MetLife Borrowings at Fair Value increased by 23.8% to $5.14B in Q1 2026 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 23.8%, from $4.15B to $5.14B.
An increase may reflect a strategic choice to hedge interest rate risk or changes in market valuation of debt instruments, while a decrease indicates a reduction in fair-value-designated debt.
This represents debt obligations that the company has elected to measure at fair value rather than amortized cost. By us...
Common among large financial institutions that utilize fair value options for risk management and accounting flexibility.
borrowings_at_fair_value| Q4 '24 | Q1 '25 | Q2 '25 | Q3 '25 | Q4 '25 | Q1 '26 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | $3.16B | $4.15B | $4.15B | $4.15B | $4.16B | $5.14B |
| QoQ Change | — | +31.3% | +0.0% | +0.0% | +0.0% | +23.8% |
| YoY Change | — | — | — | — | +31.3% | +23.8% |