Chapter 5 Why Are FIs Special - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 5 Why Are FIs Special

Description:

borrow large sums (mortgages/commercial/ personal loans) for long periods of time ... payment services (banks, trusts, and credit unions) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:32
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: khartv
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 5 Why Are FIs Special


1
Chapter 5 - Why Are FIs Special?
  • Business 4039

2
Terms Definitions
  • Negative Externality
  • covenant
  • liquity
  • price risk
  • Name at Lloyds
  • reinsurance
  • asset transformer
  • primary security
  • agency costs
  • delegated monitor
  • maturity intermediation
  • time intermediation
  • denomination intermediation

3
Why are FIs Special?
  • This short chapter serves both as a summary of
    Part I the Financial Services Sector, and as a
    transition to Part II Risk Measurement.
  • Unlike Chapters 1-3, it is largely conceptual,
    summarizing the functions of FIs and their
    importance to society.

4
Uniqueness Recognized
  • One of the themes dominating FI organization in
    Canada is the degree to which the specialness of
    Fis should be enshrined in law and regulatory
    practice.
  • Students are encouraged to follow the current
    debates on this topic in the financial press.
    Look for
  • deposit taking FI regulation
  • insurance company regulation
  • securities industry regulation
  • Bank of Canada policy concerning FIs
  • CDIC policy concerning FIs
  • Regulatory activities of liability insurers
  • international coordination of FI regulation

5
Intermediation Services of FIs
  • risk transfer, reduction, and monitoring services
  • liquidity services
  • maturity intermediation services
  • transaction services
  • financial information services

6
Deficit-Saving Economic Unit
Surplus-Saving Economic Unit
  • Borrowers
  • borrow large sums
    (mortgages/commercial/ personal loans)
  • for long periods of time
  • complex legal transactions because of the
    long-term nature of the debt contracts and the
    need to contractually ensure that the interests
    of the lender are protected.
  • Savers
  • many of them saving small amounts individually,
    but large amounts in aggregate
  • for short periods of time (ie. Need liquidity)
  • are generally risk averse
  • dont have the capacity, time or sophistication
    to analyze risk or to monitor borrowers

Deposit-taking Financial Intermediary
7
Deficit-Saving Economic Unit
Surplus-Saving Economic Unit
Deposit-taking Financial Intermediary
  • Deposit-taking FIs
  • pool deposits, provide liquidity for depositors,
    collect/analyze/monitor the financial
    positions/activities of borrowers, make credit
    allocation decisions among opportunities to
    lend/invest, negotiate/monitor/enforce loan
    agreements.
  • In this manner the need of both savers and
    borrowers are met with efficiency. In the
    absence of FIs failure, confidence in the system
    is built and this encourages full participation,
    thereby reducing monetary leakage.currency in
    circulation is made available for the best
    competing uses in our society.

8
Covenant
  • legal clauses in a bond contract that require the
    issuer of bonds to take or avoid certain actions

9
Price Risk
  • the risk that the sale price of an asset will be
    lower than its purchase price.

10
Name at Lloyds
  • the final risk bearer in an insurance contract
    underwritten in the market organized by Lloyds
    of London.

11
Agency Costs - cost of monitoring
  • costs relating to the risk that the owners and
    managers of firms that receive savers funds will
    take actions with those funds contrary to the
    savers best interests.

12
Delegated Monitor
  • an economic agent appointed to act on behalf of
    smaller agents in collecting information and/or
    investing funds.

13
Secondary Claims
  • example demand deposit in a deposit-taking FI
  • it is a financial asset that has characteristics
    far different than primary securities (bonds,
    stocks, commercial loans) gt often improved
    liquidity/safety of principal, etc.

14
Maturity Intermediation
  • a service performed by deposit-taking FIs for
    secondary asset holders (depositors)....because
    of pooling and diversification....
  • mismatching the maturities of assets and
    liabilities of the FI.

15
Economies of Scale
  • FIs provide potential economies of scale in
    transactions costs...information collection and
    risk management.

16
Institutional Aspects of Specialness
  • money supply transmission (banks)
  • credit allocation (banks, trusts, credit unions,
    and finance companies)
  • risk offlay (insurance companies)
  • intergenerational transfer (pensions, life
    insurance companies, and deposit-taking FIs)
  • payment services (banks, trusts, and credit
    unions)
  • denomination intermediation (mutual funds,
    pension funds)

17
Question 5 - 1
  • What are the major functions of financial
    intermediaries?
  • FIs are either brokers or asset/risk
    transformers.
  • As brokers, they merely act as agents for savers
    and investors in investment transactions and for
    risk generators and absorbers in risk offlay
    transactions.
  • As brokers, they provide information and
    transaction services.
  • As asset transformers, FIs invest in primary
    financial securities and issue claims (including
    contingent claims of insurance) to provide asset
    transformation and risk offlay.

18
Question 5 - 2
  • How can FIs afford to issue financial claims that
    have superior liquidity to securities market
    claims?
  • The FI pools the funds of small investors, each
    of which would have insufficient incentive to
    monitor the actions of borrowers. In monitoring
    the aggregated claims, the FI can achieve
    informational economies of scale.
  • Liquidity and risk reduction of claims is also
    increased by pooling into diversified FI
    portfolios that lower risk of the secondary
    securities of FI issues relative to the primary
    securities that the FI purchases.

19
Question 5 - 3
  • From the perspective of society, apply
    cost/benefit analysis to government regulation of
    the FI industry by enumerating the benefits FIs
    provide to society weighing them against the
    costs to society. Relate the cost benefit
    analysis to emerging trends in financial
    intermediation.
  • Benefits FIs provide
  • risk transfer, reduction and monitoring services
  • liquidity services
  • maturity intermediation services
  • transaction services, and
  • financial information services
  • ...

20
Question 5 - 3 ...
  • From the perspective of society, apply
    cost/benefit analysis to government regulation of
    the FI industry by enumerating the benefits FIs
    provide to society weighing them against the
    costs to society. Relate the cost benefit
    analysis to emerging trends in financial
    intermediation.
  • In transferring risks and funds, they serve
    either as brokers or as transformers. As
    brokers, they arrange for the placing of stocks
    and bonds with ultimate investors. As asset
    transformers, Fis perform liquidity and maturity
    intermediation services, pooling small
    denomination, liquid deposits and actuarial
    claims into less liquid larger denomination
    loans. Their interconnection through the
    payments system provides transactions services.
    They also provide financial information on
    deposits, payments, loans and a wide variety of
    disintermediated assets.

21
Question 5 - 3...
  • FIs institutional functions in society include
  • Money supply transmission (banks)
  • credit allocation (banks, trusts, credit unions
    and finance companies)
  • risk offlay (insurance companies)
  • intergenerational transfers (pensions, life
    insurance companies and deposit-taking Fis)
  • payment services (banks, trusts and credit
    unions)
  • denomination intermediation (mutual funds,
    pension funds)

22
Question 5 - 3 ...
  • Costs The main cost to society of these
    services beyond the interest, fees and
    commissions that are visible for each transaction
    stems from the system of regulation. Direct
    clearers have access to Bank of Canada borrowing.
    Deposit-taking FIs retail liabilities are
    guaranteed by CDIC (or provincial government
    deposit guarantee corporations.) Considerable
    cost (that must be borne eventually by service
    users and/or taxpayers) is associated with the
    preparation of regulatory agency filings,
    government audits, and staffing of regulatory
    bodies.
  • The move to risk-adjusted deposit insurance
    premiums for deposit insurance and
    self-regulatory organizations - rather than
    government organizations - to regulate the FI
    industry are part of a trend to allocate more
    fairly the costs of FI specialness and increase
    the efficiency of monitoring.

23
Question 5 - 4
  • From the perspective of the FI, apply cost
    benefit analysis to the FI industry. Relate this
    cost benefit analysis to emerging trends in
    financial intermediation.
  • Benefits FIs can be very profitable witness
    the record bank profits in recent years. The
    level of profitability is related to the
    efficiency with which the FI provides existing
    and develops new services and the degree to which
    current FIs are protected from competition from
    exiting competitors and new entrants.
  • Costs Government safety nets and protective
    regulations are not without costs.
    Deposit-taking FIs pay hefty deposit insurance
    premiums. The costs of on-site inspections are
    borne by the FI. Accounting, auditing and
    administrative expenses are associated with
    various regulatory filings.

24
Question 5 - 4 ...
  • From the perspective of the FI, apply cost
    benefit analysis to the FI industry. Relate this
    cost benefit analysis to emerging trends in
    financial intermediation.
  • In FI industries with free entry and exit (such
    as PC insurance or credit unions), the
    cost-benefit analysis can be easily observed in
    the extent to which firms enter and exit the
    industry.
  • In other industries where ease of entry is
    curtailed by legal, high investment, reputational
    capital or regulatory constraints (e.g., banking
    and life insurance) the tradeoff must be inferred
    from such measures as FI profitability and market
    performance of shares.

25
Question 5 - 5
  • If financial markets operated perfectly and
    costlessly, financial intermediaries would not
    exist. State whether you agree or disagree and
    why.
  • This is a very open ended question, depending
    largely on definitions of perfectly and
    costlessly.
  • If FI services were provided to the public for
    nothing, then the FI would not exist, the
    statement is clearly true.
  • If the sentence is taken to mean, if markets for
    existing securities were efficient, Fis would not
    exist the statement would be wrong.
  • If perfection implies financial market
    completeness, then the payoffs of securities in
    every future state of the world would be priced
    in financial markets. In that case, fully
    informed rationale individuals could purchase
    disintermediated claims that would fully offset
    any future risk and make risk offlay through Fis
    redundant.

26
Question 5 - 6
  • FIs are among the most heavily regulated firms in
    private industry. Explain why.
  • To justify such regulation, advocates usually
    argue that Fis provide special functions or
    services and that major disturbances to, or
    interferences with, these functions can lead to
    adverse effects on the rest of the economy - what
    economists call negative externalities.
  • Example if a major FI were to fail, the results
    - if not correctly dealt with -- could include
    loss of confidence in the FI system in general,
    contraction of the money supply, reduction in
    credit allocation and real economic losses.

27
Question 5 - 7
  • How would financial and economic transactions
    differ if there were no FIs?
  • If there were no FIs, fund flows between the
    funds providers and the funds users would be less
    because the monitoring costs would be prohibitive
    for retail investors. The resulting lack of
    monitoring would reduce the attractiveness and
    increase the risk of investing in household and
    corporate debt and equity. In the absence of
    FIs, the risk generating household or business
    would have two choices either accept the risks
    as a fact of life or seek out (and individually
    contract with) risk absorbers (ie. Households, or
    businesses that are more risk tolerant than the
    risk generator). These increased risks and/or
    costs would restrain the flow of funds.

28
Question 5 - 8
  • Why may investors be averse to holding primary
    securities directly?
  • Investors may be averse to holding primary
    securities directly because of
  • a. monitoring costs
  • b. liquidity costs and
  • c. price risk
  • The relative long term nature of corporate debt
    and equity increases both the liquidity costs and
    price risk of direct securities holdings. If an
    investor wants to liquidate a position at any
    given point in time, he or she may find that the
    price may be temporarily below the true market
    value of the security.
  • Moreover the costs of liquidation, (in terms of
    fees, commissions

29
Question 5 - 8 ...
  • Why may investors be averse to holding primary
    securities directly?
  • Moreover the costs of liquidation, (in terms of
    fees, commissions, search costs, time), may be
    prohibitive. An FI can economize on both of
    these costs by maintaining a portfolio of
    securities and pooling diverse transactions to
    create volume discounts and internal hedging
    opportunities (I.e., when one investor wants to
    liquidate another may want to invest.)

30
Question 5 - 9
  • What is meant by maturity intermediation?
  • If net borrowers and net lenders have different
    optimal time horizons, FIs can service both
    sectors by mismatching their asset and liability
    maturities. That is, the FI can offer the
    relatively short term liabilities desired by
    households (say, in the form of bank deposits)
    and also satisfy the demand for long term loans
    (say, for home mortgages). By investing in a
    portfolio of long and short term assets and
    liabilities, the FI can both reduce risk exposure
    through diversification and manage risk exposure
    by centralizing its hedging activities.

31
Question 5 - 10
  • This apparent decline of banks and insurance
    companies assets is only relative.
  • Actual assets have been growing both in nominal
    and real (inflation adjusted) terms.
  • The growth, however, has been less than that of
    mutual funds and pension funds. Reasons for
    this trend include
  • the aging population, which has an increasing
    proportion of its financial assets in funds to
    support retirement
  • increasing investor sophistication and desire to
    tailor investment profiles to personal risk
    return preferences has led to increasing interest
    in mutual funds.
  • Increased availability of disintermediated
    instruments as opposed to claims of
    deposit-taking FIs and insurance companies that
    must bear the costs of regulatory burden.
  • Stock and bond market booms have contributed to
    make mutual funds look attractive relative to
    fixed interest returns of bank deposits.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com