Officials Expect Larger Loan Loss Allowances for Modifications

When banks modify a mortgage to make the payments more affordable, it is not only considered a troubled debt restructuring by the federal banking regulators, the regulators also expect banks to increase their allowances for loan losses. "It could result in more significant allowances for TDRs," said Kathy Murphy, chief accountant for the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The OCC official told the certified public accountants at their annual banking conference that most banks don't have a history of doing loan modifications. Nevertheless, banks are expected to do a Financial Accounting Standard 114 analysis of future cash flows on modified loans using current market trends to determine the appropriate impairment, she said. "Trends right now don't look like real estate is recovering," OCC's chief accountant said. Tom Kelly of PriceWaterhouseCoopers told the CPAs that a lot of firms are struggling with the complexity of FAS 114 and TDRs. "It is complex from an accounting standpoint and from an operational aspect," Mr. Kelly said.

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