Title: Economics 370 Money and Banking
1Economics 370Money and Banking
2Chapter 10 Banking Industry Structure and
Competition
- Historical Development of the Banking System
- Financial Innovation and the Evolution of the
Banking Industry - Structure of the U.S. Commercial Banking Industry
- Bank Consolidation and Nationwide Banking
- Separation of the Banking and Other Financial
Industries - Thrift Industry Regulation and Structure
- International Banking
3Historical Development - Banks
- 1782 Bank of North America charted in
Philadelphia - 1791 Bank of the United States was created
- Established a national bank separate from state
- Acted as a private and central bank
- 1911 charter was not renewed due to concern over
a central bank, Alexander Hamilton - 1816 The Second Bank of the US was created
- Helped finance the War of 1812
- Again advocates, Andrew Jackson argued against a
central bank in favor of states rights - 1832 The Second Bank of the US lapses
4Historical Development - Banks
- State Banks
- Chartered by the state commission in which they
operated, no interstate banking - There was no national currency
- Banks issued banknotes which could be redeemed
for gold - Banks failed on a regular basis
5Historical Development - Banks
- National Bank Act of 1863
- Created federally chartered banks
- Created the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency - Introduced heavy taxes on state banks intending
to dry up funds for state banks - Dual Banking System
- State banks were able to raise funds through
deposits and today we have state and national
banks
6Historical Development - Banks
- Federal Reserve 1913
- National banks were required to become members of
the Federal Reserve System - State banks had the option of joining the system
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1933
- Steamed from the 9,000 bank failures during the
Great Depression - Members of the Federal Reserve System were
required to purchase insurance.
7Historical Development - Banks
- Glass-Steagall Act 1933
- Investment decisions by banks caused many
failures - Prevents commercial banks from underwriting and
dealing in corporate securities, but allows for
purchases of pre-approved debt securities - Many commercial and investment banks seperated
- First National Bank of Boston spun of First
Boston Corporation, which is now Credit Suisse
First Boston - J.P. Morgan discontinued investment banking and
created Morgan Stanley.
8Historical Development - Regulation
- The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Responsible for 1,850 national banks
- The Federal Reserve
- With state banking authorities oversee 900 banks
- The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
- With state banking authorities oversee 4,800
state banks not part of the Federal Reserve
9(No Transcript)
10Evolution of the Banking Industry
- Financial innovation is driven by the desire to
earn profits - A change in the financial environment will
stimulate a search by financial institutions for
innovations that are likely to be profitable - Responses to change in demand conditions
(inflation) - Responses to changes in supply conditions
(technology) - Avoidance of regulations
11Responses to Changes in Demand Conditions
Interest Rate Volatility
- In the 1970s and 1980s interest rates
fluctuated by more than 10 - Adjustable-rate mortgages - 1975
- Flexible interest rates keep profits high when
rates rise - Lower initial interest rates than the tradition
fixed 30 year loan make them attractive to home
buyers - Financial Derivatives - 1975
- Ability to hedge interest rate risk
- Future Contracts - Payoffs are linked to
previously issued securities
12Responses to Changes in Supply Conditions
Information Technology
- Bank credit and debit cards
- Improved computer technology lowers the
transaction costs - Nationwide cards were established after WWII
- Electronic banking
- ATM
- Home banking
- ABM automated banking machine
- Virtual banking
13Responses to Changes in Supply Conditions
Information Technology
- Junk bonds
- Before the 1980s only corporations with Baa
ratings or higher could issue bonds - Fallen Angels corporations that were initially
rated above Baa but fell below - With increases in technology and information
investors started buying debt securities of
lesser known corporations - Commercial paper market Short term debt
security - Securitization
- Transforming illiquid financial assets into
marketable capital securities - Loans are bundled into small denominations sold
to buyers and the buyers will receive portions of
the interest and principle payments
14Avoidance of RegulationsLoophole Mining
- Reserve requirements act as a tax on deposits
- Lost profit is the interest the could be earned
- Restrictions on interest paid on deposits led to
disintermediation - Until 1980 checking accounts were prohibited from
paying interest - Deposit rate ceilings are still in affect today
15Loophole Mining
- Sweep Accounts
- Allows banks to avoid paying the tax on
reserves - At the end of each day corporate accounts with a
balance above a certain amount are invested in
overnight securities - These securities pay interest rates higher than
standard checking account, corporate account are
prohibited from earning interest - Money Market Mutual Funds
- Legally they are not checking accounts which
means banks dont have to hold a portion as
reserves - Offer higher interest rates
16Decline of Traditional Banking
- As a source of funds for borrowers, market share
has fallen - Share of total financial intermediary assets has
fallen - No decline in overall profitability
- Increase in income from off-balance-sheet
activities
17(No Transcript)
18Decline of Traditional Banking
- Decline in cost advantages in acquiring funds
(liabilities) - Rising inflation led to rise in interest rates
and disintermediation - Low-cost source of funds, checkable deposits,
declined in importance - Decline in income advantages on uses of funds
(assets) - Information technology has decreased need for
banks to finance short-term credit needs or to
issue loans - Information technology has lowered transaction
costs for other financial institutions,
increasing competition
19Banks Responses
- Expand into new and riskier areas of lending
- Commercial real estate loans
- Leveraged buyouts
- Corporate takeovers
- Pursue off-balance-sheet activities
- Non-interest income
- Concerns about risk
20Branching
- McFadden Act 1927
- With state branching regulations prohibited
branching across state lines and forced all
national banks to conform to the branching
regulations of the state in which they were
located - Coastal states allowed banks to open branches
throughout a given state - Many states prevented large national banks
opening near state banks
21Response to Branching
- Bank Holding Companies
- Own shares of many different banks
- Can engage in many banking activities
- Automated Teller Machines
- Are not considered branch
- At first banks did not own the ATMs
22Bank Consolidation
- The number of banks has declined over the last 25
years - Bank failures
- Consolidation
- Deregulation
- Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching
Efficiency Act of 1994 overturns the McFadden Act
which prohibited interstate banking - Economies of scale and scope from information
technology - Results may be not only a smaller number of banks
but a shift in assets to much larger banks
23Benefits and Costs of Bank Consolidation
- Benefits
- Increased competition, driving inefficient banks
out of business - Increased efficiency also from economies of scale
and scope - Lower probability of bank failure from more
diversified portfolios - Costs
- Elimination of community banks may lead to less
lending to small business - Banks expanding into new areas may take increased
risks and fail
24(No Transcript)
25Separation of Banking and Other Financial Services
- Glass-Steagall Act of 1933
- Prohibited commercial banks from underwriting
corporate securities or engaging in brokerage
activities - Section 20 loophole was allowed by the Federal
Reserve enabling affiliates of approved
commercial banks to underwrite securities as long
as the revenue did not exceed a specified amount - U.S. Supreme Court validated the Feds action in
1988
26Separation of Banking and Other Financial
Services (contd)
- Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services
Modernization Act of 1999 - Abolishes Glass-Steagall
- States regulate insurance activities
- SEC keeps oversight of securities activities
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
regulates bank subsidiaries engaged in
securities underwriting - Federal Reserve oversees bank holding companies
27Three Basic World Frameworks
- Universal banking - Germany
- No separation between banking and securities
industries - Banks can own equity in corporations
- British-style universal banking
- May engage in security underwriting
- Separate legal subsidiaries are common
- Bank equity holdings of commercial firms are less
common - Few combinations of banking and insurance firms
28Three Basic World Frameworks (contd)
- Some legal separation
- Seen in Japan
- Allowed to hold substantial equity stakes in
commercial firms - Bank holding companies are illegal
29Thrift Industry Regulation and Structure
- Savings and Loan Associations
- Chartered by the federal government or by states
- Most are members of Federal Home Loan Bank System
(FHLBS) - Deposit insurance provided by Savings Association
Insurance Fund (SAIF), part of FDIC - Regulated by the Office of Thrift Supervision
- Mutual Banks
- Approximately half are chartered by states
- Regulated by state in which they are located
- Deposit insurance provided by FDIC or state
insurance
30Thrift Industry Regulation and Structure
(contd)
- Credit Unions
- Tax-exempt
- Chartered by federal government or by states
- Regulated by the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA) - Deposit insurance provided by National Credit
Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF)
31International Banking
- Rapid growth
- Growth in international trade and multinational
corporations - Global investment banking is very profitable
- Ability to tap into the Eurodollar market
32Eurodollar Market
- Dollar-denominated deposits held in banks outside
of the U.S. - Most widely used currency in international trade
- Offshore deposits not subject to regulations
- Important source of funds for U.S. banks
33Structure of U.S. Banking Overseas
- Shell operation
- Edge Act corporation
- International banking facilities (IBFs)
- Not subject to regulation and taxes
- May not make loans to domestic residents
34Foreign Banks in the U.S.
- Agency office of the foreign bank
- Can lend and transfer fund in the U.S.
- Cannot accept deposits from domestic residents
- Not subject to regulations
- Subsidiary U.S. bank
- Subject to U.S. regulations
- Owned by a foreign bank
35Foreign Banks in the U.S. (contd)
- Branch of a foreign bank
- May open branches only in state designated as
home state or in state that allow entry of
out-of-state banks - Limited-service may be allowed in any other state
- Subject to the International Banking Act of 1978
- Basel Accord (1988)
- Example of international coordination of bank
regulation - Sets minimum capital requirements for banks