1 WACHOVIA - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FINANCIAL SUPPLEMENT AND FORM 10-Q THIRD QUARTER 1995 2 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ WACHOVIA CORPORATION DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS DIRECTORS L. M. BAKER, JR. THOMAS K. HEARN, JR. JAMES W. JOHNSTON President and President Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Wake Forest University Chief Executive Officer R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company JOHN G. MEDLIN, JR. W. HAYNE HIPP Chairman of the Board President and WYNDHAM ROBERTSON Chief Executive Officer Vice President, Communications RUFUS C. BARKLEY, JR. The Liberty Corporation University of North Carolina Chairman of the Board Cameron & Barkley Company ROBERT M. HOLDER, JR. HERMAN J. RUSSELL Chairman of the Board Chairman of the Board and CRANDALL C. BOWLES Holder Corporation Chief Executive Officer Executive Vice President H.J. Russell & Company Springs Industries, Inc. DONALD R. HUGHES Consultant and Retired SHERWOOD H. SMITH, JR. JOHN L. CLENDENIN Vice Chairman of the Board Chairman of the Board and Chairman of the Board Burlington Industries, Inc. Chief Executive Officer and Chief Executive Officer Carolina Power & Light Company BellSouth Corporation F. KENNETH IVERSON Chairman and CHARLES MCKENZIE TAYLOR LAWRENCE M. GRESSETTE, JR. Chief Executive Officer Chairman of the Board Chairman of the Board, Nucor Corporation Taylor & Mathis, Inc. President and Chief Executive Officer SCANA Corporation PRINCIPAL CORPORATE OFFICERS L. M. BAKER, JR. W. DOUG KING ROBERT S. MCCOY, JR. President and Executive Vice President Executive Vice President Chief Executive Officer Consumer Services Chief Financial Officer MICKEY W. DRY WALTER E. LEONARD, JR. G. JOSEPH PRENDERGAST Executive Vice President Executive Vice President Executive Vice President Chief Credit Officer Operations/Technology General Banking HUGH M. DURDEN KENNETH W. MCALLISTER RICHARD B. ROBERTS Executive Vice President Executive Vice President Executive Vice President Corporate Banking General Counsel/Administrative Treasurer 2 3 _______________________________________________________________________________ SELECTED PERIOD-END DATA September 30 September 30 1995 1994 ------- ------- Banking offices: North Carolina ................................. 218 216 Georgia ........................................ 125 126 South Carolina ................................. 146 149 ------- ------- Total ......................................... 489 491 ======= ======= Automated banking machines: North Carolina ................................. 319 285 Georgia ........................................ 202 185 South Carolina ................................. 173 169 ------- ------- Total ......................................... 694 639 ======= ======= Employees (full-time equivalent) ................. 15,843 15,614 Common stock shareholders of record .............. 28,042 28,878 Common shares outstanding(thousands) ............. 170,326 170,760 ________________________________________________________________________________ COMMON STOCK DATA--PER SHARE 1995 1994 ------------------------------------ ----------------------- Third Second First Fourth Third Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter --------- -------- -------- --------- --------- Market value: Period-end.................................. $ 43 1/8 $ 35 3/4 $ 35 1/2 $ 32 1/4 $ 32 1/4 High ...................................... 45 37 7/8 36 1/2 34 1/2 35 1/4 Low......................................... 35 3/8 34 1/4 32 31 1/2 31 3/8 Book value at period-end...................... 21.24 20.75 19.89 19.23 18.83 Dividend...................................... .36 .33 .33 .33 .30 Price/earnings ratio*......................... 12.4x 10.5x 11.0x 10.3x 10.7x *Based on most recent twelve months net income per primary share and period-end stock price ________________________________________________________________________________ FINANCIAL INFORMATION Analysts, investors and others seeking additional financial information about Wachovia Corporation or its member companies should contact the following either by phone or in writing. Robert S. McCoy, Jr., Chief Financial Officer, (910) 770-5926 James C. Mabry, Investor Relations Manager, (910) 770-5788 Wachovia Corporation P. O. Box 3099 Winston-Salem, NC 27150 Common Stock Listing -- New York Stock Exchange, ticker symbol - WB 3 4 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ FINANCIAL SUMMARY TABLE 1 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Twelve Months 1995 1994 Ended --------------------------------- ---------------------- September 30 Third Second First Fourth Third 1995 Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS (thousands, except per share data) Interest income -- taxable equivalent ..... $ 2,979,706 $ 813,117 $ 774,078 $ 715,414 $677,097 $632,359 Interest expense .......................... 1,460,047 418,917 392,970 342,596 305,564 274,329 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Net interest income -- taxable equivalent . 1,519,659 394,200 381,108 372,818 371,533 358,030 Taxable equivalent adjustment ............. 100,135 26,633 23,987 23,622 25,893 24,909 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Net interest income ....................... 1,419,524 367,567 357,121 349,196 345,640 333,121 Provision for loan losses ................. 93,158 23,179 28,652 21,788 19,539 18,123 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Net interest income after provision for loan losses ............... 1,326,366 344,388 328,469 327,408 326,101 314,998 Other operating revenue ................... 648,535 170,415 166,304 157,093 154,723 151,541 Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio ............................... 79,025 -- 79,025 -- -- -- Investment securities gains (losses) ...... (23,954) 317 (26,236) (129) 2,094 433 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Total other income ........................ 703,606 170,732 219,093 156,964 156,817 151,974 Personnel expense ......................... 589,814 153,298 149,987 144,963 141,566 139,695 Other expense ............................. 581,242 145,584 156,630 138,069 140,959 131,598 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Total other expense ....................... 1,171,056 298,882 306,617 283,032 282,525 271,293 Income before income taxes ................ 858,916 216,238 240,945 201,340 200,393 195,679 Applicable income taxes* .................. 260,445 64,958 78,036 59,184 58,267 57,687 ----------- --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- Net income ................................ $ 598,471 $ 151,280 $ 162,909 $ 142,156 $142,126 $137,992 =========== ========= ========= ========= ======== ======== Net income per common share: Primary ................................. $ 3.48 $ .88 $ .94 $ .83 $ .83 $ .80 Fully diluted ........................... $ 3.46 $ .87 $ .95 $ .82 $ .82 $ .80 Cash dividends paid per common share ...... $ 1.35 $ .36 $ .33 $ .33 $ .33 $ .30 Cash dividends paid on common stock ....... $ 230,492 $ 61,312 $ 56,302 $ 56,458 $ 56,420 $ 51,241 Cash dividend payout ratio ................ 38.5% 40.5% 34.6% 39.7% 39.7% 37.1% Average primary shares outstanding ........ 171,988 171,793 171,986 172,205 171,973 172,097 Average fully diluted shares outstanding .. 172,567 172,512 172,446 172,760 172,552 172,701 SELECTED AVERAGE BALANCES (millions) Total assets .............................. $ 40,129 $ 42,573 $ 40,876 $ 38,902 $ 38,146 $ 37,409 Loans -- net of unearned income ........... 26,704 28,097 27,203 26,219 25,290 24,553 Investment securities** ................... 8,064 8,778 8,276 7,612 7,582 7,695 Other interest-earning assets ............. 979 1,210 1,012 815 877 809 Total interest-earning assets ............. 35,747 38,085 36,491 34,646 33,749 33,057 Interest-bearing deposits ................. 18,037 19,352 18,388 17,354 17,040 17,020 Short-term borrowed funds ................. 7,618 8,593 7,869 7,390 6,619 6,115 Long-term debt ............................ 4,796 4,851 4,863 4,674 4,795 4,637 Total interest-bearing liabilities ........ 30,451 32,796 31,120 29,418 28,454 27,772 Noninterest-bearing deposits .............. 5,329 5,212 5,333 5,302 5,471 5,364 Total deposits ............................ 22,366 24,564 23,721 22,656 22,511 22,384 Shareholders' equity ...................... 3,312 3,463 3,345 3,253 3,186 3,114 RATIOS (averages) Annualized net loan losses to loans ....... .34% .33% .42% .30% .31% .29% Annualized net yield on interest-earning assets ................. 4.25 4.11 4.19 4.36 4.37 4.30 Shareholders' equity to: Total assets ............................ 8.25 8.13 8.18 8.36 8.35 8.32 Net loans ............................... 12.59 12.51 12.48 12.60 12.80 12.89 Annualized return on assets*** ............ 1.49 1.42 1.59 1.46 1.49 1.48 Annualized return on shareholders' equity*** ................. 18.07 17.47 19.48 17.48 17.84 17.73 Nine Months Ended September 30 1995 1994 ---------- ---------- SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS (thousands, except per share data) Interest income -- taxable equivalent ..... $2,302,609 $1,785,357 Interest expense .......................... 1,154,483 732,824 ---------- ---------- Net interest income -- taxable equivalent.. 1,148,126 1,052,533 Taxable equivalent adjustment ............. 74,242 74,267 ---------- ---------- Net interest income ....................... 1,073,884 978,266 Provision for loan losses ................. 73,619 52,224 ---------- ---------- Net interest income after provision for loan losses ................ 1,000,265 926,042 Other operating revenue ................... 493,812 449,709 Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio ............................... 79,025 -- Investment securities gains (losses) ...... (26,048) 1,226 ---------- ---------- Total other income ........................ 546,789 450,935 Personnel expense ......................... 448,248 421,941 Other expense ............................. 440,283 393,947 ---------- ---------- Total other expense ....................... 888,531 815,888 Income before income taxes ................ 658,523 561,089 Applicable income taxes* .................. 202,178 164,157 ---------- ---------- Net income ................................ $ 456,345 $ 396,932 ========== ========== Net income per common share: Primary ................................. $ 2.65 $ 2.30 Fully diluted ........................... $ 2.64 $ 2.30 Cash dividends paid per common share ...... $ 1.02 $ .90 Cash dividends paid on common stock ....... $ 174,072 $ 154,083 Cash dividend payout ratio ................ 38.1% 38.8% Average primary shares outstanding ........ 171,993 172,462 Average fully diluted shares outstanding .. 172,882 173,086 SELECTED AVERAGE BALANCES (millions) Total assets .............................. $ 40,797 $ 36,653 Loans -- net of unearned income ........... 27,180 23,850 Investment securities** ................... 8,226 7,717 Other interest-earning assets ............. 1,014 906 Total interest-earning assets ............. 36,420 32,473 Interest-bearing deposits ................. 18,372 16,894 Short-term borrowed funds ................. 7,955 6,100 Long-term debt ............................ 4,797 4,200 Total interest-bearing liabilities ........ 31,124 27,194 Noninterest-bearing deposits .............. 5,282 5,355 Total deposits ............................ 23,654 22,249 Shareholders' equity ...................... 3,354 3,066 RATIOS (averages) Annualized net loan losses to loans ....... .35% .29% Annualized net yield on interest-earning assets ................. 4.21 4.33 Shareholders' equity to: Total assets ............................ 8.22 8.37 Net loans ............................... 12.53 13.08 Annualized return on assets*** ............ 1.49 1.44 Annualized return on shareholders' equity*** ................. 18.14 17.26 *Income taxes applicable to securities transactions were ($8,716), $91, ($9,580), ($67), $840, $173, ($9,556), and $488, respectively **Reported at amortized cost; excludes pretax unrealized gains (losses) on securities available-for-sale of ($3), $65, $15, ($49), ($44), ($28), $11 and ($2), respectively ***Includes average unrealized gains (losses) on securities available-for-sale of ($2), $40, $9, ($30), ($27), ($17), $7 and ($1) net of tax, respectively ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4 5 RESULTS OF OPERATIONS OVERVIEW Wachovia Corporation ("Wachovia") is a southeastern interstate bank holding company with dual headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Principal banking subsidiaries are Wachovia Bank of Georgia, N.A., Wachovia Bank of North Carolina, N.A., and Wachovia Bank of South Carolina, N.A. The First National Bank of Atlanta provides credit card services for Wachovia's affiliated banks. The economy grew at a faster pace in the third quarter of 1995 compared with the preceding year. Seasonally adjusted unemployment for the nation averaged 5.6 percent for the third period versus 5.7 percent in the second quarter. Within Wachovia's primary operating states of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina, seasonally adjusted unemployment averaged 5.1 percent, 4.4 percent and 5 percent, respectively, for the three months ended September 30. Wachovia's net income for the 1995 third quarter was $151.280 million or $.87 per fully diluted share compared with $137.992 million or $.80 per fully diluted share in the same period of 1994. For the first nine months, net income totaled $456.345 million or $2.64 per fully diluted share versus $396.932 million or $2.30 per fully diluted share a year earlier. Annualized returns for the quarter were 17.47 percent on shareholders' equity and 1.42 percent on assets. Year to date, annualized returns were 18.14 percent on equity and 1.49 percent on assets. The equity and assets used in computing these returns include unrealized gains or losses, net of tax, on securities available-for-sale. Excluding these unrealized amounts, annualized returns were 17.68 percent on equity and 1.42 percent on assets for the three months and were 18.17 percent and 1.49 percent, respectively, year to date. Results for the first nine months included an aftertax gain in the second quarter of $47.385 million or $.27 per share from the sale of the corporation's mortgage servicing portfolio, aftertax securities losses of $16.656 million or $.10 per share from restructuring of maturities in the available-for-sale portfolio and aftertax expenses of $11.291 million or $.07 per share for severance costs from consolidations, higher consulting fees for strategic initiatives and charitable contributions. Proceeds from the sale of the mortgage servicing portfolio are being invested in programs to enhance growth and productivity such as next generation branch automation, upgrades to customer information databases to improve sales effectiveness and service, and major refinements to financial systems for performance measurement. Expanded discussion of operating results and the corporation's financial condition is presented in the following narrative and tables. Interest income is stated on a taxable equivalent basis which is adjusted for the tax-favored status of earnings from certain loans and investments. References to changes in assets and liabilities represent daily average levels unless otherwise noted. 5 6 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ COMPONENTS OF EARNINGS PER PRIMARY SHARE TABLE 2 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended September 30 September 30 1995 1994 Change 1995 1994 Change ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Interest income -- taxable equivalent .......... $ 4.74 $ 3.67 $ 1.07 $13.39 $10.35 $ 3.04 Interest expense ............................... 2.44 1.59 .85 6.71 4.25 2.46 ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Net interest income -- taxable equivalent ...... 2.30 2.08 .22 6.68 6.10 .58 Taxable equivalent adjustment .................. .15 .14 .01 .43 .43 -- ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Net interest income ............................ 2.15 1.94 .21 6.25 5.67 .58 Provision for loan losses ...................... .14 .11 .03 .43 .30 .13 ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Net interest income after provision for loan losses .............................. 2.01 1.83 .18 5.82 5.37 .45 Other operating revenue ........................ .99 .88 .11 2.87 2.61 .26 Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio ... -- -- -- .46 -- .46 Investment securities losses ................... -- -- -- (.15) -- (.15) ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Total other income ............................. .99 .88 .11 3.18 2.61 .57 Personnel expense .............................. .89 .81 .08 2.61 2.45 .16 Other expense .................................. .85 .76 .09 2.56 2.28 .28 ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Total other expense ............................ 1.74 1.57 .17 5.17 4.73 .44 Income before income taxes ..................... 1.26 1.14 .12 3.83 3.25 .58 Applicable income taxes ........................ .38 .34 .04 1.18 .95 .23 ------ ------ ------- ------ ------ ------ Net income ..................................... $ .88 $ .80 $ .08 $ 2.65 $ 2.30 $ .35 ====== ====== ======= ====== ====== ====== ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ COMPUTATION OF EARNINGS PER COMMON SHARE TABLE 3 (thousands, except per share) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended September 30 September 30 1995 1994 1995 1994 -------- -------- -------- -------- PRIMARY Average common shares outstanding ............... 170,291 170,874 170,696 171,204 Dilutive common stock options -- based on treasury stock method using average market price ....... 1,412 1,141 1,217 1,180 Dilutive common stock awards -- based on treasury stock method using average market price ....... 90 82 80 78 -------- -------- -------- -------- Average primary shares outstanding .............. 171,793 172,097 171,993 172,462 ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income ...................................... $151,280 $137,992 $456,345 $396,932 ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income per common share -- primary .......... $ .88 $ .80 $ 2.65 $ 2.30 FULLY DILUTED Average common shares outstanding ............... 170,291 170,874 170,696 171,204 Dilutive common stock options -- based on treasury stock method using higher of period-end market price or average market price .......... 1,738 1,141 1,651 1,180 Dilutive common stock awards -- based on treasury stock method using higher of period-end market price or average market price .......... 102 82 102 78 Convertible notes assumed converted ............. 381 604 433 624 -------- -------- -------- -------- Average fully diluted shares outstanding ........ 172,512 172,701 172,882 173,086 ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income ...................................... $151,280 $137,992 $456,345 $396,932 Add interest on convertible notes after taxes ... 71 127 263 393 -------- -------- -------- -------- Adjusted net income ............................. $151,351 $138,119 $456,608 $397,325 ======== ======== ======== ======== Net income per common share -- fully diluted .... $ .87 $ .80 $ 2.64 $ 2.30 ________________________________________________________________________________ 6 7 NET INTEREST INCOME Taxable equivalent net interest income for the third quarter rose $36.170 million or 10.1 percent year over year and expanded $95.593 million or 9.1 percent for the first nine months of 1995. Higher levels of interest-earning assets along with improved rates principally in the securities available-for-sale portfolio accounted for the growth in both periods, offsetting the impact of competitive pricing pressures on both loans and deposits. On a sequential quarter basis, taxable equivalent net interest income for the third period increased $13.092 million or 3.4 percent. The net yield on interest-earning assets (net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets) was lower by 19 basis points and 12 basis points for the third quarter and first nine months, respectively, compared with year-earlier periods and decreased 8 basis points from the second quarter. The corporation anticipates pricing pressures to continue throughout the remainder of the year. Taxable equivalent interest income expanded $180.758 million or 28.6 percent for the quarter and $517.252 million or 29 percent year to date, the result of both interest-earning asset growth and a higher average rate earned. Average interest-earning assets were up $5.028 billion or 15.2 percent for the three-month period and $3.947 billion or 12.2 percent for the first nine months, with the average yield rising 88 basis points and 110 basis points, respectively. Taxable equivalent interest income increased $39.039 million or 5 percent from the second quarter, with average interest-earning assets higher by $1.594 billion or 4.4 percent and the average rate earned down 4 basis points. Loan growth remained strong. Year over year, average loans rose $3.544 billion or 14.4 percent for the third quarter and $3.330 billion or 14 percent for the first nine months. Loans were up an additional $894 million or 3.3 percent from the second quarter. Commercial loans, including related real estate categories, were higher by $2.733 billion or 20 percent for the quarter and $2.495 billion or 18.9 percent year to date compared with the same periods in 1994. Growth was strongest in regular commercial loans and in commercial mortgages, with increases of $1.745 billion or 23.1 percent and $307 million or 9 percent, respectively, for the three months and $1.894 billion or 26.3 percent and $313 million or 9.4 percent, respectively, for the first nine months. Construction lending for apartments, shopping centers and office buildings principally in Wachovia's three home states accelerated briskly in the three months ended September 30. Gains in both periods also occurred in foreign loans and lease financing. Tax-exempt loans rose for the quarter, reflecting growth in financing of corporate employee stock ownership plans, but remained moderately lower year to date. Based on regulatory definitions, commercial real estate loans were $4.476 billion or 15.4 percent of total loans at September 30, 1995. Commercial mortgages were $3.725 billion and construction loans were $751 million. Comparable amounts a year earlier were $3.921 billion in commercial real estate loans, representing 15.7 percent of total loans, with $3.421 billion in commercial mortgages and $500 million in construction loans. At June 30, 1995, commercial mortgages totaled $3.673 billion and construction loans were $675 million, representing a combined 15.4 percent of the corporation's loan portfolio. Retail loans, including residential mortgages, rose $811 million or 7.4 percent for the third quarter versus a year earlier and were up $835 million or 7.9 percent for the first nine months. Substantially all of the growth in both periods occurred in residential mortgages and in credit card loans. Residential mortgages were higher by $437 million or 12 percent for the quarter and $290 million or 7.9 percent year to date, with increases accelerating in the third period. Credit card outstandings grew $369 million or 10 percent for the three months and $571 million or 16.6 percent for the first nine months. At September 30, 1995, managed credit card outstandings totaled $4.239 billion, including $124 million of net securitized loans, compared with $3.816 billion a year earlier and $4.160 billion at June 30. As part of a diversified funding strategy, the corporation securitized $500 million of its credit card receivables on October 26, 1995. Revenues received from the securitized portfolio will be part of other operating revenue reducing future net interest income from credit cards. Investment securities increased $1.083 billion or 14.1 percent for the quarter and $509 million or 6.6 percent year to date and were higher by $502 million or 6.1 percent from the preceding three months. In the second quarter, the corporation sold $1.950 billion of available-for-sale securities at a loss with the proceeds being reinvested in higher-yielding investments to help enhance the overall yield of the portfolio. 7 8 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NET INTEREST INCOME AND AVERAGE BALANCES TABLE 4 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Twelve Months 1995 1994 Ended ------------------------------------- ----------------------- September 30 Third Second First Fourth Third 1995 Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter ------------ --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- NET INTEREST INCOME -- TAXABLE EQUIVALENT (thousands) Interest income: Loans ................................. $ 2,344,182 $ 630,199 $ 605,468 $ 571,334 $ 537,181 $ 495,361 Investment securities ................. 571,396 163,187 151,695 130,210 126,304 125,922 Interest-bearing bank balances ........ 789 473 105 101 110 142 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements .... 5,306 1,959 763 1,202 1,382 1,347 Trading account assets ................ 58,033 17,299 16,047 12,567 12,120 9,587 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total ............................. 2,979,706 813,117 774,078 715,414 677,097 632,359 Interest expense: Interest-bearing demand ............... 58,067 14,845 14,412 14,367 14,443 13,954 Savings and money market savings ...... 222,036 62,425 61,595 50,578 47,438 44,811 Savings certificates .................. 335,058 99,999 96,773 74,870 63,416 57,023 Large denomination certificates ....... 87,204 28,679 20,226 20,011 18,288 18,453 Time deposits in foreign offices ...... 36,207 11,299 9,503 7,507 7,898 7,042 Short-term borrowed funds ............. 445,401 129,411 119,486 108,389 88,115 71,495 Long-term debt ........................ 276,074 72,259 70,975 66,874 65,966 61,551 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total ............................. 1,460,047 418,917 392,970 342,596 305,564 274,329 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Net interest income ..................... $ 1,519,659 $ 394,200 $ 381,108 $ 372,818 $ 371,533 $ 358,030 =========== ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= Annualized net yield on interest-earning assets ............... 4.25% 4.11% 4.19% 4.36% 4.37% 4.30% AVERAGE BALANCES (millions) Assets: Loans -- net of unearned income ....... $ 26,704 $ 28,097 $ 27,203 $ 26,219 $ 25,290 $ 24,553 Investment securities ................. 8,064 8,778 8,276 7,612 7,582 7,695 Interest-bearing bank balances ........ 10 23 6 6 7 11 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements .... 91 133 51 77 100 115 Trading account assets ................ 878 1,054 955 732 770 683 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total interest-earning assets ..... 35,747 38,085 36,491 34,646 33,749 33,057 Cash and due from banks ............... 2,517 2,530 2,491 2,502 2,544 2,350 Premises and equipment ................ 556 578 563 546 536 523 Other assets .......................... 1,719 1,725 1,724 1,662 1,767 1,912 Unrealized gains (losses) on securities available-for-sale ................... (3) 65 15 (49) (44) (28) Allowance for loan losses ............. (407) (410) (408) (405) (406) (405) ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total assets ..................... $ 40,129 $ 42,573 $ 40,876 $ 38,902 $ 38,146 $ 37,409 =========== ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= Liabilities and shareholders' equity: Interest-bearing demand ............... $ 3,276 $ 3,231 $ 3,218 $ 3,288 $ 3,364 $ 3,367 Savings and money market savings ...... 6,320 6,689 6,415 6,060 6,114 6,197 Savings certificates .................. 6,196 6,698 6,712 5,917 5,457 5,247 Large denomination certificates ....... 1,587 1,939 1,407 1,502 1,493 1,599 Time deposits in foreign offices ...... 658 795 636 587 612 610 Short-term borrowed funds ............. 7,618 8,593 7,869 7,390 6,619 6,115 Long-term debt ........................ 4,796 4,851 4,863 4,674 4,795 4,637 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total interest-bearing liabilities 30,451 32,796 31,120 29,418 28,454 27,772 Demand deposits in domestic offices ..... 5,303 5,199 5,316 5,275 5,424 5,277 Demand deposits in foreign offices ...... 7 8 7 6 6 5 Noninterest-bearing time deposits in domestic offices ...................... 19 5 10 21 41 82 Other liabilities ....................... 1,037 1,102 1,078 929 1,035 1,159 Shareholders' equity .................... 3,312 3,463 3,345 3,253 3,186 3,114 ----------- --------- --------- --------- --------- --------- Total liabilities and shareholders' equity ............. $ 40,129 $ 42,573 $ 40,876 $ 38,902 $ 38,146 $ 37,409 =========== ========= ========= ========= ========= ========= Total deposits ......................... $ 23,366 $ 24,564 $ 23,721 $ 22,656 $ 22,511 $ 22,384 Nine Months Ended September 30 1995 1994 ----------- ----------- NET INTEREST INCOME -- TAXABLE EQUIVALENT (thousands) Interest income: Loans ................................. $ 1,807,001 $ 1,376,444 Investment securities ................. 445,092 377,898 Interest-bearing bank balances ........ 679 487 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements .... 3,924 6,300 Trading account assets ................ 45,913 24,228 ----------- ----------- Total ............................. 2,302,609 1,785,357 Interest expense: Interest-bearing demand ............... 43,624 40,645 Savings and money market savings ...... 174,598 117,023 Savings certificates .................. 271,642 163,644 Large denomination certificates ....... 68,916 52,017 Time deposits in foreign offices ...... 28,309 14,420 Short-term borrowed funds ............. 357,286 184,457 Long-term debt ........................ 210,108 160,618 ----------- ----------- Total ............................. 1,154,483 732,824 ----------- ----------- Net interest income ..................... $ 1,148,126 $ 1,052,533 =========== =========== Annualized net yield on interest-earning assets ............... 4.21% 4.33% AVERAGE BALANCES (millions) Assets: Loans -- net of unearned income ....... $ 27,180 $ 23,850 Investment securities ................. 8,226 7,717 Interest-bearing bank balances ........ 12 15 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements .... 87 229 Trading account assets ................ 915 662 ----------- ----------- Total interest-earning assets ..... 36,420 32,473 Cash and due from banks ............... 2,508 2,361 Premises and equipment ................ 563 512 Other assets .......................... 1,703 1,716 Unrealized gains (losses) on securities available-for-sale ................... 11 (2) Allowance for loan losses ............. (408) (407) ----------- ----------- Total assets ..................... $ 40,797 $ 36,653 =========== =========== Liabilities and shareholders' equity: Interest-bearing demand ............... $ 3,246 $ 3,391 Savings and money market savings ...... 6,390 6,125 Savings certificates .................. 6,445 5,294 Large denomination certificates ....... 1,618 1,600 Time deposits in foreign offices ...... 673 484 Short-term borrowed funds ............. 7,955 6,100 Long-term debt ........................ 4,797 4,200 ----------- ----------- Total interest-bearing liabilities 31,124 27,194 Demand deposits in domestic offices ..... 5,263 5,275 Demand deposits in foreign offices ...... 7 5 Noninterest-bearing time deposits in domestic offices ...................... 12 75 Other liabilities ....................... 1,037 1,038 Shareholders' equity .................... 3,354 3,066 ----------- ----------- Total liabilities and shareholders' equity ............. $ 40,797 $ 36,653 =========== =========== Total deposits ......................... $ 23,654 $ 22,249 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8 9 At September 30, 1995, securities available-for-sale were $4.248 billion and securities held-to-maturity were $4.389 billion as detailed in the following table. $ in thousands Securities available-for-sale at market value: U.S. Government and agency .................... $3,174,133 Mortgage backed securities .................... 905,889 Other ......................................... 168,274 ---------- Total securities available-for-sale ........ 4,248,296 Securities held-to-maturity: U.S. Government and agency .................... 2,481,518 Mortgage backed securities .................... 1,508,660 State and municipal ........................... 381,146 Other ......................................... 17,434 ---------- Total securities held-to-maturity .......... 4,388,758 ---------- Total investment securities ................ $8,637,054 ========== Securites held-to-maturity had a market value of $4.513 billion at September 30, 1995, representing a $124 million appreciation over book value. On the same date, securities available-for-sale marked to fair market value under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 115, "Accounting for Certain Investments in Debt and Equity Securities" (FASB 115), had an unrealized gain of $71.993 million, pretax, and $44.431 million, net of tax. Average available-for-sale securities for the third quarter had an unrealized gain of $64.920 million, pretax, and $39.715 million, net of tax. For the first nine months of 1995, average available-for-sale securities had an unrealized gain of $10.659 million, pretax, and $6.576 million, net of tax. Interest expense for the third quarter increased $144.588 million or 52.7 percent and was up $421.659 million or 57.5 percent for the first nine months, primarily due to a higher average cost of funds as well as to expanded levels of interest-bearing liabilities. The average rate paid rose 115 basis points for the three months and 136 basis points year to date, with average interest-bearing liabilities increasing $5.024 billion or 18.1 percent and $3.930 billion or 14.5 percent, respectively. Funding growth in the third period versus a year earlier occurred primarily in interest-bearing time deposits and in short-term borrowings with long-term debt increasing at a more moderate pace. Interest expense in the third quarter was higher by $25.947 million or 6.6 percent from the previous three months, with average interest-bearing liabilities rising $1.676 billion or 5.4 percent and the average rate paid up 1 basis point. Interest-bearing time deposits grew $2.332 billion or 13.7 percent for the quarter and $1.478 billion or 8.7 percent year to date and were up $964 million or 5.2 percent from the second period. Average interest-bearing time deposits have increased on a sequential monthly basis in eight of the first nine months of 1995. Year-over-year growth occurred primarily in savings certificates, which rose $1.451 billion or 27.7 percent for the quarter and $1.151 billion or 21.7 percent for the first nine months, largely reflecting the results of the corporation's certificates of deposit sale in March. The one-day sale attracted over $1 billion, with approximately 86 percent representing new money, and generated approximately 28,000 new account relationships out of about 77,000 participating accounts. Savings and money market savings rose for both periods with good growth occurring in Wachovia's Premiere money market account. Foreign time deposits and large denomination certificates also were higher, both in the third period and year to date. Interest-bearing demand deposits were down moderately in both periods. Short-term borrowings for the third quarter and first nine months rose $2.478 billion or 40.5 percent and $1.855 billion or 30.4 percent, respectively, and were higher by $724 million or 9.2 percent from the second quarter. Increases from the year-earlier periods occurred largely in other short-term borrowings, which were up $1.580 billion for the three months and $1.335 billion year to date, and in federal funds purchased and securities sold under repurchase agreements, which rose $778 million or 15.8 percent for the quarter and $552 million or 11.2 percent for the first nine months. Commercial paper borrowings expanded for the third period but were modestly lower year to date. Other short-term borrowings include short-term bank notes issued beginning in the fourth quarter of 1994 with maturities from 30 days to one year. At 9 10 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ TAXABLE EQUIVALENT RATE/VOLUME VARIANCE ANALYSIS -- THIRD QUARTER* TABLE 5 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Variance Average Volume Average Rate Interest Attributable to ----------------- ------------ ------------------ ------------------ 1995 1994 1995 1994 1995 1994 Variance Rate Volume ------- ------- ----- ----- ------- ------- -------- -------- ------- (Millions) (Thousands) INTEREST INCOME Loans: $ 9,302 $ 7,557 7.32 6.32 Commercial ..................... $171,542 $120,422 $ 51,120 $ 20,707 $30,413 2,117 1,951 10.50 8.88 Tax-exempt ..................... 56,008 43,703 12,305 8,381 3,924 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 11,419 9,508 7.91 6.85 Total commercial ............ 227,550 164,125 63,425 27,561 35,864 732 740 9.32 8.35 Direct retail................... 17,195 15,579 1,616 1,793 (177) 2,493 2,490 8.41 7.68 Indirect retail ................ 52,836 48,179 4,657 4,599 58 4,064 3,695 12.28 11.00 Credit card .................... 125,739 102,450 23,289 12,525 10,764 345 335 12.64 11.67 Other revolving credit.......... 11,000 9,840 1,160 843 317 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 7,634 7,260 10.75 9.62 Total retail ................ 206,770 176,048 30,722 21,335 9,387 698 481 9.79 9.41 Construction.................... 17,235 11,400 5,835 484 5,351 3,696 3,389 8.55 7.83 Commercial mortgages ........... 79,673 66,917 12,756 6,430 6,326 4,091 3,654 8.53 7.82 Residential mortgages........... 87,934 72,026 15,908 6,827 9,081 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 8,485 7,524 8.64 7.93 Total real estate ........... 184,842 150,343 34,499 14,259 20,240 236 176 8.56 7.68 Lease financing ................ 5,095 3,415 1,680 425 1,255 323 85 7.29 6.66 Foreign ........................ 5,942 1,430 4,512 149 4,363 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 28,097 24,553 8.90 8.00 Total loans ................. 630,199 495,361 134,838 58,828 76,010 Investment securities: Held-to-maturity: 2,487 2,286 6.70 6.52 U.S. Government and agency..... 42,029 37,574 4,455 1,083 3,372 1,552 1,017 7.98 7.83 Mortgage backed securities..... 31,231 20,067 11,164 411 10,753 395 587 11.67 12.35 State and municipal ........... 11,625 18,262 (6,637) (955) (5,682) 16 15 5.57 3.98 Other.......................... 221 146 75 62 13 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total securities held- 4,450 3,905 7.59 7.73 to-maturity .............. 85,106 76,049 9,057 (1,394) 10,451 Available-for-sale:** 3,246 2,622 7.17 5.41 U.S. Government and agency..... 58,631 35,776 22,855 13,172 9,683 910 924 7.31 4.64 Mortgage backed securities .... 16,761 10,813 5,948 6,118 (170) 172 244 6.22 5.33 Other.......................... 2,689 3,284 (595) 489 (1,084) ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total securities available- 4,328 3,790 7.16 5.22 for-sale ................. 78,081 49,873 28,208 20,421 7,787 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 8,778 7,695 7.38 6.49 Total investment securities.. 163,187 125,922 37,265 18,332 18,933 23 11 8.03 5.20 Interest-bearing bank balances.... 473 142 331 106 225 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under 133 115 5.83 4.66 resale agreements............... 1,959 1,347 612 373 239 1,054 683 6.51 5.57 Trading account assets ........... 17,299 9,587 7,712 1,841 5,871 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total interest-earning $38,085 $33,057 8.47 7.59 assets .................... 813,117 632,359 180,758 78,243 102,515 ======= ======= INTEREST EXPENSE $ 3,231 $ 3,367 1.82 1.64 Interest-bearing demand .......... 14,845 13,954 891 1,467 (576) 6,689 6,197 3.70 2.87 Savings and money market savings.. 62,425 44,811 17,614 13,836 3,778 6,698 5,247 5.92 4.31 Savings certificates ............. 99,999 57,023 42,976 24,713 18,263 1,939 1,599 5.87 4.58 Large denomination certificates... 28,679 18,453 10,226 5,830 4,396 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total time deposits in 18,557 16,410 4.40 3.25 domestic offices .......... 205,948 134,241 71,707 52,465 19,242 795 610 5.64 4.58 Time deposits in foreign offices.. 11,299 7,042 4,257 1,830 2,427 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 19,352 17,020 4.45 3.29 Total time deposits.......... 217,247 141,283 75,964 54,690 21,274 Federal funds purchased and securities sold under 5,687 4,909 6.00 4.66 repurchase agreements .......... 86,062 57,688 28,374 18,296 10,078 557 437 5.45 4.44 Commercial paper ................. 7,654 4,882 2,772 1,258 1,514 Other short-term borrowed 2,349 769 6.03 4.60 funds .......................... 35,695 8,925 26,770 3,512 23,258 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total short-term 8,593 6,115 5.98 4.64 borrowed funds ............ 129,411 71,495 57,916 24,065 33,851 3,765 3,798 5.70 4.97 Bank notes ....................... 54,109 47,538 6,571 6,980 (409) 1,086 839 6.63 6.62 Other long-term debt ............. 18,150 14,013 4,137 16 4,121 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- 4,851 4,637 5.91 5.27 Total long-term debt ........ 72,259 61,551 10,708 7,770 2,938 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total interest-bearing $32,796 $27,772 5.07 3.92 liabilities ............... 418,917 274,329 144,588 89,402 55,186 ======= ======= ----- ----- -------- -------- -------- 3.40 3.67 Interest rate spread ===== ===== Net yield on interest- earning assets and 4.11 4.30 net interest income ............ $394,200 $358,030 $ 36,170 (16,416) 52,586 ===== ===== ======== ======== ======== ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ *Interest income and yields are presented on a fully taxable equivalent basis using the federal income tax rate and state tax rates, as applicable, reduced by the nondeductible portion of interest expense **Volume amounts are reported at amortized cost; excludes pretax unrealized gains (losses) of $65 million in 1995 and ($28) million in 1994 10 11 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ TAXABLE EQUIVALENT RATE/VOLUME VARIANCE ANALYSIS -- NINE MONTHS* TABLE 6 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Variance Average Volume Average Rate Interest Attributable to --------------- ------------ ---------------------- ------------------- 1995 1994 1995 1994 1995 1994 Variance Rate Volume ------ ------- ------ ------ ---------- ---------- -------- -------- --------- (Millions) (Thousands) INTEREST INCOME Loans: $ 9,083 $ 7,189 7.49 5.72 Commercial.................... $ 508,921 $ 307,795 $201,126 $108,510 $ 92,616 1,888 1,973 9.99 8.68 Tax-exempt ................... 141,146 128,119 13,027 18,685 (5,658) ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 10,971 9,162 7.92 6.36 Total commercial .......... 650,067 435,914 214,153 118,628 95,525 732 730 9.18 8.21 Direct retail ................ 50,210 44,825 5,385 5,272 113 2,415 2,453 8.22 7.75 Indirect retail .............. 148,513 142,134 6,379 8,602 (2,223) 4,004 3,433 12.36 10.90 Credit card .................. 370,139 279,837 90,302 40,323 49,979 Other revolving 342 332 12.64 11.38 credit .................... 32,379 28,259 4,120 3,224 896 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 7,493 6,948 10.73 9.53 Total retail................. 601,241 495,055 106,186 65,474 40,712 611 487 9.83 8.68 Construction ................. 44,966 31,630 13,336 4,563 8,773 3,638 3,325 8.63 7.54 Commercial mortgages.......... 234,827 187,570 47,257 28,611 18,646 3,968 3,678 8.32 7.75 Residential mortgages ........ 246,834 213,152 33,682 16,220 17,462 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 8,217 7,490 8.57 7.72 Total real estate .......... 526,627 432,352 94,275 50,128 44,147 209 169 8.21 7.86 Lease financing .............. 12,849 9,948 2,901 453 2,448 290 81 7.49 5.23 Foreign ...................... 16,217 3,175 13,042 1,883 11,159 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 27,180 23,850 8.89 7.72 Total loans ............... 1,807,001 1,376,444 430,557 224,368 206,189 Investment securities: Held-to-maturity: 2,490 2,248 6.79 6.60 U.S. Government and agency... 126,533 110,868 15,665 3,405 12,260 1,437 1,058 8.03 7.70 Mortgage backed securities... 86,328 60,944 25,384 2,723 22,661 453 610 11.97 12.59 State and municipal ......... 40,535 57,490 (16,955) (2,714) (14,241) 15 12 5.95 4.75 Other ....................... 672 409 263 117 146 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total securities held- 4,395 3,928 7.73 7.82 to-maturity ............. 254,068 229,711 24,357 (2,702) 27,059 Available-for-sale:** 2,782 2,542 6.79 5.53 U.S. Government and agency... 141,221 105,062 36,159 25,576 10,583 832 971 6.35 4.61 Mortgage backed securities... 39,503 33,499 6,004 11,312 (5,308) 217 276 6.35 4.66 Other........................ 10,300 9,626 674 3,023 (2,349) ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total securities available- 3,831 3,789 6.67 5.23 for-sale ............... 191,024 148,187 42,837 41,208 1,629 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 8,226 7,717 7.23 6.55 Total investment securities. 445,092 377,898 67,194 41,268 25,926 12 15 7.78 4.28 Interest-bearing bank balances.. 679 487 192 326 (134) Federal funds sold and securities purchased under 87 229 6.01 3.68 resale agreements ............ 3,924 6,300 (2,376) 2,745 (5,121) 915 662 6.71 4.90 Trading account assets ......... 45,913 24,228 21,685 10,647 11,038 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total interest-earning $36,420 $32,473 8.45 7.35 assets ................... 2,302,609 1,785,357 517,252 285,653 231,599 ======= ======= INTEREST EXPENSE $ 3,246 $ 3,391 1.80 1.60 Interest-bearing demand ........ 43,624 40,645 2,979 4,771 (1,792) 6,390 6,125 3.65 2.55 Savings and money market savings 174,598 117,023 57,575 52,320 5,255 6,445 5,294 5.64 4.13 Savings certificates............ 271,642 163,644 107,998 67,600 40,398 1,618 1,600 5.69 4.35 Large denomination certificates. 68,916 52,017 16,899 16,303 596 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total time deposits in 17,699 16,410 4.22 3.04 domestic offices......... 558,780 373,329 185,451 154,226 31,225 673 484 5.62 3.99 Time deposits in foreign offices 28,309 14,420 13,889 7,097 6,792 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 18,372 16,894 4.27 3.07 Total time deposits ....... 587,089 387,749 199,340 162,985 36,355 Federal funds purchased and securities sold under 5,459 4,907 6.02 4.10 repurchase agreements......... 245,789 150,366 95,423 76,985 18,438 486 518 5.56 3.65 Commercial paper................ 20,182 14,155 6,027 6,973 (946) Other short-term borrowed 2,010 675 6.07 3.95 funds ........................ 91,315 19,936 71,379 15,217 56,162 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total short-term 7,955 6,100 6.01 4.04 borrowed funds .......... 357,286 184,457 172,829 106,259 66,570 3,855 3,377 5.63 4.76 Bank notes ..................... 162,446 120,100 42,346 23,963 18,383 942 823 6.77 6.58 Other long-term debt ........... 47,662 40,518 7,144 1,157 5,987 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- 4,797 4,200 5.86 5.11 Total long-term debt ...... 210,108 160,618 49,490 25,005 24,485 ------- ------- ---------- ---------- -------- Total interest-bearing $31,124 $27,194 4.96 3.60 liabilities ............. 1,154,483 732,824 421,659 304,684 116,975 ======= ======= ----- ----- ---------- ---------- -------- 3.49 3.75 Interest rate spread ===== ===== Net yield on interest-earning assets and net interest 4.21 4.33 income ....................... $1,148,126 $1,052,533 $ 95,593 (29,492) 125,085 ===== ===== ========== ========== ======== ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ *Interest income and yields are presented on a fully taxable equivalent basis using the federal income tax rate and state tax rates, as applicable, reduced by the nondeductible portion of interest expense **Volume amounts are reported at amortized cost; excludes pretax unrealized gains (losses) of $11 million in 1995 and ($2) million in 1994 11 12 September 30, 1995, short-term bank notes outstanding totaled $1.825 billion with an average cost of 5.87 percent and an average maturity of 1.4 months compared with $1.907 billion in outstandings with an average cost of 6.07 percent and an average maturity of 2.2 months at June 30. Long-term debt was higher by $214 million or 4.6 percent for the three months and $597 million or 14.2 percent year to date but was largely unchanged from the second period. Growth in the third quarter versus a year earlier occurred in other long-term debt. As part of a strategy to broaden its funding sources, the corporation began issuing subordinated debentures in the fourth quarter of 1992. In October 1995, Wachovia issued $250 million of 30-year subordinated debentures. The notes have a 10-year put option and were priced at par to yield 6.605 percent or 47.5 basis points above comparable 10-year Treasuries. With the latest offering, the corporation has issued a total of $1.300 billion in subordinated notes. For the first nine months, medium-term bank notes were up $478 million or 14.2 percent while other long-term debt rose $119 million or 14.4 percent. At September 30, 1995, medium-term bank notes totaled $3.926 billion with an average cost of 5.69 percent and an average maturity of 1.4 years. Comparable amounts a year earlier were $3.890 billion in outstandings with an average cost of 5.04 percent and an average maturity of 1.9 years. At June 30, 1995, medium-term bank notes totaled $3.979 billion. Gross deposits averaged $24.564 billion for the third quarter and $23.654 billion year to date, up $2.180 billion or 9.7 percent and $1.405 billion or 6.3 percent, from the same respective periods in 1994. Collected deposits, net of float, averaged $22.780 billion for the third period and $21.911 billion for the first nine months, representing increases of $1.983 billion or 9.5 percent and $1.237 billion or 6 percent, respectively. ASSET AND LIABILITY MANAGEMENT AND INTEREST RATE SENSITIVITY The corporation uses a number of tools to measure interest rate risk, including monitoring the difference or gap between rate sensitive assets and liabilities over various time periods, monitoring the change in present value of the asset and liability portfolios under various rate scenarios and simulating net interest income under the same rate scenarios. Management believes that rate risk is best measured by simulation modeling which calculates expected net interest income based on projected interest-earning assets, interest-bearing liabilities, off-balance sheet financial instruments and interest rates. The corporation monitors exposure to a gradual change in rates of 200 basis points up or down over a rolling 12-month period and an interest rate shock of an instantaneous change in rates of 200 basis points up or down over the same period. From time to time, the model horizon is expanded to a 24-month period. The corporation policy limit for the maximum negative impact on net interest income from a gradual change in interest rates of 2 percentage points over 12 months is 7.5 percent. Management generally has maintained a risk position well within the policy guideline level. As of September 30, 1995, the model indicated the impact of a 2 percentage point gradual rise in rates over 12 months would approximate a .2 percent increase in net interest income, while a 2 percentage point decline in rates over the same period would approximate a .4 percent decrease from an unchanged rate environment. In addition to on-balance sheet instruments such as investment securities and purchased funds, the corporation uses off-balance sheet derivative instruments to manage interest rate risk, liquidity and net interest income. Off-balance sheet instruments include interest rate swaps, futures and options with indices that directly correlate to on-balance sheet instruments. The corporation has used off-balance sheet financial instruments, principally interest rate swaps, over a number of years and believes their use on a sound basis enhances the effectiveness of asset and liability and interest rate sensitivity management. Off-balance sheet asset and liability derivative transactions are based on referenced or notional amounts. At September 30, 1995, the corporation had $1.342 billion notional amount of derivatives outstanding for asset and liability management purposes. Interest rate swaps were $1.327 billion or 99 percent of the total notional amount. Credit risk of off-balance sheet derivative financial instruments is equal to the fair value gain of the instrument if a counterparty fails to perform. The credit risk is normally a small percentage of the notional amount and fluctuates as interest rates move up or down. The corporation mitigates this risk by subjecting the transactions to the same rigorous approval and monitoring process as is used for on-balance sheet credit transactions, by dealing in the national market with highly rated counterparties, by executing all transactions under International Swaps and Derivatives Association Master Agreements and by using collateral instruments to reduce exposure. Collateral is delivered by either party when the fair value of a particular 12 13 transaction or group of transactions with the same counterparty on a net basis exceeds an acceptable threshold of exposure. The threshold level is determined based on the strength of the individual counterparty. The fair value of all asset and liability derivative positions for which the corporation was exposed to counterparties totaled $16 million at September 30, 1995. The fair value of all asset and liability derivative positions for which counterparties were exposed to the corporation amounted to $16 million on the same date. Fair value details and additional asset and liability derivative information are included in the accompanying tables. Estimated Fair Value of Asset and Liability Management Derivatives by Purpose ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- September 30, 1995 September 30, 1994 -------------------------------------------------- ------------------------- Notional Fair Value Fair Value Net Fair Value Notional Net Fair Value $ in millions Value Gains (Losses) Gains (Losses) Value Gains (Losses) -------- ---------- ---------- -------------- -------- -------------- Convert floating rate liabilities to fixed: Swaps-pay fixed/receive floating........ $ 124 $-- $(3) $(3) $ 237 $(2) Caps purchased-pay fixed/receive floating.............................. 15 -- -- -- 15 -- Convert fixed rate assets to floating: Swaps-pay fixed/receive floating........ 402 -- (3) (3) -- -- Forward starting swaps-pay fixed/receive floating................ 58 -- (4) (4) 75 1 Convert fixed rate liabilities to floating: Swaps-receive fixed/pay floating........ 200 3 (5) (2) 100 (16) Convert floating rate assets to fixed: Swaps-receive fixed/pay floating........ 218 1 (1) -- 373 (15) Index amortizing swaps-receive fixed/pay floating.................... 325 12 -- 12 175 (3) Hedge spread between prime and fed funds: Interest rate caps...................... -- -- -- -- 400 -- ------ --- ---- --- ------ ---- Total derivatives.................... $1,342 $16 ($16) $-- $1,375 ($35) ====== === ==== === ====== ==== Maturity Schedule of Asset and Liability Management Derivatives --------------------------------------------------------------- September 30, 1995 Within Over Average One Two Three Four Five Five Life $ in millions Year Years Years Years Years Years Total (Years) ------ ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ------- Interest rate swaps: Pay fixed/receive floating: Notional amount.................... $ 430 $ 32 $ 13 $ 13 $ 14 $ 24 $ 526 1.09 Weighted average rates received.... 4.80% 6.18% 6.00% 5.98% 5.92% 5.88% 5.02% Weighted average rates paid........ 7.53 7.85 6.36 6.51 7.07 7.54 7.49 Receive fixed/pay floating: Notional amount.................... $ 108 $ 108 $ 2 $ -- $ 100 $ 100 $ 418 5.09 Weighted average rates received.... 5.10% 6.91% 10.71% -- 7.75% 6.31% 6.52% Weighted average rates paid........ 6.16 6.11 8.75 -- 5.88 5.88 6.02 Index amortizing swaps:* Receive fixed/pay floating: Notional amount.................... $ 75 $ 53 $ 70 $ 47 $ 54 $ 26 $ 325 2.27 Weighted average rates received.... 7.14% 7.88% 8.22% 8.38% 8.10% 8.48% 7.94% Weighted average rates paid........ 5.90 6.00 5.96 5.95 5.98 5.94 5.95 Total interest rate swaps: Notional amount...................... $ 613 $ 193 $ 85 $ 60 $ 168 $ 150 $1,269 2.71 Weighted average rates received...... 5.14% 7.06% 7.93% 7.85% 7.71% 6.62% 6.26% Weighted average rates paid.......... 7.09 6.37 6.08 6.09 6.01 6.15 6.61 Forward starting interest rate swaps: Notional amount...................... $ -- -- -- -- -- $ 58 $ 58 8.52 Weighted average rates paid.......... -- -- -- -- -- 8.03% 8.03% Interest rate caps (notional amount)**................ $ 15 -- -- -- -- -- $ 15 .13 Total derivatives (notional amount).............. $ 628 $ 193 $ 85 $ 60 $ 168 $ 208 $1,342 2.93 *Maturity is based upon expected average lives rather than contractual lives. **Average rates are not meaningful. 13 14 Asset and liability transactions are accounted for following hedge accounting rules. Accordingly, gains and losses related to the fair value of derivative contracts used for asset and liability management purposes are not immediately recognized in earnings. If the hedged or altered balance sheet amounts were marked to market, the resulting unrealized balance sheet gains or losses could be expected to offset unrealized derivatives gains and losses. NONPERFORMING ASSETS Nonperforming assets were $75.449 million or .26 percent of loans and foreclosed property at September 30, 1995, down $34.062 million or 31.1 percent from a year earlier and lower by $1.191 million or 1.6 percent from June 30. Paydowns by borrowers, the return of cash-basis assets to accrual status and sales of foreclosed property primarily accounted for the decreases from both periods. Included in the above total at September 30, 1995 were real estate nonperforming assets of $60.813 million or .70 percent of real estate loans and foreclosed real estate. Comparable amounts were $73.033 million or .95 percent a year earlier and $53.558 million or .64 percent at June 30. Real estate nonperforming loans were $47.142 million at September 30, 1995, $55.749 million one year earlier and $37.783 million at the end of the second quarter of 1995. Commercial real estate nonperforming assets were $32.904 million or .73 percent of related loans and foreclosed real estate compared with $53.418 million or 1.36 percent at September 30, 1994 and $29.837 million or .69 percent at June 30, 1995. Commercial real estate nonperforming loans included in these amounts were $28.121 million at September 30, 1995, $44.780 million a year earlier and $23.721 million at second-quarter close. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NONPERFORMING ASSETS AND CONTRACTUALLY PAST DUE LOANS TABLE 7 (thousands) _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Sept. 30 June 30 March 31 Dec. 31 Sept. 30 1995 1995 1995 1994 1994 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- NONPERFORMING ASSETS Cash-basis assets -- domestic borrowers........................ $57,524* $57,918 $ 71,848 $ 78,712 $ 89,184 Restructured loans -- domestic................................. --** -- -- -- -- ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total nonperforming loans................................. 57,524 57,918 71,848 78,712 89,184 Foreclosed property: Foreclosed real estate........................................ 16,651 18,859 20,669 22,900 22,309 Less valuation allowance...................................... 2,980 3,084 3,304 4,026 5,025 Other foreclosed assets....................................... 4,254 2,947 3,510 2,931 3,043 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total foreclosed property................................. 17,925 18,722 20,875 21,805 20,327 ------- ------- -------- -------- -------- Total nonperforming assets................................ $75,449*** $76,640 $ 92,723 $100,517 $109,511 ======= ======= ======== ======== ======== Nonperforming loans to period-end loans........................ .20% .21% .27% .30% .36% Nonperforming assets to period-end loans and foreclosed property.......................................... .26 .27 .35 .39 .44 Period-end allowance for loan losses times nonperforming loans.......................................... 7.10x 7.06x 5.69x 5.16x 4.55x Period-end allowance for loan losses times nonperforming assets......................................... 5.42 5.33 4.41 4.04 3.71 CONTRACTUALLY PAST DUE LOANS (accruing loans past due 90 days or more) Domestic borrowers............................................. $47,058 $49,004 $ 48,998 $ 37,010 $ 43,708 ======= ======= ======== ======== ======== *Includes $7,856 of loans which have been defined as impaired per Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 114, "Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan" (FASB 114) **Excludes $4,262 of loans which have been renegotiated at market rates and have been reclassified to performing status ***Net of cumulative corporate and commercial real estate charge-offs and foreclosed real estate write-downs totaling $23,684; includes $2,722 of nonperforming assets on which interest and principal are paid current _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 14 15 PROVISION AND ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES The provision for loan losses was $23.179 million for the third quarter and $73.619 million year to date, up $5.056 million or 27.9 percent and $21.395 million or 41 percent from the same respective periods in 1994. The provision decreased $5.473 million or 19.1 percent from the second quarter, primarily due to higher loan recoveries in the period. The provision reflects management's assessment of the adequacy of the allowance for loan losses to absorb potential write-offs in the loan portfolio. Factors considered in this assessment include growth and composition of the loan portfolio, historical credit loss experience, current and anticipated economic conditions and changes in borrowers' financial positions. Net loan losses totaled $23.128 million or .33 percent annualized of average loans for the three months and $71.067 million or .35 percent for the first nine months, increasing $5.068 million or 28.1 percent and $20.050 million or 39.3 percent, respectively, from the same periods in 1994. Net charge-offs for the third quarter were lower by $5.391 million or 18.9 percent from the preceding three months. Excluding credit cards, loans had net recoveries of $1.089 million or .02 percent of average loans for the quarter and net losses of $7.979 million or .05 percent year to date versus net losses of $3.587 million or .07 percent and $9.339 million or .06 percent, respectively, in the same year-earlier periods and $7.876 million or .14 percent in the second quarter. Credit card net charge-offs totaled $24.217 million or 2.38 percent of average credit card loans for the three months and $63.088 million or 2.10 percent for the first nine months versus $14.473 million or 1.57 percent and $41.678 million or 1.62 percent in the same respective periods a year earlier. Commercial loans had net recoveries of $2.130 million or .07 percent of average commercial loans for the quarter and $2.035 million or .02 percent year to date compared with net loan losses of $2.148 million or .09 percent and $6.795 million or .10 percent, respectively, in 1994. At September 30, 1995, the allowance for loan losses totaled $408.684 million, representing 1.41 percent of period-end loans and 710 percent coverage of nonperforming loans. This compared with $406.005 million, 1.63 percent and 455 percent, respectively, a year earlier and with $408.633 million, 1.45 percent and 706 percent coverage at June 30, 1995. 15 16 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ALLOWANCE FOR LOAN LOSSES (thousands) TABLE 8 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 1994 ----------------------------- ------------------ Nine Months Ended Third Second First Fourth Third September 30 Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter 1995 1994 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- SUMMARY OF TRANSACTIONS Balance at beginning of period................ $408,633 $408,500 $406,132 $406,005 $405,942 $406,132 $404,798 Provision for loan losses..................... 23,179 28,652 21,788 19,539 18,123 73,619 52,224 Deduct net loan losses: Loans charged off: Commercial................................. 431 1,872 318 1,793 3,063 2,621 11,090 Credit card................................ 27,424 23,829 21,431 19,682 17,310 72,684 50,046 Other revolving credit..................... 1,202 1,058 805 1,000 908 3,065 2,715 Other retail............................... 3,609 3,528 3,412 3,216 2,504 10,549 8,193 Real estate................................ 526 5,499 391 1,785 749 6,416 2,920 Lease financing............................ 99 636 101 57 28 836 169 Foreign.................................... -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- Total..................................... 33,291 36,422 26,458 27,533 24,562 96,171 75,133 Recoveries: Commercial................................. 2,561 1,400 695 1,382 915 4,656 4,295 Credit card................................ 3,207 3,186 3,203 2,926 2,837 9,596 8,368 Other revolving credit..................... 273 267 322 224 285 862 835 Other retail............................... 1,056 972 1,019 927 1,159 3,047 3,029 Real estate................................ 3,021 2,037 1,761 2,624 1,273 6,819 7,391 Lease financing............................ 45 41 30 31 25 116 173 Foreign.................................... -- -- 8 7 8 8 25 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- Total..................................... 10,163 7,903 7,038 8,121 6,502 25,104 24,116 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- Net loan losses............................. 23,128 28,519 19,420 19,412 18,060 71,067 51,017 -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- Balance at end of period...................... $408,684* $408,633* $408,500* $406,132 $406,005 $408,684* $406,005 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== NET LOAN LOSSES (RECOVERIES) BY CATEGORY Commercial.................................... $ (2,130) $ 472 $ (377) $ 411 $ 2,148 $ (2,035) $ 6,795 Credit card................................... 24,217 20,643 18,228 16,756 14,473 63,088 41,678 Other revolving credit........................ 929 791 483 776 623 2,203 1,880 Other retail.................................. 2,553 2,556 2,393 2,289 1,345 7,502 5,164 Real estate................................... (2,495) 3,462 (1,370) (839) (524) (403) (4,471) Lease financing............................... 54 595 71 26 3 720 (4) Foreign....................................... -- -- (8) (7) (8) (8) (25) -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- Total..................................... $ 23,128 $ 28,519 $ 19,420 $ 19,412 $ 18,060 $ 71,067 $ 51,017 ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== ======== Net Loan Losses -- excluding credit cards..... $ (1,089) $ 7,876 $ 1,192 $ 2,656 $ 3,587 $ 7,979 $ 9,339 ANNUALIZED NET LOAN LOSSES (RECOVERIES) TO AVERAGE LOANS BY CATEGORY Commercial.................................... (.07%) .02% (.01%) .02 % .09% (.02%) .10% Credit card................................... 2.38 2.07 1.84 1.76 1.57 2.10 1.62 Other revolving credit........................ 1.08 .93 .57 .92 .74 .86 .75 Other retail.................................. .32 .33 .31 .29 .17 .32 .22 Real estate................................... (.12) .17 (.07) (.04) (.03) (.01) (.08) Lease financing............................... .09 1.19 .15 .06 .01 .46 -- Foreign....................................... -- -- (.01) (.01) (.04) -- (.04) Total loans................................... .33 .42 .30 .31 .29 .35 .29 Total loans -- excluding credit cards......... (.02) .14 .02 .05 .07 .05 .06 Period-end allowance to outstanding loans..... 1.41 1.45 1.53 1.57 1.63 1.41 1.63 *Includes the related allowance for credit losses for impaired loans as defined in FASB 114, "Accounting by Creditors for Impairment of a Loan", of $916 at September 30, 1995, $0 at June 30, 1995 and $2,070 at March 31, 1995 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 16 17 NONINTEREST INCOME Total other operating revenue rose $18.874 million or 12.5 percent for the third quarter versus a year earlier and $44.103 million or 9.8 percent for the first nine months. Higher levels of deposit account service charges and credit card income, strong growth in other service charges and fees and other income, and widened trading account profits primarily accounted for the gains in both periods. Total other operating revenue for the third quarter increased $4.111 million or 2.5 percent from the preceding three months. Service charges on deposit accounts were up $3.469 million or 7.1 percent for the quarter and $6.006 million or 4.1 percent year to date. The favorable variances in both periods reflected higher revenues from overdraft and insufficient fund charges and from savings account service charges. Commercial account analysis fees were slightly lower for both the quarter and first nine months, largely due to increased credit given for commercial deposit account balances. The level of corporate service activities expanded in both periods. Credit card income rose $2.909 million or 10.3 percent for the three months and $10.266 million or 12.6 percent year to date. Gains in cardholder interchange income and net merchant discount income along with higher levels of other card income, including loan securitization, accounted for the growth in both periods. Cardholder purchase volume for the quarter and first nine months totaled $952 million and $2.654 billion, respectively, versus $862 million and $2.337 billion in the same respective periods a year earlier. Other service charges and fees grew $8.690 million or 59.6 percent for the third period and $20.612 million or 49.8 percent year to date, led by strong gains in investment fee income and electronic banking. Investment fee income consists primarily of fees from mutual funds, variable rate demand bond fees, brokerage commissions, private placements and loan syndications, while electronic banking represents revenues received principally from debit card and ATM usage. On a year-to-date basis, investment fee income represents approximately 30 percent of total other service charges and fees, while electronic banking represents approximately 40 percent. Safe deposit and safekeeping fees, representing approximately 10 percent of the total, showed modest growth on a year-to-date basis, while being down for the quarter. Gains in both periods occurred in remaining other service charges and fees, representing approximately 20 percent of total other service charges and fees. Trading account profits were higher by $805 thousand or 51.1 percent for the quarter and $4.142 million or 112.5 percent for the first nine months, reflecting improved bond market conditions from the prior year periods. Trust fee income was down a modest $411 thousand or 1.3 percent for the third period and $983 thousand or 1 percent year to date, the result primarly of lower corporate trust fees in both periods. Personal trust fees were moderately higher for both the quarter and first nine months. Mortgage fee income was down $4.321 million or 50.3 percent for the three months and $5.068 million or 20.8 percent for the first nine months. Declines principally reflected the loss of servicing fees, primarily due to the sale in April of the corporation's mortgage servicing portfolio. Origination fees increased in the third period but remained lower year to date. Loan originations totaled $421.066 million for the third quarter versus $296.307 million a year earlier and were $930.751 million for the first nine months compared with $1.146 billion in the same period of 1994. Remaining combined categories of total other operating revenue grew $7.733 million or 44.3 percent for the third period and $9.128 million or 16.9 percent year to date. Insurance premiums and commissions increased $619 thousand or 25.5 percent for the three months and $1.252 million or 14.7 percent for the first nine months. Bankers' acceptance and letter of credit fees were modestly higher for the quarter but decreased $616 thousand or 3.5 percent year to date. Other income rose $7.056 million or 76.8 percent for the third period and $8.492 million or 30.6 percent for the first nine months reflecting, in part, increased 17 18 activity in the Capital Markets Group. Included in other income are revenues from the corporation's customer portfolio of interest rate and currency derivatives (excluding foreign exchange forwards and options) which had a notional amount of $5.847 billion and a fair value of $3.310 million at September 30, 1995 compared with $2.549 billion and $2.505 million, respectively, a year earlier. Including investment securities sales and the sale of the corporation's mortgage servicing portfolio in the second quarter, total noninterest income was higher by $18.758 million or 12.3 percent for the third period and $95.854 million or 21.3 percent year to date. Investment securities sales resulted in net gains of $317 thousand for the quarter and net losses of $26.048 million for the first nine months. The April sale of the mortgage servicing portfolio resulted in a pretax gain of $79.025 million. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NONINTEREST INCOME (thousands) TABLE 9 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 1994 ----------------------------------- ------------------- Nine Months Ended Third Second First Fourth Third September 30 Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter 1995 1994 --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- Service charges on deposit accounts ....... $ 52,409 $ 52,452 $ 48,881 $ 48,413 $ 48,940 $ 153,742 $147,736 Fees for trust services ................... 31,740 33,211 30,881 31,285 32,151 95,832 96,815 Credit card income -- net of interchange payments .................... 31,180 31,867 28,944 30,200 28,271 91,991 81,725 Mortgage fee income ....................... 4,269 6,547 8,454 8,886 8,590 19,270 24,338 Trading account profits (losses) -- excluding interest....................... 2,381 2,375 3,067 (582) 1,576 7,823 3,681 Insurance premiums and commissions ........ 3,044 3,385 3,313 3,189 2,425 9,742 8,490 Bankers' acceptance and letter of credit fees ............................. 5,885 5,743 5,559 5,365 5,827 17,187 17,803 Other service charges and fees ............ 23,261 19,888 18,817 15,530 14,571 61,966 41,354 Other income .............................. 16,246 10,836 9,177 12,437 9,190 36,259 27,767 --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- Total other operating revenue ....... 170,415 166,304 157,093 154,723 151,541 493,812 449,709 Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio ............................... -- 79,025 -- -- -- 79,025 -- Investment securities gains (losses) ...... 317 (26,236) (129) 2,094 433 (26,048) 1,226 --------- --------- --------- -------- -------- --------- -------- Total ............................... $ 170,732 $ 219,093 $ 156,964 $156,817 $151,974 $ 546,789 $450,935 ========= ========= ========= ======== ======== ========= ======== ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NONINTEREST EXPENSE Noninterest expense for the third quarter increased $27.589 million or 10.2 percent year over year and was up $72.643 million or 8.9 percent for the first nine months. Wachovia's overhead ratio measuring noninterest expense as a percentage of total adjusted revenues (taxable equivalent net interest income and total other operating revenue) was 52.94 percent for the third period and 54.11 percent year to date. Noninterest expense decreased $7.735 million or 2.5 percent from the second quarter. Total personnel expense rose $13.603 million or 9.7 percent for the third period and $26.307 million or 6.2 percent for the first nine months. Salaries expense grew $10.359 million or 8.9 percent for the quarter and $22.171 million or 6.4 percent year to date, primarily reflecting higher base salaries with severance and incentive pay also up in both periods. Employee benefits expense increased $3.244 million or 14.2 percent for the three months and $4.136 million or 5.5 percent for the first nine months, largely due to rises in retirement benefits expense and payroll taxes. Combined net occupancy and equipment expense was up modestly for the quarter and was higher by $5.541 million or 4 percent year to date. Net occupancy expense rose $1.398 million or 7 percent for the 18 19 three months and $2.904 million or 4.9 percent for the first nine months, principally due to increased building maintenance and operating premise lease expenses and to higher building depreciation expense. Equipment expense was lower by $1.039 million or 3.9 percent for the third period, largely reflecting the reclassification of some telecommunications expenses to other expense. For the first nine months, equipment expense was up $2.637 million or 3.3 percent, due primarily to higher equipment maintenance costs as well as to increased expenses associated with equipment installation and relocation. Remaining combined categories of noninterest expense were higher by $13.627 million or 16.1 percent and $40.795 million or 16 percent for the third quarter and first nine months, respectively. Advertising and sales promotion expense rose $6.315 million or 78.8 percent for the quarter and $6.375 million or 23.5 percent for the first nine months, due principally to credit card solicitations. Expenses for professional services increased $5.104 million or 110.5 percent for the three months and $10.607 million or 76 percent year to date, with consulting fees associated with ongoing strategic initiatives principally accounting for the growth. Outside data processing, programming and software expense was up $2.125 million or 27.1 percent for the three months and $6.082 million or 24.9 percent year to date, primarily reflecting higher external programming services costs, increased volume of treasury cash services operations and amortization of externally purchased software. Deposit insurance premiums paid by banking companies to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation were reduced in the third quarter retroactive to June 1, 1995. The rate for well-capitalized banks decreased from $.23 to $.04 per $100 of deposits resulting in a refund of $13.173 million to the corporation. Also in the third period, the corporation made an accrual of $8.581 million for an expected one-time Savings Association Insurance Fund assessment. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NONINTEREST EXPENSE (thousands) TABLE 10 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 1994 -------------------------------------- ------------------------- Third Second First Fourth Third Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter -------- --------- -------- --------- --------- Salaries ............................................ $127,152 $ 123,720 $118,185 $ 117,904 $ 116,793 Employee benefits ................................... 26,146 26,267 26,778 23,662 22,902 -------- --------- -------- --------- --------- Total personnel expense ....................... 153,298 149,987 144,963 141,566 139,695 Net occupancy expense ............................... 21,424 20,940 20,190 21,261 20,026 Equipment expense ................................... 25,750 27,935 28,263 27,197 26,789 Postage and delivery ................................ 9,379 9,190 9,592 8,650 8,645 Outside data processing, programming and software ... 9,959 10,664 9,897 10,773 7,834 Stationery and supplies ............................. 6,374 6,619 6,208 6,182 6,578 Advertising and sales promotion ..................... 14,334 9,747 9,412 6,949 8,019 Professional services ............................... 9,721 9,149 5,691 6,539 4,617 Travel and business promotion ....................... 4,474 5,110 4,059 4,650 3,757 FDIC insurance and regulatory examinations .......... 9,464 13,344 13,339 13,188 13,294 Check clearing and other bank services .............. 2,374 2,337 2,150 2,204 2,475 Amortization of intangible assets ................... 1,210 2,116 4,071 4,430 4,524 Foreclosed property expense ......................... (146) 408 (155) 9 (452) Other expense ....................................... 31,267 39,071 25,352 28,927 25,492 -------- --------- -------- --------- --------- Total ......................................... $298,882 $ 306,617 $283,032 $ 282,525 $ 271,293 ======== ========= ======== ========= ========= Overhead ratio ...................................... 52.94% 56.01% 53.41% 53.69% 53.24% Nine Months Ended September 30 1995 1994 -------- --------- Salaries ............................................ $369,057 $ 346,886 Employee benefits ................................... 79,191 75,055 -------- --------- Total personnel expense ....................... 448,248 421,941 Net occupancy expense ............................... 62,554 59,650 Equipment expense ................................... 81,948 79,311 Postage and delivery ................................ 28,161 26,513 Outside data processing, programming and software ... 30,520 24,438 Stationery and supplies ............................. 19,201 18,376 Advertising and sales promotion ..................... 33,493 27,118 Professional services ............................... 24,561 13,954 Travel and business promotion ....................... 13,643 11,604 FDIC insurance and regulatory examinations .......... 36,147 40,263 Check clearing and other bank services .............. 6,861 6,690 Amortization of intangible assets ................... 7,397 14,263 Foreclosed property expense ......................... 107 (4,297) Other expense ....................................... 95,690 76,064 -------- --------- Total ......................................... $888,531 $ 815,888 ======== ========= Overhead ratio ...................................... 54.11% 54.31% ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 19 20 INCOME TAXES Applicable income taxes were higher by $7.271 million or 12.6 percent for the third period and $38.021 million or 23.2 percent for the first nine months. Income taxes computed at the statutory rate are reduced primarily by the interest earned on state and municipal debt securities and industrial revenue obligations. Also, within certain limitations, one-half of the interest income on qualifying employee stock ownership plan loans is exempt from federal taxes. The interest earned on state and municipal debt instruments is exempt from federal taxes and, except for out-of-state issues, from Georgia and North Carolina taxes as well, and results in substantial interest savings for local governments and their constituents. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ INCOME TAXES (thousands) TABLE 11 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended September 30 September 30 1995 1994 1995 1994 --------- --------- --------- --------- Income before income taxes .................................. $ 216,238 $ 195,679 $ 658,523 $ 561,089 ========= ========= ========= ========= Federal income taxes at statutory rate ...................... $ 75,683 $ 68,488 $ 230,483 $ 196,381 State and local income taxes -- net of federal benefit....... 952 1,235 (864) 3,426 Effect of tax-exempt securities interest and other income ... (11,799) (12,115) (33,404) (36,087) Other items ................................................. 122 79 5,963 437 --------- --------- --------- --------- Total tax expense ...................................... $ 64,958 $ 57,687 $ 202,178 $ 164,157 ========= ========= ========= ========= Currently payable: Federal ................................................... $ 60,398 $ 52,835 $ 213,143 $ 154,905 Foreign ................................................... 59 46 183 106 State and local ........................................... 241 1,773 10,954 6,549 --------- --------- --------- --------- Total .................................................. 60,698 54,654 224,280 161,560 Deferred: Federal ................................................... 3,036 2,907 (9,819) 3,876 State and local ........................................... 1,224 126 (12,283) (1,279) --------- --------- --------- --------- Total .................................................. 4,260 3,033 (22,102) 2,597 --------- --------- --------- --------- Total tax expense ...................................... $ 64,958 $ 57,687 $ 202,178 $ 164,157 ========= ========= ========= ========= ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ FINANCIAL CONDITION AND CAPITAL RATIOS Total assets at September 30, 1995 were $44.101 billion, including $39.483 billion of interest-earning assets and $29.012 billion of loans. Comparable amounts one year earlier were $38.134 billion in assets, $33.580 billion in interest-earning assets and $24.968 billion in loans. At June 30, 1995, assets totaled $42.867 billion, interest-earning assets were $38.329 billion and loans were $28.251 billion. Deposits at third period-end were $25.283 billion, including $20.066 billion of time deposits, representing 79.4 percent of the total. This compared with deposits of $22.256 billion a year earlier, including $16.984 billion of time deposits or 76.3 percent of the total. Deposits at June 30, 1995 were $23.892 billion, with $18.530 billion of time deposits, representing 77.6 percent of the total. Shareholders' equity was $3.618 billion at September 30, 1995, up $403 million or 12.5 percent from $3.215 billion at the end of the 1994 third quarter and higher by $83 million or 2.3 percent from $3.535 billion at June 30, 1995. Included in the total at September 30, 1995 was $44.431 million, net of tax, of unrealized gains on securities available-for-sale marked to fair market value under FASB 115. Cash dividends paid totaled $61.312 million for the third quarter and $174.072 million for the first nine months, an increase of 19.7 percent and 13 percent, respectively, from the same periods in 1994. Cash dividends paid represented a payout of 40.5 percent of net income for the three months and 38.1 percent year to date. The corporation was authorized by the board of directors on July 28, 1995 to repurchase up to 5 million shares of its common stock. The authorization replaced an earlier action on July 22, 1994 to repurchase the same number of shares. Repurchased shares will be used for various corporate purposes, including share issuance for the corporation's employee stock plans and dividend reinvestment plan. In the third quarter, the 20 21 corporation repurchased 436,000 shares under the new and previous authorizations at an average price of $36.939 per share for a total cost of $16.105 million. As of September 30, 1995, a total of 4,800,000 shares remained available for repurchase under the new authorization. Intangible assets were $40.283 million at September 30, 1995, consisting of $29.844 million in goodwill, $7.342 million in deposit base intangibles, $1.725 million in purchased credit card intangibles and $1.372 million in other intangible assets. In April, the corporation sold its mortgage servicing portfolio with associated mortgage servicing rights of $31.903 million at March 31, 1995. At third quarter-close 1994, intangible assets were $82.546 million, with $37.286 million in mortgage servicing rights, $31.334 million in goodwill, $9.092 million in deposit base intangibles, $3.045 million in purchased credit card intangibles and $1.789 million in other intangibles. Intangible assets at June 30, 1995 were $41.492 million. Regulatory agencies divide capital into Tier I (consisting of shareholders' equity less ineligible intangible assets) and Tier II (consisting of the allowable portion of the reserve for loan losses and certain long-term debt) and measure capital adequacy by applying both capital levels to a banking company's risk-adjusted assets and off-balance sheet items. Regulatory requirements presently specify that Tier I capital should exclude the market appreciation or depreciation of securities available-for-sale arising from valuation adjustments under FASB 115. In addition to these capital ratios, regulatory agencies have established a Tier I leverage ratio which measures Tier I capital to average assets less ineligible intangible assets. Regulatory guidelines require a minimum of total capital to risk-adjusted assets ratio of 8 percent with one-half consisting of tangible common shareholders' equity and a minimum Tier I leverage ratio of 3 percent. Banks which meet or exceed a Tier I ratio of 6 percent, a total capital ratio of 10 percent and a Tier I leverage ratio of 5 percent are considered well capitalized by regulatory standards. At September 30, 1995, Wachovia's Tier I to risk-adjusted assets ratio was 9.32 percent with total capital 13.08 percent of risk-adjusted assets. The corporation's Tier I leverage ratio was 8.34 percent. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CAPITAL COMPONENTS AND RATIOS (thousands) TABLE 12 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 1994 ----------------------------------------------- ---------------------------- Third Second First Fourth Third Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter Quarter ------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Tier I capital: Common shareholders' equity ............... $ 3,617,642 $ 3,535,313 $ 3,404,983 $ 3,286,507 $ 3,214,881 Less ineligible intangible assets ......... 29,844 30,216 30,589 30,961 31,334 Unrealized (gains) losses on securities available-for-sale, net of tax .......... (44,431) (44,556) 10,111 37,635 21,510 ------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Total Tier I capital ................... 3,543,367 3,460,541 3,384,505 3,293,181 3,205,057 Tier II capital: Allowable allowance for loan losses ....... 408,684 408,633 408,500 406,132 406,005 Allowable long-term debt .................. 1,018,003 1,020,267 770,680 830,782 832,881 ------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Tier II capital additions .............. 1,426,687 1,428,900 1,179,180 1,236,914 1,238,886 ------------ ----------- ----------- ----------- ----------- Total capital .......................... $ 4,970,054 $ 4,889,441 $ 4,563,685 $ 4,530,095 $ 4,443,943 ============ =========== =========== =========== =========== Risk-adjusted assets ........................ $ 38,011,712 $37,189,208 $36,207,967 $35,573,896 $34,100,248 Quarterly average assets .................... $ 42,572,976 $40,875,958 $38,901,940 $38,146,370 $37,676,339 Risk-based capital ratios: Tier I capital ............................ 9.32% 9.31% 9.35% 9.26% 9.40% Total capital ............................. 13.08 13.15 12.60 12.73 13.03 Tier I leverage ratio* ...................... 8.34 8.47 8.70 8.63 8.51 Shareholders' equity to total assets ........ 8.20 8.25 8.47 8.39 8.43 *Ratio excludes the average unrealized gains (losses) on securities available-for-sale, net of tax, of $39,715, $8,933, ($29,681), ($26,581) and ($16,885), respectively ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 21 22 WACHOVIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CONDITION September 30 December 31 September 30 $ in thousands 1995 1994 1994 ----------- ----------- ----------- ASSETS Cash and due from banks.................................................... $ 2,516,429 $ 2,670,115 $ 2,508,241 Interest-bearing bank balances............................................. 419,555 6,763 5,758 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements........................................ 347,962 201,606 199,386 Trading account assets..................................................... 1,065,949 889,958 745,000 Securities available-for-sale.............................................. 4,248,296 3,538,247 3,688,984 Securities held-to-maturity (market value of $4,513,177, $4,114,644 and $3,980,564, respectively)................................. 4,388,758 4,184,610 3,972,867 Loans and net leases....................................................... 29,020,208 25,898,774 24,975,597 Less unearned income on loans.............................................. 7,956 7,970 7,881 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total loans.......................................................... 29,012,252 25,890,804 24,967,716 Less allowance for loan losses............................................. 408,684 406,132 406,005 ----------- ----------- ----------- Net loans............................................................ 28,603,568 25,484,672 24,561,711 Premises and equipment..................................................... 591,879 543,548 532,121 Due from customers on acceptances.......................................... 608,825 416,591 774,222 Other assets............................................................... 1,309,884 1,251,848 1,145,995 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total assets......................................................... $44,101,105 $39,187,958 $38,134,285 =========== =========== =========== LIABILITIES Deposits in domestic offices: Demand................................................................... $ 5,208,185 $ 5,657,579 $ 5,265,733 Interest-bearing demand.................................................. 3,278,742 3,524,857 3,336,611 Savings and money market savings......................................... 6,796,514 6,065,966 6,099,692 Savings certificates..................................................... 6,641,131 5,464,532 5,177,269 Large denomination certificates.......................................... 2,401,901 1,416,318 1,484,147 Noninterest-bearing time................................................. 5,695 24,121 50,753 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total deposits in domestic offices................................... 24,332,168 22,153,373 21,414,205 Deposits in foreign offices: Demand................................................................... 8,522 5,540 6,399 Time..................................................................... 942,325 910,345 835,091 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total deposits in foreign offices.................................... 950,847 915,885 841,490 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total deposits....................................................... 25,283,015 23,069,258 22,255,695 Federal funds purchased and securities sold under repurchase agreements......................................... 6,472,005 5,898,398 5,528,088 Commercial paper........................................................... 535,019 406,706 432,012 Other short-term borrowed funds............................................ 2,080,499 1,007,340 854,559 Long-term debt: Bank notes............................................................... 3,925,550 3,953,318 3,890,345 Other long-term debt..................................................... 1,084,663 837,146 839,246 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total long-term debt................................................. 5,010,213 4,790,464 4,729,591 Acceptances outstanding.................................................... 608,825 416,591 774,222 Other liabilities.......................................................... 493,887 312,694 345,237 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total liabilities.................................................... 40,483,463 35,901,451 34,919,404 SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY Preferred stock, par value $5 per share: Authorized 50,000,000 shares; none outstanding........................... -- -- -- Common stock, par value $5 per share: Issued 170,325,647, 170,933,749 and 170,759,977, respectively.............................................. 851,628 854,669 853,800 Capital surplus............................................................ 714,051 741,946 741,083 Retained earnings.......................................................... 2,051,963 1,689,892 1,619,998 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total shareholders' equity........................................... 3,617,642 3,286,507 3,214,881 ----------- ----------- ----------- Total liabilities and shareholders' equity........................... $44,101,105 $39,187,958 $38,134,285 =========== =========== =========== 22 23 WACHOVIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME Three Months Ended Nine Months Ended September 30 September 30 $ in thousands, except per share 1995 1994 1995 1994 -------- -------- ---------- --------- INTEREST INCOME Loans............................................................ $615,542 $483,087 $1,769,174 $1,340,149 Securities available-for-sale: State and municipal............................................ -- -- -- 14 Other investments.............................................. 74,019 46,801 180,054 139,133 Securities held-to-maturity: State and municipal............................................ 7,923 12,192 27,398 38,316 Other investments.............................................. 70,466 54,992 204,460 164,226 Interest-bearing bank balances................................... 473 142 679 487 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements.............................. 1,959 1,347 3,924 6,300 Trading account assets........................................... 16,102 8,889 42,678 22,465 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total interest income...................................... 786,484 607,450 2,228,367 1,711,090 INTEREST EXPENSE Deposits: Domestic offices............................................... 205,948 134,241 558,780 373,329 Foreign offices................................................ 11,299 7,042 28,309 14,420 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total interest on deposits................................. 217,247 141,283 587,089 387,749 Short-term borrowed funds........................................ 129,411 71,495 357,286 184,457 Long-term debt................................................... 72,259 61,551 210,108 160,618 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total interest expense..................................... 418,917 274,329 1,154,483 732,824 NET INTEREST INCOME.............................................. 367,567 333,121 1,073,884 978,266 Provision for loan losses........................................ 23,179 18,123 73,619 52,224 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Net interest income after provision for loan losses ..................................... 344,388 314,998 1,000,265 926,042 OTHER INCOME Service charges on deposit accounts.............................. 52,409 48,940 153,742 147,736 Fees for trust services.......................................... 31,740 32,151 95,832 96,815 Credit card income............................................... 31,180 28,271 91,991 81,725 Mortgage fee income.............................................. 4,269 8,590 19,270 24,338 Trading account profits.......................................... 2,381 1,576 7,823 3,681 Other operating income........................................... 48,436 32,013 125,154 95,414 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total other operating revenue.............................. 170,415 151,541 493,812 449,709 Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio..................... -- -- 79,025 -- Investment securities gains (losses)............................. 317 433 (26,048) 1,226 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total other income......................................... 170,732 151,974 546,789 450,935 OTHER EXPENSE Salaries......................................................... 127,152 116,793 369,057 346,886 Employee benefits................................................ 26,146 22,902 79,191 75,055 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total personnel expense ................................... 153,298 139,695 448,248 421,941 Net occupancy expense............................................ 21,424 20,026 62,554 59,650 Equipment expense................................................ 25,750 26,789 81,948 79,311 Other operating expense.......................................... 98,410 84,783 295,781 254,986 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- Total other expense........................................ 298,882 271,293 888,531 815,888 Income before income taxes....................................... 216,238 195,679 658,523 561,089 Applicable income taxes.......................................... 64,958 57,687 202,178 164,157 -------- -------- ---------- ---------- NET INCOME....................................................... $151,280 $137,992 $ 456,345 $ 396,932 ======== ======== ========== ========== Net income per common share: Primary........................................................ $ .88 $ .80 $ 2.65 $ 2.30 Fully diluted.................................................. $ .87 $ .80 $ 2.64 $ 2.30 Average shares outstanding: Primary........................................................ 171,793 172,097 171,993 172,462 Fully diluted.................................................. 172,512 172,701 172,882 173,086 23 24 WACHOVIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY Common Stock -------------------------- Capital Retained $ in thousands, except per share Shares Amount Surplus Earnings ----------- -------- -------- ---------- PERIOD ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1994 Balance at beginning of year ........................................ 171,375,772 $856,879 $761,573 $1,399,495 Net income .......................................................... 396,932 Cash dividends declared on common stock -- $.90 a share ............................................. (154,083) Common stock issued pursuant to: Stock option and employee benefit plans ........................... 544,925 2,724 12,255 Dividend reinvestment plan ........................................ 260,354 1,302 7,255 Conversion of debentures .......................................... 47,174 236 665 Common stock acquired ............................................... (1,468,248) (7,341) (40,471) Unrealized losses on securities available-for-sale, net of tax .................................... (21,510) Miscellaneous ....................................................... (194) (836) ----------- -------- -------- ---------- Balance at end of period ............................................ 170,759,977 $853,800 $741,083 $1,619,998 =========== ======== ======== ========== PERIOD ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 1995 Balance at beginning of year ........................................ 170,933,749 $854,669 $741,946 $1,689,892 Net income .......................................................... 456,345 Cash dividends declared on common stock -- $1.02 a share ............................................ (174,072) Common stock issued pursuant to: Stock option and employee benefit plans ........................... 625,298 3,126 12,442 Dividend reinvestment plan ........................................ 271,933 1,360 8,592 Conversion of debentures .......................................... 165,885 829 2,355 Common stock acquired ............................................... (1,671,218) (8,356) (51,249) Unrealized gains on securities available-for-sale, net of tax .................................... 82,065 Miscellaneous ....................................................... (35) (2,267) ----------- -------- -------- ---------- Balance at end of period ............................................ 170,325,647 $851,628 $714,051 $2,051,963 =========== ======== ======== ========== 24 25 WACHOVIA CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS Nine Months Ended September 30 $ in thousands 1995 1994 ---------- ---------- OPERATING ACTIVITIES Net income.................................................................................... $ 456,345 $ 396,932 Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operations: Provision for loan losses................................................................... 73,619 52,224 Depreciation and amortization............................................................... 53,780 83,893 Deferred income tax benefit................................................................. (22,102) 2,597 Investment securities (gains) losses........................................................ 25,979 (1,226) Gain on sale of noninterest-earning assets.................................................. (1,621) (4,649) Gain on sale of mortgage servicing portfolio................................................ (79,025) -- Increase (decrease) in accrued income taxes................................................. 22,047 (327) Increase (decrease) in accrued interest receivable.......................................... (68,599) 7,851 Increase in accrued interest payable........................................................ 87,770 51,802 Net change in other accrued and deferred income and expense................................. 78,819 4,140 Net trading account activities.............................................................. (175,991) 43,779 Net loans held for resale................................................................... (216,831) 264,175 ---------- ---------- Net cash provided by operating activities............................................... 234,190 901,191 INVESTING ACTIVITIES Net (increase) decrease in interest-bearing bank balances..................................... (412,792) 6,720 Net (increase) decrease in federal funds sold and securities purchased under resale agreements........................................................... (146,356) 491,720 Purchases of securities available-for-sale.................................................... (3,670,330) (722,958) Purchases of securities held-to-maturity...................................................... (555,926) (304,060) Sales of securities available-for-sale........................................................ 2,390,251 69,376 Calls, maturities and prepayments of securities available-for-sale............................ 681,106 654,953 Calls, maturities and prepayments of securities held-to-maturity.............................. 349,887 470,771 Net increase in loans made to customers....................................................... (2,979,765) (2,314,157) Capital expenditures.......................................................................... (113,131) (87,128) Proceeds from sales of premises and equipment................................................. 11,196 5,710 Proceeds from sale of mortgage servicing portfolio............................................ 142,011 -- Net increase in other assets.................................................................. (81,583) (74,639) ---------- ---------- Net cash used by investing activities................................................... (4,385,432) (1,803,692) FINANCING ACTIVITIES Net increase (decrease) in demand, savings and money market accounts.......................... 19,595 (1,140,275) Net increase in certificates of deposit....................................................... 2,194,162 43,572 Net increase in federal funds purchased and securities sold under repurchase agreements....... 573,607 786,805 Net increase (decrease) in commercial paper................................................... 128,313 (157,166) Net increase (decrease) in other short-term borrowings........................................ 1,073,159 (236,564) Proceeds from issuance of bank notes.......................................................... 946,897 1,945,589 Maturities of bank notes...................................................................... (975,731) (427,800) Proceeds from issuance of other long-term debt................................................ 248,012 247,800 Payments on other long-term debt.............................................................. (384) (263) Common stock issued........................................................................... 17,653 19,804 Dividend payments............................................................................. (174,072) (154,083) Common stock repurchased...................................................................... (56,025) (46,601) Net increase in other liabilities............................................................. 2,370 396 ---------- ---------- Net cash provided by financing activities............................................... 3,997,556 881,214 DECREASE IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS......................................................... (153,686) (21,287) Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year................................................ 2,670,115 2,529,528 ---------- ---------- Cash and cash equivalents at end of period.................................................... $2,516,429 $2,508,241 ========== ========== SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURES Unrealized appreciation in securities available-for-sale: Increase in securities available-for-sale................................................... $ 133,840 $ 35,225 Increase (decrease) in deferred taxes....................................................... (51,775) 13,715 Increase in shareholders' equity............................................................ 82,065 21,510 25 26 ________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 FORM 10Q United States Securities and Exchange Commission Washington, DC 20549 Quarterly Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 For the Quarterly Period Ended September 30, 1995 Commission File Number 1-9021 WACHOVIA CORPORATION Incorporated in the State of North Carolina IRS Employer Identification Number 56-1473727 Address and Telephone: 301 North Main Street, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27150, (910) 770-5000 191 Peachtree Street NE, Atlanta, Georgia 30303, (404) 332-5000 Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Common Stock -- $5.00 par value, which is registered on the New York Stock Exchange. As of September 30, 1995, Wachovia Corporation had 170,325,647 shares of common stock outstanding. Wachovia Corporation has (1) filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE Portions of the financial supplement for the quarter ended September 30, 1995 are incorporated by reference into Parts I and II as indicated in the table below. Except for parts of the Wachovia Corporation Financial Supplement expressly incorporated herein by reference, this Financial Supplement is not to be deemed filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. PART I FINANCIAL INFORMATION PAGE Item 1 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED) Selected Period-End Data ................. 3 Common Stock Data -- Per Share ........... 3 Consolidated Statements of Condition...... 22 Consolidated Statements of Income......... 23 Consolidated Statements of Shareholders' Equity ................... 24 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows..... 25 Item 2 MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS ............................... 4-21 26 27 ________________________________________________________________________________ 1995 FORM 10-Q - continued PART II OTHER INFORMATION Item 6 EXHIBITS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K (a) 11 "Computation of Earnings per Common Share," is presented as Table 3 on page 6 of the third quarter 1995 financial supplement. 19 "Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements," listed in Part I, Item 1 do not include all information and footnotes required under generally accepted accounting principles. However, in the opinion of management, the profit and loss information presented in the interim financial statements reflects all adjustments necessary to present fairly the results of operations for the periods presented. Adjustments reflected in the third quarter of 1995 figures are of a normal, recurring nature. The results of operations shown in the interim statements are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected for the entire year. 27 Financial Data Schedule (for SEC purposes only). (b) Reports on Form 8-K: No reports on Form 8-K were filed during the three months ended September 30, 1995. SIGNATURES Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized. WACHOVIA CORPORATION November 9, 1995 ROBERT S. McCOY, JR. November 9, 1995 JOHN C. McLEAN, JR. ------------------------ ------------------- Robert S. McCoy, Jr. John C. McLean, Jr. Executive Vice President Comptroller and Chief Financial Officer 27