XML 81 R21.htm IDEA: XBRL DOCUMENT v2.3.0.15
Fair Value of Financial Measurements
12 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2011
Fair Value of Financial Instruments [Abstract] 
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
FAIR VALUES OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
U.S. GAAP requires disclosure of fair value information about financial instruments, whether or not recognized on the statement of financial condition, for which it is practicable to estimate those values. Certain financial instruments and all non-financial instruments are excluded from the disclosure requirements. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value estimates presented do not reflect the underlying fair value of the Company. Although Management is not aware of any factors that would materially affect the estimated fair value amounts presented, such amounts have not been comprehensively revalued for purposes of these financial statements since that date, and therefore, estimates of fair value subsequent to that date may differ significantly from the amounts presented below.
 
 
2011
2010
  
Carrying
Amount
Estimated
Fair Value
Carrying
Amount
Estimated
Fair Value
 
(In thousands)
Financial assets
 
 
 
 
Cash and cash equivalents
$
816,002

$
816,002

$
888,622

$
888,622

Available-for-sale securities:


 
 
Equity securities




Obligations of U.S. government
190,527

190,527

341,006

341,006

Obligations of states and political subdivisions
23,568

23,568



Obligations of foreign governments




Corporate debt securities
29,959

29,959

10,000

10,000

Mortgage-backed securities


 
 
Agency pass-through certificates
3,011,090

3,011,090

2,130,087

2,130,087

Other debt securities




Total available-for-sale securities
3,255,144

3,255,144

2,481,093

2,481,093

Held-to-maturity securities:
 
 
 
 
Equity securities




Obligations of U.S. government




Obligations of states and political subdivisions
1,950

2,023

7,055

7,269

Obligations of foreign governments




Corporate debt securities




Mortgage-backed securities


 
 
Agency pass-through certificates
45,086

48,593

73,052

77,631

Other debt securities




Total held-to-maturity securities
47,036

50,616

80,107

84,900

Loans receivable
7,935,877

8,479,307

8,423,703

8,899,937

Covered loans
382,183

375,027

534,474

534,474

FDIC indemnification asset
98,871

101,751

131,128

131,128

FHLB stock
151,755

151,755

151,748

151,748

Financial liabilities


 
 
Customer accounts
8,665,903

8,557,357

8,852,540

8,811,009

FHLB advances and other borrowings
2,762,066

3,038,127

2,665,548

2,965,921



The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair value of financial instruments:

Cash and cash equivalents – The carrying amount of these items is a reasonable estimate of their fair value.

Available-for-sale securities and held-to-maturity securities – Securities at fair value are priced using model pricing based on the securities' relationship to other benchmark quoted prices as provided by an independent third party, and under the provisions of the Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification are considered a Level 2 input method.

Loans receivable and covered loans – For certain homogeneous categories of loans, such as fixed- and variable-rate residential mortgages, fair value is estimated for securities backed by similar loans, adjusted for differences in loan characteristics, using the same methodology described above for AFS and HTM securities. The fair value of other loan types is estimated by discounting the future cash flows and estimated prepayments using the current rates at which similar loans would be made to borrowers with similar credit ratings and for the same remaining term. Some loan types were valued at carrying value because their floating rate or expected maturity characteristics. Net deferred loan fees are not included in the fair value calculation but are included in the carrying amount.

FDIC indemnification asset – The fair value of the indemnification asset is estimated by discounting the expected future cash flows using the current rates .

FHLB stock – The fair value is based upon the redemption value of the stock which equates to its carrying value.

 Customer accounts – The fair value of demand deposits, savings accounts, and money market accounts is the amount payable on demand at the reporting date. The fair value of fixed-maturity certificates of deposit is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using the rates currently offered for deposits with similar remaining maturities.

FHLB advances and other borrowings – The fair value of FHLB advances and other borrowings is estimated by discounting the estimated future cash flows using rates currently available to the Company for debt with similar remaining maturities.