023 Form 10-K under “Item 7. MD&A—Enterprise Risk Management” and describe how we manage these risks under each respective MD&A section in our 2023 Form 10-K.
CREDIT RISK
Our loan portfolio, which represents the largest component of assets on our balance sheet, accounts for the substantial majority of our credit risk exposure. We also engage in certain nonlending activities that may give rise to counterparty credit risk, such as entering into derivative transactions to manage interest rate risk and purchasing investment securities. We provide additional information on our credit risk-management framework under “Item 7. MD&A—Credit Risk—Credit Risk Management” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Loan Portfolio Credit Risk
Our primary credit exposure is loans to rural electric cooperatives, which provide essential electric services to end-users, the majority of which are residential customers. We also have a limited portfolio of loans to not-for-profit and for-profit telecommunication companies. The substantial majority of loans to our borrowers are long-term fixed-rate loans with terms of up to 35 years. Long-term fixed-rate loans accounted for 88% and 87% of total loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Because we lend primarily to our rural electric utility cooperative members, we have had a loan portfolio inherently subject to single-industry and single-obligor credit concentration risk since our inception in 1969. We historically, however, have experienced limited defaults and losses in our electric utility loan portfolio due to several factors. First, the majority of our electric cooperative borrowers operate in states where electric cooperatives are not subject to rate regulation. Thus, they are able to make rate adjustments to pass along increased costs to the end customer without first obtaining state regulatory approval, allowing them to cover operating costs and generate sufficient earnings and cash flows to service their debt obligations. Second, electric cooperatives face limited competition, as they tend to operate in exclusive territories not serviced by public investor-owned utilities. Third, electric cooperatives typically are consumer-owned, not-for-profit entities that provide an essential service to end-users, the majority of which are residential customers. As not-for-profit entities, rural electric cooperatives, unlike investor-owned utilities, generally are eligible to apply for assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (“FEMA”) and states to help recover from major disasters or emergencies. Fourth, electric cooperatives tend to adhere to a conservative core business strategy model that has historically resulted in a relatively stable, resilient operating environment and overall strong financial performance and credit strength for the electric cooperative network. Finally, we generally lend to our members on a senior secured basis, which reduces the risk of loss in the event of a borrower default.
Below we provide information on the credit risk profile of our loan portfolio, including security provisions, credit concentration, credit quality indicators and our allowance for credit losses.
Security Provisions
Except when providing line of credit loans, we generally lend to our members on a senior secured basis. Table 12 presents, by legal entity and member class and by loan type, secured and unsecured loans in our loan portfolio as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. Of our total loans outstanding, 91% and 92% were secured as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance, net of discounts, charge-offs and recoveries, of loans as of the end of each period. Excludes unamortized deferred loan origination costs of $14 million and $13 million
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Concentrations of credit may exist when a lender has large credit exposures to single borrowers, large credit exposures to borrowers in the same industry sector or engaged in similar activities or large credit exposures to borrowers in a geographic region that would cause the borrowers to be similarly impacted by economic or other conditions in the region.
As discussed above under “Credit Risk—Loan Portfolio Credit Risk,” because we lend primarily to our rural electric utility cooperative members, our loan portfolio is inherently subject to single-industry and single-obligor credit concentration r
isk. Loans outstanding to electric utility organizations totaled $33,850 million and
$32,032 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and represented approximately 98%
and 99%
of our total loans outstanding as of each respective date. Our credit exposure is partially mitigated by long-term loans guaranteed by RUS, which totaled $116 million and $123 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Single-Obligor Concentration
Table 13 displays the outstanding loan exposure for our
20
largest borrowers, by legal entity and member class, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Our 20 largest borrowers consisted of 12 distribution systems and eight power
supp
ly systems as of February 29, 2024 compared to 10 distribution systems and 10 power
supp
ly systems as of May 31, 2023.
The largest total exposure to a single borrower or controlled group represented approximately
1%
of total loans outstanding as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 13: Loans—Loan Exposure to 20 Largest Borrowers
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
% of Total
Amount
% of Total
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
4,139,902
12
%
$
3,600,193
11
%
Power supply
2,427,916
7
2,782,098
9
Total CFC
6,567,818
19
6,382,291
20
NCSC Electric
179,500
1
205,321
—
Total loan exposure to 20 largest borrowers
6,747,318
20
6,587,612
20
Less: Loans covered under Farmer Mac standby purchase commitment
(234,663)
(1)
(266,754)
(1)
Net loan exposure to 20 largest borrowers
$
6,512,655
19
%
$
6,320,858
19
%
We entered into a long-term standby purchase commitment agreement with Farmer Mac during fiscal year 2016. Under this agreement, we may designate certain long-term loans to be covered under the commitment, subject to approval by Farmer Mac, and in the event any such loan later goes into payment default for at least 90 days, upon request by us, Farmer Mac must purchase such loan at par value.
The aggregate unpaid principal balance of designated and Farmer Mac approved loans was
$398 million and $436 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Loan exposure to our 20 largest borrowers covered under the Farmer Mac agreement totaled $235 million and $267 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, which reduced our exposure to the 20 largest borrowers to 19%
as of each respective date. No loans have been put to Farmer Mac for purchase pursuant to this agreement.
Geographic Concentration
Although our organizational structure and mission result in single-industry concentration, we serve a geographically diverse group of electric and telecommunications borrowers throughout the U.S. The consolidated number of borrowers with loans outstanding totaled 893 and 884 as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, located in 49 states and the District of Columbia. Of the 893 and 884 borrowers with loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, 50 and 52 were electric power supply borrowers as of each respective date. Electric power supply borrowers generally require significantly more capital than electric distribution and telecommunications borrowers.
Texas, which had 67 and 69 borrowers with loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, accounted for the largest number of borrowers with loans outstanding in any one state as of each respective date, as well as the largest concentration of loan exposure in any one state. Loans outstanding to Texas-based borrowers totaled $5,688 million and $5,529 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and accounted for approximately 16% and 17% of total loans outstanding as of each respective date. Of the loans outstanding to Texas-based borrowers,
$133 million and $155 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, were covered by the Farmer Mac standby repurchase agreement, which reduced our credit risk exposure to Texas-based borrowers to
$5,555 million
and $5,373 million as of each respective date.
See “Note 4—Loans” for information on the Texas-based number of borrowers and loans outstanding by legal entity and member class.
Credit Quality Indicators
Assessing the overall credit quality of our loan portfolio and measuring our credit risk is an ongoing process that involves tracking payment status, modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty, nonperforming loans, charge-offs, the internal risk ratings of our borrowers and other indicators of credit risk. We monitor and subject each borrower and loan facility in our loan portfolio to an individual risk assessment based on quantitative and qualitative factors. Payment status trends and internal risk ratings are indicators, among others, of the probability of borrower default and overall credit quality of our loan portfolio. We believe the overall credit quality of our loan portfolio remained strong as of February 29, 2024.
Loan Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing Financial Difficulty
We actively monitor problem loans and, from time to time, attempt to work with borrowers to manage such exposures through loan workouts or modifications that better align with the borrower’s current ability to pay. Therefore, as part of our loss mitigation efforts, we may provide modifications to a borrower experiencing financial difficulty to improve long-term collectability of the loan and to avoid the need for exercising remedies. We consider the impact of all loan modifications when estimating the credit quality of our loan portfolio and establishing the allowance for credit losses.
On June 1, 2023, we adopted ASU 2022-02,
Financial Instruments – Credit Losses (Topic 326) – Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures
, using the prospective adoption method. The ASU eliminated the accounting guidance for TDRs and enhanced the disclosure requirements for loan refinancings and restructurings made with borrowers experiencing financial difficulty, which are to be applied prospectively. For additional information on the adoption of ASU 2022-02 see “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
We had no loan modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty during Q3 FY2024. We had one loan modification to a NCSC telecom borrower experiencing financial difficulty during YTD FY2024. This loan received a term extension and had an amortized cost of $3 million as of February 29, 2024, representing 1% of the NCSC telecom loan portfolio. Loans modified to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty totaled $3 million a
s of
February 29, 2024
, consisting of one NCSC telecom loan as discussed above, which was
performing in accordance with the terms of the loan agreement
. There were no unadvanced loan commitments related to this loan.
Troubled Debt Restructurings—Prior to Adoption of ASU 2022-02
As discussed above, ASU 2022-02 eliminated the accounting guidance for TDRs. Prior to the adoption of ASU 2022-02,
a
loan restructuring or modification of terms is accounted for
as TDR if, for economic or legal reasons related to the borrower’s financial difficulties, a concession is granted to the borrower that we would no
t otherwise consider.
We had loans outstanding to two borrowers totaling $8 million which have been performing in accordance with the terms of their respective restructured loan agreement for an extended period of time and were classified as performing TDR loans and on accrual status as of May 31, 2023. We had loans outstanding to Brazos totaling $23 million classified as nonperforming TDR loans during Q3 FY2023, which were on non-accrual status as of May 31, 2023. During Q1 FY2024, we received the remaining payment of Brazos’ loans outstanding of $23 million in accordance with the provisions of Brazos’ plan of reorganization to repay its loans in full. Prior to the Brazos loan restructuring, we have not had any loan modifications that were required to be accounted for as TDRs since fiscal year 2016.
We classify loans as nonperforming at the earlier of the date when we determine: (i) interest or principal payments on the loan is past due 90 days or more; (ii) as a result of court proceedings, the collection of interest or principal payments based on the original contractual terms is not expected; or (iii) the full and timely collection of interest or principal is otherwise uncertain. Once a loan is classified as nonperforming, we generally place the loan on nonaccrual status. Interest accrued but not collected at the date a loan is placed on nonaccrual status is reversed against earnings.
We had a loan to one CFC electric power supply borrower totaling $85 million classified as nonperforming as of February 29, 2024. In comparison, we had loans to two CFC electric power supply borrowers totaling $89 million classified as nonperforming as of May 31, 2023. Nonperforming loans represented 0.25% and 0.27% of total loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The reduction in nonperforming loans of $4 million was due to the receipt
of $4 million in loan payments from
Brazos Sandy Creek to pay off its nonperforming loan outstanding during the
YTD FY2024
. In March 2024, we received a $36 million payment on the outstanding nonperforming loan, which reduced its balance to $49 million as of the date of this Report.
We provide additional information on nonperforming loans in “Note 4—Loans—Credit Quality Indicators—Nonperforming Loans.”
Net Charge-Offs
We had no loan charge-offs or recoveries during
Q3 FY2024 and
Q3 FY2023. W
e recorded
$1 million in net loan recoveries to previously charged-off loan amounts
during YTD FY2024.
We received a total of $28 million in loan payments from Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek to repay their $27 million of total loans outstanding in full during
YTD FY2024
. The additional payments received totaling $1 million were recorded as net loan recoveries on the Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek previously charged-off loan amounts during
YTD FY2024
. In comparison, w
e experienced net charge-offs
totaling
$15 million
for the CFC electric power supply loan portfolio related to Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek nonperforming loans during
YTD FY2023
, which resulted in an annualized net charge-off rate of
0.06%
for
YTD FY2023
.
Prior to Brazos’ and Brazos Sandy Creek’s bankruptcy filings, we had not experienced any defaults or charge-offs in our electric utility and telecommunications loan portfolios since fiscal year 2013 and 2017, respectively.
Borrower Risk Ratings
As part of our management of credit risk, we maintain a credit risk rating framework under which we employ a consistent process for assessing the credit quality of our loan portfolio. We evaluate each borrower and loan facility in our loan portfolio and assign internal borrower and loan facility risk ratings based on consideration of a number of quantitative and qualitative factors. We categorize loans in our portfolio based on our internally assigned borrower risk ratings, which are intended to assess the general creditworthiness of the borrower and probability of default. Our borrower risk ratings align with the U.S. federal banking regulatory agencies’ credit risk definitions of pass and criticized categories, with the criticized category further segmented among special mention, substandard and doubtful. Pass ratings reflect relatively low probability of default, while criticized ratings have a higher probability of default. Our internally assigned borrower risk ratings serve as the primary credit quality indicator for our loan portfolio. Because our internal borrower risk ratings provide important information on the probability of default, they are a key input in determining our allowance for credit losses.
Criticized loans totaled $268 million and $323 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and represented approximately 1% of total loans outstanding as of each respective date. The decrease of $55 million in criticized loans was primarily due to loan payments received from Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek in the doubtful category and a decrease in loans outstanding for one CFC electric distribution borrower in the special mention category during YTD FY2024.
Each of the borrowers with loans outstanding in the criticized category was current with regard to all principal and interest amounts due to us as of February 29, 2024. In contrast, each of the borrowers with loans outstanding in the criticized category, with the exception of Brazos Sandy Creek, was current with regard to all principal and interest amounts due to us as of May 31, 2023.
We provide additional information on our borrower risk rating framework in our 2023 Form 10-K under “Item 7. MD&A Credit Risk—Loan Portfolio Credit Risk—Credit Quality Indicators.” See “Note 4—Loans” of this Report for detail, by member class, on loans outstanding in each borrower risk rating category.
Allowance for Credit Losses
We are required to maintain an allowance based on a current estimate of credit losses that are expected to occur over the remaining contractual term of the loans in our portfolio. Our allowance for credit losses consists of a collective allowance and an asset-specific allowance. The collective allowance is established for loans in our portfolio that share similar risk characteristics and are therefore evaluated on a collective, or pool, basis in measuring expected credit losses. The asset-specific allowance is established for loans in our portfolio that do not share similar risk characteristics with other loans in our portfolio and are therefore evaluated on an individual basis in measuring expected credit losses.
Table 14 presents, by legal entity and member class, loans outstanding and the related allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023 and the allowance components as of each date.
Table 14: Allowance for Credit Losses by Borrower Member Class and Evaluation Methodology
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Loans Outstanding
(1)
Allowance for Credit Losses
Allowance Coverage Ratio
(2)
Loans Outstanding
(1)
Allowance for Credit Losses
Allowance Coverage Ratio
(2)
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
26,876,308
$
16,005
0.06
%
$
25,437,077
$
14,924
0.06
%
Power supply
5,731,520
26,291
0.46
5,437,242
33,306
0.61
Statewide and associate
258,181
1,228
0.48
200,368
1,194
0.60
Total CFC
32,866,009
43,524
0.13
31,074,687
49,424
0.16
NCSC:
Electric
984,182
3,503
0.36
956,874
2,464
0.26
Telecom
548,521
1,968
0.36
487,788
1,206
0.25
Total NCSC
1,532,703
5,471
0.36
1,444,662
3,670
0.25
Total
$
34,398,712
$
48,995
0.14
$
32,519,349
$
53,094
0.16
Allowance components:
Collective allowance
$
34,306,336
$
31,359
0.09
%
$
32,398,910
$
27,335
0.08
%
Asset-specific allowance
92,376
17,636
19.09
120,439
25,759
21.39
Total allowance for credit losses
$
34,398,712
$
48,995
0.14
$
32,519,349
$
53,094
0.16
Allowance coverage ratios:
Nonaccrual loans
(3)
$
84,987
57.65
%
$
112,209
47.32
%
___________________________
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance, net of discounts, charge-offs and recoveries, of loans as of each period end. Excludes unamortized deferred loan origination costs of $14 million and $13 million
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
(2)
Calculated based on the allowance for credit losses attributable to each member class and allowance components at period end divided by the related loans outstanding at period end.
(3)
Calculated based on the total allowance for credit losses at period end divided by loans outstanding on nonaccrual status at period end. Nonaccrual loans represented 0.25% and 0.35% of total loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. We provide additional information on our nonaccrual loans in “Note 4—Loans” in this Report.
The allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio decreased to $49 million and 0.14%, respectively, as of February 29, 2024, from $53 million and 0.16%, respectively, as of May 31, 2023. The $4 million decrease in the allowance for credit losses reflected a reduction in the asset-specific allowance of $8 million, partially offset by an increase in collective allowance of $4 million.
The decrease in the
asset-specific allowance was primarily attributable to an increase in
the expected payments on a nonperforming CFC power supply loan.
The increase in the collective allowance was primarily due to loan portfolio growth and a slight decline in the overall credit quality and risk profile of our loan portfolio.
We discuss our methodology for estimating the allowance for credit losses under the CECL model in “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies—Allowance for Credit Losses” and provide information on management’s judgment and the uncertainties involved in our determination of the allowance for credit losses in “MD&A—Critical Accounting Estimates—Allowance for Credit Losses” in our 2023 Form 10-K. We provide additional information on our loans and allowance for credit losses under “Note 4—Loans” and “Note 5—Allowance for Credit Losses” of this Report.
Counterparty Credit Risk
In addition to credit exposure from our borrowers, we enter into other types of financial transactions in the ordinary course of business that expose us to counterparty credit risk, primarily related to transactions involving our cash and cash equivalents, securities held in our investment securities portfolio and derivatives. We mitigate our risk by only entering into these transactions with counterparties with investment-grade ratings, establishing operational guidelines and counterparty exposure limits and monitoring our counterparty credit risk position. We evaluate our counterparties based on certain quantitative and qualitative factors and periodically assign internal risk rating grades to our counterparties.
Cash and Investments Securities Counterparty Credit Exposure
Our cash and cash equivalents and investment securities totaled $145 million and $372 million, respectively, as of February 29, 2024. The primary credit exposure associated with investments held in our investments portfolio is that issuers will not repay principal and interest in accordance with the contractual terms. Our cash and cash equivalents with financial institutions generally have an original maturity of less than one year and pursuant to our investment policy guidelines, all fixed-income debt securities, at the time of purchase, must be rated at least investment grade based on external credit ratings from at least two of the leading global credit rating agencies, when available, or the corresponding equivalent, when not available. We therefore believe that the risk of default by these counterparties is low. As of February 29, 2024, our overall counterparty credit risk was deemed to be satisfactory and not materially changed compared with
May 31, 2023
.
We provide additional information on the holdings in our investment portfolio below under “Liquidity Risk—Investment Portfolio” and in “Note 3—Investment Securities.”
Derivative Counterparty Credit Exposure
Our derivative counterparty credit exposure relates principally to interest-rate swap contracts. We generally engage in over-the-counter (“OTC”) derivative transactions, which expose us to individual counterparty credit risk because these transactions are executed and settled directly between us and each counterpart
y. We are exposed to the risk that an individual derivative counterparty defaults on payments due to us, which we may not be able to collect or which may require us to seek a replacement derivative from a different counterparty. This replacement may be at a higher cost, or we may be unable to find a suitable replacement.
We manage our derivative counterparty credit exposu
re through diversification of our derivative positions among various counterparties and by executing derivative transactions with financial institutions that have investment-grade credit ratings and maintaining enforceable master netting arrangements with these counterparties, which allow us to net derivative assets and liabilities with the same counterparty. We also manage the credit risk associated with our derivative counterparties by using internal credit risk analysis, limits and monitoring process. We had 12 active derivative counterparties with credit ratings ranging from Aa1 to Baa1 by Moody’s as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, and from AA- to BBB+ and AA- to A- by S&P as of February 29, 2024 an
d May 31, 2023, respectively. The total outstanding notional amount of derivatives with these counterparties was $7,345 million and $7,816 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The highest single derivative counterparty concentration, by outstanding notional amount, accounted for approximately 24% and 23% of the total outstanding notional amount of our derivatives as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
While our derivative agreements include netting provisions that allow for offsetting of all contracts with a given counterparty in the event of default by one of the two parties, we report the fair value of our derivatives on a gross basis by
individual contr
act as either a derivative asset or derivative liability on our consolidated balance sheets.
The fair value of our derivatives includes credit valuation adjustments reflecting counterparty credit risk. We e
stimate our exposure to credit loss on our derivatives by calculating the replacement cost to settle at current market prices, as defined in our derivative agreements, all outstanding derivatives in a net gain position at the counterparty level where a right of legal offset exists. We provide information on the impact of netting provisions under our master swap agreements and collateral pledged, if any, in “Note 9—Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities—Impact of Derivatives on Consolidated Balance Sheets.” We believe our exposure to derivative counterparty risk, at any point in time, is equal to the amount of our outstanding derivatives in a net gain position, at the individual counterparty level, which totaled $530 million and $349 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
We provide additional detail on our derivative agreements, including a discussion of derivative contracts with credit rating triggers and settlement amounts that would be required in the event of a ratings trigger, in “Note 9—Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities.”
See “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in our 2023 Form 10-K and “Item 1A. Risk Factors” of this Report for additional information about credit risks related to our business.
LIQUIDITY RISK
We define liquidity as the ability to convert assets into cash quickly and efficiently, maintain access to available funding and roll-over or issue new debt under normal operating conditions and periods of CFC-specific and/or market stress, to ensure that we can meet borrower loan requests, pay current and future obligations and fund our operations in a cost-effective manner. We provide additional information on our liquidity risk-management framework under “Item 7. MD&A—Liquidity Risk—Liquidity Risk Management” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
In addition to cash on hand, our primary sources of funds include member loan principal repayments, securities held in our investment portfolio, committed bank revolving lines of credit, committed loan facilities under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program, a revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac and proceeds from debt issuances to members and in the public capital markets. Our primary uses of funds include loan advances to members, principal and interest payments on borrowings, periodic interest settlement payments related to our derivative contracts and operating expenses.
Available Liquidity
As part of our strategy in managing liquidity risk and meeting our liquidity objectives, we seek to maintain various committed sources of funding that are available to meet our near-term liquidity needs. Table 15 presents a comparison between our available liquidity, which consists of cash and cash equivalents, our debt securities investment portfolio and amounts under committed credit facilities, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Committed bank revolving line of credit agreements—unsecured
(2)
2,800
2
2,798
2,600
2
2,598
Guaranteed Underwriter Program committed facilities—secured
(3)
9,923
8,723
1,200
9,473
8,448
1,025
Farmer Mac revolving note purchase agreement—secured
(4)
6,000
3,883
2,117
6,000
3,150
2,850
Total committed credit facilities
18,723
12,608
6,115
18,073
11,600
6,473
Total available liquidity
$
19,203
$
12,608
$
6,595
$
18,747
$
11,600
$
7,147
____________________________
(1)
Represents the aggregate fair value of our portfolio of debt securities as of period end. Our portfolio of equity securities consists primarily of preferred stock securities that are not as readily redeemable; therefore, we exclude our portfolio of equity securities from our available liquidity.
(2)
The committed bank revolving line of credit agreements consist of a three-year and a four-year revolving line of credit agreement. The accessed amount of $2 million as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, relates to letters of credit issued pursuant to the four-year revolving line of credit agreement.
(3)
The committed facilities under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program are not revolving.
(4)
Availability subject to market conditions.
Although as a nonbank financial institution we are not subject to regulatory liquidity requirements, our liquidity management framework includes monitoring our liquidity and funding positions on an ongoing basis and assessing our ability to meet our scheduled debt obligations and other cash flow requirements based on point-in-time metrics as well as forward-looking projections. Our liquidity and funding assessment takes into consideration amounts available under existing liquidity sources, the expected rollover of member short-term investments and scheduled loan principal payment amounts, as well as our continued ability to access the capital markets and other non-capital market related funding sources.
Liquidity Risk Assessment
We utilize several measures to assess our liquidity risk and ensure we have adequate coverage to meet our liquidity needs. Our primary liquidity measures indicat
e the extent to which we have sufficient liquidity to cover the payment of scheduled debt obligations over the next 12 months. We calculate our liquidity coverage ratios under several scenarios that take into consideration various assumptions about our near-term sources and uses of liquidity, including the assumption that maturities of member short-term investments will not have a significant impact on our anticipated cash outflows. Our members have historically maintained a relatively stable level of short-term investments in CFC in the form of daily liquidity fund notes, commercial paper, select notes and medium-term notes. As such, we expect that our members will continue to reinvest their excess cash in short-term investment products offered by CFC.
Table 16 presents our primary liquidity coverage ratios as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023 and displays the calculation of each ratio as of these respective dates based on the assumptions discussed above.
Long-term and subordinated debt scheduled to mature over next 12 months
2,348
2,383
Total debt scheduled to mature over next 12 months
6,953
6,929
Excess (deficit) in available liquidity over debt scheduled to mature over next 12 months
$
(358)
$
218
Liquidity coverage ratio
0.95
1.03
Liquidity coverage ratio, excluding expected maturities of member short-term investments
(3)
Total available liquidity
(2)
$
6,595
$
7,147
Total debt scheduled to mature over next 12 months
6,953
6,929
Exclude: Member short-term investments
(3,206)
(3,253)
Total debt, excluding member short-term investments, scheduled to mature over next 12 months
3,747
3,676
Excess in available liquidity over total debt, excluding member short-term investments, scheduled to mature over next 12 months
$
2,848
$
3,471
Liquidity coverage ratio, excluding expected maturities of member short-term investments
1.76
1.94
___________________________
(1)
Calculated based on available liquidity at period end divided by total debt scheduled to mature over the next 12 months at period end.
(2)
Total available liquidity is presented above in Table 15.
(3)
Calculated based on available liquidity at period end divided by debt, excluding member short-term investments, scheduled to mature over the next 12 months.
As presented in Table 16 above, our available liquidity of $6,595 million as of February 29, 2024 was $358 million below our total scheduled debt obligations over the next 12 months of $6,953 million, consisting of short-term borrowings and long-term and subordinated debt. The short-term borrowings scheduled maturity amount consists of member investments of $3,206 million, dealer commercial paper of $899 million and Farmer Mac notes payable of $500 million. The long-term and subordinated scheduled debt obligations over the next 12 months of $2,348 million consist of debt maturities and scheduled debt payment amounts, of which, $149 million was from member investments.
We believe we can continue to roll over our member short-term investments of $3,206 million as of February 29, 2024, based on our expectation that our members will continue to reinvest their excess cash in short-term investment products offered by CFC. As mentioned above
, our members historically have maintained a relatively stable level of short-term investments in CFC. Member short-te
rm investments in CFC have averaged $3,543 million over the last 12 fiscal quarter-end reporting periods. Our available liquidity as of February 29, 2024 was $2,848 million in excess of, or 1.8 times over, our total scheduled debt obligations, excluding member short-term investments, over the next 12 months of $3,747 million. In addition, we expect to re
ceive $1,535 million from scheduled long-term loan principal payments over the next 12 months.
We expect to continue accessing the dealer commercial paper market as a cost-effective means of satisfying our incremental short-term liquidity needs. Although the intra-quarter amount of dealer commercial paper outstanding may fluctuate based on our liquidity requirements, our intent is to manage our short-term wholesale funding risk by maintaining the dealer commercial paper outstanding at each quarter-end within a range of $1,000 million to $1,500 million. To mitigate commercial paper rollover risk, we expect to continue to maintain our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements and be in compliance with the covenants of these agreements so we can draw on these facilities, if necessary, to repay dealer or member commercial paper that cannot be refinanced with similar debt. In addition, under master repurchase agreements we have with our bank counter parties, we can obtain short-term funding in secured borrowing transactions by selling
investment-grade corporate debt securities from our investment securities portfolio subject to an obligation to repurchase the same or similar securities at an agreed-upon price and date.
The issuance of long-term debt, which represents the most significant component of our funding, allows us to reduce our reliance on short-term borrowings, as well as effectively manage our refinancing and interest rate risk. We expect to continue to issue long-term debt in the public capital markets and under our other non-capital market debt arrangements to meet our funding needs and believe that we have sufficient sources of liquidity to meet our debt obligations and support our operations over the next 12 months.
Investment Securities Portfolio
We have an investment portfolio of debt securities classified as trading and equity securities, both of which are reported on our consolidated balance sheets at fair value.
Our debt securities investment portfolio is intended to serve as an additional source of liquidity. Under master repurchase agreements that we have with counterparties, we can obtain short-term funding by selling investment-grade corporate debt securities from our investment portfolio subject to an obligation to repurchase the same or similar securities at an agreed-upon price and date. Because we retain effective control over the transferred securities, transactions under these repurchase agreements are accounted for as collateralized financing agreements (i.e., secured borrowings) and not as a sale and subsequent repurchase of securities. The obligation to repurchase the securities is reflected as a component of our short-term borrowings on our consolidated balance sheets. The aggregate fair value of debt securities underlying repurchase transactions is parenthetically disclosed on our consolidated balance sheets. We had no borrowings under repurchase agreements outstanding as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023; therefore, we had no debt securities in our investment portfolio pledged as collateral as of each respective date.
Our investment portfolio also included equity securities with a fair value of $37 million and $35 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, consisting primarily of preferred stock securities that are not as readily redeemable, therefore, we excluded the equity securities from our available liquidity.
We provide additional information on our investment securities portfolio in “Note 3—Investment Securities” of this Report.
Borrowing Capacity Under Various Credit Facilities
The aggregate borrowing capacity under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements, committed loan facilities under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac totaled $18,723 million and $18,073 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and the aggregate amount available for access totaled $6,115 million and $6,473 million as of each respective date. The following is a discussion of our borrowing capacity and key terms and conditions under each of these credit facilities.
Committed Bank Revolving Line of Credit Agreements—Unsecured
Our committed bank revolving lines of credit may be used for general corporate purposes; however, we generally rely on them as a backup source of liquidity for our member and dealer commercial paper. On November 20, 2023, we amended the three-year and four-year committed bank revolving line of credit agreements to extend the maturity dates to November 28, 2026 and November 28, 2027, respectively, and to include a $100 million swingline facility under each agreement. In connection with the amendments to the revolving line of credit agreements, commitments from the existing banks increased by $100 million under each of the three-year and four-year revolving credit agreements. Commitments of $150 million under each agreement will expire at the prior maturity dates of November 28, 2025 and November 28, 2026. The total commitment amount under the three-year facility and the four-year facility was $1,345 million and $1,455 million, respectively, resulting in a combined total commitment amount under the two facilities of $2,800 million. Under our current committed bank revolving line of credit agreements, we have the ability to request up to $300 million of letters of credit, which would result in a reduction in the remaining available amount under the facilities.
Table 17 presents the total commitment amount under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements, outstanding letters of credit and the amount available for access as of February 29, 2024.
Table 17: Committed Bank Revolving Line of Credit Agreements
February 29, 2024
(Dollars in millions)
Total Commitment
Letters of Credit Outstanding
Amount Available for Access
Maturity
Annual
Facility Fee
(1)
Bank revolving line of credit term:
3-year agreement
$
150
$
—
$
150
November 28, 2025
7.5 bps
3-year agreement
1,195
—
1,195
November 28, 2026
7.5 bps
Total 3-year agreement
1,345
—
1,345
4-year agreement
150
—
150
November 28, 2026
10.0 bps
4-year agreement
1,305
2
1,303
November 28, 2027
10.0 bps
Total 4-year agreement
1,455
2
1,453
Total
$
2,800
$
2
$
2,798
____________________________
(1)
Facility fee based on CFC’s senior unsecured credit ratings in accordance with the established pricing schedules at the inception of the related agreement.
We did not have any outstanding borrowings under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements as of February 29, 2024; however, we had letters of credit outstanding of $2 million under the
four
-year committed bank revolving agreement as of this date.
Although our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements do not contain a material adverse change clause or rating triggers that would limit the banks’ obligations to provide funding under the terms of the agreements, we must be in compliance with the covenants to draw on the facilities. We have been and expect to continue to be in compliance with the covenants under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements. As such, we could draw on these facilities to repay dealer or member commercial paper that cannot be rolled over.
Guaranteed Underwriter Program Committed Facilities—Secured
Under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program, we can borrow from the Federal Financing Bank and use the proceeds to extend new loans to our members and refinance existing member debt. As part of the program, we pay fees, based on our outstanding borrowings, that are intended to help fund the USDA Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant program and thereby support additional investment in rural economic development projects. The borrowings under this program are guaranteed by the RUS. Each advance is subject to quarterly amortization and a final maturity not longer than 30 years from the date of the advance.
On December 19, 2023, we closed on a $450 million Series U committed loan facility from the U.S. Treasury Department’s Federal Financing Bank under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program. Pursuant to this facility, we may borrow any time before July 15, 2028. Each advance is subject to quarterly amortization and a final maturity not longer than 30 years from the date of the advance.
As displayed in Table 15, we had accessed $8,723 million under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and up to $1,200 million was available for borrowing as of February 29, 2024. Of the $1,200 million available borrowing amount, $750 million is available for advance through July 15, 2027 and $450 million is available for advance through July 15, 2028. We are required to pledge eligible distribution system loans or power supply system loans as collateral in an amount at least equal to our total outstanding borrowings under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program committed loan facilities, which totaled $6,844 million as of February 29, 2024.
Farmer Mac Revolving Note Purchase Agreement—Secured
We have a revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac
under which we can borrow up to $6,000 million from Farmer Mac at any time, subject to market conditions, through June 30, 2027. The agreement has successive automatic one-year renewals beginning June 30, 2026, unless Farmer Mac provides 425 days’ written notice of non-renewal.
Under this agreement, we had outstanding secured notes payable totaling $3,883 million and $3,150 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
We borrowed $500 million in short-term notes payable and $300 million in long-term notes payable under this note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac during YTD FY2024. A
s displayed in Table 15, the amount available for borrowing under this agreement was $2,117 million as of February 29, 2024. We are required to pledge eligible electric distribution system or electric power supply system loans as collateral in an amount at least equal to the total principal amount of notes outstanding under this agreement.
We provide additional information on pledged collateral below under “Pledged Collateral” in this section and in “Note 3—Investment Securities” and “Note 4—Loans.”
Short-Term Borrowings
Our short-term borrowings, which we rely on to meet our daily, near-term funding needs, consist of commercial paper, which we offer to members and dealers, select notes and daily liquidity fund notes offered to members, medium-term notes offered to members and dealers and funds from repurchase secured borrowing transactions.
Short-term borrowings increased $59 million to $4,605 million as of February 29, 2024, from $4,546 million as of May 31, 2023, and accounted for 14% and 15% of total debt outstanding as of each respective period.
Member investments have historically been our primary source of short-term borrowings. Table 18 displays the composition, by funding source, of our short-term borrowings as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. As indicated in Table 18, members’ investments represented 70% and 72% of our outstanding short-term borrowings as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Table 18: Short-Term Borrowings
—
Funding Sources
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
Outstanding
% of Total Short-Term Borrowings
Amount
Outstanding
% of Total Short-Term Borrowings
Funding source:
Members
$
3,205,670
70
%
$
3,253,108
72
%
Farmer Mac notes payable
500,000
11
—
—
Capital markets
898,956
19
1,293,167
28
Total
$
4,604,626
100
%
$
4,546,275
100
%
Our intent is to manage our short-term wholesale funding risk by maintaining the dealer commercial paper outstanding at each quarter-end within a range of $1,000 million to $1,500 million, although the intra-quarter amount of dealer commercial paper outstanding may fluctuate based on our liquidity requirements.
Dealer commercial paper outstanding was $899 million and $1,293 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
See “Note 6—Short-Term Borrowings” for additional information on our short-term borrowings.
Long-Term and Subordinated Debt
Long-term and subordinated debt, which represents the most significant source of our funding, totaled $27,937 million and $26,453 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and accounted for 86% and 85% of total debt outstanding as of each respective date. See Table 19 below for a summary of our long-term and subordinated debt issuances and repayments during YTD FY2024.
The issuance of long-term debt allows us to reduce our reliance on short-term borrowings and effectively manage our refinancing and interest rate risk, due in part to the multi-year contractual maturity structure of long-term debt. In addition to access to private debt facilities, we also issue debt in the public capital markets. Pursuant to Rule 405 of the Securities Act, we are classified as a “well-known seasoned issuer.” Under our effective shelf registration statements filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), we may offer and issue the following debt securities:
•
an unlimited amount of collateral trust bonds and senior and subordinated debt securities, including medium-term notes, member capital securities and subordinated deferrable debt, until October 2026; and
•
daily liquidity fund notes up to $20,000 million in the aggregate—with a $3,000 million limit on the aggregate principal amount outstanding at any time—until March 2025.
Although we register member capital securities and the daily liquidity fund notes with the SEC, these securities are not available for sale to the general public. Medium-term notes are available for sale to both the general public and members. Notwithstanding the foregoing, we have contractual limitations with respect to the amount of senior indebtedness we may incur.
Long-Term Debt and Subordinated Debt—Issuances and Repayments
Table 19 summarizes long-term and subordinated debt issuances and repayments during YTD FY2024.
Table 19: Long-Term and Subordinated Debt
—
Issuances and Repayments
YTD FY2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Issuances
Repayments
(1)
Debt product type:
Collateral trust bonds
$
—
$
855,000
Guaranteed Underwriter Program notes payable
275,000
152,020
Farmer Mac notes payable
300,000
67,137
Medium-term notes sold to members
91,418
118,851
Medium-term notes sold to dealers
2,983,856
953,841
Other notes payable
—
1,169
Subordinated deferrable debt
100,000
100,000
Members’ subordinated certificates
98
25,109
Total
$
3,750,372
$
2,273,127
____________________________
(1)
Repayments include principal maturities, scheduled amortization payments, repurchases and redemptions.
Long-Term and Subordinated Debt—Principal Maturity and Amortization
Table 20 summarizes scheduled principal maturity and amortization of our long-term debt, subordinated deferrable debt and members’ subordinated certificates outstanding as of February 29, 2024, in each fiscal year during the five-year period ending May 31, 2028, and thereafter.
Table 20: Long-Term and Subordinated Debt—Scheduled Principal Maturities and Amortization
(1)
(1)
Amounts presented are based on the face amount of debt outstanding as of
February 29, 2024, and therefore does not include related debt issuance costs and discounts.
(2)
Member loan subordinated certificates totaling $136 million amortize annually based on the unpaid principal balance of the related loan.
We provide additional information on our financing activities under the above “Consolidated Balance Sheet Analysis—Debt” and in “Note 7—Long-Term Debt” and “Note 8—Subordinated Deferrable Debt.”
Pledged Collateral
Under our secured borrowing agreements, we are required to pledge loans, investment debt securities or other collateral and maintain certain pledged collateral ratios. Of our total debt outstanding of $32,541 million as of February 29, 2024, $17,462 million, or 54%, was secured by pledged loans totaling $21,644 million. In comparison, of our total debt outstanding of $30,999 million as of May 31, 2023, $17,450 million, or 56%, was secured by pledged loans totaling $21,038 million. Following is additional information on the collateral pledging requirements for our secured borrowing agreements.
We are required to pledge loans or other collateral in transactions under our collateral trust bond indentures, bond agreements under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program and note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac. Total debt outstanding is presented on our consolidated balance sheets net of unamortized discounts and issuance costs. Our collateral pledging requirements are based, however, on the face amount of secured outstanding debt, which excludes net unamortized discounts and issuance costs. However, as discussed below, we typically maintain pledged collateral in excess of the required percentage. Under the provisions of our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements, the excess collateral that we are allowed to pledge cannot exceed 150% of the outstanding borrowings under our collateral trust bond indentures, the Guaranteed Underwriter Program or the Farmer Mac note purchase agreements.
Table 21 displays the collateral coverage ratios pursuant to these secured borrowing agreements as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 21: Collateral Pledged
Requirement Coverage Ratios
Maximum Committed Bank Revolving Line of Credit Agreements
Actual Coverage Ratios
(1)
Minimum Debt Indentures
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Secured borrowing agreement type:
Collateral trust bonds 1994 indenture
100
%
150
%
132
%
115
%
Collateral trust bonds 2007 indenture
100
150
130
114
Guaranteed Underwriter Program notes payable
100
150
118
117
Farmer Mac notes payable
100
150
116
136
Clean Renewable Energy Bonds Series 2009A
(2)
100
150
—
129
___________________________
(1)
Calculated based on the amount of collateral pledged divided by the face amount of outstanding secured debt.
(2)
Collateral includes cash pledged. Clean renewable energy bonds series 2009A matured and was paid off in full as of February 29, 2024.
Table 22 displays the unpaid principal balance of loans pledged for secured debt, the excess collateral pledged and unencumbered loans as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Less: Loans required pledged under secured debt agreements
(2)
(17,664,095)
(17,664,350)
Loans pledged in excess of required amount
(2)(3)
(3,979,507)
(3,373,580)
Total pledged loans
(21,643,602)
(21,037,930)
Unencumbered loans
$
12,755,110
$
11,481,419
Unencumbered loans as a percentage of total loans outstanding
37%
35%
____________________________
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance of loans as of the end of each period. Excludes unamortized deferred loan origination costs of $14 million and $13 million
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
(2)
Reflects unpaid principal balance of pledged loans.
(3)
Excludes cash collateral pledged to secure debt. If there is an event of default under most of our indentures, we can only withdraw the excess collateral if we substitute cash or permitted investments of equal value.
As displayed above in Table 22, we had excess loans pledged as collateral totaling $3,980 million and $3,374 million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. To ensure that we do not fall below the minimum collateral coverage ratio requirement, we typically pledge loans in excess of the required amount for the following reasons: (i) our distribution and power supply loans are typically amortizing loans that require scheduled principal payments over the life of the loan, whereas the debt securities issued under secured indentures and agreements typically have bullet maturities; (ii) distribution and power supply borrowers have the option to prepay their loans; and (iii) individual loans may become ineligible for various reasons, some of which may be temporary.
We provide additional information on our borrowings, including the maturity profile, below in the “Liquidity Risk” section and additional information on pledged loans in “Note 4—Loans” of this Report. For additional detail on each of our debt product types, refer to “Note 5—Short-Term Borrowings,” “Note 7—Long-Term Debt,” “Note 8—Subordinated Deferrable Debt” and “Note 9—Members’ Subordinated Certificates” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
In the ordinary course of business, we engage in financial transactions that are not presented on our consolidated balance sheets, or may be recorded on our consolidated balance sheets in amounts that are different from the full contract or notional amount of the transaction. Our off-balance sheet arrangements consist primarily of unadvanced loan commitments intended to meet the financial needs of our members and guarantees of member obligations, which may affect our liquidity and funding requirements based on the likelihood that borrowers will advance funds under the loan commitments or we will be required to perform under the guarantee obligations. We provide information on our unadvanced loan commitments in “Note 4—Loans” and information on our guarantee obligations in “Note 11—Guarantees.”
Projected Near-Term Sources and Uses of Funds
Table 23 below displays a projection of our pr
imary long-term sources and u
ses of funds, by quarter, over each of the
next six fisc
al quarters. Our projection is based on the following, which includes several assumptions: (i) the estimated issuance of long-term debt, including capital market and other non-capital market term debt, is based on our market-risk management goal of minimizing the mismatch between the cash flows from our financial assets and our financial liabilities; (ii) long-term loan scheduled amortization repayment amounts represent scheduled loan principal payments for long-term loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and estimated loan principal payments for long-term loan advances, plus estimated prepayment amounts on long-term loans; (iii) long-term and subordinated debt maturities consist of both scheduled principal maturity and amortization amounts and projected principal maturity and amortization amounts on term debt outstanding in each period pr
esented; and (iv) long-term loan advances are based on our current projection of member demand for loans. In addition, amounts available under our committed bank revolving lines of credit, net increases in dealer commercial paper and short-term member investments are intended to serve as a backup source of liquidity.
Table 23: Liquidity—Projected Long-Term Sources and Uses of Funds
(1)
Projected Long-Term Sources of Funds
Projected Long-Term Uses of Funds
(Dollars in millions)
Long-Term Debt Issuance
Anticipated Long-Term
Loan Repayments
(2)
Total Projected Long-Term
Sources of
Funds
Long-Term and Subordinated Debt Maturities
(3)
Long-Term
Loan Advances
Total Projected
Long-Term Uses of
Funds
Q4 FY2024
$
657
$
380
$
1,037
$
552
$
889
$
1,441
Q1 FY2025
—
387
387
385
845
1,230
Q2 FY2025
1,115
385
1,500
994
723
1,717
Q3 FY2025
1,930
383
2,313
1,342
925
2,267
Q4 FY2025
639
392
1,031
421
793
1,214
Q1 FY2026
780
402
1,182
776
752
1,528
Total
$
5,121
$
2,329
$
7,450
$
4,470
$
4,927
$
9,397
____________________________
(1)
The dates presented represent the end of each quarterly period through the quarter ended
August 31, 2025
.
(2)
Anticipated long-term loan repayments include scheduled long-term loan amortizations and anticipated cash repayments at repricing date.
(3)
Long-term debt maturities also include medium-term notes with an original maturity of one year or less and expected early redemptions of debt.
As displayed in Table 23, we currently project long-term advances of $3,382 million over the next 12 months, which we project will exceed anticipated long-term loan repayments over the same period of $1,535 million, resulting in net long-term loan growth of approximately $1,847 million over the next 12 months.
The estimates presented above are developed at a particular point in time based on our expected future business growth and funding. Our actual results and future estimates may vary, perhaps significantly, from the current projections, as a result of changes in market conditions, management actions or other factors.
Credit Ratings
Our funding and liquidity, borrowing capacity, ability to access capital markets and other sources of funds and the cost of these funds are partially dependent on our credit ratings.
Table 24 displays our credit ratings as of February 29, 2024, which remain unchanged as of the date of this Report.
Table 24: Credit Ratings
February 29, 2024
Moody’s
S&P
Fitch
CFC credit ratings and outlook:
Long-term issuer credit rating
(1)
A2
A-
A
Senior secured debt
(2)
A1
A-
A+
Senior unsecured debt
(3)
A2
A-
A
Subordinated debt
A3
BBB
BBB+
Commercial paper
P-1
A-2
F1
Outlook
Stable
Stable
Stable
Rating agency credit opinion date
February 21, 2024
December 7, 2023
September 22, 2023
___________________________
(1)
Based on our senior unsecured debt rating.
(2)
Applies to our collateral trust bonds.
(3)
Applies to our medium-term notes.
See “Credit Risk—Counterparty Credit Risk—Derivative Counterparty Credit Exposure” above for information on credit rating provisions related to our derivative contracts.
Our debt-to-equity ratio decreased to 11.52 as of February 29, 2024, from 12.14 as of May 31, 2023, primarily due to an increase in equity from our reported net income of $408 million for YTD FY2024, which was partially offset by a decrease in equity of
$10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements
during the period.
While our goal is to maintain an adjusted debt-to-equity ratio of approximately 6-to-1, the adjusted debt-to-equity ratio increased to 6.29 as of February 29, 2024 from 6.04 as of May 31, 2023,
due to an increase in adjusted liabilities resulting from additional borrowings to fund growth in our loan portfolio, partially offset by an increase in adjusted equity. The increase in adjusted equity was primarily due to our adjusted net income of $224 million for YTD FY2024, partially offset by a decrease in equity of
$10 million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and
$113 million from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements during the period.
Debt Covenants
As part of our short-term and long-term borrowing arrangements, we are subject to various financial and operational covenants. If we fail to maintain specified financial ratios, such failure could constitute a default by CFC of certain covenants under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements and senior debt indentures. We were in compliance with all covenants and conditions under our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements and senior debt indentures as of February 29, 2024.
As discussed above in “Non-GAAP Financial Measures,” the financial covenants set forth in our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements and senior debt indentures are based on adju
sted financial measures, including adjusted TIER. We provide a reconciliation of adjusted TIER and other non-GAAP financial measures disclosed in this Report to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures below in “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations.” See “Item 7. MD&A—Non-GAAP Financial Measures” in our 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of each of our non-GAAP measures and an explanation of the adjustments to derive these measures.
MARKET RISK
Interest rate risk represents our primary source of market risk, as interest rate-volatility can have a significant impact on the earnings and overall financial condition of a financial institution. We are exposed to interest rate risk primarily from the differences in the timing between the maturity or repricing of our loans and the liabilities funding our loans. We seek to generate stable adjusted net interest income on a sustained and long-term basis by minimizing the mismatch between the cash flows from our financial assets and our financial liabilities. We use derivatives as a tool in matching the duration and repricing characteristics of our interest-rate sensitive assets and liabilities. We provide additional information on our management of interest rate risk in our 2023 Form 10-K under “Item 7. MD&A—Market Risk—Interest Rate Risk Management.” Below we discuss how we manage and measure interest rate risk.
Interest Rate Risk Assessment
Our Asset Liability Management (“ALM”) framework includes the use of analytic tools and capabilities, enabling CFC to generate a comprehensive profile of our interest rate risk exposure. We routinely measure and assess our interest rate risk exposure using various methodologies through the use of ALM models that enable us to accurately measure and monitor our interest rate risk exposure under multiple interest rate scenarios using several different techniques. Below we present two measures used to assess our interest rate risk exposure: (i) the interest rate sensitivity of projected net interest income and adjusted net interest income; and (ii) duration gap.
Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis
We regularly evaluate the sensitivity of our interest-earning assets and the interest-bearing liabilities funding those assets and our net interest income and adjusted net interest income projections under multiple interest rate scenarios. Each month we update our ALM models to reflect our existing balance sheet position and incorporate different assumptions about
forecasted changes in our balance sheet position over the next 12 months. Based on the forecasted balance sheet changes, we generate various projections of net interest income and adjusted net interest income over the next 12 months. Management reviews and assesses these projections and underlying assumptions to identify a baseline scenario of projected net interest income and adjusted net interest income over the next 12 months, which reflects what management considers, at the time, as the most likely scenario. As discussed under “Non-GAAP Financial Measures,” we derive adjusted net interest income by adjusting our reported interest expense and net interest income to include the impact of net derivative cash settlements amounts.
Our interest rate sensitivity analyses take into consideration existing interest rate-sensitive assets and liabilities as of the reported balance sheet date and forecasted changes to the balance sheet over the next 12 months under management’s baseline projection.
As discussed in the “Executive Summary—Outlook” section, we currently anticipate net long-term loan growth of $1,847 million over the next 12 months. We also expect that our variable-rate line of credit loans outstanding will remain at
approximately
the current level over the same period. Although t
he yield curve is expected to remain inverted throughout calendar year 2024, given the expected drop in short-term interest rates, the yield curve inversion is expected to narrow in 2024.
Based on our current forecast assumptions, including the yield curve forecast noted above, we project a slight increase in our reported net interest income, h
owever,
we expect a decrease in our reported net interest yield over the next 12 months compared to the 12-month period ended February 29, 2024. We also project a decrease in our adjusted net interest income and adjusted net interest yield over the next 12 months relative to the 12-month period ended February 29, 2024, primarily due to the current yield curve assumptions and our balance sheet position.
Table 25 presents the estimated percentage impact that a hypothetical instantaneous parallel shift of plus or minus 100 basis points in the interest rate yield curve, relative to our base case forecast yield curve, would have on our projected baseline 12-month net interest income and adjusted net i
nterest income as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. In instances where the hypothetical instantaneous interest rate shift of minus 100 basis points results in a negative interest rate, we assume an interest rate floor rate of 0% in a negative interest rate. We also present the estimated percentage impact on our projected baseline 12-month net interest income and adjusted net interest income assuming a hypothetical inverted yield curve under which shorter-term interest rates increase by an instantaneous 75 basis points and longer-term interest rates decrease by an instantaneous 75 basis points.
Table 25: Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Estimated Impact
(1)
+ 100 Basis Points
– 100 Basis Points
Inverted
+ 100 Basis Points
– 100 Basis Points
Inverted
Net interest income
(4.19)
%
4.30
%
(10.64)
%
(4.41)
%
4.70
%
(5.88)
%
Derivative cash settlements
12.34
%
(12.34)
%
10.31
%
11.50
%
(11.58)
%
9.38
%
Adjusted net interest income
(2)
8.14
%
(8.04)
%
(0.34)
%
7.09
%
(6.88)
%
3.50
%
____________________________
(1)
The actual impact on our reported and adjusted net interest income may differ significantly from the sensitivity analysis presented.
(2)
We include net periodic derivative cash settlement interest expense amounts as a component of interest expense in deriving adjusted net interest income. See the section “Non-GAAP Financial Measures and Reconciliations” for a reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures presented in this Report to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures.
The changes in the sensitivity measures between February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023 are p
rimarily attributable to changes in the size and composition of our forecasted balance sheet, as well as changes in current interest rates and forecasted interest rates. As the interest rate sensitivity simulations displayed in Table 25 indicate, we would expect an unfavorable impact on our projected net interest income over a 12-month horizon as of February 29, 2024, under the hypothetical scenario of an instantaneous parallel shift of plus 100 basis points in the interest rate yield curve and a further inverted yield curve. However, we would expect an unfavorable impact on our adjusted net interest income over a 12-month horizon as of February 29, 2024, under the hypothetical scenario of an instantaneous parallel shift of minus 100 basis points in the interest rate yield curve and a slight decline under a further inverted yield curve.
The duration gap, which represents the difference between the estimated duration of our interest-earning assets and the estimated duration of our interest-bearing liabilities, summarizes the extent to which the cash flows for assets and liabilities are matched over time. We use derivatives in managing the differences in timing between the maturities or repricing of our interest earning assets and the debt funding those assets. A positive duration gap indicates that the duration of our interest-earning assets is greater than the duration of our debt and derivatives, and therefore denotes an increased exposure to rising interest rates over the long term. Conversely, a negative duration gap indicates that the duration of our interest-earning assets is less than the duration of our debt and derivatives, and therefore denotes an increased exposure to declining interest rates over the long term. While the duration gap provides a relatively concise and simple measure of the interest rate risk inherent in our consolidated balance sheet as of the reported date, it does not incorporate projected changes in our consolidated balance sheet.
The duration gap widened slightly to negative 1.54 months as of February 29, 2024, from negative 1.34 months as of May 31, 2023 and was within the risk limits and guidelines established by CFC’s Asset Liability Committee as of each respective date. The slight widening of the duration gap is primarily due to an increase in line of credit loans outstanding of $407 million, which reduced the duration of interest-earning assets.
Limitations of Interest Rate Risk Measures
While we believe that the interest income sensitivities and duration gap measures provided are useful tools in assessing our interest rate risk exposure, there are inherent limitations in any methodology used to estimate the exposure to changes in market interest rates. These measures should be understood as estimates rather than as precise measurements. The interest rate sensitivity analyses only contemplate certain hypothetical movements in interest rates and are performed at a particular point in time based on the existing balance sheet and, in some cases, expected future business growth and funding mix assumptions. The strategic actions that management may take to manage our balance sheet may differ significantly from our projections, which could cause our actual interest income to differ substantially from the above sensitivity analysis. Moreover, as discussed above, we use various other methodologies to measure and monitor our interest rate risk under multiple interest rate scenarios, which, together, provide a comprehensive profile of our interest rate risk.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING ESTIMATES
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make a number of judgments, estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amount of assets, liabilities, income and expenses in our consolidated financial statements. Understanding our accounting policies and the extent to which we use management’s judgment and estimates in applying these policies is integral to understanding our financial statements. We provide a discussion of our significant accounting policies in “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Certain accounting estimates are considered critical because they involve significant judgments and assumptions about highly complex and inherently uncertain matters, and the use of reasonably different estimates and assumptions could have a material impact on our results of operations or financial condition. The determination of the allowance for expected credit losses over the remaining expected life of the loans in our loan portfolio involves a significant degree of management judgment and level of estimation uncertainty. As such, we have identified our accounting policy governing the estimation of the allowance for credit losses as a critical accounting estimate.
We describe our allowance methodology and process for estimating the allowance for credit losses under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies—Allowance for Credit Losses–Loan Portfolio—Current Methodology” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
We identify the key inputs used in determining the allowance for credit losses, discuss the assumptions that require the most significant management judgment and contribute to the estimation uncertainty and disclose the sensitivity of our allowance to hypothetical changes in the assumptions underlying the calculation of our reported allowance for credit losses under “Item 7. MD&A—Critical Accounting Estimates” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Management established policies and control procedures intended to ensure that the methodology used for determining our allowance for credit losses, including any judgments and assumptions made as part of such method, are well-controlled and applied consistently from period to period.
We regularly evaluate the key inputs and assumptions used in determining the allowance for credit losses and update them, as necessary, to better reflect present conditions, including current trends in credit performance and borrower risk profile, portfolio concentration risk, changes in risk-management practices, changes in the regulatory environment and other factors relevant to our loan portfolio segments. We did not change our allowance methodology or the nature of the underlying key inputs and assumptions used in measuring our allowance for credit losses during the current quarter.
We discuss the risks and uncertainties related to management’s judgments and estimates in applying accounting policies that have been identified as critical accounting estimates under “Item 1A. Risk Factors—Regulatory and Compliance Risks” in our 2023 Form 10-K. We provide additional information on the allowance for credit losses under the section “Credit Risk—Allowance for Credit Losses” and “Note 5—Allowance for Credit Losses” in this Report.
RECENT ACCOUNTING CHANGES AND OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
Recent Accounting Changes
We provide information on recently adopted accounting standards and the adoption impact on CFC’s consolidated financial statements and recently issued accounting standards not yet required to be adopted and the expected adoption impact in “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.” To the extent we believe the adoption of new accounting standards has had or will have a material impact on our consolidated results of operations, financial condition or liquidity, we discuss the impact in the applicable section(s) of this MD&A.
NON-GAAP FINANCIAL MEASURES AND RECONCILIATIONS
As discussed above in the section “Non-GAAP Financial Measures,” in addition to financial measures determined in accordance with U.S. GAAP, management evaluates performance based on certain non-GAAP financial measures, which we refer to as “adjusted” financial measures. Below we provide a reconciliation of our adjusted financial measures presented in this Report to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures. See “Item 7. MD&A—Non-GAAP Financial Measures” in our 2023 Form 10-K for a discussion of each of our non-GAAP financial measures and an explanation of the adjustments to derive these measures.
Net Income and Adjusted Net Income
Table 26 provides a reconciliation of adjusted interest expense, adjusted net interest income, adjusted total revenue and adjusted net income to the comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures. These adjusted financial measures are used in the calculation of our adjusted net interest yield and adjusted TIER.
Include: Derivative cash settlements interest income
(1)
38,342
18,634
94,978
12,650
Adjusted interest expense
(308,677)
(263,075)
(892,167)
(723,971)
Adjusted net interest income
$
103,158
$
90,217
$
289,611
$
260,493
Adjusted total revenue:
Net interest income
$
64,816
$
71,583
$
194,633
$
247,843
Fee and other income
5,025
5,326
16,173
13,548
Total revenue
69,841
76,909
210,806
261,391
Include: Derivative cash settlements interest income
(1)
38,342
18,634
94,978
12,650
Adjusted total revenue
$
108,183
$
95,543
$
305,784
$
274,041
Adjusted net income:
Net income
$
31,189
$
163,217
$
407,508
$
514,855
Exclude: Derivative forward value gains (losses)
(2)
(56,817)
83,674
183,372
330,035
Adjusted net income
$
88,006
$
79,543
$
224,136
$
184,820
____________________________
(1)
Represents the net periodic contractual interest income (expense) amount on our interest-rate swaps during the reporting period.
(2)
Represents the change in fair value of our interest rate swaps during the reporting period due to changes in expected future interest rates over the remaining life of our derivative contracts.
We primarily fund our loan portfolio through the issuance of debt. However, we use derivatives as economic hedges as part of our strategy to manage the interest rate risk associated with funding our loan portfolio. We therefore consider the interest income and expense incurred on our derivatives to be part of our funding cost in addition to the interest expense on our debt. As such, we add net periodic derivative cash settlements interest income and expense amounts to our reported interest expense to derive our adjusted interest expense and adjusted net interest income. We exclude unrealized derivative forward value gains and losses from our adjusted total revenue and adjusted net income.
TIER and Adjusted TIER
Table 27 displays the calculation of our TIER and adjusted TIER.
Table 27: TIER and Adjusted TIER
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
TIER
(1)
1.09
1.58
1.41
1.70
Adjusted TIER
(2)
1.29
1.30
1.25
1.26
____________________________
(1)
TIER is calculated based on our net income (loss) plus interest expense for the period divided by interest expense for the period.
(2)
Adjusted TIER is calculated based on adjusted net income (loss) plus adjusted interest expense for the period divided by adjusted interest expense for the period.
Liabilities and Equity and Adjusted Liabilities and Equity
Table 28 provides a reconciliation between our total liabilities and total equity and the adjusted amounts used in the calculation of our adjusted debt-to-equity ratio as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. As indicated in Table 28, subordinated debt is treated in the same manner as equity in calculating our adjusted-debt-to-equity ratio.
(2)
See Table 28 above for details on the calculation of these non-GAAP financial measures and the reconciliation to the most comparable U.S. GAAP financial measures.
(3)
Calculated based on adjusted total liabilities at period end divided by adjusted total equity at period end.
Total CFC Equity and Members
’
Equity
Members’ equity excludes the noncash impact of derivative forward value gains (losses) and foreign currency adjustments recorded in net income and amounts recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income. Because these amounts generally have not been realized, they are not available to members and are excluded by the CFC Board of Directors in determining the annual allocation of adjusted net income to patronage capital, to the members’ capital reserve and to other member funds. Table 30 provides a reconciliation of members’ equity to total CFC equity as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. We present the components of accumulated other comprehensive income in “Note 10—Equity.”
Table 30: Members’ Equity
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Members’ equity:
Total CFC equity
$
2,848,380
$
2,562,059
Exclude:
Accumulated other comprehensive income
853
8,343
Period-end cumulative derivative forward value gains attributable to CFC
(1)
525,096
342,624
Subtotal
525,949
350,967
Members’ equity
$
2,322,431
$
2,211,092
____________________________
(1)
Represents period-end cumulative derivative forward value gains for CFC only, as total CFC equity does not include the noncontrolling interests of the variable interest entit
ies,
which we are required to consolidate. We report the separate results of operations for CFC in “Note 14—Business Segments.” The period-end cumulative derivative forward value total gain amounts as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023 are presented above in Table 28.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE 1—SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
The Company
National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation (“CFC”) is a tax-exempt, member-owned cooperative association incorporated under the laws of the District of Columbia in April 1969. CFC’s principal purpose is to provide its members with financing to supplement the loan programs of the Rural Utilities Service (“RUS”) of the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”). CFC makes loans to its rural electric members so they can acquire, construct and operate electric distribution systems, electric generation and transmission (“power supply”) systems and related facilities. CFC also provides its members and associates with credit enhancements in the form of letters of credit and guarantees of debt obligations. As a cooperative, CFC is owned by and exclusively serves its membership, which consists of not-for-profit entities or subsidiaries or affiliates of not-for-profit entities.
Basis of Presentation and Use of Estimates
The accompanying unaudited interim consolidated financial statements have been prepared in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States (“U.S. GAAP”). These consolidated financial statements include the accounts of CFC and variable interest entities (“VIEs”) where CFC is the primary beneficiary. National Cooperative Services Corporation (“NCSC”) is a VIE that is required to be consolidated by CFC. NCSC is a taxable member-owned cooperative that may provide financing to members of CFC, government or quasi-government entities which own electric utility systems that meet the Rural Electrification Act definition of “rural,” its rural telecommunications members and their affiliates, and for-profit and nonprofit entities that are owned, operated or controlled by, or provide significant benefits to certain members of CFC. Previously, Rural Telephone Finance Cooperative (“RTFC”) qualified as a VIE that was required to be consolidated by CFC. RTFC was a taxable Subchapter T cooperative association that provided financing for its rural telecommunications members and their affiliates. Subsequent to December 1, 2023, in connection with the sale of RTFC’s business to NCSC, CFC is no longer a primary beneficiary of RTFC and therefore does not consolidate RTFC in its consolidated financial statements. See additional discussion
under “RTFC Sale Transaction” below.
All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated. Unless stated otherwise, references to “we,” “our” or “us” relate to CFC and its consolidated entity.
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts and rel
ated disclosures during the period. Management’s most significant estimates and assumptions involve determining the allowance for credit losses. These estimates are based on information available as of the date of the consolidated financial statements. While management makes its best judgments, actual amounts or results could differ from these estimates. In the opinion of management, these unaudited interim financial statements reflect all adjustments of a normal, recurring nature that are necessary for the fair statement of results for the periods presented.
The results in the interim financial statements included in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended February 29, 2024 (“this Report”) are
not necessarily indicative of results that may be expected for the full fiscal year, and the unaudited interim consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with our audited consolidated
financial statements included in CFC’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2023 (“2023 Form 10-K”).
Our fiscal year begins on June 1 and ends on May 31. Reference to “Q3 FY2024” and “YTD FY2024” refer to three and nine months ended February 29, 2024, respectively. Reference to “Q3 FY2023” and “YTD FY2023” refer to three and nine months ended February 28, 2023, respectively.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
RTFC Sale Transaction
On December 1, 2023, RTFC sold and transferred all of its loans and certain other assets and liabilities to NCSC
, which was accounted for pursuant to ASC 805-50 “Transactions between Entities under Common Control” as a sale of RTFC
’s business to NCSC (hereon referred to as the “RTFC sale transaction”). The transfer was recorded at R
TFC
’s
historical carrying amounts and therefore did not have an impact on the consolidated financial statements. In connection with the RTFC sale transaction, the CFC Board of Directors approved the early retirement of $
66
million of allocated but unretired CFC patronage capital to RTFC at a discounted amount of
$
41
million,
which was paid from CFC to RTFC in December 2023 and the remaining
$
25
million
was allocated to CFC
members
’
capital reserve as of February 29, 2024. Following the closing of the RTFC sale transaction on December 1, 2023, CFC concluded that it is no longer the primary beneficiary of RTFC and accordingly, deconsolidated RTFC from it
s
consolidated financial statements, resulting in a $
10
million reduction in noncontrolling interest primarily attributable to cash held by RTFC. We did
no
t record a gain or loss in association with CFC
’s
deconsolidation of RTFC.
New Accounting Standards Adopted in Fiscal Year 2024
Financial Instruments-Credit Losses, Troubled Debt Restructurings (“TDRs”) and Vintage Disclosures
In March 2022, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2022-02,
Financial Instruments—Credit Losses (Topic 326): Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures,
which addresses and amends areas identified by the FASB as part of its post-implementation review of the accounting standard that introduced the current expected credit losses (“CECL”) model. The amendments eliminate the accounting guidance for troubled debt restructurings (“TDR”) by creditors that have adopted the CECL model and enhance the disclosure requirements for loan refinancings and restructurings made with borrowers experiencing financial difficulty. In addition, the amendments require disclosure of current-period gross write-offs for financing receivables and net investment in leases by year of origination in the vintage disclosures. ASU 2022-02 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2022, including interim periods within those fiscal years for entities, such as CFC, that have adopted the CECL accounting standard. We adopted the guidance on June 1, 2023 using the prospective adoption method. Accordingly, we will continue to account for existing TDR loans pursuant to the prior TDR accounting guidance until the loans are subsequently modified or settled, and to provide the disclosure required for TDR loans for the comparative periods prior to the adoption. While the guidance resulted in expanded disclosures, it did not have an impact on our consolidated results of operation, financial condition or liquidity from adoption of this accounting standard.
New Accounting Standards Issued But Not Yet Adopted
Segment Reporting-Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures.
In November 2023, the FASB issued ASU 2023-07,
Segment Reporting (Topic 280): Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures,
which introduce key amendments to enhance disclosures for public entities’ reportable segments. The amendments require disclosure of significant segment expenses that are regularly provided to the chief operating decision maker (“CODM”) and included within each reported measure of segment profit or loss, an amount and description of its composition for other segment items to reconcile to segment profit or loss, and the title and position of the entity’s CODM. The amendments also expand the interim segment disclosure requirements. ASU 2023-07 is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2023, and interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024, with early adoption permitted and requires retrospective application to all prior periods presented in the financial statements. We expect to adopt the guidance in fiscal year 2025, and the interim disclosure requirements in the first quarter of fiscal year 2026. We are currently in the process of reviewing the guidance and evaluating its impact on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Disclosure Improvements-Codification Amendment in Response to the SEC’s Disclosure Update and Simplification Initiative
In October 2023, the FASB issued ASU 2023-06,
Disclosure Improvements - Codification Amendment in Response to the SEC’s Disclosure Update and Simplification Initiative
. The amendments in this update modify the disclosure or presentation requirements of a variety of Topics in the Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) in response to the SEC’s Release No. 33-10532, Disclosure Update and Simplification Initiative, and align the ASC’s requirements with the SEC’s regulations. For entities subject to the SEC’s existing disclosure requirements, the effective date for each amendment will be the date on which the SEC’s removal of that related disclosure from Regulation S-X or Regulation S-K becomes effective. However, if by June 30, 2027, the SEC has not removed the related disclosure from its regulations, the amendments will be removed from the Codification and not become effective. Early adoption is prohibited. We are currently in the process of evaluating the impact of the amendment on our consolidated financial statements and related disclosures.
NOTE 2—INTEREST INCOME AND INTEREST EXPENSE
The following table displays the components of interest income, by interest-earning asset type, and interest expense, by debt product type, presented on our consolidated statements of operations.
Table 2.1: Interest Income and Interest Expense
(Dollars in thousands)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
Interest income:
Loans
(1)
$
401,691
$
347,112
$
1,159,269
$
968,629
Cash, time deposits and investment securities
10,144
6,180
22,509
15,835
Total interest income
411,835
353,292
1,181,778
984,464
Interest expense:
(2)(3)
Short-term borrowings
71,485
50,639
192,909
116,034
Long-term debt
241,817
204,876
693,269
541,678
Subordinated debt
33,717
26,194
100,967
78,909
Total interest expense
347,019
281,709
987,145
736,621
Net interest income
$
64,816
$
71,583
$
194,633
$
247,843
____________________________
(1)
Includes loan conversion fees, which are generally deferred and recognized in interest income over the period to maturity using the effective interest method, late payment fees, commitment fees and net amortization of deferred loan fees and loan origination costs.
(2)
Includes amortization of debt discounts and debt issuance costs, which are generally deferred and recognized as interest expense over the period to maturity using the effective interest method. Issuance costs related to dealer commercial paper, however, are recognized in interest expense immediately as incurred.
(3)
Includes fees related to funding arrangements, such as up-front fees paid to banks participating in our committed bank revolving line of credit agreements. Based on the nature of the fees, the amount is either recognized immediately as incurred or deferred and recognized in interest expense ratably over the term of the arrangement.
Deferred income reported on our consolidated balance sheets of $
34
million and $
39
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, consists primarily of deferred loan conversion fees that totaled $
26
million and $
30
million as of each respective date.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE 3—INVESTMENT SECURITIES
Our investment securities portfolio consists of debt securities classified as trading and equity securities with readily determinable fair values. We therefore record changes in the fair value of our debt and equity securities in earnings and report these unrealized changes together with realized gains and losses from the sale of securities as a component of non-interest income in our consolidated statements of operations.
Debt Securities
The following table presents the composition of our investment debt securities portfolio and the fair value as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 3.1: Investments in Debt Securities, at Fair Value
(1)
Consists of securities backed by the Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”).
(2)
Consists primarily of securities backed by auto lease loans, equipment-backed loans, auto loans and credit card loans.
We recognized net unrealized gains on our debt securities of $
5
million and $
13
million for Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, respectively. We recognized net unrealized gains of $
2
million and net unrealized losses of $
7
million on our debt securities for Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, respectively.
We did not sell any debt securities during the
YTD FY2024 and YTD FY2023; therefore,
no
realized gains or losses were recorded during these periods for sale of securities.
Equity Securities
The following table presents the composition of our equity security holdings and the fair value as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 3.2: Investments in Equity Securities, at Fair Value
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Equity securities, at fair value:
Farmer Mac—Series C non-cumulative preferred stock
$
25,110
$
25,750
Farmer Mac—Class A common stock
11,535
9,744
Total equity securities, at fair value
$
36,645
$
35,494
We recognized net unrealized gains on our equity securities of $
1
million for both Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024. We recognized net unrealized losses on our equity securities of $
2
million and net unrealized gains of $
4
million for Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, respectively.
NOTE 4—LOANS
Our loan portfolio is segregated into segments by borrower member class, which is based on the utility sector of the borrowers because the key operational, infrastructure, regulatory, environmental, customer and financial risks of each sector are similar in nature. Total loan portfolio member class consists of CFC distribution, CFC power supply, CFC statewide and associate, NCSC electric and NCSC telecommunications (“telecom”). Prior to the RTFC sale transaction on December 1, 2023, NCSC electric and NCSC telecom were referred to as NCSC and RTFC, respectively.
We offer both long-term and line of credit loans to our borrowers. Under our long-term loan facilities, a borrower may select a fixed interest rate or a variable interest rate at the time of each loan advance. Line of credit loans are revolving loan facilities and generally have a variable interest rate.
Loans to Members
Loans to members consist of loans held for investment and loans held for sale. The outstand
ing amount of loans held for investment is recorded based on the unpaid principal balance, net of discounts, charge-offs and recoveries, of loans and deferred loan origination costs. The outstanding amount of loans held for sale is recorded based on the lower of cost or fair value.
The following table presents loans to members by legal entity, member class and loan type, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 4.1: Loans to Members by Member Class and Loan Type
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
% of Total
Amount
% of Total
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
26,876,308
78
%
$
25,437,077
78
%
Power supply
5,731,520
16
5,437,242
17
Statewide and associate
258,181
1
200,368
1
Total CFC
32,866,009
95
31,074,687
96
NCSC:
Electric
984,182
3
956,874
3
Telecom
548,521
2
487,788
1
Total NCSC
1,532,703
5
%
$
1,444,662
4
%
Total loans outstanding
(1)
34,398,712
100
32,519,349
100
Deferred loan origination costs—CFC
(2)
13,622
—
12,737
—
Loans to members
$
34,412,334
100
%
$
32,532,086
100
%
Loan type:
Long-term loans:
Fixed rate
$
30,059,233
88
%
$
28,371,358
87
%
Variable rate
809,585
2
1,024,653
3
Total long-term loans
30,868,818
90
29,396,011
90
Lines of credit
3,529,894
10
3,123,338
10
Total loans outstanding
(1)
34,398,712
100
32,519,349
100
Deferred loan origination costs—CFC
(2)
13,622
—
12,737
—
Loans to members
$
34,412,334
100
%
$
32,532,086
100
%
____________________________
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance, net of discounts, charge-offs and recoveries, of loans as of the end of each period.
(2)
Deferred loan origination costs are recorded on the books of CFC.
Loan Sales
We may transfer whole loans and participating interests to third partie
s. These transfers are typically made concurrently or within a short period of time with the closing of the loan sale or participation agreement at par value and meet the accounting criteria required for sale accounting.
We sold CFC and NCSC loans, at par for cash, totaling $
208
million and $
192
million during YTD FY2024 and
YTD FY2023
, respectively. We recorded immaterial losses on the sale of these loa
ns
attributable to the unamortized deferred loan origination costs associated with the transferred loans
.
We had loans held for sale totaling $
15
million as of
February 29, 2024, which were sold subsequent to the quarter end. We had
no
loans held for sale as of
May 31, 2023.
Accrued Interest Receivable
We report accrued interest on loans separately on our consolidated balance sheets as a component of the line item accrued interest receivable rather than as a component of loans to members. Accrued interest on loans totale
d $
149
million
and $
133
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Accrued interest receivable amounts generally represent
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
three months or less of accrued interest on loans outstanding. Because our policy is to write off past-due accrued interest receivable in a timely manner, we elected not to measure an allowance for credit losses for accrued interest receivable on loans outstanding. We also elected to exclude accrued interest receivable from the credit quality disclosures required under CECL.
Credit Concentration
Concentrations of credit may exist when a lender has large credit exposures to single borrowers, large credit exposures to borrowers in the same industry sector or engaged in similar activities or large credit exposures to borrowers in a geographic region that would cause the borrowers to be similarly impacted by economic or other conditions in the region. As a tax-exempt, member-owned finance cooperative, CFC’s principal focus is to provide funding to its rural electric utility cooperative members to assist them in acquiring, constructing and operating electric distribution systems, power supply systems and related facilities.
Because we lend primarily to our rural electric utility cooperative members, we have had a loan portfolio subject to single-industry and single-obligor concentration risks since our inception in 1969. Loans outstanding to electric utility organizations of $
33,850
million and $
32,032
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, accounted for
98
% and
99
% of total loans outstanding as of each respective
date. The remaining loans outstanding in our portfolio were to members, affiliates and associates in the telecommunications industry. Our credit exposure is partially mitigated by long-term loans guaranteed by RUS, which totaled
$
116
million an
d $
123
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Single-Obligor Concentration
The outstanding loan exposure for o
ur
20
largest borrowers totaled $
6,747
million and $
6,588
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, representing
20
% of total loans outstanding as of each respective date. Our
20
largest borrowers consisted of
12
distribution systems and
eight
power
supp
ly systems as of February 29, 2024 compared to
10
distribution systems and
10
power
supp
ly systems as of May 31, 2023. The largest total outstanding exposure to a single borrower or controlled group represented approximately
1
% of total loans outstanding as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
We entered into a long-term standby purchase commitment agreement with Farmer Mac during fiscal year 2016. Under this agreement, we may designate certain long-term loans to be covered under the commitment, subject to approval by Farmer Mac, and in the event any such loan later goes into payment default for at least 90 days, upon request by us, Farmer Mac must purchase such loan at par value. We are required to pay Farmer Mac a monthly fee based on the unpaid principal
balance of loans covered under the purchase commitment. The aggregate unpaid principal balance of designated and Farmer Mac approved loans was $
398
million and $
436
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Loan exposure to our
20
largest borrowers covered under the Fa
rmer Mac agreement totaled $
235
million and $
267
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, which reduced our exposure to the
20
largest borro
wers to
19
% as of each respective date.
We have had
no
loan defaults for loans covered under this agreement; therefore,
no
loa
ns have been put to Farmer Mac for purchase pursuant to the standby purchase agreement as of February 29, 2024. Our credit exposure is also mitigated by long-term loans guaranteed by RUS.
Geographic Concentration
Although our organizational structure and mission result in single-industry concentration, we serve a geographically diverse group of electric and telecommunications borrowers throughout the U.S. The consolidated number of borrowers with loans outstanding totaled
893
and
884
a
s of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, located in
49
states and the District of Columbia.
Of the
893
and
884
borrowers with loans outstanding,
50
and
52
were electric power supply borrowers
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Electric power supply borrowers generally require significantly more capital than electric distribution and telecommunications borrowers.
Texas accounted for the largest number of borrowers with loans outstanding in any one state as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, as well as the largest concentration of loan exposure.
The following table presents the Texas-based number of borrowers and loans outstanding by legal entity and member class, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 4.2: Loan Exposure to Texas-Based Borrowers
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of Borrowers
Amount
% of Total
Number of Borrowers
Amount
% of Total
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
57
$
4,446,098
13
%
57
$
4,319,937
13
%
Power supply
6
1,140,297
3
8
1,128,941
4
Statewide and associate
1
82,571
—
1
51,504
—
Total CFC
64
5,668,966
16
66
5,500,382
17
NCSC:
Electric
1
8,667
—
1
16,667
—
Telecom
2
10,764
—
2
11,755
—
Total NCSC
3
19,431
—
3
28,422
—
Total loan exposure to Texas-based borrowers
67
5,688,397
16
69
5,528,804
17
Less: Loans covered under Farmer Mac standby purchase commitment
(
132,866
)
—
(
155,409
)
—
Net loan exposure to Texas-based borrowers
$
5,555,531
16
%
$
5,373,395
17
%
Credit Quality Indicators
Assessing the overall credit quality of our loan portfolio and measuring our credit risk is an ongoing process that involves tracking payment status, modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty, nonperforming loans, charge-offs, the internal risk ratings of our borrowers and other indicators of credit risk. We monitor and subject each borrower and loan facility in our loan portfolio to an individual risk assessment based on quantitative and qualitative factors. Payment status trends and internal risk ratings are indicators, among others, of the probability of borrower default and overall credit quality of our loan portfolio.
Payment Status of Loans
Loans are considered delinquent when contractual principal or interest amounts become past due 30 days or more following the scheduled payment due date. Loans are placed on nonaccrual status when payment of principal or interest is 90 days or more past due or management determines that the full collection of principal and interest is doubtful.
The following table presents the payment status, by legal entity and member class, of loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 4.3: Payment Status of Loans Outstanding
February 29, 2024
(Dollars in thousands)
Current
30-89 Days Past Due
> 90 Days
Past Due
Total
Past Due
Total Loans Outstanding
Nonaccrual Loans
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
26,876,308
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
26,876,308
$
—
Power supply
5,731,520
—
—
—
5,731,520
84,987
Statewide and associate
258,181
—
—
—
258,181
—
Total CFC
32,866,009
—
—
—
32,866,009
84,987
NCSC:
Electric
984,182
—
—
—
984,182
—
Telecom
548,521
—
—
—
548,521
—
Total NCSC
1,532,703
—
—
—
1,532,703
—
Total loans outstanding
$
34,398,712
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
34,398,712
$
84,987
Percentage of total loans
100.00
%
—
%
—
%
—
%
100.00
%
0.25
%
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Current
30-89 Days Past Due
> 90 Days
Past Due
Total
Past Due
Total Loans Outstanding
Nonaccrual Loans
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
25,437,077
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
25,437,077
$
—
Power supply
5,432,895
—
4,347
4,347
5,437,242
112,209
Statewide and associate
200,368
—
—
—
200,368
—
Total CFC
31,070,340
—
4,347
4,347
31,074,687
112,209
NCSC:
Electric
920,159
36,715
—
36,715
956,874
—
Telecom
487,788
—
—
—
487,788
—
Total NCSC
1,407,947
36,715
—
36,715
1,444,662
—
Total loans outstanding
$
32,478,287
$
36,715
$
4,347
$
41,062
$
32,519,349
$
112,209
Percentage of total loans
99.87
%
0.11
%
0.02
%
0.13
%
100.00
%
0.35
%
We had
no
delinquent loans as of February 29, 2024. In comparison, we had
one
CFC electric power supply borrower, Brazos Sandy Creek Electric Cooperative Inc. (“Brazos Sandy Creek”), with a delinquent loan totaling $
4
million and
one
NCSC electric borrower with a delinquent loan of $
37
million as of May 31, 2023. The decrease in loans on nonaccrual status of $
27
million to $
85
million as of February 29, 2024, from $
112
million as of May 31, 2023 was due to
the receipt of loan principal payments from Brazos Electric Power Cooperative, Inc. (
“
Brazos
”
) and Brazos Sandy Creek during the three months ended August 31, 2023 (
“
Q1 FY2024
”
). We received a total of $
28
million in loan payments from Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek to repay their $
27
million of total loans outstanding in full during Q1 FY2024. The additional payments received of $
1
million were recorded as loan recoveries on the Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek previously charged-off loan amounts.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Loan Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing Financial Difficulty
We actively monitor problem loans and, from time to time, attempt to work with borrowers to manage such exposures through loan workouts or modifications that better align with the borrower’s current ability to pay. Therefore, as part of our loss mitigation efforts, we may provide modifications to a borrower experiencing financial difficulty to improve long-term collectability of the loan and to avoid the need for exercising remedies. We consider the impact of all loan modifications when estimating the credit quality of our loan portfolio and establishing the allowance for credit losses.
On June 1, 2023, we adopted
ASU 2022-02, Financial Instruments – Credit Losses (Topic 326) – Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures,
using the prospective adoption method.
The ASU eliminated the accounting guidance for TDRs and enhanced the disclosure requirements for loan refinancings and restructurings made with borrowers experiencing financial difficulty, which are to be applied prospectively. For additional information on the adoption of ASU 2022-02 see “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
We had
no
loan modifications to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty during Q3 FY2024. We had
one
loan modification to a NCSC telecom borrower experiencing financial difficulty during YTD FY2024. This loan received a term extension and had an amortized cost of $
3
million as of February 29, 2024, representing
1
% of the NCSC telecom loan portfolio. Loans modified to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty totaled $
3
million a
s of February 29, 2024, consisting of
one
NCSC telecom loan as discussed above, which was
performing in accordance with the terms of the loan agreement
. There were
no
unadvanced loan commitments related to this loan.
Troubled Debt Restructurings—Prior to the Adoption of ASU 2022-02
As discussed above, ASU 2022-02 eliminated the accounting guidance for TDRs. Prior to the adoption of ASU 2022-02, a loan restructuring or modification of terms was accounted for as a TDR if, for economic or legal reasons related to the borrower’s financial difficulties, a concession was granted to the borrower that we would not otherwise consider.
The following table presents the outstanding balance of modified loans accounted for as TDRs and the performance status, by legal entity and member class, of these loans as of May 31, 2023.
Table 4.4: Troubled Debt Restructurings
—
Prior to the Adoption of ASU 2022-02
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of Borrowers
Outstanding Amount
(1)
% of Total Loans Outstanding
TDR loans:
Member class:
CFC—Distribution
1
$
4,638
0.02
%
CFC—Power Supply
1
22,875
0.07
NCSC—Telecom
1
3,592
0.01
Total TDR loans
3
$
31,105
0.10
%
Performance status of TDR loans:
Performing TDR loans
2
$
8,230
0.03
%
Nonperforming TDR loans
1
22,875
0.07
Total TDR loans
3
$
31,105
0.10
%
____________________________
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance net of charge-offs and recoveries as of the end of each period.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
There were
no
unadvanced commitments related to these loans as of May 31, 2023.
We had loans outstanding to
two
borrowers totaling $
8
million which have been performing in accordance with the terms of their respective restructured loan agreement for an extended period of time and were classified as performing TDR loans and on accrual status as of May 31, 2023. We had loans outstanding to Brazos totaling $
23
million classified as nonperforming TDR loans during Q3 FY2023, which were on non-accrual status as of May 31, 2023. During Q1 FY2024, we received the remaining payment of Brazos’ loans outstanding of $
23
million in accordance with the provisions of Brazos’ plan of reorganization to repay its loans in full. Prior to the Brazos loan restructuring, we have not had any loan modifications that were required to be accounted for as TDRs since fiscal year 2016.
Nonperforming Loans
The following table presents the outstanding balance of nonperforming loans, by legal entity and member class, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. Loans classified as nonperforming are placed on nonaccrual status.
Table 4.5: Nonperforming Loans
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Number of Borrowers
Outstanding Amount
(1)
% of Total Loans Outstanding
Number of Borrowers
Outstanding Amount
(1)
% of Total Loans Outstanding
Nonperforming loans:
Member class:
CFC—Power supply
1
$
84,987
0.25
%
2
$
89,334
0.27
%
Total nonperforming loans
1
$
84,987
0.25
%
2
$
89,334
0.27
%
____________________________
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal balance net of charge-offs and recoveries as of the end of each period.
Nonperforming loans totaled $
85
million as of February 29, 2024, a decrease of $
4
million from
May 31, 2023,
due to the receipt
of $
4
million in loan payments from
Brazos Sandy Creek to pay off its nonperforming loan outstanding during Q1 FY2024, as discussed above. In March 2024, we received a $
36
million payment on the outstanding nonperforming loan, which reduced its balance to $
49
million as of the date of this Report.
Net Charge-Of
fs
We had
no
charge-offs or recoveries during Q3 FY2024 and
Q3 FY2023
. As mentioned above, during YTD FY2024
,
we recorded
$
1
million in net loan recoveries on the Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek previously charged-off loan amounts. In comparison, we
experienced net charge-offs totaling $
15
million for the CFC electric power supply loan portfolio related to Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek nonperforming loans during YTD FY2023, which resulted in an annualized net charge-off rate of
0.06
% for YTD FY2023. Prior to Brazos’ and Brazos Sandy Creek’s bankruptcy filings, we had
not
experienced any defaults or charge-offs in our electric utility and telecommunications loan portfolios since fiscal year 2013 and 2017, respectively.
Borrower Risk Ratings
As part of our management of credit risk, we maintain a credit risk rating framework under which we employ a consistent process for assessing the credit quality of our loan portfolio. We evaluate each borrower and loan facility in our loan portfolio and assign internal borrower and loan facility risk ratings based on the consideration of a number of quantitative and qualitative factors. Each risk rating is reassessed annually following the receipt of the borrower’s audited financial statements; however, interim risk-rating adjustments may occur as a result of updated information affecting a borrower’s ability to fulfill its obligations or other significant developments and trends. We categorize loans in our portfolio based on
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
our internally assigned borrower risk ratings, which are intended to assess the general creditworthiness of the borrower and probability of default. Our borrower risk ratings align with the U.S. federal banking regulatory agencies’ credit risk definitions of pass and criticized categories, with the criticized category further segmented among special mention, substandard and doubtful. Pass ratings reflect relatively low probability of default, while criticized ratings have a higher probability of default.
The following is a description of the borrower risk rating categories.
•
Pass
: Borrowers that are not
included in the categories of special mention, substandard or doubtful.
•
Special Mention
: Borrowers that may be characterized by a potential credit weakness or deteriorating financial condition that
is not sufficiently serious to warrant a classification of substandard or doubtful.
•
Substandard
: Borrowers that display a well-defined credit weakness that may jeopardize the full collection of principal and interest.
•
Doubtful
: Borrowers that have a well-defined credit weakness or weaknesses that make full collection of principal and interest, on the basis of currently known facts, conditions and collateral values, highly questionable and improbable.
Our internally assigned borrower risk ratings serve as the primary credit quality indicator for our loan portfolio. Because our internal borrower risk ratings provide important information on the probability of default, they are a key input in determining our allowance for credit losses.
Table 4.6 displays total loans outstanding, by borrower risk rating category and by legal entity and member class, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. The borrower risk rating categories presented below correspond to the borrower risk rating categories used in calculating our collective allowance for credit losses. If a parent company provides a guarantee of full repayment of loans of a subsidiary borrower, we include the loans outstanding in the borrower risk-rating category of the guarantor parent company rather than the risk rating category of the subsidiary borrower for purposes of calculating the collective allowance.
We present term loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024, by fiscal year of origination for each year during the five-year annual reporting period beginning in fiscal year
2020
, and in the aggregate for periods prior to fiscal year
2020
. The origination period represents the date CFC advances funds to a borrower, rather than the execution date of a loan facility for a borrower. Revolving loans are presented separately due to the nature of revolving loans. The substantial majority of loans in our portfolio represent fixed-rate advances under secured long-term facilities with terms up to
35
years, and as indicate
d in Table 4.6 below, term loan advances made to borrowers prior to fiscal year 2020 totaled $
17,832
million, representing
52
% of our total loans outstanding of $
34,399
million as of February 29, 2024. The average remaining maturity of our long-term loans, which accounted for
90
% of total loans outstanding as of February 29, 2024, was
19
years.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 4.6: Loans Outstanding by Borrower Risk Ratings and Origination Year
February 29, 2024
Term Loans by Fiscal Year of Origination
(Dollars in thousands)
YTD Q3 2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
Prior
Revolving Loans
Total
May 31, 2023
Pass
CFC:
Distribution
$
1,946,451
$
2,383,589
$
2,346,575
$
1,606,185
$
1,780,464
$
14,331,583
$
2,314,132
$
26,708,979
$
25,242,708
Power supply
505,264
456,871
329,193
539,450
171,567
2,914,894
729,294
5,646,533
5,325,033
Statewide and
associate
36,880
59,941
23,391
1,748
12,035
17,183
94,814
245,992
187,310
Total CFC
2,488,595
2,900,401
2,699,159
2,147,383
1,964,066
17,263,660
3,138,240
32,601,504
30,755,051
NCSC:
Electric
55,823
259,449
17,785
5,107
185,970
259,995
200,053
984,182
956,874
Telecom
89,204
47,966
76,837
66,373
24,102
191,143
49,716
545,341
484,196
Total NCSC
145,027
307,415
94,622
71,480
210,072
451,138
249,769
1,529,523
1,441,070
Total pass
$
2,633,622
$
3,207,816
$
2,793,781
$
2,218,863
$
2,174,138
$
17,714,798
$
3,388,009
$
34,131,027
$
32,196,121
Special mention
CFC:
Distribution
$
—
$
4,185
$
—
$
4,687
$
—
$
16,572
$
141,885
$
167,329
$
194,369
Statewide and
associate
—
—
—
—
—
12,189
—
12,189
13,058
Total CFC
—
4,185
—
4,687
—
28,761
141,885
179,518
207,427
NCSC telecom
—
—
—
—
—
3,180
—
3,180
3,592
Total special mention
$
—
$
4,185
$
—
$
4,687
$
—
$
31,941
$
141,885
$
182,698
$
211,019
Substandard
Total substandard
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Doubtful
CFC power supply
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
84,987
$
—
$
84,987
$
112,209
Total doubtful
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
84,987
$
—
$
84,987
$
112,209
Total criticized loans
$
—
$
4,185
$
—
$
4,687
$
—
$
116,928
$
141,885
$
267,685
$
323,228
Total loans outstanding
$
2,633,622
$
3,212,001
$
2,793,781
$
2,223,550
$
2,174,138
$
17,831,726
$
3,529,894
$
34,398,712
$
32,519,349
Criticized loans totaled $
268
million and $
323
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, and represented approxima
tely
1
%
of total loans outstanding as of each respective date. The decrease of $
55
million in criticized loans was primarily due to loan payments received from Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek in the doubtful category and a decrease in loans outstanding for
one
CFC electric distribution borrower in the special mention category during YTD FY2024
. Each of the borrowers with loans outstanding in the criticized category was current with regard to all principal and interest amounts due to us as of February 29, 2024. In contrast, each of the borrowers with loans outstanding in the criticized category, with the exception of Brazos Sandy Creek, was current with regard to all principal and interest amounts due to us as of May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Special Mention
One
CFC electric distribution borrower with loans outstan
ding of $
167
million a
nd $
194
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, accounted for the substantial majority of loans in the special mention loan category amount of $
183
million and $
211
million as of each respective date. This borrower experienced an adverse financial impact from restoration costs incurred to repair damage caused by
two
successive hurricane
s. We expect that the borrower will continue to receive grant funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the state where it is located for the full reimbursement of the hurricane damage-related restoration costs.
Substandard
We did
not
have any loans classified as substandard as of February 29, 2024 or May 31, 2023.
Doubtful
We had
one
loan outstanding classified as doubtful totaling $
85
million as of February 29, 2024 to a CFC electric power supply borrower. We had loans outstanding classified as doubtful totaling $
112
million as of May 31, 2023, consisting of an $
85
million loan outstanding to a CFC electric power supply borrower and $
27
million of loans outstanding to Brazos and Brazos Sandy Creek. See
“Troubled Debt Restructurings
—
Prior to the Adoption of ASU 2022-02”
and
“N
onperforming Loans
”
above for additional information on these loans.
Unadvanced Loan Commitments
Unadvanced loan commitments represent approved and executed loan contracts for which funds have not been advanced to borrowers.
The following table presents unadvanced loan commitments, by member class and by loan type, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 4.7: Unadvanced Commitments by Member Class and Loan Type
(1)
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
10,159,853
$
9,673,712
Power supply
4,361,646
3,995,128
Statewide and associate
237,250
175,150
Total CFC
14,758,749
13,843,990
NCSC:
Electric
622,080
604,436
Telecom
381,988
340,135
Total NCSC
1,004,068
944,571
Total unadvanced commitments
$
15,762,817
$
14,788,561
Loan type:
(2)
Long-term loans:
Fixed rate
$
—
$
—
Variable rate
6,072,610
5,669,634
Total long-term loans
6,072,610
5,669,634
Lines of credit
9,690,207
9,118,927
Total unadvanced commitments
$
15,762,817
$
14,788,561
____________________________
(1)
Excludes the portion of any commitment to advance funds under swingline loan facilities in excess of CFC’s total commitment amount in a syndicated credit facility. Other syndicate lenders have an absolute obligation to acquire participations in such swingline loans upon CFC’s election, including during a default by the borrower.
(2)
The interest rate on unadvanced loan commitments is not set until an advance is made; therefore, all unadvanced long-term loan commitments are reported as variable rate. However, the borrower may select either a fixed or a variable rate when an advance is drawn under a loan commitment.
The following table displays, by loan type, the available balance under unadvanced loan commitments as of February 29, 2024, and the related maturities in each fiscal year during the five-year period ended May 31, 2028, and thereafter.
Table 4.8: Unadvanced Loan Commitments
Available
Balance
Notional Maturities of Unadvanced Loan Commitments
(Dollars in thousands)
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
Thereafter
Line of credit loans
$
9,690,207
$
236,468
$
4,559,285
$
1,228,664
$
1,514,794
$
823,429
$
1,327,567
Long-term loans
6,072,610
195,323
692,126
617,431
1,148,164
1,510,517
1,909,049
Total
$
15,762,817
$
431,791
$
5,251,411
$
1,846,095
$
2,662,958
$
2,333,946
$
3,236,616
Unadvanced line of credit commitments accounted for
61
% of total unadvanced loan commitments as of February 29, 2024, while unadvanced long-term loan commitments accounted for
39
% of total unadvanced loan commitments. Unadvanced line of credit commitments are typically revolving facilities for periods not to exceed
five years
and generally serve as supplemental back-up liquidity to our borrowers. Historically, borrowers have not drawn the full commitment amount for line of credit facilities, and we have experienced a very low utilization rate on line of credit loan facilities regardless of whether or not we are obligated to fund the facility when a material adverse change has occurred.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Our unadvanced long-term loan commitments typically have a
five-year
draw period under which a borrower may draw funds prior to the expiration of the commitment. We expect that the majority of the long-term unadvanced loan commitme
nts of $
6,073
million will be advanced prior to the expiration of the commitment.
Because we historically have experienced a very low utilization rate on line of credit loan facilities, which account for the majority of our total unadvanced loan commitments, we believe the unadvanced loan commitment total of $
15,763
million as of February 29, 2024 is not necessarily representative of our future funding requirements.
Unadvanced Loan Commitments—Conditional
The substantial majority of our line of credit commitments and all of our unadvanced long-term loan commitments include
material adverse change clauses. Unadvanced loan commitments subject to material adverse change clauses totaled $
12,363
million and $
11,617
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. Prior to making an advance on these facilities, we confirm that there has been no material adverse change in the business or condition, financial or otherwi
se, of the borrower since the time the loan was approved and confirm that the borrower is currently in compliance with loan terms and conditions. In some cases, the borrower’s access to the full amount of the facility is further constrained by the designated purpose, imposition of borrower-specific restrictions or by additional conditions that must be met prior to advancing funds.
Unadvanced Loan Commitments—Unconditional
Unadvanced loan commitments not subject to material adverse change clauses at the time of each advance consisted of unadvanced committed lines of credit t
otaling $
3,400
million and $
3,172
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. We are required to advance amounts on these committed facilities as long as the borrower is in compliance with the terms and conditions of the facility.
The following table summarizes the available balance under unconditional committed lines of credit as of February 29, 2024, and the related maturity amounts in each fiscal year during the five-year period ending May 31, 2028, and thereafter.
Table 4.9: Unconditional Committed Lines of Credit—Available Balance
Available
Balance
Notional Maturities of Unconditional Committed Lines of Credit
(Dollars in thousands)
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
Thereafter
Committed lines of credit
$
3,399,772
$
4,641
$
405,062
$
374,300
$
1,023,660
$
722,639
$
869,470
Pledged Collateral—Loans
We are required to pledge eligible mortgage notes or other collateral in an amount at least equal to the outstanding balance of our secured debt.
Table 4.10 displays the borrowing amount under each of our secured borrowing agreements and the corresponding loans outstanding pledged as collateral as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. See “Note 6—Short-Term Borrowings” and “Note 7—Long-Term Debt” for information on our secured borrowings and other borrowings.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE 5—ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES
We are required to maintain an allowance based on a current estimate of credit losses that are expected to occur over the remaining term of the loans in our portfolio. Our allowance for credit losses consists of a collective allowance and an asset-specific allowance. The collective allowance is established for loans in our portfolio that share similar risk characteristics and are therefore evaluated on a collective, or pool, basis in measuring expected credit losses. The asset-specific allowance is established for loans in our portfolio that do not share similar risk characteristics with other loans in our portfolio and are therefore evaluated on an individual basis in measuring expected credit losses.
Allowance for Credit Losses—Loan Portfolio
The following tables summarize, by legal entity and member class, changes in the allowance for credit losses for our loan portfolio.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
The following tables present, by legal entity and member class, the components of our allowance for credit losses as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
(1)
Represents the unpaid principal amount of loans as of the end of each period. Excludes unamortized deferred loan origination costs of $
14
million and $
13
million
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
(2)
Calculated based on the collective allowance component at period end divided by collectively evaluated loans outstanding at period end.
(3)
Calculated based on the asset-specific allowance component at period end divided by individually evaluated loans outstanding at period end.
(4)
Calculated based on the total allowance for credit losses at period end divided by total loans outstanding at period end.
Our allowance for credit losses and allowance coverage ratio decreased to $
49
million and
0.14
%, respectively, as of February 29, 2024, from $
53
million and
0.16
%, respectively, as of May 31, 2023. The $
4
million decrease in the allowance for credit losses reflected a reduction in the asset-specific allowance of $
8
million, partially offset by an increase in the collective allowance of $
4
million.
The decrease in the
asset-specific allowance was primarily attributable to an increase in the expected payments on a nonperforming CFC power supply loan.
The increase in the collective allowance was primarily due to loan portfolio growth and a slight decline in the overall credit quality and risk profile of our loan portfolio.
Reserve for Credit Losses—Unadvanced Loan Commitments
In addition to the allowance for credit losses for our loan portfolio, we maintain an allowance for credit losses for unadvanced loan commitments, which we refer to as our reserve for credit losses because this amount is reported as a component of other liabilities on our consolidated balance sheets. We measure the reserve for credit losses for unadvanced loan commitments based on expected credit losses over the contractual period of our exposure to credit risk arising from our obligation to extend credit, unless that obligation is unconditionally cancellable by us. The reserve for credit losses related to our off-balance sheet exposure for unadvanced loan commitments was less than $
1
million as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NOTE 6—SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS
Short-term borrowings consist of borrowings with an original contractual maturity of
one year
or less and do not include the current portion of long-term debt. Our short-term borrowings totaled $
4,605
million and accounted for
14
% of total debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024, compared with $
4,546
million and
15
% of total debt outstanding as of May 31, 2023.
The following table provides information on our short-term borrowings as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 6.1: Short-Term Borrowings Sources
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Amount
% of Total Debt Outstanding
Amount
% of Total Debt Outstanding
Short-term borrowings:
Commercial paper:
Commercial paper dealers, net of discounts
$
898,956
3
%
$
1,293,167
4
%
Commercial paper members, at par
1,158,861
3
1,017,431
4
Total commercial paper
2,057,817
6
2,310,598
8
Select notes to members
1,285,682
4
1,630,799
5
Daily liquidity fund notes to members
279,548
1
238,329
1
Medium-term notes to members
481,579
1
366,549
1
Farmer Mac notes payable
(1)
500,000
2
—
—
Total short-term borrowings
$
4,604,626
14
%
$
4,546,275
15
%
____________________________
(1)
Advanced under the revolving purchase agreement with Farmer Mac dated March 24, 2011. See “Note 7—Long-Term Debt” for additional information on this revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Committed Bank Revolving Line of Credit Agreements
The following table presents the amount available for access under our bank revolving line of credit agreements as of February 29, 2024.
Table 6.2: Committed Bank Revolving Line of Credit Agreements Available Amounts
February 29, 2024
(Dollars in millions)
Total Commitment
Letters of Credit Outstanding
Available Amount
Maturity
Annual Facility Fee
(1)
Bank revolving agreements:
3
-year agreement
$
150
$
—
$
150
November 28, 2025
7.5
bps
3
-year agreement
1,195
—
1,195
November 28, 2026
7.5
bps
Total
3
-year agreement
1,345
—
1,345
4
-year agreement
150
—
150
November 28, 2026
10.0
bps
4
-year agreement
1,305
2
1,303
November 28, 2027
10.0
bps
Total
4
-year agreement
1,455
2
1,453
Total
$
2,800
$
2
$
2,798
____________________________
(1)
Facility fee determined by CFC’s senior unsecured credit ratings based on the pricing schedules put in place at the inception of the related agreement.
On November 20, 2023, we amended the
three-year
and
four-year
committed bank revolving line of credit agreements to extend the maturity dates to November 28, 2026 and November 28, 2027, respectively, and to include a $
100
million swingline facility under each agreement. In connection with the amendments to the revolving line of credit agreements, commitments from the existing banks increased by $
100
million under each of the
three-year
and
four-year
revolving credit agreements. Commitments of $
150
million under each agreement will expire at the prior maturity dates of November 28, 2025 and November 28, 2026. The total commitment amount under the
three-year
facility and the
four-year
facility was $
1,345
million and $
1,455
million, respectively, resulting in a combined total commitment amount under the
two
facilities of $
2,800
million. These agreements allow us to request up to $
300
million of letters of credit, which, if requested, results in a reduction in the total amount available for our use. We were in compliance with all covenants and conditions under the agreements as of February 29, 2024.
NOTE 7—LONG-TERM DEBT
The following table displays, by debt product type, long-term debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. Long-term debt outstanding totaled $
25,452
million and accounted for
78
% of total debt outstanding as of February 29, 2024, compared with $
23,947
million and
77
% of total debt outstanding as of May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 7.1: Long-Term Debt by Debt Product Type
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Secured long-term debt:
Collateral trust bonds
$
6,937,711
$
7,792,711
Unamortized discount, net
(
169,639
)
(
178,832
)
Debt issuance costs
(
32,372
)
(
35,906
)
Total collateral trust bonds
6,735,700
7,577,973
Guaranteed Underwriter Program notes payable
6,843,623
6,720,643
Farmer Mac notes payable
3,382,761
3,149,898
Other secured notes payable
—
1,098
Debt issuance costs
—
(
2
)
Total other secured notes payable
—
1,096
Total secured notes payable
10,226,384
9,871,637
Total secured long-term debt
16,962,084
17,449,610
Unsecured long-term debt:
Medium-term notes sold through dealers
8,182,741
6,152,726
Medium-term notes sold to members
337,827
365,260
Medium term notes sold through dealers and to members
8,520,568
6,517,986
Unamortized premium, net
(
1,318
)
4
Debt issuance costs
(
29,703
)
(
21,122
)
Total unsecured medium-term notes
8,489,547
6,496,868
Unsecured notes payable
—
71
Unamortized discount
—
(
1
)
Total unsecured notes payable
—
70
Total unsecured long-term debt
8,489,547
6,496,938
Total long-term debt
$
25,451,631
$
23,946,548
Secured Debt
Long-term secured debt of $
16,962
million and $
17,450
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, represented
67
% and
73
% of total long-term debt outstanding as of each respective date. We were in compliance with all covenants and conditions under our debt indentures as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. We are required to pledge eligible mortgage notes in an amount at least equal to the outstanding balance of our secured debt. See “Note 4—Loans” for information on pledged collateral under our secured debt agreements.
Collateral Trust Bonds
Collateral trust bonds represent secured obligations sold to investors in the capital markets. Collateral trust bonds are secured by the pledge of mortgage notes or eligible securities in an amount at least equal to the principal balance of the bonds outstanding. We repaid $
855
million of collateral trust bonds that matured during YTD FY2024.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Guaranteed Underwriter Program Notes Payable
We borrowed
$
275
million and repaid $
152
million of note
s payable outstanding under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program during YTD FY2024. We had up to $
1,200
million available for access under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program as of February 29, 2024.
On December 19, 2023, we closed on a $
450
million Series U committed loan facility from the U.S. Treasury Department’s Federal Financing Bank under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program. Pursuant to this facility, we may borrow any time before July 15, 2028. Each advance is subject to quarterly amortization and a final maturity not longer than
30
years from the date of the advance.
The notes outstanding under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program contain a provision that if during any portion of the fiscal year, our senior secured credit ratings do not have at least two of the following ratings: (i) A3 or higher from Moody’s Investors Service (“Moody’s”), (ii) A- or higher from S&P Global Inc. (“S&P”), (iii) A- or higher from Fitch Ratings (“Fitch”) or (iv) an equivalent rating from a successor rating agency to any of the above rating agencies, we may not make cash patronage capital distributions in excess of
5
% of total patronage capital. We are required to pledge eligible distribution system or power supply system loans as collateral in an amount at least equal to the total principal amount of notes outstanding under the Guaranteed Underwriter Program.
Farmer Mac Notes Payable
We have a revolving note purchase agreement with Farmer Mac under which we can borrow up to $
6,000
million from Farmer Mac at any time, subject to market conditions, through June 30, 2027. The agreement has successive automatic
one-year
renewals b
eginning June 30, 2026, unless Farmer Mac provides
425
days’
written notice of non-renewal. Pursuant to this revolving note purchase agreement, we can borrow, repay and re-borrow funds at any time through maturity, as market conditions permit, provided that the outstanding principal amount at any time does not exceed the total available under the agreement. Each borrowing under the revolving note purchase agreement is evidenced by a pricing agreement setting forth the interest rate, maturity date and other related terms as we may negotiate with Farmer Mac at the time of each such borrowing. We may select a fixed rate or variable rate at the time of each advance with a maturity as determined in the applicable p
ricing agreement.
We borrowed a total of $
300
million in principal amount of long-term notes payable under the Farmer Mac note purchase agreement during YTD FY2024.
The amount outstanding under this agreement included $
500
million of short-term borrowings and $
3,383
million of long-term debt as of February 29, 2024. The amount availab
le for borrowing totaled $
2,117
million as of February 29, 2024. We are required to pledge eligible electric distribution system or electric power supply system loans as collateral in an amount at least equal to the total principal amount of notes outstanding under this agreement.
Unsecured Debt
Long-term unsecured debt of $
8,490
million and $
6,497
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, represented
33
% and
27
% of long-term debt outstanding as of each respective date.
Medium-Term Notes
Medium-term notes represent unsecured obligations that may be issued through dealers in the capital markets or directly to our members. During YTD FY2024, w
e issued an aggregate principal amount of dealer medium-term notes totaling $
2,350
million with an average fixed interest rate of
5.03
% and an average term of
five years
, and an aggregate principal amount of dealer medium-term notes totaling $
600
million with floating interest rates and an average term of
two years
. We repaid $
900
million in principal amount of dealer medium-term notes that matured during
YTD FY2024
.
See “Note 7—Long-Term Debt” in our 2023 Form 10-K for additional information on our various long-term debt product types.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
NOTE 8—SUBORDINATED DEFERRABLE DEBT
Subordinated deferrable debt represents long-term debt that is subordinated to all debt other than subordinated certificates held by our members. We had subordinated deferrable debt outstanding of $
1,287
million and $
1,283
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. On June 26, 2023, we redeemed $
100
million in principal amount of our $
400
million subordinated deferrable debt due 2043, at par plus accrued interest. As a result, we recognized $
1
million of losses on early extinguishment of debt related to unamortized debt issuance costs in our consolidated statements of operations for YTD FY2024.
On February 8, 2024, we issued $
100
million of
7.125
% subordinated deferrable debt due 2053, which pays interest semi-annually, may be called at par every
five years
, resets to a new fixed rate every
five years
based on the five-year U.S. Treasury rate plus a spread of
3.533
% and allows us to defer the payment of interest for one or more consecutive interest periods not exceeding
20
consecutive semi-annual periods. To date, we have not exercised our right to defer interest payments. See “Note 8—Subordinated Deferrable Debt” in our 2023 Form 10-K for additional information on the terms and conditions, including maturity and call dates, of our subordinated deferrable debt outstanding.
NOTE 9—DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING ACTIVITIES
We are an end user of derivative financial instruments and do not engage in derivative trading. Derivatives may be privately negotiated contracts, which are often referred to as over-the-counter (“OTC”) derivatives, or they may be listed and traded on an exchange. We generally engage in OTC derivative transactions. Our derivative instruments are an integral part of our interest rate risk-management strategy. Our principal purpose in using derivatives is to manage our aggregate interest rate risk profile within prescribed risk parameters. The derivative instruments we use primarily consist of interest rate swaps, which we typically hold to maturity. In addition, we may
use Treasury locks to manage the interest rate risk associated with future debt issuance or debt that is scheduled to reprice in the future. We provide a discussion of our accounting for derivatives policy in “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Notional Amount of Derivatives Not Designated as Accounting Hedges
The notional amount is used only as the basis on which interest payments are determined and is not the amount exchanged, nor recorded on our consolidated balance sheets.
The following table shows, by derivative instrument type, the notional amount, the weighted-average rate paid and the weighted-average interest rate received for our interest rate swaps as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. For the substantial majority of interest rate swap agreements, the daily
compounded
Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) is used as the basis for determining variable interest payment amounts each period.
Table 9.1: Derivative Notional Amount and Weighted Average Rates
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Cash Flow Hedges
On November 3, 2023, we executed
two
Treasury lock agreements with an aggregate notional amount of $
300
million to hedge interest rate risk by locking in the underlying U.S. Treasury interest rate component of interest rate payments on anticipated debt issuances. The Treasury locks were designated and qualified as cash flow hedges. On November 7, 2023, we terminated the Treasury locks upon the pricing of the $
300
million of notes payable under our Farmer Mac revolving note purchase agreement and recorded a net settlement gain of less than $
1
million in accumulated other comprehensive income (“AOCI”), which is reclassified into interest expense over the term of the related Farmer Mac borrowings. We did not have any derivatives designated as accounting hedges as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
In January 2023, we executed
two
Treasury lock agreements with an aggregate notional amount of $
300
million to hedge interest rate risk on anticipated debt issuances. The agreements, which were scheduled to mature on December 2023, were designated as a cash flow hedge of a forecasted transaction. In February 2023, we terminated the Treasury locks and recorded a settlement gain of $
8
million in AOCI. As the hedged forecasted transaction did not occur in the time period specified in the hedge documentation, we reclassified the $
8
million gain from AOCI to earnings as a component of derivative gains (losses) on our consolidated statements of operations during Q3 FY2024.
Impact of Derivatives on Consolidated Balance Sheets
The following table displays the fair value of the derivative assets and derivative liabilities, by derivatives type, recorded on our consolidated balance sheets and the related outstanding notional amount as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
Table 9.2: Derivative Assets and Liabilities at Fair Value
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Fair Value
Notional Amount
Fair Value
Notional Amount
(1)
Derivative assets:
Interest rate swaps
$
616,640
$
5,717,705
$
460,762
$
5,405,274
Total derivative assets
$
616,640
$
5,717,705
$
460,762
$
5,405,274
Derivative liabilities:
Interest rate swaps
$
87,809
$
1,627,232
$
115,074
$
2,410,840
Total derivative liabilities
$
87,809
$
1,627,232
$
115,074
$
2,410,840
____________________________
(1)
The notional amount as of May 31, 2023 includes $
196
million notional amount of forward starting swaps, as shown above in Table 9.1: Derivative Notional Amount and Weighted-Average Rates, with an effective start date in YTD FY2024. The fair value of these swaps as of May 31, 2023 is included in the above table and in our consolidated financial statements.
All of our master swap agreements include netting provisions that allow for offsetting of all contracts with a given counterparty in the event of default by one of the two parties. However, we report derivative asset and liability amounts on a gross basis by individual contract.
The following table presents the gross fair value of derivative assets and liabilities reported on our consolidated balance sheets as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, and provides information on the impact of netting provisions under our master swap agreements and collateral pledged, if any.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 9.3: Derivative Gross and Net Amounts
February 29, 2024
Gross Amount
of Recognized
Assets/ Liabilities
Gross Amount
Offset in the
Balance Sheet
Net Amount of Assets/ Liabilities
Presented
in the
Balance Sheet
Gross Amount
Not Offset in the
Balance Sheet
(Dollars in thousands)
Financial
Instruments
Cash
Collateral
Pledged
Net
Amount
Derivative assets:
Interest rate swaps
$
616,640
$
—
$
616,640
$
86,356
$
—
$
530,284
Derivative liabilities:
Interest rate swaps
87,809
—
87,809
86,356
—
1,453
May 31, 2023
Gross Amount
of Recognized
Assets/ Liabilities
Gross Amount
Offset in the
Balance Sheet
Net Amount of Assets/ Liabilities
Presented
in the
Balance Sheet
Gross Amount
Not Offset in the
Balance Sheet
(Dollars in thousands)
Financial
Instruments
Cash
Collateral
Pledged
Net
Amount
Derivative assets:
Interest rate swaps
$
460,762
$
—
$
460,762
$
112,047
$
—
$
348,715
Derivative liabilities:
Interest rate swaps
115,074
—
115,074
112,047
—
3,027
Impact of Derivatives on Consolidated Statements of Operations
The primary factors affecting the fair value of our derivatives and the derivative gains (losses) recorded in our consolidated statements of operations include changes in interest rates, the shape of the swap curve and the composition of our derivative portfolio. We generally record derivative losses when interest rates decline and derivative gains when interest rates rise, as our derivative portfolio consists of a higher proportion of pay-fixed swaps than receive-fixed swaps.
The following table presents the components of the derivative gains (losses) reported in our consolidated statements of operations. Derivative cash settlements interest expense represents the net periodic contractual interest amount for our interest-rate swaps during the reporting period. Derivative forward value gains (losses) represent the change in fair value of our interest rate swaps during the reporting period due to changes in expected future interest rates over the remaining life of our derivative contracts. We classify the derivative cash settlement amounts for the net periodic contractual interest expense on our interest rate swaps as an operating activity in our consolidated statements of cash flows.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Credit Risk-Related Contingent Features
Our derivative contracts typically contain mutual early-termination provisions, generally in the form of a credit rating trigger. Under the mutual credit rating trigger provisions, either counterparty may, but is not obligated to, terminate and settle the agreement if the credit rating of the other counterparty falls below a level specified in the agreement. If a derivative contract is terminated, the amount to be received or paid by us would be equal to the prevailing fair value, as defined in the agreement, as of the termination date.
During YTD FY2024, Fitch, S&P and Moody’s affirmed CFC’s credit ratings and stable outlook.
Our senior unsecured credit ratings from Moody’s, S&P and Fitch wer
e A2, A- and A,
respectively, as of February 29, 2024. Moody’s, S&P and Fitch had our ratings on
stable
outlook as of February 29, 2024.
Our credit ratings and outlook remain unchanged as of the date of this Report.
The following table displays the notional amounts of our derivative contracts with rating triggers as of February 29, 2024, and the payments that would be required if the contracts were terminated as of that date because of a downgrade of our unsecured credit ratings or the counterparty’s unsecured credit ratings below A3/A-, below Baa1/BBB+, to or below Baa2/BBB, or to or below Ba2/BB+ by Moody’s or S&P, respectively. In calculating the payment amounts that would be required upon termination of the derivative contracts, we assume that amounts for each counterparty would be netted in accordance with the provisions of the master netting agreements with the counterparty. The net payment amounts are based on the fair value of the underlying derivative instrument, excluding the credit risk valuation adjustment, plus any unpaid accrued interest amounts.
(1)
Rating trigger for CFC falls below A3/A-, while rating trigger for counterparty falls below Baa1/BBB+ by Moody’s or S&P, respectively.
(2)
Rating trigger for CFC falls to or below Baa2/BBB, while rating trigger for counterparty falls to or below Ba2/BB+ by Moody’s or S&P, respectively.
We have interest rate swaps with
one
counterparty that are subject to a ratings trigger and early termination provision in the event of a downgrade of CFC’s senior unsecured credit ratings below Baa3, BBB- or BBB- by Moody’s, S&P or Fitch, respectively. The outstanding notional amount of these swaps, which is not included in the above table, totaled $
220
million as of February 29, 2024. These swaps were in an unrealized gain position of $
35
million as of February 29, 2024.
The aggregate fair value amount, including the credit valuation adjustment, of all interest rate swaps with rating triggers that were in a net liability position was $
1
million as of February 29, 2024.
Derivative Counterparty Credit Exposure
Our interest-rate swap contracts are subject to credit risk associated with counterparties to these derivative contracts. As mentioned above, we generally engage in OTC derivative transactions, which expose us to individual counterparty credit risk because these transactions are executed and settled directly between us and each counterparty. To manage this risk, we diversify our derivative positions among counterparties with investment-grade credit ratings, perform an internal credit risk
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
analysis and maintain enforceable master netting arrangements, allowing us to net derivative assets and liabilities with the same counterparty. The fair value of our derivatives includes credit valuation adjustments reflecting counterparty credit risk.
We had
12
active derivative counterparties with credit ratings ranging from Aa1 to Baa1 by Moody’s as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, and from AA- to BBB+ and AA- to A- by S&P as of February 29, 2024 an
d May 31, 2023, respectively. Our largest counterparty exposure, based on the outstanding notional amount, accounted for approximately
24
% and
23
% of the total outstanding notional amount of our derivatives as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. We believe our exposure to derivative counterparty risk, at any point in time, is equal to the amount of our outstanding derivatives in a net gain position, at the individual counterparty level based on the legally enforceable netting provisions under our master swap agreements,
which totaled
$
530
million
and
$
349
million
as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, as presented in Table
9.3
above.
NOTE 10—EQUITY
Total equity increased $
279
million to $
2,868
million as of February 29, 2024 compared to May 31, 2023. The increase was attributable primarily to our reported net income of $
408
million for YTD FY2024, partially offset by a decrease in equity of
$
10
million from
CFC
’
s deconsolidation of RTFC and $
113
million
from CFC Board of Directors’ authorized patronage capital retirements
during the period, as discussed below.
Allocation of Net Earnings and Retirement of Patronage Capital
The amount of patronage capital allocated each year by CFC’s Board of Directors is based on adjusted net income, which excludes the impact of derivative forward value gains (losses). See “MD&A—Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for information on adjusted net income. In May 2023, the CFC Board of Directors authorized the allocation of $
1
million of net earnings for fiscal year 2023 to the cooperative educational fund. In July 2023, the CFC Board of Directors authorized the allocation of net earnings for fiscal year 2023 as follows: $
110
million to members in the form of patronage capital and $
140
million to the members’ capital reserve.
In July 2023, the CFC Board of Directors also authorized the retirement of allocated net earnings totaling $
72
million, of which $
55
million represented
50
% of the patronage capital allocation for fiscal year 2023 and $
17
million represented the portion of the allocation from net earnings for fiscal year 1998 that had been held for
25
years pursuant to the CFC Board of Directors’ polic
y.
The authorized patronage capital retirement amount of $
72
million was returned to members in cash in September 2023.
The remaining portion of the patronage capital allocation for fiscal year 2023 will be retained by CFC for
25
years pursuant to the guidelines adopt
ed by the CFC Board of Directors in June 2009.
In connection with the RTFC sale transaction, the CFC Board of Directors approved the early retirement of $
66
million of allocated but unretired CFC patronage capital to RTFC at a discounted amount of
$
41
million,
which was paid from CFC to RTFC in December 2023 and the remaining
$
25
million
was allocated to CFC
members
’
capital reserve as of February 29, 2024.
See “Note 11—Equity” in our 2023 Form 10-K for additional information on our policy for allocation and retirement of patronage capital.
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
The following table presents, by component, changes in AOCI for the periods presented and the balance of each component as of the end of each respective period.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 10.1: Changes in Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
Q3 FY2024
Q3 FY2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Unrealized Gains on Derivative Hedges
(1)
Unrealized Losses on Defined Benefit Plans
(2)
Total
Unrealized Gains on Derivative Hedges
(1)
Unrealized Losses on Defined Benefit Plans
(2)
Total
Beginning balance
$
11,271
$
(
2,653
)
$
8,618
$
4,745
$
(
2,665
)
$
2,080
Changes in unrealized gains
—
—
—
6,691
—
6,691
Realized (gains) losses reclassified to earnings
(
7,818
)
53
(
7,765
)
(
177
)
100
(
77
)
Ending balance
$
3,453
$
(
2,600
)
$
853
$
11,259
$
(
2,565
)
$
8,694
YTD FY2024
YTD FY2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Unrealized Gains on Derivative Hedges
(1)
Unrealized Losses on Defined Benefit Plans
(2)
Total
Unrealized Gains on Derivative Hedges
(1)
Unrealized Losses on Defined Benefit Plans
(2)
Total
Beginning balance
$
11,102
$
(
2,759
)
$
8,343
$
5,123
$
(
2,865
)
$
2,258
Changes in unrealized gains
483
—
483
6,691
—
6,691
Realized (gains) losses reclassified to earnings
(
8,132
)
159
(
7,973
)
(
555
)
300
(
255
)
Ending balance
$
3,453
$
(
2,600
)
$
853
$
11,259
$
(
2,565
)
$
8,694
____________________________
(1)
Of the derivative gains reclassified to earnings, a portion is reclassified as a component of the derivative gains (losses) line item and the remainder is reclassified as a component of the interest expense line item on our consolidated statements of operations.
(2)
Reclassified to earnings as a component of the other non-interest expense line item presented on our consolidated statements of operations.
See “Note 9—Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities” for discussion on our
derivatives designated as accounting hedges.
We expect to reclassify realized net gains of $
1
million attributable to derivative cash flow hedges from AOCI into earnings over the next 12 months.
NOTE 11—GUARANTEES
We guarantee certain contractual obligations of our members so they may obtain various forms of financing. We use the same credit policies and monitoring procedures in providing guarantees as we do for loans and commitments. If a member system defaults on its obligation to pay debt service, then we are obligated to pay any required amounts under our guarantees. Meeting our guarantee obligations satisfies the underlying obligation of our member systems and prevents the exercise of remedies by the guarantee beneficiary based upon a payment default by a member system. In general, the member system is required to repay any amount advanced by us with interest, pursuant to the documents evidencing the member system’s reimbursement obligation.
The following table displays the notional amount of our outstanding guarantee obligations, by guarantee type and by member class, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Table 11.1: Guarantees Outstanding by Type and Member Class
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Guarantee type:
Long-term tax-exempt bonds
(1)
$
75,005
$
98,405
Letters of credit
(2)(3)
718,662
538,393
Other guarantees
185,402
160,023
Total
$
979,069
$
796,821
Member class:
CFC:
Distribution
$
465,158
$
383,644
Power supply
438,408
380,382
Statewide and associate
(4)
26,714
17,532
CFC total
930,280
781,558
NCSC
48,789
15,263
Total
$
979,069
$
796,821
____________________________
(1)
Represents the outstanding principal amount of long-term variable-rate guaranteed bonds.
(2)
Reflects our maximum potential exposure for letters of credit, which also includes interest due, if any.
(3)
Under a hybrid letter of credit facility, we had $
30
million of commitments that may be used for the issuance of letters of credit as of February 29, 2024.
(4)
Includes CFC guarantees to NCSC telecom memb
ers totaling $
25
million
and $
16
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
We had guarantees outstanding totaling $
979
million and $
797
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Guarantees under which our right of recovery from our members was not secured totaled $
679
million and $
535
million and represented
69
% and
67
% of total guarantees as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively.
Long-term tax-exempt bonds of $
75
million and $
98
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively,
consist of adjustable or variable-rate bonds that may be converted to a fixed rate as specified in the applicable indenture for each bond offering. We are unable to determine the maximum amount of interest that we may be required to pay related to the remaining adjustable and variable-rate bonds. Many of these bonds have a call provision that allows us to call the bond in the event of a default, which would limit our exposure to future interest payments on these bonds. Our maximum potential exposure generally is secured by mortgage liens on the members’ assets and future revenue. If a member’s debt is accelerated because of a determination that the interest thereon is not tax-exempt, the member’s obligation to reimburse us for any guarantee payments will be treated as
a long-term loan. The maturities for long-term tax-exempt bonds and the related guarantees extend through calendar year 2037.
Of the outstanding letters of credit of $
719
million and $
538
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, $
200
million and $
138
million were secured at each respective date. The maturities for the outstanding letters of credit as of February 29, 2024 extend through calendar year
2044.
In addition to the letters of credit listed in the table above, under master letter of credit facilities in place as of February 29, 2024, we may be required to issue up to an additio
nal $
129
million in letters of credit to third parties for the benefit of our members. All of our master letter of credit facilities were subject to ma
terial adverse change clauses at the time of issuance as of February 29, 2024. Prior to issuing a letter of credit, we would confirm that there has been no material adverse change in the business or condition, financial or otherwise, of the borrower since the master letter of credit facility was approved and confirm that the borrower is currently in compliance with the terms and conditions of the agreement governing the facility.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
The maximum potential exposure for other guarantees was $
185
million and $
160
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively, of which $
25
million was secured as of both February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. The maturities for these other guarantees listed in the table above extend through calendar year 2025.
In addition to the guarantees described above, we were also the liquidity provider for $
75
million of variable-rate tax-exempt bonds as of February 29, 2024, issued for our member cooperatives. While the bonds are in variable-rate mode, in return for a fee, we have unconditionally agreed to purchase bonds tendered or put for redemption if the remarketing agents are unable to sell such bonds to other investors. We were
not
required to perform as liquidity provider pursuant to these obligations during YTD FY2024 or YTD FY2023.
Guarantee Liability
We recorded a total guarantee liability for noncontingent and contingent exposures related to guarantees and liquidity obligations of $
15
million and $
13
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The noncontingent guarantee liability, which pertains to our obligation to stand ready to perform over the term of our guarantees and liquidity obligations we have entered into or modified since January 1, 2003 and accounts for the substantial majority of our guarantee liability, totaled $
15
million and $
12
million as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, respectively. The remaining amount pertains to our contingent guarantee exposures.
NOTE 12—FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT
Fair value, also referred to as an exit price, is defined as the price that would be received for an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. The fair value accounting guidance provides a three-level fair value hierarchy for classifying financial instruments. This hierarchy is based on the markets in which the assets or liabilities trade and whether the inputs to the valuation techniques used to measure fair value are observable or unobservable. The fair value measurement of a financial asset or liability is assigned a level based on the lowest level of any input that is significant to the fair value measurement in its entirety. The levels, in priority order based on the extent to which observable inputs are available to measure fair value, are Level 1, Level 2 and Level 3. The accounting guidance for fair value measurements requires that we maximize the use of observable inputs and minimize the use of unobservable inputs in determining fair value.
The following table presents the carrying value and estimated fair value of all of our financial instruments, including those carried at amortized cost, as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023. The table also displays the classification level within the fair value hierarchy based on the degree of observability of the inputs used in the valuation technique for estimating fair value.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
For additional information regarding fair value measurements, the fair value hierarchy and a description of the methodologies we use to estimate fair value, see “Note 14—Fair Value Measurement” to the Consolidated Financial Statements in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Transfers Between Levels
We monitor the availability of observable market data to assess the appropriate classification of financial instruments within the fair value hierarchy and transfer between Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3 accordingly. Observable market data includes but is not limited to quoted prices and market transactions. Changes in economic conditions or market liquidity generally will drive changes in availability of observable market data. Changes in availability of observable market data, which also may result in changes in the valuation technique used, are generally the cause of transfers between levels. We did not have any transfers into or out of Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy during YTD FY2024 or YTD FY2023.
Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
The following table presents the carrying value and fair value of financial instruments reported in our consolidated financial statements at fair value on a recurring basis as of February 29, 2024 and May 31, 2023, and the classification of the valuation technique within the fair value hierarchy. We did
no
t have any assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs during YTD FY2024 or YTD FY2023.
Table 12.2: Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Level 1
Level 2
Total
Assets:
Equity securities, at fair value
$
36,645
$
—
$
36,645
$
35,494
$
—
$
35,494
Debt securities trading, at fair value
—
335,032
335,032
—
474,875
474,875
Deferred compensation investments
7,605
—
7,605
6,660
—
6,660
Derivative assets
—
616,640
616,640
—
460,762
460,762
Liabilities:
Derivative liabilities
$
—
$
87,809
$
87,809
$
—
$
115,074
$
115,074
Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Nonrecurring Basis
We may be required, from time to time, to measure certain assets and liabilities at fair value on a nonrecurring basis on our consolidated balance sheets. These assets and liabilities are not measured at fair value on an ongoing basis but are subject to fair value adjustments in certain circumstances, such as in the application of the lower of cost or fair value accounting or when we evaluate assets for impairment. We did
not
have any assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis during
YTD FY2024 or YTD FY2023.
NOTE 13—VARIABLE INTEREST ENTITIES
NCSC meets the definition of a VIE because it does not have sufficient equity investment at risk to finance its activities without financial support. CFC is the primary source of funding for NCSC. Under the terms of management agreements with NCSC, CFC manages the business operations of NCSC. CFC also unconditionally guarantees full indemnification for any loan losses of NCSC pursuant to guarantee agreements with NCSC. CFC earns management and guarantee fees from its agreements with NCSC. Previously, RTFC was a VIE that was required to be consolidated by CFC. Subsequent to December 1, 2023, in connection with the RTFC sale transaction, CFC is no longer a primary beneficiary of RTFC, and
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
accordingly, deconsolidated RTFC from it
s
consolidated financial statements. We provide additional information on the RTFC sale transaction under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies.”
All loans that require NCSC board approval also require CFC board approval. CFC is not a member of NCSC and does not elect directors to the NCSC board. If CFC becomes a member of NCSC, it would control the nomination process for
one
NCSC director. NCSC members elect directors to the NCSC board based on
one
vote for each member. NCSC is a Class C member of CFC.
NCSC creditors have no recourse against CFC in the event of a default by NCSC, unless there is a guarantee agreement under which CFC has guaranteed NCSC debt obligations to a third party.
The following table provides information on incremental consolidated assets and liabilities of VIE included in CFC’s consolidated financial statements, after intercompany eliminations, which include NCSC’s consolidated assets and liabilities as of February 29, 2024 and NCSC’s and RTFC’s assets and liabilities as of May 31, 2023.
Table 13.1: Consolidated Assets and Liabilities of Variable Interest Entities
(Dollars in thousands)
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
Assets:
Loans outstanding
$
1,532,703
$
1,444,662
Other assets
15,293
12,612
Total assets
$
1,547,996
$
1,457,274
Liabilities:
Total liabilities
$
12,825
$
19,704
The following table provides information on CFC’s credit commitments and potential exposure to loss under these commitments to NCSC as of February 29, 2024, and to NCSC and RTFC as of May 31, 2023
Table 13.2: CFC Exposure Under Credit Commitments to NCSC and RTFC
February 29, 2024
May 31, 2023
(Dollars in thousands)
NCSC
NCSC and RTFC
CFC credit commitments:
Total CFC credit commitments
$
5,000,000
$
5,500,000
Outstanding commitments:
Borrowings payable to CFC
(1)
1,521,826
1,428,886
Credit enhancements:
CFC third-party guarantees
48,789
15,263
Other credit enhancements
1,138
2,038
Total credit enhancements
(2)
49,927
17,301
Total outstanding commitments
1,571,753
1,446,187
CFC credit commitments available
(3)
$
3,428,247
$
4,053,813
____________________________
(1)
Intercompany borrowings payable by NCSC to CFC as of February 29, 2024 and intercompany borrowing payable by NCSC and RTFC to CFC as of May 31, 2023 are eliminated in consolidation.
(2)
Excludes interest due on these instruments.
(3)
Represents total CFC credit commitments less outstanding commitments as of each period end.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
Under a loan and security agreement with CFC, NCSC had access to a $
1,500
million revolving line of credit and a $
1,500
million revolving term loan from CFC as of May 31, 2023, maturing in 2067. Under a loan and security agreement with CFC, RTFC had access to a $
1,000
million revolving line of credit and a $
1,500
million revolving term loan from CFC as of May 31, 2023, maturing in 2067.
In connection with the RTFC sale transaction on December 1, 2023, the NCSC loan and security agreement with CFC was amended to assume the RTFC loan and security agreement with CFC and revise the amount available thereunder. As a result, as of February 29, 2024, NCSC had access to $
2,000
million revolving line of credit and a $
3,000
million revolving term loan from CFC which will mature in 2067.
CFC loans to NCSC are secured by all assets
and revenue of NCSC. CFC’s maximum potential exposure, including interest due, for the credit enhancements totaled $
50
million as of February 29, 2024. Th
e maturities for obligations guaranteed by CFC extend through 2043.
NOTE 14—BUSINESS SEGMENTS
Our activities were previously conducted through
three
operating segments, which were based on each of the legal entities included in our consolidated financial statements: CFC, NCSC and RTFC. We reported segment information for CFC separately; however, we aggregated segment information for NCSC and RTFC into
one
reportable segment because neither entity met the quantitative materiality threshold for separate reporting under the accounting guidance governing segment reporting. As discussed above under “Note 1—Summary of Significant Accounting Policies,” on December 1, 2023, RTFC completed the sale of its business to NCSC. After the RTFC sale transaction, our operating segments currently consist of CFC and NCSC, which are based on each of the legal entities included in our consolidated financial statements. As we aggregated segment information for NCSC and RTFC into
one
reportable segment in prior periods, the RTFC sale transaction did not cause a change in the composition of our reportable segments. We present the results of our business segments on the basis in which management internally evaluates operating performance to establish short- and long-term performance goals, develop budgets and forecasts, identify potential trends, allocate resources and make compensation decisions.
Segment Results and Reconciliation
The following tables display segment results of operations for Q3 FY2024 and YTD FY2024, and Q3 FY2023 and YTD FY2023, assets attributable to each segment as of February 29, 2024 and February 28, 2023 and a reconciliation of total segment amounts to our consolidated total amounts.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(UNAUDITED)
YTD FY2023
(Dollars in thousands)
CFC
NCSC
Segments Total
Reclasses and Adjustments
(1)
Intersegment Eliminations
(2)
Consolidated Total
Results of operations:
Interest income
$
978,150
$
42,914
$
1,021,064
$
—
$
(
36,600
)
$
984,464
Interest expense
(
736,618
)
(
36,603
)
(
773,221
)
—
36,600
(
736,621
)
Derivative cash settlements interest income (expense)
13,090
(
440
)
12,650
(
12,650
)
—
—
Interest expense
(
723,528
)
(
37,043
)
(
760,571
)
(
12,650
)
36,600
(
736,621
)
Net interest income
254,622
5,871
260,493
(
12,650
)
—
247,843
Provision for credit losses
(
3,806
)
(
1,296
)
(
5,102
)
—
1,296
(
3,806
)
Net interest income after provision for credit losses
250,816
4,575
255,391
(
12,650
)
1,296
244,037
Non-interest income:
Fee and other income
18,696
3,442
22,138
—
(
8,590
)
13,548
Derivative gains:
Derivative cash settlements interest income
—
—
—
12,650
—
12,650
Derivative forward value gains
—
—
—
330,035
—
330,035
Derivative gains
—
—
—
342,685
—
342,685
Investment securities losses
(
5,574
)
—
(
5,574
)
—
—
(
5,574
)
Total non-interest income
13,122
3,442
16,564
342,685
(
8,590
)
350,659
Non-interest expense:
General and administrative expenses
(
76,183
)
(
7,976
)
(
84,159
)
—
6,078
(
78,081
)
Other non-interest expense
(
973
)
(
1,218
)
(
2,191
)
—
1,216
(
975
)
Total non-interest expense
(
77,156
)
(
9,194
)
(
86,350
)
—
7,294
(
79,056
)
Income (loss) before income taxes
186,782
(
1,177
)
185,605
330,035
—
515,640
Income tax provision
—
(
785
)
(
785
)
—
—
(
785
)
Net income (loss)
$
186,782
$
(
1,962
)
$
184,820
$
330,035
$
—
$
514,855
February 28, 2023
CFC
NCSC
Segment Total
Reclasses and Adjustments
(1)
Intersegment Eliminations
(2)
Consolidated Total
Assets:
Total loans outstanding
$
32,355,116
$
1,470,160
$
33,825,276
$
—
$
(
1,456,045
)
$
32,369,231
Deferred loan origination costs
12,598
—
12,598
—
—
12,598
Loans to members
32,367,714
1,470,160
33,837,874
—
(
1,456,045
)
32,381,829
Less: Allowance for credit losses
(
56,297
)
(
4,031
)
(
60,328
)
—
4,031
(
56,297
)
Loans to members, net
32,311,417
1,466,129
33,777,546
—
(
1,452,014
)
32,325,532
Other assets
1,661,392
98,919
1,760,311
—
(
84,331
)
1,675,980
Total assets
$
33,972,809
$
1,565,048
$
35,537,857
$
—
$
(
1,536,345
)
$
34,001,512
____________________________
(1)
Consists of (i) the reclassification of net periodic derivative settlement interest expense amounts, which we report as a component of interest expense for business segment reporting purposes but is included in derivatives gains (losses) in our consolidated total results and (ii) derivative forward value gains and losses, which we exclude from our business segment results but is included in derivatives gains (losses) in our consolidated total results.
(2)
Consists of intercompany borrowings payable by NCSC to CFC and the interest related to those borrowings, management fees paid by NCSC to CFC and other intercompany amounts, all of which are eliminated in consolidation.
Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
For quantitative and qualitative disclosures about market risk, see “Part I—Item 2. MD&A—Market Risk” and “Note 9—Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities.”
Item 4. Controls and Procedures
As of the end of the period covered by this report, senior management, including the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, evaluated the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Based on this evaluation process, the Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures are effective. There were no changes in our internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the three months ended February 29, 2024 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
PART II—OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1. Legal Proceedings
From time to time, CFC is subject to certain legal proceedings and claims in the ordinary course of business, including litigation with borrowers related to enforcement or collection actions. Management presently believes that the ultimate outcome of these proceedings, individually and in the aggregate, will not materially harm our financial position, liquidity or results of operations. CFC establishes reserves for specific legal matters when it determines that the likelihood of an unfavorable outcome is probable and the loss is reasonably estimable. Accordingly, no reserve has been recorded with respect to any legal proceedings at this time.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
Our financial condition, results of operations and liquidity are subject to various risks and uncertainties, some of which are inherent in the financial services industry and others of which are more specific to our own business. We identify and discuss the most significant risk factors of which we are currently aware that could have a material adverse impact on our business, results of operations, financial condition or liquidity in the section “Part I—Item 1A. Risk Factors” in our 2023 Form 10-K, as filed with the SEC on August 2, 2023. We are not aware of any material changes in the risk factors identified in our 2023 Form 10-K. However, other risks and uncertainties, including those not currently known to us, could also negatively impact our business, results of operations, financial condition and liquidity. Therefore, the risk factors identified and discussed in our 2023 Form 10-K should not be considered a complete discussion of all the risks and uncertainties we may face. For information on how we manage our key risks, see “Item 7. MD&A—Enterprise Risk Management” in our 2023 Form 10-K.
Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
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____________________________
*
Filed herewith this Report.
†
Furnished with this Report, which shall not be deemed “filed” for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or otherwise subject to the liability of that Section.
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES
COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORATION
Date: April 12, 2024
By:
/s/ YU LING WANG
Yu Ling Wang
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
By:
/s/ PANKAJ SHAH
Pankaj Shah
Vice President and Controller
(Principal Accounting Officer)
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