Covenant Breach workflow
Summarize
Summary of Covenant Breach Workflow
The Covenant Breach workflow is designed for bank agents to proactively manage and address covenant breaches for both business and personal loans. It facilitates communication with loan customers and establishes an action plan for resolution. Covenants are essential commitments made by borrowers that help banks monitor loan performance and mitigate risks related to potential defaults.
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Key Features
- Loan Monitoring: Banks continuously monitor covenants to identify risks associated with loans.
- Automated Case Generation: If a breach occurs, an API triggers a Covenant Breach credit service case, which can also be manually initiated by a credit agent.
- Task Routing: The workflow automatically assigns tasks to appropriate back-office teams based on established rules.
- Document Verification: Document agents are tasked with verifying necessary documents, with options to request deferments if needed.
- Credit Authorization: Credit agents review and approve credit authorization tasks as part of the workflow process.
- Covenant Updates: Credit agents update covenant information in the banking system after reviewing cases.
Key Outcomes
By utilizing the Covenant Breach workflow, bank agents can efficiently manage covenant breaches, ensuring timely communication with borrowers and improving loan risk management. The systematic approach leads to better tracking and resolution of cases, ultimately enhancing customer relations and operational efficiency.
Learn how bank agents, using the Covenant Breach workflow, proactively contact a loan customer for a covenant breach and decide on an action plan for the future. The workflow applies to both business and personal loans.
What are covenants
A covenant is a promise by a borrower to a bank to abide by certain conditions through the life of the loan. Covenants are set up by the bank at the time of originating a loan. Monitoring covenants is an ongoing activity for the bank. A covenant helps a bank to identify and mitigate potential risks that are associated with a loan. When a covenant is breached, it is a signal of a potential default by the borrower.
- Quarterly submissions of financial statements by the borrower
- Monthly submissions of inventory and stock statement or unpaid invoices
An example of a covenant for personal loans could be a periodic submission of home insurance premium receipts.
The following workflow routes the case and tasks for a covenant breach to agents in different departments. The agents log in to Workspace to work on the tasks in their queue.
- As a credit agent or via an API
- If a covenant breach is observed for a loan, an API in the backend triggers a Covenant Breach credit service case. A credit agent can also create this case.
- As back-office agents
- After the case is initiated and a credit agent updates the case details, a workflow is
triggered automatically. The assignment rules route the associated tasks to the
appropriate back-office teams.
- A credit agent reviews the case details and adds additional details such as the
covenant compliance status.
The document processor service determines the documents that must be verified for the case. The workflow generates an inbound document verification task for the document agent.
- A document agent works on the inbound document verification task to verify each
document that is listed in the task. If required, this agent can request for a
deferment of a specific document.
The workflow generates a credit authorization task for the credit agent.
- A credit authorizer (credit agent) works on the credit task to review and approve
it.
The workflow generates a covenant update task for the credit agent.
- A credit agent works on this credit task and updates the covenant information in the banking system.
- A credit agent reviews the case details and adds additional details such as the
covenant compliance status.
After the case is complete, its state and the stage are set to Closed Complete and the work notes are updated.