Chapter 9
description
Transcript of Chapter 9
Chapter 9
Commercial Banks
Contents
Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
Commercial Bank Liabilities
Commercial Bank Assets
Commercial Bank Capital Accounts
Commercial Bank Management
Liquidity Management
Liability Management
Capital Management
The Importance of Commercial Banks
Savers Borrower
Funds
Primary claims
Funds Funds
Primary claimsSecondary claims
FinancialIntermediaries
The Importance of Commercial Banks
• Depository institutions play a key role in
channeling funds from savers (surplus unit)
to borrowers (deficit units)
• Commercial banks dominate among
depository institutions.
• Banks take in funds by accepting _____
• Banks use the funds mainly to ______
deposit
grant loans
The Importance of Commercial Banks
• Commercial banks are the oldest and most diversified of all financial intermediaries.
• Banks are important in the money supply process.
• Banks create money by lending or buying the securities
The Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
• Banks earn a profit on the “spread” (3%-4%)
by obtaining funds at relatively low interest
rates and lending at higher interest rates.
• In recent years, fees have played an
increasingly important role in bank profits.
The Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
• A bank balance sheet is a statement of its
assets, liabilities, and net worth at a given point in
time.
•Assets are what it owns.
Loan, securities (Investment) earning assets
•Liabilities are what it owes.
Demand deposit, saving deposit, time deposit
The Commercial Bank Balance Sheet
– Net worth (capital accounts, capital) is
the difference between its assets and
liabilities.
Common stocks, retained earning
•Assets = Liabilities + Net Worth
•Assets - Liabilities = Net Worth
Figure 9-1
Table 9-1
Commercial Bank Liabilities
Transactions Deposits
(checkable deposits)
Non-transaction Deposits
Non-deposit borrowing
Other liabilities
Commercial Bank Liabilities
Transactions Deposits (checkable deposits)
Demand Deposits: non-interest bearing checking accounts
Negotiable Order Of Withdrawal (NOW) Accounts: interest-bearing checking accounts
Automatic Transfer Service (ATS) Accounts:Paired accounts with checks on non-interest baring accounts & automatic transfers to it from interest-bearing accounts
Commercial Bank Liabilities
Non-Transactions Deposits
Passbook Savings Accounts Any amount of funds can be added or withdrawn at any timeSmall Certificates of Deposit (CDs up to $100,000)There are penalties if withdrawing before maturity (3 months to 5 years) similar to time deposit in ThailandMoney Market Deposit Accounts (MMDAs) Special type of saving account with limited check writing feature (no more than 6 times per month) Negotiable CDs. Large CDs over $100,000
Commercial Bank Liabilities
Non-deposit Borrowing
Borrowing from the Fed
discount loans, discount window
pay interest at the discount rate
Borrowing from other banks’ excess reserve
overnights loans between bank
federal funds
pay interest at federal fund rate
Commercial Bank Assets
Cash Assets
Loans
Securities
Other Assets
Commercial Bank Assets
Most of banks’ assets are in form of income-earning assets or earning assets (85%) Loan
Securities
However, banks are subjected to maintains portion of their source of funds (liabilities) in form of non-interest-earning legal reserves Coin and currency in banks
Bank’s deposit balance at the central bank
Commercial Bank Assets
Cash Assets
Vault cash - Currency and coins at bank
o to meet public’s demand
o to meet reserve required
Deposits with Federal Reserve Bank (central bank)o to meet reserve required
o to facilitate check clearing process
Deposits with other bankso Correspondent banking – smaller banks maintain deposits in
larger banks in return of services e.g. check collection, investment counsel, and transaction in securities and foreign currency
Commercial Bank Assets
Loans
Real Estate Loans: collateralized by property (real estate), Ex. Mortgage
Securitization – banks bundle many real estate loans into the package and issue the securities based on this package to investors
Business Loans: Regular installment loans
Lines of credit (subject to compensating balance)
Commercial Bank Assets
Consumer Loans: Auto loans
Credit cards banks get the fee from business accepting the card and also get the interest rate if the cardholders design to pay the minimum balance.
Overdraft arrangement
Other Loans: Federal funds sold
Securities
Other assets Building, Land, Equipment
Commercial Bank Capital Accounts
• Bank capital derives from the issue of bank stock
shares and from retained earnings
• Bank capital provides a cushion that protects a bank's
owners from potential bank insolvency
– Total assets are less than total liabilities
– Negative net worth
Writing Off Bad Loans
Bank needs to write off $600,000 for bad loans
Writing Off Bad Loans
• Immediate write off bad loans can make the bank to
face the situation of insolvency.
– Close the banks
– Find new owners to take over the bank
(through Merger & Acquisition)
• Bank usually (also subject to the regulation) sets aside
contingent funds against loan loss in advance
loan loss reserve (Allowance for bad debts)
Commercial Bank Management
• Commercial banks strive to: – earn solid profits;
– maintain extremely low exposure to the possibility of becoming insolvent, and
– maintain high liquidity (the ability to immediately meet currency withdrawals) by managing liquidity and capital.
T-Accounts
• T-accounts are statements of the change in the balance sheet resulting from a given event. – ie. if a customer withdraws $200 in cash from a savings
account at the Bank of Medicine Bow.
ie. Clearing a check for $12,000 written by a bank customer
The Importance of Liquidity
• Banks must have emergency plans to meet large reserve withdrawals, so banks need to hold liquid assets like Treasury bills.
• If a bank is exposed to large deposit outflows and can obtain reserves only at substantial cost, it could find itself in serious trouble, even if it has a relatively large capital account.
The Liquidity-Risk Trade-off
• If bank decides to maintains high liquidity, bank will face less risk
• If bank decides to maintains low liquidity, bank will face higher risk
The Liquidity-Risk Trade-off
With a reserve requirement of 10%, the bank has no excess reserves.
Its assets are 90% in high return loans and 10% in low return securities.
What if depositors withdraw $20 million?
The Liquidity-Risk Trade-off
If depositors withdraw $20 million, Deposit decreases to $380 million Reserves also decreases to $20 million
However, required reserve ratio is 10%, bank need to maintain reserves at $38 million bank need to find more reserve for $18 million
Bank has marketable securities (liquid assets) only $10 million that is not enough bank need to find other funds
The Liquidity-Profitability Trade-off
• If bank decides to maintains low liquidity, bank will have a change to get higher return
• If bank decides to maintains high liquidity, bank will get lower return
• Higher liquidity means bank will hold more excess reserve (no return) and more marketable securities (low return) rather than lending the loan (higher return)
The Liquidity-Profitability Trade-off
• The bank has $10 million excess reserves.
• Its assets are split between high return loans & low return securities.
The Liquidity-Profitability Trade-off
• If depositors withdraw $20 m, then the balance sheet changes– Deposit decrease to $380 million
– Reserves decrease to $30 million
• With 10% required reserve ratio, bank has to maintain $38 million reserve bank need more $8 million
• Bank have lots of marketable securities to be liquidated and change to reserve no problem
• However, it is less profitable because it has fewer high-return loans.
The Liquidity-Profitability Trade-off
• If bank decides to maintains low liquidity,
bank will face higher risk but have more
opportunity to get higher return
• If bank decides to maintains high liquidity,
bank will face lower risk and get lower
return
Indicators of Bank Liquidity
• The ratio of bank loans to total assets– Higher ratio lower liquidity
• The ratio of securities to total assets– Higher ratio higher liquidity
• The ratio of demand deposit to total bank deposits – Higher ratio Bank need to maintain
more liquidity
Liability Management
• Banks look for good lending opportunities and then search for the funds to finance these loans.
• When a large bank finds a profitable lending opportunity, it can:
– “buy” federal funds;
– issue negotiable CDs at whatever interest rate is required to attract funds;
– issue repurchase agreements or borrow Eurodollars, or
– obtain funds through the commercial paper market.
Liability Management
• Aggressive liability management can be dangerous,
because a bank’s assets typically have longer
maturities than its liabilities.
• If interest rates rise sharply, banks can suffer severe
losses.
• Aggressive liability management allows banks to make
profitable loans that they would otherwise have to turn down.
Liability Management
3rd year 10th yearNow
Loans
Deposit
5%
1%
5%
4%
2nd year
7%
5%
Capital Management
• Bank capital provides a financial cushion so that transitory adverse developments will not cause insolvency.
• Bank capital also protects bank managers and owners from
their own mistakes and from various risks:
– default risk borrowers do not pay back their loans
– interest-rate risk when interest rate changes
– liquidity risk depositors will withdraw the fund
– Foreign exchange rate risk when exchange rate change
– political or country risk risk that fund or assets in other countries cannot be mobilized to home country
– management risk employees will engage in activities involving enormous risk (Barings Bank – Nicholas Leeson)
Capital Management
• Bank capital ratio =
• higher bank capital ratio – implies a lower risk of insolvency, – but also a lower rate of return.
Capital
Asset
The Capital Management Tradeoff
Earning Earning Total Assets
Capital Total Assets Capital= x
Return on Equity = ROA * Equity Multiplier
Note: A high capital ratio represents a low equity multiplier;
A low capital ratio represents a high equity multiplier
A trade-off arises between short-run profitability & the risk of insolvency
Capital Management
Earning/Capital = Earning/TA x TA/Capital
Suppose a bank has net income (earnings) 1m, TA 100m
Case 1: a bank has capital = 5mEarning / Capital = ???Case 2 : a bank has capital = 10mEarning / Capital = ???
Summary
Commercial bank raise the funds from accepting deposit
and use the funds in granting the loan
Bank earn interest rate spread between deposit rate and
loan rate and also earn the service fees
If bank faces daily shortage in reserve, bank can borrow
from Fed at discount rate or borrow from other banks at fed
fund rate
Loans are most-income-earning assets of the banks
Banks are subjected to maintains portion of their source of
funds in form of non-interest-earning legal reserves
(currency and deposit at Fed)
Summary
Smaller banks maintain deposits in larger banks in
return of services e.g. check collection, investment
counsel, and transaction in securities and foreign
currency Correspondent banking system
Bank may bundle many real estate loans into the
package and issue the securities based on this
package to investors securitization
Bank becomes insolvency if total asset is less than
total liability or negative net worth (equity)
Summary
If bank decides to maintains low liquidity, bank will face
higher risk but have more opportunity to get higher return
Aggressive liability management can be dangerous,
because a bank’s assets typically have longer maturities
than its liabilities. If interest rates rise sharply, banks can
suffer severe losses.
Bank capital provides a cushion that protects a bank's
owners from potential bank insolvency
higher bank capital ratio, implies a lower risk of insolvency,
but also a lower rate of return.