Company: USB-PA
Filing Date: 2025-11-05
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0000036104-25-000064
Chunk: 170

Company: US BANCORP \DE\
Filing Date: 2025-11-05
Form: 10-Q
Chunk 170
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 %           |     | .17 | %         |     | .01 | %            |     | 1.05 | %          |

| 20 |     | U.S. Bancorp |

Table 9 summarizes the projected impact to net interest income over the next 12 months of various potential interest rate changes. The sensitivity of the projected impact to net interest income over the next 12 months is dependent on balance sheet growth, product mix, customer behavior, deposit pricing and funding decisions. From December 31, 2024 to September 30, 2025, changes in net interest income sensitivities reflect updates to both the actual and projected balance sheet, as well as enhancements to behavioral models made in the third quarter of 2025. The Company periodically assesses interest rate risk scenarios and behavioral assumptions, such as deposit rotation, pricing sensitivity and mortgage prepayment speeds, based on historical and projected through-the-cycle experience. As of September 30, 2025, the Company remains relatively neutral to a parallel 50 basis point shift in interest rates, as asset and liability repricing remains closely aligned. Under more significant rate shock scenarios, certain assets and liabilities, particularly mortgage assets and deposit products, are expected to exhibit non-linear behavior, resulting in varying impacts to net interest income. In higher rate scenarios, the analysis anticipates deposit disintermediation and a mix shift into higher yielding products, along with reduced mortgage prepayments. Conversely, in lower rate scenarios, the analysis assumes that deposits will shift into lower yielding products, while mortgage paydowns accelerate. While the Company’s interest rate risk models incorporate historical data and expected customer behaviors, actual outcomes may differ significantly due to changes in macroeconomic conditions, competitive dynamics and customer preferences.

Use of Derivatives to Manage Interest Rate and Other Risks To manage the sensitivity of earnings and capital to interest rate, prepayment, credit, price and foreign currency fluctuations (asset and liability management positions), the Company enters into derivative transactions. The Company uses derivatives for asset and liability management purposes primarily in the following ways:

• To convert fixed-rate debt and available-for-sale investment securities from fixed-rate payments to floating-rate payments;

• To convert floating-rate loans and debt from floating-rate payments to fixed-rate payments;

• To mitigate changes in value of the Company’s unfunded mortgage loan commitments, funded MLHFS and MSRs;

• To mitigate remeasurement volatility of foreign currency denominated balances; and

• To mitigate the volatility of the Company’s net investment in foreign operations driven by fluctuations