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The Investment Function in Banking

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Introduction. Depository institutions devote a significant portion of their asset portfolios to investments in securities. Nonbank financial-service providers such as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Investment Function in Banking


1
Chapter10
  • The Investment Function in Banking

2
Functions of a Banks Security Portfolio
  1. Stabilize the banks income, so that bank
    revenues level out over the business cycle.
  2. Offset credit risk exposure in the banks loan
    portfolio.
  3. Provide geographic diversification.
  4. Provide a backup source of liquidity.
  5. Reduce the bank' tax exposure, especially in
    offsetting taxable loan revenues.

3
Functions of a Banks Security Portfolio.contd
  • Serve as collateral to secure government deposits
    held by the banks.
  • Help hedge the bank against losses due to
    changing interest rates.
  • Provide flexibility in a banks asset portfolio
    because investment securities can be bought or
    sold quickly to restructure bank assets.
  • Dress up the banks balance sheet make it look
    financially stronger due to the high quality of
    most bank held securities.

4
Figure Investments On a Banks Balance Sheet
Asset Cash
Liabilities Deposits
Add to Investments When cash Is excess
Sell investments When cash is low
When deposits are low use Investments as
collateral for more borrowings
Nondeposit Borrowings
Investment
Return investments pledged As collateral to the
investment Portfolio when deposit growth Is strong
Add to investments When loan demand Is weak.
Sell Investments When loan Demand is high
Loans
5
Investment Instruments Available to Banks and
Other Financial Firms
  • Popular Money Market Instruments
  • Treasury Bills
  • Short-term treasury Notes Bonds.
  • Federal Agency Securities (for USA only)
  • Certificates of Deposit
  • International Eurocurrency Deposits.
  • Bankers Acceptances.
  • Commercial Paper.
  • Short-term Municipal Obligations
  • Popular Capital Market Instruments
  • Long-term Treasury Notes Bonds.
  • Municipal Notes Bonds
  • Corporate Notes Bonds
  • Common stock Preferred Stock

6
Other Investment Instruments Developed More
Recently
  • Structured Notes
  • Securitized Assets.
  • Stripped Securities
  • Structured NotesStructured notes usually are
    packaged investments assembled by security
    dealers that offer customers flexible yields in
    order to protect their customers' investments
    against losses due to inflation and changing
    interest rates. Most structured notes are based
    upon government or federal agency securities.

7
Other Investment Instruments Developed More
Recently---Contd
  • Securitized Assets Securitized assets are loans
    that are placed in a pool and, as the loans
    generate interest and principal income, that
    income is passed on to the holders of securities
    representing an interest in the loan pool. These
    loan-backed securities are attractive to many
    banks because of their higher yields and frequent
    federal guarantees (in the case, for example, of
    most home-mortgage-backed securities) as well as
    their relatively high liquidity and marketability

8
Other Investment Instruments Developed More
Recently---Contd
  • What special risks do securitized assets present
    to banks and other financial institutions
    investing in them?
  • Securitized assets often carry substantial
    interest-rate risk and prepayment risk, which
    arises when certain loans in the
    securitized-asset pool are paid off early by the
    borrowers (usually because interest rates have
    fallen and new loans can be substituted for the
    old loans at cheaper
  • loan rates) or are defaulted. Prepayment
    risk can significantly decrease the values of
    securities backed by loans and change their
    effective maturities.

9
Other Investment Instruments Developed More
Recently---Contd
  • Reasons for the popularity of Securitized
    Assets/Loan-backed investment securities
  • Guarantees from government agencies or private
    institutions.
  • The higher average yields available on
    securitized assets than on U.S. Treasury
    securities.
  • The lack of good-quality loans securities of
    other kinds in same markets around the globe.
  • The superior liquidity marketability of
    securities backed by loans compared to the loans
    themselves.

10
Other Investment Instruments Developed More
Recently---Contd
  • Stripped Securities Stripped securities consist
    of either principal payments or interest payments
    from a debt security. The expected cash flow from
    a Treasury bond or mortgage-backed security is
    separated into a stream of principal payments and
    a stream of interest payments, each of which may
    be sold as a separate security maturing on the
    day the payment is due. Some of these stripped
    payments are highly sensitive in their value to
    changes in interest rates.

11
Factors Affecting the Choice of Investment
Securities
  • Expected Rate of Return
  • Tax Exposure
  • Interest-Rate Risk
  • Credit or Default Risk
  • Business Risk
  • Liquidity Risk
  • Call Risk
  • Prepayment Risk
  • Inflation Risk
  • Pledging Requirements

12
How is the expected yield on most bonds
determined?
  • For most bonds, this requires the calculation of
    the yield to maturity (YTM) if the bond is to be
    held to maturity or the planned holding period
    yield (HPY) between point of purchase and point
    of sale. YTM is the expected rate of return on a
    bond held until its maturity date is reached,
    based on the bond's purchase price, promised
    interest payments, and redemption value at
    maturity. HPY is a rate of discount bringing the
    current price of a bond in line with its stream
    of expected cash inflows and its expected sale
    price at the end of the bank's holding period.

13
How has the tax exposure of various bank
security investments changed in recent years?
  • In recent years, the government has treated
    interest income and capital gains from most bank
    investments as ordinary income for tax purposes.
    In the past, only interest was treated as
    ordinary income and capital gains were taxed at a
    lower rate.
  • After-tax Gross Yield on Corporate Bond
    Before-tax gross yield to the bank X (1 Banks
    marginal income tax rate)

14
Different Types of Risk
  • Interest Rate Risk The danger that shifting
    market interest rates can reduce bank net income
    or lower the value of bank assets equity.
  • Credit or Default Risk The danger that a banks
    extensions of credit will not pay out as
    promised, reducing the banks profitability
    threatening its survival.
  • Business Risk The danger that changes in the
    economy will adversely affect the banks income
    the quality of its assets.
  • Liquidity Risk The danger that a bank will
    experience a cash shortage or have to borrow at
    high cost to meet its obligations to pay.

15
Different Types of Risk-----Contd
  • Call Risk The danger that investment securities
    held by a bank will be retired early, reducing
    the banks expected return.
  • Prepayment Risk The danger that banks holding
    loan-backed securities will receive a lower
    return because some of the loans backing the
    securities are paid off early.
  • Inflation Risk The danger that rising prices of
    goods services will result in lower bank
    returns or reduced values in bank assets
    equity.

16
Maturity Management Tools
  1. The Yield Curve A geographical relationship
    between the maturity or term of a collection of
    securities their yield to maturity.

Yield to Maturity (YTM)
Time (measured in months years)
17
Maturity Management Tools----Contd
  • Features of Yield Curve
  • Yield curves possibly provide a forecast of the
    future course of short-term rates, telling us
    what the current average expectation is in the
    market.
  • The yield curve also provides an indication of
    equilibrium yields at varying maturities and,
    therefore, gives an indication if there are any
    significantly underpriced or overpriced
    securities.
  • The yield curve's shape gives the bank's
    investment officer a measure of the yield
    trade-off - that is, how much yield will change,
    on average, if a security portfolio is shortened
    or lengthened in maturity.

18
Maturity Management Tools----Contd
  1. Duration Duration tells a bank about the price
    volatility of its earning assets and liabilities
    due to changes in interest rates. Higher values
    of duration imply greater risk to the value of
    assets and liabilities held by a bank. For
    example, a loan or security with a duration of 4
    years stands to lose twice as much in terms of
    value for the same change in interest rates as a
    loan or security with a duration of 2 years.
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