Title: Value Creation and Structure of Financial Services Industry
1Value Creation and Structure of Financial
Services Industry
2Target market for this course
- Managers of financial service firms
- Investment bankers doing deals
- Strategic planners and researchers
- Consultants and other business services
- Users of financial services
3Course goals and requirements
- Readings
- Class participation
- Case analysis and discussion
- Group project
- Individual parts of project
- Current periodicals
4Financial service firms
- Mergers and acquisitions
- Banks and thrifts consolidate
- e.g. Citibank and CalFed
- Financial firms form conglomerates
- Citigroup out of Travellers and Citicorp
- Multinational financial firms
- Aegon (Holland) acquires Transamerica
- International events
- Chile, South Korea, Poland
-
5Driving forces
- Technology
- Cheap telephony/satellites
- Telephone service centers
- Cheap computing
- Internet
- Regulation/taxation
- Roth accounts, 401Ks
- Bank holding company/Glass-Steagall
- Demographics
6Key questions for management
- Where are synergies, revenues or costs?
- Economies of scale
- Economies of scope
- Cross-selling
- Cost of inputs
- More important What are we good at?
- Requires a rigorous framework for analysis
7Approach taken in this course
- Financial economics
- Hands-on applications
- Healthy skepticism
- Examine the basics
- Ask simple questions
8Objective function for financial service firms
- Maximize shareholders wealth
- Stock-owned corporations
- Commercial banks
- Diversified financials
- Mutual organizations
- Thrifts
- Insurance
- Problem with mutuals
9Value Added and Value Creation
- Value added subtracts all costs of inputs from
all revenues - Value added must cover any value added by the
firm from use of labor and capital, and used to
cover payments to tax authorities - In many countries, value added used as basis for
taxes (e.g European Union)
10Value Added in 2004Amex and Lehman Brothers
11Performance Assessments
12Value Creation inFinancial Services
- Financial services
- Activities required to provide services
- Allocate resources to highest returns
- Determinants of returns
13Financial Services
- Credit (lending)
- Securities
- Transaction processing (payments)
- Insurance
- Asset management
- Information
14Activities to Provide Services
- Setting Terms/Pricing
- Communicating/Marketing
- Producing/Delivering
- Controlling/Monitoring
- Funding/Investing
- Risk Bearing/Risk Shifting
15Value Creation Matrix
- Columns Services
- Rows Activities
- Strategies Concentration of activities
- How to choose best strategies?
16Value Matrix (Table 2.5)
17Possible Strategiesto Increase ROI
18Traditional Financial Services
- Result of
- Business specialization
- Taxation
- Regulation
- Main types of firm
- Deposit-taking
- Insurance type
- Investment companies
- Securities firms
19The Financial Services Industry
- Basic types of institutions
- Deposit-taking
- Insurance type
- Asset management
- Securities
- Representation in Flow of Funds
- Institutional investors
20Flow of Funds
- Strategic overview
- Primary sectors
- Total wealth
- Nature of real wealth
- Role of financial intermediation
- Major financial service sectors
- Tracing changes in the Flow of Funds
21Strategic challenges and the Flow of Funds
- Baby boomers
- Third world development
- Differential savings rates
- Trade flows and trading blocs
- Domestic issues
- Low-income customers
- Community redevelopment
22For Next Week
- Review Chapter 2 discussed this week
- Read Chapter 5 and Copeland et al Valuation
chapters on banks and insurance companies for
next week - Review example of FSI valuation
- Choose firms for members of the group
- Obtain basic financial data, Value Line
Investment Survey, and other analyses