chapter 10 banking and bank management chapter 9 alternate 8th edition

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Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

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Page 1: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Chapter 10

Banking and Bank Management

Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Page 2: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Depository Institutions: The Big Questions

• Where do banks get their funds and what do they do with them?

• How do commercial banks manage their balance sheets?

• What risks do banks face?

Page 3: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks: Assets, Liabilities, and Capital

• The balance sheet identity: Bank Assets = [Bank Liabilities + Bank Capital]

• When one side changes, the other side must change as well.

• A bank’s balance sheet lists sources of bank funds (liabilities) and uses to which they are put (assets)

Page 4: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 17-4

Balance Sheet of All Commercial Banks (items as a percentage of the total, June 2011

Page 5: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 17-5

Balance Sheet of All Commercial Banks (items as a percentage of the total, December 2008)

Page 6: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liabilities – Sources of Funds Checkable Deposits: Referred to as transactions

deposits, includes all accounts that allow the owner (depositor) to write checks to third parties; ─ Include non-interest earning checking accounts (known as

- demand deposit accounts),

─ Interest earning negotiable orders of withdrawal (NOW) accounts, and

─ Money-market deposit accounts (MMDAs), which typically pay the most interest among checkable deposit accounts

Page 7: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liabilities – Sources of Funds

Non-transaction Deposits: generally a bank’s highest cost funds.

Banks want deposits which are more stable and predictable and will pay more to attract such funds.

Also the largest source of funds.

Page 8: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liabilities – Sources of Funds

Borrowings: banks borrow from:─ the Federal Reserve System: discount loans

─ other banks: Fed funds and repos

─ Corporations: Repos and commercial paper

Page 9: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION
Page 10: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Bank Capital – Source of Funds

Bank Capital: the source of funds supplied by the bank owners, either through purchase of ownership shares or retained earnings

Bank capital provides a cushion, thus capital levels are important.

Page 11: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Assets – Uses of Funds

Reserves: funds held in account with the Fed (vault cash and cash in the ATM machine is included).

Required reserves represent what is required by law under required reserve ratios.

Any reserves beyond this are called excess reserves.

Page 12: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Assets – Uses of Funds

Securities: includes U.S. government debt, agency debt, municipal debt, and other (non-equity) securities. About 19% of assets. ─ Short-term Treasury debt is often referred to

as secondary reserves because of its high liquidity.

Page 13: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Assets – Uses of Funds

Loans: business loans, auto loans, and mortgages.

Generally not very liquid.

Most banks tend to specialize in either consumer loans or business loans, and even take that as far as loans to specific groups (such as a particular industry).

Page 14: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Assets – Uses of Funds

Other Assets: bank buildings, computer systems, and other equipment.

Page 15: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Commercial Bank Liability Trend

• Checkable Deposits (10%, up from 6% in Dec 2008)

Transactions deposit available on demand

Have declined substantially in importance

• Transactions deposits were 61% of bank funds in 1960.

Page 16: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Commercial Bank Liability Trend

• Nontransaction Deposits (55%)

• Borrowing (23%, around 31% in 2008) Discount loans for the Fed Reserves from other banks in the

Federal Funds Market (unsecured) Repurchase agreements

• Bank Capital (12%, up from 10% in 2008)

Page 17: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks:Changes in Assets (use of funds)over time 1947-2006

Securities DownSecondary Markets, Increased Liquidity

Security holdings down from 70% in 1947 to less than 20% in 2011. Loans( C&I, mortgage, and consumer loans) over 50%.

Page 18: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 17-18

The Balance Sheet of Commercial Banks – Sources of Funds

•Transactions deposits were 61% of bank funds in 1960, 6.0% in 2008.

•Borrowings provided only 2% of bank funds in 1960, up to 31% in 2008.

Page 19: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Basic Banking Transaction Cash Deposit of $100 in First National Bank

• The above example presents 2 ways to record the same transaction.

• Opening of a checking account leads to an increase in the bank’s reserves equal to the increase in checkable deposits(NOTE: vault cash counts as reserves)

First National Bank First National Bank

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Vault Cash

+$100 Checkable deposits

+$100 Reserves +$100 Checkable deposits

+$100

Page 20: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

First National Bank Second National Bank

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Reserves +$100 Checkable deposits

+$100 Reserves -$100 Checkable deposits

-$100

Check Deposit of $100 into FNB written on SNB

FNB gains reserves and SNB loses reserves

Page 21: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Basic Banking - Making a Profit

• 10% Reserve Requirement

• Banks use excess reserves to make loans or invest in bonds.

• The bank makes a profit because it borrows short and lends long

First National Bank First National Bank

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Required reserves

+$10 Checkable deposits

+$100 Required reserves

+$10 Checkable deposits

+$100

Excess reserves

+$90 Loans +$90

Page 22: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

General Principles of Bank Management

• The basic operation of a bank -

• Make profits by: Selling liabilities with one set of characteristics

(liquidity, risk ,size, return). [Source of Funds] Buying assets with a different set of

characteristics. (liquidity, risk ,size, return). [Use of Funds]

Process known as “asset transformation” also referred to as maturity transformation

Page 23: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

General Principles of Bank Management

1. Liquidity management

2. Asset management─ Managing credit risk─ Managing interest-rate risk

3. Liability management

4. Managing capital adequacy

How does a bank manage its assets and liabilities. Four primary concerns:

Page 24: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Principles of Bank ManagementLiquidity Management

Reserves requirement = 10%, Excess reserves = $10 million

With 10% reserve requirement, bank has excess reserves of $1 million: no changes needed in balance sheet

Deposit outflow = $10 million

Page 25: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liquidity Management

With 10% reserve requirement, bank has $9 million reserve shortfall

No excess reserves -

Deposit outflow of $10 million

Page 26: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liquidity Management - Shortfall in Reserves: Borrow from other banks or corporations.

• Other banks - Federal Funds Market

• Corporations - CP or Repo

• There’s a cost - interest rate paid on the borrowed funds

Assets Liabilities

Reserves $9M Deposits $90M

Loans $90M Borrowing $9M

Securities $10M Bank Capital $10M

Page 27: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liquidity Management: Borrow from the Fed

• Incur interest cost - payments to Fed based on the discount rate

Assets Liabilities

Reserves $9M Deposits $90M

Loans $90M Borrow from Fed $9M

Securities $10M Bank Capital $10M

Page 28: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liquidity Management: Sell Securities

• There are costs: transaction costs and possible capital loss.

Assets Liabilities

Reserves $9M Deposits $90M

Loans $90M Bank Capital $10M

Securities $1M

Page 29: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liquidity Management: Reduce Loans

• Reduction of loans is the most costly way of acquiring reserves

Calling in loans (not renewing short-term loans) antagonizes customers

Not a liquid asset, other banks may only agree to purchase loans at a substantial discount

Assets Liabilities

Reserves $9M Deposits $90M

Loans $81M Bank Capital $10M

Securities $10M

Page 30: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Asset Management Asset Management: the attempt to earn the

highest possible return on assets while minimizing the risk.1. Get borrowers with low default risk, paying

high interest rates

2. Buy securities with high return, low risk

3. Diversified portfolio

4. Manage liquidity

Page 31: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Asset Management - Credit Risk: Overcoming Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

• Screening and information collection

• Specialization in lending (e.g. energy sector)

• Diversification - by industry and geography

• Monitoring and enforcement of restrictive covenants

• Long-term customer relationships

• Collateral and compensating balances

Page 32: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Liability Management

Managing the source of funds: from deposits, to CDs, to other debt.1. Important since 1960s

2. No longer primarily depend on deposits

3. More dependent on non-transactions deposits and borrowing.

─ Growth in borrowing from 2% in 1960 to 31% in 2008.

─ Negotiable CDs at 19%

Page 33: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Bank Capital (Equity)

• Assets – Liabilities = Net Worth

• Called Bank Capital. The value of the bank to its owners.

• In Jan 2007, commercial bank capital was $860 million, 8.8% of assets ($9.77 Billion)

• June 2011 bank capital at 12% of assets

Page 34: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Capital Adequacy Management

• Bank capital is a cushion that helps prevent bank failure. As banks write down assets, bank capital

takes a hit.

• Regulatory requirement – regulators set minimum capital requirements.

Page 35: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Capital Adequacy Management

High Capital bank has a 10% capital ratio.Low Capital bank has a 4% capital ratio.

Page 36: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Capital Adequacy Management: Preventing Bank Failure When Assets Decline

High Bank Capital Low Bank Capital

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Reserves $10M Deposits $90M Reserves $10M Deposits $96M

Loans $90M Bank Capital $10M Loans $90M Bank Capital $4M

High Bank Capital Low Bank Capital

Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities

Reserves $10M Deposits $90M Reserves $10M Deposits $96M

Loans $85M Bank Capital $5M Loans $85M Bank Capital -$1M

Scenario: Borrower defaults on $5 million loan and minimum capital requirement is 5%.

Page 37: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Capital Adequacy Management: Return to Equity Holders

Return on Assets: net profit after taxes per dollar of assets

ROA = net profit after taxes

assetsReturn on Equity: net profit after taxes per dollar of equity capital

ROE = net profit after taxes

equity capital

Relationship between ROA and ROE is expressed by the

Equity Multiplier: the amount of assets per dollar of equity capital

EM =Assets

Equity Capital

net profit after taxes

equity capitalnet profit after taxes

assets assets

equity capital

ROE = ROA EM

Page 38: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Capital Adequacy Management

Tradeoff between safety (high capital) and ROE

Banks also hold capital to meet capital requirements

If Equity Capital ↑ => EM ↓ => ROE ↓

Page 39: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Strategies for Managing Capital

What should a bank manager do if she feels the bank is holding too much capital?

Buy or retire stock

Increase dividends to reduce retained earnings

Increase asset growth via debt (like CDs)

Page 40: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Strategies for Managing Capital

Reverse these strategies if bank is holding too little capital?

Issue stock

Decrease dividends to increase retained earnings

Slow asset growth (retire debt)

Page 41: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Equity Multiplier and Capital Ratio

• This is actually a measure of leverage

• EM = 10 means $1 of equity supports $10 in assets. The bank borrows $9.

• EM = 25 means $1 of equity supports $25 in assets. The bank borrows $24.

• EM is the inverse of the capital ratio

Total Assets

Equity CapitalEM

Page 42: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Bank Profitability

ROA is typically 1.2 to 1.3%

ROE is 10 to 12 times ROA.

Let’s take a look:

http://www2.fdic.gov/qbp/2013dec/cb1.html

Page 43: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Bank Capital• U.S. commercial banks combine about $1.5

trillion in bank capital (equity) with $11.0 trillion of borrowed funds to purchase $12.5 trillion in assets.

• Ratio of debt/equity = 10 to 1 historically. Highly leveraged. Now about 8 to 1. Non-financial corporation about 1 to 1.

• Ratio of Assets/Equity = 12.5/1.5 = 8.33 (down from over 11)

• Note: Government guarantees contributes to banks ability to hold so much debt.

Page 44: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Leverage of Various Financial Institutions prior to Financial Crisis

Assets $Trillion

Liabilities $Trillion

Equity $Trillion

Leverage

Assets/Equity

Commercial Banks

10.8 9.7 1.1 9.8

Savings Inst. 1.91 1.68 .23 8.4Credit Unions

0.75 .66 .09 8.4

Investment Banks

5.4 5.23 .17 31.7 (1/31.7) = .0315

GSEs 1.63 1.56 .067 24.7

Overall 20.5 18.8 1.7 12.2

Page 45: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Suppose banks are required to maintain a capital ratio of 10%. Assume times are good and loan portfolio increases by $1.

National Capital Bank – Sheet 1

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $90 Loans/Securities $90 Equity Capital $10Total $100 Total $100

National Capital Bank – Sheet 3

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $99 Loans $100 Equity Capital $11Total $110 Total $110

National Capital Bank – Sheet 2

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $90 Loans/Securities $91 Equity Capital $11Total $101 capital ratio is 10.89% > 10%

Page 46: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

The mechanism works in reverse when times are not so good. Loan portfolio decreases by $1. De-leveraging the balance sheet

National Capital Bank - Sheet 1

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $90 Loans/Securities $90 Capital $10

National Capital Bank – Sheet 3

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $81 Loans/Securities $80 Capital $9Total $90 Total $90

National Capital Bank – Sheet 2

Assets LiabilitiesCash $10 Debt $90 Loans/Securities $89 Capital $9 capital ratio is 9.09% < 10%

Page 47: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

How a Capital Crunch Caused a Credit Crunch in 2008 Housing boom and bust led to large bank

losses (including losses on SIVs which had to be recognized on the balance sheet).

The losses reduced bank capital.

Page 48: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

How a Capital Crunch Caused a Credit Crunch in 2008 Banks 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 and a financial crisis?

Page 49: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Banks Must Manage Interest-Rate Risk:

• WHY?

• Bank assets don’t match liabilities

• Banks “borrow short” and “lend long”

• Creates a maturity mismatch

Page 50: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Managing Interest Rate Risk • Also, banks have assets and liabilities that are

Interest-rate sensitive and non-interest rate sensitive. For example,

• Deposit rates tied to market rates (interest rate sensitive cost)

• long-term fixed rate loan ( Non-interest rate sensitive income)

• What happens if interest rate rise? Deposit costs based on flexible short-term interest rates

rise. Loan revenues based on fixed interest rate remain fixed. Profit reduction

Page 51: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Interest-Rate Risk – Simple Gap Analysis

• If a bank has more rate-sensitive liabilities than assets, a rise in interest rates will reduce bank profits and a decline in interest rates will raise bank profits

First National Bank

Assets Liabilities

Rate-sensitive assets $20M Rate-sensitive liabilities

$50M

Variable-rate and short-term loans

Variable-rate CDs

Short-term securities Money market deposit accounts

Fixed-rate assets $80M Fixed-rate liabilities $50M

Reserves Checkable deposits

Long-term loans Savings deposits

Long-term securities Long-term CDs

Equity capital

Page 52: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Interest Rate Risk: Gap Analysis

• Basic Gap Analysis

• [Rate sensitive assets – rate sensitive liabilities] x Δ interest rate = Δ bank profits

Page 53: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Managing Interest-Rate Risk

Basis Gap AnalysisGAP = rate-sensitive assets – rate-sensitive liabilities

= $20 – $50 = –$30 millionWhen i 5%:

1. Income on assets = + $1 million

(= 5% $20m)

2. Costs of liabilities = +$2.5 million

(= 5% $50m)

3. Profits = $1m – $2.5m = –$1.5m

= 5% (GAP) = 5% ($20 - $50) = .05x -$30 =-$1.5

4. Profits = i GAP

Page 54: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

Off-Balance-Sheet Activities

1. Loan sales

2. Fee income from─ Foreign exchange trades for customers─ Servicing mortgage-backed securities─ Guarantees of debt─ Backup lines of credit

3. Trading Activities and Risk Management Techniques─ Financial futures and options ─ Foreign exchange trading─ Interest rate swaps

All these activities involve risk and potential conflicts

Page 55: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 17-55

Special Purpose Vehicle

Loans

All Other Assets

Deposits

Other Liabilities

Capital

BankAssets Liab.

Assets Liab.SPVCash

Loans

LoansABS Investors

Cash

ABS

Converting on-balance sheet assets to a securitized asset:

SPV is set up solely for this purpose. It acts as a conduit passing cash flows to investors for a fee. It has no rights to the cash flows and it ceases to exist when the Asset Backed Security (ABS) matures.

Page 56: Chapter 10 Banking and Bank Management Chapter 9 ALTERNATE 8TH EDITION

© 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. 17-56

Structured Investment Vehicle

Loans

All Other Assets

Deposits

Other Liabilities

Capital

BankAssets Liab.

Assets Liab.SIV

Cash Loans

Loans Commercial Paper

Investors

Cash

ABCP and Repo

Converting on-balance sheet assets to a securitized asset:

SIV is a structured operating company set up to earn higher returns then its cost of funds. Borrows very short-term and invest long-term.

How does this differ from a bank?Huge liquidity risk!