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1、Chapter PreviewBanks play an important role in channeling funds (about $6 trillion annually) to finance productive investment opportunities.They provide loans to businesses, finance college educations, and allow us to purchase homes with mortgages.Chapter PreviewIn this chapter, we examine how banki
2、ng is conducted to earn the highest profits possible. In the commercial banking setting, we look at loans, balance sheet management, and income determinants. Topics include:The Bank Balance SheetBasics of BankingGeneral Principles of Bank ManagementOff-Balance Sheet ActivitiesMeasuring Bank Performa
3、nceThe Bank Balance SheetThe Balance Sheet is a list of a banks assets and liabilitiesTotal assets = total liabilities + capitalThe Bank Balance SheetA banks balance sheet lists sources of bank funds (liabilities) and uses to which they are put (assets)Banks invest these liabilities (sources) into a
4、ssets (uses) in order to create value for their capital providersThe Bank Balance SheetThe next slide shows the aggregate balance sheet for all commercial banks as of 2010, each of these items as a % of assets. We will then examine each item in detail.The Bank Balance SheetFlow of funds (tab down to
5、 commercial banks) http:/releases/z1/current/z1r-4.pdfThe Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (a)Checkable Deposits: includes all accounts that allow the owner (depositor) to write checks to third parties; examples include non-interest earning checking accounts (known as DDAsdemand deposit accounts), in
6、terest earning negotiable orders of withdrawal (NOW) accounts, and money-market deposit accounts (MMDAs), which typically pay the most interest among checkable deposit accountsThe Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (a)Checkable deposits are a banks lowest cost funds because depositors want safety and l
7、iquidity and will accept a lesser interest return from the bank in order to achieve such attributes. They also make up about 4% of bank liabilities.The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (b)Nontransaction Deposits: are the overall primary source of bank liabilities (74%) and are accounts from which the
8、 depositor cannot write checks; examples include savings accounts and time deposits (also known as CDs or certificates of deposit) The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (b)Nontransaction deposits are generally a banks highest cost funds because banks want deposits which are more stable and predictable
9、 and will pay more to the depositors (funds suppliers) in order to achieve such attributes.The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (c)Borrowings: banks obtain funds by borrowing from the Federal Reserve System, other banks, and corporations; these borrowings are called: discount loans/advances (from the
10、 Fed), fed funds (from other banks), interbank offshore dollar deposits (from other banks), repurchase agreements (a.k.a., “repos” from other banks and companies), commercial paper and notes (from companies and institutional investors)The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (c)Certain borrowings can be
11、more volatile than other liabilities, depending on market conditions. They currently make up about 12% of bank liabilities, but have been as high as 26% (2004) and as low as 2% (1960) in recent history.The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (d)Bank Capital: is the source of funds supplied by the bank o
12、wners, either directly through purchase of ownership shares or indirectly through retention of earnings (retained earnings being the portion of funds which are earned as profits but not paid out as ownership dividends). This is about 6% of assets.The Bank Balance Sheet: Liabilities (d)Since assets m
13、inus liabilities equals capital, capital is seen as protecting the liability suppliers from asset devaluations or write-offs (capital is also called the balance sheets “shock absorber,” thus capital levels are important).The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (a)Reserves: funds held in account with the Fed
14、(vault cash as well). Required reserves represent what is required by law under current required reserve ratios. Any reserves beyond this area called excess reserves.The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (a)Cash items in Process of Collection: checks deposited at a bank, but where the funds have not yet be
15、en transferred from the other bank.Deposits at Other Banks: usually deposits from small banks at larger banks (referred to as correspondent banking)The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (a)Reserves, Cash items in Process of Collection, and Deposits at Other Banks are collectively referred to as Cash Items
16、in our balance sheet, and account for 2% of assets.The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (b)Securities: these are either U.S. government/agency debt, municipal debt, and other (non-equity) securities. These make-up about 17% of assets. Short-term Treasury debt is often referred to as secondary reserves bec
17、ause of its high liquidity.The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (c)Loans: representing 74% of assets, these are a banks income-earning assets, such as business loans, auto loans, and mortgages. These are generally not very liquid. Most banks tend to specialize in either consumer loans or business loans, a
18、nd even take that as far as loans to specific groups (such as a particular industry).The Bank Balance Sheet: Assets (d)Other Assets: bank buildings, computer systems, and other equipment.Basics of BankingBefore we explore the main role of banksthat is, asset transformationit is helpful to understand
19、 some of the simple accounting associated with the process of banking. But think beyond the debits/credit and try to see that banks engage in asset transformation.Basics of BankingAsset transformation is, for example, when a bank takes your savings deposits and uses the funds to make, say, a mortgag
20、e loan. Banks tend to “borrow short and lend long” (in terms of maturity).Basics of BankingT-account Analysis: Deposit of $100 cash into First National BankBasics of BankingDeposit of $100 checkConclusion: When bank receives deposits, reserves by equal amount; when bank loses deposits, reserves by e
21、qual amountBasics of BankingThis simple analysis gets more complicated when we add bank regulations to the picture. For example, if we return to the $100 deposit, recall that banks must maintain reserves, or vault cash. This changes how the $100 deposit is recorded.Basics of BankingT-account Analysi
22、s: Deposit of $100 cash into First National BankBasics of BankingAs we can see, $10 of the deposit must remain with the bank to meeting federal regulations. Now, the bank is free to work with the $90 in its asset transformation functions. In this case, the bank loans the $90 to its customers.Basics
23、of BankingT-account Analysis: Deposit of $100 cash into First National BankGeneral Principles of Bank ManagementLiquidity managementAsset managementManaging credit riskManaging interest-rate riskLiability managementManaging capital adequacyNow lets look at how a bank manages its assets and liabiliti
24、es. The bank has four primary concerns:General Principles of Bank ManagementAlthough we will focus on these ideas, banks must also manage credit risk and interest-rate risk. An in-depth discussion of these topics will be presented in Chapter 24.Principles of Bank ManagementLiquidity ManagementReserv
25、es requirement = 10%, Excess reserves = $10 million Principles of Bank ManagementWith 10% reserve requirement, bank still has excess reserves of $1 million: no changes needed in balance sheetDeposit outflow of $10 millionLiquidity ManagementWith 10% reserve requirement, bank has $9 million reserve s
26、hortfallNo excess reservesDeposit outflow of $10 millionLiquidity ManagementBorrow from other banks or corporations2. Sell securitiesLiquidity ManagementBorrow from FedCall in or sell off loansConclusion: Excess reserves are insurance against above 4 costs from deposit outflowsAsset ManagementAsset
27、Management: the attempt to earn the highest possible return on assets while minimizing the risk.Get borrowers with low default risk, paying high interest ratesBuy securities with high return, low riskDiversifyManage liquidityLiability ManagementLiability Management: managing the source of funds, fro
28、m deposits, to CDs, to other debt.Important since 1960sNo longer primarily depend on deposits When see loan opportunities, borrow or issue CDs to acquire fundsLiability ManagementIts important to understand that banks now manage both sides of the balance sheet together, whereas it was more separate
29、in the past. Indeed, most banks now manage this via the asset-liability management (ALM) committee.This explains the increased use of CDs and loans over checkable deposits in recent decades.Capital Adequacy ManagementBank capital is a cushion that prevents bank failure. For example, consider these t
30、wo banks:Capital Adequacy ManagementWhat happens if these banks make loans or invest in securities (say, subprime mortgage loans, for example) that end up losing money? Lets assume both banks lose $5 million from bad loans.Capital Adequacy ManagementImpact of $5 million loan lossConclusion: A bank m
31、aintains reserves to lessen the chance that it will become insolvent.Capital Adequacy ManagementSo, why dont banks hold want to hold a lot of capital? Higher is bank capital, lower is return on equityROA = Net Profits/AssetsROE = Net Profits/Equity CapitalEM = Assets/Equity CapitalROE = ROA EMCapita
32、l , EM , ROE Capital Adequacy ManagementTradeoff between safety (high capital) and ROEBanks also hold capital to meet capital requirements (more on this in Chapter 20).The Practicing Manager: Strategies for Managing Capital: what should a bank manager do if she feels the bank is holding too much cap
33、ital?Sell or retire stockIncrease dividends to reduce retained earningsIncrease asset growth via debt (like CDs)The Practicing Manager: Reversing these strategies will help a manager if she feels the bank is holding too little capital?Issue stockDecrease dividends to increase retained earningsSlow a
34、sset growth (retire debt)How a Capital Crunch Caused a Credit Crunch in 2008The slowdown in growth of credit triggered a crunch in 2007credit was hard to get. What caused the credit crunch?Housing boom and bust led to large bank losses, including losses on SIVs which had to be recognized on the bala
35、nce sheet. The losses reduced bank capital.How a Capital Crunch Caused a Credit Crunch in 2008Banks were forced to either (1) raise new capital or (2) reduce lending. Guess which route they chose? Why would banks be hesitant to raise new capital (equity) during an economic downturn?Off-Balance-Sheet
36、 ActivitiesLoan sales (secondary loan participation)Fee income fromForeign exchange trades for customersServicing mortgage-backed securitiesGuarantees of debtBackup lines of creditTrading Activities and Risk Management TechniquesFinancial futures and options Foreign exchange tradingInterest rate swa
37、psAll these activities involve risk and potential conflictsRouge TradersTo highlight the problems that some of these off-balance sheet activities generate, we will briefly look at two incidences with devastating results.Barings: Nick Leeson engaged in speculative trades on the Nikkea, and personally
38、 generated $1.3 billion in losses over a 3-year period. Barings had to close!Rogue TradersDaiwa Bank: Toshihide Iguchi racked up $1.1 billion in losses in trading. When he fessed-up, the bank decided to hide this from regulators. The bank was eventually fined $340 million and barred from U.S. operat
39、ions.Measuring Bank PerformanceMuch like any business, measuring bank performance requires a look at the income statement. For banks, this is separated into three parts:Operating IncomeOperating ExpensesNet Operating IncomeNote how this is different from, say, a manufacturing firms income statement.Banks Income S
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