OTHER INTEREST-BEARING LIABILITIES
The Company’s non-deposit borrowings may, at any given time, include fed funds purchased from correspondent banks, borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank, advances from the Federal Reserve Bank, securities sold under agreements to repurchase, subordinated notes and/or junior subordinated debentures. The Company uses short-term FHLB advances and fed funds purchased on unsecured lines to support liquidity needs created by seasonal deposit flows, to temporarily satisfy funding needs from increased loan demand, and for other short-term purposes. The FHLB line consists of both a secured and unsecured component. The secured component depends on the level of pledged collateral.
Total non-deposit interest-bearing liabilities decreased by $70.9 million, during the first half of 2023 primarily due to an overnight increase in long term FHLB borrowings. This was a strategic decision to take advantage of longer term pricing as a partial on-balance sheet match to longer term loans due to the current inverted yield curve and to provide longer-term interest rate risk mitigation.
Customer repurchase agreements declined from $109.2 million at December 31, 2022 to $73.7 million at June 30, 2023. Customer repurchase agreements provide collateral for customers that sweep excess deposit balances each day into a separate repurchase agreement account where the Company effectively sells certain government bonds to customers daily and then repurchase the same bonds on the next business day. Although these accounts are not deposits and are not FDIC insured, they provide customers with larger account balances the ability to have their account secured with collateral.
Other borrowings increased $106.2 million to $325.2 million at June 30, 2023 from $219.0 million at December 31, 2022 and consist of overnight borrowings from correspondent banks and the FHLB.
Long-term debt at June 30, 2023 consisted of $49.3 million of subordinated debt. This remained relatively unchanged from December 31, 2022. Subordinated debentures related to $35.6 million of trust preferred securities at June 30, 2023 and $35.5 million at December 31, 2022. Trust preferred securities are variable rate instruments which were benchmarked against the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) plus a spread until LIBOR was phased out on June 30, 2023. These instruments are benchmarked against the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), effective June 30, 2023.
OTHER NONINTEREST-BEARING LIABILITIES
Other liabilities are principally comprised of operating lease right-of-use liabilities, accrued interest payable, other accrued but unpaid expenses, and certain clearing amounts. The Company’s balance of other liabilities was $49.6 million at June 30, 2023 as compared to $45.1 million at December 31, 2022, an increase of $4.5 million or 10%. The increase was primarily driven by investment securities that have not settled as of June 30, 2023.
LIQUIDITY AND MARKET RISK MANAGEMENT
LIQUIDITY
Liquidity management refers to the Company’s ability to maintain cash flows that are adequate to fund operations and meet other obligations and commitments in a timely and cost-effective manner. Detailed cash flow projections are reviewed by Management on a monthly basis, with various stress scenarios applied to assess our ability to meet liquidity needs under unusual or adverse conditions. Liquidity ratios are also calculated and reviewed on a regular basis. While those ratios are merely indicators and are not measures of actual liquidity, they are closely monitored, and we are committed to maintaining adequate liquidity resources to draw upon should unexpected needs arise.
The Company, on occasion, experiences cash needs as the result of loan growth, deposit outflows, asset purchases or liability repayments. To meet these short-term needs, we can borrow overnight funds from other financial institutions,