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FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
3 Months Ended
Jan. 29, 2023
FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS  
FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS

(17)  Fair Value Measurements

The fair values of financial instruments that do not approximate the carrying values were as follows in millions of dollars. Long-term borrowings exclude finance lease liabilities.

January 29, 2023

October 30, 2022

January 30, 2022

 

Carrying
Value

Fair
Value

Carrying
Value

Fair
Value

Carrying
Value

Fair
Value

 

Financing receivables – net

$

36,882

$

35,894

$

36,634

$

35,526

$

33,191

$

33,033

Financing receivables securitized – net

5,089

4,869

5,936

5,698

3,516

3,530

Short-term securitization borrowings

4,864

4,785

5,711

5,577

3,482

3,468

Long-term borrowings due within one year

7,378

7,220

7,466

 

7,322

8,313

8,322

Long-term borrowings

35,035

34,149

33,566

 

31,852

32,806

33,843

Fair value measurements above were Level 3 for all financing receivables and Level 2 for all borrowings.

Fair values of the financing receivables that were issued long-term were based on the discounted values of their related cash flows at interest rates currently being offered by the Company for similar financing receivables. The fair values of the remaining financing receivables approximated the carrying amounts.

Fair values of long-term borrowings and short-term securitization borrowings were based on current market quotes for identical or similar borrowings and credit risk, or on the discounted values of their related cash flows at current market interest rates. Certain long-term borrowings have been swapped to current variable interest rates. The carrying values of these long-term borrowings included adjustments related to fair value hedges.

Assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis in millions of dollars follow, excluding the Company’s cash equivalents, which were carried at cost that approximates fair value and consisted of money market funds and time deposits.

    

January 29

    

October 30

    

January 30

 

2023

2022

2022

 

Level 1:

Marketable securities

 

International equity securities

$

2

$

3

$

2

U.S. equity fund

86

70

72

U.S. fixed income fund

118

 

 

U.S. government debt securities

64

 

62

 

63

Total Level 1 marketable securities

270

135

137

Level 2:

Marketable securities

U.S. government debt securities

127

121

138

Municipal debt securities

71

 

63

 

74

Corporate debt securities

209

 

200

 

229

International debt securities

18

60

2

Mortgage-backed securities

157

 

155

 

155

Total Level 2 marketable securities

582

 

599

 

598

Other assets – Derivatives

 

360

373

299

Accounts payable and accrued expenses – Derivatives

891

1,231

276

Level 3:

Accounts payable and accrued expenses – Deferred consideration

 

225

236

The contractual maturities of debt securities at January 29, 2023 in millions of dollars are shown below. Actual maturities may differ from contractual maturities because some securities may be called or prepaid. Because of the potential for prepayment on mortgage-backed securities, they are not categorized by contractual maturity.

 

Amortized

Fair

Cost

Value

Due in one year or less

 

$

35

$

35

Due after one through five years

111

105

Due after five through 10 years

197

176

Due after 10 years

204

173

Mortgage-backed securities

182

157

Debt securities

 

$

729

 

$

646

Fair value, nonrecurring Level 3 measurements from impairments, excluding financing receivables with specific allowances which were not significant, were as follows in millions of dollars.

Fair Value

Losses

Three Months Ended 

January 29

October 30

January 30

January 29

January 30

  

2023

  

2022

  

2022

  

2023

2022

 

Inventories

$

19

Property and equipment – net

15

The following is a description of the valuation methodologies the Company uses to measure certain financial instruments on the balance sheet at fair value:

Marketable securitiesThe portfolio of investments is valued on a market approach (matrix pricing model) in which all significant inputs are observable or can be derived from or corroborated by observable market data such as interest rates, yield curves, volatilities, credit risk, and prepayment speeds. Funds are valued using closing prices in the active market in which the investment trades.

DerivativesThe Company’s derivative financial instruments consist of interest rate contracts (swaps), foreign currency exchange contracts (futures, forwards, and swaps), and cross-currency interest rate contracts (swaps). The portfolio is valued based on an income approach (discounted cash flow) using market observable inputs, including swap curves and both forward and spot exchange rates for currencies.

Financing receivables Specific reserve impairments are based on the fair value of the collateral, which is measured using a market approach (appraisal values or realizable values).

Inventories – The impairment was based on net realizable value.

Property and equipment - net – The valuations were based on cost and market approaches. The inputs include replacement cost estimates adjusted for physical deterioration and economic obsolescence.