CoverageForm 410-K10-Q8-K13D13G13F

Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines - 8-K

Filed May 29, 2026. See issuer overview · financials · original on SEC.gov ↗
Accession
0001325814-26-000082
2.039.01

Item 2.03 - Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation

526 words

Item 2.03 Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an Off-Balance Sheet Arrangement of a Registrant.

The Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines (the "Bank") obtains most of its funds from the sale of debt securities, known as consolidated obligations, in the capital markets. Consolidated obligations, which consist of bonds and discount notes, are by regulation the joint and several obligations of the eleven Federal Home Loan Banks. The Federal Home Loan Banks are regulated by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (the "Finance Agency"), and regulations authorize the Finance Agency to require any Federal Home Loan Bank to repay all or a portion of the principal of or interest on consolidated obligations for which another Federal Home Loan Bank is the primary obligor. Consolidated obligations are sold to the public through the Office of Finance using authorized securities dealers. Consolidated obligations are backed only by the financial resources of the eleven Federal Home Loan Banks and are not guaranteed by the United States government.

Schedule A sets forth all consolidated obligation bonds and discount notes committed to be issued by the Federal Home Loan Banks, for which the Bank is the primary obligor, on the trade dates indicated, other than discount notes with a maturity of one year or less that are issued in the ordinary course of business. Schedule A also includes any consolidated obligations with a remaining maturity in excess of one year, if any, for which we have assumed the primary repayment obligation from another Federal Home Loan Bank.

We may elect to change our method of reporting information on the issuance or assumption of consolidated obligations at any time. In reviewing the information in this Current Report on Form 8-K, please note:

• although consolidated obligations issuance is material to the Bank, we have not made a judgment as to the materiality of any particular consolidated obligation or obligations;

• Schedule A does not address any interest-rate exchange agreements (or other derivative instruments) which we may enter into as a result of our asset and liability management strategies and that may be associated, directly or indirectly, with one or more of the reported consolidated obligations;

• Schedule A will not enable a reader to track changes in the total consolidated obligations outstanding for which we are the primary obligor because Schedule A generally excludes consolidated obligation discount notes with a maturity of one year or less and does not reflect whether the proceeds from the issuance of the reported consolidated obligations will be used to, among other things, satisfy called or maturing consolidated obligations. We will report the total consolidated obligations outstanding for which we are the primary obligor in our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission; and

• the principal amounts reported on Schedule A represent the principal amount of the reported consolidated obligations at par, which may not correspond to the amounts reported in our financial statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles contained in our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, because the par amount does not account for, among other things, any discounts, premiums or concessions.

Item 9.01 - Financial Statements and Exhibits

23 words · Exhibit 99.1 attached

Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.

Exhibit 99.1: Schedule A

Exhibit 104: Cover Page Interactive Data File (embedded within the inline XBRL document)

Exhibit 99.1 · 718 words

EX-99.1
2
tsy052926ex991.htm
EX-99.1

SCHEDULE A

FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK OF DES MOINES

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Call

Call

Rate Type/

Call/

Trade

Settlement

Maturity

Pay

Type

Style

Rate Sub-Type

Amort

Coupon

Date

Cusip

Date

Date

Date

(1)

(2)

(3) (4)

Date

Percent

Bank Par

5/26/2026

3130AWN30

5/28/2026

6/8/2029

6/8/2026

Non-Callable

N/A

Fixed Constant

N/A

4.38

25,000,000

5/26/2026

3130BATE7

5/29/2026

6/25/2027

11/25/2026

Optional Principal Redemption

Bermudan

Fixed Constant

11/25/2026

4.00

20,000,000

5/26/2026

3130BAVJ3

5/27/2026

8/13/2027

8/13/2026

Optional Principal Redemption

Bermudan

Fixed Constant

11/13/2026

4.02

15,000,000

5/26/2026

3130BAVM6

5/29/2026

5/25/2029

11/25/2026

Optional Principal Redemption

Bermudan

Fixed Constant

11/25/2026

4.45

10,000,000

(1)    Call Type Description:

Optional Principal Redemption  bonds (callable bonds) may be redeemed by the Bank in whole or in part at its discretion on predetermined call dates, according to the terms of the bond.

Indexed Amortizing Notes  (indexed principal redemption bonds) repay principal based on a predetermined amortization schedule or formula that is linked to the level of a certain index, according to the terms of the bond.

Scheduled Amortizing Notes  repay principal based on a predetermined amortization schedule, according to the terms of the bond.

(2)    Call Style Description:

Indicates whether the consolidated obligation is redeemable at the option of the Bank, and if so redeemable, the type of redemption provision. The types of redemption provisions are:

American -redeemable continuously on and after the first redemption date and until maturity.

Bermudan -redeemable on specified recurring dates on and after the first redemption date, until maturity.

European -redeemable on a particular date only.

Canary -redeemable on specified recurring dates on and after the first redemption date until a specified date prior to maturity.

Multi-European -redeemable on particular dates only.

(3)    Rate Type Description:

Conversion  bonds have coupons that convert from fixed to variable, or variable to fixed, or a mix of capped coupons and non-capped coupons, or from one variable type to another, or from one U.S. or other currency index to another, according to the terms of the bond.

Fixed  bonds generally pay interest at constant or stepped fixed rates over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

Variable  bonds may pay interest at different rates over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

(4)    Rate Sub-Type Description:

Constant  bonds generally pay interest at fixed rates over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

Step Down  bonds generally pay interest at decreasing fixed rates for specified intervals over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

Step Up  bonds generally pay interest at increasing fixed rates for specified intervals over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

Step Up/Down  bonds generally pay interest at various fixed rates for specified intervals over the life of the bond, according to the terms of the bond.

Zero Coupon  bonds earn a fixed yield to maturity or the optional principal redemption date, according to the terms of the bond, with principal and interest paid at maturity or upon redemption to the extent exercised prior to maturity.

Capped Floater  bonds have an interest rate that cannot exceed a stated or calculated ceiling, according to the terms of the bond.

Dual Index Floater  bonds have an interest rate determined by two or more indices, according to the terms of the bond.

Leveraged/Deleveraged  bonds pay interest based on a formula that includes an expressed multiplier, according to the terms of the bond: multiplier > 1 = leveraged, multiplier < 1 = deleveraged.

Inverse Floater  bonds have an interest rate that increases as an index declines and decreases as an index rises, according to the terms of the bond.

Stepped Floater  bonds pay interest based on an increasing spread over an index, according to the terms of the bond.

Range  bonds may pay interest at different rates depending upon whether a specified index is inside or outside a specified range, according to the terms of the bond.

Single Index Floater  bonds pay interest at a rate that increases as an index rises and decreases as an index declines, according to the terms of the bond.

Ratchet Floater  bonds pay interest subject to increasing floors, according to the terms of the bond, such that subsequent coupons may not be lower than the previous coupon.