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FLAGSTAR BANCORP INC - Quarter Report: 2022 March (Form 10-Q)


UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-Q
(Mark One)
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended March 31, 2022
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: 001-16577
 fbc-20220331_g1.jpg
Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter).
Michigan  38-3150651
(State or other jurisdiction of  (I.R.S. Employer
Incorporation or organization)  Identification No.)
5151 Corporate Drive,Troy,Michigan  48098-2639
(Address of principal executive offices)  (Zip code)
(248) 312-2000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Not applicable
(Former name, former address and formal fiscal year, if changed since last report)

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      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      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 filerAccelerated filer
Non-accelerated filerSmaller 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 Section 13(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  .
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
Title of each classTrading symbolName of each exchange on which registered
Common stockFBCNew York Stock Exchange
As of May 9, 2022, 53,245,670 shares of the registrant’s common stock, $0.01 par value, were issued and outstanding.



FLAGSTAR BANCORP, INC.
FORM 10-Q
FOR THE QUARTER ENDED March 31, 2022
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Item 1.
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition – March 31, 2022 (unaudited) and December 31, 2021
Consolidated Statements of Operations – For the three months ended March 31, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income – For the three months ended March 31, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity – For the three months ended March 31, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows – For the three months ended March 31, 2022 and 2021 (unaudited)
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4.
Item 1.
Item 1A.
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4.
Item 5.
Item 6.
2


GLOSSARY OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

The following list of abbreviations and acronyms are provided as a tool for the reader and may be used throughout this Report, including the Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes:
TermDefinitionTermDefinition
ACLAllowance for Credit LossesHELOANHome Equity Loan
AFSAvailable-for-SaleHFIHeld-for-Investment
AgenciesFederal National Mortgage Association, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, and Government National Mortgage Association, CollectivelyHFSHeld-for-Sale
HOLAHome Owners' Loan Act
ALCOAsset Liability CommitteeHome equitySecond Mortgages, HELOANs, HELOCs
ALLLAllowance for Loan LossesHPIHousing Price Index
AOCIAccumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)HTMHeld-to-Maturity
ASUAccounting Standards UpdateLGGLoans with Government Guarantees
Basel IIIBasel Committee on Banking Supervision Third Basel AccordLHFILoans Held-for-Investment
C&ICommercial and IndustrialLHFSLoans Held-for-Sale
CARES ActCoronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security ActLIBORLondon Interbank Offered Rate
CDARSCertificates of Deposit Account Registry ServiceLTVLoan-to-Value Ratio
CDCertificates of DepositManagementFlagstar Bancorp’s Management
CECLCurrent Expected Credit Losses MBSMortgage-Backed Securities
CET1Common Equity Tier 1MD&AManagement's Discussion and Analysis
CLTVCombined Loan-to-Value RatioMSRMortgage Servicing Rights
Common StockCommon SharesN/ANot Applicable
CRECommercial Real EstateN/MNot Meaningful
Deposit BetaThe change in the annualized cost of our deposits, compared to the change in the Federal Reserve discount rateNBVNet Book Value
DOJUnited States Department of JusticeNPLNonperforming Loan
DOJ Liability2012 Settlement Agreement with the Department of JusticeNYSENew York Stock Exchange
OCCOffice of the Comptroller of the Currency
DTADeferred Tax AssetOCIOther Comprehensive Income (Loss)
EVEEconomic Value of EquityQTLQualified Thrift Lending
Fannie MaeFederal National Mortgage AssociationRegulatory AgenciesBoard of Governors of the Federal Reserve, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Securities and Exchange Commission
FASBFinancial Accounting Standards Board
FBCFlagstar Bancorp
FDICFederal Deposit Insurance CorporationREOReal estate owned and other nonperforming assets, net
Federal ReserveBoard of Governors of the Federal Reserve SystemRMBSResidential Mortgage-Backed Securities
FHAFederal Housing AdministrationRWARisk Weighted Assets
FHLBFederal Home Loan BankSECSecurities and Exchange Commission
FICOFair Isaac CorporationSNCShared National Credit Loans
FOALFallout-Adjusted LocksSOFRSecured Oversight Financing Rate
FRBFederal Reserve BankTDRTroubled Debt Restructuring
Freddie MacFederal Home Loan Mortgage CorporationTPOThird Party Originator
FTEFull Time Equivalent EmployeesUPBUnpaid Principal Balance
GAAPUnited States Generally Accepted Accounting PrinciplesU.S. TreasuryUnited States Department of Treasury
GNMAGovernment National Mortgage AssociationVIEVariable Interest Entities
HELOCHome Equity Lines of CreditXBRLeXtensible Business Reporting Language
3


PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 2.Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

    The following is Management's Discussion and Analysis of the financial condition and results of operations of Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. for the first quarter of 2022, which should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and related notes set forth in Part I, Item 1 of this Form 10-Q and Part II, Item 8 of Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.'s 2021 Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021.

    Certain statements in this Form 10-Q, including but not limited to statements included within Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended. These statements are based on the current beliefs and expectations of our Management. Actual results may differ from those set forth in forward-looking statements. See Forward-Looking Statements on page 41 of this Form 10-Q, Part II, Item 1A, Risk Factors of this Form 10-Q and Part I, Item 1A, Risk Factors of Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.'s 2021 Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021. Additional information about Flagstar can be found on our website at www.flagstar.com.

    Where we say "we," "us," "our," the "Company," "Bancorp" or "Flagstar," we usually mean Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. However, in some cases, a reference will include our wholly-owned subsidiary Flagstar Bank, FSB (the "Bank"). See the Glossary of Abbreviations and Acronyms on page 3 for definitions used throughout this Form 10-Q.    

Introduction

    We are a savings and loan holding company founded in 1993. Our business is primarily conducted through our principal subsidiary, the Bank, a federally chartered stock savings bank founded in 1987. We provide commercial and consumer banking services, and we are the 6th largest bank mortgage originator in the nation and the 5th largest subservicer of mortgage loans nationwide. At March 31, 2022, we had 5,341 full-time equivalent employees. Our common stock is listed on the NYSE under the symbol "FBC".

    Our relationship-based business model leverages our full-service bank’s capabilities and our national mortgage platform to create build financial solutions for our customers. At March 31, 2022, we operated 158 full-service banking branches that offer a full set of banking products to consumer, commercial, and government customers. Our banking footprint spans Michigan, Indiana, California, Wisconsin, Ohio and contiguous states.

    We originate mortgages through a network of brokers and correspondents in all 50 states and our own loan officers, which includes our direct lending team, from 82 retail locations in 28 states and 3 call centers. We are also a leading national servicer of mortgage loans and provide complementary ancillary offerings including MSR lending, servicing advance lending and MSR recapture services.

Strategic Merger with New York Community Bancorp, Inc.

On April 26, 2021, it was announced that New York Community Bancorp, Inc. ("NYCB") and Flagstar had entered into a definitive merger agreement (the "Merger Agreement") under which the two companies will combine in an all stock merger. Under the terms of the Merger Agreement, Flagstar shareholders will receive 4.0151 shares of NYCB common stock for each Flagstar share they own. The combined company expects to have over $85 billion in assets and operate nearly 400 traditional branches in nine states and over 80 loan production offices across a 28 state footprint. On August 4, 2021, Flagstar's and NYCB's shareholders each voted in their respective special meetings of shareholders to approve the proposed business combination. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals.

On April 26, 2022, NYCB and Flagstar entered into Amendment No. 1 (the "Amendment") to the Merger Agreement. Under the Amendment, the parties have agreed to: extend the termination date of the Merger Agreement to October 31, 2022; Change the structure of the merger of the subsidiary banks, so that Flagstar Bank, FSB will initially convert to a national bank charter and New York Community Bank will merge with and into the national bank, with the national bank as the surviving entity; and clarify that approvals of the FDIC and the New York State Department of Financial Services are no longer required but that the approval of the OCC will be required. Other than as expressly modified by the Amendment, the Merger Agreement, remains in full force and effect.

Completion of the transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of regulatory approvals.

4


Operating Segments

    Our operations are conducted through our three operating segments: Community Banking, Mortgage Originations, and Mortgage Servicing. For further information, see MD&A - Operating Segments and Note 17 - Segment Information.
5


Results of Operations

The following table summarizes our results of operations for the periods indicated:

Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions, except share data)
Net interest income$165 $181 $189 $(16)$(24)
(Benefit) provision for credit losses(4)(17)(28)13 24 
Total noninterest income160 202 324 (42)(164)
Total noninterest expense261 291 347 (30)(86)
Provision for income taxes15 24 45 (9)(30)
Net income$53 $85 $149 $(32)$(96)
Income per share
Basic$0.99 $1.62 $2.83 $(0.63)$(1.84)
Diluted$0.99 $1.60 $2.80 $(0.61)$(1.81)
Weighted average shares outstanding:
Basic53,219,866 52,867,138 52,675,562 352,728 544,304 
Diluted53,578,001 53,577,832 53,297,803 169 280,198 

The following table summarizes our adjusted results of operations(1):

Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions, except share data)
Net interest income$165 $181 $189 $(16)$(24)
(Benefit) provision for credit losses(4)(17)(28)13 24 
Total noninterest income160 202 324 (42)(164)
Total noninterest expense258 285 312 (27)(54)
Provision for income taxes16 25 53 (9)(37)
Net income$55 $90 $176 $(35)$(121)
Income per share
Basic$1.03 $1.71 $3.34 $(0.68)$(2.31)
Diluted$1.02 $1.69 $3.31 $(0.67)$(2.29)
(1)See Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures for further information.


6


The following table summarizes certain selected ratios and statistics for the periods indicated:
Three Months Ended,
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
Selected Ratios:
Interest rate spread (1)2.91 %2.79 %2.55 %
Net interest margin3.11 %2.96 %2.82 %
Adjusted net interest margin (2)3.12 %2.98 %3.02 %
Return on average assets0.89 %1.28 %1.98 %
Adjusted return on average assets (2)0.92 %1.35 %2.34 %
Return on average common equity7.87 %12.74 %25.73 %
Return on average tangible common equity (2)8.61 %13.79 %27.99 %
Adjusted return on average tangible common equity (2)9.10 %14.90 %32.97 %
Common equity-to-assets ratio11.75 %10.67 %8.01 %
Common equity-to-assets ratio (average for the period)11.12 %10.08 %7.71 %
Efficiency ratio80.4 %75.9 %67.7 %
Adjusted efficiency ratio (2)79.6 %74.4 %60.8 %
Selected Statistics:
Book value per common share$51.33 $51.09 $44.71 
Tangible book value per share (2)$48.61 $48.33 $41.77 
Number of common shares outstanding53,236,067 53,197,650 52,752,600 
(1)Interest rate spread is the difference between the yield earned on average interest-earning assets for the period and the rate of interest paid on average interest-bearing liabilities.
(2) See Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures for further information.

Overview

Net income for the quarter-ended March 31, 2022 was $53 million, or $0.99 per diluted share compared to fourth quarter 2021 net income of $85 million, or $1.60 per diluted share. When adjusting for the pre-tax impact of merger related expenses, first quarter 2022 net income was $55 million, or $1.02 per diluted share as compared to $90 million, or $1.69 per diluted share in the fourth quarter of 2021.

Net interest income in the first quarter declined $16 million, or 9 percent as compared to the prior quarter driven by a $2.7 billion, or 11 percent, reduction in average interest-earning assets partially offset by a 15 basis points increase in net interest margin. In the first quarter, a smaller mortgage market and seasonality drove declines in our HFS and warehouse loan portfolios compared to the prior quarter, which were partially offset by a $360 million increase in our commercial and industrial loan portfolio. The margin expansion was largely attributable to the impact of income recognized from the payoff of loans with government guarantees in forbearance and higher rates on newly originated loans held-for-sale.

Net return on mortgage servicing rights increased $10 million, to $29 million for the first quarter 2022, compared to a $19 million net return for the fourth quarter 2021. The increase in interest rates during the quarter resulted in improved valuations and hedging results as we reduced our hedge ratio on this portfolio to help mitigate the impact of higher mortgage rates on our mortgage origination revenue.

Net gain on sales decreased $46 million, or 51 percent compared to the prior quarter driven by lower gain on loan sale margins which declined 44 basis points, to 58 basis points for the first quarter 2022, as compared to 102 basis points for the fourth quarter 2022. The decrease was largely the result of $21 million fewer re-securitization gains from cured LGG loans and secondary marketing, which were impacted by the speed of rate changes in the quarter and volatility. Fallout adjusted lock volume declined to $7.7 billion from $8.9 billion for the fourth quarter 2021, reflecting lower refinance volumes due to increasing interest rates.

Our benefit for credit losses for the quarter ended March 31, 2022 was $4 million, compared to a benefit of $17 million in the fourth quarter 2021. Our benefit for credit losses in the first quarter was driven by the reduction in our ACL reserve reflecting one non-accrual commercial loan, no commercial delinquencies and low levels of consumer delinquencies while forbearance loans continue to decrease as of March 31, 2022.

We subserviced 1.3 million accounts as of March 31, 2022, a 2 percent increase compared to December 31, 2021 as we continued to grow this business.
7


Net Interest Income

The following table presents details on our net interest margin and net interest income on a consolidated basis:
 Three Months Ended,
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
Average
Balance
InterestAnnualized
Yield/
Rate
Average
Balance
InterestAnnualized
Yield/
Rate
Average
Balance
InterestAnnualized
Yield/
Rate
 (Dollars in millions)
Interest-Earning Assets
Loans held-for-sale$4,833 $40 3.31 %$6,384 $49 3.10 %$7,464 $53 2.83 %
Loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage1,500 13 3.35 %1,569 13 3.22 %2,132 17 3.20 %
Home equity598 4.05 %635 3.93 %820 3.50 %
Other1,253 15 4.86 %1,229 16 4.80 %1,040 12 4.79 %
Total consumer loans3,351 34 4.04 %3,433 35 3.92 %3,992 36 3.68 %
Commercial real estate3,226 29 3.60 %3,260 29 3.45 %3,042 26 3.36 %
Commercial and industrial1,834 16 3.52 %1,473 14 3.69 %1,486 13 3.53 %
Warehouse lending3,973 32 3.25 %5,148 47 3.54 %6,395 64 4.00 %
Total commercial loans9,033 77 3.43 %9,881 90 3.53 %10,923 103 3.76 %
Total loans held-for-investment (1)12,384 111 3.59 %13,314 125 3.63 %14,915 139 3.73 %
Loans with government guarantees1,402 15 4.40 %1,742 11 2.62 %2,502 0.56 %
Investment securities 2,021 11 2.19 %2,104 11 2.09 %2,210 12 2.21 %
Interest-earning deposits 929 — 0.16 %747 — 0.15 %87 — 0.14 %
Total interest-earning assets $21,569 $177 3.30 %$24,291 $196 3.18 %$27,178 $208 3.06 %
Other assets2,592 2,408 2,887 
Total assets$24,161 $26,699 $30,065 
Interest-Bearing Liabilities
Retail deposits
Demand deposits $1,626 $— 0.09 %$1,692 $— 0.05 %$1,852 $— 0.07 %
Savings deposits 4,253 0.14 %4,211 0.14 %3,945 0.14 %
Money market deposits887 — 0.09 %927 — 0.09 %685 — 0.06 %
Certificates of deposit 929 0.35 %973 0.44 %1,293 0.96 %
Total retail deposits7,695 0.15 %7,803 0.15 %7,775 0.25 %
Government deposits1,879 0.17 %1,998 0.17 %1,773 0.22 %
Wholesale deposits and other1,071 0.89 %1,238 0.93 %1,031 1.59 %
Total interest-bearing deposits 10,645 0.23 %11,039 0.25 %10,579 10 0.38 %
Short-term FHLB advances and other658 — 0.22 %1,258 0.19 %2,779 0.17 %
Long-term FHLB advances1,260 0.98 %1,400 0.88 %1,200 1.03 %
Other long-term debt396 3.23 %396 3.16 %453 4.11 %
Total interest-bearing liabilities$12,959 $12 0.39 %$14,093 $15 0.39 %$15,011 $19 0.51 %
Noninterest-bearing deposits
Retail deposits and other2,474 2,468 2,270 
Custodial deposits (2)4,970 6,309 7,194 
Total noninterest bearing deposits7,444 8,777 9,464 
Other liabilities 1,071 1,137 3,271 
Stockholders’ equity2,687 2,692 2,319 
Total liabilities and stockholders' equity$24,161 $26,699 $30,065 
Net interest-earning assets$8,610 $10,198 $12,167 
Net interest income $165 $181 $189 
Interest rate spread (3)2.91 %2.79 %2.55 %
Net interest margin (4)3.11 %2.96 %2.82 %
Ratio of average interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities166.4 %172.4 %181.1 %
Total average deposits$18,089 $19,816 $20,043 
(1)Includes nonaccrual loans. For further information on nonaccrual loans, see Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment.
(2)Includes noninterest-bearing custodial deposits that arise due to the servicing of loans for others.
(3)Interest rate spread is the difference between rates of interest earned on interest-earning assets and rates of interest paid on interest-bearing liabilities.
(4)Net interest margin is net interest income divided by average interest-earning assets.
    
8



The following table presents the dollar amount of changes in interest income and interest expense for the components of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities. The table distinguishes between the changes related to average outstanding balances (changes in volume while holding the initial rate constant) and the changes related to average interest rates (changes in average rates while holding the initial balance constant). The rate/volume variances are allocated to rate. Rate and volume variances are calculated on each line separate as an indication of the magnitude. Line items may not aggregate to the totals due to mix changes.
Three Months Ended,Three Months Ended,
March 31, 2022 versus December 31, 2021 Increase (Decrease) Due to:March 31, 2022 versus March 31, 2021 Increase (Decrease) Due to:
 RateVolumeTotalRateVolumeTotal
 (Dollars in millions)
Interest-Earning Assets
Loans held-for-sale$$(13)$(9)$$(19)$(13)
Loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage(1)— (5)(4)
Home equity— — — (2)(1)
Other(1)— (1)— 
Total consumer loans— (1)(1)(6)(2)
Commercial real estate— — — 
Commercial and industrial(1)— 
Warehouse lending(5)(10)(15)(8)(24)(32)
Total commercial loans(6)(7)(13)(8)(18)(26)
Total loans held-for-investment(6)(8)(14)(4)(24)(28)
Loans with government guarantees(4)13 (2)11 
Investment securities— — — — (1)(1)
Interest-earning deposits and other— — — — — — 
Total interest-earning assets$$(22)$(19)$12 $(43)$(31)
Interest-Bearing Liabilities
Interest-bearing deposits$(1)$— $(1)$(4)$— $(4)
Short-term FHLB advances and other borrowings(1)— (1)— (1)(1)
Long-term FHLB advances(1)— (1)— — — 
Other long-term debt— — — (1)(1)(2)
Total interest-bearing liabilities(2)(1)(3)(4)(3)(7)
Change in net interest income$$(21)$(16)$16 $(40)$(24)

Comparison to Prior Quarter

Net interest income for the three months ended March 31, 2022 was $165 million, a decrease of $16 million, or 9 percent as compared to the fourth quarter 2021. The results primarily reflect a $2.7 billion, or 11 percent, net decrease in average earning assets primarily from lower mortgage loans held-for-sale and warehouse loans due to seasonality and a smaller mortgage origination market. These decreases were partially offset by $360 million higher balances in our commercial and industrial loan portfolio and a higher net interest margin.

The net interest margin increased 15 basis points to 3.11 percent for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, as compared to 2.96 percent for the quarter ended December 31, 2021. The increase in net interest margin was largely attributable to the impact from the Federal Reserve's March rate increase, income recognition resulting from the payoff of LGG in forbearance, and higher yields on newly originated LHFS.

Average total deposits were $18.1 billion in the first quarter 2022, decreasing $1.7 billion, or 9 percent, from the fourth quarter 2021. The decrease was primarily driven by a decrease of $1.3 billion, or 21 percent, in average custodial deposits due to a reduction in mortgage refinance activity driven by the higher rate environment.

9


Comparison to Prior Year    Quarter

Net interest income for the three months ended March 31, 2022 was $165 million, a decrease of $24 million as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2021. The 13 percent decrease was driven by a decline in average earning assets, primarily from mortgage loans held-for-sale and warehouse loans due to a smaller mortgage origination market. In addition, average LGG decreased $1.1 billion driven by loans exiting forbearance and being resold.

Net interest margin increased 29 basis points to 3.11 percent for the three months ended March 31, 2022, as compared to 2.82 percent for the three months ended March 31, 2021 primarily due to higher interest rates, income recognition resulting from the payoff of LGG in forbearance as a majority of these loans were not earning interest in the first quarter of 2021 and higher rates on newly originated LHFS.

Average interest-bearing liabilities decreased $2.1 billion, primarily driven by a decrease of $2.1 billion in short term FHLB borrowings due to a reduction in our overall asset base.

Provision for Credit Losses

Comparison to Prior Quarter

The benefit for credit losses was $4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, as compared to a $17 million benefit for credit losses for the three months ended December 31, 2021. Our benefit for credit losses in the first quarter was driven by a reduction in our ACL reserve that reflects the credit quality of our outstanding portfolio with a low number of non-accrual loans and no commercial delinquencies as of March 31, 2022. During the first quarter 2022, we had $21 million of net charge-offs, primarily all from the $20 million charge-off of a commercial credit that had an $18 million specific reserve at December 31, 2021. The prior quarter benefit contained qualitative reserve reductions reflecting strong portfolio performance and asset quality.

Comparison to Prior Year Quarter

The benefit for credit losses was $4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, as compared to a benefit of $28 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021 which was driven by improved economic forecasts in the prior year.

For further information on the provision for credit losses, see MD&A - Credit Quality.

10


Noninterest Income

    The following tables provide information on our noninterest income and other mortgage metrics:
 Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
 (Dollars in millions)
Net gain on loan sales$45 $91 $227 $(46)$(182)
Loan fees and charges27 29 42 (2)(15)
Net return on mortgage servicing rights29 19 — 10 29 
Loan administration income33 36 27 (3)
Deposit fees and charges
Other noninterest income17 19 20 (2)(3)
Total noninterest income$160 $202 $324 $(42)$(164)

 Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
 (Dollars in millions)
Mortgage rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted) (1)(3)$7,700 $8,900 $12,300 $(1,200)$(4,600)
Mortgage loans closed (3)$8,200 $10,700 $13,800 $(2,500)$(5,600)
Mortgage loans sold and securitized (3)$9,900 $12,100 $13,700 $(2,200)$(3,800)
Net margin on mortgage rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted) (1)(2)0.58 %1.02 %1.84 %(0.44)%(1.26)%
Net margin on loans sold and securitized0.45 %0.75 %1.65 %(0.30)%(1.20)%
(1)Fallout-adjusted refers to mortgage rate lock commitments which are adjusted by estimates of the percentage of mortgage loans in the pipeline that are not expected to close based on our historical experience and the impact of changes in interest rates.
(2)Gain on sale margin is based on net gain on loan sales to fallout-adjusted mortgage rate lock commitments.
(3)Rounded to nearest hundred million.

Comparison to Prior Quarter

    Noninterest income decreased $42 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, compared to the quarter ended December 31, 2021, primarily due to the following:

Net gain on loan sales decreased $46 million as compared to the fourth quarter 2021. Gain on sale margins decreased 44 basis points, to 58 basis points for the first quarter 2022, as compared to 102 basis points for the fourth quarter 2021. The decrease was largely the result of $21 million fewer re-securitization gains from the LGG portfolio and secondary marketing performance, which was impacted by the speed of interest rate changes in the quarter. FOALs decreased $1.2 billion, or 13 percent, to $7.7 billion, reflecting lower refinance volumes due to increasing interest rates.

Net return on mortgage servicing rights was $29 million in the first quarter of 2022, an increase of $10 million compared to the fourth quarter of 2021. The increase in interest rates during the quarter resulted in improved valuations and hedging results as we reduced our hedge ratio on this portfolio to help mitigate the impact of higher mortgage rates on our mortgage origination revenue.

Loan administration income decreased $3 million, to $33 million for the first quarter 2022, compared to $36 million for the fourth quarter 2021, driven by a decline in the average number of subserviced loans in forbearance which earn a higher rate.

Loan fees and charges decreased $2 million to $27 million for the first quarter of 2022, compared to $29 million for the fourth quarter 2021, primarily due to a 23 percent decrease in mortgage loans closed partially offset by higher ancillary fee income in our servicing business.

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Comparison to Prior Year    Quarter

    Noninterest income decreased $164 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to the three months ended March 31, 2021, primarily due to the following:

Net gain on loan sales decreased $182 million, primarily due to $4.6 billion lower FOALs and a 126 basis points decrease in our gain on sale margin driven by the reduction in mortgage origination market, reduced refinance activity due to higher mortgage rates and the resulting increased competition.

Net return on mortgage servicing rights increased $29 million, primarily driven by the increase in interest rates which resulted in improved valuations and hedging results as we reduced our hedge ratio on this portfolio in the first quarter of 2022 to help mitigate the impact of higher mortgage rates on our mortgage origination revenue.

Loan administration income increased $6 million, driven primarily by a decline in LIBOR-based credits paid to sub-servicing customers on custodial deposits controlled by them which declined $2.2 billion along with higher overall subservicing fee income due to an increase in the average number of loans being subserviced.

Loan fees and charges decreased $15 million primarily driven by a 40 percent decrease in mortgage loans closed. This decrease was partially offset by higher ancillary fee income from our servicing business.

Noninterest Expense

    The following table sets forth the components of our noninterest expense:
 Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
 (Dollars in millions)
Compensation and benefits$127 $137 $144 $(10)$(17)
Occupancy and equipment45 47 46 (2)(1)
Commissions26 38 62 (12)(36)
Loan processing expense21 21 21 — — 
Legal and professional expense11 13 (2)
Federal insurance premiums— (2)
Intangible asset amortization(1)(1)
General, administrative and other25 28 57 (3)(32)
Total noninterest expense$261 $291 $347 $(30)$(86)
Efficiency ratio80.4 %75.9 %67.7 %4.5 %12.7 %
Number of FTE employees5,341 5,395 5,418 (54)(77)

Comparison to Prior Quarter

Noninterest expense decreased to $261 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, compared to $291 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2021. Excluding $3 million of merger costs in the first quarter of 2022 and $6 million of merger costs in the fourth quarter 2021, noninterest expense decreased $27 million, or 9 percent. The decrease in noninterest expense primarily reflects lower commissions as mortgage loan closings decreased 23 percent compared to the prior quarter and a decrease in incentive compensation partially offset by seasonally higher payroll taxes and benefits.

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Comparison to Prior Year    Quarter

Noninterest expense decreased $86 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to the three months ended March 31, 2021 primarily due to the following:

Mortgage commissions decreased $36 million primarily driven by a 40 percent reduction in mortgage loan closings.

Compensation and benefits decreased $17 million, primarily due to a decrease in incentive compensation and slightly lower average FTE.

General, administrative and other noninterest expense decreased $32 million primarily driven by the $35 million DOJ final settlement expense recognized during the three months ended March 31, 2021. The quarter ended March 31, 2021 includes $3 million of merger expenses.

Provision for Income Taxes

    The first quarter provision for income taxes totaled $15 million, as compared to a provision for income taxes of $24 million for the fourth quarter 2021, with an effective tax rate of 22 percent, in-line with the effective tax rate for the fourth quarter 2021.

Operating Segments

    Our operations are conducted through three operating segments: Community Banking, Mortgage Originations, and Mortgage Servicing. The Other segment includes the remaining reported activities. The operating segments have been determined based on the products and services offered and reflect the manner in which financial information is currently evaluated by Management. Each of the operating segments is complementary to each other and because of the interrelationships of the segments, the information presented is not indicative of how the segments would perform if they operated as independent entities.

    We charge the lines of business for the net charge-offs that occur. In addition to this amount, we charge them for the change in loan balances during the period, applied at the budgeted credit loss factor. The difference between the consolidated provision (benefit) for credit losses and the sum of total net charge-offs and the change in loan balances is assigned to the “Other” segment, which includes the changes related to the economic forecasts, model changes, qualitative adjustments and credit downgrades. The amount assigned to “Other” is allocated back to the lines of business through general, administrative and other noninterest expense.

    For detail on each segment's objectives, strategies, and priorities, please read this section in conjunction with Note 17 - Segment Information.

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Community Banking

Our Community Banking segment serves commercial, governmental and consumer customers in our banking footprint which spans throughout Michigan, Indiana, California, Wisconsin, Ohio and contiguous states. We also serve home builders, correspondents, and commercial customers on a national basis. The Community Banking segment originates and purchases loans, while also providing deposit and fee-based services to consumer, business and mortgage lending customers.

Our commercial customers operate in a diversified range of industries including financial, insurance, service, manufacturing, and distribution. We offer financial products to these customers for use in their normal business operations, as well as provide financing of working capital, capital investments, and equipment. Additionally, our CRE business supports income producing real estate and home builders. The Community Banking segment also offers warehouse lines of credit to non-bank mortgage lenders.

 Three Months Ended, 1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
Community BankingMarch 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$122 $147 $156 $(25)$(34)
(Benefit) provision for credit losses22 (14)13 36 
Net interest income after (benefit) provision for credit losses100 138 170 (38)(70)
Other noninterest income18 16 18 — 
Total noninterest income18 16 18 — 
Compensation and benefits28 26 31 (3)
Commissions— — 
Loan processing expense
General, administrative and other18 21 25 (3)(7)
Total noninterest expense49 49 58 — (9)
Income before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes69 105 130 (36)(61)
Indirect overhead allocation(10)(9)(10)(1)— 
Provision for income taxes12 20 25 (8)(13)
Net income$47 $76 $95 $(29)$(48)
Key Metrics
Number of FTE employees1,173 1,123 1,273 50 (100)
Number of bank branches158 158 158 — — 

Comparison to Prior Quarter

    The Community Banking segment reported net income of $47 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, compared to net income of $76 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2021. The $29 million decrease was driven by the following:

Net interest income decreased $25 million primarily due to a $1.2 billion decline in our warehouse portfolio as a result of the reduction in the mortgage origination market and a higher intercompany funding rate.

General, administrative and other noninterest expense decreased $3 million due to lower intersegment expense allocations from the Other segment. This is primarily due to the decrease in ACL during the first quarter 2022 resulting in a provision benefit and higher net charge-offs which resulted in a benefit to the Other segment.

The provision for credit losses was $22 million in the first quarter 2022, compared to a $9 million provision in the prior quarter. The increase was primarily all from the $20 million charge-off associated with one commercial credit.

Comparison to Prior Year Quarter

    The Community Banking segment reported net income of $47 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to $95 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021. The decrease was driven by the following:
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Net interest income decreased $34 million primarily due to a $2.4 billion decline in our warehouse portfolio as a result of the reduction in the mortgage origination market and higher intercompany funding rate charges on our assets.

The provision for credit losses of $22 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022 was primarily driven by a charge-off relating to one commercial borrower. The $14 million benefit for credit losses for the three months ended March 31, 2021 was primarily due to a $16 million recovery on a previously charged-off loan.

General, administrative and other noninterest expense decreased $7 million due to lower intersegment expense allocations from the Other segment. This is primarily due to the decrease in ACL during the first quarter of 2022, resulting in a provision benefit and higher net charge-offs, which caused a benefit to the Other segment.

Mortgage Originations

    We are a leading national originator of residential first mortgages. Our Mortgage Originations segment utilizes multiple distribution channels to originate or acquire one-to-four family residential mortgage loans on a national scale, primarily to sell. Subsequent to sale, we retain certain mortgage servicing rights which are reported at their fair value. The fair value includes service fee revenues, a cost to service which is an intercompany allocation paid to our servicing business, and other financial line impacts. We originate and retain certain mortgage loans in our LHFI portfolio which generate interest income in the Mortgage Originations segment.
 Three Months Ended, 1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
Mortgage OriginationsMarch 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$56 $62 $56 $(6)$— 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses(3)(2)
Net interest income after provision (benefit) for credit losses53 65 58 (12)(5)
Net gain on loan sales45 91 227 (46)(182)
Loan fees and charges10 24 (4)(18)
Loan administration expense(7)(7)(10)— 
Net return on mortgage servicing rights29 19 — 10 29 
Other noninterest income(4)(2)
Total noninterest income74 118 244 (44)(170)
Compensation and benefits45 49 54 (4)(9)
Commissions25 37 61 (12)(36)
Loan processing expense11 11 (2)(2)
General, administrative and other11 23 22 (12)(11)
Total noninterest expense90 120 148 (30)(58)
Income before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes37 63 154 (26)(117)
Indirect overhead allocation(15)(17)(19)
Provision for income taxes28 (5)(24)
Net income$18 $37 $107 $(19)$(89)
Key Metrics
Mortgage rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted) (1)(2)$7,700 $8,900 $12,300 $(1,200)$(4,600)
Noninterest expense to closing volume1.11 %1.13 %1.07 %(0.02)%0.04 %
Number of FTE employees2,044 2,109 2,083 (100)(39)
(1)Fallout-adjusted refers to mortgage rate lock commitments which are adjusted by a percentage of mortgage loans in the pipeline that are not expected to close based on our historical experience and the impact of changes in interest rates.
(2)Rounded to nearest hundred million.

Comparison to Prior Quarter

    The Mortgage Originations segment reported net income of $18 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022 as compared to $37 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2021. The $19 million decrease was driven by the following:
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Net gain on loan sales decreased $46 million as compared to the fourth quarter 2021. Gain on sale margins decreased by 44 basis points to 58 basis points for the first quarter 2022, as compared to 102 basis points for the fourth quarter 2021. The decrease was largely the result of fewer re-securitization gains from the LGG portfolio and secondary marketing performance, which was impacted by the speed of interest rate changes in the quarter. Channel margins were down slightly due to competitive factors. FOALs decreased $1.2 billion, or 13 percent, to $7.7 billion.

Net interest income decreased $6 million primarily due to a $1.6 billion, or 24 percent, decline in the LHFS portfolio driven by the reduction in the mortgage origination market, partially offset by higher interest rates.
Net return on mortgage servicing rights increased $10 million, to $29 million for the first quarter 2022, compared to a $19 million net return for the fourth quarter 2021. The increase in interest rates during the quarter resulted in improved valuations and hedging results as we reduced our hedge ratio on this portfolio to help mitigate the impact of higher mortgage rates on our mortgage origination revenue.

Commissions decreased $12 million, primarily due to a 23 percent reduction in mortgage loan closings.

General, administrative and other noninterest expense decreased $12 million primarily due to lower intersegment expense allocations from the Other segment. This is primarily due to the decrease in ACL during the quarter resulting in a provision benefit and higher net charge-offs which resulted in a benefit to the Other segment.

Comparison to Prior Year Quarter
    
    The Mortgage Originations segment reported net income of $18 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022 and $107 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021. The decrease was driven by the following:

Net gain on loan sales decreased $182 million primarily due to $4.6 billion lower FOALs and a 126 basis points decrease in our gain on sale margin driven by the challenging mortgage market and competitive factors relative to the prior year.

Commissions decreased $36 million and loan fees and charges decreased $18 million primarily due to reduction in mortgage closings.

Compensation and benefits decreased $9 million primarily due to lower incentive compensation and lower FTE.

General, administrative and other noninterest expense decreased $11 million primarily due to lower intersegment expense allocations from the Other segment. This is primarily due to the decrease in ACL during the quarter resulting in a provision benefit and higher net charge-offs which resulted in a benefit to the Other segment.
Net return on mortgage servicing rights, including the impact of economic hedges, increased $29 million primarily driven by reduced hedge ratio in this portfolio and increased interest rates during quarter ended March 31, 2021.

Mortgage Servicing
    
    The Mortgage Servicing segment services loans when we hold the MSR asset, and subservices mortgage loans for others through a scalable servicing platform on a fee for service basis. The loans we service generate custodial deposits which provide a stable funding source supporting interest-earning asset generation in the Community Banking and Mortgage Originations segments. We earn income from other segments for the use of noninterest-bearing escrows. Revenue for serviced and subserviced loans is earned on a contractual fee basis, with the fees varying based on our responsibilities and the delinquency or payment status of the underlying loans. Along with these contractual fees, we may also collect ancillary fees related to these loans. The Mortgage Servicing segment also services residential mortgages for our LHFI portfolio in the Community Banking segment and our own MSR portfolio in the Mortgage Originations segment for which it earns intersegment revenue on a fee per loan basis. Our continued growth in our subservicing business and the strength of our platform has made us the 6th largest subservicer in the nation.

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 Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
Mortgage ServicingMarch 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$$$$(1)$(1)
Loan fees and charges21 18 18 
Loan administration income43 45 40 (2)
Total noninterest income64 63 58 
Compensation and benefits16 16 16 — — 
Loan processing expense
General, administrative and other21 22 22 (1)(1)
Total noninterest expense46 46 46 — — 
Income before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes21 19 16 
Indirect overhead allocation(6)(5)(6)(1)— 
Provision for income taxes— 
Net income$12 $11 $$$
Key Metrics
Average number of residential loans serviced (1)1,245,000 1,218,000 1,117,000 27,000 128,000 
Number of FTE employees736 729 721 15 
(1)Rounded to nearest thousand.

    The following table presents loans serviced and the number of accounts associated with those loans:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
Unpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsUnpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsUnpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accounts
(Dollars in millions)
Loan Servicing
Subserviced for others (2)$253,013 1,041,251 $246,858 1,032,923 $197,053 921,126 
Serviced for others (3)40,065 154,404 35,074 137,243 40,402 160,511 
Serviced for own loan portfolio (4)7,215 60,167 8,793 63,426 9,965 66,363 
Total loans serviced$300,293 1,255,822 $290,725 1,233,592 $247,420 1,148,000 
(1)UPB, net of write downs, does not include premiums or discounts.
(2)Loans subserviced for a fee for non-Flagstar owned loans or MSRs. Includes temporary short-term subservicing performed as a result of sales of servicing-released MSRs.
(3)Loans for which Flagstar owns the MSR.
(4)Includes LHFI (residential first mortgage, home equity and other consumer), LHFS (residential first mortgage), LGG (residential first mortgage), and repossessed assets.

Comparison to Prior Quarter

The Mortgage Servicing segment reported net income of $12 million for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, compared to net income of $11 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2021 as a result of a slightly higher number of loans serviced and subserviced. Loan administration income declined $2 million driven by lower monthly subservicing fees due to a lower number of loans being in forbearance. LIBOR-based fees paid to sub-servicing customers on custodial deposits controlled by them were flat as a $1.3 billion decline in the average balance of custodial deposits was offset by a higher variable rate.

Comparison to Prior Year Quarter

The Mortgage Servicing segment reported net income of $12 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to net income of $8 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021. The $4 million increase in net income was driven by a $6 million increase in noninterest income primarily driven by a $2.2 billion decline in LIBOR-based fees paid to sub-servicing customers on custodial deposits controlled by them and higher ancillary fee income.

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Other

    The Other segment includes the treasury functions, which include the impact of interest rate risk management, balance sheet funding activities and the investment securities portfolios, as well as other expenses of a corporate nature, including corporate staff, risk management, and legal expenses which are charged to the line of business segments. The Other segment charges each operating segment a daily funds transfer pricing rate on their average assets which resets more rapidly than the underlying borrowing costs resulting in an asset sensitive position. In addition, the Other segment includes revenue and expenses not directly assigned or allocated to the Community Banking, Mortgage Originations or Mortgage Servicing segments.
 Three Months Ended,1Q22 vs. 4Q211Q22 vs. 1Q21
OtherMarch 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$(16)$(32)$(27)$16 $11 
(Benefit) provision for credit losses(29)(23)(12)(6)(17)
Net interest income after (benefit) provision for credit losses13 (9)(15)22 28 
Net gain on loan sales— — — — — 
Loan fees and charges— — (1)— 
Loan administration expense(3)(2)(3)(1)— 
Other noninterest income— 
Total noninterest income(1)— 
Compensation and benefits38 44 43 (6)(5)
Commissions— — — — — 
Loan processing expense— — 
General, administrative and other37 29 51 (14)
Total noninterest expense76 74 95 (19)
Income before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes(59)(78)(106)19 47 
Indirect overhead allocation31 31 35 — (4)
Provision for income taxes(4)(8)(10)
Net loss$(24)$(39)$(61)$15 $37 
Key Metrics
Number of FTE employees1,388 1,484 1,340 (96)48 

Comparison to Prior Quarter

    The Other segment reported a net loss of $24 million, for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, compared to a net loss of $39 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2021. The $15 million improvement was primarily driven by a $16 million increase in net interest income as a result of the net impact that higher interest rates in the first quarter 2022 had on our overall asset sensitive position.

Comparison to Prior Year Quarter

    The Other segment reported a net loss of $24 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022, compared to a net loss of $61 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021. The $37 million improvement was driven by an $11 million increase in net interest income as a result of the net impact that higher interest rates in the first quarter 2022 had on our overall asset sensitive position. Additionally, in the first quarter 2021 we recorded a $35 million final settlement expense for the DOJ Liability which did not reoccur.

Risk Management

    Certain risks are inherent in our business and include, but are not limited to, operational, strategic, credit, regulatory compliance, legal, reputational, liquidity, market and cybersecurity. We continuously invest in our risk management activities which are focused on ensuring we properly identify, measure and manage such risks across the entire enterprise to maintain safety and soundness and maximize profitability. We hold capital to protect us from unexpected loss arising from these risks.
18



    A comprehensive discussion of risks affecting us can be found in the Risk Factors section included in Part I, Item 1A of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 and in Part II, Item 1A of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q. Some of the more significant processes used to manage and control credit, market, liquidity and operational risks are described in the following paragraphs.

Credit Risk

    Credit risk is the risk of loss to us arising from an obligor’s inability or failure to meet contractual payment or performance terms. We provide loans, extend credit, and enter into financial derivative contracts, all of which have related credit risk. We manage credit risk using a thorough process designed to ensure we make prudent and consistent credit decisions. The process was developed with a focus on utilizing risk-based limits and credit concentrations while emphasizing diversification on a geographic, industry and customer level. The process utilizes documented underwriting guidelines, comprehensive documentation standards, and ongoing portfolio monitoring including the timely review and resolution of credits experiencing deterioration. These activities, along with the management of credit policies and credit officers’ delegated authority, are centrally managed by our credit risk team.

    We maintain credit limits, in compliance with regulatory requirements. Under HOLA, the Bank may not make a loan or extend credit to a single or related group of borrowers in excess of 15 percent of Tier 1 plus Tier 2 capital and any portion of the ACL not included in Tier 2 capital. This limit was $466 million as of March 31, 2022. We maintain a more conservative maximum internal Bank credit limit than required by HOLA, generally not exceeding $100 million to any one borrower/obligor relationship, with the exception of warehouse borrower/obligor relationships, which have a higher internal Bank limit of $200 million. All warehouse advances are fully collateralized by residential mortgage loans and this asset class has had very low levels of historical loss. We have a tracking and reporting process to monitor lending concentration levels, and all new commercial credit exposures to a single or related borrower that exceed $50 million and all new warehouse credit exposures to a single or related borrower that exceed $75 million must be approved by the Board of Directors. Exceptions to these levels are made to strong borrowers on a case by case basis, with the approval of the Board of Directors.

    Our commercial loan portfolio has been built on our relationship-based lending strategy. We provide financing and banking products to our commercial customers in our core banking footprint and we will follow those established customer relationships to meet their financing needs in areas outside of our footprint. We have also formed relationship lending on a national scale through our home builder finance and warehouse lending businesses. At March 31, 2022, we had $9.9 billion UPB in our commercial loan portfolio with our warehouse lending and home builder finance businesses accounting for 59 percent of the total. Of the remaining commercial loans in our portfolio, the majority of CRE and C&I loans were with customers who have established relationships within our core banking footprint.

Credit risk within the commercial loan portfolio is managed using concentration limits based on line of business, industry, geography and product type. This is managed through the use of strict underwriting guidelines detailed in credit policies, ongoing loan level reviews, monitoring of the concentration limits and continuous portfolio risk management reporting. The commercial credit policy outlines the risks and underwriting requirements and provides a framework for all credit and lending activities. Our commercial loan credit policies consider maturity and amortization terms, maximum LTVs, minimum debt service coverage ratios, construction loan monitoring procedures, appraisal requirements, pro-forma analysis requirements and thresholds for product specific advance rates.

    We typically originate loans on a recourse basis with full or partial guarantees. On a limited basis, we may approve loans without recourse if sufficient consideration is provided in the loan structure. Non-recourse loans primarily have low LTVs, strong cash flow coverage or other mitigating factors supporting the lack of a guaranty. These guidelines also require an appraisal of pledged collateral prior to closing and on an as-needed basis when market conditions justify. We contract with a variety of independent licensed professional firms to conduct appraisals that are in compliance with our internal commercial credit and appraisal policies and regulatory requirements.

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    Our commercial loan portfolio includes leveraged lending. The Bank defines a transaction as leveraged when two or more of the following conditions exist: 1) proceeds from the loan are used for buyouts, acquisitions, recapitalization or capital distributions, 2) the borrower's total funded debt to EBITDA ratio is greater than four or Senior Funded Debt to EBITDA ratio is greater than three, 3) the borrower has a high debt to net worth ratio within its industry or sector as defined by internal limits, and 4) debt leverage significantly exceeds industry norms or historical levels for leverage as defined by internal limits. Leveraged lending transactions typically result in leverage ratios that are significantly above industry norms or historical levels. Our leveraged lending portfolio and other loan portfolios with above-average default probabilities tend to behave similarly during a downturn in the general economy or a downturn within a specific sector. Consequently, we take steps to avoid undue concentrations by setting limits consistent with our appetite for risk and our financial capacity. In addition, there are specific underwriting conditions set for our leveraged loan portfolio and there is additional emphasis on certain items beyond the standard underwriting process including synergies, collateral shortfall and projections.

    Our commercial loan portfolio also includes loans that are considered to be SNCs. A SNC is defined as any loan or loan commitment totaling at least $100 million that is shared by three or more federally regulated institutions. On an annual basis, a joint regulatory task force performs a risk assessment of all SNCs. When completed, these risk ratings are shared and our risk rating must be no better than the risk rating listed in the SNC assessment. Exposure and credit quality for SNCs are carefully monitored and reported internally.

    For our CRE portfolio, including owner and nonowner-occupied properties and home builder finance lending, we obtain independent appraisals as part of our underwriting and monitoring process. These appraisals are reviewed by an internal appraisal group that is independent from our sales and credit teams.

    The home builder finance group is a national relationship-based lending platform that focuses on markets with strong housing fundamentals and higher population growth potential. The team primarily originates construction and development loans. We generally lend in metropolitan areas or counties where verifiable market statistics and data are readily available to support underwriting and ongoing monitoring. We also evaluate the jurisdictions and laws, demographic trends (age, population and income), housing characteristics and economic indicators (unemployment, economic growth, household income trends) for the geographies where our borrowers primarily operate. We engage independent licensed professionals to supply market studies and feasibility reports, environmental assessments and project site inspections to complement the procedures we perform internally. Further, we perform ongoing monitoring of the projects including periodic inspections of collateral and annual portfolio and individual credit reviews.

    The consumer loan portfolio has been built on strong underwriting criteria and within concentration limits intended to diversify our risk profile. Our consumer loan portfolio includes high credit quality residential first and second lien mortgage loans, non-auto boat and recreational vehicle indirect lending loans and other unsecured consumer loans.

Loans Held-for-Investment

    The following table summarizes the amortized cost of our LHFI by category:
March 31, 2022% of TotalDecember 31, 2021% of TotalChange
 (Dollars in millions)
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$1,499 11.3 %$1,536 11.5 %$(37)
Home equity (1)596 4.5 %613 4.5 %(17)
Other1,267 9.6 %1,236 9.2 %31 
Total consumer loans3,362 25.4 %3,385 25.2 %(23)
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate3,254 24.6 %3,223 24.0 %31 
Commercial and industrial1,979 15.0 %1,826 13.6 %153 
Warehouse lending4,641 35.1 %4,974 37.1 %(333)
Total commercial loans9,874 74.6 %10,023 74.8 %(149)
Total loans held-for-investment$13,236 100.0 %$13,408 100.0 %$(172)
(1)Includes second mortgages, HELOCs, and HELOANs.

    The decrease in our commercial loan portfolio of $149 million, or 1 percent, is mainly due to warehouse repayments outpacing advances from December 31, 2021 to March 31, 2022, partially offset by $184 million higher balances in our commercial and industrial and commercial real estate loan portfolios. Our consumer loan portfolio decreased $23 million, or 1
20


percent, from December 31, 2021 to March 31, 2022 as a $31 million increase in other consumer loans was more than offset by a $37 million decrease in residential first mortgage loans and a $17 million decrease in home equity loans due to higher prepayments due to refinance activity.
    
    Residential first mortgage loans. We originate or purchase various types of conforming and non-conforming fixed and adjustable rate loans underwritten using Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines for the purpose of purchasing or refinancing owner occupied and second home properties. We typically hold certain mortgage loans in LHFI that do not qualify for sale to the Agencies and that have an acceptable yield and risk profile. The LTV requirements on our residential first mortgage loans vary depending on occupancy, property type, loan amount, and FICO scores. Loans with LTVs exceeding 80 percent are required to obtain mortgage insurance. As of March 31, 2022, loans in this portfolio had an average current FICO score of 731 and an average current LTV of 51 percent.

    The following table presents amortized cost of our total residential first mortgage LHFI by major category:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
Estimated LTVs (1)
Less than 80% and current FICO scores (2):
Equal to or greater than 660$962 $988 
Less than 66055 50 
80% and greater and current FICO scores (2):
Equal to or greater than 660369 385 
Less than 660113 113 
Total$1,499 $1,536 
Geographic region
California$444 $441 
Michigan438 400 
Florida80 68 
Texas73 83 
Washington57 59 
New York42 38 
Indiana40 34 
Colorado31 30 
Illinois27 31 
New Jersey22 24 
Other245 328 
Total$1,499 $1,536 
(1)LTVs reflect loan balance at the date reported, as a percentage of appraised property value at loan closing.
(2)FICO scores are updated at least on a quarterly basis or more frequently, if available.
        
    The following table presents amortized cost of our total residential first mortgage LHFI as of March 31, 2022, by year of closing:
20222021202020192018 and PriorTotal
(Dollars in millions)
Residential first mortgage loans$114 $352 $189 $257 $587 $1,499 
Percent of total7.6 %23.5 %12.6 %17.1 %39.2 %100.0 %

    Home equity. Our home equity portfolio includes HELOANs, second mortgage loans, and HELOCs. These loans are underwritten and priced in an effort to ensure credit quality and loan profitability. Our debt-to-income ratio on HELOANs and HELOCs is capped at 43 percent and 45 percent, respectively. We currently limit the maximum CLTV to 89.99 percent and FICO scores to a minimum of 700. Second mortgage loans and HELOANs are fixed rate loans and are available with terms up to 20 years. HELOC loans are variable-rate loans that contain a 10-year interest only draw period followed by a 20-year amortizing period. As of March 31, 2022, loans in this portfolio had an average current FICO score of 753 and an average CLTV of 54 percent. At March 31, 2022, HELOCs and HELOANs in a first lien position totaled $63 million.
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    Other consumer loans. Our other consumer loan portfolio consists of secured and unsecured loans originated through our indirect lending business, third party closings and our Community Banking segment.
    
The following table presents amortized cost of our other consumer loan portfolio by purchase type:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
Balance% of PortfolioBalance% of Portfolio
 (Dollars in millions)
Indirect lending$935 74 %$926 75 %
Point of sale295 23 %272 22 %
Other37 %38 %
Total other consumer loans$1,267 100 %$1,236 100 %

    Other consumer loans totaled $1.3 billion as of March 31, 2022, compared to $1.2 billion at December 31, 2021. The increase in other consumer loans was primarily due to the ongoing growth in our non-auto, boat and recreational vehicle indirect lending businesses, which began in late 2018, of which 66 percent is secured by boats and 34 percent is secured by recreational vehicles and growth in our point of sale portfolio. As of March 31, 2022, loans in our indirect portfolio had an average current FICO score of 747. Point of sale loans consist of unsecured consumer installment loans originated primarily for home improvement purposes through a third-party financial technology company who also provides us a level of credit loss protection.

    Commercial real estate loans. The CRE portfolio contains loans collateralized by diversified property types which are primarily income producing in the normal course of business. The majority of our retail exposure is to neighborhood centers and single tenant locations, which include pharmacies and hardware stores. Generally, the maximum LTV is 80 percent, or 90 percent for owner-occupied real estate, and the minimum debt service coverage is 1.20. Our CRE loans primarily earn interest at a variable rate.

Our national home builder finance program within our commercial portfolio contained $3.0 billion in commitments with $1.2 billion in outstanding loans as of March 31, 2022. Of these outstanding loans $861 million are collateralized and included in our CRE portfolio while $334 million are unsecured and included in our C&I portfolio.

As of March 31, 2022, our CRE portfolio included $158 million of SNCs and no leveraged lending loans compared to $186 million of SNCs and no leveraged lending loans as of December 31, 2021. As of March 31, 2022, the SNC portfolio had ten borrowers with an average amortized cost of $16 million and an average commitment of $19 million. There were no nonperforming SNC or leveraged loans as of March 31, 2022 and there was no SNC that was rated as substandard. There was one special mention SNC loan for $22 million as of March 31, 2022. There were no leveraged loans outstanding that were rated as special mention or substandard as of March 31, 2022.

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    The following table presents amortized cost of our total CRE LHFI by collateral location and collateral type:
MITXCAOHFLOtherTotal% by collateral type
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Home builder$27 $169 $100 $— $186 $379 $861 26.6 %
Multi family209 44 66 50 22 77 468 14.4 %
Owner occupied 300 24 — 59 395 12.1 %
Hotel159 — 26 30 — 180 395 12.1 %
Retail (1)203 — 55 33 296 9.1 %
Senior living facility122 24 — 68 — 56 270 8.3 %
Office173 — 20 — 55 252 7.7 %
Industrial55 — — — — 21 76 2.3 %
Parking garage/lot46 — — — — 20 66 2.0 %
Shopping Mall — — 16 — — — 16 0.5 %
Land-residential (2)— — — — 12 0.4 %
Single family residence (3)— — — — 0.2 %
All other (4)15 48 — — 72 140 4.3 %
Total$1,320 $289 $261 $220 $211 $953 $3,254 100.0 %
Percent by state40.6 %8.9 %8.0 %6.8 %6.5 %29.2 %100.0 %
(1)Includes multipurpose retail space, neighborhood centers, shopping centers and single-use retail space.
(2)Loans secured by land. Land residential includes development and unimproved vacant land.
(3)Loans secured by 1-4 single family residence properties.
(4)All other primarily includes: mini-storage facilities, data centers, movie theaters, etc.

    Commercial and industrial loans. C&I LHFI facilities typically include lines of credit and term loans to businesses for use in normal business operations to finance working capital, equipment and capital purchases, acquisitions and expansion projects. We lend to customers with a history of profitability and a long-term business model. Generally, leverage conforms to industry standards and the minimum debt service coverage is 1.20 times. Of our C&I loans, 96 percent earn interest at a variable rate.

    As of March 31, 2022, our C&I portfolio included $1.0 billion of SNCs. The finance and insurance sector and the services sector comprised the majority of the portfolio's NBV with 39 and 28 percent of the balance, respectively. The SNC portfolio had forty-nine borrowers with an average amortized book value of $21 million and an average commitment of $37 million. There were no NPLs, no loans were rated as special mention, and loans totaling $23 million of amortized cost were rated as substandard as of March 31, 2022.

    As of March 31, 2022, our C&I portfolio included $327 million of leveraged lending, of which $232 million were SNCs, which were also included in the SNC portfolio discussed in the prior paragraph. The manufacturing sector comprised 50 percent of the leveraged lending portfolio, and the financial and insurance sector comprised 20 percent. There were $9 million in NPLs as of March 31, 2022, and loans totaling $25 million were rated substandard and loans totaling $9 million were rated as special mention. Included in the financial and insurance sector within our C&I portfolio are $342 million in loans outstanding to 8 borrowers that are collateralized by MSR assets with an average amortized cost of $43 million and an average commitment of $72 million. The ratio of the loan outstanding to the fair market value of the collateral ranges from 12 percent to 69 percent.

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    The following table presents amortized cost of our total C&I LHFI by borrower's geographic location and industry type as defined by the North American Industry Classification System:
MINYFLSCCANJTXOHWIINOtherTotal% by industry
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Financial & Insurance$27 $232 $47 $103 $22 $98 $43 $41 $22 $— $82 $717 36.2 %
Services131 16 — 10 11 — — 99 272 13.7 %
Manufacturing238 — — — — — — — 47 296 15.0 %
Home Builder Finance— — 122 39 82 — 52 — — — 39 334 16.9 %
Rental & Leasing156 27 30 — — — — — — 24 245 12.4 %
Distribution35 — — — 13 — — — 53 2.7 %
Healthcare— — — — — — 18 — — 12 33 1.7 %
Government & Education— — — — — — — — 12 16 0.8 %
Commodities— — — — — — — — 13 0.7 %
Total$591 $263 $214 $141 $133 $108 $94 $61 $29 $13 $325 $1,979 100.0 %
Percent by state30.0 %13.0 %11.0 %7.0 %7.0 %6.0 %5.0 %3.0 %1.0 %1.0 %16.0 %100.0 %

    Warehouse lending. We have a national platform with relationship managers across the country. We offer warehouse lines of credit to other mortgage lenders which allow the lender to fund the closing of residential mortgage loans. Each extension, advance, or draw-down on the line is fully collateralized by residential mortgage loans and is paid off when the lender sells the loan to an outside investor or, in some instances, to the Bank.

    Underlying mortgage loans are predominantly originated using the Agencies' underwriting standards. The guideline for debt to tangible net worth is 15 to 1. The aggregate committed amount of warehouse lines of credit granted to other mortgage lenders at March 31, 2022 was $12.0 billion, of which $4.6 billion was outstanding, compared to $12.0 billion at December 31, 2021, of which $5.0 billion was outstanding.

Credit Quality

    Our focus on effectively managing credit risk through our careful underwriting standards and processes has resulted in strong trends in certain credit quality characteristics in our loan portfolios. The credit quality of our loan portfolios is demonstrated by low delinquency levels, minimal charge-offs and low levels of NPLs.

For all loan categories within the consumer and commercial loan portfolio, loans are placed on nonaccrual status when any portion of principal or interest is 90 days past due (or nonperforming), or earlier when we become aware of information indicating that collection of principal and interest is in doubt. While it is the goal of Management to collect on loans under their original legal terms, we attempt to work out a satisfactory repayment schedule or modification with past due borrowers and will undertake foreclosure proceedings if the delinquency is not satisfactorily resolved. Our practices regarding past due loans are designed to both assist borrowers in meeting their contractual obligations and minimize losses incurred by the Bank. When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status, the accrued interest income is reversed. Loans return to accrual status when principal and interest become current and are anticipated to be fully collectible.

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Nonperforming assets     

    The following table sets forth our nonperforming assets:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
LHFI
Residential first mortgage (1)$76 $38 
Home equity
Other consumer
Commercial and industrial (2)32 
Total nonperforming LHFI95 81 
TDRs
Residential first mortgage10 11 
Home equity
Total nonperforming TDRs12 13 
Total nonperforming LHFI and TDRs (2)107 94 
Real estate and other nonperforming assets, net
LHFS24 17 
Total nonperforming assets$135 $117 
Nonperforming assets to total assets (3)0.48 %0.39 %
Nonperforming LHFI and TDRs to LHFI0.80 %0.70 %
Nonperforming assets to LHFI and repossessed assets (3)0.84 %0.74 %
(1)Includes $33 million of first residential mortgage loans that are current in accordance with their forbearance exit plan and have not yet returned to accrual status as of March 31, 2022.
(2)Includes one commercial loan less than 90 days past due in nonaccrual that is current in accordance with their forbearance plan.
(3)Ratio excludes LHFS, which are recorded at fair value.

    The following table sets forth activity related to our total nonperforming LHFI and TDRs:
Three Months Ended,
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
Beginning balance$93 $94 
Additions 54 10 
Reductions— — 
Principal payments(10)(9)
Charge-offs(25)(1)
Return to performing status(5)(1)
Transfers to REO— — 
Total nonperforming LHFI and TDRs (1)$107 $93 
(1)Includes less than 90 days past due performing loans which are deemed nonaccrual. Interest is not being accrued on these loans.

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Delinquencies

    The following table sets forth loans 30-89 days past due in our LHFI portfolio:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
Amount% of LHFIAmount% of LHFI
(Dollars in millions)
Performing loans past due 30-89:
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$15 0.11 %$48 0.36 %
Home equity0.02 %0.07 %
Other consumer0.03 %0.04 %
Total consumer loans22 0.17 %62 0.46 %
CRE— — %— — %
C&I— — %— — %
Total commercial loans— — %— — %
Total performing loans past due 30-89 days$22 0.17 %$62 0.46 %

    For further information, see Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment.

Payment Deferrals

Beginning in March 2020, as a response to COVID-19, we offered our consumer borrowers principal and interest payment deferrals, forbearance and/or extensions up to a maximum period of 18 months. Consumer borrowers were not required to provide proof of hardship to be granted forbearance or payment deferral. Typically, payment history is the primary tool used to identify consumer borrowers who are experiencing financial difficulty. Forbearance or payment deferrals make this determination more challenging. In addition, consumer borrowers who have requested forbearance or payment deferrals are not being aged and remain in the aging category they were in prior to forbearance or payment deferral while they remain in a forbearance or payment deferral status.

    The table below summarizes borrowers in our consumer loan portfolios that are in active forbearance or were granted a payment deferral:
As of March 31, 2022As of December 31, 2021
 Number of BorrowersUPBPercent of PortfolioNumber of BorrowersUPBPercent of Portfolio
(Dollars in millions, actual number of borrowers)
Loans Held-For-Investment
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage178$32 2.1 %212$35 2.3 %
Home equity410.8 %480.8 %
Other consumer920.3 %960.3 %
Total consumer loan deferrals/forbearance311$41 1.2 %356$44 1.3 %
Loans Held-For-Sale
Residential first mortgage24$0.2 %47$13 0.3 %

There were no performing commercial borrowers in payment deferral as of March 31, 2022.


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The table below summarizes the percent of our residential loan servicing portfolio in forbearance as of March 31, 2022:
Total PopulationLoans in Forbearance
Unpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsUnpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsPercent of UPBPercent of Accounts
(Dollars in millions)
Loan servicing
Subserviced for others (2)$253,970 1,044,616 $2,512 11,338 1.0 %1.1 %
Serviced for others (3)39,107 151,035 350 1,366 0.9 %0.9 %
Serviced for own loan portfolio (4)7,217 60,171 157 901 2.2 %1.5 %
Total loans serviced$300,294 1,255,822 $3,019 13,605 1.0 %1.1 %
(1)UPB, net of write downs, does not include premiums or discounts.
(2)Loans subserviced for non-Flagstar owned loans or MSRs, in each case subserviced for a fee. Includes temporary short-term subservicing performed as a result of sales of servicing-released MSRs.
(3)Loans for which Flagstar owns the MSR.
(4)Includes LHFI (residential first mortgage, home equity and other consumer), LHFS (residential first mortgage), and LGG (residential first mortgage).

The table below summarizes the percent of our residential loan servicing portfolio in forbearance as of December 31, 2021:

Total PopulationLoans in Forbearance
Unpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsUnpaid Principal Balance (1)Number of accountsPercent of UPBPercent of Accounts
(Dollars in millions)
Loan servicing
Subserviced for others (2)$247,081 1,033,711 $3,946 18,313 1.6 %1.8 %
Serviced for others (3)35,097 137,315 514 2,158 1.5 %1.6 %
Serviced for own loan portfolio (4)8,645 63,039 220 1,158 2.5 %1.8 %
Total loans serviced$290,823 1,234,065 $4,680 21,629 1.6 %1.8 %
(1)UPB, net of write downs, does not include premiums or discounts.
(2)Loans subserviced for non-Flagstar owned loans or MSRs, in each case subserviced for a fee. Includes temporary short-term subservicing performed as a result of sales of servicing-released MSRs.
(3)Loans for which Flagstar owns the MSR.
(4)Includes LHFI (residential first mortgage, home equity and other consumer), LHFS (residential first mortgage), and LGG (residential first mortgage).

As the MSR owner for loans serviced for others, the Agencies require us to advance payments on past due loans as follows:
Principal and InterestTaxes and Insurance
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac4 monthsNo time limit
GNMANo time limitNo time limit

We believe that we have ample liquidity to handle servicing advances related to these loans. We initially provide advances on a short-term basis for loans we subservice and are reimbursed by the MSR owner. Our advance receivable for our subserviced loans is therefore insignificant.

Troubled debt restructurings (held-for-investment)

TDRs are modified loans in which a borrower demonstrates financial difficulties and for which a concession has been granted as a result. Nonperforming TDRs are included in nonaccrual loans. TDRs remain in nonperforming status until a borrower has made payments and is current for at least six consecutive months. Performing TDRs are not considered to be nonaccrual so long as we believe that all contractual principal and interest due under the restructured terms will be collected.

    Since March 2020, as a response to COVID-19, we have offered our consumer and commercial customers principal and interest payment deferrals and extensions up to a maximum period of 18 months. We considered these programs in the context of whether or not the short-term modifications of these loans and the programs offered to return to paying status would constitute a TDR. We considered the CARES Act, interagency guidance and related guidance from the FASB, which provided that short-term modifications made on a good faith basis in response to COVID-19 to borrowers who were current prior to any
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relief are not required to be accounted for as TDRs. As a result, we have determined that loans modified under these programs are not TDRs. We believe our application of the referenced guidance and accounting for these programs is appropriate.

    The following table sets forth a summary of TDRs by performing status:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
Performing TDRs
Consumer Loans
Residential first mortgage$16 $14 
Home equity
Total consumer loans23 22 
Commercial Loans
Commercial real estate — — 
Commercial and industrial— 
Total commercial loans— 
Total performing TDRs23 24 
Nonperforming TDRs
Nonperforming TDRs
Nonperforming TDRs, performing for less than six months
Total nonperforming TDRs12 13 
Total TDRs$35 $37 

At March 31, 2022 our total TDR loans decreased $2 million to $35 million compared to $37 million at December 31, 2021 primarily driven by principal payments and payoffs out-pacing new additions. Of our total TDR loans, 66 percent and 65 percent were in performing status at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. For further information, see Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment.

Allowance for Credit Losses

The ACL represents Management's estimate of lifetime losses in our LHFI portfolio which have not yet been realized. For further information see Note 1 - Basis of Presentation and Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment.

The following tables present the changes in the ACL balance for the three months ended March 31, 2022:
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
Residential First Mortgage (1)Home EquityOther ConsumerCommercial Real EstateCommercial and IndustrialWarehouse LendingTotal LHFI Portfolio (2)Unfunded CommitmentsTotal ACL
(Dollars in millions)
Beginning allowance balance$40 $14 $36 $28 $32 $$154 $16 $170 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses:
Loan volume— — — — (2)
Economic forecast (3)— (2)— — 
Credit (4)— (3)(6)(1)(6)— (6)
Qualitative factor adjustments— — — (1)(4)— (5)— (5)
Charge-offs(1)— (2)— (20)— (23)— (23)
Recoveries— — — — — 
Provision for charge-offs(1)— — — 
Ending allowance balance$43 $16 $34 $22 $13 $$131 $14 $145 
(1)Includes loans with government guarantees where insurance limits may result in a loss in excess of all or part of the guarantee.
(2)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
(3)Includes changes in the lifetime loss rate based on current economic forecasts as compared to forecasts used in the prior quarter.
(4)Includes changes in the probability of default and severity of default based on current borrower and guarantor characteristics, as well as individually evaluated reserves.

The ACL was $145 million at March 31, 2022, compared to $170 million at December 31, 2021. The decrease in the allowance is primarily reflective of the $20 million charge-off of a commercial credit which was specifically reserved at $18 million at December 31, 2021. The remaining decrease is due to decreases in our collectively evaluated portfolio including our consideration of the low levels of delinquency and the performance of our commercial portfolios. This was, partially offset by a
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slight deterioration in economic forecasts focused around consumer personal income and debt service ratios as pandemic-related stimulus comes to an end and inflation increases. We utilized the Moody’s March scenarios in our forecast: a growth forecast, weighted at 30 percent; a baseline forecast, weighted at 40 percent; and an adverse forecast, weighted at 30 percent. Within our composite forecast, unemployment ends 2022 at 4 percent, slightly increasing in 2023 with a full recovery by 2024. GDP continues to recover throughout 2022 and returns to pre-COVID levels in 2023. HPI decreases by 2 percent from the first quarter of 2022 through the fourth quarter of 2022 before increasing 3 percent by the fourth quarter of 2023.
    The ACL as a percentage of LHFI was 1.1 percent as of March 31, 2022 compared to 1.3 percent as of December 31, 2021. Excluding warehouse loans, where we have not experienced charge-offs in several years, the allowance as a percentage of LHFI was 1.6 percent at March 31, 2022 compared to 2.0 percent at December 31, 2021. The decrease in the allowance as a percentage of LHFI is reflective of the credit performance of our portfolio with no delinquent commercial loans.

The following tables set forth certain information regarding the allocation of our allowance to each loan category, including the allowance amount as a percentage of amortized cost and average loan life:
March 31, 2022
 LHFI Portfolio (1)Percent of
Portfolio
Allowance Amount (2)Allowance as a Percent of Loan PortfolioWeighted Average Loan Life
(in years)
(Dollars in millions)
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$1,479 11.2 %$43 2.9 %5
Home equity595 4.5 %16 2.7 %3
Other consumer1,267 9.6 %35 2.8 %3
Total consumer loans3,341 25.3 %94 2.8 %
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate$3,254 24.6 %$28 0.9 %2
Commercial and industrial1,979 15.0 %19 1.0 %2
Warehouse lending4,641 35.1 %0.1 %— 
Total commercial loans9,874 74.7 %51 0.5 %
Total consumer and commercial loans$13,215 100.0 %$145 1.1 %
Total consumer and commercial loans excluding warehouse$8,574 64.9 %$141 1.6 %
(1) Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
(2) Includes ALLL and reserve for unfunded commitments.

December 31, 2021
 LHFI Portfolio (1)Percent of
Portfolio
Allowance Amount (2)Allowance as a Percent of Loan PortfolioWeighted Average Loan Life
(in years)
(Dollars in millions)
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$1,521 11.4 %$40 2.6 %5
Home equity611 4.6 %14 2.3 %3
Other consumer1,236 9.2 %37 3.0 %3
Total consumer loans3,368 25.2 %91 2.7 %
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate$3,223 24.1 %$38 1.2 %1
Commercial and industrial1,826 13.6 %36 2.0 %2
Warehouse lending4,974 37.1 %0.1 %— 
Total commercial loans10,023 74.8 %79 0.8 %
Total consumer and commercial loans$13,391 100.0 %$170 1.3 %
Total consumer and commercial loans excluding warehouse$8,417 62.9 %$165 2.0 %
(1) Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
(2) Includes ALLL and reserve for unfunded commitments.

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Market Risk

    Market risk is the risk of reduced earnings and/or declines in the net market value of the balance sheet due to changes in market rates. Our primary market risk is interest rate risk which impacts our net interest income, fee income related to interest sensitive activities such as mortgage closing and servicing income, and loan and deposit demand.

We are subject to interest rate risk due to:

The maturity or repricing of assets and liabilities at different times or for different amounts
Differences in short-term and long-term market interest rate changes
The remaining maturity of various assets or liabilities may shorten or lengthen as interest rates change

    Our ALCO, which is composed of our executive officers and certain other members of management, monitors interest rate risk on an ongoing basis in accordance with policies approved by our Board of Directors. The ALCO reviews interest rate positions and considers the impact projected interest rate scenarios have on earnings, capital, liquidity, business strategies, and other factors. However, Management has the latitude to change interest rate positions within certain limits if, in Management's judgment, the change will enhance profitability or minimize risk.

    To assess and manage interest rate risk, sensitivity analysis is used to determine the impact on earnings and the net market value of the balance sheet across various interest rate scenarios, balance sheet trends, and strategies.

Net interest income sensitivity

    Management uses a simulation model to analyze the sensitivity of net interest income to changes in interest rates across various interest rate scenarios which demonstrates the level of interest rate risk inherent in the existing balance sheet. The analysis holds the current balance sheet values constant and does not take into account management intervention. In addition, we assume certain correlation rates, often referred to as a “deposit beta”, for non-maturity interest-bearing deposits, wherein the rates paid to customers change relative to changes in benchmark interest rates. The effect on net interest income over a 12-month time horizon due to hypothetical changes in market interest rates is presented in the table below. In this interest rate shock simulation, as of the periods presented, interest rates have been adjusted by instantaneous parallel changes rather than in a ramp simulation which applies interest rate changes over time. All rates, short-term and long-term, are changed by the same amount (e.g. plus 100 basis points) resulting in the shape of the yield curve remaining unchanged.
March 31, 2022
ScenarioNet interest income$ Change% Change
(Dollars in millions)
100$846$405.1%
Constant806—%
(100)738(68)(8.3)%
December 31, 2021
ScenarioNet interest income$ Change% Change
(Dollars in millions)
100$882$12216.1%
Constant760—%
(100)695(65)(8.5)%

    In the net interest income simulations, our balance sheet exhibits asset sensitivity. When interest rates rise, our net interest income increases. Conversely, when interest rates fall, our net interest income decreases. The reduction in our interest income sensitivity as of March 31, 2022 compared to December 31, 2021 is primarily driven by changes in our hedging activities as described in Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments.

    The net interest income sensitivity analysis has certain limitations and makes various assumptions. Key elements of this interest rate risk exposure assessment include maintaining a static balance sheet and parallel rate shocks. Future interest rates not moving in a parallel manner across the yield curve, how the balance sheet will respond and shift based on a change in future interest rates, the impact of interest rate floors on certain of our commercial loans and how the Company will respond are not included in this analysis and limit the predictive value of these scenarios.

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Economic value of equity

    Management also utilizes EVE, a point in time analysis of the economic value of our current balance sheet position, which measures interest rate risk over a longer term. The EVE calculation represents a hypothetical valuation of equity, and is defined as the market value of assets, less the market value of liabilities, adjusted for the market value of off-balance sheet instruments. The assessment of both the short-term earnings (Net Interest Income Sensitivity) and long-term valuation (EVE) approaches, rather than Net Interest Income Sensitivity alone provides a more comprehensive analysis of interest rate risk exposure.

There are assumptions and inherent limitations in any methodology used to estimate the exposure to changes in market interest rates and as such, sensitivity calculations used in this analysis are hypothetical and should not be considered to be predictive of future results. This analysis evaluates risks to the current balance sheet only and does not incorporate future growth assumptions. Additionally, the analysis assumes interest rate changes are instantaneous and the new rate environment is constant but does not include actions Management may undertake to manage risk in response to interest rate changes. Each rate scenario reflects unique prepayment and repricing assumptions. Management derives these assumptions by considering published market prepayment expectations, repricing characteristics, our historical experience, and our asset and liability management strategy. This analysis assumes that changes in interest rates may not affect or could partially affect certain instruments based on their characteristics.

    The following table is a summary of the changes in our EVE that are projected to result from hypothetical changes in market interest rates as well as our internal policy limits for changes in our EVE based on the different scenarios. The interest rates, as of the dates presented, are adjusted by instantaneous parallel rate increases and decreases as indicated in the scenarios shown in the table below.
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
ScenarioEVEEVE %$ Change% ChangeScenarioEVEEVE %$ Change% ChangePolicy Limits for % Change
(Dollars in millions)
300$4,878 21.5 %$803 19.7 %300$4,579 18.2 %$1,042 29.5 %(22.5)%
2004,678 20.6 %603 14.8 %2004,232 16.8 %695 19.6 %(15.0)%
1004,400 19.4 %325 8.0 %1003,939 15.6 %402 11.4 %(7.5)%
Current4,075 18.0 %— — %Current3,537 14.0 %— — %— %
(100)N/MN/MN/MN/M(100)N/MN/MN/MN/M7.5 %

    Our balance sheet exhibits asset sensitivity in various interest rate scenarios. The increase in EVE as rates rise is the result of the amount of assets that would be expected to reprice exceeding the amount of liabilities repriced. The amount of the change in EVE decreased as of March 31, 2022 compared to December 31, 2021 primarily driven by changes in our hedging activities as described in Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments. For each scenario shown, the percentage change in our EVE is within our Board policy limits.

Derivative financial instruments

    As a part of our risk management strategy, we use derivative financial instruments to minimize fluctuation in earnings caused by market risk. We use forward sales commitments to hedge our unclosed mortgage closing pipeline and funded mortgage LHFS. All of our derivatives and mortgage loan production originated for sale are accounted for at fair market value and we do not apply hedge accounting related to the management of these risks. Changes to our unclosed mortgage closing pipeline are based on changes in fair value of the underlying loan, which is impacted most significantly by changes in interest rates and changes in the probability that the loan will not fund within the terms of the commitment, referred to as a fallout factor or, inversely, a pull-through rate. Market risk on interest rate lock commitments and mortgage LHFS is managed using corresponding forward sale commitments. The adequacy of these hedging strategies, and the ability to fully or partially hedge market risk, rely on various assumptions or projections, including a fallout factor, which is based on a statistical analysis of our actual rate lock fallout history.

We have designated certain interest rate swaps as fair value hedges of investment securities AFS using the last-of-layer method. Additionally, we designated certain interest rate swaps as cash flow hedges on LIBOR-based variable interest payments on certain commercial loans. For further information, see Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments and Note 16 - Fair Value Measurements.

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Mortgage Servicing Rights (MSRs)

    Our MSRs are sensitive to changes in interest rates and are highly susceptible to prepayment risk, basis risk, market volatility and changes in the shape of the yield curve. We utilize derivatives, including interest rate swaps and swaptions, as part of our overall hedging strategy to manage the impact of changes in the fair value of the MSRs, however these risk management strategies do not completely eliminate all risk. Our hedging strategies rely on assumptions and projections regarding assets and general market factors, many of which are outside of our control. For further information, see Note 7 - Mortgage Servicing Rights, Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments and Note 16 - Fair Value Measurements. 

Liquidity Risk

    Liquidity risk is the risk that we will not have sufficient funds, at a reasonable cost, to meet current and future cash flow needs as they become due. The liquidity of a financial institution reflects the ability to, at a reasonable cost, meet loan demand, to accommodate possible outflows in deposits and to take advantage of interest rate and market opportunities. The ability of a financial institution to meet current financial obligations is a function of the balance sheet structure, the ability to liquidate assets, and access to various sources of funds.

Parent Company Liquidity

    The Company currently obtains its liquidity primarily from dividends paid by the Bank. The primary uses of the Company's liquidity are debt service, operating expenses and the payment of cash dividends to shareholders, which remained at $0.06 per share in the first quarter 2022. The Company holds $150 million of subordinated debt which is scheduled to mature on November 1, 2030. The Bank did not pay any dividends to the Company in the first quarter of 2022 and at March 31, 2022, the Company held $205.4 million of cash on deposit at the Bank which is sufficient to cover the cash outflows needed to service the subordinated debt interest, pay dividends and cover the operating expenses of the Company in excess of 2 years.

    The OCC and the FRB regulate all capital distributions made by the Bank, directly or indirectly, to the holding company, including dividend payments. Whether an application or notice is required is based on a number of factors including whether the institution qualifies for expedited treatment under the OCC rules and regulations or if the total amount of all capital distributions (including each proposed capital distribution) for the applicable calendar year exceeds net income for that year to date plus the retained net income for the preceding two years, or the Bank would not be at least adequately capitalized following the dividend. Additional restrictions on dividends apply if the Bank fails the QTL test for more than three out of the prior twelve months. As of March 31, 2022, the Bank is in compliance with the QTL test, having qualified assets above the 65 percent requirement for twelve of the prior twelve months. At March 31, 2022, the Bank is able to pay dividends to the holding company of approximately $1 billion without submitting an application to the OCC and remain well capitalized.

Bank Liquidity
    
    Our primary sources of funding are deposits from retail and government customers, custodial deposits related to loans we service and FHLB borrowings. We use the FHLB of Indianapolis as a significant source for funding our residential mortgage origination business due to the flexibility in terms which allows us to borrow or repay borrowings as daily cash needs require. The amount we can borrow, or the value we receive for the assets pledged to our liquidity providers, varies based on the amount and type of pledged collateral, as well as the perceived market value of the assets and the "haircut" of the market value of the assets. That value is sensitive to the pricing and policies of our liquidity providers and can change with little or no notice.

    Further, other sources of liquidity include our LHFS portfolio and unencumbered investment securities. We primarily originate agency-eligible LHFS and therefore the majority of new residential first mortgage loan closings are readily convertible to cash, either by selling them as part of our monthly agency sales, RMBS, private party whole loan sales, or by pledging them to the FHLB and borrowing against them. In addition, we have the ability to sell unencumbered investment securities or use them as collateral. At March 31, 2022, we had $1.6 billion of advances outstanding and an additional $3.2 billion of collateralized borrowing capacity available at the FHLB.

    Our primary measure of liquidity is a ratio of ready liquidity to volatile funding, the volatile funds coverage ratio (“VFCR”). The VFCR is a liquidity coverage ratio that is customized to our business and ensures we have adequate coverage to meet our liquidity needs during times of liquidity stress. Volatile funds are the portion of the Bank’s funding identified as being at a higher risk of runoff in times of stress. Ready liquidity consists of cash on reserve at the Federal Reserve and unused borrowing capacity provided by the loan and investments portfolios. The VFCR is calculated, reported, and forecasted daily as
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part of our liquidity management framework and as of March 31, 2022 was 169 percent and in compliance with our board policy limit of 90 percent.
    
    Our liquidity position is continuously monitored and adjustments are made to the balance between sources and uses of funds as deemed appropriate. We balance the liquidity of our loan assets to our available funding sources. Our LHFI portfolio is funded with stable core deposits whereas our warehouse loans and LHFS may be funded with FHLB borrowings and custodial deposits. Warehouse loans are typically more liquid than other loan assets, as loans are paid within a short amount of time, when the lender sells the loan to an outside investor or, in some instances, to the Bank. As not all asset categories require the same level of liquidity, our loan-to-deposit ratio shows how we manage our liquidity position, how much liquidity we have and the agility of our balance sheet. The Company's average HFI loan-to-deposit ratio was 68.5 percent for the three months ended March 31, 2022. Excluding warehouse loans, which have draws that typically pay off within a few weeks, and custodial deposits, which represent mortgage escrow accounts on deposit with the Bank, the average HFI loan-to-deposit ratio was 64.1 percent for the three months ended March 31, 2022.

    As governed and defined by our policy, we maintain adequate excess liquidity levels appropriate to cover unanticipated liquidity needs. In addition to this liquidity, we also maintain targeted minimum levels of unused borrowing capacity as another cushion against unexpected liquidity needs. Each business day, we forecast 90 days of daily cash needs. This allows us to determine our projected near term daily cash fluctuations and also to plan and adjust, if necessary, future activities. As a result, in an adverse environment, we believe we would be able to make adjustments to operations as required to meet the liquidity needs of our business, including adjusting deposit rates to increase deposits, planning for additional FHLB borrowings, accelerating sales of LHFS (agencies and/or private), selling LHFI or investment securities, borrowing through the use of repurchase agreements, reducing closings, making changes to warehouse funding facilities, or borrowing from the discount window.

    The following table presents primary sources of funding as of the dates indicated:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021Change
(Dollars in millions)
Retail deposits$10,175 $10,264 $(89)
Government deposits1,886 2,000 (114)
Wholesale deposits974 1,141 (167)
Custodial deposits4,313 4,604 (291)
Total deposits17,348 18,009 (661)
FHLB advances and other short-term debt
1,400 3,280 (1,880)
Other long-term debt396 396 — 
Total borrowed funds1,796 3,676 (1,880)
Total funding $19,144 $21,685 $(2,541)

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    The following table presents our borrowing capacity as of the dates indicated:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021Change
(Dollars in millions)
FLHB Borrowing capacity
Line of credit available
$30 $30 $— 
Collateralized borrowing capacity3,182 3,792 (610)
Total unused borrowing capacity
$3,212 $3,822 $(610)
FRB discount window
Collateralized borrowing capacity$1,724 $1,666 $58 
Unencumbered investment securities
Agency - Commercial (1)$995 $123 $872 
Agency - Residential (1)543 55 488 
Municipal obligations 17 18 (1)
Corporate debt obligations53 54 (1)
Other— 
Total unencumbered investment securities1,609 251 1,358 
Total liquidity sources and borrowing capacity$6,545 $5,739 $806 
(1) These are not currently pledged to the FHLB but are eligible to be pledged, at our discretion.

Deposits

    The following table presents the composition of our deposits:
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
Balance% of DepositsBalance% of DepositsChange
(Dollars in millions)
Retail deposits
Branch retail deposits
Savings accounts$3,814 22.0 %$3,751 20.8 %$63 
Certificates of deposit/CDARS (1)898 5.2 %951 5.3 %(53)
Demand deposit accounts1,962 11.3 %1,946 10.8 %16 
Money market demand accounts497 2.9 %494 2.7 %
Total branch retail deposits7,171 41.3 %7,142 39.7 %29 
Commercial deposits (2)
Demand deposit accounts2,106 12.1 %2,194 12.2 %(88)
Savings accounts496 2.9 %520 2.9 %(24)
Money market demand accounts402 2.3 %408 2.3 %(6)
Total commercial retail deposits3,004 17.3 %3,122 17.3 %(118)
Total retail deposits$10,175 58.7 %$10,264 57.0 %$(89)
Government deposits
Savings accounts$743 4.3 %$721 4.0 %$22 
Demand deposit accounts584 3.4 %664 3.7 %(80)
Certificates of deposit/CDARS (1)554 3.2 %609 3.4 %(55)
Money market demand accounts— %— %(1)
Total government deposits1,886 10.9 %2,000 11.1 %(114)
Custodial deposits (3)4,313 24.9 %4,604 25.6 %(291)
Wholesale deposits974 5.6 %1,141 6.3 %(167)
Total deposits (4)$17,348 100.0 %$18,009 100.0 %$(661)
(1)The aggregate amount of CD with a minimum denomination of $100,000 was approximately $1.1 billion and $1.2 billion at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.
(2)Contains deposits from commercial and business banking customers.
(3)Represents investor custodial accounts and escrows controlled by us in connection with loans serviced or subserviced for others that have been placed on deposit with the Bank.
(4)Total exposure related to uninsured deposits over $250,000 was approximately $5.0 billion and $6.0 billion at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.
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    Total deposits decreased $0.7 billion, or 4 percent, at March 31, 2022 compared to December 31, 2021, primarily driven by a decrease in custodial, wholesale, and government deposits.

    We utilize local governmental agencies and other public units as an additional source for deposit funding. At March 31, 2022, we were required to hold collateral for certain Michigan, California, Indiana, Wisconsin and Ohio government deposits based on a variety of factors including, but not limited to, the size of individual deposits, FDIC limits and external bank ratings. At March 31, 2022, collateral held on government deposits was $179 million. At March 31, 2022, government deposit accounts included $554 million of CDs with maturities typically less than one year and $1.3 billion of checking and savings accounts.

    Custodial deposits arise due to our servicing or subservicing of loans for others and represent the portion of the investor custodial accounts on deposit with the Bank. For certain subservice agreements, we give a LIBOR-based fee credit that reduces subservicing income from the MSR owners who controls the $3.6 billion custodial deposit against subservicing income. This cost is a component of net loan administration income.

    We participate in the CDARS program, through which certain customer CDs are exchanged for CDs of similar amounts from other participating banks and customers may receive FDIC insurance up to $50 million. This program helps the Bank secure larger deposits and attract and retain customers. At March 31, 2022, we had $110 million of total CDs enrolled in the CDARS program, a decrease of $5 million from December 31, 2021.

FHLB Advances

    The FHLB provides loans, also referred to as advances, on a fully collateralized basis, to savings banks and other member financial institutions. We are required to maintain a minimum amount of qualifying collateral securing FHLB advances. In the event of default, the FHLB advance is similar to a secured borrowing, whereby the FHLB has the right to sell the pledged collateral to settle the fair value of the outstanding advances.

    We rely upon advances from the FHLB as a source of funding for the closing or purchase of loans for sale in the secondary market and for providing duration specific short-term and long-term financing. The outstanding balance of FHLB advances fluctuates from time to time depending on our current inventory of mortgage LHFS and the availability of lower cost funding sources. Our portfolio includes short-term fixed rate advances and long-term fixed rate advances.

    We are currently authorized through a resolution of our Board of Directors to apply for advances from the FHLB using approved loan types as collateral, which includes residential first mortgage loans, HELOC, CRE loans and investment securities. As of March 31, 2022, our Board of Directors authorized and approved a line of credit with the FHLB of up to $10 billion, which is further limited based on our total assets and qualified collateral, as determined by the FHLB. At March 31, 2022, we had $1.2 billion of advances outstanding and an additional $3.2 billion of collateralized borrowing capacity available at the FHLB.

Federal Reserve Discount Window
    
    We have arrangements with the FRB of Chicago to borrow from its discount window. The discount window is a borrowing facility that we may utilize for short-term liquidity needs arising from special or unusual circumstances. The amount we are allowed to borrow is based on the lendable value of the collateral that we provide. To collateralize the line, we pledge investment securities and loans that are eligible based on FRB of Chicago guidelines.

    At March 31, 2022, we pledged collateral, which included commercial loans, municipal bonds, and agency bonds, to the FRB of Chicago amounting to $2.1 billion with a lendable value of $1.7 billion. At December 31, 2021, we pledged collateral to the FRB of Chicago amounting to $2.3 billion with a lendable value of $1.7 billion. We do not typically utilize this available funding source, and at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, we had no borrowings outstanding against this line of credit.
Other Unsecured Borrowings

We have access to overnight federal funds purchased lines with other Federal Reserve member institutions. We utilize this source of funding for short-term liquidity needs, depending on the availability and cost of our other funding sources. At March 31, 2022 we had $200 million of borrowings outstanding under this source of funding. Additional borrowing capacity under this and other sources of funding can vary depending on market conditions.

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Debt

    As part of our overall capital strategy, we previously raised capital through the issuance of junior subordinated notes to our special purpose trusts formed for the offerings, which issued Tier 1 qualifying preferred stock ("trust preferred securities"). The trust preferred securities are callable by us at any time. Interest is payable on a quarterly basis; however, we may defer interest payments for up to 20 quarters without default or penalty. At March 31, 2022, we are current on all interest payments. Additionally, we have $150 million of subordinated debt outstanding (the "Notes"), which mature on November 1, 2030.

Operational Risk

    Operational risk is the risk to current or projected financial condition and resilience arising from inadequate or failed internal processes or systems, human errors or misconduct, or adverse external events which may include vendor failures, fraudulent activities, disasters, and security risks. We continuously strive to adapt our system of internal controls to ensure compliance with laws, rules, and regulations, and to improve the oversight of our operational risk.

We continuously evaluate internal systems, processes and controls to identify potential vulnerabilities and mitigate potential loss from cyber-attacks. The goal of this framework is to implement effective operational risk techniques and strategies, minimize operational and fraud losses, and enhance our overall performance.

Loans with Government Guarantees

    Substantially all our LGG continue to be insured or guaranteed by the FHA or the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs ("VA"). In the event of a government guaranteed loan borrower default, the Bank has a unilateral option to repurchase loans sold to GNMA if the loan is due, but unpaid, for three consecutive months (typically referred to as 90 days past due) and can recover losses through a claims process from the guarantor. Nonperforming repurchased loans in this portfolio earn interest at a rate based upon the 10-year U.S. Treasury note rate from the time the underlying loan becomes 60 days delinquent until the loan is conveyed to HUD (if foreclosure timelines are met), which is not paid by the FHA until claimed. Additionally, if the Bank cures the loan, it can be resold to GNMA, usually at a gain. If not, the Bank can begin the process of collecting the government guarantee by filing a claim in accordance with established guidelines. Certain loans within our portfolio may be subject to indemnification obligations and insurance limits which expose us to limited credit risk.

    Additional expenses or charges may arise on LGG due to Veteran's Affairs loan insurance limits and FHA property foreclosure and preservation requirements that may result in a loss in excess of all, or part of, the guarantee. During the three months ended March 31, 2022, we had $3 million in net charge-offs related to LGG and have reserved for the remaining risks within other assets and as a component of our ALLL on residential first mortgages.

    Our LGG portfolio totaled $1.3 billion at March 31, 2022, as compared to $1.7 billion at December 31, 2021. GNMA has granted borrowers with an option to seek forbearance on their mortgage repayments. $46 million of GNMA loans are in forbearance as of March 31, 2022. When a GNMA loan is due, but unpaid, for three consecutive months (typically referred to as 90 days past due) the loan is required to be re-recognized on the balance sheet by the MSR owner. These loans are recorded in LGG, and a liability to repurchase the loans is recorded in other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition.

    For further information, see Note 5 - Loans with Government Guarantees and the Credit Risk - Payment Deferrals section of the MD&A.

Capital
    
    Management actively reviews and manages our capital position and strategy. We conduct quarterly capital stress tests and capital adequacy assessments which utilize internally defined scenarios. These analyses are designed to help Management and the Board better understand the integrated sensitivity of various risk exposures through quantifying the potential financial and capital impacts of hypothetical stressful events and scenarios. We make adjustments to our balance sheet composition taking into consideration potential business risks, regulatory requirements and the flexibility to support future growth. We prudently manage our capital position and work with our regulators to ensure that our capital levels are appropriate considering our risk profile.

    The capital standards we are subject to include requirements contemplated by the Dodd-Frank Act as well as guidelines reached by Basel III. These risk-based capital adequacy guidelines are intended to measure capital adequacy with regard to a banking organization’s balance sheet, including off-balance sheet exposures such as unused portions of loan
36


commitments, letters of credit, and recourse arrangements. Our capital ratios are maintained at levels in excess of those considered to be "well-capitalized" by regulators. Tier 1 leverage was 11.83 percent at March 31, 2022 providing a 683 basis point stress buffer above the minimum level needed to be considered “well-capitalized.” Additionally, total risk-based capital to RWA was 16.59 percent at March 31, 2022 providing a 659 basis point buffer above the minimum level needed to be considered "well-capitalized".

    Dodd-Frank Act Section 171, commonly known as the Collins Amendment, established minimum Tier 1 leverage and risk-based capital requirements for insured depository institutions, depository institution holding companies, and non-bank financial companies that are supervised under the Federal Reserve. Under the amendment, certain hybrid securities, such as trust preferred securities, may be included in Tier 1 capital for bank holding companies that had total assets below $15 billion as of December 31, 2009. As we were below $15 billion in assets as of December 31, 2009, the trust preferred securities classified as long-term debt on our balance sheet will be included as Tier 1 capital, unless we complete an acquisition of a depository institution holding company or a depository institution and we report total assets greater than $15 billion in the quarter in which the acquisition occurs. Should that event occur, our trust preferred securities would be included in Tier 2 capital.

Regulatory Capital

    The Bank and Flagstar are subject to the Basel III-based U.S. rules, including capital simplification.

    On March 27, 2020, in response to COVID-19, U.S. banking regulators issued an interim final rule that allows banking organizations the option to delay the initial adoption impact of CECL on regulatory capital for two years followed by a three-year transition period. During the two-year delay we added back to CET1 capital 100 percent of the initial adoption impact of CECL plus 25 percent of the cumulative quarterly changes in the ACL (i.e., quarterly transitional amounts). Starting on January 1, 2022, the quarterly transitional amounts along with the initial adoption impact of CECL are phased out of CET1 capital over the three-year transition period.

    For the period presented, the following table sets forth our capital ratios as well as our excess capital over well-capitalized minimums.
Flagstar BancorpActualWell-Capitalized Under Prompt Corrective Action ProvisionsExcess Capital Over
Well-Capitalized Minimum
 AmountRatioAmountRatioCapital Simplification
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Tier 1 leverage capital
(to adjusted avg. total assets)
2,843 11.83 %1,201 5.0 %$1,642 
Common equity Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,603 13.89 %1,218 6.5 %1,385 
Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,843 15.17 %1,499 8.0 %1,344 
Total capital (to RWA)3,110 16.59 %1,874 10.0 %1,236 
     
    As presented in the table above, our constraining capital ratio is our total capital to risk weighted assets at 16.59 percent. It would take a $1.2 billion after-tax loss, with the balance sheet remaining constant, for our total risk-based capital ratio to fall below the level considered to be "well-capitalized".

     For additional information on our capital requirements, see Note 14 - Regulatory Matters.

Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    In addition to results presented in accordance with GAAP, this report includes certain non-GAAP financial measures. We believe these non-GAAP financial measures provide additional information that is useful to investors in helping to understand the underlying performance and trends of the Company.

    Non-GAAP financial measures have inherent limitations, which are not required to be uniformly applied and are not audited. Readers should be aware of these limitations and should be cautious with respect to the use of such measures. To mitigate these limitations, we have practices in place to ensure that these measures are calculated using the appropriate GAAP or regulatory components in their entirety and to ensure that our performance is properly reflected to facilitate consistent period-to-period comparisons. Our method of calculating these non-GAAP measures may differ from methods used by other companies. Although we believe the non-GAAP financial measures disclosed in this report enhance investors' understanding of our business and performance, these non-GAAP measures should not be considered in isolation, or as a substitute for those
37


financial measures prepared in accordance with GAAP. Where non-GAAP financial measures are used, the most directly comparable GAAP or regulatory financial measure, as well as the reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP or regulatory financial measure, can be found in this report.

    Tangible book value per share, return on average tangible common equity, adjusted return on average tangible common equity, adjusted return on average assets, adjusted noninterest expense, adjusted provision for income taxes, adjusted net income, adjusted basic earnings per share, adjusted diluted earnings per share, adjusted net interest margin and adjusted efficiency ratio.

The Company believes that these non-GAAP financial measures provide a meaningful representation of its operating performance on an ongoing basis for investors, securities analysts, and others. Management uses these measures to assess performance of the Company against its peers and evaluate overall performance.

The following tables provide a reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures.

March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
Total stockholders' equity$2,733 $2,718 $2,358 
Less: Goodwill and intangible assets145 147 155 
Tangible book value/Tangible common equity$2,588 $2,571 $2,203 
Number of common shares outstanding 53,236,067 53,197,650 52,752,600 
Tangible book value per share$48.61 $48.33 $41.77 

Three Months Ended,
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions, except share data)
Net income$53 $85 $149 
Plus: Intangible asset amortization, net of tax
Tangible net income$54 $87 $151 
Total average equity$2,687 $2,692 $2,319 
Less: Average goodwill and intangible assets146 148 156 
Total average tangible equity$2,541 $2,544 $2,163 
Return on average tangible common equity8.61 %13.79 %27.99 %
Adjustment to remove DOJ settlement expense— %— %4.98 %
Adjustment for merger costs0.49 %1.11 %— %
Adjusted return on average tangible common equity9.10 %14.90 %32.97 %
Return on average assets0.89 %1.28 %1.98 %
Adjustment to remove DOJ— %— %0.36 %
Adjustment for merger costs0.03 %0.07 %— %
Adjusted return on average assets0.92 %1.35 %2.34 %

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Adjusted HFI loan-to-deposit ratio.

March 31,
2022
December 31, 2021March 31,
2021
(Dollars in millions)
Average LHFI$12,384 $13,314 $14,915 
Less: Average warehouse loans3,973 5,148 6,395 
Adjusted average LHFI$8,411 $8,166 $8,520 
Average deposits$18,089 $19,816 $20,043 
Less: Average custodial deposits4,970 6,309 7,194 
Adjusted average deposits$13,119 $13,507 $12,849 
HFI loan-to-deposit ratio68.5 %67.2 %74.4 %
Adjusted HFI loan-to-deposit ratio64.1 %60.5 %66.3 %

Three Months Ended,
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021March 31, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
Noninterest expense$261 $291 $347 
Adjustment to remove DOJ settlement expense— — 35 
Adjustment for merger costs— 
Adjusted noninterest expense$258 $285 $312 
Income before income taxes$68 $109 $194 
Adjustment to remove DOJ settlement expense— — 35 
Adjustment for merger costs— 
Adjusted income before income taxes$71 $115 $229 
Provision for income taxes$15 $24 $45 
Adjustment to remove DOJ settlement expense— — (8)
Adjustment for merger costs(1)(1)— 
Adjusted provision for income taxes$16 $25 $53 
Net income$53 $85 $149 
Adjusted net income$55 $90 $176 
Weighted average common shares outstanding53,219,866 52,867,138 52,675,562 
Weighted average diluted common shares53,578,001 53,577,832 53,297,803 
Adjusted basic earnings per share$1.03 $1.71 $3.34 
Adjusted diluted earnings per share$1.02 $1.69 $3.31 
Average interest earning assets$21,569 $24,291 $27,178 
Net interest margin3.11 %2.96 %2.82 %
Adjustment for LGG loans available for repurchase0.01 %0.02 %0.20 %
Adjusted net interest margin3.12 %2.98 %3.02 %
Efficiency Ratio80.37 %75.86 %67.67 %
Adjustment to remove DOJ settlement expense— %— %(6.83)%
Adjustment for merger costs(0.79)%(1.51)%— %
Adjusted efficiency ratio79.58 %74.35 %60.84 %

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Critical Accounting Estimates

    Various elements of our accounting policies, by their nature, are subject to estimation techniques, valuation assumptions and other subjective assessments. Certain accounting policies that, due to the judgment, estimates and assumptions are critical to an understanding of our Consolidated Financial Statements and the Notes, are described in Item 1. These policies relate to: (a) the determination of our ACL and (b) fair value measurements. We believe the judgment, estimates and assumptions used in the preparation of our Consolidated Financial Statements and the Notes are appropriate given the factual circumstances at the time. However, given the sensitivity of our Consolidated Financial Statements and the Notes to these critical accounting policies, the use of other judgments, estimates and assumptions could result in material differences in our results of operations and/or financial condition.

    For further information on our critical accounting policies, please refer to our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, which is available on our website, flagstar.com, under the Investor Relations section, or on the website of the Securities and Exchange Commission, at sec.gov.

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Forward – Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this Form 10-Q, including but not limited to statements included within the Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended. In addition, we may make forward-looking statements in our other documents filed with or furnished to the SEC, and Management may make forward-looking statements orally to analysts, investors, representatives of the media and others.

    Generally, forward-looking statements are not based on historical facts but instead represent Management’s current beliefs and expectations regarding future events and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. Such statements may be identified by words such as believe, expect, anticipate, intend, plan, estimate, and similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as will, should, would and could. Our actual results and capital and other financial conditions may differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements depending upon a variety of factors, including without limitation: the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could give rise to the right of one or both of the parties to terminate the definitive merger agreement among NYCB, 615 Corp. and Flagstar; the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against NYCB or Flagstar; the possibility that the proposed transaction will not close when expected or at all because required regulatory or other approvals are not received or other conditions to the closing are not satisfied on a timely basis or at all, or are obtained subject to conditions that are not anticipated; the ability of NYCB and Flagstar to meet expectations regarding the timing, completion and accounting and tax treatments of the proposed transaction; the risk that any announcements relating to the proposed transaction could have adverse effects on the market price of the common stock of NYCB or Flagstar; the possibility that the anticipated benefits of the proposed transaction will not be realized when expected or at all, including as a result of the impact of, or problems arising from, the integration of the two companies or as a result of the strength of the economy and competitive factors in the areas where NYCB and Flagstar do business; certain restrictions during the pendency of the proposed transaction that may impact the parties’ ability to pursue certain business opportunities or strategic transactions; the possibility that the proposed transaction may be more expensive to complete than anticipated, including as a result of unexpected factors or events; diversion of management’s attention from ongoing business operations and opportunities; the possibility that the parties may be unable to achieve expected synergies and operating efficiencies in the proposed transaction within the expected timeframes or at all and to successfully integrate Flagstar’s operations and those of NYCB; such integration may be more difficult, time consuming or costly than expected; revenues following the proposed transaction may be lower than expected; potential adverse reactions or changes to business or employee relationships, including those resulting from the announcement or completion of the proposed transaction; NYCB’s and Flagstar’s success in executing their respective business plans and strategies and managing the risks involved in the foregoing; and the precautionary statements included within the discussion and analysis of our results of operations and the risk factors listed and described in Item 1A to Part I, of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, which are incorporated by reference herein.

Other than as required under United States securities laws, we do not undertake to update the forward-looking statements to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that may arise after the date of the forward-looking statements.
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Item 1. Financial Statements
Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition
(In millions, except share data)
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
(Unaudited)
Assets
Cash$174 $277 
Interest-earning deposits231 774 
Total cash and cash equivalents405 1,051 
Investment securities available-for-sale2,010 1,804 
Investment securities held-to-maturity190 205 
Loans held-for-sale ($3,154 and $4,920 measured at fair value, respectively)
3,475 5,054 
Loans held-for-investment ($21 and $16 measured at fair value, respectively)
13,236 13,408 
Loans with government guarantees1,256 1,650 
Less: allowance for loan losses(131)(154)
Total loans held-for-investment and loans with government guarantees, net14,361 14,904 
Mortgage servicing rights523 392 
Federal Home Loan Bank stock329 377 
Premises and equipment, net354 360 
Goodwill and intangible assets145 147 
Bank-owned life insurance367 365 
Other assets1,085 824 
Total assets$23,244 $25,483 
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Noninterest bearing deposits$6,827 $7,088 
Interest bearing deposits10,521 10,921 
Total deposits17,348 18,009 
Short-term Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other200 1,880 
Long-term Federal Home Loan Bank advances1,200 1,400 
Other long-term debt396 396 
Other liabilities 1,367 1,080 
Total liabilities20,511 22,765 
Stockholders’ Equity
Common stock $0.01 par value, 80,000,000 shares authorized; 53,236,067 and 53,197,650 shares issued and outstanding, respectively
Additional paid in capital1,357 1,355 
Accumulated other comprehensive income(2)35 
Retained earnings1,377 1,327 
Total stockholders’ equity2,733 2,718 
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity$23,244 $25,483 
    
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
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Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Operations
(In millions, except per share data)
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
(Unaudited)
Interest Income
Loans$166 $196 
Investment securities11 12 
Total interest income177 208 
Interest Expense
Deposits10 
Short-term Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other— 
Long-term Federal Home Loan Bank advances
Other long-term debt
Total interest expense12 19 
Net interest income165 189 
Benefit for credit losses(4)(28)
Net interest income after provision for credit losses169 217 
Noninterest Income
Net gain on loan sales45 227 
Loan fees and charges27 42 
Net return on mortgage servicing rights29 — 
Loan administration income33 27 
Deposit fees and charges
Other noninterest income17 20 
Total noninterest income160 324 
Noninterest Expense
Compensation and benefits127 144 
Occupancy and equipment45 46 
Commissions26 62 
Loan processing expense21 21 
Legal and professional expense11 
Federal insurance premiums
Intangible asset amortization
General, administrative and other25 57 
Total noninterest expense261 347 
Income before income taxes68 194 
Provision for income taxes15 45 
Net income$53 $149 
Net income per share
Basic$0.99 $2.83 
Diluted$0.99 $2.80 
Cash dividends declared$0.06 $0.06 
Weighted average shares outstanding
Basic53,219,866 52,675,562 
Diluted53,578,001 53,297,803 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
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Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
(In millions)
Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
(Unaudited)
Net income$53 $149 
Other comprehensive income, net of tax
Investment securities(58)(15)
Derivatives and hedging activities21 22 
Other comprehensive income, net of tax(37)
Comprehensive income$16 $156 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.

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Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity
(In millions, except share data)
Common StockAccumulated Other Comprehensive IncomeTotal Stockholders’ Equity
Number of SharesAmountAdditional Paid in CapitalRetained Earnings
Balance at December 31, 202153,197,650 $$1,355 $35 $1,327 $2,718 
(Unaudited)
Net income— — — — 53 53 
Total other comprehensive income— — — (37)— (37)
Stock-based compensation38,245 — — — 
Dividends declared and paid172 — — — (3)(3)
Balance at March 31, 202253,236,067 $$1,357 $(2)$1,377 $2,733 
Balance at December 31, 202052,656,067 $$1,346 $47 $807 $2,201 
(Unaudited)
Net income— — — — 149 149 
Total other comprehensive income— — — — 
Shares issued from the Employee Stock Purchase Plan62,462 — — — — — 
Stock-based compensation33,957 — — — 
Dividends declared and paid114 — — — (3)(3)
Balance at March 31, 202152,752,600 $$1,350 $54 $953 $2,358 

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
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Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
(In millions)
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
 (Unaudited)
Operating Activities
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities $1,231 $(320)
Investing Activities
Proceeds from sale of AFS securities including loans that have been securitized642 417 
Collection of principal on investment securities AFS97 239 
Purchase of investment securities AFS and other(233)(86)
Collection of principal on investment securities HTM15 58 
Proceeds received from the sale of LHFI— 35 
Net closings, purchases, and principal repayments of LHFI 143 1,337 
Acquisition of premises and equipment, net of proceeds(12)(11)
Net sale of FHLB stock48 — 
Net proceeds from the sale of MSRs— (2)
Purchase of MSRs(13)— 
Other, net(8)(3)
Net cash provided by investing activities679 1,984 
Financing Activities
Net change in deposit accounts(661)(553)
Net change in short-term FHLB borrowings and other short-term debt(1,680)(1,155)
Repayment of long-term FHLB advances(200)— 
Repayment of long-term debt— (246)
Net receipt of payments of loans serviced for others18 113 
Dividends declared and paid(3)(3)
Other
Net cash used in financing activities(2,525)(1,838)
Net change in cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash (1)(615)(174)
Beginning cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash (1)1,092 654 
Ending cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash (1)$477 $480 
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information
Non-cash reclassification of LHFI to LHFS$$14 
Non-cash reclassification of LHFS to securitized LHFS$642 $417 
MSRs resulting from sale or securitization of loans$79 $65 
Operating section supplemental disclosures
Proceeds from sales of LHFS$9,232 $13,721 
Closings, premium paid and purchase of LHFS, net of principal repayments$(8,344)$(14,109)
(1)For further information on restricted cash, see Note 8 - Derivatives.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
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Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (Unaudited)
Note 1 - Basis of Presentation

    The accompanying financial statements of Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. ("Flagstar," or the "Company"), including its wholly owned principal subsidiary, Flagstar Bank, FSB (the "Bank"), have been prepared using GAAP for interim financial statements. Where we say "we," "us," "our," the "Company," "Bancorp" or "Flagstar," we usually mean Flagstar Bancorp, Inc. However, in some cases, a reference to "we," "us," "our," the "Company" or "Flagstar" will include the Bank.

    These consolidated financial statements do not include all of the information and footnotes required by GAAP for a full year presentation and certain disclosures have been condensed or omitted in accordance with rules and regulations of the SEC. These interim financial statements are unaudited and include, in our opinion, all adjustments, consisting of only normal recurring adjustments, necessary for a fair statement of the results for the periods indicated, which are not necessarily indicative of results which may be expected for the full year. These consolidated financial statements and notes should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and footnotes thereto included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, which is available on our website, flagstar.com, and on the SEC website at sec.gov.

On April 26, 2021, it was announced that New York Community Bancorp, Inc. ("NYCB") and Flagstar had entered into a definitive merger agreement (the "Merger Agreement") under which the two companies will combine in an all stock merger. Under the terms of the Merger Agreement, Flagstar shareholders will receive 4.0151 shares of NYCB common stock for each Flagstar share they own. The combined company expects to have over $85 billion in assets and operate nearly 400 traditional branches in nine states and over 80 loan production offices across a 28 state footprint. On August 4, 2021, Flagstar's and NYCB's shareholders each voted in their respective special meetings of shareholders to approve the proposed business combination. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals.

On April 26, 2022, NYCB and Flagstar entered into Amendment No. 1 (the "Amendment") to the Merger Agreement. Under the Amendment, the parties have agreed to: extend the termination date of the Merger Agreement to October 31, 2022; Change the structure of the merger of the subsidiary banks, so that Flagstar Bank, FSB will initially convert to a national bank charter and New York Community Bank will merge with and into the national bank, with the national bank as the surviving entity; and clarify that approvals of the FDIC and the New York State Department of Financial Services are no longer required but that the approval of the OCC will be required. Other than as expressly modified by the Amendment, the Merger Agreement, remains in full force and effect.

Completion of the transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of regulatory approvals.




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Note 2 - Investment Securities

    The following table presents our investment securities:
Amortized CostGross Unrealized
Gains
Gross Unrealized
Losses
Fair Value
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Available-for-sale securities
Agency - Commercial$1,086 $— $(28)$1,058 
Agency - Residential649 — (34)615 
Corporate debt obligations71 — 72 
Municipal obligations19 — — 19 
Other MBS258 — (13)245 
Certificate of deposits— — 
Total available-for-sale securities (1)$2,084 $$(75)$2,010 
Held-to-maturity securities
Agency - Commercial $93 $— $(2)$91 
Agency - Residential 97 — (2)95 
Total held-to-maturity securities (1)$190 $— $(4)$186 
December 31, 2021
Available-for-sale securities
Agency - Commercial$739 $$— $747 
Agency - Residential690 (3)696 
Corporate debt obligations70 — 73 
Municipal obligations 20 — — 20 
Other MBS268 — (1)267 
Certificate of deposits— — 
Total available-for-sale securities (1)$1,788 $20 $(4)$1,804 
Held-to-maturity securities
Agency - Commercial $99 $$— $100 
Agency - Residential 106 — 109 
Total held-to-maturity securities (1)$205 $$— $209 
(1)There were no securities of a single issuer, which are not governmental or government-sponsored, that exceeded 10 percent of stockholders’ equity at March 31, 2022 or December 31, 2021.

We evaluate AFS debt securities where the value has declined below amortized cost for impairment. If we intend to sell or believe it is more likely than not that we will be required to sell the debt security, it is written down to fair value through earnings. For AFS debt securities that we intend to hold, we evaluate the debt securities for expected credit losses, except for debt securities that are guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury, U.S. government agencies or sovereign entities of high credit quality for which we apply a zero loss assumption, and which comprised 85 percent of our AFS portfolio as of March 31, 2022. For the remaining AFS securities, credit losses are recognized as an increase to the ACL through the credit loss provision. If any of the decline in fair value is related to market factors, that amount is recognized in OCI. We had no unrealized credit losses during the three months ended March 31, 2022 and the year ended December 31, 2021.

    We separately evaluate our HTM debt securities for any credit losses. As of March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, our entire HTM portfolio qualified for the zero loss assumption as all securities are guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury or U.S. government agencies.

    Investment securities transactions are recorded on the trade date for purchases and sales. Interest earned on investment securities, including the amortization of premiums and the accretion of discounts, is determined using the effective interest method over the period of maturity and recorded in interest income in the Consolidated Statements of Operations. Accrued interest receivable on investment securities totaled $5 million at March 31, 2022 and $4 million at December 31, 2021, and was reported in other assets on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition.

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Available-for-sale securities

    Securities AFS are carried at fair value. Unrealized gains and losses on AFS securities are reported as a component of other comprehensive income.
    
    We purchased $393 million and $86 million of AFS securities, which were comprised of U.S. government sponsored agency MBS, CD, and corporate debt obligations during the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021, respectively. We did not retain any passive interests in our own private MBS during the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021.

    There were no sales of AFS securities during both the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021 other than those related to mortgage loans that had been securitized for sale in the normal course of business.

Held-to-maturity securities

    Investment securities HTM are carried at amortized cost and adjusted for amortization of premiums and accretion of discounts using the interest method. Unrealized losses are not recorded to the extent they are temporary in nature.    

    There were no purchases or sales of HTM securities during both the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021.

The following table summarizes the unrealized loss positions on AFS and HTM investment securities, by duration of the unrealized loss: 
 Unrealized Loss Position with
Duration 12 Months and Over
Unrealized Loss Position with
Duration Under 12 Months
Fair ValueNumber of SecuritiesUnrealized LossFair
Value
Number of
Securities
Unrealized
Loss
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Available-for-sale securities
Agency - Commercial$$— $895 91$(28)
Agency - Residential— — — 609 87(34)
Municipal obligations— — — 12 5— 
Corporate debt obligations— — — 11 4— 
Other mortgage-backed securities— — 157 7(13)
Held-to-maturity securities
Agency - Commercial$— — $— $86 24$(2)
Agency - Residential— — — 90 43(2)
December 31, 2021
Available-for-sale securities
Agency - Commercial$$— $143 9$— 
Agency - Residential— — — 291 19(3)
Municipal obligations— — — 1— 
Corporate debt obligations— — — — — 
Other mortgage-backed securities— — 147 5(1)
Held-to-maturity securities
Agency - Commercial$— — $— $— 1$— 
Agency - Residential— — — — — 

Unrealized losses on AFS securities have not been recognized into income because almost all of the portfolio held by us are issued by U.S. government entities and agencies. These securities are either explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the U.S. government, are highly rated by major rating agencies, and have a long history of no credit losses. The remaining unrealized losses on AFS securities are municipal securities and corporate debt obligations, all of which are considered investment grade or are de minimis. The fair value is expected to recover as the bonds approach maturity.
49


    The following table shows the amortized cost and estimated fair value of securities by contractual maturity:
 Investment Securities Available-for-SaleInvestment Securities Held-to-Maturity
Amortized
Cost
Fair
Value
Weighted Average
Yield (1)
Amortized
Cost
Fair
Value
Weighted Average
Yield (1)
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Due in one year or less$$2.16 %$$2.21 %
Due after one year through five years4.65 %2.86 %
Due after five years through 10 years211 208 2.86 %2.01 %
Due after 10 years1,858 1,787 2.27 %179 175 2.49 %
Total$2,084 $2,010 $190 $186 
(1) Weighted-average yields are based on amortized cost weighted for the contractual maturity of each security.

    We pledge investment securities, primarily agency collateralized and municipal taxable mortgage obligations, to collateralize lines of credit and/or borrowings. At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, we had pledged investment securities of $228 million and $1.5 billion, respectively.

Note 3 - Loans Held-for-Sale

    The majority of our mortgage loans originated as LHFS are ultimately sold into the secondary market on a whole loan basis or by securitizing the loans into agency, government, or private label MBS. At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, LHFS totaled $3.5 billion and $5.1 billion, respectively. For the three months ended March 31, 2022, we had net gains on loan sales associated with LHFS of $45 million as compared to $227 million for the three months ended March 31, 2021, respectively.
    
    At March 31, 2022 residential LHFS of $293 million, commercial LHFS of $18 million and corporate advances of $10 million were recorded at the lower of cost or fair value. At December 31, 2021, we recorded $116 million residential LHFS and commercial LHFS of $18 million at the lower of cost or fair value. We elected the fair value option for the remainder of the loans in the portfolio.

Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment

    We classify loans that we have the intent and ability to hold for the foreseeable future or until maturity as LHFI. We
report LHFI at their amortized cost, which includes the outstanding principal balance adjusted for any unamortized premiums,
discounts, deferred fees and costs. The accrued interest receivable on LHFI totaled $33 million at March 31, 2022 and $35 million at December 31, 2021 and was reported in other assets on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition.

    The following table presents our LHFI:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
 (Dollars in millions)
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$1,499 $1,536 
Home equity596 613 
Other1,267 1,236 
Total consumer loans3,362 3,385 
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate3,254 3,223 
Commercial and industrial1,979 1,826 
Warehouse lending4,641 4,974 
Total commercial loans9,874 10,023 
Total loans held-for-investment$13,236 $13,408 
    
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    The following table presents the UPB of our loan sales and purchases in the LHFI portfolio:
Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
 (Dollars in millions)
Loans Sold (1)
Performing loans$— $36 
Total loans sold$— $36 
(1)Upon a change in our intent, the loans were transferred to LHFS and subsequently sold.


We have pledged certain LHFI, LHFS, and LGG to collateralize lines of credit and/or borrowings with the FRB of Chicago and the FHLB of Indianapolis. At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, we had pledged loans of $7.8 billion and $9.9 billion, respectively.

Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans

    We determine the estimate of the ACL on at least a quarterly basis. The ACL represents Management's estimate of expected lifetime losses in our LHFI portfolio, excluding loans carried under the fair value option. In addition, we record a reserve for expected lifetime losses on our unfunded commitments - see Reserve for Unfunded Commitments section below. Therefore, we record ALLL on relevant financial assets and a reserve for unfunded commitments on our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, collectively referred to as the ACL.

Expected credit losses are estimated over the contractual term of the loans, adjusted for expected prepayments when appropriate. The contractual terms exclude expected extensions, renewals, and modifications unless the following applies: Management has a reasonable expectation at the reporting date that a TDR will be executed with an individual borrower or the extension or renewal options are included in the original or modified contract at the reporting date and are not unconditionally cancellable by us.

The ACL is impacted by changes in asset quality of the portfolio, including but not limited to increases in risk rating changes in our commercial portfolio, borrower delinquencies, changes in FICO scores or changes in LTVs in our consumer portfolio. In addition, while we have incorporated our forecasted impact of COVID-19 into our ACL, the ultimate impact of COVID-19 is still uncertain, including how long economic activity will be impacted by the pandemic and what effect the unprecedented levels of government fiscal and monetary actions will have on the economy and our credit losses.

Specifically identified component. The specifically identified component of ACL related to performing TDR loans is generally measured as the difference between the recorded investment in the specific loan and the present value of the cash flows expected to be collected, discounted at the loan's original effective interest rate. Estimating the timing and amounts of future cash flow projections is highly judgmental and based upon assumptions including default rates, prepayment probability and loss severities. All of these estimates and assumptions require significant management judgment and certain assumptions are highly subjective.

Specifically identified collateral dependent NPL loans are generally measured as the difference between the recorded investment in the impaired loan and the underlying collateral value less estimated costs to sell. These estimates are dependent on third-party property valuations which may be influenced by factors such as the current and future level of home prices, the duration of current overall economic conditions, and other macroeconomic and portfolio-specific factors.

Model-based component. A general allowance is established for lifetime losses inherent on non-impaired loans by segmenting the portfolio based upon common risk characteristics. Our consumer loan portfolio is segmented into Residential First Mortgage, Home Equity and Other Consumer. Loan characteristics impacting these segments include lien position, credit quality, and loan structure. At a high-level, our commercial loans are segmented into Commercial Real Estate, Commercial and Industrial, and Warehouse Lending. Loan characteristics impacting these segments include credit quality and loan structure.

We measure the allowance using the applicable dual risk rating model which measures probability of default, loss given default and exposure at default. As of March 31, 2022, we utilized the Moody’s March scenarios in our forecast: a growth forecast, weighted at 30 percent; a baseline forecast, weighted at 40 percent; and an adverse forecast, weighted at 30 percent. Within our composite forecast, unemployment ends 2022 at 4 percent, slightly increasing in 2023 with a full recovery by 2024. GDP continues to recover throughout 2022 and returns to pre-COVID levels in 2023. HPI decreases by 2 percent from the first quarter of 2022 through the fourth quarter of 2022 before increasing 3 percent by the fourth quarter of 2023.
51



Qualitative adjustments. The specifically identified component analysis and the output of the model provide a reasonable starting point for our analysis, but do not, by themselves, form a sufficient basis to determine the appropriate level for the ACL. We therefore consider the qualitative factors that are likely to cause the ACL associated with our existing portfolio to differ from the output of the model. The most significant qualitative factors considered include changes in economic and business conditions, changes in nature and volume of portfolio and changes in the volume and severity of past due loans. The application of different inputs into the model calculation and the assumptions used by Management to adjust the model calculation are subject to significant management judgment and may result in actual credit losses that differ from the originally estimated amounts.

    The following table presents changes in the ALLL, by class of loan:
Residential
First
Mortgage (1)
Home EquityOther
Consumer
Commercial
Real Estate
Commercial
and Industrial
Warehouse
Lending
Total
 (Dollars in millions)
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
Beginning balance$40 $14 $36 $28 $32 $$154 
(Benefit) provision(1)(6)(1)(2)
Charge-offs(1)— (2)— (20)— (23)
Recoveries— — — — 
Ending allowance balance$43 $16 $34 $22 $13 $$131 
Three Months Ended March 31, 2021
Beginning balance$49 $25 $39 $84 $51 $$252 
Benefit(2)(5)(6)— (11)— (24)
Charge-offs(2)— (1)— (1)— (4)
Recoveries— — — 16 — 17 
Ending allowance balance$45 $20 $33 $84 $55 $$241 
(1)Includes LGG.

    The ALLL was $131 million at March 31, 2022 and $154 million at December 31, 2021. The decrease in the allowance is primarily reflective of changes in our economic forecast and judgment we applied related to those forecasts and underlying borrower credit as a result of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Loans are considered to be past due when any payment of principal or interest is 30 days past the scheduled payment date. While it is the goal of Management to collect on loans, we attempt to work out a satisfactory repayment schedule or modification with past due borrowers and will undertake foreclosure proceedings if the delinquency is not satisfactorily resolved. Our practices regarding past due loans are designed to both assist borrowers in meeting their contractual obligations and minimize losses incurred by the Bank.

    Beginning in March 2020, as a response to COVID-19, customers facing COVID-19 related difficulties were offered forbearance in an effort to help our borrowers get to the other side of the health crisis. As these loans reach the end of their forbearance period, we have been working with each customer to modify or refinance the outstanding loan to fit their new circumstances. Refer to payment deferral information in the Credit Risk Section of the MD&A for additional details.

    We cease the accrual of interest on all classes of consumer and commercial loans upon the earlier of becoming 90 days past due, or when doubt exists as to the ultimate collection of principal or interest (classified as nonaccrual or NPLs). When a loan is placed on nonaccrual status, the accrued interest income is reversed and the loan may only return to accrual status when principal and interest become current and are anticipated to be fully collectible. We do not consider accrued interest receivable in our measurement of the ACL as accrued interest is written-off in a timely manner when the loan is placed on nonaccrual. We are not aging receivables for customers who have been granted a payment deferral in response to COVID-19 which remain in the aging category they were in at the time of payment deferral. We continue to accrue interest on these loans, consistent with our forbearance programs.

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The following table sets forth the LHFI aging analysis of past due and current loans:
30-59 Days
Past Due
60-89 Days
Past Due
90 Days or
Greater Past
Due (1)
Total
Past Due
CurrentTotal LHFI (3) (4) (5)
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$$$86 $101 $1,398 $1,499 
Home equity12 584 596 
Other1,260 1,267 
Total consumer loans12 10 98 120 3,242 3,362 
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate— — — — 3,254 3,254 
Commercial and industrial— — — — 1,979 1,979 
Warehouse lending— — — — 4,641 4,641 
Total commercial loans— — — — 9,874 9,874 
Total loans (2)$12 $10 $98 $120 $13,116 $13,236 
December 31, 2021
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$14 $34 $49 $97 $1,439 $1,536 
Home equity18 595 613 
Other1,227 1,236 
Total consumer loans26 36 62 124 3,261 3,385 
Commercial loans
Commercial real estate— — — — 3,223 3,223 
Commercial and industrial— — 32 32 1,794 1,826 
Warehouse lending— — — — 4,974 4,974 
Total commercial loans— — 32 32 9,991 10,023 
Total loans (2)$26 $36 $94 $156 $13,252 $13,408 
(1)Includes less than 90 days past due performing loans which are placed in nonaccrual. Interest is not being accrued on these loans.
(2)Includes $9 million of past due loans accounted for under the fair value option as of March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021.
(3)Collateral dependent loans totaled $145 million and $108 million at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. The majority of these loans are secured by real estate.
(4)The interest income recognized on impaired loans was less than $1 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021.
(5)The delinquency status for loans in forbearance is frozen for loans at inception of the forbearance period and will resume when the borrower's forbearance period ends.

Interest income is recognized on nonaccrual loans using a cash basis method. Interest that would have been accrued for the three months ended March 31, 2022 was $1 million. At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, we had no loans 90 days or greater past due and still accruing interest.

Reserve for Unfunded Commitments

We estimated expected credit losses over the contractual period in which we are exposed to credit risk via a contractual obligation to extend credit, unless that obligation is unconditionally cancellable by us. The reserve for unfunded commitments is adjusted as a provision for credit loss expense. The estimate includes consideration of the likelihood that funding will occur and an estimate of expected credit losses on commitments expected to be funded over its estimated life.

The reserve for unfunded commitments is reflected in other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition and was $14 million as of March 31, 2022, compared to $16 million as of December 31, 2021. The decrease in the reserve is due to improvements in the economic forecasts as a result of the continued vaccine rollout and the lifting of most COVID-19 restrictions.
The following categories of off-balance sheet credit exposures have been identified: unfunded loans with available balances, new commitments to lend that are not yet funded, and standby and commercial letters of credit. For further information, see Note 15 - Legal Proceedings, Contingencies and Commitments.

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Troubled Debt Restructurings
    
    We may modify certain loans in both our consumer and commercial loan portfolios to retain customers or to maximize collection of the outstanding loan balance. TDRs are modified loans in which a borrower demonstrates financial difficulties and for which a concession has been granted as a result. Nonperforming TDRs are included in nonaccrual loans. TDRs remain in nonperforming status until a borrower has made payments and is current for at least six consecutive months. Performing TDRs are not considered to be nonaccrual so long as we believe that all contractual principal and interest due under the restructured terms will be collected. Performing and nonperforming TDRs remain impaired as interest and principal will not be received in accordance with the original contractual terms of the loan agreement. Refer to Note 1- Description of Business, Basis of Presentation, and Summary of Significant Accounting Standards to the consolidated financial statements in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021 for a description of the methodology used to determine TDRs.

    Some loan modifications classified as TDRs may not ultimately result in the full collection of principal and interest, as modified, but may give rise to potential incremental losses. We measure impairments using a discounted cash flow method for performing TDRs and measure impairment based on collateral values for nonperforming TDRs.

    Beginning in March 2020, as a response to COVID-19, we offered our consumer borrowers principal and interest payment deferrals, forbearance and/or extensions up to a maximum period of 18 months. We considered these programs in the context of whether or not the short-term modifications of these loans and the programs offered to return to payment status would constitute a TDR. We considered the CARES Act, interagency guidance and related guidance from the FASB, which provided that short-term modifications made on a good faith basis in response to COVID-19 to borrowers who were current prior to any relief are not required to be accounted for as TDRs. As a result, we have determined that loans modified under these programs are not TDRs.

The following table provides a summary of TDRs by type and performing status:
 TDRs
 PerformingNonperformingTotal
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$16 $10 $26 
Home equity
Total TDRs (1)(2)$23 $12 $35 
December 31, 2021
Consumer loans
Residential first mortgage$14 $11 $25 
Home equity10 
Total consumer TDR loans (1)(2)22 13 35 
Commercial loans
Commercial and industrial— 
Total commercial TDR loans— 
Total TDRs (1)(2)$24 $13 $37 
(1)The ALLL on TDR loans totaled $4 million at both March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021.
(2)Includes $3 million and $5 million of TDR loans accounted for under the fair value option at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.
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The following table provides a summary of newly modified TDRs:
 New TDRs
 Number of AccountsPre-Modification Unpaid Principal BalancePost-Modification Unpaid Principal Balance (1)
(Dollars in millions)
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
Residential first mortgages$$
Home equity (2)(3)— — 
Commercial Real Estate— — — 
Total TDR loans10 $$
Three Months Ended March 31, 2021
Residential first mortgages$$
Total TDR loans$$
(1)Post-modification balances include past due amounts that are capitalized at modification date.
(2)Home equity post-modification UPB reflects write downs.
(3)Includes loans carried at the fair value option.
    
    There were no loans modified in the previous 12 months that subsequently defaulted during the three months ended March 31, 2022. All TDR classes within the consumer and commercial loan portfolios are considered subsequently defaulted when they are greater than 90 days past due within 12 months of the restructuring date.

Credit Quality

    We utilize a combination of internal and external risk rating systems which are applied to all consumer and commercial loans which are used as loan-level inputs to our ACL models. Descriptions of our risk ratings as they relate to credit quality follow the ratings used by the U.S. bank regulatory agencies as listed below.

Pass. Pass assets are not impaired nor do they have any known deficiencies that could impact the quality of the asset.

Watch. Watch assets are defined as pass-rated assets that exhibit elevated risk characteristics or other factors that deserve Management’s close attention and increased monitoring. However, the asset does not exhibit a potential or well-defined weakness that would warrant a downgrade to criticized or adverse classification.

Special mention. Assets identified as special mention possess credit deficiencies or potential weaknesses deserving Management's close attention. Special mention assets have a potential weakness or pose an unwarranted financial risk that, if not corrected, could weaken the assets and increase risk in the future. Special mention assets are criticized, but do not expose an institution to sufficient risk to warrant adverse classification.

    Substandard. Assets identified as substandard are inadequately protected by the current net worth and paying capacity of the obligor or of the collateral pledged, if any. Assets so classified must have a well-defined weakness or weaknesses that jeopardize the full collection or liquidation of the debt. Substandard assets are characterized by the distinct possibility that we will sustain some loss if the deficiencies are not corrected. For HELOANs and other consumer loans, we evaluate credit quality based on the aging and status of payment activity and any other known credit characteristics that call into question full repayment of the asset. Substandard loans may be placed on either accrual or nonaccrual status.

    Doubtful. An asset classified as doubtful has all the weaknesses inherent in one classified substandard, with the added characteristic that the weaknesses make collection or liquidation in full, on the basis of currently existing facts, conditions and values, highly questionable and improbable. A doubtful asset has a high probability of total or substantial loss, but because of specific pending events that may strengthen the asset, its classification as loss is deferred. Doubtful borrowers are usually in default, lack adequate liquidity or capital and lack the resources necessary to remain an operating entity. Pending events can include mergers, acquisitions, liquidations, capital injections, the perfection of liens on additional collateral, the valuation of collateral and refinancing. Generally, pending events should be resolved within a relatively short period and the ratings will be adjusted based on the new information. Due to the high probability of loss, doubtful assets are placed on nonaccrual.

    Loss. An asset classified as loss is considered uncollectible and of such little value that the continuance as a bankable asset is not warranted. This classification does not mean that an asset has absolutely no recovery or salvage value, rather that it is not practical or desirable to defer writing off the asset even though partial recovery may be affected in the future
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Consumer Loans

    Consumer loans consist of open and closed-end loans extended to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures. Consumer loans include other consumer product loans and loans to individuals secured by their personal residence, including first mortgage, home equity, and home improvement loans. Because consumer loans are usually relatively small-balance, homogeneous exposures, consumer loans are rated based primarily on payment performance. Payment performance is a proxy for the strength of repayment capacity and loans are generally classified based on their payment status rather than by an individual review of each loan.

    In accordance with regulatory guidance, we assign risk ratings to consumer loans in the following manner:

Consumer loans are classified as Watch once the loan becomes 60 days past due.
Open and closed-end consumer loans 90 days or more past due are classified as Substandard.

Payment activity, credit rating and LTVs have the most significant impact on the ACL for consumer loans. The following table presents the amortized cost in residential and consumer loans based on payment activity:
Revolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisRevolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotalDecember 31, 2021
 Term Loans
Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of March 31, 202220222021202020192018Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential First Mortgage
Pass $107 $340 $169 $204 $74 $408 $77 $10 $1,389 $1,444 
Watch — — — — 34 
Substandard— 24 12 38 — 81 43 
Home Equity
Pass12 15 490 57 587 604 
Watch— — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — — 
Other Consumer
Pass 68 362 211 209 95 306 1,263 1,229 
Watch — — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — — 
Total Consumer Loans (1)(2)$176 $707 $388 $452 $190 $470 $875 $83 $3,341 $3,368 
(1)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
(2)The delinquency status for loans in forbearance are frozen for loans at inception of the forbearance period and will resume when the borrower's forbearance period ends.
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Revolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisRevolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotalDecember 31, 2020
 Term Loans
Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of December 31, 202120212020201920182017Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential First Mortgage
Pass $318 $197 $233 $89 $108 $407 $82 $10 $1,444 $2,205 
Watch — 12 11 — 34 21 
Substandard21 — 43 25 
Home Equity
Pass15 15 508 49 604 838 
Watch— — — — — — — 13 
Substandard— — — — — 
Other Consumer
Pass 380 227 226 101 284 1,229 1,000 
Watch — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — 
Total Consumer Loans (1)(2)$704 $433 $496 $209 $118 $460 $876 $72 $3,368 $4,109 
(1)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
(2)The delinquency status for loans in forbearance are frozen for loans at inception of the forbearance period and will resume when the borrower's forbearance period ends.
    
The following table presents the amortized cost in residential and consumer loans based on credit scores:
Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost Basis
FICO BandRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of March 31, 202220222021202020192018Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential First Mortgage
>750$18 $155 $78 $95 $37 $246 $46 $$679 
700-75086 121 50 62 29 132 21 507 
<70065 45 72 23 72 10 293 
Home Equity
>750— 234 16 262 
700-750205 26 248 
<700— — 53 20 85 
Other Consumer
>75068 362 212 211 96 203 1,161 
700-750— — — — — — 84 86 
<700— — — — — — 19 20 
Total Consumer Loans (1)$176 $707 $388 $452 $190 $470 $875 $83 $3,341 
(1)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.
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Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost Basis
FICO BandRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of December 31, 202120212020201920182017Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential First Mortgage
>750$139 $94 $107 $40 $70 $212 $49 $$716 
700-750117 58 69 36 36 161 22 505 
<70063 49 76 24 66 11 300 
Home Equity
>750238 13 266 
700-750210 22 250 
<700— 62 18 95 
Other Consumer
>750251 162 142 56 273 892 
700-750128 62 79 39 — — 316 
<700— — 28 
Total Consumer Loans (1)$704 $433 $496 $209 $118 $460 $876 $72 $3,368 
(1)    Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.

Loan-to-value ratios primarily impact the allowance on mortgages within the consumer loan portfolio. The following table presents the amortized cost in residential first mortgages and home equity loans based on loan-to-value ratios:
Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost Basis
LTV BandRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of March 31, 202220222021202020192018Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential First Mortgage
>90$$88 $67 $129 $51 $28 $— $— $366 
71-9021 107 64 51 21 199 — — 463 
55-7069 79 23 26 131 — 338 
<5514 67 19 23 92 75 13 312 
Home Equity
>90— — — — — 
71-90355 41 421 
<=70— 137 20 166 
Total (1)$108 $345 $176 $241 $94 $466 $569 $75 $2,074 
(1)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.

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Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost Basis
LTV BandRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of December 31, 202120212020201920182017Prior
Consumer Loans(Dollars in millions)
Residential first mortgage
>90$88 $74 $142 $53 $16 $16 $— $— $389 
71-90109 78 58 29 31 185 — — 490 
55-7069 26 27 36 163 — 332 
<5553 23 25 31 75 80 14 310 
Home Equity
>90— — — — — — 
71-9011 369 35 432 
<=70141 18 171 
Total (1)$323 $205 $267 $106 $117 $455 $592 $67 $2,132 
(1)Excludes loans carried under the fair value option.

Commercial Loans

Risk rating and the average loan duration have the most significant impact on the ACL for commercial loans. Additional factors which impact the ACL are debt-service-coverage ratio, loan-to-value ratio, interest-coverage ratio and leverage ratio.

Internal audit conducts periodic examinations which serve as an independent verification of the accuracy of the ratings assigned. All loans are examined on at least an annual basis. Loan grades are based on different factors within the borrowing relationship: entity sales, debt service coverage, debt/total net worth, liquidity, balance sheet and income statement trends, management experience, business stability, financing structure and financial reporting requirements. The underlying collateral is also rated based on the specific type of collateral and corresponding LTV. The combination of the borrower and collateral risk ratings results in the final risk rating for the borrowing relationship.

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Based on the most recent credit analysis performed, the amortized cost basis, by risk category for each class of loans within the commercial portfolio, is as follows:
Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost BasisDecember 31, 2021
Term LoansRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of March 31, 202220222021202020192018Prior
Commercial Loans(Dollars in million)
Commercial real estate
Pass$63 $546 $256 $437 $290 $633 $869 $— $3,094 $3,071 
Watch— — 13 83 32 — 136 128 
Special mention— — — — 22 — — 24 
Substandard— — — — — — — — — 22 
Commercial and industrial
Pass265 75 163 26 93 1,254 — 1,883 1,685 
Watch— 12 — — 14 — 39 71 
Special mention— — — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — 18 28 — 48 70 
Warehouse
Pass4,496 — — — — — — — 4,496 4,834 
Watch145 — — — — — — — 145 140 
Special mention— — — — — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — — — — — — — 
Total commercial loans$4,711 $824 $350 $603 $356 $833 $2,197 $— $9,874 $10,023 

Revolving Loans Converted to Term Loans Amortized Cost BasisDecember 31, 2020
Term LoansRevolving Loans Amortized Cost BasisTotal
 Amortized Cost Basis by Closing Year
As of December 31, 202120212020201920182017Prior
Commercial Loans(Dollars in million)
Commercial real estate
Pass$518 $257 $558 $313 $238 $402 $785 $— $3,071 $2,805 
Watch13 64 35 — 128 166 
Special mention— — — — — — — 53 
Substandard— — — — 22 — — — 22 37 
Commercial and industrial
Pass257 81 156 30 95 1,059 — 1,685 1,200 
Watch10 — — 44 — 71 106 
Special mention— — — — — — — — — 24 
Substandard— — 17 18 — 33 — 70 52 
Warehouse
Pass4,834 — — — — — — — 4,834 7,398 
Watch140 — — — — — — — 140 260 
Special mention— — — — — — — — — — 
Substandard— — — — — — — — — — 
Total commercial loans$5,755 $347 $744 $383 $421 $444 $1,929 $— $10,023 $12,101 
    
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Note 5 - Loans with Government Guarantees
    
    Substantially all LGG are insured or guaranteed by the FHA or the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Nonperforming repurchased loans in this portfolio earn interest at a rate based upon the 10-year U.S. Treasury note rate from the time the underlying loan becomes 60 days delinquent until the loan is conveyed to HUD (if foreclosure timelines are met), which is not paid by the FHA until claimed. The Bank has a unilateral option to repurchase loans sold to GNMA if the loan is due, but unpaid, for three consecutive months (typically referred to as 90 days past due) and can recover losses through a claims process from the guarantor. These loans are recorded in LGG and the liability to repurchase the loans is recorded in Other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. As of March 31, 2022 this liability was $63 million, as compared to a balance of $200 million as of December 31, 2021. Certain loans within our portfolio may be subject to indemnifications and insurance limits which expose us to limited credit risk. We have reserved for these risks within other assets and as a component of our ACL on residential first mortgages.

At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, LGG totaled $1.3 billion and $1.7 billion, respectively.

    Repossessed assets and the associated claims related to government guaranteed loans are recorded in other assets and totaled $11 million and $7 million, at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively.

Note 6 - Variable Interest Entities

    We have no consolidated VIEs as of March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021.

    In connection with our non-qualified mortgage securitization activities, we have retained a five percent interest in the investment securities of certain trusts ("other MBS") and are contracted as the servicer of the underlying loans, compensated based on market rates, which constitutes a continuing involvement in these trusts. Although we have a variable interest in these securitization trusts, we are not their primary beneficiary due to the relative size of our investment in comparison to the total amount of securities issued by the VIE and our inability to direct activities that most significantly impact the VIE’s economic performance. As a result, we have not consolidated the assets and liabilities of the VIE in our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. The Bank’s maximum exposure to loss is limited to our five percent retained interest in the investment securities that had a fair value of $245 million as of March 31, 2022 as well as the standard representations and warranties made in conjunction with the loan transfers. See Note 2 - Investment Securities and Note 16 - Fair Value Measurements, for additional information.

Note 7 - Mortgage Servicing Rights

    We have investments in MSRs that result from the sale of loans to the secondary market for which we retain the servicing. We account for MSRs at their fair value. A primary risk associated with MSRs is the potential reduction in fair value as a result of higher than anticipated prepayments due to loan refinancing prompted, in part, by declining interest rates or government intervention. Conversely, these assets generally increase in value in a rising interest rate environment to the extent that prepayments are slower than anticipated. We utilize derivatives as economic hedges to offset changes in the fair value of the MSRs resulting from the actual or anticipated changes in prepayments stemming from changing interest rate environments. There is also a risk of valuation decline due to higher than expected default rates, which we do not believe can be effectively managed using derivatives. For further information regarding the derivative instruments utilized to manage our MSR risks, see Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments.

    Changes in the fair value of residential first mortgage MSRs were as follows:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Balance at beginning of period$392 $329 
Additions from loans sold with servicing retained79 65 
Purchases13 — 
Reductions from sales— — 
Decrease in MSR fair value due to pay-offs, pay-downs, run-off, model changes, and other (1)(8)(39)
Changes in estimates of fair value due to interest rate risk (1) (2)47 73 
Fair value of MSRs at end of period$523 $428 
(1)Changes in fair value are included within net return on mortgage servicing rights on the Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(2)Represents estimated MSR value change resulting primarily from market-driven changes which we manage through the use of derivatives.
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    The following table summarizes the hypothetical effect on the fair value of servicing rights using adverse changes of 10 percent and 20 percent to the weighted average of certain significant assumptions used in valuing these assets:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
Fair valueFair value
Actual10% adverse change20% adverse changeActual10% adverse change20% adverse change
(Dollars in millions)
Option adjusted spread6.59 %$513 $503 7.12 %$383 $374 
Constant prepayment rate8.69 %506 490 9.24 %373 355 
Weighted average cost to service per loan$79.25 518 512 $79.38 387 383 

    The sensitivity calculations above are hypothetical and should not be considered to be predictive of future performance. Changes in fair value based on adverse changes in assumptions generally cannot be extrapolated because the relationship of the change in assumption to the change in fair value may not be linear. To isolate the effect of the specified change, the fair value shock analysis is consistent with the identified adverse change, while holding all other assumptions constant. In practice, a change in one assumption generally impacts other assumptions, which may either magnify or counteract the effect of the change. For further information on the fair value of MSRs, see Note 16 - Fair Value Measurements.

    Contractual servicing and subservicing fees. Contractual servicing and subservicing fees, including late fees and other ancillary income are presented below. Contractual servicing fees are included within net return on mortgage servicing rights on the Consolidated Statements of Operations. Contractual subservicing fees including late fees and other ancillary income are included within loan administration income on the Consolidated Statements of Operations. Subservicing fee income is recorded for fees earned on subserviced loans, net of third-party subservicing costs.

    The following table summarizes income and fees associated with owned MSRs:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Net return (loss) on mortgage servicing rights
Servicing fees, ancillary income and late fees (1)$30 $31 
Decreases in MSR fair value due to pay-offs, pay-downs, run-off, model changes, and other(8)(39)
Changes in fair value due to interest rate risk47 73 
Loss on MSR derivatives (2)(41)(65)
Net transaction costs— 
Total return included in net return on mortgage servicing rights$29 $— 
(1)Servicing fees are recorded on an accrual basis. Ancillary income and late fees are recorded on a cash basis.
(2)Changes in the derivatives utilized as economic hedges to offset changes in fair value of the MSRs.
        
    The following table summarizes income and fees associated with our mortgage loans subserviced for others:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
 (Dollars in millions)
Loan administration income on mortgage loans subserviced
Servicing fees, ancillary income and late fees (1)$37 $32 
Charges on subserviced custodial balances (2)(2)(3)
Other servicing charges(2)(3)
Total income on mortgage loans subserviced, included in loan administration$33 $26 
(1)Servicing fees are recorded on an accrual basis. Ancillary income and late fees are recorded on cash basis.
(2)Charges on subserviced custodial balances represent interest due to the MSR owner.


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Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments

    Derivative financial instruments are recorded at fair value in other assets and other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. Our policy is to present our derivative assets and derivative liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition on a gross basis, even when provisions allowing for set-off are in place. However, for derivative contracts cleared through certain central clearing parties, variation margin payments are recognized as settlements. We are exposed to non-performance risk by the counterparties to our various derivative financial instruments. A majority of our derivatives are centrally cleared through a Central Counterparty Clearing House or consist of residential mortgage interest rate lock commitments further limiting our exposure to non-performance risk. We believe that the non-performance risk inherent in our remaining derivative contracts is minimal based on credit standards and the collateral provisions of the derivative agreements.

Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments: We maintain a derivative portfolio of interest rate swaps, futures and forward commitments used to manage exposure to changes in interest rates and MSR asset values and to meet the needs of customers. We also enter into interest rate lock commitments, which are commitments to originate mortgage loans whereby the interest rate on the loan is determined prior to funding and the customers have locked into that interest rate. Market risk on interest rate lock commitments and mortgage LHFS is managed using corresponding forward sale commitments and U.S. Treasury futures. Changes in the fair value of derivatives not designated as hedging instruments are recognized on the Consolidated Statements of Operations.

    Derivatives designated as hedging instruments: We have designated certain interest rate swaps as fair value hedges of investment securities AFS using the last-of-layer method. Cash flows and the income impact associated with designated hedges are reported in the same category as the underlying hedged item.

    We have also designated certain interest rate swaps as cash flow hedges on LIBOR-based variable interest payments on certain commercial loans. Changes in the fair value of derivatives designated as cash flow hedges are recorded in OCI on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition and reclassified into interest income in the same period in which the hedge transaction is recognized in earnings.

During the first quarter of 2022, we de-designated all of our cash flow hedges of custodial deposits. We evaluate the probability of hedged forecasted transactions on at least a quarterly basis relating to amounts deferred in OCI. Amounts recorded in OCI related to de-designated cash flow hedges of forecasted transactions, which remain probable to occur, are reclassified into net loan administration income in the same period in which the hedged transaction is recognized into earnings.

We had 46 million (net-of-tax) of unrealized gains on de-designated cash flow hedges recorded in AOCI as of March 31, 2022. The estimated amount to be reclassified from OCI into earnings on de-designated hedging relationships during the next 12 months represents $10 million (net-of-tax) of gains. We had $5 million (net-of-tax) of unrealized losses on derivatives designated in a hedge relationship as of March 31, 2022. The estimated amount to be reclassified from OCI into earnings during the next 12 months beginning March 31, 2022 represents $9 million of gains (net-of-tax). At December 31, 2021, we had $20 million (net-of-tax) of unrealized gains on derivatives classified as cash flow hedges recorded in AOCI.

Derivatives that are designated in hedging relationships are assessed for effectiveness using regression analysis at inception and qualitatively thereafter, unless regression analysis is deemed necessary. All designated hedge relationships were and are expected to be highly effective as of March 31, 2022.

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    The following tables present the notional amount, estimated fair value and maturity of our derivative financial instruments:
March 31, 2022 (1)
Notional AmountFair Value (2)Expiration Dates
 (Dollars in millions)
Derivatives in cash flow hedge relationships:
Assets
Interest rate swaps on commercial loans$2,000 $2025
Derivatives in fair value hedge relationships:
Assets
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities$100 $— 2022
Interest rate swaps on subordinated debt150 — 2025
Total$250 $— 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Futures$1,053 $2022-2023
Mortgage-backed securities forwards11,684 200 2022
Rate lock commitments3,259 23 2022
Interest rate swaps and swaptions5,064 105 2022-2052
Total$21,060 $330 
Liabilities
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$4,629 $45 2022
Rate lock commitments2,112 27 2022
Interest rate swaps1,771 22 2022-2032
Total$8,512 $94 
(1)Variation margin pledged to, or received from, a Central Counterparty Clearing House to cover the prior day's fair value of open positions is considered a settlement of the derivative position for accounting purposes.
(2)Derivative assets and liabilities are included in other assets and other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, respectively.
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December 31, 2021 (1)
Notional AmountFair Value (2)Expiration Dates
 (Dollars in millions)
Derivatives in cash flow hedge relationships:
Liabilities
Interest rate swaps on custodial deposits$800 — 2026-2027
Derivatives in fair value hedge relationships:
Assets
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities$85 $— 2022
Total derivative assets$85 $— 
Liabilities
Interest rate swaps on HFI residential first mortgages$100 $— 2024
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities350 — 2024-2025
Total derivative liabilities$450 $— 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Futures$1,117 $— 2022-2023
Mortgage-backed securities forwards4,008 11 2022
Rate lock commitments5,169 54 2022
Interest rate swaps and swaptions4,070 76 2022-2031
Total$14,364 $141 
Liabilities
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$4,023 $14 2022
Rate lock commitments370 2022
Interest rate swaps and swaptions1,493 2022-2031
Total$5,886 $20 
(1)Variation margin pledged to or received from a Central Counterparty Clearing House to cover the prior day's fair value of open positions, is considered a settlement of the derivative position for accounting purposes.
(2)Derivative assets and liabilities are included in other assets and other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, respectively.

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    The following tables present the derivatives subject to a master netting arrangement, including the cash pledged as collateral:
Gross Amounts Netted in the Statements of Financial ConditionNet Amount Presented in the Statements of Financial Condition Gross Amounts Not Offset in the Statements of Financial Condition
Gross AmountFinancial InstrumentsCash Collateral
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities$— $— $— $— $
Interest rate swaps on subordinated debt— — — — 
Interest rate swaps on commercial loans2— — 31
Total derivative assets$$— $$— $36 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$200 $— $200 $— $142 
Interest rate swaps and swaptions (1)105— 105 — 52 
Total derivative assets$305 $— $305 $— $194 
Liabilities
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$45 $— $45 $— $11 
Interest rate swaps22— 22 — 30
Total derivative liabilities$67 $— $67 $— $41 
December 31, 2021
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities$— $— $— $— $
Total derivative assets$— $— $— $— $
Liabilities
Interest rate swaps on AFS securities$— $— $— $— $
Interest rate swaps on HFI residential first mortgages— — — — 
Interest rate swaps on custodial deposits— — — — 9
Total derivative liabilities$— $— $— $— $14 
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:
Assets
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$10 $— $10 $— $12 
Interest rate swaptions (1)77 — 77 — 17 
Total derivative assets$87 $— $87 $— $29 
Liabilities
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$14 $— $14 $— $
Interest rate swaps— — 24 
Total derivative liabilities$20 $— $20 $— $33 
(1)Variation margin pledged to, or received from, a Central Counterparty Clearing House to cover the prior day's fair value of open positions is considered settlement of the derivative position for accounting purposes.

Losses of $1 million on fair value hedging relationships of AFS securities were recorded in interest income for the three months ended both March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021.

Losses of $1 million on cash flow hedging relationships of custodial deposits were reclassified from AOCI into loan administration income during the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021.

Gains and losses on fair value hedging relationships of HFI residential first mortgages for the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021 were de-minimis.
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The fair value basis adjustment on our hedged AFS securities is included in investment securities available-for-sale on our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. The carrying amount of our hedged securities was $83 million at March 31, 2022 and $1.0 billion at December 31, 2021 of which a de-minimis amount and unrealized losses of $5 million, respectively, were due to the fair value hedge relationships. The closed portfolio of AFS securities designated in this last-of-layer method hedge was $86 million par (amortized cost of $85 million) at March 31, 2022 and $1.0 billion par (amortized cost of $1.0 billion) at December 31, 2021, of which $86 million and $435 million were designated in active hedge relationships at March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, respectively. The fair value basis adjustment associated with de-designated last-of-layer hedges of AFS securities is $17 million at March 31, 2022. The basis adjustment is allocated to individual securities recorded in available-for-sale securities within the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition and will be accreted into interest income over the remaining life of those securities.

At March 31, 2022, we pledged a total of $99 million related to derivative financial instruments, consisting of $28 million of cash collateral on derivative liabilities and $71 million of maintenance margin on centrally cleared derivatives. We had an obligation to return a total of $173 million of cash collateral on derivative assets at March 31, 2022. We pledged a total of $66 million related to derivative financial instruments, consisting of $28 million of cash collateral on derivative liabilities and $38 million of maintenance margin on centrally cleared derivatives and had a $12 million obligation to return cash on derivative assets at December 31, 2021. Within the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, the collateral related to derivative activity is included in other assets and other liabilities and the cash pledged as maintenance margin is restricted and included in other assets.

    The following table presents net gain recognized in income on derivative instruments, net of the impact of offsetting positions:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Derivatives not designated as hedging instruments:Location of gain (loss)
FuturesNet return on mortgage servicing rights$$— 
Interest rate swaps and swaptionsNet return on mortgage servicing rights(13)(47)
Mortgage-backed securities forwardsNet return on mortgage servicing rights(31)(18)
Rate lock commitments and MSR forwardsNet gain on loan sales104 162 
Interest rate swaps (1)Other noninterest income
Total derivative gain (loss)$65 $98 
(1)Includes customer-initiated commercial interest rate swaps.

Note 9 - Borrowings

Federal Home Loan Bank Advances and Other Borrowings

    The following is a breakdown of our FHLB advances and other borrowings outstanding:
  March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
AmountRateAmountRate
 (Dollars in millions)
Short-term fixed rate term advances$— — %$1,600 0.19 %
Other short-term borrowings2000.42 %280 0.11 %
Total short-term Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other borrowings200 1,880 
Long-term fixed rate advances1,200 1.03 %1,400 0.90 %
Total Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other borrowings$1,400 $3,280 
    
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    The following table contains detailed information on our FHLB advances and other borrowings:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
 (Dollars in millions)
Maximum outstanding at any month end$2,200 $4,737 
Average outstanding balance1,918 3,979 
Average remaining borrowing capacity4,451 5,484 
Weighted average interest rate0.72 %0.43 %
    
    The following table outlines the maturity dates of our FHLB advances and other borrowings:
 March 31, 2022
 (Dollars in millions)
2022$400
2023500
2024100
2025
Thereafter400
Total$1,400

Parent Company Senior Notes, Subordinated Notes and Trust Preferred Securities

    The following table presents long-term debt, net of debt issuance costs:
 March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
AmountInterest RateAmountInterest Rate
 (Dollars in millions)
Senior Notes
Senior notes, settled 2021$— — %$— — %
Subordinated Notes
Notes, matures 2030149 4.125 %149 4.125 %
Trust Preferred Securities
Floating Three Month LIBOR Plus:
3.25%, matures 2032264.22 %26 3.47 %
3.25%, matures 2033263.49 %26 3.37 %
3.25%, matures 2033264.25 %26 3.47 %
2.00%, matures 2035262.24 %26 2.12 %
2.00%, matures 2035262.24 %26 2.12 %
1.75%, matures 2035512.58 %51 1.95 %
1.50%, matures 2035251.74 %25 1.62 %
1.45%, matures 2037252.28 %25 1.65 %
2.50%, matures 203716 3.33 %16 2.70 %
Total Trust Preferred Securities247 247 
Total other long-term debt$396 $396 

Subordinated Notes

On October 28, 2020, we issued $150 million of Subordinated Debt (the "Notes") with a maturity date of November 1, 2030. The Notes bear interest at a fixed rate of 4.125 percent through October 31, 2025, and a variable rate tied to SOFR thereafter until maturity. We have the option to redeem all or a part of the Notes beginning on November 1, 2025, and on any subsequent interest payment date. The Notes qualify as Tier 2 capital for regulatory purposes.

Trust Preferred Securities

    We sponsor nine trust subsidiaries, which issued preferred stock to third party investors. We issued junior subordinated debt securities to those trusts, which we have included in long-term debt. The junior subordinated debt securities are the sole
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assets of those trusts. The trust preferred securities are callable by us at any time. Interest is payable quarterly; however, we may defer interest payments for up to 20 quarters without default or penalty. As of March 31, 2022, we had no deferred interest.

Note 10 - Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)

    The following table sets forth the components in AOCI:
Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Investment Securities
Beginning balance$15 $52 
Unrealized loss(77)(20)
Less: Tax benefit(19)(5)
Net unrealized loss(58)(15)
Other comprehensive loss, net of tax(58)(15)
Ending balance$(43)$37 
Cash Flow Hedges
Beginning balance$20 $(5)
Unrealized gain29 26 
Less: Tax provision
Net unrealized gain21 21 
Reclassifications out of AOCI (1)— 
Other comprehensive income, net of tax21 22 
Ending balance$41 $17 
(1)Reclassifications are reported in noninterest income on the Consolidated Statements of Operations.

Note 11 - Earnings Per Share

    Basic earnings per share, excluding dilution, is computed by dividing earnings applicable to common stockholders by the weighted average number of shares of common stock outstanding during the period. Diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution that could occur if securities or other contracts to issue common stock were exercised and converted into common stock or resulted in the issuance of common stock that could then share in our earnings.

    The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share of common stock:
 Three Months Ended March 31,
 20222021
(Dollars in millions, except share data)
Net income applicable to common shareholders$53 $149 
Weighted Average Shares
Weighted average common shares outstanding 53,219,86652,675,562
Effect of dilutive securities
Stock-based awards358,135 622,241 
Weighted average diluted common shares$53,578,001 $53,297,803 
Earnings per common share
Basic earnings per common share$0.99 $2.83 
Effect of dilutive securities
Stock-based awards— (0.03)
Diluted earnings per common share$0.99 $2.80 

Note 12 - Stock-Based Compensation

    We had stock-based compensation expense of $2 million and $4 million for the three months ended March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2021, respectively.

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Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units
    
    The following table summarizes restricted stock and restricted stock units activity:
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
SharesWeighted — Average Grant-Date Fair Value per Share
Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units
Non-vested balance at beginning of period600,573 $36.61 
Granted134,066 36.62 
Vested(43,756)40.46 
Canceled and forfeited(19,493)33.16 
Non-vested balance at end of period671,390 $36.47 

Note 13 - Income Taxes

    The provision for income taxes in interim periods requires us to make a best estimate of the effective tax rate expected to be applicable for the full year, adjusted for any discrete items for the applicable period. This estimated effective tax rate is then applied to interim consolidated pre-tax operating income to determine the interim provision for income taxes.

    The following table presents our provision for income tax and effective tax provision rate:
Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Income before income taxes$68 $194 
Provision for income taxes15 45 
Effective tax provision rate22.0 %23.0 %

    We believe that it is unlikely that our unrecognized tax benefits will change by a material amount during the next 12 months. We recognize interest and penalties related to unrecognized tax benefits in provision for income taxes.

Note 14 - Regulatory Matters

Regulatory Capital

    We, along with the Bank, are subject to the Basel III based U.S. capital rules, including capital simplification in 2020. Under these requirements, we must meet specific capital guidelines that involve quantitative measures of the Bank’s assets, liabilities, and certain off-balance sheet items as calculated under regulatory accounting practices. The Bank’s capital amounts and classifications are also subject to qualitative judgments by regulators. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can initiate certain mandatory, and possibly additional, discretionary actions by regulators that could have a material effect on the Consolidated Financial Statements.

    To be categorized as "well-capitalized," the Company and the Bank must maintain minimum tangible capital, Tier 1 capital, common equity Tier 1 and total capital ratios as set forth in the table below. We, along with the Bank, are considered "well-capitalized" at both March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021.
    
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    The following tables present the regulatory capital requirements under the applicable Basel III based U.S. capital rules:
Flagstar BancorpActualFor Capital Adequacy PurposesWell-Capitalized Under Prompt Corrective Action Provisions
 AmountRatioAmountRatioAmountRatio
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Tier 1 capital (to adjusted avg. total assets)$2,843 11.83 %$961 4.0 %$1,201 5.0 %
Common equity Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,603 13.89 %843 4.5 %1,218 6.5 %
Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,843 15.17 %1,124 6.0 %1,499 8.0 %
Total capital (to RWA)3,110 16.59 %1,499 8.0 %1,874 10.0 %
December 31, 2021
Tier 1 capital (to adjusted avg. total assets)$2,798 10.54 %$1,062 4.0 %$1,327 5.0 %
Common equity Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,558 13.19 %873 4.5 %1,261 6.5 %
Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,798 14.43 %1,164 6.0 %1,552 8.0 %
Total capital (to RWA)3,080 15.88 %1,552 8.0 %1,940 10.0 %
Flagstar BankActualFor Capital Adequacy PurposesWell-Capitalized Under Prompt Corrective Action Provisions
 AmountRatioAmountRatioAmountRatio
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Tier 1 capital (to adjusted avg. total assets)$2,758 11.50 %$959 4.0 %$1,199 5.0 %
Common equity Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,758 14.73 %843 4.5 %1,217 6.5 %
Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,758 14.73 %1,124 6.0 %1,498 8.0 %
Total capital (to RWA)2,875 15.35 %1,498 8.0 %1,873 10.0 %
December 31, 2021
Tier 1 capital (to adjusted avg. total assets)$2,706 10.21 %$1,060 4.0 %$1,325 5.0 %
Common equity Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,706 13.96 %872 4.5 %1,260 6.5 %
Tier 1 capital (to RWA)2,706 13.96 %1,163 6.0 %1,551 8.0 %
Total capital (to RWA)2,839 14.65 %1,551 8.0 %1,938 10.0 %

Note 15 - Legal Proceedings, Contingencies and Commitments

Legal Proceedings

    We and our subsidiaries are subject to various pending or threatened legal proceedings arising out of the normal course of business operations. In addition, the Bank is routinely named in civil actions throughout the country by borrowers and former borrowers relating to the closing, purchase, sale and servicing of mortgage loans. From time to time, governmental agencies also conduct investigations or examinations of various practices of the Bank. In the course of such investigations or examinations, the Bank cooperates with such agencies and provides information as requested.

We assess the liabilities and loss contingencies in connection with pending or threatened legal and regulatory proceedings on at least a quarterly basis and establish accruals when we believe it is probable that a loss may be incurred and that the amount of such loss can be reasonably estimated. Once established, litigation accruals are adjusted, as appropriate, in light of additional information. Payments made to settle our liabilities may differ from the contingency or fair value recorded due to factors that differ from our assumptions.

At March 31, 2022, we do not believe that the amount of any reasonably possible losses in excess of any amounts accrued with respect to ongoing proceedings or any other known claims will be material to our financial statements or that the ultimate outcome of these actions will have a materially adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.

Other litigation accruals

    At March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, our total accrual for contingent liabilities and settled litigation was $9 million.

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Commitments

    In the normal course of business, we have various commitments outstanding which are not included on our Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. The following table is a summary of the contractual amount of significant commitments:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021
 (Dollars in millions)
Commitments to extend credit
Mortgage loan commitments including interest rate locks$5,371 $5,539 
Warehouse loan commitments7,675 6,840 
Commercial and industrial commitments1,764 1,582 
Other construction commitments2,877 2,719 
HELOC commitments727 631 
Other consumer commitments349 273 
Standby and commercial letters of credit102 107 
    
    Commitments to extend credit are agreements to lend to a customer as long as there is not a violation of any condition established in the contract. Because many of these commitments expire without being drawn upon, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future cash flow requirements. Commitments generally have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses. We evaluate each customer's credit worthiness on a case-by-case basis. The amount of collateral obtained, if deemed necessary by us, upon extension of credit is based on Management's credit evaluation of the counterparties.

    These instruments involve, to varying degrees, elements of credit and interest rate risk beyond the amount recognized on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. Our exposure to credit losses in the event of nonperformance by the other party to the financial instrument for commitments to extend credit and standby letters of credit is represented by the contractual amount of those instruments. We utilize the same credit policies in making commitments and conditional obligations as we do for balance sheet instruments. The types of credit we extend are as follows:

    Mortgage loan commitments including interest rate locks. We enter into mortgage loan commitments, including interest rate locks with our customers. These interest rate lock commitments are considered to be derivative instruments and the fair value of these commitments is recorded on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition in other assets. For further information, see Note 8 - Derivative Financial Instruments.

    Warehouse loan commitments. Lines of credit provided to mortgage originators to fund loans they originate and then sell. The proceeds of the sale of the loans are used to repay the draw on the line used to fund the loans.

    Commercial and industrial and other construction commitments. Conditional commitments issued under various terms to lend funds to businesses and other entities. These commitments include revolving credit agreements, term loan commitments and short-term borrowing agreements. Many of these loan commitments have fixed expiration dates or other termination clauses and may require payment of a fee. Because many of these commitments are expected to expire without being funded, the total commitment amounts do not necessarily represent future liquidity requirements.

    HELOC commitments. Commitments to extend, originate or purchase credit are primarily lines of credit to consumers and have specified rates and maturity dates. Many of these commitments also have adverse change clauses, which allow us to cancel the commitment due to deterioration in the borrowers’ creditworthiness or a decline in the collateral value.

    Other consumer commitments. Conditional commitments issued to accommodate the financial needs of customers. The commitments are made under various terms to lend funds to consumers, which include revolving credit agreements, term loan commitments and short-term borrowing agreements.

    Standby and commercial letters of credit. Conditional commitments issued to guarantee the performance of a customer to a third party. Standby letters of credit generally are contingent upon the failure of the customer to perform according to the terms of the underlying contract with the third party, while commercial letters of credit are issued specifically to facilitate commerce and typically result in the commitment being drawn on when the underlying transaction is consummated between the customer and the third party. These financial standby letters of credit irrevocably obligate the bank to pay a third-party beneficiary when a customer fails to repay an outstanding loan or debt instrument.

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    We maintain a reserve for estimated lifetime credit losses in unfunded commitments to extend credit. Unfunded commitments to extend credit include unfunded loans with available balances, new commitments to lend that are not yet funded and standby and commercial letters of credit. A reserve balance of $14 million at March 31, 2022 and $16 million at December 31, 2021, respectively, is reflected in other liabilities on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition. See Note 4 - Loans Held-for-Investment for additional information.

    Supplemental executive retirement plan with former CEO. The Company entered into a supplemental executive retirement plan (“SERP”) with a former CEO in 2009. In the second quarter of 2021, we entered into a settlement agreement with the former CEO that terminates the SERP and all other prior employment agreements in exchange for a maximum payment of $6 million which remains subject to regulatory approval as of March 31, 2022.

Note 16 - Fair Value Measurements

We utilize fair value measurements to record or disclose the fair value on certain assets and liabilities. Fair value is defined as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability through an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. The determination of fair values of financial instruments often requires the use of estimates. In cases where quoted market values in an active market are not available, we use present value techniques and other valuation methods to estimate the fair values of our financial instruments. These valuation models rely on market-based parameters when available, such as interest rate yield curves or credit spreads. Unobservable inputs may be based on Management's judgment, assumptions and estimates related to credit quality, our future earnings, interest rates and other relevant inputs. These valuation methods require considerable judgment and the resulting estimates of fair value can be significantly affected by the assumptions made and methods used.

Valuation Hierarchy

U.S. GAAP establishes a three-level valuation hierarchy for disclosure of fair value measurements. The hierarchy is based on the transparency of the inputs used in the valuation process with the highest priority given to quoted prices available in active markets and the lowest priority given to unobservable inputs where no active market exists, as discussed below:

Level 1 - Quoted prices (unadjusted) for identical assets or liabilities in active markets in which we can participate as of the measurement date,

Level 2 - Quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets and other inputs that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly, for substantially the full term of the financial instrument, and

Level 3 - Unobservable inputs that reflect our own assumptions about the assumptions that market participants would use in pricing an asset or liability.

A financial instrument's categorization within the valuation hierarchy is based upon the lowest level of input within the valuation hierarchy that is significant to the overall fair value measurement. Transfers between levels of the fair value hierarchy are recognized at the end of the reporting period.

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Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis

    The following tables present the financial instruments carried at fair value by caption on the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition and by level in the valuation hierarchy.
March 31, 2022
Level 1Level 2Level 3Total Fair Value
(Dollars in millions)
Investment securities available-for-sale
Agency - Commercial$— $1,058 $— $1,058 
Agency - Residential— 615 — 615 
Municipal obligations— 19 — 19 
Corporate debt obligations— 72 — 72 
Other MBS— 245 — 245 
Certificate of deposit— — 
Loans held-for-sale
Residential first mortgage loans— 3,154 — 3,154 
Loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage loans— 21 — 21 
Mortgage servicing rights— — 523 523 
Derivative assets
Rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted)— — 23 23 
Futures— — 
Mortgage-backed securities forwards— 200 — 200 
Interest rate swaps and swaptions— 105 — 105 
Total assets at fair value$— $5,492 $546 $6,038 
Derivative liabilities
Rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted)$— $— $(27)$(27)
Mortgage backed securities forwards— (45)— (45)
Interest rate swaps— (22)— (22)
Total liabilities at fair value$— $(67)$(27)$(94)
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December 31, 2021
  Level 1Level 2Level 3Total Fair Value
(Dollars in millions)
Loans held-for-sale
Residential first mortgage loans$— $4,920 $— $4,920 
Investment securities available-for-sale
Agency - Commercial— 747 — 747 
Agency - Residential— 696 — 696 
Other MBS— 267 — 267 
Corporate debt obligations— 73 — 73 
Municipal obligations— 20 — 20 
Certificate of deposit— — 
Derivative assets
Interest rate swaps and swaptions— 77 — 77 
Rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted)— — 54 54 
Mortgage-backed securities forwards— 10 — 10 
Loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage loans— 15 — 15 
Home equity— — 
Mortgage servicing rights— — 392 392 
Total assets at fair value$— $6,826 $447 $7,273 
Derivative liabilities
Mortgage-backed securities forwards$— $(14)$— $(14)
Interest rate swaps and swaptions— (5)— (5)
Rate lock commitments (fallout-adjusted)— — (1)(1)
DOJ Liability— — — — 
Total liabilities at fair value$— $(19)$(1)$(20)


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Fair Value Measurements Using Significant Unobservable Inputs

    The following table includes a roll forward of the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition amounts (including the change in fair value) for financial instruments classified by us within Level 3 of the valuation hierarchy:
Balance at
Beginning of
Period
Total Gains (Losses) Recorded in EarningsPurchases / ClosingsSalesSettlementTransfers OutBalance at
End of 
Period
(Dollars in millions)
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
Assets
Mortgage servicing rights (1)$392 $39 $92 $— $— $— $523 
Rate lock commitments (net) (1)(2)53 (174)101 — — 16 (4)
Totals$445 $(135)$193 $— $— $16 $519 
Three Months Ended March 31, 2021
Assets
Loans held-for-investment
Home equity$$— $— $— $— $— $
Mortgage servicing rights (1)329 34 65 — — — 428 
Rate lock commitments (net) (1)(2)208 (169)205 — — (170)74 
Totals$539 $(135)$270 $— $— $(170)$504 
Liabilities
DOJ Liability$(35)$(35)$— $— $— $— $(70)
Totals$(35)$(35)$— $— $— $— $(70)
(1)We utilized swaptions, futures, forward agency and loan sales and interest rate swaps to manage the risk associated with mortgage servicing rights and rate lock commitments. Gains and losses for individual lines do not reflect the effect of our risk management activities related to such Level 3 instruments.
(2)Rate lock commitments are reported on a fallout-adjusted basis. Transfers out of Level 3 represent the settlement value of the commitments that are transferred to LHFS, which are classified as Level 2 assets.
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    The following tables present the quantitative information about recurring Level 3 fair value financial instruments and the fair value measurements as of:
Fair ValueValuation TechniqueUnobservable InputRange (Weighted Average)
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Assets
Loans held-for-investment
Mortgage servicing rights$523 Discounted cash flowsOption adjusted spread
Constant prepayment rate
Weighted average cost to service per loan
3.8% - 21.6% (6.6%)
0% - 10.3% (8.7%)
$67 - $90 ($80)
(1)
Rate lock commitments (net)$(4)Consensus pricingOrigination pull-through rate
77.2%
(1)
(1)Unobservable inputs were weighted by their relative fair value of the instruments.

Fair ValueValuation TechniqueUnobservable InputRange (Weighted Average)
(Dollars in millions)
December 31, 2021
Assets
Loans held-for-investment
Mortgage servicing rights$392 Discounted cash flowsOption adjusted spread
Constant prepayment rate
Weighted average cost to service per loan
3.9% - 21.6% (7.1%)
0% - 11.1% (9.2%)
$67 - $90 ($80)
(1)
Rate lock commitments (net)$53 Consensus pricingOrigination pull-through rate
72.8%
(1)
(1)Unobservable inputs were weighted by their relative fair value of the instruments.

Recurring Significant Unobservable Inputs

    Home equity. The most significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the HELOANs are discount rates, constant prepayment rates and default rates. The constant prepayment and default rates are based on a 12 month historical average. Significant increases (decreases) in the discount rate in isolation result in a significantly lower (higher) fair value measurement. Increases (decreases) in prepay rates in isolation result in a higher (lower) fair value and increases (decreases) in default rates in isolation result in a lower (higher) fair value.

    MSRs. The significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the MSRs are option adjusted spreads, prepayment rates and cost to service. Significant increases (decreases) in all three assumptions in isolation result in a significantly lower (higher) fair value measurement. Weighted average life (in years) is used to determine the change in fair value of MSRs. For March 31, 2022 and December 31, 2021, the weighted average life (in years) for the entire MSR portfolio was 6.7 and 5.8, respectively.

    DOJ Liability. The DOJ Liability was settled for $70 million in the second quarter of 2021, fully satisfying the Amendment and reducing the liability to $0 at March 31, 2022. Prior to settlement, the significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the DOJ Liability were the discount rate, asset growth rate, return on assets, dividend rate and potential ways we might be required to begin making DOJ Liability payments and our estimates of the likelihood of these outcomes, as further discussed in Note 15 - Legal Proceedings, Contingencies and Commitments.

    Rate lock commitments. The significant unobservable input used in the fair value measurement of the rate lock commitments is the pull through rate. The pull through rate is a statistical analysis of our actual rate lock fallout history to determine the sensitivity of the residential mortgage loan pipeline compared to interest rate changes and other deterministic values. New market prices are applied based on updated loan characteristics and new fallout ratios (i.e. the inverse of the pull through rate) are applied accordingly. Significant increases (decreases) in the pull through rate in isolation result in a significantly higher (lower) fair value measurement.

Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Nonrecurring Basis
    
    We also have assets that are subject to measurement at fair value on a nonrecurring basis under certain conditions. The following table presents assets measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis:
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Total (1)Level 2Level 3Losses
 (Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Loans held-for-sale (2)$293 $293 $— $(1)
Commercial loans18 — 18 — 
Impaired loans held-for-investment (2)
Residential first mortgage loans72 — 72 (8)
Repossessed assets (3)— (1)
Totals$387 $293 $94 $(10)
December 31, 2021
Loans held-for-sale (2)$116 $116 $— $(1)
Commercial loans18 — 18 — 
Impaired loans held-for-investment (2)
Residential first mortgage loans36 — 36 (5)
Repossessed assets (3)— (1)
Totals$176 $116 $60 $(7)
(1)The fair values are determined at various dates dependent upon when certain conditions were met requiring fair value measurement.
(2)Gains (losses) reflect fair value adjustments on assets for which we did not elect the fair value option.
(3)Gains (losses) reflect write downs of repossessed assets based on the estimated fair value of the specific assets.

    The following table presents the quantitative information about nonrecurring Level 3 fair value financial instruments and the fair value measurements:
Fair ValueValuation TechniqueUnobservable InputRange (Weighted Average)
(Dollars in millions)
March 31, 2022
Commercial loans$18 Fair value of collateralMarket priceN/A
Impaired loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage loans (1)$72 Fair value of collateralLoss severity discount
0% - 100% (9.8%)
Repossessed assets (1)$Fair value of collateralLoss severity discount
0% - 98.0% (25.4%)
December 31, 2021
Impaired loans-held-for sale
Commercial loans HFS$18 Fair value of collateralMarket priceN/A
Impaired loans held-for-investment
Residential first mortgage loans (1)$36 Fair value of collateralLoss severity discount
0% - 100% (12.7%)
Repossessed assets (1)$Fair value of collateralLoss severity discount
0% - 96.3% (19.8%)
(1)Unobservable inputs were weighted by their relative fair value of the instruments.

Nonrecurring Significant Unobservable Inputs

    The significant unobservable inputs used in the fair value measurement of the impaired loans and repossessed assets are appraisals or other third-party price evaluations which incorporate measures such as recent sales prices for comparable properties.

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Fair Value of Financial Instruments

    The following table presents the carrying amount and estimated fair value of financial instruments that are carried either at fair value, cost, or amortized cost:
 March 31, 2022
 Estimated Fair Value
Carrying ValueTotalLevel 1Level 2Level 3
 (Dollars in millions)
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents$405 $405 $405 $— $— 
Investment securities available-for-sale2,010 2,010 — 2,010 — 
Investment securities held-to-maturity190 186 — 186 — 
Loans held-for-sale3,475 3,475 — 3,475 — 
Loans held-for-investment13,236 13,197 — 21 13,176 
Loans with government guarantees1,256 1,256 — 1,256 — 
Mortgage servicing rights523 523 — — 523 
Federal Home Loan Bank stock329 329 — 329 — 
Bank owned life insurance367 367 — 367 — 
Repossessed assets— — 
Other assets, foreclosure claims11 11 — 11 — 
Derivative financial instruments, assets330 330 — 307 23 
Liabilities
Retail deposits
Demand deposits and savings accounts$(9,277)$(7,972)$— $(7,972)$— 
Certificates of deposit(898)(901)— (901)— 
Wholesale deposits(974)(952)— (952)— 
Government deposits(1,886)(1,748)— (1,748)— 
Company controlled deposits(4,313)(4,264)— (4,264)— 
Federal Home Loan Bank advances(1,400)(1,395)— (1,395)— 
Long-term debt(396)(346)— (346)— 
Derivative financial instruments, liabilities(94)(94)— (67)(27)
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 December 31, 2021
 Estimated Fair Value
Carrying ValueTotalLevel 1Level 2Level 3
 (Dollars in millions)
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents$1,051 $1,051 $1,051 $— $— 
Investment securities available-for-sale1,804 1,804 — 1,804 — 
Investment securities held-to-maturity205 209 — 209 — 
Loans held-for-sale5,054 5,054 — 5,054 — 
Loans held-for-investment13,408 13,453 — 14 13,439 
Loans with government guarantees1,650 1,650 — 1,650 — 
Mortgage servicing rights392 392 — — 392 
Federal Home Loan Bank stock377 377 — 377 — 
Bank owned life insurance365 365 — 365 — 
Repossessed assets— — 
Other assets, foreclosure claims— — 
Derivative financial instruments, assets141 141 — 87 54 
Liabilities
Retail deposits
Demand deposits and savings accounts$(9,313)$(8,469)$— $(8,469)$— 
Certificates of deposit(951)(952)— (952)— 
Wholesale deposits(1,141)(1,137)— (1,137)— 
Government deposits(2,000)(1,904)— (1,904)— 
Company controlled deposits(4,604)(4,580)— (4,580)— 
Federal Home Loan Bank advances and other(3,280)(3,288)— (3,288)— 
Long-term debt(396)(340)— (340)— 
Derivative financial instruments, liabilities(20)(20)— (19)(1)

Fair Value Option

    We elected the fair value option for certain items as discussed throughout the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements to more closely align the accounting method with the underlying economic exposure. Interest income on LHFS is accrued on the principal outstanding primarily using the "simple-interest" method.

    The following table reflects the change in fair value included in earnings of financial instruments for which the fair value option has been elected:
Three Months Ended March 31,
20222021
(Dollars in millions)
Assets
Loans held-for-sale
Net gain on loan sales$(294)$87 
Liabilities
DOJ Liability
Other noninterest expense$— $35 
    




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The following table reflects the difference between the aggregate fair value and aggregate remaining contractual principal balance outstanding for assets and liabilities for which the fair value option has been elected:
March 31, 2022December 31, 2021

UPBFair ValueFair Value Over / (Under) UPBUPBFair ValueFair Value Over / (Under) UPB
(Dollars in millions)
Assets
Nonaccrual loans
Loans held-for-sale$25 $23 $(2)$18 $16 $(2)
Loans held-for-investment14 11 (3)15 13 (2)
Total nonaccrual loans$39 $34 $(5)$33 $29 $(4)
Other performing loans
Loans held-for-sale$3,188 $3,131 $(57)$4,790 $4,904 $114 
Loans held-for-investment12 10 (2)(2)
Total other performing loans$3,200 $3,141 $(59)$4,795 $4,907 $112 
Total loans
Loans held-for-sale$3,213 $3,154 $(59)$4,808 $4,920 $112 
Loans held-for-investment26 21 (5)20 16 (4)
Total loans$3,239 $3,175 $(64)$4,828 $4,936 $108 

Note 17 - Segment Information

    Our operations are conducted through three operating segments: Community Banking, Mortgage Originations and Mortgage Servicing. The Other segment includes the remaining reported activities. Operating segments are defined as components of an enterprise that engage in business activity from which revenues are earned and expenses are incurred for which discrete financial information is available that is evaluated regularly by executive management in deciding how to allocate resources and in assessing performance. The operating segments have been determined based on the products and services offered and reflect the manner in which financial information is currently evaluated by Management. Each segment operates under the same banking charter, but is reported on a segmented basis for this report. Each of the operating segments is complementary to each other and because of the interrelationships of the segments, the information presented is not indicative of how the segments would perform if they operated as independent entities.

The Community Banking segment originates loans, provides deposits and fee-based services to consumer, business, and mortgage lending customers through its Branch Banking, Business Banking and Commercial Banking, Government Banking and Warehouse Lending. Products offered through these groups include checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, CD, consumer loans, commercial loans, CRE loans, home builder finance loans and warehouse lines of credit. Other financial services available include consumer and corporate card services, customized treasury management solutions, merchant services and capital markets services such as loan syndications, and investment and insurance products and services. The interest income on LHFI is recognized in the Community Banking segment, excluding residential first mortgages and newly originated home equity products within the Mortgage Originations segment.

The Mortgage Originations segment originates and acquires one-to-four family residential mortgage loans to sell or hold on our balance sheet. Loans originated-to-sell comprise the majority of the lending activity. These loans are originated through mortgage branches, call centers, the Internet and third-party counterparties. The Mortgage Originations segment recognizes interest income on loans that are held-for-sale and the gains from sales associated with these loans, along with the interest income on residential mortgages and newly originated home equity products within LHFI.

The Mortgage Servicing segment services and subservices mortgage and other consumer loans for others on a fee for service basis and may also collect ancillary fees and earn income through the use of noninterest-bearing escrows. Revenue for those serviced and subserviced loans is earned on a contractual fee basis, with the fees varying based on our responsibilities and the status of the underlying loans. The Mortgage Servicing segment also services loans for our LHFI portfolio and our own LHFS portfolio in the Mortgage Originations segment, for which it earns revenue via an intercompany service fee allocation.

The Other segment includes the treasury functions, which include the impact of interest rate risk management, balance sheet funding activities and the administration of the investment securities portfolios, as well as miscellaneous other expenses of a corporate nature. In addition, the Other segment includes revenue and expenses related to treasury and corporate assets and
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liabilities and equity not directly assigned or allocated to the Community Banking, Mortgage Originations or Mortgage Servicing operating segments.

Revenues are comprised of net interest income (before the provision (benefit) for credit losses) and noninterest income. Noninterest expenses and a majority of provision (benefit) for income taxes, are allocated to each operating segment. Provision for credit losses is allocated to segments based on net charge-offs and changes in outstanding balances. In contrast, the level of the consolidated provision for credit losses is determined based on an allowance model using the methodologies described in Item 2 – MD&A. The net effect of the credit provision is recorded in the Other segment. Allocation methodologies may be subject to periodic adjustment as the internal management accounting system is revised and the business or product lines within the segments change.

    The following tables present financial information by business segment for the periods indicated:
 Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
 Community BankingMortgage OriginationsMortgage ServicingOther (1)Total
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$122 $56 $$(16)$165 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses22 — (29)(4)
Net interest income after benefit for credit losses100 53 13 169 
Net gain on loan sales— 45 — — 45 
Loan fees and charges— 21 — 27 
Net return on mortgage servicing rights— 29 — — 29 
Loan administrative (expense) income— (7)43 (3)33 
Other noninterest income18 — 26 
Total noninterest income18 74 64 160 
Compensation and benefits28 45 16 38 127 
Commissions25 — — 26 
Loan processing expense21 
General, administrative and other18 11 21 37 87 
Total noninterest expense49 90 46 76 261 
Income (loss) before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes69 37 21 (59)68 
Indirect overhead allocation (expense) income(10)(15)(6)31 — 
Provision (benefit) for income taxes12 (4)15 
Net income (loss)$47 $18 $12 $(24)$53 
Intersegment revenue (expense)$22 $$$(40)$— 
Average balances
Loans held-for-sale$18 $4,815 $— $— $4,833 
Loans with government guarantees— 1,404 (2)— 1,402 
Loans held-for-investment (2)10,942 1,442 — — 12,384 
Total assets11,326 8,695 167 3,973 24,161 
Deposits12,006 42 5,016 1,025 18,089 
(1)Includes offsetting adjustments made to reclassify income and expenses relating to operating leases and custodial deposits for subservicing clients.
(2)    Includes adjustment made to reclassify operating lease assets to LHFI.
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Three Months Ended March 31, 2021
 Community BankingMortgage OriginationsMortgage ServicingOther (1)Total
(Dollars in millions)
Summary of Operations
Net interest income$156 $56 $$(27)$189 
Benefit for credit losses(14)(2)— (12)(28)
Net interest income after benefit for credit losses170 58 (15)217 
Net gain on loan sales— 227 — — 227 
Loan fees and charges— 24 18 — 42 
Net return on mortgage servicing rights— — — — — 
Loan administrative (expense) income— (10)40 (3)27 
Other noninterest income18 — 28 
Total noninterest income18 244 58 324 
Compensation and benefits31 54 16 43 144 
Commissions61 — — 62 
Loan processing expense11 21 
General, administrative and other25 22 22 51 120 
Total noninterest expense58 148 46 95 347 
Income (loss) before indirect overhead allocations and income taxes130 154 16 (106)194 
Indirect overhead allocation (expense) income(10)(19)(6)35 — 
Provision (benefit) for income taxes25 28 (10)45 
Net income (loss)$95 $107 $$(61)$149 
Intersegment revenue (expense)$14 $(2)$12 $(24)$— 
Average balances
Loans held-for-sale$— $7,464 $— $— $7,464 
Loans with government guarantees— 2,502 — — 2,502 
Loans held-for-investment (2)12,806 2,079 — 30 14,915 
Total assets13,168 13,015 390 3,492 30,065 
Deposits11,804 15 7,157 1,067 20,043 
(1)Includes offsetting adjustments made to reclassify income and expenses relating to operating leases and custodial deposits for subservicing clients.
(2)    Includes adjustment made to reclassify operating lease assets to LHFI.

Note 18 - Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
    
Adoption of New Accounting Standards
    
    We adopted the following ASU during the quarter ended March 31, 2022. This ASU did not have a material impact to our financial statements:
StandardDescriptionEffective Date
ASU 2022-01Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815): Fair Value Hedging—Portfolio Layer MethodDecember 15, 2022

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Accounting Standards Issued But Not Yet Adopted

The expected impact of applicable material accounting pronouncements recently issued or proposed but not yet required to be adopted are discussed in the table below.

StandardDescriptionEffective Date
ASU 2022-02
Financial Instruments-Credit Losses (Topic 326): Troubled Debt Restructurings and Vintage Disclosures
ASU 2022-02 eliminates prior accounting guidance for TDRs, while enhancing disclosure requirements for certain loan refinancings and restructurings by creditors when a borrower is experiencing financial difficulty. The standard also requires that an entity disclose current-period gross charge-offs by year of origination for financing receivables and net investments in leases.

The amendments in this update are effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2022, including interim periods within those fiscal years. An entity has the option to apply a modified retrospective transition method, resulting in a cumulative-effect adjustment to retained earnings in the period of adoption. Early adoption is permitted in any interim period.
Adoption of this amendment is not expected to have a
material impact on our results of operations or
financial position, but is expected to result in additional disclosure requirements.

Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

    A discussion regarding our management of market risk is included in "Market Risk" in this report in "Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 4. Controls and Procedures

(a)Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures. As of March 31, 2022, pursuant to Rule 13a-15(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended ("Exchange Act"), an evaluation was performed by the Company’s Management, including our principal executive and financial officers, regarding the design and effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures. Based upon that evaluation, the principal executive and financial officers have concluded that our current disclosure controls and procedures were effective to ensure that information required to be disclosed by the Company in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the Commission's rules and forms as of March 31, 2022.
(b)Changes in Internal Controls. There have been no changes in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 13a-15(d) of the Exchange Act) during the three months ended March 31, 2022, that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
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PART II

Item 1. Legal Proceedings

    See Legal Proceedings in Note 15 - Legal Proceedings, Contingencies and Commitments to the Consolidated Financial Statements, which is incorporated herein by reference.

Item 1A. Risk Factors

The Company believes that there have been no material changes to the risk factors previously disclosed in response to Item 1A. to Part I, of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021.

Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

    Sale of Unregistered Securities

The Company made no sales of unregistered securities during the quarter ended March 31, 2022.
Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

    The Company made no purchases of its equity securities during the quarter ended March 31, 2022.

Item 3. Defaults upon Senior Securities

    The Company had no defaults on senior securities.     

Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

    None.

Item 5. Other Information

None.
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Item 6. Exhibits 
Exhibit No. Description
2.1*
2.2*
3.1*
3.2*
4.1*
4.2*
4.3*
31.1
31.2
32.1
32.2 
101
Financial statements from Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of the Company for the quarter ended March 31, 2022, formatted in XBRL: (i) the Consolidated Statements of Financial Condition, (ii) the Consolidated Statements of Operations, (iii) the Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss), (iv) the Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity, (v) the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows and (vi) the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.

*Incorporated herein by reference
86


SIGNATURES

    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.
 
FLAGSTAR BANCORP, INC.
Registrant
Date: May 10, 2022/s/ Alessandro DiNello
Alessandro DiNello
President and Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)
/s/ James K. Ciroli
James K. Ciroli
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)


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