Company: WTFCN
Filing Date: 2025-05-05
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001015328-25-000130
Chunk: 44

Company: WINTRUST FINANCIAL CORP
Filing Date: 2025-05-05
Form: 10-Q
Item: Item 1
Chunk 44
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 $187,294 $— $187,294 Total assets at period end$45,720,014 $10,713,783 $1,143,136 $57,576,933 $— $57,576,933 (1)Other segment items include non-interest expense categories such as ‘Software & Equipment’, ‘Data processing’, ‘Advertising and Marketing’, ‘FDIC Insurance’, and ‘Occupancy’. See “Non-Interest Expense” under Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations in Item 2 of this Form 10-Q for further discussion on non-interest expense.

(14) Derivative Financial Instruments

The Company primarily enters into derivative financial instruments as part of its strategy to manage its exposure to changes in interest rates. Derivative instruments represent contracts between parties that result in one party delivering cash to the other party based on a notional amount and an underlying term (such as a rate, security price or price index or commodity price) as specified in the contract. The amount of cash delivered from one party to the other is determined based on the interaction of the notional amount of the contract with the underlying term. Derivatives are also implicit in certain contracts and commitments.The derivative financial instruments currently used by the Company to manage its exposure to interest rate risk include: (1) interest rate swaps and collars to manage the interest rate risk of certain fixed and variable rate assets and variable rate liabilities; (2) interest rate lock commitments provided to customers to fund certain mortgage loans to be sold into the secondary market; (3) forward commitments for the future delivery of such mortgage loans to protect the Company from adverse changes in interest rates and corresponding changes in the value of mortgage loans held-for-sale; (4) covered call options to economically hedge specific investment securities and receive fee income, effectively enhancing the overall yield on such securities to compensate for net interest margin compression; and (5) options and swaps to economically hedge a portion of the 

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fair value adjustments related to the Company’s mortgage servicing rights portfolio. The Company also enters into derivatives (typically interest rate swaps and commodity forward contracts) with certain qualified borrowers to facilitate the borrowers’ risk management strategies and concurrently enters into mirror-image derivatives with a third party counterparty, effectively making a market in the derivatives for such borrowers. Additionally, the Company enters into foreign currency contracts to manage foreign exchange risk associated with certain foreign currency denominated assets.The Company recognizes derivative financial instruments in the consolidated financial statements at