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The Nature of Financial Intermediation

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Title: The Nature of Financial Intermediation


1
The Nature of Financial Intermediation
  • Business 4039

2
Key Concepts
  • Pivotal role of banks and other deposit-taking
    FIs
  • Rapid pace of change in markets, technologies and
    non-bank competition
  • Information costs are responsible for emergence
    of financial intermediaries
  • Financial intermediaries deal with
  • Search
  • Verification
  • Monitoring
  • Enforcement costs.

3
Important Terms Defined
  • Liquidity and funding risk
  • The threat of insufficient liquidity on the part
    of the bank for normal operating requirements
  • Settlement/payment risk
  • Is created when one party to a deal pays money or
    delivers assets before receiving its own cash or
    assets, hence exposing itself to a potential loss
    and interest rate risk.
  • Interest rate risk
  • The risk that arises from mismatches in both the
    volume and maturity of interest-sensitive assets,
    liabilities and off-balance sheet items
  • Market or price risk
  • The exposure of banks to losses due to market or
    price fluctuations in well-defined markets
  • Foreign exchange or currency risk
  • The exposure of banks to fluctuations in foreign
    exchange rates that affect positions held in a
    particular currency for a customer or the bank.
  • Sovereign risk
  • In which the political or economic conditions in
    a particular country threaten to interrupt
    repayment of loans or other debt obligations
  • Operating risk
  • Arising from losses caused by fraud, failure of
    internal control, or unexpected expenses, as in
    the case of lawsuits.

4
Financial Intermediation
  • Information is the underlying, core reason for
    the existence of financial intermediaries.
  • Borrowers do not have the means to search out and
    contract with lenders. Even if they do, it is
    an expensive and time consuming and unsystematic
    process that can be prohibitively expensive.
  • This situation does existfor example in the case
    of angel capital.

5
Financial Intermediaries
  • There are many types of financial intermediaries
    that have evolved over time
  • Deposit-taking financial intermediaries
  • Banks /Trust companies
  • Credit unions
  • Non-depositor
  • Life and PC insurance companies
  • Investment dealers
  • Finance Companies
  • Other
  • Mutual funds

6
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.
  • The end result is that financial institutions are
    among the most heavily regulated and heavily
    taxed organizations in our society.
  • You 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
  • Role of OSFI in supervision

7
Intermediation Services of FIs
  • risk transfer, reduction, and monitoring services
  • liquidity services
  • maturity intermediation services
  • transaction services
  • financial information services
  • denomination intermediation (mutual funds)

8
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
9
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.

10
Price Risk
  • the risk that the sale price of an asset will be
    lower than its purchase price.

11
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.

12
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.

13
Securitization
  • The creation of a marketable financial asset
    through financial innovationof otherwise
    illiquid financial assets
  • Eg. MBSs

14
Economies of Scale
  • FIs provide potential economies of scale in
    transactions costs...information collection and
    risk management.

15
Institutional Aspects of Special-ness
  • 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)

16
Rationale for Regulation
  • Relevance of Negative Externalities
  • Failure to provide essential intermediation
    services, or the breakdown in provision of these
    services can be costly to both surplus savings
    economic units and deficit-spending economic
    units
  • Such failures can have negative implications for
    the government, social stability and for the
    standard of living in an economy
  • Financial crisis in one country can have
    contagion effects in other countries
  • The foregoing negative externalities are the
    underlying reason for the extra regulatory
    attention paid to financial institutions.
  • This extra attention gives rise to net regulatory
    burden (the difference between the private costs
    of regulations and the private benefits for the
    producers of financial services)

17
Types of FI Regulation
  • Safety and soundness regulation
  • Monetary policy regulation
  • Credit allocation regulation
  • Consumer protection regulation
  • Investor protection regulation
  • Entry and chartering regulation

18
Safety and Soundness Regulation
  • Purpose
  • To protect depositors and borrowers against the
    risk of FI failure.
  • Layers of Protection
  • Diversification regulation (no more than 10 of a
    portfolio can be invested in one security/asset)
    banks cannot have loans exceeding 25 of total
    equity capital to any one company or borrower.
  • Minimum capital requirements
  • Guaranty funds (CDIC, CIPF) to meet insolvency
    losses to small claimholders
  • Monitoring and surveillance (OSFI for example)

19
Monetary Policy Regulation
  • In classical central bank theory, the central
    bank can control the quantity of bank deposits
    (D) using changing reserve requirements (R).
  • Where
  • (r) desired ratio of cash reserves
  • (R) quantity of bank reserves outstanding
  • Today, banks in Canada are not subject to reserve
    requirements however, they are all highly
    cognizant of the need for liquidity reserves
    reserves are costly and required reserves are
    seen as a tax
  • However, the Bank of Canada does stand ready to
    inject liquidity if necessary to prevent
    technical insolvency.
  • The Bank of Canada does use moral suasion and
    through changes in the overnight lending rate,
    affect the level of short-term interest rates in
    the country thereby taking preemptive action to
    try to control inflation.

20
Credit Allocation Regulation
  • Lending to socially important sectors of society
    such as
  • Small business
  • Farming
  • Poor - Housing
  • Consists of price (maximum rates that can be
    charged) and quantity restrictions (amount of
    foreign assets)
  • Canada does not use this type of regulation
    however, because of the imposition of private
    costs on our FIs.
  • Canada does take other actions to
    encourage/support/subsidize lending to important
    sectors of the economy by creating programs that
    lower the risk to the FI or by providing the
    service itself
  • Government providing the service
  • Business Development Bank of Canada
  • Export Development Canada
  • FedNor
  • Northern Ontario Heritage Fund
  • Government programs to lower the cost to private
    FIs
  • All of the foregoing government crown
    corporations and departments work jointly on
    projects and programs that also involve some
    private sector involvement either in financing or
    administration
  • CMHC
  • Student loan programs
  • Government (both federal and provincial programs)
    guarantees for loans to farming, forestry

21
Consumer Protection Regulation
  • 2001 Bill C-8 created the Financial Consumer
    Agency of Canada
  • Provides consumer information on bank accounts
    and investment products
  • Examines and imposes fines on FIs that violate
    consumer protection laws
  • Privacy laws at the provincial levels
  • Pressure on FIs to
  • Provide lending to small business
  • Provide banking services to low-income Canadians

22
Investor Protection Regulation
  • Provincial securities acts govern
  • Insider trading
  • Information disclosure requirements through
    prospectus and continuous reporting requirements
    for seasoned issues
  • SROs indirectly provide protection, and if they
    didnt government would step in to impose
    regulation
  • Know-your client rules and enforcement of other
    types of compliance

23
Trends in Canada
  • Gradual movement to universal banking through
    increasingly permissive regulations and
    competitive/strategy moves over time by FIs
  • More frequent review and renewal of governing
    legislation including deregulation and an
    increasingly welcoming environment for foreign
    FIs
  • Leveling of the playing field through uniform
    requirements for banks and insurance companies
  • Access to the payment system extended beyond
    banks to life insurance and underwriting firms
  • Incentives for credit union merger and growth
  • Continuing limits on chartered banks to sell
    insurance through branches (except for credit
    insurance) and retail consumer leasing
  • Completion of the demutualization process for
    life insurers giving these key FIs (SunLife,
    Canada Life, Mutual Life (Clarica)) access to
    capital
  • Extension of products lines by Investment Dealers
    and Insurance Companies into savings products,
    chequing products, wrap accounts, etc.
  • Continued develop of fee-based income
    (off-the-balance sheet) sources of income for
    banks
  • Continued pursuit of international presence by
    Canadian banks
  • Consolidation (merger) in the life insurance
    sector
  • Takeover of other pillars by banks (TD took over
    Central Guaranty Trust in 1992 and Canada Trust
    in 2000) and all banks have a brokerage arm since
    the 1980s (RBC, CIBC Wood Gundy, etc)

24
Entry Regulation
  • Chartering/federally-licensing for business,
    banks Bank Act
  • Minimum requirements to create FIs.

25
Chapter 1The Nature of Financial Intermediation
  • Problem Solutions

26
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 1
  • Identify and briefly explain the five risks
    common to financial institutions.
  • Default or credit risk of assets
  • Interest rate risk caused by maturity mismatches
    between assets and liabilities
  • Liability withdrawal or liquidity risk
  • Underwriting risk
  • Operating cost risk

27
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 2
  • Explain how economic transactions between
    household savers of funds and corporate users of
    fund would occur in a world without financial
    intermediaries.
  • Without FIs the users of corporate funds would
    have to approach directly (find/search) the
    household savers of funds in order to satisfy
    their borrowing needs.
  • This would be extremely costly and inefficient
    because of the up-front information costs faced
    by potential lenders.
  • Cost inefficiencies would arise with the
    identification of potential borrowers, the
    pooling of small savings into loans of sufficient
    size to finance corporate activities, and the
    assessment of risk and investment opportunities
  • Lenders would have to monitor the activities of
    borrowers over each loans life span.
  • The net result would be an imperfect allocation
    of resources in an economy.

28
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 3
  • Identify and explain three economic
    disincentives that probably would dampen the flow
    of funds between household savers of funds and
    corporate users of funds in an economic world
    without financial intermediaries.
  • Investors are generally averse to purchasing
    securities directly because of
  • Monitoring costs
  • Liquidity costs
  • Price risk
  • Monitoring the activities of borrowers requires
    extensive time, expense, and expertise.as a
    result, households would prefer to leave this
    activity to others, and by definition, the
    resulting lack of monitoring would increase the
    riskiness of investing in corporate debt and
    equity markets.
  • The long-term nature of corporate equity and debt
    would likely eliminate at least a portion of
    those households willing to lend money, as the
    preference of many for near-cash liquidity would
    dominate the extra returns which may be
    available.
  • The price risk of transactions on the secondary
    markets would increase without the information
    flows and services generated by high volume.

29
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 4
  • Identify and explain the two functions in which
    FIs may specialize that enable the smooth flow of
    funds from household savers to corporate users.
  • FIs serve as conduits between users and savers of
    funds by providing a brokerage function and by in
    engaging in asset transformation function.
  • Brokerage Function
  • Can benefit both savers and users of funds and
    can vary according to the firm.
  • FIs may provide only transaction services, such
    as discount brokerage, or they may also offer
    advisory services which help reduce information
    costs.

30
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 4
  • Identify and explain the two functions in which
    FIs may specialize that enable the smooth flow of
    funds from household savers to corporate users.
  • FIs serve as conduits between users and savers of
    funds by providing a brokerage function and by in
    engaging in asset transformation function.
  • Asset Transformation Function
  • Is accomplished by issuing their own securities,
    such as deposits and insurance policies that are
    more attractive to household savers, and using
    the proceeds to purchase primary securities of
    corporations.
  • FIs thus, take on the costs associated with the
    purchase of securities.

31
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 5
  • In what sense are the financial claims of FIs
    considered secondary securities, while the
    financial claims of commercial corporations are
    considered primary securities? How does the
    transformation process, or intermediation, reduce
    the risk, or economic disincentives, to the
    savers?
  • Primary securities
  • The funds raised by the financial claims issued
    by commercial corporations are used to invest in
    real assets.
  • These financial claims, which are considered
    primary securities, are purchased by FIs whose
    financial claims therefore are considered
    secondary securities.
  • Secondary securities
  • Savers who invest in the financial claims of FIs
    are indirectly investing in the primary
    securities of commercial corporations.
  • However, the information gathering and evaluation
    expenses, monitoring expenses, liquidity costs,
    and price risk of placing the investments
    directly with the commercial corporation are
    reduced because of the efficiencies of the FI

32
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 6
  • Explain how financial institutions act as
    delegated monitors.
  • Delegated Monitor
  • Depositors of excess funds in FIs give FIs the
    responsibility of deciding who should receive the
    money and of ensuring that the money is utilized
    properly by the borrower.
  • In this sense, the depositors have delegated the
    FI to act as a monitor on their behalf.
  • FI Economies as a Delegated Monitor and Overall
    Benefits
  • The FI can collect information more efficiently
    than individual investors
  • FIs can use this information to create new
    products, such as commercial loans, that
    continually update the information pool.
  • This more frequent monitoring process sends
    important information signals to other
    participants in the market, a process that
    reduces imperfection and asymmetry between the
    ultimate sources and users of funds in the
    economy.

33
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 7
  • What are the five general areas of FI
    specialness that are caused by providing various
    services to sectors of the economy?
  • FI Specialness
  • FIs collect and process information more
    efficiently than individual savers
  • FIs provide secondary claims to household savers
    which often have better liquidity characteristics
    than primary securities such as equities and
    bonds.
  • By diversifying the asset base FIs provide
    economies of scale in transaction costs because
    assets are purchased in larger amounts.
  • FIs provide maturity intermediation to the
    economy which allows the introduction of
    additional types of investment contracts, such as
    mortgage loans, that are financed with short-term
    deposits.

34
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 8
  • How do FIs solve the information and related
    agency costs when household savers invest
    directly in securities issued by corporations?
    What are agency costs?
  • Agency Costs
  • Agency costs arise because of the possibility
    that owners and managers may take actions that
    are not in the best interests of the equity
    investor or lender.
  • These costs typically result from the failure to
    adequately monitor the activities of the
    borrower.
  • If no other lender performs these tasks, the
    lender is subject to agency costs as the borrower
    may not satisfy the covenants in the lending
    agreement.
  • Because the FI invests the funds of many small
    savers, the FI has a greater incentive to collect
    information and monitor the activities of the
    borrower.

35
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 9
  • What often is the benefit to the lenders,
    borrowers, and financial markets in general of
    the solution to the information problem provided
    by the large financial institutions?
  • One benefit to the solution process is the
    development of new secondary securities that
    allow even further improvements in the monitoring
    process.
  • An example is the bank loan that is renewed more
    quickly than long-term debt.
  • The renewal process updates the financial and
    operating information of the firm more
    frequently, thereby reducing the need for
    restrictive bond covenants that may be difficult
    and costly to implement.

36
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 10
  • How do FIs alleviate the problem of liquidity
    risk faced by investors who wish to invest in the
    securities of corporations?
  • Liquidity risk occurs when savers are not able to
    sell their securities on demand.
  • Commercial banks, for example, offer deposits
    that can be withdrawn at any time. yet, the
    banks make long-term loans or invest in illiquid
    assets (mortgages and long-term bonds) because
    they are able to diversify their portfolios and
    better monitor the performance of firms that have
    borrowed or issued securities.
  • Thus individual investors are able to realize the
    benefits of investing in primary assets without
    accepting the liquidity risk of direct investment.

37
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 11
  • How do FIs help individual savers diversify
    their portfolios risks? Which type of financial
    institution is best able to achieve this goal?
  • Money placed in any financial institution will
    result in a claim on a more diversified
    portfolio.
  • Banks lend money to many types of corporate,
    consumer, and government customers, and insurance
    companies have investments in many different
    types of assets.
  • Investment in a mutual fund may generate the
    greatest diversification (depending on the type
    of fund) benefit because of the funds investment
    in a wide array of stocks and fixed income
    securities.

38
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 12
  • How can financial institutions invest in
    high-risk assets with funding provided by
    low-risk liabilities from savers?
  • Diversification of risk occurs with investments
    in assets that are not perfectly positively
    correlated.
  • One result of extensive diversification is that
    the average risk of the asset base of an FI will
    be less than the average risk of the individual
    assets in which it has invested.
  • Thus, individual investors realize some of the
    returns of high-risk assets without accepting the
    corresponding risk characteristics.

39
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 13
  • How can individual savers use financial
    institutions to reduce the transaction costs of
    investing in financial assets?
  • By pooling the assets of many small investors,
    FIs can gain economies of scale in transaction
    costs.
  • This benefit occurs whether the FI is lending to
    a corporate or retail customer, or purchasing
    assets in the money and capital markets.
  • In either case, operating activities that are
    designed to deal in large volumes typically are
    more efficient than those activities designed for
    small volumes.

40
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 14
  • What is maturity intermediation? What are some
    of the ways in which the risks of maturity
    intermediation are managed by financial
    intermediaries?
  • If net borrowers and net lenders have different
    optimal time horizons, FIs can service both
    sectors matching their asset and liability
    maturities through on- and off-balance sheet
    hedging activities and flexible access to the
    financial markets.
  • The FI can offer relatively short-term
    liabilities desired by households and also
    satisfy the demand for long-term loans such as
    home mortgages.
  • By investing in a portfolio of long- and
    short-term assets that have variable- and
    fixed-rate components, the FI can reduce maturity
    risk exposure by utilizing liabilities that have
    similar variable- and fixed-rate characteristics,
    or by using futures, options, swaps and other
    derivative products.

41
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 15
  • What are the five areas of institution-specific
    FI specialness, and which types of institutions
    are most likely to be the service providers?
  • Chartered Bank key players for transmission of
    monetary policy
  • Depository FIs such as banks, trusts, financial
    acceptance and credit unions provide financing
    for consumers and corporations. For example,
    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation provides
    mortgage insurance for residential mortgages.
  • Life insurance and pension funds provide
    mechanisms to transfer wealth across generations.
  • Depository financial institutions, insurance
    companies and brokerage firms provide payment
    services
  • Mutual funds provide denomination intermediation.
    (Brokerage/investment firms may as well, as in
    the case of T-bills)

42
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 16
  • How do deposit-taking institutions such as
    chartered banks assist in the implementation and
    transmission of monetary policy?
  • The Bank of Canada can involve banks directly in
    the implementation of monetary policy through
    changes in the target Overnight Rate. The open
    market sale and purchase of Government of Canada
    securities by the Bank of Canada involves the
    banks in the implementation of monetary policy in
    a less direct manner.

43
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 17
  • What is meant by credit allocation regulation?
    What social benefit is this type of regulation
    intended to provide?
  • Credit allocation regulation refers to the
    requirement faced by FIs to lend to certain
    sectors of the economy, which are considered to
    be socially important. These may include housing
    and farming. Presumably the provision of credit
    to make houses more affordable or farms more
    viable leads to a more stable and productive
    society.

44
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 18
  • Which financial intermediaries best fulfill the
    intergenerational wealth transfer function? What
    is this wealth transfer process?
  • Life insurance and pension funds often receive
    special taxation relief and other subsidies to
    assist in the transfer of wealth from one
    generation to another. In effect, the wealth
    transfer process allows the accumulation of
    wealth by one generation to be transferred
    directly to one or more younger generations by
    establishing life insurance policies and trust
    provisions in pension plans. Often this wealth
    transfer process avoids the full marginal tax
    treatment that a direct payment would incur.

45
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 19
  • What are two of the most important payment
    services provided by financial institutions? To
    what extent do these services efficiently provide
    benefits to the economy?
  • The two most important payment services are
    cheque clearing and wire transfer services. Any
    breakdown in these systems would produce gridlock
    in the payment system with resulting harmful
    effects to the economy at both the domestic and
    potentially the international level.

46
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 20
  • What is denomination intermediation? How do FIs
    assist in this process?
  • Denomination intermediation is the process
    whereby small investors are able to purchase
    pieces of assets that normally are sold only in
    large denominations.
  • Individual savers often invest small amounts in
    mutual funds. The mutual funds pool these small
    amounts and purchase money market securities
    which can only be sold in minimum increments of
    100,000, but which often are sold in million
    dollar packages.
  • Similarly, commercial paper often is sold only in
    minimum amounts of 100,000. Therefore small
    investors can benefit in the returns and low risk
    which these assets typically offer.

47
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 21
  • What is negative externality? In what ways do
    the existence of negative externalities justify
    the extra regulatory attention received by
    financial institutions?
  • A negative externality refers to the action by
    one party that has an adverse affect on some
    third party who is not part of the original
    transaction.
  • For example, in an industrial setting, smoke from
    a factory that lowers surrounding property values
    may be viewed as a negative externality.
  • For financial institutions, one concern is the
    contagion effect that can arise when the failure
    of one FI can cast doubt on the solvency of other
    institutions in that industry.

48
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 22
  • If financial markets operated perfectly and
    costlessly, would there be a need for financial
    intermediaries?
  • To a certain extent, financial intermediation
    exists because of financial market imperfections.
  • If information is available costlessly to all
    participants, savers would not need
    intermediaries to act as either their brokers or
    their delegated monitors.
  • However, if there are social benefits to
    intermediation, such as the transmission of
    monetary policy or credit allocation, then FIs
    would exist even in the absence of financial
    market imperfections.

49
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 23
  • What is mortgage redlining?
  • Mortgage redlining occurs when a lender
    specifically defines a geographic area in which
    it refuses to make any loans.
  • The term arose because of the area often was
    outlined on a map with a red pencil.

50
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 24
  • Why are FIs among the most regulated sectors in
    the world? When is net regulatory burden
    positive?
  • FIs are required to enhance the efficient
    operation of the economy. Successful financial
    intermediaries provide sources of financing that
    fund economic growth opportunity that ultimately
    raises the overall level of economic activity.
    Moreover, successful financial intermediaries
    provide transaction services to the economy that
    facilitate trade and wealth accumulation.

51
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 24 2
  • Why are FIs among the most regulated sectors in
    the world? When is net regulatory burden
    positive?
  • Conversely, distressed FIs create negative
    externalities for the entire economy. That is,
    the adverse impact of an FI failure is greater
    than just the loss to shareholders and other
    private claimants on the FI's assets. For
    example, the financial markets suffer if an FI
    fails and other FIs also may be thrown into
    financial distress by a contagion effect.
    Therefore, since some of the costs of the failure
    of an FI are generally borne by society at large,
    the government intervenes in the management of
    these institutions to protect society's
    interests. This intervention takes the form of
    regulation.

52
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 24 3
  • Why are FIs among the most regulated sectors in
    the world? When is net regulatory burden
    positive?
  • However, the need for regulation to minimize
    social costs may impose private costs to the
    firms that would not exist without regulation.
    This additional private cost is defined as a net
    regulatory burden. Examples include the cost of
    holding excess capital and/or excess reserves and
    the extra costs of providing information.
    Although they may be socially beneficial, these
    costs add to private operating costs. To the
    extent that these additional costs help to avoid
    negative externalities and to ensure the smooth
    and efficient operation of the economy, the net
    regulatory burden is positive.

53
Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 25
  • What forms of protection and regulation do
    regulators of FIs impose to ensure their safety
    and soundness?
  • FIs are required to diversify their assets. For
    example, federally-regulated FIs must follow
    OSFIs Guidelines on Large Exposure Limits.
  • FIs are required to maintain minimum amounts of
    capital to cushion any unexpected losses. In the
    case of banks, OSFI standards require a minimum
    core and supplementary capital of 7 percent of
    their risk-adjusted assets.
  • Regulators have set up guaranty funds such as
    CDIC, CIPF to protect individual investors
    against losses on the insolvency of FIs
  • Regulators also engage in periodic monitoring and
    surveillance, such as on-site examinations, and
    request periodic information from the FIs.

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Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 26
  • What legislation has been passed specifically to
    protect investors who use investment banks
    directly or indirectly to purchase securities?
    Give some examples of the types of abuses for
    which protection is provided.
  • While the discussion of a national securities
    regulator for Canada is under discussion, the
    regulation of securities dealers is a provincial
    and territorial responsibility in Canada.
  • Through self-regulating organizations (SROs),
    securities dealers, including mutual funds, are
    subject to rules affecting possible abuses such
    as insider trading, lack of disclosure, outright
    malfeasance, and breach of fiduciary
    responsibilities.

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Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 27
  • How do regulations regarding barriers to entry
    and the scope of permitted activities affect the
    charter value of financial institutions?
  • The profitability of existing firms will be
    increased as the direct and indirect costs of
    establishing competition increase.
  • Direct costs include the actual physical and
    financial costs of establishing a business. In
    the case of FIs, the financial costs include
    raising the necessary minimum capital to receive
    a charter.
  • Indirect costs include permission from regulatory
    authorities to receive a charter. As these
    barriers to entry are stronger, the charter value
    for existing firms will be higher.

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Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 28
  • What reasons have been given for the growth of
    investment companies at the expense of
    traditional banks and insurance companies?
  • The recent growth of investment companies can be
    attributed to two major factors
  • Investors have demanded increased access to
    direct securities markets. Investment companies
    and mutual funds allow investors to take
    positions in direct securities markets while
    still obtaining the risk diversification,
    monitoring, and transactional efficiency benefits
    of financial intermediation. Some experts would
    argue that this growth is the result of increased
    sophistication on the part of investors others
    would argue that the ability to use these markets
    has caused the increased investor awareness. The
    growth in these assets is inarguable.
  • b. Both the banking and insurance industries have
    been subject to an increase in regulation and
    governmental oversight, thereby increasing the
    net regulatory burden of traditional companies.
    As such, the costs of intermediation have
    increased, which increases the cost of providing
    services to customers.

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Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 29
  • What are some of the methods which banking
    organizations have employed to reduce the net
    regulatory burden? What has been the effect on
    profitability?
  • Through regulatory changes, FIs have begun
    changing the mix of business products offered to
    individual users and providers of funds. For
    example, banks have acquired mutual funds, have
    expanded their asset and pension fund management
    businesses, and have increased the security
    underwriting activities. As the size of banks
    has grown, an expansion of possible product
    offerings has created the potential for lower
    service costs.
  • The emphasis in recent years has been on products
    that generate increases in fee income, and the
    entire banking industry has benefited from
    increased profitability in recent years.

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Saunders Questions Chapter 1Question 30
  • What characteristics of financial products are
    necessary for financial markets to become
    efficient alternatives to financial
    intermediaries? Can you give some examples of
    the commoditization of products which were
    previously the sole property of financial
    institutions?
  • Financial markets can replace FIs in the delivery
    of products that
  • (1) have standardized terms,
  • (2) serve a large number of customers, and
  • (3) are sufficiently understood for investors to
    be comfortable in assessing their prices.
  • When these three characteristics are met, the
    products often can be treated as commodities.
    One example of this process is the migration of
    over-the-counter options to the publicly traded
    option markets as trading volume grows and
    trading terms become standardized.
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