- Compliance & Regulation, Growth & Innovation, Risk
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If 2023 taught us anything, it’s that concentration risk has the potential to sneak up on a bank, especially when economic conditions or industry landscapes undergo rapid shifts. In dynamic environments—and our current environment is nothing if not dynamic—banks may find themselves unintentionally accumulating exposures to specific sectors, geographic regions, or asset classes.
For community banks, which by definition often operate within more localized markets, concentration risk can be particularly pronounced: Downturns or adverse events in the concentrated area may significantly impact the bank’s loan portfolio and overall financial health.
Community bankers from Maine, Rhode Island, and Texas recently shared their concentration risk best practices with RMA. Highlights include:
The bankers also expressed concern about the outlook for office loans maturing in the next few years, though they said they continue to make loans for office properties if the numbers make sense.
Concentration risk is also an issue for bank deposits. That was one factor in Silicon Valley Bank’s failure. The bankers recommended a customer mix balanced between commercial and retail deposits for increased security.
To uncover concentration risk problems before they surface, bankers recommended diving deeper into available information, such as examining the tenant strength for a property owner and examining past loan issues.
“Concentrations can creep up from anywhere,” Maine Community Bank Senior Credit Officer Chris Brann said. “The critical lesson we learned is to be deliberate in looking for concentrations.”
Read more in The RMA Journal.
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