Title: Financial Institutions
1Financial Institutions
2Functions of Financial Institutions
- 1. Aids the flow of capital
- 2. Credit allocation
- 3. Provides economies of scale and scope
- 4. Satisfies the needs of general public
- 5. Provides specialization and expertise
- 6. Assists asset transformation
- 7. Offers INTERMEDIATION
3Intermediation
- The process of transforming a secondary security
into a primary security by a financial
institution. - It relates to financial investments by savors
4Dis-intermediation
- The process of reversing or rejecting the
transfer of funds into the financial
institutions. - This refers to the low deposit interest rates or
high operating costs charge to customers.
5Illustration of Disintermediation
- The removing of Middlemen
- The dis- or re-channeling funds flow from the FI
- Changing Role to the Servicing of Markets
- Security Investments
- Mutual Funds
- Insurance
6Types of Intermediation
- 1. Liquidity
- 2. Maturity
- 3. Denomination
- 4. Risk
7Types of Financial Institutions
- By Banking Business Nature
- Banks
- Non-Banks
- Non-Finance
8- By Business Operations
- Thrift type
- Contractual type
- Investment type
- Other type
9Thrift-type Financial Institutions
- Banks
- Commercial Banks
- Savings Banks
- Investment Banks (Merchant Banks)
- etc
- Non-Banks
- Deposit-taking Company, Savings and Loan, Home
Loans, Building Society, - Credit Unions
10Contract-type Financial Institutions
- Insurance Companies
- Life Insurance
- Accident and Healthy Insurance
- Pension Funds
- Mandatory Providence Funds
- Retirement Funds/Pension Funds
11Investment-type Financial Institutions
- Investment Companies
- Closed-end Investment Companies - Investment
Brokers - Open-end Investment Companies - Mutual Funds/Unit
Trust - Real Estate Trust Investment Companies
12Other Financial Institutions
- Finance Companies
- Factors Companies
- Lease Companies
- Mortgage Companies
- Credit Card Companies
- Non-finance Financial Institutions
- General Electric, Ford Motors, Toyota Motors
- wholesalers, Manufactures, Department Stores
13Why Financial Institutions?
- Fulfill economic goals
- Reduce transaction and information costs
- Provide liquidity
- Prevent risks
- As transmission of monetary policy
- Provide payment mechanism
- Supply credit allocation
14Analysis of Financial Institutions
- 1. Transaction Costs
- 2. Information Asymmetry -- Moral Hazard
- 3. Financial Risks
- 4. Financial Innovation
15High Transaction Costs Solutions
- Economy of Scale--to reduce the average unit
costs of production as output increase
(?Output ? , AC?) - Economy of Scope --to generate cost synergies
by producing multiple services ( Cx1, x2 lt
Cx1 Cx2 ) - Specialization market niche
16Solution
- Information Asymmetry--Moral Hazard
- Information Symmetry and Full Disclosure
- Regulation Reform
- Financial Intermediation
- Financial Risks
- Risk Management and Control
- Burden Administration
17Solutions
- Financial Innovations
- Enhance Internal Control--
- Planning, Control, and Administration
- Tighten Asset Management and Quality
- Modernized Operation System
- Strengthen Regulation and Monitoring
18Duties of the Management of Financial
Institutions
- 1. Determining the optimal capital structure
- Assets, Liabilities, and Capital
- 2. Managing interest rate/currency/credit risks
- 3. electing/Pricing investments and liabilities
- Maturity Matching, Profit Making
- 4. Operating effectively
- Information Processing
- Communication Technology
19Basic Concept -- Banking
- What is a Bank?
- A bank is a financial intermediary which provides
special types services relating to finance. - A bank is a company which carries on banking
business with a valid banking license. (Banking
Ordinance)
20Banking BusinessBanking Ordinance - section 2
- A. Receiving from the general public money on
current deposit, savings deposit or other
similar account repayable on demand or within
less than three months or at call or notice of
less than three months - B Paying or collecting cheques drawn by or paid
in by customers.
21Universal Definition of A Bank
- A Bank is a licensed organization that
- 1. Accepts Deposits from the general public
- 2. Grants Loans
22Special Features of a Bank
- 1. It is a regulated organization.
- 2. It offers checking accounts (Demand Deposit
Accounts, or Current Accounts) - 3. It acts as payment mechanism.
- 4. It can create money
23Money Creation Feature
- 1. Assumptions
- No cash outflow (Depositors will not make
any drawing) - Comply with the Reserves Requirement
on Deposits - No Excess Reserves set by the Bank
- Excess Balance on the Deposits will be
loaned out - All Loans will be re-deposited back to the Bank
24- Process of Money Creation
- (Minimum Deposit Reserves equal to 20)
- 1. Deposits 1,000 into the Banking System
- bank will maintain deposit reserves 200
- At the same time, 800 will be lent out
- Borrower will immediately deposit the 800 back
to the bank - The Bank will then have 1,800 in its Deposit
account
25 - B. The additional 800 deposited into the Bank.
- 20 of 800 (160) will be taken out as reserves.
- The remaining balance of 640 will be lent out.
- Borrower(s) will not withdraw cash and deposit
the 640 into the Bank - The Bank will have a total of 2,440 in Deposits.
(1,000800640)
26- C. The process repeats again until the reserves
requirement equal to the original deposits
amount. The Multiple Effect appears. - D deposits r reserves requirement
- MCMoney Creation
- MC D/r)1,000 x (1/0.2) 5,000 .. (M1)
- Minimum Reserves is 5,000 x 0.2 1,000
27- The multiplier is 5
- Money creation equals 4,000
- r 0.2 Multiplier 5
- r 0.1 Multiplier 10
- r 0.25 Multiplier 4
- r 0.08 Multiplier 12.5
28- In Reality, the Multiplier may not be exactly
the same (as 5 on the reserves requirement is
20). - M1 is always larger than original deposits.
- Monetary Policy can increase or decrease the
reserves requirement to control the money supply.
29Bank Organization Structure
- Unit Banking
- Branch Banking
- Dual Banking
- Bank Holding Company
- Multinational Banking
- Retail Banking
- Wholesale Banking
30HK Banking System
- 3 tier Banking System (Structure)
- 1981 Licensed Banks
- Licensed Deposit-taking Companies
- Registered DTC
- 1989 Licensed Banks
- Registered Licensed Banks
- Deposit-taking Companies
31Banks in Hong KongSource HKMA Monthly
Statistical bulletin, January 2002
32Balance Sheet of HK Banks SourceHKMA Monthly
Statistical Bulletin, January 2002
33Funds Flow of a Bank
- Funds Flow-in
- Deposits
- Borrowing / NCD
- Contributed Capital
- Funds Flow-out
- Loans and Advances
- Investments
- Capital Expenditures
34Balance Sheet Presentation
- Assets Side
- - Cash and Balance due from Depository
Institutions - - Investments (Short- and Long-term)
- - Loans and Advances
- - Plant and Equipment
- - Investments in Subsidiaries
35- Liabilities
- - Core Deposits
- - Certificate Deposits
- - Borrowings (Short- and Long-term)
- Equity Capital
- - Paid-in Capital
- - Retained Earnings (Reserves)
36Bank Assets and Liabilities Structure
- Rate Sensitive Assets Rate Sensitive Liab.
- Fixed Rate Assets Fixed Rate Liab.
- Non-Rate Assets Equity
37Bank Balance Sheet Characteristics
- 1. Few Fixed Assets -- Low Degree of Operating
Leverage - 2. Substantial Amount Short-term Liabilities
(Deposits) -- Requires High Liquidity - 3. Substantial Amount of Assets Relative
to Equity Capital -- High Degree of Financial
Leverage
38Services Provided by Banks
- General Areas
- - Intermediation Liquidity, Maturity
- Risk,
Denomination - - Cost Reduction
- - Price Reduction
- - Information
39Special Services Provided by Banks
- 1. Money Supply Transmissions
- 2. Credit Allocation
40 Development Factors in Financial Institutions
- 1. Crossing Traditional Boundaries
- 2. Global Competition
- 3. New Opportunities
- 4. Deregulation/Re-regulation
- 5. Corporate Restructuring
41The Development in Banking Industry
- 1. Institutionalization
- 2. Globalization
- 3. Securitization
42Structural Change in Banking
- 1. Technological Change
- 2. Regulation Change
- 3. Economical Change - Interest Rate
Fluctuation - 4. Competition Induced Change
- 5. Bank International Settlement Requirement
--Capital (Kapital) Change - TRICK
43Financial Innovation in Banking
- TRICK Rational Self-Interest
- Financial
Innovation - New financial products and processes that improve
the economic efficiency with which financial
transactions are conducted, either by serving
customers needs in new unregulated ways or by
lowering costs.
44 - Examples of Financial Innovations
- Negotiable Certificate Deposits
- ZERO-Coupon Securities
- Financial Futures
- Negotiable Order of Withdrawal (NOW a/c)
- Money Market Deposit Account (MMDA)
- Euro-Dollar Deposits
- Securitization
45Banking Regulations
46Reasons for Banking Regulations
- 1. Protect Customers
- 2. Improve Implementation of Monetary Policy
- 3. Ensure Competitive Markets
- 4. Prevent from Bank Run
- 5. Eliminate Prejudice in Supply
- 6. Pursue Desirable Credit Allocation
- 7. Protect Taxpayers from Bailouts
- 8. Reduce Information Asymmetries
47What IF There is NO Regulations
- Money will be destroyed
- Payment Mechanism will be Disrupted
- Credit will be Shrink
- Risk will be increased
- Information Flow will be retarded
48Objectives of Bank Regulations
- 1. Safety
- 2. Stability
- 3. Structure
49Forms of Bank Regulations
- Entry Control - Licensed
- Safety and Soundness Control
- Liquidity
- Capital Adequacy
- Concentration Limits
- Credit Allocation Control
- Geographical Expansion Control
50Cost/Banefit Analysis of Regulation
- Cost
- Filing Cost
- restricted Activities
- Taxes
- Benefits
- Restricted Competition
- Government Support
51 Banking Operating Structure
- Industry Organization Model
- Structure
- Conducts
- Performance
52Bank Organization Structure
- Merge and Acquisition -- Super Size Banks
- Efficiency
- Effectiveness
- Multinational Foreign Banks
- Multinational Bank Holding Companies
- Double Leverage
53Double Leverage for MBHC
- Bank Parent Company raise funds 10 Billion by
issuing bonds or borrowing - This amount is then transferred/invested into the
subsidiary Bank - The funds are used to expand the subsidiary
banks capital size. - If the subsidiary bank maintain an 20 required
ratio of Equity to Asset
54- The subsidiary banks assets will be increase by
50 billion while meeting the regulatory capital
requirement of 20. - Increase Injected Bank Equity Funds
- in
- Assets Required Reserves Ratio
- Increase in Assets 10b / 0.20 50b
55Bank Performance
56Risks Faced by Bank Operations
- Liquidity Risk
- Credit (Default) Risk
- Interest Rate Risk
- Technology/Operational Risk
- Regulatory Risk
- Country/Sovereign Risk
57- Currency (Foreign Exchange) Risk
- Political Risk
- Off-Balance Sheet Risk
58Objectives of Bank Performance
- To Reduce Risks
- To Maximize Net Worth
- To Maximize Profit
- To Comply with Regulations
- To Fulfill Bank Policies
59Features of Bank Performance
- Accepts general publics savings as deposits and
grant loans to those who need them. - Bank products are mainly services
- The income and expenses are divided into
- Interest Portion
- Non-interest Portion
60Profitability Analysis
61Measurement of Profitability
- Net Interest Income (NII)
- Interest Income Interest Expenses
- Net Interest Margin (NIM)
- Interest Income Interest Expenses
- Total Earning Assets
- Spread (Average Interest Income Rate
- Average Interest Expense Rate)
62Factors Affecting NIM/NII
- Credit Risk - Higher Risk Higher Yields
- Interest Rate Fluctuation
- Funding Mix S/T vs L/T
- Sourceswholesale vs retail savings vs time
- Uses commercial vs mortgage vs consumers
- Pricing Mix Fixed Rate vs Floating Rate
- Non-performance Assets
- Tax Exempted Investments
63Impact of Interest Rate Fluctuation on NIM
- Monitoring Rate Sensitive Assets and
Liabilities -- Gap Management RSA gt RSL
.... Positive Gap RSA lt RSL Negative
Gap RSA RSL Zero Gap When Interest
Rate increases, Gap ?IR gt ?IE NII
NIM Gap ?IR lt ?IE NII NIM
64Measurement Return on Net Worth
- Return on New Worth (RONW)
- (Total Net Income / Total Equity on MV)
- Return on Assets (ROA)
- (Total Net Income / Total Assets)
- Return on Equity (ROE)
- (Total Net Income / Total Equity on BV)
65Asset/Liability Management
- Monitoring Assets and Liabilities Mix Actively
Management the Which Assets are funded by What
Liabilities The GAP (RSA RSL) RSA
financed by FRL FRA financed by FRL NRA
financed by FRL - Determine the Amount, Rate Differential and the
Expected Earnings of all the items.
66Illustration of Active Mgt
- Example
- RSA 8 170 RSL 6 150
- FRA11 155 FRL 8.5 185
- NRA 30 Equity 20
- Total 355 Total 355
- Rate Differentials (Annual)
- On RSA and RSL (8 - 6) 2
- On FRA and FRL (11 - 8.5) 1.5
- On GAP and FRL (8,5 - 8) 0.5
- On NRA and FRL (8.5 - 0) ( 8.5)
67- Profitability Analysis
- RSA financed by RSL (150 _at_ 2) 3
- FRA financed by FRL (155 _at_ 1.5) 2.325
- GAP financed by FRL (20 _at_ 0.5) 0.1
- NRA financed by FRL (10 _at_ 8.5) (0.85)
- NRA financed by Equity (20 _at_ --) 0
Total Pre-tax Profits
4.575 - RONW (ROE) 4.575 ? 20 0.22875
22.875
68Liquidity Analysis
69Nature of Liquidity
- 1. The ability to maintain sufficient funds to
fulfill the regulatory requirement - 2. The ease with which a bank to convert the
assets into cash to meet the claims
of withdrawals and /or to repay the debts and
expenses.
70Concepts of Liquidity
- Narrow Concept the ability to maintain
sufficient funds or to raise a certain amount of
deposits at a certain cost within a certain
amount of time to meet the needs by the bank - -- Store Liquidity
- Broad Concept the ability to include the ease
with which the bank can obtain cash by borrowing
from external sources -- Purchasing Liquidity
71Liquidity Requirement byHong Kong Banking
Ordinanace
- Any Licensed Bank should maintain the Liquidity
Ratio of not less than 25 of Liquefiable Assets
to its Qualifying Liabilities for each calendar
month, based on the sum of net weighted amount of
the liquefiable assets and the sum of the
qualifying liabilities for each working day of
the month.
72Causes of Liquidity
- 1. Liability-side Causes
- Depositors withdraw cash from
their accounts or additional deposits do
not come as expected - 2. Asset-side Causes
- Lending commitments or Matured Loans do not
pay on time. -
73Indicators of Liquidity Risk
- 1. Mis-Matching of maturities of Qualifying
Assets to Liquefiable Liabilities - 2. Inadequate Liquidity Ratio on Qualifying
Assets to Liquefiable Liabilities
74Measurement of Liquidity Risk
- 1. Static Measurement
- a. Liquidity Ratio
- Qualifying Assets
- Liquefiable Liabilities
- b. Net Cash Flows Analysis
- Cash In-flows Cash Out-flows
75- 2. Dynamic Measurement
- a. Liquidity Planning to analyze the
deposits withdrawals and additional
deposits, and the loans commitments and loans
repayments. To determine the net effect on
the Liquidity Position. - Liq.Bal Deposits Loans Net
Change
140 50 75 100 80
??? Liq Liq Liq Liq
76- B. Trends Analysis on Loans and Deposits
-
- Deposits
- Liquidity
-
Gap - Loans
- t
77Management of Liquidity Risks
- 1. Store Liquidity
- a. Maintain sufficient CASH and Near
Cash - b. Maintain Good Quality Loans
- c. Retain Deposits in the Bank
78- 2. Purchase Liquidity
- a. Maintain Diversified Borrowing
Sources - (I) Inter-bank Loans
- (ii) Other Borrowings
- (iii) Discount Windows (LAF)
- (iv) REPO
- (v) NCD
- b. Increase Deposits
- c. Seek Deposit Sources (Euro Deposit)
79Lending Analysis
80Nature of Lending
- Lending is the single and largest categories for
banking - Lending provides the primary source of revenue
for banking - Banking business is to grant loans to allocate
capital - Lending classes Commercial and Industry, Real
Estate (Mortgage). Consumer, and others (leasing,
agriculture, govt, etc)
81Concepts of Bank Lending
- 1. The possibility of total loss become less as
the number of loans increases - 2. The possibility of no losses also
become less as number of loans increase - 3. As loan portfolio getting larger, number of
loans that will go bad can be predicted - 4. The Larger the loan portfolio,
the possibilities of total loss are very remote - 5. In large loan portfolio, some losses
are certain
82Elements for Lending Policy
- Size
- Maturity
- Composition
- Interest Rate Loan Pricing
- Fixed Rate or Floating
Rate - Analyze Loan Loss
83Strategies for Lending Policy
- Loan Analysis
- No Analysis
- Subjective Analysis
- 5 Cs
- Ratio Analysis and Cash Flow Analysis
- Objective Analysis
- Credit Score
- Z Score
84- Credit Score Altmans Z Score
- Z 1.2X1 1.4X2 3.3X3 0.6X4 1.0X5
- X1 Working Capital / Total Assets
- X2 Retained Earnings / Total Assets
- X3 EBIT / Total Assets
- X4 M. Value of Equity / B. Value of
Total Debts - X5 Sales / Total Assets
- Z Score Probability of Failure
- 1.8 or less Very High
- 1.81 2.99 Not Sure
- 3.0 or Above Unlikely
85- Loan Administration
- Centralized Approval
- Decentralized Approval
- Loan Authorization
- Personnel
- Authorized Line of Credit
- Loan Monitoring
86- Loan Delinquency
- a. Workout Agreement
- b. Collateral Liquidation
- c. Reducing Debt to Collecting Judgment
- d. Charge off
- e. Bankruptcy
87Capital Analysis
88 Role of Capital
- To Support Operating Asset Commitments
- To Promote Depositors Confidence
- To Improve Growth - Loans and Deposits
- - Earnings
- To Prevent Morale Hazard
89Composition of Capital
- Traditional Concept (GAAP Concept)
- 1. Contributed Capital
- -- Core and Supplementary Capital
- 2. Book Value
- Regulatory Concept (Regulatory Accounting
Principles) - 1. Contributed Capital plus Debt Capital
- 2. Market Value
90Debt as Source of Capital
- Attribute of Debt (Regulatory point of view)
1. It is legally subordinate to deposits.
2. It does not require immediate
repayment. 3. It offers some protection
to depositors. 4. It is a sources of
funds
91Conditions for Debt as Capital
- Original maturity of 5 year or more
- When Issue must Identify as Subordinate to
deposits - Must be Uninsured
92Capital Adequacy
- Regulatory Requirement (Bank of International
Settlement Requirement) Capital / Risk Adjusted
Assets gt 8 Core Capital / Risk Adjusted Assets
gt 4 - Internal Requirement -Add a Premium onto the
BIS requirement -Currently Average Ratio is
20
93Quantitative Analysis of Capital Adequacy
- 1. Leverage Analysis NW/ Total
Assets NW / Risk Adjusted Assets NW /
Average Loans NW / Average Deposits - 2. Net Capital Ratio Capital R.E.
Problem Assets Risk Adjusted Assets NCR lt
2.74 ---- Inadequate
94Qualitative Analysis of Capital Adequacy
- Regulatory Analysis CAMEL --- Capital
size Asset Quality Management
Earning History Liquidity Position
95Continued
- For Bank Holding Company Institutes CAMEL
BOPEC Bank Subsidiary Other
Subsidiaries Parent Company Earnings
(Consolidated) Capital (Consolidated)