CHFC 2018 Annual Report

Federal and state banking laws place certain restrictions on the amount of dividends that a bank may pay to its parent company. During the year ended December 31, 2018, Chemical Bank paid $114.3 million in dividends to us, and we paid cash dividends to shareholders of $89.0 million. During 2017, Chemical Bank paid $165.0 million in dividends to us and we paid cash dividends to shareholders of $78.5 million. The earnings of Chemical Bank are the principal source of funds to pay cash dividends to our shareholders. Chemical Bank had net income of $295.3 million during the year ended December 31, 2018, compared to net income of $162.7 million during the year ended December 31, 2017. Cash dividends to shareholders are dependent upon earnings, capital requirements, regulatory restraints and other factors affecting Chemical Bank. The following liquidity ratios compare certain assets and liabilities to total deposits or total assets. December 31, 2018 2017 2016 Investment securities carried at fair value to total deposits 19.4% 14.4% 9.6% Loans to total deposits (1) 95.6 100.7 98.3 Interest-earning assets to total assets 89.6 88.6 87.4 Interest-bearing deposits to total deposits 75.6 72.7 74.0 (1) For liquidity purposes, securities sold under agreements to repurchase with customers are treated similarly to deposits and are included in this calculation. 80 Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk. Market risk is the risk to a financial institutions' condition resulting from adverse movements in market rates or prices, including, but not limited to, interest rates, foreign exchange rates, commodity prices, or equity prices. Interest rate risk, a form of market risk, is the current and prospective risk to earnings or capital arising from movement in interest rates. Interest rate risk is due to the difference in the repricing and maturity dates between financial assets and funding sources, as well as changes in the relationship between benchmark rate indices used to reprice various assets and liabilities, product options available to customers, competitive pressures and other variables. Our net interest income is largely dependent upon the effective management of interest rate risk. Our goal is to avoid a significant decrease in net interest income, and thus an adverse impact on our profitability in periods of changing interest rates. Sensitivity of earnings to interest rate changes arises when yields on assets change differently from the interest costs on liabilities. Interest rate sensitivity is determined by the amount of interest-earning assets and interest- bearing liabilities repricing within a specific time period and the magnitude by which interest rates change on the various types of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. The management of interest rate sensitivity includes monitoring the maturities and repricing opportunities of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. Our interest rate risk is managed through policies and risk limits approved by the boards of directors of the Corporation and Chemical Bank and an Asset and Liability Committee ("ALCO"). The ALCO, which is comprised of executive and senior management from various areas of the Corporation and Chemical Bank, including finance, lending, investments and deposit gathering, meets regularly to execute asset and liability management strategies. The ALCO establishes guidelines and monitors the sensitivity of earnings to changes in interest rates. The goal of the ALCO process is to manage the impact on net interest income and the net present value of future cash flows of probable changes in interest rates within authorized risk limits. The primary technique we use to measure our interest rate risk is simulation analyses. Simulation analyses forecast the effects on our balance sheet structure and net interest income under a variety of scenarios that incorporate changes in interest rates, the shape of the U.S. Treasury yield curve, interest rate relationships and the mix of assets and liabilities and loan prepayments. These forecasts are compared against net interest income projected in a stable interest rate environment. While many assets and liabilities reprice either at maturity or in accordance with their contractual terms, several balance sheet components demonstrate characteristics that require an evaluation to more accurately reflect their repricing behavior. Key assumptions in the simulation analysis include prepayments on loans, probable calls of investment securities, changes in market conditions, loan volumes and loan pricing, deposit sensitivity and customer preferences. These assumptions are inherently uncertain as they are subject to fluctuation and revision in a dynamic environment. As a result, the simulation analysis cannot precisely forecast the impact of rising and falling interest rates on net interest income. Actual results will differ from simulated results due to many other factors, including changes in balance sheet components, interest rate changes, changes in market conditions and management strategies.

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