Economic headwinds and uncertainty underscore the importance of scenario modeling.
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Economic headwinds and uncertainty underscore the importance of scenario modeling.
Model risk assessment, ongoing monitoring, and documentation considerations are key.
Financial institutions need to put resources into continually assessing their models.
For financial services organizations that are further along in their CECL journey, it will be crucial to examine how their CECL model is already working, the functionality of monitoring systems already in place, and ways they may need to refresh the model.
This is especially important because CECL requirements are more robust for organizations in the financial services space; for banks and other financial institutions, for instance, their entire loan and lease portfolio and certain securities are subject to the accounting standard.
Economic headwinds and uncertainty in the market could also lead to more loan and lease portfolio risk, which underscores the importance of modeling various scenarios and getting quality outputs from that modeling. Institutions should zero in on model risk assessment, ongoing monitoring, and documentation considerations to make their CECL compliance more robust.
A model risk assessment can determine the current-year model validation scope and frequency of validation activities and should be the first step for many financial services organizations evaluating their CECL models. Items to consider in such an assessment include:
“One of the areas we see institutions struggling with around the model risk assessment is that they treat CECL differently from any of their other models,” says Nicholas Hahn, a risk consulting partner at RSM US LLP. That’s in part because of its significance and in part because it’s an accounting standard, rather than a model to forecast, project or improve performance, he adds. Treating CECL as a stand-alone model often means the organization may not have a proper model risk framework in place—and a solid framework is key to understanding how frequently the organization should validate the model.
“That risk assessment piece is crucial because it assesses not only the level of risk, but also sets the table for how the organization needs to manage the risk it just assessed,” Hahn says.
The assessment process can also help determine how frequently to revisit the model in the context of economic turbulence, interest rate changes and credit deterioration.
That risk assessment piece is crucial because it assesses not only the level of risk, but also sets the table for how the organization needs to manage the risk it just assessed.
Along with risk assessments, ongoing monitoring is central to understanding the performance of a CECL model. A challenge with CECL models, however, is projecting losses over the lives of loans that have constantly changing variables. That means models based on statistics or machine learning don’t always suffice. Instead, financial services organizations must rely on other techniques for monitoring.
Here are some important considerations for ongoing monitoring efforts:
Just as importantly, financial services organizations need processes in place to ensure a smooth handoff of oversight from what is usually a cross-functional CECL committee—often put in place to bring a CECL model online—to the institution’s accounting function.
“Institutions need to understand when that shift might happen and what it means for oversight,” says Hahn. “It will also have implications for the control structure. As you move from a more cross-functional team with lots of eyes to more periodic, ongoing monitoring, there should still be meetings throughout the year to assess whether the model still makes sense.”
As part of that transition, organizations should also assess who has access to the model and its information and who might need—or no longer need—access.
“It’s one thing to have a model that puts out information to a board of directors, but if the board never sees it, that’s a huge problem,” Hahn says.
Alongside access issues, financial services organizations need to make sure their CECL model documentation clearly identifies users, owners, governance parties and anyone else involved in monitoring.
“Due to the complexities associated with CECL, model documentation is key and has taken on additional importance with relation to CECL compliance, especially due to its association with model risk,” says Andrew Broucek, a risk consulting director at RSM. “This documentation provides a road map not only for management’s CECL compliance but will be a key element of review by third parties, including regulators and auditors.”
The documentation should also clearly spell out the control structure of the model and identify to whom situations get escalated, whether that is the board of directors, a specific committee or another group.
Due to the complexities associated with CECL, model documentation is key and has taken on additional importance with relation to CECL compliance, especially due to its association with model risk. This documentation provides a road map not only for management’s CECL compliance but will be a key element of review by third parties, including regulators and auditors.
Because CECL calculations must include considerations related to historical performance as well as current and future trends affecting credit defaults and losses, financial institutions will need to put resources into continually assessing and revisiting their models. The judgments and estimates used in the forecasting process will need to continue to be refined and updated as actual and forecasted economic conditions change.