CH 13
CH 13
CH 13
B.
C.
II.
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1.
b.
c.
2.
3.
B.
b.
c.
Other Borrowings
(1)
Trading Liabilities
(2)
Eurodollars (See Chapter 12).
(3)
Bankers Acceptances (see Chapters 7 and 12).
(4)
Federal Home Loan Bank Advances
(5)
Discount Window Loans (see Chapters 2 and 3).
(6)
Capital Notes or Bonds
i.
usually subordinate to depositors claims
ii.
may count as capital for some regulatory purposes
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(1)
(2)
c.
d.
e.
2.
3.
Loans and Leases: Main earning assets of any bank; about 59% of industry assets.
4.
III.
a.
b.
Other Assets.
a.
Trading account assetssecurities held for resale.
b.
Fixed assetsland, buildings, equipment, etc,.
c.
Intangiblesgoodwill, prepaids, etc.
Earn a high enough interest rate to cover the costs of funding the loan.
Recover the administrative costs of originating and monitoring the loan.
Provide adequate compensation for risk
a.
Credit (or default) risk.
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b.
c.
B.
C.
Liquidity risk.
Interest rate risk.
2.
Base rate pricing: marking up from a minimum offered the least risky borrowers.
1.
2.
3.
For increased default risk above the risk associated with the base
rate. The banks credit department assesses default risk.
b.
For term-to-maturity.
(1)
Most business loans are variable rate--as the base rate
increases or decreases, the loan rate adjusts accordingly.
(2)
For fixed-rate loans the bank will adjust the short-term base rate
by an amount consistent with the current yield curve.
c.
Expressed mathematically: rL = BR + DR + TM + CF
where: rL =
BR =
DR =
TM =
CF =
D.
Nonprice adjustments to alter the effective return under a given nominal rate.
1.
2.
Compensating balances.
a.
Bank requires borrower to carry minimum balance in non-interest-bearing
deposit account.
b.
Effective return increases because net loan amount is lower.
Other nonprice adjustments
a.
Risk reclassification.
b.
Additional collateral or specified collateral.
c.
Shorter maturities (or rest periods for lines of credit).
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E.
IV.
V.
Five Cs of Credit:
1.
Character (willingness to pay)
2.
Capacity (cash flow)
3.
Capital (wealth or net worth)
4.
Collateral (security)
5.
Conditions (economic conditions)
B.
C.
Default risk premiums for identified risk categories determined from analysis of
credit losses over several business cycles.
VI.
Matched-funding loan pricing: Fixed-rate loans are funded with deposits or borrowed
funds of the same maturity.
Must offer depositors high enough rates to attract and retain a stable deposit base.
Must not pay so much on deposits that profitability is compromised.
Competition puts pressure on the spread from both sides
1.
bank may have to charge lower rates on loans
2.
bank may have to pay higher rates on deposits
Fee-based services.
A.
B.
C.
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3.
VII.
VIII.
Off-balance-sheet banking
A.
B.
C.
Derivatives: Interest rate/currency forwards, futures, options, swaps (see Ch. 11)
1.
Hedging (encouraged by regulators)
2.
Speculating (discouraged by regulators)
D.
E.
Securitization: assignment of cash flows from assets (usually loans) via securities to
investors.
1.
Similar rationale to loan brokerage.
2.
Bank transfers assets to trust; sells ownership units in trust.
3.
Banks can underwrite securitizations themselves after deregulation.
Bank and Financial Holding Companies: The most common way of organizing U.S. banks.
A.
De facto branching.
1.
Multibank holding companies circumvent branching restrictions.
2.
Recent deregulation makes branching easier.
B.
C.
Tax avoidance.
1.
Interest paid on debt is tax-deductible.
2.
Most dividends received from subsidiaries are tax-exempt.
3.
Nonbank subsidiaries can be structured to avoid local taxes.
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COMPLETION QUESTIONS
1.
In commercial banks ________ deposits are the most important source of funds; ________ loans
represent the major investment category.
2.
3.
Though interest payments have been prohibited on demand deposits in the past, banks have paid
________ interest by offering "free" checking accounts, convenience, and other perks.
4.
Several money market securities are listed below. Indicate whether each security represents a bank
asset, a bank liability, or neither.
a.
Banker's Acceptance
________________
b.
Negotiable Certificate of Deposit
_______________
c.
Treasury Bill
________________
d.
Federal Funds Purchased
________________
5.
The bank investment portfolio provides both ________ and ________ to the bank.
6.
7.
A ________ is an informal agreement to lend in the near future; a ________ credit agreement is a
formal contract, supported by fees, to lend on demand for a period of several years.
8.
While traditionally the "best" loan rate offered to bank customers, today the ________ rate plays a
smaller role as a posted reference or index bank rate.
9.
10.
TRUE-FALSE QUESTIONS
T
1.
F
2.
to lend.
F
3.
With credit cards, the bank generates revenues from both
borrowers and retailers.
F
funds.
F
5.
A bank would prefer to make a fixed-rate mortgage loan if it
predicts higher interest rates in coming years.
F
6.
Demand deposits represent the largest source of funds for
commercial banks.
F
7.
revenue.
4.
The prime rate today represents the lowest bank lending rate.
A revolving credit agreement is a longer-term informal agreement
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F
8.
for banks.
F
10.
the banks.
9.
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
To a bank, all of the following are advantages of holding U.S. Treasury securities except:
a.
they are highly marketable
b.
they may be used as collateral
c.
they offer relatively high interest rates
d.
they pose little or no default risk
5.
ABC Bank is considering a taxable security yielding 10% and a nontaxable municipal bond
yielding 6%. If ABC's marginal tax rate is 46%, which of the following is the best choice, assuming
each instrument represents essentially the same risk?
a.
Always take the tax-free bond.
b.
Always select the taxable security because its yield is higher.
c.
Compare the securities on an after-tax basis and buy the municipal.
d.
Compare the securities on an after-tax basis and buy the taxable bond.
6.
While time deposits are banks' major source of funds, their major use is:
a.
investments.
b.
consumer loans.
c.
demand deposits.
d.
commercial loans.
e.
real estate loans
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7.
As a bank depositor shifts funds from demand deposits to savings to time deposits, the depositor's
a.
liquidity declines and interest income decreases.
b.
liquidity declines and interest income increases.
c.
liquidity increases but default risk increases.
d.
implicit interest increases and explicit interest declines.
8.
9.
All of the following are a source of common equity capital for banks except:
a.
common equity.
b.
retained earnings.
c.
capital notes.
d.
reserve accounts.
10.
Two important functions of bank investments (as distinguished from loans) are
a.
capital and income
b.
income and safety
c.
liquidity and income
d.
funding and liquidity.
2.
demand
3.
4.
a. liability b.
5.
liquidity; income
6.
bridge
7.
8.
prime
9.
compensating
10.
F
High-quality businesses are borrowing at rates below prime today. Traditionally,
the "prime" represented the "best" rate for quality credit customers.
2.
F
bank.
Revolving credit is usually a formal commitment to lend in return for a fee to the
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3.
T
Retailers pay a percentage of their credit card receipts; credit card holders may
pay an annual fee to the bank and finance charges (interest) if they carry a balance.
4.
5.
F
If rates are expected to increase, the bank would want a variable rate loan; the
customer would want a fixed rate (see Chapter 6).
6.
7.
Fee-based services are less related to interest rate, liquidity, and credit risk.
8.
F
Federal Funds sold are an asset; Federal Funds purchased (liability) are a source
of funds.
9.
F
Regulators generally permit derivatives and accept their use for hedging, but
discourage their use for speculation.
10.
If the cost of funds (CDs) increase, the bank may increase its prime rate.
2.
3.
d
large.
Most borrowed funds are money market transactions -- short-term, uninsured, and
4.
5.
c
Analyze in either of two ways. (1) Find the after-tax yield on the taxable security;
compare with the no-tax yield on the muni: 10% (1-.46) = 5.4%, a lower after- tax yield
than the 6% muni. (2) Adjust the tax-free security to a pretax equivalent basis and
compare with the taxable yield. 6%/(1-.46) = 11.11%, which exceeds the 10% taxable.
6.
7.
b
The depositor is shifting toward deposits where withdrawal is increasingly costly.
To compensate for the illiquidity, the yield increases.
8.
a
Securitization holds the level of assets relatively constant, thus holding the amount
of required equity capital relatively constant.
9.
c
Capital notes, while usually subordinate to deposits, are contractual debt funds,
which require that interest and principal be paid at definite times.
10.
c
Bank investments provide liquidity to honor commitments while earning steady
income.
Real estate loans are the major asset or use of funds of banks.
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