Wells Fargo 2013 Annual Report Download - page 120

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Risk Factors (continued)
the management of their market price risk, as well as when we
take positions based on market expectations or to benefit from
differences between financial instruments and markets. The
securities held in these activities are carried at fair value with
realized and unrealized gains and losses recorded in noninterest
income. As part of our business to support our customers, we
trade public securities and these securities also are subject to
market fluctuations with gains and losses recognized in net
income when realized and periodically include OTTI charges.
Although we have processes in place to measure and monitor the
risks associated with our trading activities, including stress
testing and hedging strategies, there can be no assurance that
our processes and strategies will be effective in avoiding losses
that could have a material adverse effect on our financial results.
The value of our public and private equity investments can
fluctuate from quarter to quarter. Certain of these investments
are carried under the cost or equity method, while others are
carried at fair value with unrealized gains and losses reflected in
earnings. Earnings from our equity investments may be volatile
and hard to predict, and may have a significant effect on our
earnings from period to period. When, and if, we recognize gains
may depend on a number of factors, including general economic
and market conditions, the prospects of the companies in which
we invest, when a company goes public, the size of our position
relative to the public float, and whether we are subject to any
resale restrictions.
Our venture capital investments could result in significant
OTTI losses for those investments carried under the cost or
equity method. Our assessment for OTTI is based on a number of
factors, including the then current market value of each
investment compared with its carrying value. If we determine
there is OTTI for an investment, we write-down the carrying
value of the investment, resulting in a charge to earnings. The
amount of this charge could be significant.
For more information, refer to the “Risk Management –
Asset/Liability Management – Interest Rate Risk”, “– Market
Risk – Equity Investments”, and “– Market Risk – Trading
Activities” and the “Balance Sheet Analysis – Investment
Securities” sections in this Report and Note 5 (Investment
Securities) to Financial Statements in this Report.
Effective liquidity management, which ensures that we
can meet customer loan requests, customer deposit
maturities/withdrawals and other cash commitments,
including principal and interest payments on our debt,
efficiently under both normal operating conditions and
other unpredictable circumstances of industry or
financial market stress, is essential for the operation of
our business, and our financial results and condition
could be materially adversely affected if we do not
effectively manage our liquidity. Our liquidity is essential
for the operation of our business. We primarily rely on bank
deposits to be a low cost and stable source of funding for the
loans we make and the operation of our business. Core customer
deposits, which include noninterest-bearing deposits, interest-
bearing checking, savings certificates, certain market rate and
other savings, and certain foreign deposits, have historically
provided us with a sizeable source of relatively stable and low-
cost funds. In addition to customer deposits, our sources of
liquidity include investments in our securities portfolio, our
ability to sell or securitize loans in secondary markets and to
pledge loans to access secured borrowing facilities through the
FHLB and the FRB, and our ability to raise funds in domestic
and international money through capital markets.
Our liquidity and our ability to fund and run our business
could be materially adversely affected by a variety of conditions
and factors, including financial and credit market disruption and
volatility or a lack of market or customer confidence in financial
markets in general similar to what occurred during the financial
crisis in 2008 and early 2009, which may result in a loss of
customer deposits or outflows of cash or collateral and/or our
inability to access capital markets on favorable terms. Market
disruption and volatility could impact our credit spreads, which
are the amount in excess of the interest rate of U.S. Treasury
securities, or other benchmark securities, of the same maturity
that we need to pay to our funding providers. Increases in
interest rates and our credit spreads could significantly increase
our funding costs. Other conditions and factors that could
materially adversely affect our liquidity and funding include a
lack of market or customer confidence in the Company or
negative news about the Company or the financial services
industry generally which also may result in a loss of deposits
and/or negatively affect our ability to access the capital markets;
our inability to sell or securitize loans or other assets, and, as
described below, reductions in one or more of our credit ratings.
Many of the above conditions and factors may be caused by
events over which we have little or no control. While market
conditions have continued to improve since the financial crisis,
there can be no assurance that significant disruption and
volatility in the financial markets will not occur in the future. For
example, the U.S. government’s temporary closure in October
2013 and continued concerns over the government’s ability to
reach a budget agreement caused financial market volatility. In
addition, concerns regarding the potential failure to raise the
U.S. government debt limit and any associated downgrade of
U.S. government debt ratings may cause uncertainty and
volatility as well. A failure to raise the U.S. debt limit in the
future and/or additional downgrades of the sovereign debt
ratings of the U.S. government or the debt ratings of related
institutions, agencies or instrumentalities, as well as other fiscal
or political events could, in addition to causing economic and
financial market disruptions, materially adversely affect the
market value of the U.S. government securities that we hold, the
availability of those securities as collateral for borrowing, and
our ability to access capital markets on favorable terms, as well
as have other material adverse effects on the operation of our
business and our financial results and condition.
As noted above, we rely heavily on bank deposits for our
funding and liquidity. We compete with banks and other
financial services companies for deposits. If our competitors
raise the rates they pay on deposits our funding costs may
increase, either because we raise our rates to avoid losing
deposits or because we lose deposits and must rely on more
expensive sources of funding. Higher funding costs reduce our
net interest margin and net interest income. Checking and
savings account balances and other forms of customer deposits
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