Commercial Bank Operations

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
©2009, The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter One Introduction.
Advertisements

Financial Management –Spring 2013 Chapter 2: Financial Markets And Institutions 1.The Importance of Financial Institutions 2.The Flow of Savings to Corporations.
Lecture 17: General bank management
Chapter 22 – Bank Obligations Banks as sellers of debt instruments Raise funds for Bank Operations Long-Term Debt Bonds Short-Term Debt (Money Market)
Financial Markets and Institutions 6th Edition
Chapter 3 – Depository Institutions
COMMERCIAL BANK OPERATIONS
Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
1 Banking Industry Number of banks ~7,000 decreasing (result of consolidation, deregulation and failures) Number of branches ~90,000 increasing (result.
Understanding Financial Management and Securities Markets
Part 6 Financing the Enterprise © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
Characteristics of Taxable Securities Money Market Investments Highly liquid instruments which mature within one year that are issued by governments and.
2-1 CHAPTER 2 AN OVERVIEW OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS.
Investing 101. Types of Savings tools Savings Account: An interest-bearing account (passbook or statement) at a financial institution. Certificates of.
Chap. 1 The Study of Financial Markets Financial Markets – A Definition: –Markets in which funds are transferred between savers (investors) and borrowers.
Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter One Introduction.
The Money Markets Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman1. Characteristics Sold in large denominations Have low default risk Mature in one year or less from their original.
McGraw-Hill /Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter Twelve Commercial Banks’ Financial Statements and Analysis.
Chapter 2 An Overview of the Financial System. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 2-2 Function of Financial Markets Perform.
Part IV Financial Markets. Part IV Financial Markets.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license.
Background on Commercial Banks
CHAPTER 23 Consumer Finance Operations. Chapter Objectives n Identify the main sources and uses of finance company funds n Describe the risk exposure.
Chapter 5 Money market Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman 1.
The Financial Services Industry: Depository Institutions
Chapter 17 Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions.
Financial Assets (Instruments)
1 Chapter 6 Financial Markets, Instruments, and Participants ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Financial Instruments
The Money Market Chapter 9 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Ch: 17 Commercial Bank Sources and Uses of Funds
Chapter 15 Investing in Bonds Video Clip Chapter 15 Bonds 15-1.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter One Introduction.
1 PART VI Commercial Banking. 2 CHAPTER 17 Commercial Bank Operations.
Commercial Bank Operations
Chapter 16 Commercial Bank Operations © 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company.
University of Palestine International Business And Finance Management Accounting For Financial Firms Part (3) Ibrahim Sammour.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. A Closer Look at Financial Institutions and Financial Markets Chapter 27.
ALOMAR_212_4 1 Financial Market Instruments. ALOMAR_212_42 What are the securities (instruments) traded in the financial market? 1- Money Market Instruments:
1 Chapter 9 Commercial Banking ©Thomson/South-Western 2006.
Overview of the Financial System
Chapter 7 Commercial bank financial statement Salwa Elshorafa 2009 © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.
Chapter 7 Commercial bank financial statement Salwa Elshorafa 2009 © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.
ALOMAR_212_31 Chapter 2 The Financial System. ALOMAR_212_32 Intermediaries, instruments, and regulations. Financial markets: bond and stock markets Financial.
BANKING.  Banking is a combination of businesses designed to deliver the services  Pool the savings of and making loans  Diversification  Access to.
CHAPTER 17. Transaction Deposits; checking accounts  Commercial accounts non-interest bearing  Interest bearing checking accounts Savings Deposits;
Financial Markets, Instruments, and Market Makers Chapter 3 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter Five The Financial Statements of Banks and Their Principal Competitors.
Interest Rate Risk Management. Strategies to Manage Interest-rate Risk Rearrange balance-sheet Gap Management Duration Gap Management Off-Balance Sheet.
Copyright © 2014 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter 2 AN OVERVIEW OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM Mishkin/Serletis The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets.
Chapter Five The Financial Statements of Commercial Banks Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
An Overview of the Financial System chapter 2 1. Function of Financial Markets Lenders-Savers (+) Households Firms Government Foreigners Financial Markets.
THE BANK'S BALANCE SHEET
Investing in Bonds McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
Money Market Money Market Concept, Meaning
Chapter Thirteen Managing Non-deposit Liabilities Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Bellwork 1.What are the three functions of money? 2.What is the purpose of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation? 3.When was the Federal Reserve System.
CHAPTER 6 NOTES. Statement savings account: savings account where the depositor receives a monthly statement showing all transactions. Money market deposit.
1 Chapter 17 Commercial Bank Operations Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e, Jeff Madura Copyright ©2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning.
Role of Financial Markets and Institutions
Financial Intermediaries Institutions that channel savings to investors; such as banks, insurance co.’s and credit unions.
MONETARY POLICY Lecture 4 Role of banks in the process of money creation Marijana Ivanov, Ph.D.
Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
Commercial Bank Operations
Chapter 12 - Bank Management
Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc.
Banking and the Management of Financial Institutions
Presentation transcript:

Commercial Bank Operations 17 Commercial Bank Operations

Chapter Objectives Describe the most common sources of funds for commercial banks Describe the most common uses of funds for commercial banks Describe typical off-balance sheet activities for commercial banks

Bank Participation in Financial Conglomerates Impact of the Financial Services Modernization Act (1999) Banks and other financial service firms were given more freedom to merge and offer a range of financial services Insurance Securities services Banks now a subsidiary of financial conglomerates

Bank Participation in Financial Conglomerates Benefits of diversified services to individuals and firms Individuals can obtain all their financial services at a single financial conglomerate Deposits Loans Investing (brokerage) Insurance Businesses can obtain loans, issue stocks and bonds, and have their pension fund managed by the same institution

Bank Participation in Financial Conglomerates Benefits of diversified services to the financial institution Reduce reliance on demand for single service Economies of scale and scope Diversification (service and geographical) may result in less risk Generate new business

Bank Sources of Funds Transaction deposits Savings Deposits Demand deposit account (checking) Savings Deposits Passbook savings

Bank Sources of Funds Time Deposits Certificate of deposit (CD) No secondary market Negotiable CD Short-term, minimum $100,000 Can trade among investors via dealer Money Market Deposit Accounts (MMDAs) More liquid than CDs : no specified maturity Limited check writing Created in 1982

Bank Sources of Funds Federal Funds Purchased Short-term loans between banks Allows banks to meet reserve requirement or funding needs Interest rate charged is the federal funds rate Borrowing from the Federal Reserve Banks Borrowing at the discount window Discount rate Intended for meeting temporary short-term reserve requirement needs Must get Fed approval

Bank Sources of Funds Repurchase agreements Sale of securities by one party to another with an agreement to repurchase the securities at a specified date and price Banks may sell T-bills to a corporation with temporary excess cash (bank demand deposit) and then buy them back later Source of funds for a few days Collateralized by the treasury bills

Bank Sources of Funds Eurodollar borrowings Bonds issued by the bank Banks outside the United States make dollar-denominated loans Eurodollar market is very large Bonds issued by the bank Like other businesses, banks issue bonds to finance long-term fixed assets Usually subordinated to deposits Part of secondary regulatory capital

Bank Sources of Funds Bank capital Obtained from issuing stock or retaining earnings No obligation to pay out funds in the future Must be sufficient to absorb operating losses

Uses of Funds by Banks Loans make up about 64 percent of bank assets, while all securities make up about 22 percent of assets. Cash represents 6 percent of bank assets. Cash and “due from” balances at institutions Currency/coin provided via banks Reserve requirements imposed by Fed Tool for controlling the money supply Due from Fed and vault cash count as reserves Also hold cash and due from balances to maintain liquidity and accommodate withdrawal requests by depositors

Uses of Funds by Banks Bank Loans Types of business loans Working capital loans Term loans Purchasing fixed assets Protective covenants Informal line of credit Revolving credit loan

Uses of Funds by Banks Bank Loans Loan participations Sometimes large firms seek to borrow more money than an individual bank can provide Lead bank Loans supporting leveraged buyouts Banks charge a high loan rate Monitored by bank regulators

Uses of Funds by Banks Bank Loans Collateral requirements on business loans Increasingly accepting intangible assets Important to service-oriented firms Increased lending risk with service businesses--telecomm Types of consumer loans Installment loans Credit cards Real estate loans

Uses of Funds by Banks Investment securities (bank income and liquidity) Treasury securities Government agency securities Freddie Mac Fannie Mae Corporate and municipal securities Investment grade only Federal funds sold Lending funds in the federal funds market

Uses of Funds by Banks Repurchase agreements Eurodollar loans Branches of U.S. banks located outside of the U.S. Foreign-owned banks Fixed assets Office buildings Land

Off-Balance Sheet Activities Loan commitments Obligation of bank to provide a specified loan amount to a particular business upon request Note issuance facility (NIF) Banks earn fee income for risk assumed Standby letters of credit (SLC) Backs a customer’s obligation to a third party Banks earn fee income

Off-Balance Sheet Activities Forward contracts Agreement between a customer and bank to exchange one currency for another on a particular future date at a specified exchange rate Allows customers to hedge their exchange-rate risk

Off-Balance Sheet Activities Swap contracts Two parties agree to periodically exchange interest payments on a specified notional amount of principal Banks serve as intermediaries or dealer and/or guarantor for a fee