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High Noon

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Title: High Noon


1
High Noon
  • Chapter 9
  • Code BlueHealth Science Edition 4

2
Everyone will deal with banks sometime in their
life
  • Certainly in their personal life
  • Checking accounts
  • Savings plans
  • Home mortgages
  • Possibly in their professional life as an officer
    or administrator in a healthcare facility

3
It is nice, therefore, to know a little about how
they work
  • Banks make their money by
  • Providing services to customers like checking
    accounts, servicing loans, and so on
  • Loaning money to individuals and businesses

4
Where does the money for loans come from?
  • Primarily from deposits made by customers and
    from loans from the Federal Reserve
  • When money is loaned out, it must be loaned at a
    higher rate than the rate paid to depositors, or
    the bank will lose money.

5
Losing Money
  • There is a more dramatic way that banks can lose
    money, however . . .
  • By having those who borrowed the money fail to
    repay it!

6
Default on Loan
  • This is a costly situation for banks.
  • Think about it. If a bank loans 100,000 at 6
    for a year, the most they can make is 6 x
    100,000 6,000.
  • The most they can lose, however, is 100,000!

7
Increasing the Safety of Loans
  • Banks usually require collateral when making a
    loan.
  • The collateral can be a piece of property, or, in
    the case of Brannan Community Hospital, accounts
    receivable.

8
Brannan Community Hospitals Line of Credit
  • Sometimes banks will sign an agreement to loan a
    hospital a fixed amount of money at a stated rate
    for a year using accounts receivable as the
    collateral.
  • The hospital can borrow up to 70 of the value of
    the receivables.

9
Brannan Community Hospitals Line of Credit
  • If the hospital fails to pay the loan or line of
    credit off, the bank can take ownership of the
    receivables.
  • They then collect money from patients and keep it
    to repay as much of the loan as possible.

10
Calling a Loan
  • A bank may call a loan it if it feels the
    hospital is in danger of going bankrupt.
  • At that point, the entire amount owed by the
    hospital must be paid back immediately.
  • If not, the bank can seize the collateral.

11
Personal Loans
  • In some situations, the same thing can happen
    with personal loans.
  • Fail to make payments, and the entire balance may
    come due immediately.
  • Fail to pay and the bank can take the collateral
    you offered for the loan, such as your car, your
    home, etc.

12
Business Loans
  • Businesses like hospitals are often forced to
    extend credit to customers.
  • This means that they provide goods and services
    to patients that will be paid for later.

13
Business Loans
  • The goods and services provided to patients on
    credit cost the hospital money.
  • Prior to receiving payment from patients, to pay
    their employees salaries -- and to pay their
    vendors -- hospitals must take out loans.

14
Business Loans
  • One type of loan is called a line of credit.
  • Brannan Community Hospital has a line of credit
    secured by its accounts receivables.
  • What this means is that this loan will be paid
    off when patients pay off their bills.

15
Situation in this chapter
  • In Chapter 9, the bank wants to call the
    hospitals loan.
  • If this occurs, the hospital would go out of
    business.
  • The hospital depends on its accounts receivable
    for money to pay its employees.
  • It would be unable to pay payroll.
  • It could not make payments to vendors for
    supplies purchased.

16
Administrators Dilemma
  • Wes Douglas, of course, wants to avert the
    closure of his hospital.
  • Somehow, he must convince the bank that it is not
    in their interest to close the hospital.
  • Remember, banks dont loan their own money. They
    loan the funds of their depositors, whom they
    must protect.

17
What can Wes Douglas offer the bank?
  • He can offer more collateralthe bank finally
    wants to put a lien on the Magnetic Resonance
    Imaging machine recently purchased by the
    hospital.
  • He can offer a business plan showing that the
    hospital can reverse its losses.

18
He plays one other card . . .
  • He points out that closing the hospital would
    drastically harm the economic viability of the
    city, which, in turn, would financially harm the
    bank.

19
How?
  • The hospital is the largest employer in the
    community.
  • Many hospital employees who are also bank
    customers would lose their jobs.
  • Many of these individuals would leave the
    community for jobs elsewhere.

20
How?
  • As hundreds of homes come on the market, the
    value of property in the community will decrease.
  • This will decrease the value of homes, which
    typically serve as collateral on home mortgages
    the former hospital employees will be unable to
    pay.

21
Wycoff has another idea . . .
  • Wycoff, an independently wealthy member of the
    board, has another idea.
  • He is willing to do what many hospital board
    members have done when their hospitals are in
    trouble . . . guarantee the loan.

22
What does it mean to guarantee a loan?
  • He will sign a contract stating that if the
    hospital does not pay its loan off, he will be
    personally liable.
  • He, of course, wants some protection for himself.
  • He wants collateralin this case a valuable piece
    of property owned by the hospital.

23
Why does this matter to you?
  • Many health professionals start their own
    businesses (doctors, physical therapists and so
    on).
  • Unless these professionals are wealthy, they will
    need loans to provide money to pay salaries, buy
    equipment and supplies, and so on.

24
Why does this matter to you?
  • Understanding what a line of credit is, why it is
    needed, how it is paid off, and when it can be
    called by the bank is an important concept for
    anyone who starts a healthcare business or works
    for a healthcare business.

25
The End
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