Title: Faststart
1 THE DEPOSIT BASED MODEL
ADRIAN COLES SECRETARY GENERAL, IUHF The WORLD
BANK SEMINAR Washington DC 11 March 2003
2INTERNATIONAL UNION
- The International Union -
- Publishes a quarterly journal, Housing Finance
International. - Publishes a newsletter two or three times a year.
- Maintains a website www.housingfinance.org
- Facilitates a World Congress, which is normally
held every two years. - Co-operates with the Wharton School of Management
at the University of Pennsylvania, -
international housing finance school each
May/June. - Answers ad hoc queries from members and
maintains a small library. - Has 160 members in 55 countries
3UK BUILDING SOCIETIES BASIC STATISTICS
- 65 societies mutually owned, locally based
- Assets of 190 (300) billion, end 2002
- 15 million savers - 34 of all adults
- 2.5 million borrowers - 22 of all mortgage
borrowers - 20 of outstanding mortgages 10-30 of new
business - 15 of outstanding retail deposits - 35 of new
business - 2,100 branches
- 31,000 staff
4Deposit Role in Mortgage Funding
- USA EU
- 2000 1998
- Retail deposits 41 62
- MBS and CMO 36 1
- Agency debt 23
- Mortgage bonds 19
- Dedicated savings 5
- Other 13
- TOTAL 100 100
Source Achim Dubel and European Mortgage
Federation
5Typical Building Society Balance Sheet
- Liabilities
- Retail deposits 75
- Wholesale deposits 20
- Capital 5
- 100
- Variable rate model
- Assets
- Mortgages
- - residential 70
- - commercial 5
- Liquid assets 20
- Other assets 5
- 100
6Key Issues of System Design
- Institutional issues
- e.g. mutual, shareholder or government
- Operational issues
- e.g. fund collection (product distribution)
- Regulatory issues
- e.g. disclosure of information
- Risk issues
- e.g. variable rates gives interest rate risks to
consumers - All overlap
7Institutional Issues
- Mutual, shareholder, government?
- Specialised or generalist?
- Contractual or open?
- Centralised, all or some functions, or local?
- Competitive or services of local
- non-competitors?
8Institutional IMutual, Shareholder, Government?
- customer focus
- no need for dividends narrow margins
- difficult for mutuals to acquire
- weaker institutions can survive
9Institutional IMutual, Shareholder, Government?
- lack of customer focus?
- dividend wider margin
- capital available quickly from external sources
- can acquire weaker institutions
- can be acquired incentive to efficiency
10Institutional IMutual, Shareholder, Government?
- secure
- no duplication
- inefficient?
- not customer-led
- monopoly?
11Institutional Issues IISpecialist or Generalist?
- Current general shift from specialist deposit
taking mortgage lenders to generalist - Specialist
- focus, knowledge, experience
- high exposure to one product market high risk?
- Generalist
- - economies of scope
- deposits lead to money transmission, credit cards
banking - mortgages lead to insurance, property
- - wholesale market presence offers alternative
source of funds - - diversification lower risk?
12Institutional Issues IIIContractual or Open?
- Contractual
- customers save before obtaining mortgage
- customers are committed
- institution knows customer before lending
- interest rates can be divorced from general
economy closed circuit - wait for mortgage funds
- German Bausparkasse also Austria, Slovakia,
Slovenia
13Institutional Issues IIIContractual or Open?
- Open
- immediate mortgage lending funds available
- limited pre-lending knowledge of customer
- UK building societies competition moved
institutions from closed to open system
14Institutional Issues IVCentralised or Local?
- France (Credit Agricole), Holland (Rabobank),
Germany (DZ Bank), USA (Federal Home Loan Banks),
Australia (Credit Union Services Australia Ltd)
local institutions, with strong centralised banks
(owned by local institutions) providing treasury
management, outsourced services, risk
management., - UK no similar institutions. Building
societies, locally based, but compete with each
other, co-operating more loosely. - If local institutions e.g. one for each town or
region do they compete with each other? In
past, most countries no.
15Operational Issues
- Deposit collection branches, post, internet,
phone, ATMs, intermediaries? - Product design instant access, fixed term,
notice? - Savings before granting a loan?
- Outsource, or in-house
- Share services? E.g. branches, liquidity
management, treasury management, cheque clearing
16Operational Issues IDeposit Collection
- Branches
- builds trust
- cash
- face to face meeting of customers and staff
- cross-selling opportunities
- Expensive
- Post/internet/phone
- needs trust
- no cash
- cheap
- Remote encourages commoditisation
17Operational Issues IDeposit Collection
- Intermediaries
- deposit taker uses another business to collect
deposits - cash based
- needs trust of intermediary and deposit taker
- intermediary has institutions customers
- deposit taker has responsibility for intermediary
18Operational Issues IIDeposit Product Design?
- Instant access
- Notice/fixed term
- good for lower income groups
- higher liquidity needed for institution
- less stable?
- must follow interest rate cycle
- lower rates, more transactions, ATMs
- more suitable for higher income groups
- less liquidity required
- more stable?
- needs more trust
- helps insulate institution from general interest
rates - higher rates, fewer transactions, no ATMs
19Operational Issues III
- Savings first/loan later
- Outsource, or in-house
- Sharing services
- All covered on institutional issues, but need not
be - institutionally based
20Regulatory Issues
- Prudential regulation?
- Conduct of business regulation?
- Product regulation?
- Ombudsman?
- capital, liquidity, large exposure
- disclosure of information
- restrictions on rate changes
- specify products
- prohibit certain features
- prescribe certain features
- to deal with complaints
21Regulatory Issues
- - industry or taxpayer?
- - special status for deposit takers with mortgage
presence?
- Deposit protection?
- Taxation
- Government
- competition in deposit
- market
-
22Regulatory Issues IRegulation
- Prudential
- Capital Basel rules?
- Liquidity depends on deposit profile
- Conduct of business
- Disclosure of information
- Standards of service
- write on rate changes?
- write about new products?
- branch opening hours
- advice to customers
23Regulatory Issues IRegulation
- Product regulation
- Regulator design
- products?
-
- e.g. no penalties on withdrawals, link to
external rate - depends on levels of trust
- linked to extent of conduct of business regulation
24Regulatory Issues II
- - institution and customer
- - courts
- - regulator
- - ombudsman
- - none, rely on prudential regulation
- - industry scheme
- - Voluntary
- - State-sponsored
- - insurance
- - tax payer
- Dealing with complaints
- Deposit protection
-
25Regulatory Issues II
- - tax benefits for mortgage lenders?
- - important to trace who ultimately benefits
- Taxation/ subsidies
- Government competition
-
26Who Bears the Risks?
- Deposit risk
- can the institution repay deposits when due?
- Interest rate risk
- who wins/loses when interest rates change?
- Other risks
- operational, reputational.
27Who Bears the Risks?
- Deposit risk borne by
- Interest rate risk
- Management
- shareholders
- other institutions (protection scheme)
- tax payer (e.g. USA thrift crisis)
- insurance
- depositor
- depositor and borrower in variable rate system
- but hedging overcomes this to offer short
- term fixes
- no deposit based system offers USA and Danish
advantage fixed rate/adjustable downward
although this has costs
28Conclusions
- simple
- few intermediaries
- transparent
- links borrowers and savers
29 THE DEPOSIT BASED MODEL
ADRIAN COLES SECRETARY GENERAL, IUHF The WORLD
BANK SEMINAR Washington DC 11 March 2003