Negative Gap

Negative Gap

A negative gap is a situation where a financial institution's interest-sensitive liabilities exceed its interest-sensitive assets. Negative gap is related to gap analysis, which can help determine a financial institution's interest-rate risk as it relates to repricing, i.e. the change in interest rates when an interest-sensitive investment matures. When the duration gap is zero, meaning there is no positive gap or negative gap, a firm's equity is thought to be protected against interest-rate risk because any increases or decreases in interest rates won't affect the firm. The opposite of a negative gap is a positive gap, where an entity's interest-sensitive assets exceed its interest-sensitive liabilities. A negative gap is a situation where a financial institution's interest-sensitive liabilities exceed its interest-sensitive assets.

A negative gap is when an entity's interest-sensitive liabilities exceed its interest-sensitive assets.

What Is a Negative Gap?

A negative gap is a situation where a financial institution's interest-sensitive liabilities exceed its interest-sensitive assets. A negative gap is not necessarily a bad thing, because if interest rates decline, the entity's liabilities are repriced at lower interest rates. In this scenario, income would increase. However, if interest rates increase, liabilities would be repriced at higher interest rates, and income would decrease.

The opposite of a negative gap is a positive gap, where an entity's interest-sensitive assets exceed its interest-sensitive liabilities. The terms of negative and positive gaps, which analyze interest rate gaps, are also known as duration gap.

A negative gap is when an entity's interest-sensitive liabilities exceed its interest-sensitive assets.
If interest rates decline, the liabilities are priced at lower rates, increasing income. If interest rates increase, the opposite is true.
The size of a financial institution's gap is an indicator of the impact interest rate changes will have on its net interest income.
A negative gap is a component of asset-liability management; managing cash inflows to pay for liabilities.
A zero duration gap is when there is no positive gap or negative gap and a firm is protected against interest rate movements.

Understanding a Negative Gap

Negative gap is related to gap analysis, which can help determine a financial institution's interest-rate risk as it relates to repricing, i.e. the change in interest rates when an interest-sensitive investment matures.

The size of an entity's gap indicates how much of an impact interest rate changes will have on a bank's net interest income. Net interest income is the difference between an entity's revenue, which it generates from its assets, including personal and commercial loans, mortgages and securities, and its expenses (e.g., interest paid out on deposits).

Negative Gap and Asset-Liability Management

A negative gap is not necessarily either good or bad, but it is a measure of how much a bank is exposed to interest-rate risk. Understanding this metric is a component of asset-liability management, which banks must consider in their operations.

Gap analysis, as a method of asset-liability management, can be helpful in assessing liquidity risk. In general, the concept of asset-liability management focuses on the timing of cash flows. It looks at when cash inflows are received versus when payments on liabilities are due and when the liabilities present a risk. It aims to ensure that the timing of liability payments will always be covered by cash inflows from the assets.

Asset-liability management is also concerned with the availability of assets to pay the liabilities, and when the assets or earnings may be converted into cash. This process can be applied to a range of categories of balance sheet assets.

When the duration gap is zero, meaning there is no positive gap or negative gap, a firm's equity is thought to be protected against interest-rate risk because any increases or decreases in interest rates won't affect the firm. However, achieving a zero gap is difficult as not all assets and liabilities have matching durations, customer prepayments and defaults will affect the timing of cash flows, and some assets and liabilities will have cash flow patterns that are not consistent.

Related terms:

Asset/Liability Management

Asset/liability management is the process of managing the use of assets and cash flows to reduce the firm’s risk of loss from not paying a liability on time. read more

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Cash Flow

Cash flow is the net amount of cash and cash equivalents being transferred into and out of a business. read more

Checking Account

A checking account is a deposit account held at a financial institution that allows deposits and withdrawals. Checking accounts are very liquid and can be accessed using checks, automated teller machines, and electronic debits, among other methods. read more

Commercial Loan

A commercial loan is a debt-based funding arrangement that a business can set up with a financial institution, as opposed to an individual. read more

Gap Analysis

Gap analysis is the process companies use to examine their current performance with their desired, expected performance. read more

Immunization

Immunization is a strategy that matches the duration of assets and liabilities, minimizing the impact of interest rates on the net worth. read more

Interest Rate Gap

An interest rate gap measures a firm's exposure to interest rate risk. The gap is the distance between assets and liabilities. read more

Interest Rate , Formula, & Calculation

The interest rate is the amount lenders charge borrowers and is a percentage of the principal. It is also the amount earned from deposit accounts. read more

Liability

A liability is something a person or company owes, usually a sum of money. read more