Title: ECON 712 Financial Institutions
1ECON 712 Financial Institutions
2Week 6
- Depository Institutions
- Central Banks
3Depository Institutions
- Banks
- Financial intermediaries which accept deposits
and make loans, either directly or through
purchase of securities. - Banks are special
- Important link between savers and borrowers in
economy. - Collaborate to provide payments system for the
economy. - Bank Balance Sheet Structure
- Bank liabilities tend to be short maturities,
deposits. - Bank assets either short-term credit or longer
term loans at higher rate of interest than paid
on deposits. - Profit from interest rate spread as return to the
risks arising from the duration mismatch on their
balance sheets.
4Depository Institution T-Account
- A T-Account shows banks financial position
- 1. accepts deposits,
- 2. keeps a portion as reserves,
- 3. lends out the rest.
First National Bank
Assets
Liabilities
Reserves 12 L-T Loans
148
Deposits 100 CDs
50 Equity 10
Total Assets 160
Total Liabilities 160
5Risks for Depository Institutions
- Liquidity Risk
- Balance sheet used for maturity transformation
of ST liabilities into LT assets. Exposed to
bank runs. - Govt regulations of reserve requirements and
deposit insurance schemes help limit this risk. - Interest Rate Risk
- Profit made from interest rate spread but rates
on ST liabilities can change faster than rates on
LT assets. - Asset/liability management techniques by banks.
- Credit Risk
- Competitive advantage in loans requiring
monitoring, i.e. uncertainty. - Govt capital requirements lender of last
resort.
6Commercial Banks
- National Banks regulated by Federal Reserve Board
and Bank Insurance Fund (BIF). State banks
subject to some FRB reqs. - Services
- Individual banking Consumer loans, mortgage
loans, credit cards, auto loans, brokerage
services. - Institutional banking Loans to non-financial
financial firms, government entities, Commercial
real estate loans, leasing, factoring. - Global banking Corporate/capital market
financings, foreign exchange. - Funding
- Deposits Demand deposits Time Deposits (CDs).
- Non-deposit borrowing Large CDs repos by
Money Center Banks - Common Stock Retained Earnings.
7Commercial Bank Regulation
- Historical Areas of Regulation
- Interest Rate Ceilings Essentially eliminated
but prior to 1980s Regulation Q set maximum
deposit rates payable. - Led to innovations to circumvent including CDs
Euro deposits. - Geographical Branching Restrictions Each state
has right to limit intrastate banking by McFadden
Act (1926). - Prevent large banks from forcing small banks out
of business. - Permissible Activities FRB regulates activities
to limit risk in banking system. Glass-Steagall
parts of 1933 Bank Act. - Most of these restrictions on securities
underwriting dealing lifted. - Capital Requirements Risk-based capital
requirements aimed at limiting bank insolvency
risk govt exposure. - Capital Requirements establish two tiers of
capital Core (equity R/E) supplementary
(reserves). - Assets classified by risk with capital weights
differing.
8Savings Loan Associations
- SLs chartered by either state or national.
Regulator is Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)
and SAIF. - Services
- Mortgages Mortgage-backed securities
- U.S. Government Securities
- Consumer loans Credit cards, auto home
improve. loans. - Non-Consumer Loans Commercial, corporate,
agricultural. - Municipal Bonds
- Funding
- Deposits Demand deposits Time Deposits (CDs).
- Common Stock Retained Earnings.
- SL Crisis
- Maturity mismatch high, volatile interest rates
Insolvent
9Credit Unions
- Credit Unions either state or nationally
chartered. NCUA is principal federal regulatory
agency. - Mutually-owned require common bond of
members. - Deposits are technically shares ensured by
NCUSIF - Services
- Mortgages Mortgage-backed securities
- U.S. Government Securities
- Consumer loans Credit cards, auto home
improve. loans. - Funding
- Deposits Shares from their membership.
10- Depository Institutions and the Supply of Money
11What is Money?
- Money not to be confused with wealth or income.
- Money is the set of assets used in transactions.
- Liquidity is ease with which an asset can be
converted into money. - Functions of Money
- Medium of Exchange - facilitates transactions.
- Unit of Account - used to quote prices.
- Store of Value - transfer purchasing power to
future. - Types of Money
- Commodity Money - has intrinsic value.
- Fiat Money - value by government decree.
12Money in the U.S.
- Money in U.S. is fiat money.
- Four measures
- C Currency
- M1 C Travelers Checks Demand Deposits
Other Checkable Deposits. - M2 M1 Savings Deposits Small Time Deposits
Money Mkt. Mutual Funds. - M3 M2 Large Time Deposits Term Repos
- L M3 Savings Bonds Short-term Treasury
securities other liquid assets
13Banks and The Money Supply
- The behavior of banks can influence the quantity
of demand deposits in the economy and therefore,
the money supply. - Fractional Reserve Banking System
- Banks hold a fraction of money deposited as
reserves and lend out the rest. - Reserve Requirement, rr
- Govt mandates a minimum level of reserves to be
held as percentage of deposits, - Reserves rr x Deposits
- Used to ensure liquidity of bank for depositors,
i.e. control risk to the payments system.
14Bank T-Account Revisited
First National Bank
Assets
Liabilities
- A T-Account illustrates the financial position
of a bank that - 1. accepts deposits,
- 2. keeps a portion as reserves, and
- 3. lends out the rest.
Reserves 10.00 Loans 90.00
Deposits 100.00
Total Assets 100.00
Total Liabilities 100.00
Reserve Requirement .10 Required Reserves .1
x 100 10
15Banks Money Creation
- Central bank affects Money Supply through Open
Market Operations. - Money Supply Currency Deposits at Banks
- Commercial Banks important in Money Supply
process. - When a bank makes a loan (from its reserves) the
money supply increases. When banks hold only a
fraction of deposits in reserve, banks create
money. - The creation of money through loans does not
create any wealth, but allow banks to charge
interest several times on the same bit of wealth.
16Fractional Reserve Banking
BANK ONE
Assets
Liabilities
Reserves
Deposits
Loans
BANK TWO
Money Multiplier
Assets
Liabilities
Process
Reserves
Deposits
Loans
BANK THREE
Assets
Liabilities
Reserves
Deposits
Loans
17Banks and Money Creation
- MONEY CREATION PROCESS
- Original Deposit 1,000
- Bank One Lending (1-rr)x1000
- Bank Two Lending (1-rr)2 x1000
- Bank Three Lending (1-rr)3 x1000
- and so on _____________
- Total D Ms 1 (1-rr) (1-rr)2
- (1-rr)3 x 1,000
- (1/rr) x 1,000 5,000
- In a fractional reserve banking system, banks
create money.
- Banks accept deposits, hold fraction in reserve,
lend out rest. - Reserve-deposits ratio minimum is regulated
reserve requirement, rr. - New loans made create new deposits, increasing
the money supply. - Money multiplier shows how much money created
by 1 of deposits - mm 1/rr.
18Complex Model of Money Supply
- Fractional Reserve Banking and MS
- Exogenous Variables of Money Supply Model
- Monetary Base, B Currency, C Reserves, R.
- Reserve-Deposit Ratio, rr fraction of deposits
held as reserves. - Currency-Deposit Ratio, cr Currency holdings as
of deposits - Definitions
- Money Supply M C D Monetary Base B C
R - dividing M/B C D/CR
- rearranging M/B C/D 1/C/D R/D
- Model of Ms M cr 1 x B mm x B
- cr rr
- where mm is the Money Multiplier in this more
complicated model of money supply.
19- Central Banks and Monetary Policy
20U.S. Federal Reserve System
- U.S. Federal Reserve System started 1913 as an
independent Federal agency. - Run by Board of Governors (7 members, 14 year
terms) - System made up of Federal Reserve Board and 12
regional Federal Reserve Banks. - Regulates banks ensures health of banking
system. - Lender of Last Resort to banks.
- Sets monetary policy and controls money supply.
- Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
- Board of Governors 5 regional Fed. Bank
Presidents. - Meets every 6 weeks to determine monetary policy.
- Implemented by FRB-NY trading desk.
21Instruments of Monetary Policy
- Open Market Operations
- Purchase or sale of govt bonds by the central
bank. - Open Market purchase of bonds by central bank
increases monetary base, and so the money supply. - Reserve Requirements
- Govt regulates banks minimum reserve-deposit
ratios. - Increase in reserve requirements will lower money
multiplier and so decrease money supply. - Discount Rate
- Interest rate on reserves borrowed from central
bank. - Lower rate, cheaper borrowed reserves, more banks
borrow, thus increasing money supply.
22Other Central Banks
- European Union
- European Central Bank modeled after Federal
Reserve with Central banks from EU member
countries. - Independent of member govts, sets monetary
policy. Regulation of commercial bank reserves,
etc. remains with EU natl govts. - Japan
- Bank of Japan managed by Governor, recently made
independent of Ministry of Finance. - Sets required reserves for commercial banks, has
discount window open market operations. - United Kingdom
- Bank of England is the oldest central bank.
Recently independent of Exchequer. Sets monetary,
interest rate exchange rate policy. - Commercial banks not required to hold reserves at
BOE, discount houses act as intermediaries for
borrowing reserves from BOE.
23Possible Goals of Monetary Policy
- Stability of the Price Level
- Keep the inflation rate both low and stable.
- Often involves responding to external supply
shocks. - Economic Growth and Employment
- Ensure unemployment rate and output growth are
sustainable without increases in inflation rate. - Stabilizing Interest Rates
- Ensure stable financial environment to channel
savings to best use in real investment, related
to economic growth. - Stability in Foreign Exchange Rates
- Prevent volatility in exchange rate which reduces
trade.
24- Non-Depository Institutions Future Purchasing
Power
25Modifying Future Cash Flows
- Look at Non-depositary institutions whose primary
function is to provide assets with desirable
future cash flow profiles. - Pensions, Insurance, Mutual funds all provide
vehicles by which individuals and companies can
modify their future cash flows. - Generally involves pooling of individuals and/or
assets to provide cash flow profiles not
available to individuals on their own.
26Provision of Future Cash Flows
27 28Investment Companies
- Investment Companies
- Raise funds by selling shares to public
investing proceeds in a diversified portfolio of
securities. - Open-End Funds
- Termed Mutual Funds buy /sell shares on
continual basis. - Net Asset Value
- MV of portfolio assets MV of liabilities /
shares outstanding - Load Funds impose commissions on amounts
invested. - No-Load Funds does not impose sales commission.
- Back-end Load Funds charge commission to redeem
shares. - 12b-1 Funds impose 1.25 of average daily funds
for costs. - Fees pay for costs of marketing and selling
shares in fund.
29Investment Companies
- Closed-End Funds
- Sell shares but usually do not redeem them.
Shares sell on organized exchange or OTC. - Price depends on supply vs. demand so can trade
at discount or premium to NAV of portfolio - Discount due to tax liabilities, premium due to
desirable access or info. - Unit Trusts
- of shares issued fixed like closed-end
fund,normally portfolio of bonds. - No active trading of bonds once purchased. Held
by trustee until redeemed by issuer. - Has a fixed termination date. Sales commission to
start.
30Structure of a Fund
- Structure
- Board of directors hires financial advisor
selling firm. - Advisor charges advisory fee (0.4- 1.5),
custodial fees. - Investment Objectives of Funds
- Wide range of objectives for manager of equity
fund. - Income/capital gains, blue chip/growth, specific
industries. - Wide range of objectives for manager of bond
fund. - Corporate bonds (high-quality vs junk),
convertible bonds, mortgage-backed securities,
munis, money market securities. - Balanced funds invest in both stocks and bonds.
- Economic Rationale for Funds
- Maturity intermediation, risk reduction via
diversification, lower costs of info.
transactions, payments mechanism.
31Other Aspects of Funds
- Regulation
- Investment Company Act (1940). Shares registered
with SEC. Provide periodic reports, approval to
change policies. - Investment co.s pay no tax if distribute 90 of
income to shareholders annually. Also must
diversify asset-holdings. - Fees charged regulated by SEC, 8.5 maximum.
- Banks and Mutual Funds
- Banks offer mutual funds to stem
disintermediation. - Shares in bank mutual funds generally not
govt-insured. - Family of Funds
- Management firm offers numerous funds with
different objectives. Transfers between funds at
low or no cost. - Attempt to capitalize on economies of scale and
scope.
32 33Pension Funds
- Pension Funds
- Established by plan sponsors (firms, unions,
govts) to pay retirement benefits to eligible
employees. - Structure
- Financed by tax-exempt contributions by
employer/employee. - Often employee contributions matched to some
extent by employer. - Private provision of an illiquid asset, not
available until retire. - Regulation of Pension Funds
- ERISA (1974) federal act regulating pension plans
- Funding standards for minimum contributions by
plan sponsor. - Fiduciary standards for fund trustees or
managers. - Minimum vesting standards for plan participants.
- Establish insurance program for vested benefits.
34Types of Pension Funds
- Defined Benefit Pension Funds
- Plan sponsor ,makes guaranteed payments at
retirement based on employee characteristics
(years worked, salary). - Plan sponsor at risk of investments not
generating sufficient returns to meet payments. - Defined Contribution Pension Funds
- Plan sponsor makes contributions for qualifying
employees. - Payments at retirement depend on return earned
over life. - Returns not guaranteed by plan sponsor, depend on
investment vehicles chosen by employee. - Hybrid Pension Funds
- Combines some aspects of defined benefits and
contribution. - i.e. guaranteed minimum cash benefits financed by
employer employee contributions.
35 36Insurance Companies
- Insurance Companies
- Financial intermediaries which, for a price,
will make a payment (or series of payments) if an
event occurs. - Insurance Policy
- Premium paid by policyholder to insurance company
- Sets specified payments contingent on future
events. - Insurance company underwrites the policyholders
risk. - Regulation
- Insurance policies are not guaranteed by the
govt. - Insurance companies regulated primarily at state
level. - Sets type of securities eligible for investment.
- How value of securities determined for reporting
- Annual statement plus meet adjusted regulatory
capital reqs.
37Property Casualty Insurance
- Personal or commercial lines provide broad range
of insurance protection against - Loss, damage, or destruction of property.
- Loss or impairment of income-producing ability.
- Loss resulting from injury or4 death due to
accident. - Amount of liability specified in policy. Premium
paid is invested until needed to pay on a claim. - Liabilities and Risk
- Amount and timing of claims difficult to predict
for individual but easier for pool of
policyholders. - Geographic risk, regulatory pricing risk,
inflation risk. - Assets geared more to equities than bonds,
liabilities shorter term than life insurance.
38Life Insurance
- Life Insurance
- Insurance against death but many of the products
have an investment income component as well. - Term Life Insurance
- Provides a death benefit but no cash buildup
prior to death. - Timing of benefit unknown for individual but can
estimate actuarially the amount payable on pool
of holders. - Whole Life Insurance
- Pays stated value upon death but also accumulates
cash balance (cash surrender) against which
holder may borrow. - Risk is insurance co. may not earn return on its
assets sufficient to meet crediting rate built
into policy premium. - Universal life offers benefit separate
investment vehicle.
39Life Insurance
- Annuity (Insurance Against Life)
- Regular payment to policy-holder for specified
period. - Life-contingent vs. nonlife-contingent policies.
- While length of individuals life not known,
actuarial data in pool of individuals allows good
estimate. - Single premium deferred annuity used by pension
plans. - Guaranteed Investment Contract (GIC)
- GIC is zero coupon bond issued by insurance
company at guaranteed crediting rate. - Risk that insurance co. assets will earn less
than this forcing insurance company into
bankruptcy. - Pure investment product available at different
maturities.