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The Banking Firm Purpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank . Four types of Banks Commercial Banks Savings and Loans Savings Banks Credit Unions
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The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Banking Firm

Purpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank.

Four types of Banks Commercial Banks Savings and Loans Savings Banks Credit Unions

Page 2: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Bank’s Balance Sheet

Assets Liabilities + Equity

Assets -- Market value of items in your possession.

Liabilities -- Amounts owed to other parties.

Equity = Assets - Liabilities

Page 3: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Working With Assets, Liabilities, and Equity

Note: Definition of equity implies:

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

(Balance sheets balance!).

Page 4: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

A Balance Sheet Example

Consider a house that you buy worth $120,000. You take out a mortgage of $100,000.

Assets Liabilities + Equity House $120,000 Mortgage $100,000 Equity $20,000

Page 5: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Bank’s Major Liabilities and Equity

(1) Checkable Deposits (D) Includes Demand Deposits,

Negotiable Order of Withdrawal (NOW) Acounts, Automatic Transfer of Savings (ATS) Accounts.

Not a major source of funds for banks

Page 6: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(2) Nontransactions Deposits (T) Includes Savings Deposits, and

Small and Large Time Deposits (Negotiable CDs)

Major source of funds for banks -- higher interest rate (cost), but less frequency/more predictability of withdrawal

Page 7: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(3) Borrowings (BORR) -- Funds borrowed by banks, usually to meet reserve requirements

Eurodollars Repurchase Agreements Issued Federal Funds borrowed Discount Window Borrowings

Page 8: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(4) Equity (or Equity Capital) (E) E = Total Assets - Total Liabilities Increases with bank profits,

decreases with bank losses Equity-Asset Ratio =

(Equity/Total Assets) -- measure of bank’s health

Page 9: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Bank’s Major Assets

(1) Reserves (R) -- vault cash of banks plus deposits at the Federal Reserve

Interest earning, but interest rate less than loan rates

Purpose: to back up withdrawals from customer deposits

How much reserves to hold? Profit versus safety

Page 10: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Reserve Requirements: The “Minimum Safety Level”

Federal Reserve: issues reserve ratios on checkable deposits (rD) and savings and time deposits (rT) with the provision that, at any time

R > rDD + rTT

Page 11: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Decomposition of Reserves

Required Reserves (RR), RR = rDD + rTT

Excess Reserves (ER), ER = R - RR

Equivalent Ways to Express Reserve Requirement R RR, or ER 0

Page 12: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Other Assets

(2) Cash items in the Process of

Collection -- uncleared checks

(3) Deposits at Other Banks

(Correspondent Banking)

Page 13: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(4) Securities Holdings (B)

Holdings of Bonds, holding stock is not allowed

Revenue source for banks Short-term bonds -- “secondary

reserves” Holdings include Negotiable CDs of

other banks Long-term bonds -- can enjoy

conveniences of bonds

Page 14: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(5) Loans

Other major revenue source Less liquid than bonds. For the

most part, the bank must hold them until maturity

Higher default risk than bonds

Page 15: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

(5) Loans, Continued

Preferred to bonds as a revenue source for banks.

-- Inconveniences imply higher

interest rate

-- Personal aspect, tradition of

banking (US).

Page 16: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Distinction Between Types of Banks (Loans)

Commercial Banks -- “Full Service Banks”, any type of loan

Savings and Loans -- primarily consumer mortgages

Savings Banks -- primarily consumer mortgages and consumer loans

Credit Unions -- primarily consumer loans (different tax treatment as well)

Page 17: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Fundamental Balance Sheet Rule

Any customer withdrawal from any of their deposits (checkable deposits or savings and time deposits) must be met with an equal decrease in reserves.

Page 18: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

An Example: Customer Withdrawal

Customer withdraws $200 from their savings deposit (T) at Chase

Chase

R - $200 T - $200

Page 19: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

New Customer Deposits

Example: Customer deposits $300 in their checkable deposit (D)

Chase

R + $300 D + $300

Page 20: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Banks as Financial Intermediaries

Financial Intermediary -- An institution that borrows from lenders, then loans to borrowers.

Takes advantage of institutional fact of life -- lenders want to “lend small”, but borrowers want to “borrow large”.

Page 21: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

An Example -- The Bank Increasing Its Profits

You make a $1000 mortgage payment to Chase, $800 is interest and $200 is payment to principal. Interest paid on deposits: $300 to holders of savings and time deposits (T) and $50 to holders of checkable deposits (D).

Page 22: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Balance Sheet Description

Chase

R + $1000 D + $50

L - $200 T + $300

E + $450

Bank Profit (E) = $800 - $350 = $450

Page 23: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

A Banking Philosophy: Liability Management

Liability Management -- Seek loan demand, then finance it by issuing CDs, or borrowing if under reserve requirements.

Aggressive, profit-oriented policy, followed mainly by large banks.

Page 24: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Liability Management: Evidence

Negotiable CDs have become the primary source of bank funds.

More bank borrowing (more outlets to borrow as well).

Aggregate excess reserves are generally close to zero.

Greater percentage of loans in asset portfolio (less liquid, more default risk than bonds).

Page 25: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Bank’s Nightmares

Financial intermediaries have inherent fundamental instabilities.

The bank can only reduce their probability of occurrence and the impact if they do occur.

Bank regulation and regulatory agencies seek as well to reduce the probability of occurrence or reduce the impact to the bank when they happen (next chapter).

Page 26: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Nightmare # 1 -- Disintermediation

Disintermediation -- The systematic withdrawal of customer funds, which can create a minor or major liquidity crisis.

Adverse effect of minor case: bank slips below reserve requirement.

Page 27: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Bank Run: The Most Dramatic CaseConsider the following balance sheet

situation (rD = 0.10, rT = 0.05). Chase R $500 D $2000 L $6500 T $6000 Bonds $2000 E $1000

Customers want 50% of D and 50% of T (HELP!!).

Page 28: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Ways to Reduce Adverse Effects: Disintermediation

Seek sufficient liquidity in asset portfolio

Increase excess reserves for anticipated unusual withdrawals

Be competitiveUse borrowing sources, when

needed

Page 29: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Nightmare #2 -- Interest Rate Risk

Interest Rate Risk -- Increases in interest rates (cost of funds) that the bank cannot pass on to its existing loans.

Creates reduced profits or even losses on existing loans

Most risky -- fixed rate mortgages (Savings and Loans!).

Page 30: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Ways to Reduce Interest Rate Risk

Reduce the gap in maturity between assets and liabilities

-- Promote shorter term loans

-- Promote longer-term depositsSeek other sources of

income/profits (“off the balance sheet” banking)

Page 31: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Nightmare #3 -- Loan Default

Loan Default -- Borrower fails to repay loanDeclaring bankruptcy -- chapter 7

(consumers sell assets for discharge of debts), as opposed to chapter 13 (debtor arranges plan to repay debt).

Most frequent for consumers – credit card balances (unsecured)

Default on mortgages – secured loans, but could be a problem for banks if housing prices have fallen significantly.

Page 32: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Example: Loan DefaultConsider the following balance sheet

situation (rD = 0.10, rT = 0.05).

Chase

R $500 D $2000

L $6500 T $6000

Bonds $2000 E $1000

Equity-Asset Ratio

= (1000/9000) = 11.1%

Page 33: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

The Balance Sheet After a Loan Default$500 loan default. Chase R $500 D $2000 L $6000 T $6000 Bonds $2000 E $500

Equity-Asset Ratio = (500/8500) = 5.6%

Page 34: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

Ways to Reduce Adverse Effects of Loan Default

Screening/Collateral Knowing clientelePortfolio DiversificationSeek to maintain sufficiently large

equity-asset ratio

Page 35: The Banking Firm zPurpose of Chapter -- Introduction to basic operations of the individual bank. zFour types of Banks yCommercial Banks ySavings and Loans.

A Preview of the Next Chapter

Bank regulation – how regulatory agencies regulate the banking system.

Wins and losses – US banking in the postwar period, with recent developments and current issues