Estados Financieros
Transcription
Estados Financieros
Interim Consolidated Financial Statements BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Santiago, Chile As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 Interim Consolidated Financial Statements BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish- See Note 1b) Contents I. II. III. IV. V. VI. Ch$ = MCh$ = US$ = MUS$ = UF = Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position Interim Consolidated Income Statement Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement Interim Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity Interim Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements Chilean pesos Millions of Chilean pesos United States dollars Millions of United States dollars Unidades de Fomento (UF). The UF is a peso-dominated inflation-indexed monetary unit. The UF rate is set daily in advance, based on the change in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) of the previous month BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position Interim Consolidated Income Statement Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement Interim Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity Interim Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows 1. Corporate information and summary of significant accounting policies: 2. Accounting changes: 3. Relevant events: 4. Operating segments: 5. Cash and cash equivalents: 6. Portfolio sales: 7. Property, plant and equipment: 8. Debt instruments issued and other obligations: 9. Provisions: 10. Contingencies and commitments: 11. Personnel and expenses: 12. Transactions with related parties: 13. Assets and liabilities at fair value: 14. Events occurred after the reporting period: 1 2 3 4 5 6 40 41 44 47 49 50 51 54 57 61 65 69 75 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) ASSETS Cash and due from banks Transactions in the course of collection Financial assets held-for-trading Repurchase agreements and security loans Financial derivative contracts Loans and advances to banks Loans and accounts receivable from customers Financial investments available-for-sale Financial investments held to maturity Investments in companies Intangible assets Property, plant and equipment Deferred taxes Other assets Notes 5 5 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ 5,561 665 2,475 201 219 593 28,397 5,750 111 18 206 490 1,086 523 2,803,826 335,269 1,247,837 101,187 110,538 298,996 14,317,777 2,899,132 56,149 9,166 103,897 246,807 547,417 263,684 3,528,861 270,114 1,269,674 100,638 128,140 299,173 13,527,447 3,003,534 58,220 6,830 66,979 241,031 487,600 165,070 46,295 23,341,682 23,153,311 9,259 600 821 23,170 189 1,146 7,264 108 83 307 1,000 194 4,668,294 302,363 413,800 11,682,343 95,477 577,860 3,662,740 54,373 41,977 154,970 504,264 96,965 5,952,854 175,276 520,344 9,984,854 99,755 1,192,023 3,355,645 19,921 88,840 108,649 406,583 106,565 44,141 22,255,426 22,011,309 552 1,582 (2) 278,497 797,760 (1,194) 278,497 797,760 6,162 143 (143) 72,118 (72,118) 95,891 (41,472) Non-controlling interest 2,132 22 1,075,063 11,193 1,136,838 5,164 TOTAL EQUITY 2,154 1,086,256 1,142,002 46,295 23,341,682 23,153,311 7 TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES Current accounts and other demand deposits Transactions in the course of payment Repurchase agreements and security loans Saving accounts and time deposits Financial derivative contracts Obligations with banks Debt issued instruments Other financial obligations Current taxes Deferred taxes Provisions Other liabilities TOTAL LIABILITIES EQUITY Attributable to equity holders of the bank: Issued capital Reserves Other comprehensive income Retained earnings: From previous year Net income for the period Less: Provision for distribution of income to the benefit of the state TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY 5 8 8 9 The accompanying notes 1 to 14 form an integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements 1 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Interim Consolidated Income Statement For the periods ended September 30, 2013 and 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) Notes 09/30/2013 MUS$ 1,920 (888) 1,032 09/30/2013 MCh$ 968,139 (447,616) 520,523 09/30/2012 MCh$ 901,780 (446,433) 455,347 Fees and commission income Fees and commission expense Net fee and commission income 375 (89) 286 189,070 (44,905) 144,165 171,328 (37,223) 134,105 Net income from financial operations Foreign exchange transaction, net Other operating income 154 (25) 13 77,773 (12,762) 6,705 56,755 9,004 6,023 1,460 736,404 661,234 Provisions for loan losses (327) (165,030) (146,619) OPERATING INCOME, NET 1,133 571,374 514,615 (487) (291) (50) (15) (245,358) (146,752) (25,454) (7,451) (224,252) (128,078) (16,243) (10,413) (843) (425,015) (378,986) 290 146,359 135,629 2 1,253 1,091 292 147,612 136,720 (131) (66,264) (63,183) 161 81,348 73,537 143 18 161 72,118 9,230 81,348 64,516 9,021 73,537 Interest income Interest expense Net interest income Total operating income Personnel expenses Administrative expenses Depreciation and amortization Impairment Other operating expenses Total operating expenses NET OPERATING INCOME Income from investments in companies Income before income taxes Income taxes expenses NET INCOME FOR THE PERIOD Attributable to: Equity holders of the bank Non-controlling interest 11 The accompanying notes 1 to14 form an integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements 2 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement For the periods ended September 30, 2013 and 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) Notes NET INCOME FOR THE PERIOD 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 09/30/2012 MCh$ 161 81,348 73,537 Net profit (loss) on valuation of investment securities available-for-sale Loss on accumulated foreign currency translation adjustment Net (loss) profit on cash flow hedge derivatives 12 (48) 5,993 (31) (24,300) (2,692) (836) 15,754 Other comprehensive income before income taxes (36) (18,338) 12,226 22 10,982 (7,960) (14) (7,356) 4,266 - - - TOTAL OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (14) (7,356) 4,266 CONSOLIDATED COMPREHENSIVE PROFIT FOR THE PERIOD 147 73,992 77,803 Attributable to: Equity holders of the Bank Non-controlling interest 129 18 64,762 9,230 68,782 9,021 147 73,992 77,803 OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME THAT WILL BE RECLASSIFIED TO INCOME FOR THE PERIOD Income tax on other comprehensive income Total other comprehensive income that will be reclassified to income for the period OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME THAT WILL NOT BE RECLASSIFIED TO INCOME FOR THE PERIOD The accompanying notes 1 to14 form an integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements 3 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE Y FILIALES Interim Consolidated Statements of Changes in Equity For the periods ended September 30, 2013 and 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) Other comprehensive income Issued capital Reserves MCh$ MCh$ Financial investments available for sale Cash flow hedge Conversion difference Deferred taxes Prior year's retained earnings Income for the period Provision for distribution of net income period Total attributable to equity holders of the bank Noncontrolling interest Total equity MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ Equity as of 01.01.2012 Transfers Dividends paid Variation of financial investments available-for-sale Variation of hedge accounting derivates Adjustment for conversion differences (NY) Provision for distribution of minimum income Net income for the period Equity as of 09.30.2012 278,497 278,497 720,685 76,969 797,654 1,264 (2,692) (1,428) 4,776 15,754 20,530 (4,388) (836) (5,224) (2,663) 1,564 (9,524) (10,623) 19,241 (19,241) - 96,210 (96,210) 64,516 64,516 (67,266) 19,241 20,123 (27,902) 1,027,115 (1,128) 6,230 (836) 20,123 64,516 1,116,020 3,010 (731) (930) 9,021 10,370 1,030,125 (731) (1,128) 6,230 (836) 19,193 73,537 1,126,390 Equity as of 01.01.2013 Transfers Dividends paid Variation of financial investments available-for-sale Variation of hedge accounting derivates Adjustment for conversion differences (NY) Provision for distribution of minimum income Net income for the period Equity as of 09.30.2013 Equity as of 09.30.2013 MUS$ 278,497 278,497 552 797,760 797,760 1.582 (3,998) 5,993 1,995 4 29,886 (24,300) 5,586 11 (5,110) (31) (5,141) (10) (14,616) (3,597) 14,579 (3,634) (7) 95,891 (95,891) - 95,891 (95,891) 72,118 72,118 143 (41,472) 41,472 (72,118) (72,118) (143) 1,136,838 (54,419) 2,396 (9,721) (31) (72,118) 72,118 1,075,063 2,132 5,164 (2,851) (350) 9,230 11,193 22 1,142,002 (57,270) 2.396 (9,721) (31) (72,468) 81,348 1,086,256 2,154 The accompanying notes 1 to14 form an integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements 4 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Interim Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows For the periods ended September 30, 2013 and 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) Notes 09/30/2013 09/30/2013 09/30/2012 MUS$ MCh$ MCh$ CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) OPERATING ACTIVITIES: Net income for the period 161 81,348 73,537 Charges (credits) to income that do not represent cash flows: Depreciation and amortization Provisions for loan losses Adjustment to market of financial assets held-for-trading Gain from investment in companies Net gain on sales assets received in lieu of payment Loss on sale of property, plant and equipment Write-off of assets received in lieu of payment Other charges to income that do not represent cash movements Net income (loss) for interest and inflation readjustment 50 415 (60) (2) (1) 1 195 (31) 25,454 209,290 (30,398) (1,253) (674) 15 482 98,482 (15,831) 16,243 146,619 35,567 (1,091) (385) 403 103,451 30,844 Changes in assets and liabilities affecting operating cash flows: Decrease of trading instruments Increase in loans Increase (decrease) in held to maturity and financial investments available-for-sale Increase (decrease) in other credit transactions Decrease in currents accounts Increase of deposits and loans Increase (decrease) in other demand and time liabilities Increase (decrease) of other obligations through brokerage of documents Decrease of obligations in letters of credit Increase (decrease) of loans obtained from local banks Decrease of loans obtained from foreign banks Decrease of loans obtained from the Central Bank Net decrease of other assets and liabilities 163 (1,983) 211 (2,690) 3,443 66 (211) (228) 179 (778) (618) (177) 82,129 (999,620) 106,473 177 (1,356,505) 1,736,004 33,430 (106,544) (114,721) 90,000 (392,421) (311,742) (89,136) 209,895 (1,064,997) (952,182) (284,041) (1,003,392) 1,939,362 124,893 104,843 (103,992) (5,457) (177,801) (311,237) (67,743) Net cash flows used in operating activities (1,895) (955,561) (1,186,661) CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) INVESTING ACTIVITIES: Purchase of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets Sale of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets Investments in companies Dividends received from investments in companies Sale of assets received in lieu of payment (141) (3) 1 2 (70,933) 15 (1,440) 657 1,151 (39,454) 188 (114) 463 603 Net cash flow used in investing activities (141) (70,550) (38,314) 980 (256) (190) (26) 494,295 (129,227) (95,891) (12,914) 352,039 (12,339) (19,242) (10,756) 508 256.263 309,702 (1,528) (769,848) (915,273) CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY (USED IN) FINANCING ACTIVITIES: Issue of bonds Redemption of bonds Payment of profit for the year before taxes Payment of income in benefit of non-controlling interest 8 8 Net cash flows provided by financing activities NET VARIATION FOR THE PERIOD OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT THE BEGINNING OF PERIOD 5 7,640 3,852,214 3,695,663 CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT THE END OF PERIOD 5 6,112 3,082,366 2,780,390 The accompanying notes 1 to14 form an integral part of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements 5 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES Corporate Information - Background information for the Bank and its Subsidiaries The Caja de Crédito Hipotecario was established on August 29, 1855. It was the founding institution that promoted the country’s economic development, whose main objective was to provide access to credit to the production sector and to the general public and to safeguard their deposits. Subsequently, the Caja Nacional de Ahorro was established by law, on August 22, 1910, in order to encourage savings, especially in the lower-income sector, and to ensure safe and profitable savings. Under such law, it was agreed to combine in a single institution all of the saving entities in the country under the sponsorship of the Government. The country’s needs, especially in the agricultural sector led to the creation of the Caja de Crédito Agrario, in August 1926, in order to provide financial services to a wide range of farmers. For similar purposes, but instead pursuant to the manufacturing industry, the Instituto de Crédito Industrial was established in February 1928. The four institutions mentioned above, operated separately until 1953, when under Law Decree No.126, published in the Official Gazette on July 24, 1953, Banco del Estado de Chile (BancoEstado) was established and began operating on September 1, 1953. The purpose of its creation was to promote development of domestic economic activities by providing financial products and services, and in doing so provide the best quality service to Chilean citizens. The Organic Law of Banco del Estado de Chile, Law Decree No. 2,079 of 1977, establishes that the Bank is an autonomous State company, with its own legal status and equity, of indefinite duration, exclusively subject to the supervision of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions and related to the Government through the Treasury Department. Therefore, Banco del Estado de Chile has no issued shares as it is governed by the previously mentioned Organic Law. The Bank is governed by its Board of Directors consisting of seven members; where six of them have the exclusive trust of the President of the Republic, and one is a representative of the Bank’s employees. It is managed by an Executive Committee formed by the Chairman, Vice-chairman and Chief Executive Officer. The Bank’s headquarters are located at Av. Bernardo O’Higgins No. 1111, Santiago, Chile. The Interim Consolidated Financial Statements of BancoEstado, for the period ended September 30, 2013 were approved by the Audit Committee on October 21, 2013 and by the Executive Committee on October 23, 2013. 6 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Banco del Estado de Chile is the parent company of a group of Subsidiaries which are engaged in separate lines of business. Consequently the Bank is obligated to prepare Consolidated Financial Statements including its Subsidiaries and its Foreign Branch and its investments in entities supporting its line of business in addition to its own Financial Statements. The Subsidiaries and Foreign Branch of the Bank are the following: - BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa is a privately held Corporation, incorporated on August 17, 1989, as a stock agency, that became a stock broker on June 10, 1992. On January 19, 1990, it obtained its registration as a stock broker and a stock agency with the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance, under registry No. 0137. Its main purpose is the trading of publiclyoffered securities on behalf of third parties and on its own account. - BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos is a privately held Corporation established on June 23, 1997 and authorized by Resolution No. 272 dated August 20, 1997 issued by the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance, whose exclusive purpose was to manage home savings. On April 25, 2003 through Exempt Resolution No. 105, the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance approved the by-laws of BancoEstado S.A. Administradora de Fondos para la Vivienda, consisting of changing its corporate name to BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos, and its purpose was the administration of funds referred to in Article No. 220 of Law No. 18,045 on the securities market. On December 3, 2008, Banco del Estado de Chile entered into a sale agreement with BNP Paribas Investment Partners for the sale of 4,999 shares out of the total of 10,000 shares of this Subsidiary, equivalent to 49.99% of its equity interest. The sale of its equity interests became effective on January 2, 2009. Currently the Company has under its administration 13 mutual funds and one home savings fund. - BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. was established as a limited liability company on August 4, 1999. Its by-laws were modified on September 13, 2004, becoming a privately held corporation. This company is regulated by the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance. Its purpose is the remunerated brokerage of all types of insurance ruled by Law Decree No. 251 of 1931, with any national insurance company located in the country and providing related insurance advisory services. BancoEstado has a strategic alliance with Metlife Chile Inversiones Ltda. for the development of the insurance business and incorporated this company into the ownership of BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. with a 49.9% interest. This alliance includes participation in the management and development of products and businesses. 7 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) - BancoEstado Servicios de Cobranza S.A. is a privately held company established on September 9, 1999, and registered with the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions on August 10, 1999 under No. 752. Its exclusive objective is to collect on credit documents on its own account or on behalf of others, whether through pre-judicial, judicial or extrajudicial means. - BancoEstado Microempresas S.A. Asesorías Financieras was incorporated on July 23, 1996, and is subject to the regulations of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. Its exclusive purpose is to provide support services to the banking business in terms of financial advisories to microenterprises. - BancoEstado Centro de Servicios S.A. was incorporated on November 13, 2004, for the sole purpose of carrying out legal and operating activities related to those referred to in No. 1 of Article No. 69 of the General Banking Law, except for those related to entering into contracts for checking accounts and deposit transactions. Its main purpose is to provide support services to the banking business related to cash services. - BancoEstado Contacto 24 Horas S.A. is a privately held company established on December 13, 2001. Its purpose is to provide telemarketing and technical assistance services, information on products and services, etc., by using remote and/or virtual communication, and services in general focused on developing and maintaining business relationships with the customers of BancoEstado and its Subsidiaries. - Sociedad de Servicios Transaccionales Caja Vecina S.A. is a privately held company established on October 19, 2006. Its sole and exclusive purpose is to carry out activities related to legal and operational actions with the public referred to in No. 1 of Article No. 69 of the General Banking Law, except for those related to entering into contracts for checking accounts and deposits operations. - Sociedad de Promoción de Productos Bancarios S.A. is a privately held corporation, established on May 7, 2008. Its sole and exclusive purpose is to promote the products and services of the Bank and its Subsidiaries. This company is subject to the regulations of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. 8 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) - BancoEstado New York Branch, who’s banking license was issued on July 25, 2005 by the authorities of the State of New York, authorizes Banco del Estado de Chile to open and operate a Branch. Its operation started on October 5, 2005. Its commercial orientation is towards Chilean customers, corporations, entities and institutions with products and services for foreign trade, such as letters of credit, discounts and payment orders, commercial loans in foreign currencies, exchange operations, risks hedging, etc. The Branch fully depends on its parent company. This Branch is regulated and supervised by the State of New York and the Federal Reserve in the United States. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND OTHERS: a) Period covered: The Interim Consolidated Financial Statements (hereinafter, "Financial Statements”) comprise the following statements and periods: Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position which as covers the periods ended September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, and the Interim Consolidated Income Statement, Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement, Interim Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity and Interim Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows for the periods ended September 30, 2013 and 2012. b) Basis of presentation: In accordance with Article No. 15 of the General Banking Law empowers the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions to set forth general application accounting standards to entities subject to its oversight. On the other hand, the Companies Law requires that Generally Accepted Accounting Principles be followed. According to the mentioned legal regulations, banks must use the criteria set forth by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions in its Compendium of Accounting Standards and in that which is not dealt with therein, if they do not contradict its instructions, banks must follow Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, which correspond to the technical standards issued by the Chilean Association of Accountants, which are prepared based on the International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (“IASB”). Should there be discrepancies between these generally accepted accounting principles and the accounting standard issued by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions, the latter shall prevail. The notes to the Financial Statements contain information in addition to that presented in the Interim Consolidated Statements of Financial Position, Interim Consolidated Income Statement, Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement, Interim Consolidated Statement of 9 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Equity and Interim Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows. They include clear, relevant reliable and comparative narrative descriptions of the details in those statements. For the convenience of the reader, the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements and their accompanying notes have been translated from Spanish to English. These Interim Consolidated Financial Statements for the nine-month period ended as of September 30, 2013, have been prepared in accordance with chapter C-2 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions and IAS 34 Interim Financial Information. In accordance with IAS 34, interim financial information is prepared solely with the intention of updating the contents of the latest annual Consolidated Financial Statements, with emphasis on new activities, events and circumstances occurred during the accounting period described in letter a) above and not duplicating the information previously published in the latest Consolidated Financial Statements. Due to the above, these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements do not include all the information required for full Consolidated Financial Statements prepared in accordance with international financial accounting and reporting standards agreed upon by the IASB, therefore, for an adequate comprehension of the information included in these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements, they must be read in conjunction with the Annual Consolidated Financial Statements of BancoEstado, for the year ended December 31, 2012. Therefore, as of September 30, 2013, the Bank declares that it complies with IAS 34. c) Consolidation criteria: The Interim Consolidated Financial Statements comprise the preparation of the Financial Statements of the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries and include the adjustments and reclassifications necessary to homogenize the accounting policies and valuation criteria applied by the Bank, in accordance with the standards established in the Compendium of Accounting Standards issued by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. 10 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Intercompany balances and any unrealized gains or losses from intercompany transactions are eliminated in full during the preparation of the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. As of September 30, 2013, the assets and liabilities and operating income of Subsidiaries represent altogether 9.21%, 9.61% and 28.06%, respectively (7.34%, 7.70% and 25.79%, respectively as of December 31, 2012), of total consolidated assets, liabilities and operating income. Unearned income from transactions with companies, whose investment is recognized using the equity method, is eliminated from the investment, using the share percentage in the entity’s equity. The companies in which BancoEstado participates are divided into the following: • Controlled entities and/or Subsidiaries "Controlled" entities are considered to be entities over which the Bank has the capacity to exercise control, capacity that manifests itself when there is exposure to, or entitlement to variable yields arising from involvement in an entity where the Company has an interest and has the capacity to influence those yieds through its power over the Company. The entities (hereinafter jointly referred to as “Subsidiaries”) and foreign Subsidiary over which the Bank has the capacity to exercise control, which have a significant share and form part of the Consolidated Financial Statements as of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 are detailed as follows: Ownership Rut Company 96.564.330-3 77.330.030-5 96.900.150-0 96.836.390-5 96.979.620-1 96.781.620-5 76.727.730-K 99.578.880-2 76.015.414-8 - BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. BancoEstado Servicios de Cobranza S.A. (*) BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos BancoEstado Contacto 24 Horas S.A. (*) BancoEstado Microempresas S.A. Asesorías Financieras (*) Sociedad de Servicios Transaccionales Caja Vecina S.A. (*) BancoEstado Centro de Servicios S.A. (*) Sociedad de Promoción de Productos Bancarios S.A. (*) BancoEstado - New York Branch(*) September 30, 2013 Direct Indirect Total 99.9996% 50.1000% 99.9000% 50.0100% 99.9000% 99.9000% 99.8500% 99.9000% 99.8300% 100.0000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1500% 0.1000% 0.1700% - 99.9996% 50.1000% 100.0000% 50.0100% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% Direct December 31, 2012 Indirect Total 99.9996% 50.1000% 99.9000% 50.0100% 99.9000% 99.9000% 99.8500% 99.9000% 99.8300% 100.0000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1500% 0.1000% 0.1700% - 99.9996% 50.1000% 100.0000% 50.0100% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% (*) These entities are regulated by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. The remaining companies are regulated by the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance. The New York Branch is also regulated by the State of New York and the US Federal Reserve. 11 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) • Entities supporting the line of business and/or associated entities: Entities supporting the line of business are those over which the Bank has the ability to exercise significant influence, but not control or joint control. The companies that support the line of business are detailed as follows: Company Administrador Financiero Transantiago S.A. Sociedad Operadora de la Cámara de Compensación de Pagos de Alto Valor S.A. Operadora de Tarjetas de Crédito Nexus S.A. Transbank S.A. IMERC-OTC S.A. (*) Ownership % 09/30/2013 12/31/2012 21.0000% 13.0336% 12.9030% 8.7188% 11.11% 21.0000% 13.0336% 12.9030% 8.7188% - (*) The new banking support company, IMERC-OTC S.A. was established on June 21, 2013 in conjunction with other banks in the Chilean financial system. Its line of business is to operate a centralized registry of operations, confirmation, storage, consolidation and reconciliation of derivative transactions. On July 25, a capital contribution of MCh$1,440 was paid, leaving BancoEstado with an 11.11% interest equivalent to 1,111 shares of that Company. The Bank analyzed the valuation method and decided to continue using the equity method to account for all entities supporting the line of business, using as main criterion the level of significant influence exercised over these companies (through its participation on the Board) rather than its share in the equity of those companies. • Investments in other companies: Investments in companies correspond to those companies over which the Bank has no control, or for those over which it has no significant influence. The aforementioned investments are presented at their fair value. Between September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 there have been no changes in the Bank's composition or changes in ownership. The Bank has no interest in special purpose entities. 12 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) d) Non-controlling interest: The non-controlling interest represents the portion of the gains or losses and net assets over which the Bank, directly or indirectly, has no ownership. The non-controlling interests are presented separately within the Interim Consolidated Income Statements, and in equity in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position, and are presented separately from shareholders' equity attributable to the Bank. e) Operating segments: The Bank discloses segment information in accordance with IFRS 8 “Operating Segments”, which establishes the standards to report operating segments and related disclosures for products and services and geographical areas. An operating segment is defined as a component of an entity for which separate financial information is available, that is used regularly by the chief decision maker to decide how to allocate resources and to evaluate performance. The Bank’s operating segments are determined based on the different business units. These business units generate services subject to risks and performance that are different from another operating segment. f) Functional and presentation currency: The Bank and its Subsidiaries have defined the Chilean peso as their functional currency because: • It is the currency of the main economic environment whose competitive forces and regulations determine the prices of financial services provided by the Bank and its Subsidiaries. • It is the currency that mainly influences payroll and other costs necessary to provide the services that the Bank and its Subsidiaries provide to its clients. The New York Branch has defined its functional currency as the US dollar. Balances of the Branch’s Financial Statements are converted to Chilean pesos as follows: • • • Assets and liabilities are converted at the exchange rate, as of the Financial Statement closing date. Income, expenses and cash flows, are converted applying the accounting representation exchange rate for the month of the transaction. Net equity at historical exchange rates. 13 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) The presentation currency for the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements is the Chilean peso, expressed in millions of pesos (MCh$). g) Foreign currency transactions: All balances and transactions in currencies other than the functional currency are considered “foreign currency”. For the preparation of the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements of the Bank and its Subsidiaries, monetary assets and liabilities in foreign currencies are translated into Chilean pesos using exchange rates current as of the closing date of the respective Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. The resulting gains or losses are recognized as profits or losses. Foreign currency translation arises when there is conversion to Chilean pesos of balances in the functional currency of the New York Branch, and is recorded in the "Valuation accounts - foreign currency translation" in the Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity. h) Valuation criteria of assets and liabilities: The measurement criteria of assets and liabilities recorded in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position are the following: • Assets and liabilities measured at amortized cost: The amortized cost of a financial asset or financial liability is the amount at which the financial asset or financial liability is measured at initial recognition minus principal repayments, plus or minus the cumulative amortization of any difference between the initial amount and the maturity amount, and minus any reduction for impairment or uncollectibility. For financial assets the amortized cost also includes the amounts of corrections arising from the corresponding impairment. For financial instruments the part systematically recorded in the accounts of profit and loss is recorded under the effective interest rate method. The effective rate method is determined on the basis of all cash flows estimated for all the concepts in the remaining useful life of a financial instrument. 14 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) • Assets measured at fair value: The fair value of an asset or liability at a given date is understood to be the amount at which the asset could be exchanged and the liability could be settled on that date between two prudent, knowledgeable willing parties in an arm’s length transaction. The most objective and habitual reference of the fair value of an asset or liability is the price that would be paid for it in an organized and transparent market (“quoted price” or “market price”). When there is no market price to determine the amount of the fair value for a certain asset or liability, the price established in recent transactions of similar instruments is considered to estimate its fair value. In those cases, when it is not possible to determine the fair value of a financial asset or liability, it is measured at amortized cost. In addition, according to Chapter A-2 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards, banks are not permitted to designate a financial asset or liability on initial recognition as one to be measured at fair value in replacement of the general criterion of amortized cost. The Interim Consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared based on the general criterion of amortized cost, except for: • Derivative financial instruments, which have been measured at fair value. Assets classified as held for sale are valued at fair value when it is lower than the carrying amount minus the cost of executing the sale. Financial assets held for trading are measured at fair value. Financial investments available for sale are measured at fair value. Assets valued at acquisition cost: Acquisition cost is the cost of the transaction to acquire the asset, less any impairment losses should there be any. i) Investment securities: Investment securities are classified into two categories: investments held-to-maturity and financial investments available-for-sale. The category of investments held-to-maturity includes only those instruments for which the Bank has the positive intent and ability to hold to maturity. All other investment securities are categorized as available-for-sale. 15 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Investment securities are initially recognized at cost, including transaction costs. Subsequent to initial recognition, available-for-sale investments are measured at fair value based on market prices or valuations obtained from using models, less impairment losses. Unrealized gains or losses from changes in fair value are recognized with a charge or credit to equity accounts or income if they are held for trading. When these investments are sold or impaired, the amount of the accumulated fair value adjustment in equity is transferred to income and reported under “net income from financial operations”. Held-to-maturity investments are recorded at cost plus accrued interest and readjustments less impairment provisions recorded when their carrying amount exceeds their estimated recovery amount. Interests and adjustments of held-to-maturity investments and available-for-sale instruments are included under, "interest income". Investment securities designated as hedged instruments are adjusted following the rules on hedge accounting. Investment securities purchases and sales that must be delivered within the time period established by market regulations and conventions are recognized on the trading date, which is the date when the commitment is made to purchase or sell the asset. The Bank has evaluated its held-to-maturity and available-for-sale investment portfolio as of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, in order to assess whether there are any impairment indicators. This assessment includes economic evaluations, credit rating of the debt issues and the intent and ability of management to hold these investments to maturity. Based on such evaluation, no impairment losses have been recognized. j) Instruments held for trading: Instruments held for trading are securities acquired for the purpose of generating earnings from current price fluctuation or from brokerage margins, or which form part of a portfolio in which there is a pattern of current profit-taking. 16 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Instruments held for trading are valued at fair value based on market prices as of the closing date of the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position. Gains or losses from changes in fair value, as well as income from trading activities (sale of instruments), are included in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Income under “net income from financial operations”. Accrued interest and readjustments are also reported in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Income under “net income from financial operations”. Management has designated all investments held by Subsidiaries as instruments held for trading. All purchases and sales of instruments held for trading to be delivered in the period established by market regulations or conventions are recognized on the trading date, which is the date on which the commitment is made to purchase or sell the asset. k) Financial derivative contracts: Financial derivative contracts including foreign currency and UF, interest rate futures, currency and interest rate swaps, interest rate and currency options, and other financial derivatives are initially recognized in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position at their cost (including transaction costs) and subsequently measured at fair value. Fair value is obtained from market rates, discounted cash flow models and option valuation models, as appropriate. Derivative contracts are presented as an asset when their change in fair value is positive and as a liability when it is negative under "financial derivative contracts", as applicable. Certain derivatives embedded in other financial instruments are treated as separate derivatives when their risk and characteristics are not clearly related to the host contract and such host contract is not recorded at fair value through profit or loss. At inception of a derivative contract, it should be designated by the Bank as a trading derivative or as a hedging instrument for hedge accounting purposes. Any changes in the fair value of financial derivative contracts held for trading are included in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Income under “net income from financial operations". If the derivative instrument is classified as for accounting hedge purposes, it can be: (1) a fair value hedge of existing assets or liabilities or firm commitments, or (2) a hedge for cash flows related to existing assets or liabilities or expected transactions. A hedge relationship for hedge accounting purposes must meet all the following conditions: (a) at inception of the hedge there is formal documentation of the hedge relationship; (b) the hedge is expected to be highly effective; (c) the effectiveness of the hedge can be reliably measured and (d) the hedge is highly effective in relation to the hedged risk, continuously throughout the hedge relationship. 17 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Certain transactions with derivatives that do not qualify for hedge accounting are treated and reported as trading derivatives, even though they provide effective coverage for managing risk positions. When a derivative hedges exposure to changes in the fair value of a recognized asset or liability, such asset or liability is recorded at fair value with respect to the specific risk hedged. Profits or losses from valuating both the hedged item and the hedge derivative at fair value are recognized in profit or loss. If the hedged item in a fair value hedge is a firm commitment, changes in the fair value of the commitment in regard to the risk hedged are recorded as an asset or liability with an effect on income for the period. Profits or losses from fair value measurement of the hedge derivative are recognized with an effect on income for the period. When an asset or liability is acquired as a result of the commitment, the initial recognition of the acquired asset or liability is adjusted to incorporate the accumulated effect of fair value valuation of the firm commitment that was recorded in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position. When a derivative hedges exposure to changes in the cash flows of recognized assets or liabilities or of expected transactions, the effective part of the change in fair value with respect to the hedged risk is recorded in shareholders’ equity. Any ineffective part is recognized directly in income for the period. The amounts recorded directly in shareholders' equity for the effective portion of cash flow hedges, are charged to income in the same periods in which the assets or liabilities hedged affect profit or loss for the period. l) Loans to customers: Loans to customers are non-derivative financial assets with fixed or determined payments that are not quoted in an active market and that the Bank has no intention to sell immediately or in the shortterm. When the Bank is the landlord in a lease agreement and substantially transfers all incidental risks and benefits over the leased asset, the transactions is presented under loans to customers. Loans to customers are measured at amortized cost using the effective interest rate method. 18 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) m) Interest revenue and expenses: Interest income and expenses are recognized on an accrual basis using the effective interest rate method. However, when a loan is determined to be impaired, the Bank, on a prudent basis, will suspend accrual of interest and readjustments, and recognize them in the accounting when they are received. In accordance with the criteria established by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions, suspension occurs in the following cases: Loans with individual assessment: • Loans classified in categories C5 and C6: accrual is suspended by the sole fact of being in the impaired portfolio. • Loans classified in categories C3 and C4: accrual is suspended due to having been three months in the impaired portfolio. Loans with collective assessment: • Loans with less than 80% real guarantees: accrual is suspended when payment of the loan or one of its installments has been overdue for six months. Notwithstanding the above, in the case of loans subject to individual assessment, recognition of income from accrual of interest and readjustments can be maintained for loans that are being paid normally and which correspond to obligations whose cash flows are independent, as can occur in the case of project financing. n) Income and expenses from fees and commissions: Income and expenses from fees and commissions are recognized in the Interim Consolidated Statements of Income with different criteria, depending on their nature. The most significant criteria are: - Those originating from specific actions which are recognized when the action that generates them is produced. Those originating from transactions or services that are rendered over a period of time, which are recognized over the life, maturity or term covering such transactions or services. Those related to financial assets or liabilities, which are recognized at the time of their collection. 19 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) o) Impairment: The Bank, New York Branch and its Subsidiaries use the following criteria to assess impairment, should it exist: • Financial assets: Financial assets are evaluated at each reporting date to determine whether there is objective evidence of impairment. A financial asset or group or assets will be impaired if there is objective evidence that one or more events have had a negative effect on future cash flows of the asset. An impairment loss related to financial assets recorded at amortized cost is calculated as the difference between the carrying amount of the asset and the present value of estimated cash flows discounted at the effective interest rate. An impairment loss in relation to an available-for-sale financial asset is calculated by reference to its fair value. Individually significant financial assets are individually reviewed to determine their impairment (individual assessment). The remaining financial assets are evaluated collectively in groups that share similar credit risk characteristics (collective assessment). All impairment losses are recognized in profit or loss. Any accumulated loss related to an availablefor-sale financial asset, previously recognized in equity is transferred to income. Reversal of an impairment loss occurs only if it can be objectively related to an event occurred after its recognition. In the case of financial assets carried at amortized cost and sales deeds available-forsale, reversal is recognized in income. • Non-financial assets: The carrying amount of non-financial assets, excluding investment properties and deferred taxes, is regularly reviewed to determine whether there is any indication that the asset may be impaired. If any such indication exists, the Bank estimates the recoverable amount of the asset, which is its fair value less cost of sales or its value in use, whichever is greater. 20 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Impairment losses recognized in prior periods are assessed at the end of each reporting period to determine whether there is an indication that such loss may no longer exist or may have decreased. An impairment loss is reversed if, and only if, there has been a change in the estimates used to determine the asset’s recoverable amount since the last impairment loss was recognized. The increased carrying amount of an asset attributable to reversal of an impairment loss shall not exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined, net of depreciation or amortization, had no impairment loss been recognized for the asset in prior years. p) Investments in associates: Associated entities, which are entities supporting the Bank’s line of business, are valued using the equity method (Note No. 1 c). q) Intangible assets: Intangible assets held by the Bank are mainly investments in software. Acquired software is measured at cost less accumulated amortization and accumulated impairment losses. Expenses for internally developed software are recognized as assets when the Bank is able to demonstrate its intention and ability to complete its development and use it internally to generate future economic benefits, and the cost of completing its development can be reliably measured. Capitalization of the cost of internally developed software includes all direct costs attributable to the development of the software and is amortized over its useful life. Amortization is recognized on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful life of the software since it is ready for use. The average estimated useful life of software is 3 years. Expenses incurred, in research and evaluation of technological alternatives, are recognized as an expense in the period in which they are incurred. 21 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) r) Property, plant and equipment: Property, plant and equipment items are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and impairment losses. The cost includes expenses that have been attributed directly to the acquisition of those assets. The cost of assets at the construction stage includes the cost of materials and direct labor, and any other cost directly attributable to the process of leaving the asset in a condition to be used. When part of a property, plant and equipment item has a different useful life, such part is recorded as a separate item (significant components of property, plant and equipment). Depreciation is recognized in the Interim Consolidated Income Statement on a straight-line basis over the useful lives of each part of a property, plant and equipment item. Leased assets are amortized over the term of the lease or their useful lives, whichever is shorter, unless there is certainty that the Bank will obtain ownership at the end of the term of the lease. As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank applied the following useful lives for depreciation of assets - Buildings - Equipment and facilities - Equipment and accessories 80 years 5 to 10 years 3 years Depreciation, useful lives and residual values are calculated at each reporting date. The estimated useful lives of property, plant and equipment items are reviewed at the end of the reporting period in order to detect any significant changes. If changes are observed in the useful lives of the assets, they are adjusted and depreciation is corrected in the current period and any future affected periods. Repair and maintenance expenses are recognized when they occur. s) Lease agreements: • Operating leases: When the Bank, New York Branch and its Subsidiaries act as lessee and the contract qualifies as an operating lease, total payments are recorded as operating expenses. At the end of the term of the operating lease, any payment related to contract fines required by the lessor is recorded in expenses for the period in which such contract ended. 22 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) • Financial leases: Financial leases consist of lease agreements with a clause that gives the lessee the option to purchase the leased asset at the end of the lease. The sum of the present value of lease payments that will be received from the lessee, plus the purchase option is recognized as third party financing and therefore presented in the loans and accounts receivable from customers at present value and the asset is derecognized. Goods acquired for financial lease operations are presented under “other assets” at acquisition cost. t) Cash and cash equivalents: The Bank has used the indirect method for preparing the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows, whereby the Bank’s net income is adjusted for the effects of non-cash transactions, as well as for income and expenses associated to cash flows classified as from investing or financing. In accordance with the specific requirements applicable to financial institutions, the Bank and its Subsidiaries have considered as cash and cash equivalents the balance of “cash and due from banks”, plus (less) the net balance of transactions in the course of collection presented in the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position, plus available-for-sale money market securities and repurchase agreements with little risk of change in value, maturing in three months or less from the acquisition date. It also includes investments in fixed income mutual funds, which are presented together with instruments held for trading in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position. The preparation of the Interim Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows considers the following concepts: a) Cash flows: inflows and outflows of cash and cash equivalents, understanding such to be money market investments with low risk of change in value such as: deposits with the Chilean Central Bank, local banks and foreign banks. b) Operating activities: correspond to normal activities performed by banks, as well as other activities that cannot be qualified as from investing or financing. c) Investing activities: correspond to acquisition or disposal by other means of non-current assets and other investments not included in cash and cash equivalents. d) Financing activities: correspond to activities that produce changes in the size and composition of net equity and liabilities that do not form part of operating or investing activities. 23 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) u) Allowance for loan losses: The provisions required to cover loan losses have been recognized in accordance with the standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. Assets are presented net of the allowance or showing the reduction in the case of loans and accounts receivable from customers. In the case of contingent loans, the corresponding allowances are recorded as liabilities under provisions. The models established by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions for determining provisions are summarized as follows: u.1) Allowance for individual assessment: In accordance with Chapter B-1 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions the individual assessment of debtors is necessary when dealing with clients who due to their size, complexity or exposure level, need to be known and analyzed in detail. • Criteria of commercial portfolio rating with individual analysis: The following risk rating criteria are applied to commercial debtors subject to individual analysis, and are based on the principles established in Chapter B-1 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. The analysis for the rating should be mainly based on the debtor’s payment capacity and inherent financial characteristics, taking the credit quality of the group it belongs to as referential information. Debtor portfolio with normal risk The portfolio with normal risk includes debtors whose payment capacity allows them to fulfill their obligations and commitments and it is not perceived that this condition will change based on the assessment of their economic financial position. Therefore, these are debtors without substantial risks, whose payment capacity allows them to cover obligations under the agreed terms and which would continue being satisfactory in spite of unfavorable business, economic and financial situations. 24 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) The probability of default and expected loss in each category of the normal risk portfolio is as follows: Type of portfolio Category A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 Normal risk portfolio Probability of default % 0.04 0.10 0.25 2.00 4.75 10.00 Loss due to default % 90.00 82.50 87.50 87.50 90.00 90.00 Expected loss (allowance %) 0.03600 0.08250 0.21875 1.75000 4.27500 9.00000 Substandard portfolio The substandard portfolio includes debtors with financial difficulties or significant worsening of their payment capacity and for which there are reasonable doubts about the total reimbursement of agreed principal and interest, showing little room to fulfill their current financial obligations. This portfolio also includes debtors, which lately (in the last twelve months) have shown delinquencies in excess of thirty days, show poor payment behavior with the Bank or with third parties (delinquency during the year for significant amounts outstanding for less than 90 days). The probability of default and expected loss in each category of the substandard portfolio are detailed as follows: Type of portfolio Category Substandard portfolio B1 B2 B3 B4 Probability of default % 15.00 22.00 33.00 45.00 Loss due to default % 92.50 92.50 97.50 97.50 Expected loss (allowance %) 13.87500 20.35000 32.17500 43.87500 25 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Allowance for portfolio under normal or substandard compliance To determine the amount of the allowance that should be established for portfolios with normal and substandard compliance, banks must first estimate the exposure subject to allowance, to which the respective loss percentages will be applied (expressed in decimals), which comprise the likelihood of default and loss due to default established for the category within which the debtor and/or its qualified guarantor fall, as applicable. The exposure subject to allowance corresponds to loans plus contingent loans less amounts that would be recovered by means of executing guarantees, as stated in No. 4.1 of Chapter B-1 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. Likewise, loans are understood to be the carrying amount of loans and accounts receivable of the respective debtor, whereas contingent loans are understood as the value resulting from applying the regulations contained in No. 3 of Chapter B-3 of the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. The following should be considered for calculation purposes: Allowance debtor =(EAP-EA)x(PI debtor /100)x(PDI debtor /100)+EAx(PI GUARANTOR /100)x(PDI GUARANTOR /100) Where: EAP = EA PI PDI = = = Exposure subject to allowance (Loans + contingent loans) - financial or real guarantees Guaranteed exposure Probability of default Loss due to default Notwithstanding the above, the Bank must maintain a minimum allowance percentage required of 0.50% on loans and contingent loans in the Normal Portfolio. Non-performing portfolio This portfolio includes debtors with loans overdue for more than 90 days or which are in judicial collection and whose source of payment is supported in the guarantees established. Should there be concrete information that justifies it; the present value of recoveries that might be obtained by exerting the collection actions, net of expenses associated to them can also be considered. 26 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) “Concrete information” is considered to be any recovery by judicial means that is supported with a report from the Bank’s Legal Department (“Fiscalía”), determining the effectiveness of the collection. This must be free of any encumbrance or preferential creditors, leading to an actual payment flow. In addition, those debtors who have shown a negative past performance in the Bank or financial system are considered as non-performing, such as: social security and tax payment infringement, returned and not cleared notes, debt past due in the financial system, write-offs in the financial system, etc., as well as debtors in default or showing a preventive judicial arrangement. There are six categories for debtors with non-performing loans and each of them is associated to a range of expected loss relating to commercial loans and commercial lease operations of the customer as a whole; therefore it is necessary to determine the guarantee coverage. It should be noted that all contingent loans must be fully considered, since they are rated as non-performing loans. Allowance for non-performing portfolio For the purpose of establishing the allowance, there are percentages that must be applied to the amount of the exposure which correspond to the sum of loans and contingent loans held by the same debtor. To apply this percentage, an expected loss rate should first be estimated by deducting from the amount of the exposure the amounts recoverable through execution of guarantees and, in case there is concrete information to justify it, also deducting the present value of recoveries that can be obtained exerting collection actions, net of the related expenses associated to them. This loss rate should be included in one of the six categories defined according to the range of losses actually expected by the Bank for all the operations of the same debtor. 27 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) These categories and their loss range as estimated by the Bank and the allowance percentages that should ultimately be applied on the amounts of exposure for the non-performing portfolio are those indicated in the following table: Type of portfolio Risk category Range of expected loss Allowance (%) Nonperforming portfolio C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 More than 0 up to 3% More than 3 % up to 20% More than 20% up to 30% More than 30% up to 50% More than 50% up to 80% More than 80% 2 10 25 40 65 90 The following should be considered for calculation purposes: Expected loss rate = (E-R)/E Allowance =E x (PP/100) Where: E R PP = Amount of the exposure = Recoverable amount = Allowance percentage (as per category where the expected loss rate must fall). u.2) Collective assessment allowances: Collective assessment is used to analyze a large number of operations whose individual amounts are low, generally involving individuals or small businesses. For this purpose the Bank uses models based on probability of default of debtors and their loans. In collective assessments, allowances are always established according to the expected loss using the models and formulas indicated by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions. 28 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Allowances for the collectively assessed portfolio are determined as follows: Provision= EG*(1-EA/100)*(PI/100)*(PDI/100)+EG*EA/100(PI GUARANTOR /100)x(PDI GUARANTOR /100) Where: EG EA PI PDI PI GUARANTOR PDI GUARANTOR = = = = Amount of exposure. Percentage of guaranteed exposure, for the group of loans. Probability of default. Percentage of loss due to expected default, which must be calculated excluding recoveries from guarantors. = Percentage of probability that the guarantor will default. = Percentage of loss due to guarantor default. To estimate these parameters, the Bank’s loan portfolio is divided into groups called families. These are selected by groups of similar products such as installment loans, housing mortgage loans without government guarantee, etc. With this grouping the PI and PDI parameters are obtained which have been developed with the Bank’s internal information and are used for one or several products determined according to their portfolio. u.3) Impaired portfolio: The impaired loan portfolio includes those loans for which there is concrete evidence that debtors will default by failing to make contractual payments, regardless of whether or not there is a possibility of recovering the amounts owed through guarantees, through exercising legal collection actions or by agreeing to different conditions. In any case, when dealing with debtors subject to individual assessment, the Bank considers in impaired portfolio all credits of debtors classified in any of the categories of the non-performing portfolio, as well as in categories B3 and B4 of the substandard portfolio. Likewise for debtors being collectively assessed, the impaired portfolio includes all loans in the non-performing portfolio. Based on the above, the Bank shall maintain loans in the impaired portfolio until it observes regularization of the debtor’s payment capacity or behavior; otherwise it will write these loans off. 29 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) u.4) Loans write-off: Loans and accounts receivable are written-off based on due, past due and outstanding installments. The timeframe for the write-off is from the beginning of the default, i.e. when the default time of an installment or portion of a loan of an operation reaches the deadline to be written-off, detailed as follows: Type of loan Consumer loans with or without real guarantees Other transactions without real guarantees Commercial loans with real guarantees Residential mortgage loans Leasing of consumer goods Other non-real estate lease transactions Real estate lease (commercial and residential) Deadline 6 months 24 months 36 months 48 months 6 months 12 months 36 months As of 2012 year-end, the Bank decided to standardize the criteria for writing-off mortgage loans with a subsidy, for the purpose of using it for the rest of the mortgage loan portfolios. Until 2012, mortgage loans with subsidy were written-off by reducing the respective mortgage loan (once the deadline for write-off was fulfilled), recognizing a transitory asset and establishing equivalent additional allowances. In accordance with this, in 2012 the Bank wrote-off the stock of mortgage loans with subsidy recorded in transitory assets amounting to MCh$72,319 (MCh$57,576 en 2011) with a charge to additional allowances established for this concept. For operating cash flows, as of January 2013, the general criteria established in the Compendium of Accounting Standards of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions was applied to write-off residential loans, i.e. 48 months of delinquency. u.5) Recovery of written-off loans: Recovery of previously written-off loans is recognized directly in income under risky assets provision, netting the allowance expense for the period. 30 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) u.6) Additional provisions: In addition to the allowance for loan losses, the Bank may make additional provisions to those derived from the application of portfolio assessment models, for the purpose of safeguarding against unpredictable economic fluctuations that might affect the macroeconomic environment or the situation of a specific economic sector, in accordance with the Bank’s policies (Note 9). Within the additional provisions the Bank contemplates a countercyclical mechanism of accumulation of provisions in the commercial, consumption and mortgage portfolio, to safeguard against any recessionary periods and also considers additional provisions for portfolio concentration. During 2011, the Bank’s Board decided to increase the limit for additional provisions over the total amount of allowance for loan losses to 100%. As of September 30, 2013, the Bank has recorded additional credit risk provisions equivalent to 65.12% (58.3% as of December 31, 2012). The effect of these provisions is recorded under “provisions for loan losses” in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Income. v) Provisions and contingent liabilities: Provisions are liabilities of uncertain timing and amount. These provisions are recognized in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position when the following requirements are fulfilled collectively: • It is a real obligation as a result of past events and, • As of the date of the Interim Consolidated Financial Statement it is probable that the Bank or group will use an outflow of resources to settle the obligation and the amount of the obligation can be reliably estimated. A contingent liability is a possible obligation that arises from past events whose existence will be confirmed only by the occurrence of one or more uncertain future events that are not wholly within the control of the Bank, New York Branch and its Subsidiaries. w) Employee benefits: • Employee vacations: The annual cost of vacations and employee benefits are recognized on an accrual basis. 31 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) • Current benefits: The Bank provides to its employees an annual bonus incentive plan based on achievement of certain objectives and goals, which consists of a specific number or portion of monthly salaries. That bonus is accrued based on the expected amount to be paid. The Bank has also agreed with its employees to a negotiation bonus which is amortized over the term of the collective contract and the unamortized part is recorded under “Other assets”. • Non-current benefits: The Bank has established provisions for non-current employee benefits pursuant to the existence of implicit obligations derived from its collective agreement. Those obligations give rise to the recognition of provisions which are determined by using actuarial assumptions including the employee turnover rate, expected salary increases, mortality tables and the likelihood of use of this benefit. x) Current and deferred income taxes: The Bank and its Subsidiaries have recognized a corporate income tax expense as of the end of each reporting period in accordance with applicable tax regulations. Additionally, as the Bank is treated as a public sector institution, it is subject to a tax credit in accordance with Article No. 2 of Decree Law No. 2,398 dated 1978, that corresponds to a rate of 40%. The effects of deferred taxes on temporary differences, between the tax balance sheet and the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position, are recorded in accordance with IAS 12. The Bank and its Subsidiaries recognize, when applicable, deferred tax liabilities for future estimated tax effects attributable to differences between the carrying amounts of liabilities and their tax values. Deferred tax liabilities are measured on the basis of the tax rate, which according to current tax legislation must be applied in the year in which the deferred tax liabilities are realized or settled. Future effects of changes in tax legislation or in tax rates are recognized in deferred taxes, as of the date in which the law approving those changes is enacted. On September 27, 2012, the Official Gazette published Law No. 20,630 which permanently modified the rate of article No. 20 of the Income Tax Law, setting the first category tax rate at 20%. 32 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) y) Transactions with agreements: The Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries enter into sales with repurchase agreements as a method of financing. In this regard, investments sold under repurchase agreements which serve as loan guarantees are classified under “Instruments held for trading” and “Investment securities available for sale”. The repurchase obligation is classified under “Repurchase agreements and securities loans,” recognizing interest and adjustments accrued as of the closing date. The Bank’s New York Branch and its Subsidiaries also enter into resale agreements as a method of investing. Financial instruments purchased under resale agreements are included as assets under “Repurchase agreements and securities loans” recognizing interest and readjustments accrued as of the closing date. z) Factoring transactions: The Bank performs factoring transactions with its customers, whereby it receives invoices and other commercial papers representing receivables, with or without the responsibility of the transferor, paying the transferor a percentage of the total amounts receivable from the debtor for the transferred documents. Factoring receivables are valued at cash consideration paid for the receivables. The difference between the cash consideration paid and the face value of the receivables is recognized as interest income by using the effective interest method over the financing period. The transferor maintains the responsibility of payment on the invoices not collected. aa) Assets received in lieu of payment: Assets received in lieu of payment are recognized at the lower of initial carrying amount and their net realizable value, less any regulatory write-offs. Write-offs are required by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions if the asset has not been sold within one year from its reception. 33 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) bb) Derecognition of financial assets and liabilities: The Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries derecognize a financial asset from their Statement of Financial Position when all the contractual rights over the cash flows of the financial asset expire, or when they transfer the rights to receive contractual cash flows for the financial asset during a transaction in which the risks and benefits of ownership of the financial asset are substantially transferred. Any share in financial assets transferred that is created or retained by the Bank is recognized as a separate asset or liability. The Bank eliminates a financial liability (or part of it) from its Consolidated Statement of Financial Position when, and only when, it has been extinguished, i.e. when the obligation specified in the corresponding contract has been paid or cancelled or else expired. When the Bank transfers a financial asset, it evaluates to what extent it retains the risks and benefits inherent to ownership. In this case: (a) If the risks and advantages inherent to ownership of the financial asset are substantially transferred, it is derecognized in accounts and any rights and obligations created or retained due to the transfer will be separately recognized as assets or liabilities. (b) If the risks and advantages inherent to ownership of a financial asset are substantially retained, it will continue to be recognized. (c) If all the risks and advantages inherent to ownership of the financial asset are not substantially transferred or retained, it shall determine whether it has retained control over the financial asset. In this case: (i) If the transferring entity has not retained control, it will derecognize the financial asset and shall separately recognize, as an asset or liability, any right or obligation created or retained due to the transfer. (ii) If the transferring entity has retained control, it shall continue recognizing the financial asset in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position in an amount equal to the exposure to changes in value that it might experience and recognizes a financial liability associated to the financial asset transferred. 34 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) cc) Use of estimates and judgment: The preparation of Interim Consolidated Financial Statements requires that management to make judgments, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the carrying amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates. Significant estimates and assumptions are reviewed by the Bank’s management on an ongoing basis in order to quantify certain assets, liabilities, income, expenses and uncertainties. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognized in the period, in which the estimate is revised and in any other affected future period. In particular, the information regarding the most significant areas of estimates and uncertainties and critical judgments in the application of accounting policies that have the most significant effect on the amounts recognized in the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements, correspond to the following items: - Useful lives of tangible and intangible assets. Current and deferred income taxes. Provisions for loan losses. Assumptions used in the actuarial valuation of employee benefits liabilities and commitments and other obligations. Contingencies and commitments. Impairment losses of certain assets. Assets and liabilities at fair value. During the nine-month period ended September 30, 2013 there have been no significant changes in estimates performed as of 2012 year-end other than those indicated in the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. dd) Non-current assets held-for-sale: Non-current assets (or disposal groups) are classified as held-for-sale if their carrying amount will be recovered mainly through a sales transaction rather than through continuing use. Immediately before this classification, the assets (or elements of a disposal group) are re-measured in accordance with the Bank’s accounting policies. From that time on, the assets (or disposal group) are measured at the carrying amount or fair value less cost of sales, whichever is lower. Deferred assets, employee benefits assets and investment properties continue being evaluated according to the Bank’s accounting policies. In the initial classification of assets held-for-sale and profits and/or losses subsequent to the revaluation, impairment losses are recognized in income. Profits are not recognized if they exceed any cumulative impairment. 35 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) ee) Distribution of net income to the Government: As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank has recognized a liability for the portion of net income to be distributed to the Government in accordance with its dividend distribution policy. For this purpose, it establishes a provision against a supplementary equity reserve account. This policy establishes that in order to determine the provision for the distribution of net income to the Government, it shall consider the average distribution of net income for the last three years (established from the decrees issued by the Treasury Department) or that of the last year should it be greater. Based on the above, the percentage of provision used for distribution of benefits on profit in each period was 100%, as of September 30, 2013 and 43.25%, as of December 31, 2012. ff) Interim Consolidated Other Comprehensive Income Statement: This statement presents income and expenses generated by the Bank for the period as a result of its activities, and all other income and expenses are recognized directly in equity. The Financial Statement is detailed as follows: a) b) c) d) gg) Consolidated income for the period. Net amount of income and expenses temporarily recognized in equity as “valuation accounts”. Deferred taxes originated from items a) and b), except for foreign currency translation adjustment and hedge derivative for investments abroad. Total consolidated income and expenses recognized, calculated as the sum of the previous letters, separately showing the amount attributable to the Bank and to non-controlling interest. Comparison of information The information contained in these Consolidated Interim Financial Statements for 2012 is presented solely and exclusively for the purpose of comparing it to the information for the nine-month period ended September 30, 2013. hh) Seasonality or cyclical nature of transactions in the interim period Due to the line of business of the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries, their transactions are not of a cyclical or seasonal nature. Therefore no specific details are presented in the explanatory notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements for the nine-month period ended as of September 30, 2013. 36 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) ii) Relative significance When determining the information to be disclosed regarding the different items of the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements or other matters in accordance with IAS 34, the Bank has taken into consideration their relative significance in relation to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. jj) Restructuring costs As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries have not incurred restructuring expenses. kk) Error correction As of September 30, 2013 the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries have not made error correction adjustments. ll) Compliance with agreements As of September 30, 2013, the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries have not violated any agreements. mm) New accounting pronouncements (IFRS and Interpretation of the IFRS Interpretations Committee (IFRIC)) The new standards and improvements to IFRS, as well as the interpretations that have been published in the period are detailed below. As of the date of these Financial Statements these standards are still not in force and the Bank has not applied them in advance: 37 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) a) New standards IFRS 9 Financial Instruments: Classification and Measurement Date of obligatory application January 1, 2015 IFRS 9 “Financial Instruments” This Standard introduces new requirements for the classification and measurement of financial assets, early application is allowed. It requires that all financial assets be classified entirely on the basis of the entity’s business model to manage financial assets and the characteristics of financial asset contractual cash flows. Financial assets under this standard are measured at amortized cost or fair value. Only financial assets that are classified as measured at amortized cost must be tested for impairment. Its application is effective for annual periods commencing on or after January 1, 2015, early adoption is allowed. The Bank is evaluating the potential impact that the adoption of the mentioned norm could generate in the Consolidated Financial Statements. b) Standard improvements and amendments Investment IFRS 10 IFRS 12 IAS 27 IAS 32 IAS 39 Entities - Amendments to: Consolidated Financial Statements Disclosures of Interests in Other Entities Separate Financial Statements Financial Instruments: Presentation Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement Date of obligatory application January 1, 2014 January 1, 2014 January 1, 2014 Investment Entities – Amendments to IFRS 10 – Consolidated Financial Statements; IFRS 12 – Disclosures of Interests in Other Entities and IAS 27 – Separate Financial Statements On October 31, 2012, the IASB published "Investment Entities (amendments to IFRS 10, IFRS 12 and IAS 27)”, providing an exemption for consolidation of Subsidiaries under IFRS 10 Consolidated Financial Statements for entities that comply with the definition of an "investment entity", such as certain investment funds. Instead, such entities shall measure their investments in Subsidiaries at fair value through profit or loss in conformity with IFRS 9 Financial Instruments or IAS 39 Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement. 38 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) Amendments also require additional disclosure in respect as to whether the entity is considered an investment entity, details of the entity's non-consolidated Subsidiaries and the nature of the relationship and certain transactions between the investment entity and its Subsidiaries. Amendments require that an investment entity account for its investment in a Subsidiary in the same manner in its Consolidated Financial Statements and in its Individual Financial Statements (or that it only provide Individual Financial Statements if all Subsidiaries are not consolidated). The effective date of these amendments is for periods commencing on or after January 1, 2014. Early application is allowed. The Bank is evaluating the impact that the mentioned standard might generate. IAS 32 “Financial Instruments: Presentation” In December 2011, the IASB amended the accounting and disclosure requirements related to netting of financial assets and liabilities through amendments to IAS 32 and IFRS 7. These amendments are the result of the joint project of the IASB and the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) to address differences in their respective accounting standards pursuant to financial instrument netting. Amendments to IAS 32 are effective for annual periods commencing on or after January 1, 2014. Both require retrospective application for comparative periods. The Bank is evaluating the impact that the mentioned standard might generate. IAS 39 “Financial Instruments: Recognition and Measurement” In June 2012, the IASB issued an Amendment to IAS 39 - Novation of Derivatives and Continuation of Hedge Accounting. This amendment allows the continuation of hedge accounting (under IAS 39 and the next chapter on hedge accounting in IFRS 9) when a derivative is to a central counterparty and certain conditions are met. A novation indicates an event where the original counterparties of a derivative agree to replace the original counterparty with another one for each of the parties. To apply the amendments and continue with hedge accounting, the novation to a central party must occur as a consequence of a law or regulation or the introduction of laws or regulations. The modifications must be applied for annual periods commencing on or after January 1, 2014. Early application is allowed. The Bank is assessing the impact that this amendment might have. 39 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 1 – CORPORATE INFORMATION AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (continued) c) Interpretations IFRIC 21 Levies Date of obligatory application January 1, 2014 IFRIC 21 “Levies” On May 20, 2013, the IASB issued IFRIC (International Financial Reporting Standards Committee) 21, Levies. This new interpretation provides guidelines on when to recognize a liability to pay a government levy, both for levies accounted for in accordance with IAS 37 Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets and for those whose timing and amount are certain. This interpretation defines a levy as “an outflow of resources that involve future economic benefits imposed by governments on entities in conformity with legislation”. Taxes within the scope of IAS 12 Income Taxes are excluded from the scope, as are fines and sanctions. Payments to governments for services or the acquisition of an asset under a contractual agreement are also out of the scope. That is, the levy must be a non-reciprocal transfer to a government when the entity that is paying the levy does not receive specific goods or services in exchange. For interpretation purposes, a "government" is defined in conformity with IAS 20 Accounting for Government Grants and Disclosure of Government Assistance, when an entity acts as a government agent to charge a levy, the agency's cash flows charged are out of the scope of the Interpretation. The Interpretation identifies the event that originates the obligation for recognition of a liability as the activity that triggers the payment of the levy in conformity with the corresponding legislation. The interpretation provides guidelines on recognition of a liability to pay levies: (i) the liability is recognized progressively if the event that originates the obligation occurs over a period of time; (ii) if an obligation is triggered when a minimum threshold is reached, the liability is recognized when the minimum threshold is reached. The Interpretation is applicable retrospectively for annual periods commencing on or after January 1, 2014. The Bank is assessing the impact that the mentioned standard might have. NOTE 2 - ACCOUNTING CHANGES During the nine-month period ended as of September 30, 2013 there have been no significant accounting changes that affect the interpretation of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. 40 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 3 - RELEVANT EVENTS a) Bond issuance: Bank bond: on March 13, 2013, the Bank placed a bank bond in the amount of UF 3.0 million, with a remaining term of 18 years and 10 months, at an annual issuance rate of 3.75%, with payment of biannual interest and capital payment in one installment at final maturity. Bank bond: on June 25, 2013, the Bank placed a bank bond in the amount of UF 5.0 million, with a remaining term of 3 years and 6 months, at an annual issuance rate of 3.5%, with payment of biannual interest and capital payment in one installment at final maturity. Subordinate bond: on August 6, 2013, the Bank placed a subordinate bond in the amount of UF 2.0 million, with a remaining term of 27years and 11 months at an annual issuance rate of 4.00%, with payment of biannual interest and capital amortization as of January 2037. Subordinate bond: on September 3, 2013, the Bank placed a subordinate bond in the amount of UF 2.0 million, with a remaining term of 28 years and 4 months, at an annual issuance rate of 4.00%, with payment of biannual interest and amortization of capital as of July 2037. Foreign Bond: on May 7, 2013, the Bank increased the issuance of the foreign bond placed on November 5, 2012, by US$200 million, with principal maturing on November 9, 2017, at an annual cover page rate of 2.00% with biannual interest payments, beginning on November 9, 2013. Foreign Bond: on June 11, 2013, the Bank issued a foreign bond in the amount of ¥24,000 million (Japanese yen), with a 5-year term, with principal maturing on June 18, 2018 at an issuance rate of 0.837% annually, with biannual interest payments, beginning on December 18, 2013. b) Renewal of and changes in the Board of Directors of Subsidiary BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos: At the Extraordinary Shareholders' Meeting of BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos held on January 15, 2013 the shareholders agreed to renew the Board, leaving it composed as follows: Regular Directors Alternate Directors Juan Carlos Méndez González Jorge Rodríguez Grossi Cristian Wolleter Valderrama Carlos Alberto Curi Cécille Emmanuelle Besse Advani Henri Jean Auguste Coste Rodrigo Ochagavia Ruiz-Tagle María Verónica Hevia Lobo Osvaldo Iturriaga Trucco Dominique Lienart Max Diulius Pascal Biville 41 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 3 - RELEVANT EVENTS At the 16th Ordinary Shareholders' Meeting of BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos held on March 25, 2013 the shareholders unanimously agreed to the distribution and payment of a final cash dividend to the shareholders equivalent to 100% of net profits for 2012. The shareholders at this meeting also agreed to renew the company's Board of Director, leaving it composed as follows: Regular Directors Alternate Directors Rodrigo Ochagavía Ruiz-Tagle Jorge Rodríguez Grossi Cristián Wolleter Valderrama Carlos Alberto Curi Cécille Emmanuelle Besse Advani Henri Jean August Coste Victoria Martínez Ocamica María Verónica Hevia Lobo Osvaldo Iturriaga Trucco Dominique Lienart Max Diulius Pascal Biville At the 188th Ordinary Board of Directors Meeting held on March 25, 2013 the Directors elected Mr. Rodrigo Ochagavía Ruiz-Tagle as Chairman and Mr. Carlos Alberto Curi as Vice-chairman of the company's board. c) Renewal of the Board of Directors at Subsidiary BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A.: On March 18, 2013, at the 5th Extraordinary General Shareholders' Meeting of the company the shareholders agreed to renew the entire Board of Directors. The new Board was elected, leaving it composed as follows: Mr. Roberto Palumbo Ossa, Mr. Carlos Martabit Scaff, Mr. Pablo Iacobelli Del Río, and Mr. José Miguel Saavedra Florez, as regular directors and Mr. Álvaro Cambara Lodigiani, Mr. Juan Paulo Mestre Carmona, Mr. Francisco Ugarte Larraín and Ms. Paulina Miranda Valenzuela, as their respective alternate directors. d) Renewal of and changes in the Board of Directors of Subsidiary Sociedad de Promoción de Productos Bancarios S.A.: At the Ordinary Shareholders' Meeting held on March 21, 2013 to renew the entire Board, the new Board met extraordinarily on April 9, 2013, to designate its Chairman and grant new powers of attorney, leaving it composed as follows: Chairman Director Director : Victoria Martínez Ocamica : María Verónica Hevia Lobo : Alejandro Romero Saccani 42 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 3 - RELEVANT EVENTS (continued) e) Appointment of General Manager at Subsidiary Sociedad de Servicios Transaccionales Caja Vecina S.A.: At Extraordinary Shareholders' Meeting held on February 28, 2013, the directors designated Ms Marta Verónica Jancso Acuña as General Manager, replacing Mr. Jorge Stuardo Luengo. f) Agreements reached in lawsuit with Corporación Nacional de Consumidores y Usuarios: On May 6, 2013, the Bank arrived at an agreement in the lawsuit with Corporación Nacional de Consumidores y Usuarios (CONADECUS), consisting of returning to customers that hold savings accounts without covenant, the maintenance commissions for 2003 to 2011, in the total amount of MCh$5,675. This agreement had no impact on income for the period, since that sum had already been provisioned. g) Capital contribution to the new banking support company: The new banking support company, IMERC-OTC S.A. was established on June 21, 2013 in conjunction with other banks in the Chilean financial system. Its line of business is to operate a centralized registry of operations, providing registry, confirmation, storage, consolidation and reconciliation services for derivative transactions. On July 25, a capital contribution of MCh$1,440 was paid, leaving BancoEstado with an 11.11% interest equivalent to 1,111 shares of that Company. h) Signing of a new Collective Agreement: On June 28, 2013 the new collective agreement was signed between management and the Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de BancoEstado, with a 26-month term, from July 1, 2013 to August 31, 2015. i) Distribution of 2012 profit On July 8, 2013, through Resolution No. 25, the Treasury Department requested that BancoEstado distribute 100% of profits generated in 2012, destining the sum of MCh$95,891 to tax benefit, which was sent to the General Treasury of the Republic in August 2013. j) Resignation of Director of BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa On July 26, 2013, Ms. Isabel Margarita Cabello Silva resigned as Director of BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa, leaving the Board of Directors composed of Messrs. Oscar González Narbona (Chairman), Emiliano Figueroa Sandoval, Antonio Bertrand Hermosilla, Arturo Barrios Almarza and Pedro Cristi Díaz. 43 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 4 - OPERATING SEGMENTS Segmentation criteria: Segment information is structured according to the different lines of business of the Bank, which are based on its organizational structure, products and services offered and the customer segments for which they are intended. Segment information provided is based on monthly reports prepared from information facilitated by a management control information application. The structure of this management information is designed as if each line of business were treated as an autonomous business. The Bank obtains most of its income from interest, readjustments and fees, discounting provisions and expenses. As such, the financial performance of each segment is calculated by applying the following criteria: a) the net interest margin of loans and deposits is measured at an individual transaction level and it corresponds to the difference between the effective rate of the customer and the internal transfer pricing established based on the term and currency of each operations; b) operating expenses are distributed at each area level. The allocation of expenses from operating areas to business segments is carried out using different criteria for allocating expenses, for which specific indicators are defined for the different concepts. Transfer pricing between operating segments is carried out at market values as if they were transactions with third parties. Taxes are managed at a corporate level and are not allocated to the business segments. Segments: The Bank focused its activities on the following major lines of business: Wholesale Banking, which comprises large companies, medium sized companies and institutions. Retail Banking, which includes individuals, small companies and micro companies. Treasury and International, which represents financial and international business. Other Segments, this group comprises corporate concepts, where the assets, liabilities, income and expenses, as applicable, cannot be clearly attributed to any of the lines of business or segment or which are the result of decisions affecting the Bank as a whole. 44 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 4 - OPERATING SEGMENTS (continued) As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 segment income is detailed as follows: a) Income Net income for interest September 30, 2013 Treasury Wholesaler Retail and Banking Banking International Other MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ Total MCh$ Total MUS$ September 30, 2012 Treasury Wholesaler Retail and Banking Banking International Other MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ Total MCh$ 150,200 320,558 (4,013) 53,778 520,523 1,032 135,992 270,899 2,191 46,265 455,347 20,941 6,003 2,506 56 123,041 26 2,257 3,006 1,527 71,744 (17,538) - (1,344) 13 3,643 144,165 77,773 (12,762) 6,705 286 154 (25) 13 18,689 4,255 2,507 149 117,174 1 1,750 3,742 1,602 52,499 4,401 1 (3,360) 346 2,131 134,105 56,755 9,004 6,023 Total operating Income 179,706 448,888 51,720 56,090 736,404 1,460 161,592 393,566 60,694 45,382 661,234 Provisions for loan losses (33,307) (72,172) 230 (59,781) (165,030) (327) (18,698) (84,601) Operating income, net 146,399 376,716 571,374 1,133 142,894 308,965 Operating expense Other operating expenses (417,564) (7,451) (828) (15) (368,573) (10,413) Total operating expenses (425,015) (843) (378,986) 146,359 290 135,629 1,253 2 1,091 147,612 292 136,720 Net fee and commission income Net income from financial operations Foreign exchange transactions, net Other operating income Net operating income Income from investments in companies Income before income taxes 51,950 (3,691) 1,046 (44,366) (146,619) 61,740 1,016 514,615 45 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 4 - OPERATING SEGMENTS (continued) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 the Statement of Financial Position by segment is detailed as follows: Wholesaler Banking MCh$ September 30, 2013 Treasury and International Other MCh$ MCh$ Retail Banking MCh$ Total MCh$ Total MUS$ Wholesaler Banking MCh$ Retail Banking MCh$ December 31, 2012 Treasury and International MCh$ Other MCh$ Total MCh$ ASSETS Cash and due from banks Transactions in the course of collection Financial assets held-for-trading Loans and accounts receivable from customers Financial investments available -for-sale Other assets - - 2,803,826 335,269 1,247,837 - 2,803,826 335,269 1,247,837 5,561 665 2,475 - - 3,528,861 270,114 1,269,674 - 3,528,861 270,114 1,269,674 6,157,305 18,093 95,367 8,153,629 - (96) 2,881,039 471,503 6,939 1,170,971 14,317,777 2,899,132 1,737,841 28,397 5,750 3,447 5,879,773 48,997 88,028 7,647,428 4 2,954,537 498,447 246 967,202 13,527,447 3,003,534 1,553,681 TOTAL ASSETS 6,270,765 8,153,629 7,739,378 1,177,910 23,341,682 46,295 6,016,798 7,647,432 8,521,633 967,448 23,153,311 LIABILITIES Current accounts and other demand deposits Transactions in the course of payments Saving accounts and time deposits Obligations with banks Debt issued instruments Other liabilities 2,960,144 3,831,962 471,052 1,661,281 4,214,157 14,782 42,960 302,363 3,614,314 577,860 3,662,740 106,720 3,909 21,910 769,272 4,668,294 302,363 11,682,343 577,860 3,662,740 1,361,826 9,259 600 23,170 1,146 7,264 2,702 4,404,257 3,157,032 558,450 1,222,040 3,823,574 13,280 42,197 175,276 2,997,232 1,192,023 3,355,645 325,310 284,360 7,016 453,617 5,952,854 175,276 9,984,854 1,192,023 3,355,645 1,350,657 TOTAL LIABILITIES 7,263,158 5,890,220 8,306,957 795,091 22,255,426 44,141 8,119,739 5,058,894 8,087,683 744,993 22,011,309 - - - 1,086,256 1,086,256 2,154 - - - 1,142,002 1,142,002 7,263,158 5,890,220 8,306,957 1,881,347 23,341,682 46,295 8,119,739 5,058,894 8,087,683 1,886,995 23,153,311 EQUITY TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY The “others” column mainly includes the following concepts: a) assets: investments in companies, intangibles assets, property, plant and equipment, deferred taxes and other assets; b) liabilities: current taxes, deferred taxes, provisions and other liabilities. 46 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 5 – CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS a) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, balances included in cash and cash equivalents and their reconciliation with the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Cash and due from banks Cash Deposits in the Chilean Central Bank Deposits in domestic Banks Foreign Deposit 533 2,518 2 2,507 268,932 1,269,822 1,043 1,264,029 332,330 2,612,668 318 583,545 Subtotal Cash and due from banks 5,560 2,803,826 3,528,861 65 286 201 32,906 144,447 101,187 94,838 127,877 100,638 6,112 3,082,366 3,852,214 Transactions in the course of collection High liquidity financial instruments (1) Repurchase contracts (2) Total cash and cash equivalents (1) Corresponds to instruments held for trading and investment securities available-for-sale with little risk of change in value, maturing in 90 days or less from the date of acquisition. Highly liquid financial instruments 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Time deposits Mutual fund units Note Central Bank Mutual fund 15 1 186 7,491 539 93,705 87,188 16,012 22,115 Subtotal financial assets held-for-trading 202 101,735 125,315 Time deposits Note Central Bank 28 56 14,106 28,606 2,465 97 Subtotal financial investments available-for-sale 84 42,712 2,562 286 144,447 127,877 Financial assets held-for-trading Financial investments available-for-sale Total 47 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 5 – CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS (continued) (2) Corresponds to repurchase agreements in identical situation as that stated in the previous point. As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank presents balances corresponding to mandatory reserves which are not available to be used in the amount of MCh$504,941 and MCh$449,195, respectively as part of its cash and deposits in the Chilean Central Bank. The level of cash funds and amounts held in deposits at the Chilean Central Bank is due to regulations on mandatory cash reserves that the Bank must maintain on average, which are measured monthly. b) Transactions in the course of settlement Transactions in the course of being settled correspond to transactions only pending settlement, which will increase or decrease the funds in the Chilean Central Bank or in foreign banks, normally within the following 12 or 24 business hours. As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, these transactions are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Assets Outstanding notes from other Banks (clearing) Accounts receivables 66 599 33,020 302,249 92,681 177,433 Subtotal assets 665 335,269 270,114 Liabilities Accounts payables 600 302,363 175,276 Subtotal liabilities 600 302,363 175,276 65 32,906 94,838 Net transactions in the course of collection 48 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 6 – PORTFOLIO SALES In the period as of September 30, 2013, BancoEstado has not sold loan portfolios. As of December 31, 2012, BancoEstado sold part of the portfolio of the Stated Guaranteed University Loans ("CUGE") in the framework of the public bid on Financial and Administration Service for Higher Education Studies Law No. 20,027. The bid model open to financial institutions is included in the respective tender documents, and allows the selling of a percentage of the portfolio to third parties. Regarding the sold portfolio, BancoEstado substantially transferred all the risks and benefits associated to that portfolio, maintaining only its administration service, which considers the generation of new loans and collection of loan installments. Loans sold are detailed as follows: Sales December 31, 2012 Number of transactions Bid lists New credits based on prior years lists Others 40,846 9,416 - Par value MCh$ 52,596 15,589 - Totals 50,262 68,185 Sale value MCh$ 65,283 20,718 - Release of provisions MCh$ (2,677) (710) - Gain on sale MCh$ 5,839 - Income received in advance MCh$ 15,364 - 86,001 (3,387) 5,839 15,364 (*) Income received in advance is reflected in other liabilities under unearned income and will be taken to income once the term of determined is established. 49 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 7 – PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, property, plant and equipment movements by class are detailed as follows: September 30, 2013 Property and plant MCh$ Equipment Others Total Total MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MUS$ Cost Balance as of January 1, 2013 Additions Withdrawals / Disposals Assets in transit Others 214,496 2,818 (1,568) 5,581 10 89,904 4,978 (23) 2,301 14 40,983 10,807 (471) (7,882) (5) 345,383 18,603 (2,062) 19 685 37 (4) - Subtotal 221,337 97,174 43,432 361,943 718 Accumulated depreciation (22,003) (74,378) (18,755) (115,136) (228) Property, plant and equipment, net balances as of September 30, 2013 199,334 22,796 24,677 246,807 490 December 31, 2012 Property and plant MCh$ Equipment Others Total MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ Cost Balance as of January 1, 2012 Additions Withdrawals / Disposals Impairment Assets in transit Others 199,568 154 (233) 15,007 - 87,476 515 (324) 2,237 - 40,248 28,734 (485) (27,514) - 327,292 29,403 (1,042) (10,270) - Subtotal 214,496 89,904 40,983 345,383 Accumulated depreciation Property, plant and equipment, net balances as of December 31, 2012 (20,765) (66,508) (17,079) (104,352) 193,731 23,396 23,904 241,031 50 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 8 – DEBT INSTRUMENTS ISSUED AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, debt instruments issued and other obligations are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Debt issued instruments: Bills of exchange Ordinary bonds Subordinated bonds 2,309 3,733 1,222 1,164,167 1,882,048 616,525 1,278,888 1,550,083 526,674 Subtotal 7,264 3,662,740 3,355,645 Other Financial Obligations: Obligations public sector Other local obligations Borrowings abroad 108 - 54,373 - 19,921 - Subtotal 108 54,373 19,921 7,372 3,717,113 3,375,566 Total 51 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 8 – DEBT INSTRUMENTS ISSUED AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS (continued) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 bonds issued are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 ORDINARY BONDS Series BEST-D0807 BEST-F1007 BEST-H1207 BESTA30400 BESTJ20708 BESTJ31008 BESTJ41008 BESTJ50109 BESTJ60109 BESTJ70112 BESTJ80112 Subtotal UF Bonds Series Foreign currency bonds Foreign currency bonds Foreign currency bonds Foreign currency bonds Subtotal US$ Bonds Series Foreign currency bonds Subtotal ¥ Bonds UF issued 6,000,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 3,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 40,000,000 UF placement 6,000,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 3,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 40,000,000 Issuance date Maturity date 08-01-2007 10-01-2007 12-01-2007 04-01-2000 07-01-2008 10-01-2008 10-01-2008 01-01-2009 01-01-2009 01-01-2012 01-01-2012 08-01-2017 10-01-2027 12-01-2017 04-01-2025 07-01-2018 10-01-2018 10-01-2028 01-01-2019 01-01-2029 01-01-2017 01-01-2032 US$ issued US$ placement Issuance date Maturity date 500,000,000 500,000,000 500,000,000 200,000,000 1,700,000,000 500,000,000 500,000,000 500,000,000 200,000,000 1,700,000,000 10-07-2010 02-08-2012 11-05-2012 05-07-2013 10-07-2020 02-08-2022 11-092017 11-09-2017 ¥ issued ¥ placement Issuance date Maturity date 24,000,000,000 24,000,000,000 24,000,000,000 24,000,000,000 06-11-2013 06-18-2018 Issuance rate Original currency Balance due MCh$ Balance due MUS$ 4.00% 4.25% 4.00% 6.50% 3.50% 3.50% 4.00% 3.50% 4.00% 3.50% 3.75% 6,069,570.84 2,125,834.64 4,130,514.16 2,202,095.52 2,939,891.57 4,968,794.42 1,942,598.78 5,044,118.58 1,974,816.87 5,081,457.45 3,073,374.01 39,553,066.85 140,153 49,088 95,378 50,849 67,885 114,734 44,857 116,474 45,600 117,336 70,967 913,321 278 97 189 101 135 227 89 231 90 233 141 1,811 Issuance rate 4.13% 3.88% 2.00% 2.00% Original currency 503,899,739 484,538,061 489,202,552 200,836,413 1,678,476,766 Balance due MCh$ 254,066 244,304 246,656 101,262 846,288 Balance due MUS$ 504 485 489 201 1,679 Issuance rate 0.84% Original currency Balance due MCh$ Balance due MUS$ 23,892,821,507 23,892,821,507 Total Ordinary Bonds 122,439 122,439 243 243 1,882,048 3,733 SUBORDINATED BONDS Series UEST-A0799 UEST-B0603 UEST-C0405 UEST-D0106 UEST-E0806 UEST-F0207 UEST-I0308 UESTI20110 UESTL10111 UESTL20711 UESTL30112 Total Subordinated Bonds Total UF issued 4,000,000 2,500,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 28,500,000 UF placement 4,000,000 2,500,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 28,500,000 Issuance date Maturity date Issuance rate Original currency 07-01-1999 06-01-2003 04-01-2005 01-01-2006 08-01-2006 02-01-2007 03-01-2008 01-01-2010 01-01-2011 07-01-2011 01-01-2012 07-01-2024 06-01-2025 04-01-2027 01-01-2031 08-01-2031 08-01-2031 03-01-2033 01-01-2038 01-01-2041 07-01-2041 01-01-2042 6.50% 4.80% 4.50% 4.50% 4.50% 4.00% 4.00% 4.50% 4.00% 4.00% 4.00% 2,716,635.33 1,887,998.59 3,625,981.96 1,858,964.31 2,407,659.02 2,422,026.10 1,949,798.49 3,375,572.02 2,081,318.74 2,184,075.55 2,189,733.79 26,699,763.90 Balance due MCh$ Balance due MUS$ 62,730 43,596 83,728 42,925 55,595 55,927 45,023 77,945 48,060 50,433 50,563 616,525 2,498,573 124 87 166 85 110 111 89 155 95 100 100 1,222 4,955 52 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 8 – DEBT INSTRUMENTS ISSUED AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS (continued) 12/31/2012 ORDINARY BONDS Series BEST-D0807 BEST-F1007 BEST-H1207 BESTA30400 BESTJ10708 BESTJ20708 BESTJ31008 BESTJ41008 BESTJ50109 BESTJ60109 Subtotal UF Bonds Series Foreign currency bonds Foreign currency bonds Foreign currency bonds Subtotal US$ Bonds UF issued 6,000,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 37,000,000 US$ issued 500,000,000 500,000,000 500,000,000 1,500,000,000 UF placement 6,000,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 37,000,000 US$ placement 500,000,000 500,000,000 500,000,000 1,500,000,000 Issuance date Maturity date 08/01|/2007 10/01/2007 12/01/2007 04/01/2000 07/01/2008 07/01/2008 10/01/2008 10/01/2008 01/01/2009 01/01/2009 08/01/2017 10/01/2027 12/01/2017 04/01/2025 07/01/2013 07/01/2018 10/01/2018 10/01/2028 01/01/2019 01/01/2029 Issuance date Maturity date 10/07/2010 02/08/2012 11/05/2012 10/07/2020 02/08/2022 11/09/2017 Issuance rate 4.00% 4.25% 4.00% 6.50% 3.10% 3.50% 3.50% 4.00% 3.50% 4.00% Issuance rate 4.13% 3.88% 2.00% Balance due MCh$ 140,121 48,156 93,748 50,699 115,807 67,476 112,214 43,847 116,227 45,531 833,826 Original currency 6,134,694,78 2,108,350,07 4,104,399,05 2,219,675,66 5,070,214,07 2,954,185,47 4,912,892,81 1,919,668,25 5,088,593,53 1,993,416,17 36,506,089,84 Balance due MCH$ 238,713 238,692 238,852 716,257 Original currency 493,228,848 499,381,875 499,714,866 1,492,325,589 Total Ordinary Bonds 1,550,083 SUBORDINATED BONDS Series UEST-A0799 UEST-B0603 UEST-C0405 UEST-D0106 UEST-E0806 UEST-F0207 UEST-I0308 UESTI20110 UESTL10111 Total Subordinated Bonds UF issued 4,000,000 2,500,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 24,500,000 UF placement 4,000,000 2,500,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 2,500,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 24,500,000 Issuance date Maturity date 07/01/1999 06/01/2003 04/01/2005 01/01/2006 08/01/2006 02/01/2007 03/01/2008 01/01/2010 01/01/2011 07/01/2024 06/01/2025 04/01/2027 01/01/2031 08/01/2031 08/01/2031 03/01/2033 01/01/2038 01/01/2041 Issuance rate 6.50% 4.80% 4.50% 4.50% 4.50% 4.00% 4.00% 4.50% 4.00% Balance due MCh$ 66,823 43,740 84,117 44,527 57,610 57,982 45,719 78,038 48,118 526,674 Original currency 2,925,599,00 1,915,017,05 3,682,781,50 1,949,448,66 2,522,231,86 2,538,536,43 2,001,637,17 3,416,632,18 2,106,653,81 23,058,537,66 Total 2,076,758 53 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 9 – PROVISIONS As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, provisions are detailed as follows: a) Provisions Employee benefits and remunerations provision Distribution of net income provision Credit risk on contingent loans provision Additional provision (*) Country risk provisions Total 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ 233 143 57 566 1 117,349 72,118 28,909 285,393 495 100,598 41,472 23,685 240,188 640 1,000 504,264 406,583 (*) Includes additional provisions in the amount of MCh$277,700 as of September 30, 2013 (MCh$225,851 as of December 31, 2012) b) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 the movement of provisions is detailed as follows: Employee benefits and remunerations Contingent credit risks Provisions for contingencies Other provisions Total Total MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ MUS$ Balances at January 1, 2013 Provisions established Applied provisions Release of provisions Other movements 100,598 36,383 (7,348) (12,283) (1) 23,685 11,544 (6,319) (1) 240,188 52,064 (6,859) - 42,112 72,577 (42,076) - 406,583 172,568 (62,602) (12,283) (2) 806 342 (124) (24) - Balances at September 30, 2013 117,349 28,909 285,393 72,613 504,264 1,000 Balances at January 1, 2012 Transitory assets effect (*) Provisions established Applied provisions Release of provisions Other movements 92,516 44,458 (22,277) (14,081) (18) 17,874 20,762 (14,941) (10) 160,259 57,576 113,280 (1,025) (89,902) - 68,153 629 (19,241) (7,480) 51 338,802 57,576 179,129 (57,484) (111,463) 23 Balances at December 31, 2012 100,598 23,685 240,188 42,112 406,583 (*) Includes transitory assets in the amount of MCh$57,576 which were netted as per Note 1.u.4) 54 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 9 – PROVISIONS (continued) c) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, provisions for employment benefits and payroll are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Severance indemnity provision Severance benefit provision Provision for other employee benefits Vacation provision 153 33 47 76,958 16,776 23,615 65,227 12,137 23,234 Total 233 117,349 100,598 d) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, termination benefits are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Present value of liabilities at beginning of year Increase in provision Advanced payments Applied provisions Rerelease of provisions Effects for discount rate Others 129 36 (11) (1) - 65,227 17,922 (5,832) (359) - 60,428 10,274 (3,786) (1,681) (8) Total 153 76,958 65,227 55 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 9 – PROVISIONS (continued) e) Additional provisions Additional provisions (included under the concept of contingencies provisions) are destined to cover countercyclical adverse effects on the Bank's businesses and concentration risks. As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, movements of additional provisions are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Balance as of January, 1 Transitory assets effect (*) Provision established Rerelease of provisions 448 103 - 225,851 51,849 - 145,393 57,576 95,200 (72,318) Total 551 277,700 225,851 (*) Includes transitory assets in the amount of MCh$57,576 which were netted as per Note 1.u.4) The effects for the period are recorded in the Interim Consolidated Income Statement under “Provisions for loan losses”. 56 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 10 – CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS a) Commitments and responsibilities recorded in memorandum accounts: The Bank, its New York Branch and Subsidiaries, hold the following balances related to commitments and responsibilities arising from its normal line of business in memorandum accounts: 09/30/2013 MUS$ Contingent Loans Guarantee and deposits: Guarantees and deposits in local currency Guarantees and deposits in foreign currency Confirmed foreign letters of credit Issued documented letters of credit Performance bonds Interbank letters of credit Immediately available lines of credit Amount of committed credits and not placed Other credit commitments Credits for higher education Law No. 20,027 Others Other contingent credits Operations on account of third parties Collections: Foreign collections Local collections Placement or sale of financial instruments: Placement of securities for public bid Sale of letters of credit of bank operations Sales of other instruments Financial assets transferred to and managed by the Bank: Assets assigned to Insurance companies Securitized assets Other assets assigned to third parties Third party resources managed by the Bank Financial assets administrated on behalf of third parties Other assets administrated on behalf of third parties Financial assets acquired Other assets acquired Security held in custody Securities held in custody of the bank Securities held in custody deposited in another entity Securities issued by the bank: Promissory notes of time deposits Letters of credit for sale Other documents Commitment Guarantees for underwriting operations Commitments for assets purchase Total 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ 197 223 105 1,366 1,493 1,550 1,042 - 99,243 112,576 53,176 688,741 752,858 781,300 525,232 - 128,342 75,411 90,840 619,755 779,026 542,731 594,479 - 17 135 8,738 67,951 11,302 66,876 - - - - - - 2,809 - 1,416,341 - 1,230,454 - 1,674 5,476 844,012 2,760,754 793,367 4,455,718 5,226 2 - 2,634,803 917 - 1,865,608 917 - - - - 21,315 10,746,642 11,254,826 57 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 10 – CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS (continued) b) Lawsuits and legal proceedings: b.1.) Normal legal contingencies of the industry: As of the date of issuance of these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements, there are several legal proceedings that have been filed against the Bank, its New York Branch and its Subsidiaries in relation to normal operations in its line of business. According to management and based on the advice of its legal counsel, the Bank has recorded the provisions it deems appropriate to cover potential losses not contemplated by the Bank, New York Branch and its Subsidiaries. As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank and its Subsidiaries have provisions for this concept in the amount of MCh$3,369 and MCh$9,985, respectively; which form part of “provisions” in the Interim Consolidated Statement of Financial Position. Lawsuits and provisions by type are detailed as follows: TYPE b.2.) September 30, 2013 N° Provision Amount MCh$ December 31, 2012 N° Provision Amount MCh$ Provision Amount MUS$ Labor Civil 60 386 478 2,891 1 6 34 357 859 9,126 Total 446 3,369 7 391 9,985 Contingencies due to significant lawsuits at Courts of Justice: As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank, New York Branch and Subsidiaries do not have contingencies due to significant lawsuits in courts, which affect or could affect these Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. c) Operating guarantees granted: 09/30/2013 09/30/2013 12/31/2012 MUS$ MCh$ MCh$ Financial assets in guarantee CCLV (compensation and clearing company) Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago Shares in guarantee for the Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago 13 6,728 5,558 26 12,939 10,556 Total 39 19,667 16,114 58 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 10 – CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS (continued) BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. • Guarantee on transactions and third party liability: In accordance with Article No. 58 of Decree Law No. 251, as of September 30, 2013, Subsidiary BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. has a guarantee deposit which covers possible damages that might affect it as a consequence of infractions of the law, regulations and complementary standards that regulate insurance brokers, and especially when the noncompliance arises from acts, errors and omissions of the broker its representatives, managers or dependents participating in the brokerage. Guarantee information is detailed as follows: Number Amount Issuer Purpose : : : : Effective : 6773877 U.F. 60,000 BancoEstado To guarantee any present or future creditors that it may have pursuant to its brokerage operations and for the exclusive purpose of being used under the terms of Article No. 58 D.F.L. No. 251 dated 1931. Until April 14, 2014. BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa • Operating guarantees: In order to comply with the obligation of transaction guarantees established in Article No. 30 of Law No. 18,045, Subsidiary BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa has purchased insurance policy No. 212103605 from Compañía de Seguros de Crédito Continental S.A. for a value of UF 20,000, valid from April 22, 2012, to April 22, 2014, with Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago, Bolsa de Valores as the representative of the beneficiaries of the guarantee. BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa has established a first priority pledge on its share of Bolsa de Comercio de Santiago, Bolsa de Valores, in order to guarantee faithful and timely performance of its obligations owed to that institution. In addition, it has established a second priority pledge in favor of all stock brokers to secure its obligations with them. 59 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 10 – CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS (continued) BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa has purchased comprehensive broker insurance from Chartis Chile Compañía de Seguros Generales S.A. Policy No. 0020058287 for officer fidelity, with an insured sum of US$10,000,000 in force until January 31, 2014. BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos: • Operating guarantees In compliance with Articles No. 226 and No. 227 of Law No. 18,045, Subsidiary BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos, designated Banco del Estado de Chile as representative of the beneficiaries of the guarantees it has established. The guarantee deposits established are detailed as follows: Fondo Solidez BECH Fondo Mutuo Corporativo BancoEstado Fondo Mutuo Solvente BancoEstado Fondo Mutuo Compromiso BancoEstado Fondo Mutuo Conveniencia BancoEstado Fondo Mutuo Protección BancoEstado Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado Acciones Nacionales Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado BNP Paribas Renta Emergente Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado BNP Paribas Acciones Emergentes Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado BNP Paribas Acciones Desarrolladas Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado BNP Paribas Más Renta Bicentenario Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado Perfil Dinámico A Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado Perfil Tradicional C Fondo Mutuo BancoEstado Perfil Moderado E Currency Amount Start Date Maturity date UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF UF 10,000.00 77,734.67 139,673.95 28,621.76 17,215.10 27,935.44 12,437.14 10,000.00 10,000.00 10,000.00 10,000.00 10,000.00 10,000.00 10,000.00 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/09/2013 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 01/10/2014 d) Contingent loans and liabilities: To satisfy the needs of customers, the Bank acquired several irrevocable commitments and contingent liabilities, although these obligations could not be recognized in the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements, these contain credit risks and are therefore part of the Bank's global risk, as indicated in letter a) of this note. 60 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 10 – CONTINGENCIES AND COMMITMENTS (continued) The contractual amounts of the transactions that obligate the Bank to grant loans and the amount of the provisions established for the credit risk assumed are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ Guarantees and deposits Document letter of credit Performance bonds Amounts available for users of credit card Amount of committed credits and not placed Credits for higher education Law No. 20,027 Provisions established 197 328 1,366 1,493 1,042 1,550 (57) 99,243 165,752 688,741 752,858 525,232 781,300 (28,909) 128,342 166,251 619,755 779,026 594,479 542,731 (23,685) Total 5,919 2,984,217 2,806,899 NOTE 11 - PERSONNEL EXPENSES a) As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 employee payroll and expenses are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 09/30/2012 MCh$ Personnel remunerations Bonuses or other benefits Severance indemnity Training expenses Welfare expenses Other personnel expenses 337 51 37 4 31 27 170,070 25,903 18,445 1,733 15,783 13,424 154,006 31,961 9,509 1,707 15,021 12,048 Total 487 245,358 224,252 b) Employee benefits plans: As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012 the Bank and Subsidiaries maintain the following employee benefits: Employee vacations: The annual cost of vacations and employee benefits is recognized on an accrual basis. 61 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 11 - PERSONNEL EXPENSES (continued) Current benefits Current benefits are composed mainly of incentives to fulfill commercial goals and obtaining operating efficiencies. These benefits are: • Individual performance bonus: provides a sum of money to each employee on the basis of a polynomial that conjugates compliance with Bank and individual goals, and employee income. • Corporate bonus: defines a percentage of the monthly Bank payroll to be distributed equally among all Bank employees. It is based on compliance of commercial goals and operating efficiencies. In addition the Bank has agreed with its employees on a collective negotiation bonus, which is amortized over the term of the collective contract and the unamortized part is recorded under other assets. Non-current benefits Non-current benefits are benefits accrued by the Bank as established by Law and/or the existence of implicit obligations derived from the current collective agreement, signed on June 28, 2013, which was signed for a term of 26 months. The methodology used to determine the provision for all its employees uses actuarial assumptions which consider variables such as turnover rate, mortality rates, remuneration increases, probability of use of the benefit based on the accumulated benefits valuation method or accrued cost of the benefit method. This methodology is established in IAS 19. The benefits are detailed as follows: • Termination benefits: affects all the Bank's employees. The Bank estimates that employees will stay with the Bank until their retirement age (60 years for women and 65 years for men) and consequently establishes provisions, depending on the probability of occurrence for events such as resignation, death, termination or retirement during their employment at the Bank. All this in accordance with legal standards and current collective agreement. • Seniority awards: affects all the Bank's employees. This award to permanence at the Bank grants a percentage of income at each permanence benchmark. These are at 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40 and 45 years of service. 62 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 11 - PERSONNEL EXPENSES (continued) • Retirement savings: affect all employees with indefinite employment contracts who joined the Bank after August 14, 1981 and are not affiliated to the unemployment insurance contemplated in Law No. 19,728. This benefit establishes a retirement savings program in the form of self-insurance that will contribute a salary plus bonus with a limit of U.F. 90 for every 36 months of effective contribution in the mentioned program. • Additional retirement plan benefits: affects all employees entitled to the plan established by the collective agreement. The early and voluntary discharge benefit for all female employees between 55 and 60 years; and male employees between 58 and 64 years that increase termination benefits by a percentage based on the age range. Social security benefits refer to health insurance plans and life insurance for a period of 24 months, and scholarships during the current schooling cycle (preschool, elementary school, high school and university) of its students. Actuarial assumptions Actuarial assumptions used to calculate the aforementioned non-current commitments in accordance with IFRS are detailed as follows: • Mortality and incapacity: uses mortality table RV-2009 issued by the Superintendency of Securities and Insurance. • Turnover rates (resignations and company needs): calculated on the basis of historical values recorded at the company, which records events occurred between 2010-2012. • Discount rate: is determined on the basis of the BCU (rate of Central Bank of Chile bonds in Unidades de Fomento) at 5, 10 and 20 years plus a spread equivalent to the cost of bond issuances or high quality corporate bonds or obligations over the indicated rate. As of September 30, 2013 real annual discount rates used are 3.04%, 3.07% and 3.26% respectively (3.13% BCU 10 years as of September 30, 2012). • Remuneration increase: historical estimates of an annual rate of 2%. • Retirement age: in accordance with current labor standards, 60 and 65 years for women and men, respectively. There is no corporate practice of advancing employee benefits. 63 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 11 - PERSONNEL EXPENSES (continued) As of September 30, 2013, movements of actuarial provisions are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MCh$ Changes obligations Initial value of the obligation Cost of current service Interest cost Change of others - the current value Actuarial gains and losses From experience or actual behavior By rotation rate resignation For pay turnover For wage growth rate For discount rate For mortality By changing parameters or hypotheses By rotation rate resignation For pay turnover For wage growth rate For discount rate For other Benefits paid during the year Currency adjustments Obligations at end of period 09/30/2013 MUS$ 65,227 7,570 1,689 8,304 129 15 3 18 (312) 163 590 (2) (174) 1 - (548) 8,587 (1) 18 (5,832) - (12) - 76,958 153 64 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 12 – TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES In accordance with the provisions of the General Banking Law and the instructions set forth by the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Institutions, individuals or legal entities are considered to be associated when they are involved in the ownership or management of the institution directly or indirectly through third parties. a) Group entities (consolidated in the financial statements) September 30, 2013 Direct Indirect Total Company and/or branch abroad BancoEstado S.A. Corredores de Bolsa BancoEstado Corredores de Seguros S.A. BancoEstado Servicios de Cobranza S.A. BancoEstado S.A. Administradora General de Fondos BancoEstado Contacto 24 Horas S.A. BancoEstado Microempresas S.A. Asesorías Financieras Sociedad de Servicios Transaccionales Caja Vecina S.A. BancoEstado Centro de Servicios S.A. Sociedad de Promoción de Productos Bancarios S.A. BancoEstado - New York Branch 99.9996% 50.1000% 99.9000% 50.0100% 99.9000% 99.9000% 99.8500% 99.9000% 99.8300% 100.0000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1500% 0.1000% 0.1700% - Direct 99.9996% 50.1000% 100.0000% 50.0100% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% December 31, 2012 Indirect Total 99.9996% 50.1000% 99.9000% 50.0100% 99.9000% 99.9000% 99.8500% 99.9000% 99.8300% 100.0000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1000% 0.1500% 0.1000% 0.1700% - 99.9996% 50.1000% 100.0000% 50.0100% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% 100.0000% b) Loans with related parties Loans and accounts receivable, contingent loans and assets corresponding to trading and investing instruments associated to related entities are detailed as follows: Productive Companies MCh$ Loans and receivables Commercial loans Mortgage loans Consumer loans Gross loans Allowance for loan losses Loans, net Contingent credits: Total contingent credits Allowance for contingent loans Contingent loans, net Acquired instruments: For negotiation For investment September 30, 2013 Productive Investment Investment Companies Companies Companies MUS$ MCh$ MUS$ 102,255 - 203 - 102,255 (609) Natural Persons MCh$ Natural Persons MUS$ December 31, 2012 Productive Investment Natural Companies Companies Persons MCh$ MCh$ MCh$ 9 - - 370 5,225 613 1 10 1 114,614 - 13 - 290 4,468 439 203 9 - 6,208 12 (1) (1) - (37) - 114,614 13 5,197 (253) (1) (25) 101,646 202 8 - 6,171 12 114,361 12 5,172 86,188 (217) 171 - 17,867 (224) 35 - 292 (4) 1 - 174,866 (395) 12,897 (134) 350 (3) 85,972 171 17,643 35 288 1 174,471 12,763 347 - - - - - - - - - 65 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 12 – TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES (continued) c) Other assets and liabilities with related parties 09/30/2013 MUS$ Assets Other Assets Liabilities Financial derivative contracts Demand deposits Deposits and other loans Other liabilities 09/30/2013 MCh$ 12/31/2012 MCh$ - 37 11 138 318 - 69,583 160,423 2 2,195 170,708 17 d) Income from transactions with related parties Type of income or expense Income MCh$ September 30, 2013 Income Expense MUS$ MCh$ Expense MUS$ September 30, 2012 Income Expense MCh$ MCh$ Interest income (expense) Income (expense) from commissions and services Income (loss) from negotiation Income (loss) from other financial transactions Exchange differences Expenses from operational support Other expenses 4,921 430 14 - 10 1 - (252) (1,340) (18) (1) (3) - 4,846 386 70 - (134) (752) (842) Total 5,366 11 (1,610) (4) 5,302 (1,728) 66 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 12 – TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES (continued) e) Contracts with related parties Contracts with related parties September 30, 2013 Type of Contract December 31, 2012 Type of Contract Lease of office Back office services Computational support Compensation chamber service - Lease of office Computational support Computational support Compensation chamber service Unlock bank-cards Unlock bank-cards Lease of office - Lease of office Inserts service Checkbook services Notary fees Transportation of securities 1) Contracts over UF 1,000 Isapre Fundación Operadora de Tarjetas de Crédito Nexus S. A. Transbank S. A. Sociedad Operadora Camara Compensación Pago Alto Valor S.A. Administrador Financiero Transantiago 2) Contracts less than UF 1,000 Administrador Financiero Transantiago Fundación Asistencial y de Salud Operadora de Tarjetas de Crédito Nexus S. A. Operadora de Tarjetas de Crédito Nexus S. A. Comercial Dimobili Transbank S. A. f) Payments to the Board of Directors and key management employees As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 remunerations received by key management employees are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 MUS$ 09/30/2013 MCh$ 09/30/2012 MCh$ Short term benefits to employees Staff severance indemnities 5 - 2,534 156 2,800 24 Total 5 2,690 2,824 67 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 12 – TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES (continued) g) Key employees As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the Bank's key employees are detailed as follows: September 30, 2013 December 31, 2012 Number of executives 1 1 4 2 1 1 1 7 8 Number of executives 1 1 4 2 1 1 1 7 8 26 26 Position Chairman Vice President Director Labor Director General Manager Chief Attorney Controller Area Managers General Managers of Subsidiaries Total h) Transactions with key employees and their related parties As of September 30, 2013 and 2012, the Bank has performed transactions with key employees and their related parties, whose results are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 Income of key executives and related parties MCh$ 09/30/2013 Income of key executives and related parties MUS$ 09/30/2012 Income of key executives and related parties MCh$ Credit cards and other services Loans Guarantees Mortgage credits Others 139 3,008 48 6 - 310 4,022 74 Total 3,195 6 4,406 68 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE In general, “fair value” is understood to be the price that a financial instrument has, at a specific moment in time, in a free and voluntary transaction between interested parties, who are duly informed and independent from each other. For financial instruments without available market prices, fair values have been estimated using current values or other valuation techniques. These techniques are significantly affected by the assumptions used, including the discount rate. In this sense, the fair value estimates of certain financial assets and liabilities, cannot be justified by comparison to independent markets and, in many cases cannot be made at immediate placement. In addition, the fair value estimates presented below do not have the intention of estimating the fair value of the Bank’s profits generated by its current or future business activities, and therefore do not represent the Bank’s value as a going concern. The methods used to estimate fair value of financial instruments are detailed below: a) Cash and due from banks: The carrying amount of cash and bank deposits approximates their estimated fair value due to their current nature. b) Transactions in the course of collection (assets and liabilities): The carrying amount of transactions with foreign exchange approximates their estimated value due to their current nature. c) Financial investments and bonds issued: The estimated fair value of these financial instruments was determined using market values at prices quoted in the market for financial instruments with similar characteristics. d) Loans and accounts receivable from customers, loans and advances to banks, deposits and other obligations, letters of credit issued, agreements and other debts: The fair values of these financial instruments are estimated using the analysis of cash flow discounts, derived from the settlement of contractual cash flows for each of them, at a market discount rate, which considers credit risk, when applicable. 69 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE (continued) e) Derivative instruments The fair value of derivatives represents the estimated amount that the Bank and its Subsidiaries expect to receive or pay to rescind the contracts and agreements, keeping in mind current interest rates and prices. Regarding the fair value of derivatives the Bank performs contrast price adjustment and adjustments for counterparty credit risk. In the case of contrast price adjustments (bid/ask) the Bank takes market information and incorporates it in the rate curves when assessing. For counterparty credit risk adjustments the Bank applies the criteria defined for the “normal compliance” portfolio, one takes the counterparty credit exposure and applies the expected loss factor on the fair value and it is recorded as goodwill in the Consolidated Income Statement for the Period. 70 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE (continued) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, estimated fair values of financial instruments are detailed as follows: 09/30/2013 Carrying amount MCh$ Carrying amount MUS$ Estimated fair value MCh$ 12/31/2012 Estimated fair value MUS$ (Loss) gain not recognized MCh$ (Loss) gain not recognized MUS$ Carrying amount MCh$ Estimated fair value MCh$ (Loss) gain not recognized MCh$ Assets Cash and due from bank Transactions in the course of collection Financial assets held-for-trading Repurchase agreements and security loans Financial derivative contracts Loans and advance to banks Loans and accounts receivables from customers Financial investments available-for-sale Financial investment held to maturity Total 2,803,826 335,269 1,247,837 101,187 110,538 298,996 14,317,777 2,899,132 56,149 22,170,711 5,561 665 2,475 201 219 593 28,397 5,750 111 43,972 2,803,826 335,269 1,247,837 101,158 110,538 281,676 16,378,601 2,899,132 51,755 24,209,792 5,561 665 2,475 201 219 559 32,484 5,750 103 48,017 (29) (17,320) 2,060,824 (4,394) 2,039,081 (34) 4,087 (9) 4,044 3,528,861 270,114 1,269,674 100,638 128,140 299,173 13,527,447 3,003,534 58,220 22,185,801 3,528,861 270,114 1,269,674 100,638 128,140 322,593 15,340,363 3,003,534 58,220 24,022,137 23,420 1,812,916 1,836,336 Liabilities Current accounts and other demand deposits Transactions in the course of payment Repurchase agreements and security loans Saving accounts and time deposits Financial derivative contracts Obligations with banks Debt issued instruments Other financial liabilities Total 4,668,294 302,363 413,800 11,682,343 95,477 577,860 3,662,740 54,373 21,457,250 9,259 600 821 23,170 189 1,146 7,264 108 42,557 4,668,294 302,363 413,481 12,371,601 95,477 604,961 3,359,392 54,361 21,869,930 9,259 600 820 24,537 189 1,200 6,663 108 43,376 319 (689,258) (27,101) 303,348 12 (412,680) 1 (1,367) (54) 602 (818) 5,952,854 175,276 520,344 9,984,854 99,755 1,192,023 3,355,645 19,921 21,300,672 5,952,854 175,276 520,342 10,551,736 99,755 1,236,606 3,145,799 19,896 21,702,264 2 (566,882) (44,583) 209,846 25 (401,592) "Loans and advance to banks" and "Loans and accounts receivable from customers" are valued using market rates, discounting the credit risk provision, if applicable. 71 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE (continued) Fair value measurement and hierarchy IFRS 7 establishes a fair value hierarchy, which prioritizes the entry of valuation techniques used to measure fair value. The hierarchy gives top priority to unadjusted prices quoted in active markets for identical assets and liabilities (level 1 measurements) and the lowest priority to measurements that imply important non-observable entries (level 3 measurements). The three levels of fair value hierarchy are detailed as follows: • Level 1: entries with quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets and liabilities, which the Bank has the capacity to access as of the measurement date. • Level 2: entries other than quoted prices included in level 1, which are directly or indirectly observable for assets or liabilities. • Level 3: non-observable entries for assets or liabilities. Banco Estado applies models recognized and validated in the financial industry to valuate financial instruments. Fixed income instruments (IRF) and financial brokerage instruments (IIF) are valued applying the model developed by DICTUC S.A., Subsidiary of Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, which basically consists of valuating instruments in portfolio with real transaction prices. Should there be no prices for a specific instrument; the Price Reference Model is applied based on all information available on transactions for the day and all historical information recorded in the Santiago Stock Exchange. In the case of derivative instruments, the methodology applied corresponds to currency rate factors obtained from valid market sources and modeled using a 6-factor Svenson model, obtaining the rate curve with daily periodicity for each currency and term and market where the Bank operates. 72 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE (continued) As of September 30, 2013 and December 31, 2012, the assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurrent basis, are detailed as follows: September 30, 2013 Fair value measurements Total MCh$ Total MUS$ Prices in active markets for identical assets Prices in active markets for identical assets (level 1) MCh$ (level 1) MUS$ Other significant input observable (level 2) MCh$ Other significant input observable (level 2) MUS$ Significant input nonobservable Significant input nonobservable (level 3) MCh$ (level 3) MUS$ ASSETS Financial assets held for trading Financial derivative contracts Financial investments available for sale 1,247,837 110,538 2,899,132 2,475 219 5,750 284,461 562,877 564 1,116 963,376 110,538 2,336,255 1,911 219 4,634 - - TOTAL 4,257,507 8,444 847,338 1,680 3,410,169 6,764 - - LIABILITIES Financial derivative contracts 95,477 189 - - 95,477 189 - - TOTAL 95,477 189 - - 95,477 189 - - 73 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 13 – ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AT FAIR VALUE (continued) Total MCh$ 12/31/2012 Fair value measurements Prices in active Other significant markets for input observable identical assets (level 1) (level 2) MCh$ MCh$ Significant input non-observable (level 3) MCh$ ASSETS Financial assets held for trading Financial derivative contracts Financial investments available for sale 1,269,674 128,140 3,003,534 108,397 466,621 1,161,277 128,140 2,536,913 - TOTAL 4,401,348 575,018 3,826,330 - LIABILITIES Financial derivative contracts 99,755 - 99,755 - TOTAL 99,755 - 99,755 - Assets and liabilities classified in level 2 correspond to instruments whose rates or valuation prices are obtained from market prices by the application of modeling. 74 BANCO DEL ESTADO DE CHILE AND SUBSIDIARIES Notes to the Interim Consolidated Financial Statements As of September 30, 2013 and 2012 and December 31, 2012 (Figures expressed in millions of Chilean pesos - MCh$) (Translation of financial statements originally issued in Spanish - See Note 1b) NOTE 14 – EVENTS OCCURRED AFTER THE REPORTING PERIOD On October 10, 2013, Ms. María Cecilia Vergara Fisher resigned as Director of BancoEstado Contacto 24 Horas S.A., leaving the Board of Directors composed by Messrs. Hernán Saavedra Parra (Chairman), Jaime León Romo and Jorge Franetovic Yob. There are no other events after the reporting period that occurred from September 30, 2013 to November 14, 2013, that might significantly affect the presentation of the Bank's Interim Consolidated Financial Statements. CARLOS MARTABIT SCAFF Chief Finance Officer PABLO PIÑERA ECHENIQUE Chief Executive Officer MARCOS GAÍNZA ARAGONÉS Accounting and Management Manager OSCAR GONZÁLEZ NARBONA Planning and Management Control Manager 75