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Depository Institutions

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Title: Depository Institutions


1
Depository Institutions
2
Depository Institutions
  • Main criteria is that a significant portion of
    the firms funds come from customer deposits.
  • Examples include
  • Commercial Banks
  • Savings and Loans
  • Credit Unions

3
Recent Trends
  • The 1990s ended with the Fin Modernization Act
    (1999).
  • During this time there has been a wave of mergers
    and acquisitions in the industry.
  • The increased business services that Depository
    Institutions are now allowed to offer has created
    a desire for larger less regional institutions.

4
Largest Depository Institutions, Dec 31, 2003 by
total assets (billions)
  • Dom
  • Assets Assets Dep
  • J.P Morgan Chase 1009 11.11 6.61
  • Bank of America 870 9.58 9.82
  • Citigroup 796 8.77 3.47
  • Wells Fargo 380 4.19 4.62
  • Wachovia Corp 362 3.99 4.09
  • Washington Mutual 276 3.04 3.23
  • US Bancorp 192 2.12 2.19
  • National City Corp 132 1.45 1.17
  • SunTrust 125 1.37 1.47
  • ABN ARMCO 107 1.18 0.87

5
Traditional Services
  • Depository Institutions have been traditionally
    been subject to a large amount of regulation that
    restricted their actions.
  • Main business functions
  • Consumer and Business Lending
  • Savings Products
  • Payment Services
  • Main overlap with other FIs has been in Savings
    products That has changed dramatically in the
    last 10 years.

6
Key Regulatory Legislation
  • National Currency and Bank Acts (1863-64)
  • Set up system of federally chartering banks
    through US Treas Dept. or Comptroller of
    Currency or Administrator of National Banks
  • Comptroller of the Currency examines all
    nationally chartered banks every 12 to 18 months
  • Established pledging requirements for owners
    equity

7
Key Regulatory Legislation
  • The Federal Reserve Act (1913)
  • Established the Federal Reserve System as a
    lender of last resort
  • Established network to clear and collect checks

8
Key Legislation
  • McFadden Act (1927)
  • National banks allowed branches in their original
    city.
  • Branching across state lines forbidden unless
    allowed by state law
  • Liberalized banks underwriting activities and
    allowed underwriting of corporate stocks and
    bonds

9
Legislation (continued)...
  • 1933 Glass-Steagall
  • Separates securities and banking activities
  • Prohibited commercial banks from most
    underwriting of securities. 4 exceptions Munis,
    US govt, Private Placement and Real Estate Loans.
    Fear of conflict of interest
  • Established FDIC
  • National banks allowed to branch state wide if
    state chartered banks were allowed to do so.

10
Legislation (continued)...
  • Bank Holding Company Act and subsequent
    amendments (1956 1966 and 1970)
  • Specifies permissible activities and regulation
    by Fed Res of Bank Holding Cos.
  • Bank Holding Companies must request Fed Approval
  • Cos with 2 or more banks must register with Fed
    Res and file financial statements and submit to
    Fed Res review of their books
  • 1970 Amendments to the Bank Holding Company Act
    Extension to one-bank holding companies

11
Legislation (continued)...
  • 1970 International Banking Act Regulated foreign
    bank branches and agencies in USA
  • 1980 Depository Institutions Deregulation and
    Monetary Control Act
  • Phased out interest rate ceilings imposed by
    Regulation Q
  • Goal was to make SLs, credit unions and other
    nonbank depository institutions more competitive.

12
Legislation (continued)
  • Depository Institutions Act (1982) Garn-St.
    Germain Depository Institutions Act)
  • Allowed all federally supervised depository
    Institutions to sell deposit accounts equivalent
    to Money market mutual fund accounts
  • Loan limits were liberalized for national banks,
    allowed lending of up to 15 of their capital
  • FDIC could arrange mergers across state lines for
    failing institutions
  • Competitive Equality in Banking Act (1987)
  • Redefined bank to limit growth of nonbank banks.

13
Legislation (continued)
  • Financial Institutions Reform Recovery and
    Enforcement Act (1989)
  • Imposed restrictions on investment activities
  • Replaced FSLIC with FDIC-SAIF
  • Replaced FHLB with Office of Thrift Supervision
  • Created Resolution Trust Corporation

14
Legislation (continued)
  • 1991 FDIC Improvement Act
  • Fear of FDIC insolvency by end of 1991
  • Ordered new measurement scale for describing
    financial condition of depository institution and
    when in violation to take prompt corrective
    action
  • Risk-based deposit insurance premiums
  • Limited too big to fail

15
Legislation (continued)
  • Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching
    Efficiency Act (1994)
  • Permits BHCs to acquire banks in other states.
  • Invalidates some restrictive state laws.
  • Permits BHCs to convert out-of-state subsidiary
    banks to branches of single interstate bank.
  • Newly chartered branches permitted interstate if
    allowed by state law.

16
1999 Financial Services Modernization Act
  • Financial Services Modernization Act
  • Allowed banks, insurance companies, and
    securities firms to enter each others business
    areas
  • Provided for state regulation of insurance
  • Streamlined regulation of BHCs
  • Prohibited FDIC assistance to affiliates and
    subsidiaries of banks and savings institutions
  • Provided for national treatment of foreign banks
  • ATM fees must be clearly disclosed
  • Federal Crime to steal account information

17
Structural Changes
18
FDIC Institutions
19
Competition among FIs
20
Unresolved Issues
  • Does regulatory approval limit the ability of
    banks to respond to new markets?
  • Will functional regulation work (can regulatory
    agencies work together?)
  • Can and will countries work together as
    institutions become more global?

21
Bank Size (by asset concentration)
  • Community banks under 1billion in assets
    specialize in retail or consumer lending
  • The asset share of banks over 1Billion has
    increased from 63.4 in 1984 to 83.9 in 2000.
  • Large banks often have access to cheaper forms of
    cash.
  • Money Center Banks Heavy reliance on nondeposit
    or borrowed funds.

22
Balance Sheet
  • Assets - four major categories
  • Cash and deposits held at other institutions
  • Government and private interest bearing
    securities
  • Loans and leases
  • Misc assets.
  • Liabilities two major categories
  • Deposits
  • Non deposit borrowing

23
Assets
  • Cash (Primary Reserves)
  • includes vault cash, reserves at the Fed Res,
    deposits at other banks, checks in the process of
    collection. Designed to meet liquidity needs
  • Investment Securities
  • Liquid portion (Secondary Reserves) ST Govt
    securities, money market securities, commercial
    paper, time deposits
  • Income Generating portion Bonds notes and other
    securities (taxable and tax exempt).
  • Trading account securities bank serve as a
    security dealer for state, federal and local
    govt obligations. Bank intends to sell these
    prior to maturity

24
Assets (continued)
  • Loans
  • Largest portion of assets form most banks
  • Includes consumer, real estate, business, ag
    production, leases and foreign loans.
  • Most statements include a gross loan amount and
    an allowance for loan loss (balance is built
    with deductions from current income, when a loan
    is uncollectable then balance is reduced.
    Therefore both the gross account and loss account
    change. And net income is not impacted.)

25
Assets (continued)
  • Federal Funds sold and Securities Purchased under
    Repurchase agreements
  • Short term loans
  • Customers Liability on Acceptances
  • A line of credit provided via a letter of credit
    backing purchases by the customer.
  • Miscellaneous Assets
  • Bank buildings, equipment, prepaid insurance etc.

26
Assets, of Total Assets
27
Loans, of Total Loans
28
Loan Portfolios 2000
Real Estate 62.77
Real Estate 39.85
29
Liabilities
  • Largest portion of liabilities is deposits
  • Average ratio of equity to assets 8.49 (91.51
    of asses are financed by some type of debt..)
  • Approximately 21 of deposits are transaction
    accounts (checkable deposits that cost little or
    no interest)
  • Retail savings and time deposits have been
    declining due to competition form money market
    mutual funds

30
Deposits
  • Non-interest bearing demand deposits
  • Checking accounts with unlimited check writing
  • Savings deposits
  • NOW accounts
  • Held only by individuals and nonprofit
    institutions pay interest and permit checks
  • Money market deposit accounts
  • Limited check writing ability and can pay
    interest
  • Time deposits
  • CDs with fixed maturity and interest rate

31
Liabilities, of Total
32
Assets Vs. Liabilities
  • Generally liabilities tend to be of shorter
    maturity than assets. This introduces interest
    rate risk and liquidity risk for depository
    institutions.

33
Equity
  • Usually about 8 to 10 of liabilities and equity
  • Generally equity held is close to the minimum
    amount set by regulations

34
Off - Balance Sheet Activities
  • Assets and Liabilities that will appear on the
    balance sheet or income statement if a contingent
    event occurs.
  • Motivated by both earnings and regulatory (tax
    avoidance) incentives
  • Expose the bank to added risk, but do not show up
    on traditional financial reports.

35
OBS Activities continued
  • Standby Credit Agreements- bank pledges to
    guarantee repayment of a customers loan received
    from a third party
  • Interest rate swaps exchange interest payments
    on debt securities with another party
  • Financial futures and options
  • Loan commitments pledge to lend up to a certain
    amount of funds
  • Foreign exchange rate contracts

36
Other Fee Generating Activities
  • Trust Services
  • Management of estate assets and pension fund
    assets
  • Correspondent Banking
  • Providing banking services to smaller
    institutions that do not have the staff or
    expertise in those services.

37
Savings Associations
  • Primarily deal with household saving and
    mortgages.
  • Financing long term mortgages with short term
    deposits has been helped by a traditionally
    upward sloping yield curve.

38
SL Regulation
  • Traditionally restricted in the type of accounts
    they could offer the regulation in the early
    1980s allowed SLs to become more competitive
    with commercial banks. Most notably the repeal
    of Regulation Q. Also allowed to offer NOW
    accounts and more market sensitive money market
    accounts

39
Savings Banks
  • Originally organized as a mutual organization
    that also focused on mortgage lending
  • Many are now switching to stock ownership

40
Credit Unions
  • Nonprofit depository institutions that are
    mutually organized.
  • Members must belong to a specific similar
    occupation, association or live in a given
    community.
  • Earnings are designated to paying higher rates of
    return on deposits and to charging lower rates of
    interest on loans.

41
Financial Analysis ofDepository Institutions
  • Finance 129
  • Drake University

42
Basic Financial Statements
  • Report of Condition
  • Balance Sheet
  • Report of Income
  • Income Statement
  • Funds Flow Statement
  • Sources and Uses of Funds
  • Statement of Stockholders Equity

43
Balance Sheet
  • Financial Outputs
  • (uses of Bank Funds or Assets)
  • Cash (primary reserves)
  • Liquid Security Holdings
  • (secondary Reserves)
  • Investments in Securities
  • Loans
  • Consumer
  • Real Estate
  • Ag
  • Fin Institutions
  • Mics Loans
  • Misc
  • Financial Inputs
  • (Sources of Funds or
  • Liabilities and Owners Equity)
  • Deposits from Public
  • Demand
  • NOWs
  • Money markets
  • Savings
  • Time
  • Nondeposit Borrowings
  • Equity Capital
  • Stock
  • Surplus
  • Retained Earnings
  • Capital reserves

44
Balance Sheet continued
  • As with any balance sheet
  • Assets Liabilities Owners Equity
  • or
  • Accumulated uses Accumulated sources
  • of bank funds of bank funds


45
Balance Sheet Components Assets
  • The Cash Account
  • includes Cash in the vault, deposits with other
    banks, cash items in the process of collection
    and reserve accounts with the Federal Reserve
  • Traditionally banks attempt to keep this account
    as low as possible
  • Primary reserves since it is banks first line of
    defense against withdrawls

46
Balance Sheet Components Assets
  • Investment Securities the liquid portion
  • Short term government securities and money market
    instruments
  • secondary reserves
  • Investment Securities Income Generating Portion
  • Taxable and nontaxable
  • Can be recorded at original cost or market value
    or the lower of the two
  • trading account securities

47
Balance Sheet Components Assets
  • Loans
  • Largest Asset
  • Generally broken down by purpose of loans
  • Gross loans -- total of all outstanding
  • Allowance for Loan losses (ALL account)
  • PLL on income statement
  • Gross minus ALL Net Loans
  • Allocated Transfer Risks
  • Unearned Discounts

48
Balance Sheet Components Assets
  • ALL account
  • often divided into two sections, specific
    reserves, and general reserves
  • Tax reform Act of 1986
  • only loans actually declared uncollectable can be
    expensed through the ALL accounts
  • decreased use of ALL accounts
  • Permanent capital

49
Balance Sheet Components Assets
  • Federal Funds Sold and Securities Purchased under
    Resale Agreements
  • Customers liability Acceptances
  • Misc Assets

50
Balance Sheet Components Liabilities
  • Deposits
  • Noninterest bearing
  • Savings
  • NOW accounts
  • Money Market Accounts
  • Time Deposits
  • Borrowings from Nondeposit sources
  • Capital Accounts

51
Book vs. Fair Value
  • Banks have traditionally recorded balance sheet
    entries at original cost (book value or
    historical cost accounting -- ammoritzed cost)
  • Implies that interest rate fluctuations would not
    impact values
  • Fair Value -- current market value

52
Arguments against Fair Value
  • Possible increase in the volatility of earnings
  • greater instability in stock prices of banks
  • loss of bank capital cushions
  • lack of resale market

53
Income Statement or Report of Income
  • Revenue Items
  • Interest Income (interest generated from loans
    normally accounts for most income (generally more
    than 2/3)
  • Non interest income (fee income) Increasingly
    important.
  • No interest income also includes securities gains
    (or losses). Now subject to standard tax rate

54
Report of IncomeExpenses
  • Interest Expense
  • largest expense is interest paid on deposits,
    often between 50 and 60 of total expenses
  • fed funds borrowing and repurchase agreements
    have grown in importance.
  • Non interest expense
  • wages, salaries and other personnel expenses

55
Income
  • Net Interest Income
  • Total Interest Income -Total Interest Expense
  • Also referred to as interest margin
  • Net income
  • Adds non interest income and subtracts no
    interest expense to interest income.

56
Income Statement
  • Interest Income
  • Interest on loans, Interest on securities, Other
  • Interest Expense
  • Deposit Interest, Short term debt, Long Term
    debt
  • Net Interest Income
  • Non interest Income
  • Service Charges, Trust Department, Other
  • Non interest Expense
  • Wages, Net occupancy, Other operating expenses
  • Income before taxes
  • Provision for income taxes
  • Net income after taxes

57
Funds - Flow Statement
  • Dividends paid out to stockholders
  • increase in banks assets
  • decreases in bank liabilities
  • Funds Used by the bank
  • Funds from operations
  • decreases in bank assets
  • increases in bank liabilities
  • Funds provided to the bank


58
Capital Account Statement
  • Beginning Balance
  • Net income
  • - Dividends paid to shareholders
  • New Shares of Stock issued
  • - Purchases of treasury stock
  • Balance at end of period

59
Common Characteristics of Banks Financial
Statements
  • Heavy dependence on borrowed funds
  • Earnings are exposed to risk if borrowings cannot
    be repaid
  • Growing use of nondeposit borrowings
  • Bank must hold a significant proportion of high
    quality and marketable securities
  • Financial Assets are more important than plants
    and equipment
  • few fixed costs and limited use of operating
    leverage.

60
Evaluating and Measuring Bank Performance
  • Going to use ratio analysis to evaluate the
    performance of depository institutions

61
ROE and ROA
  • ROE measure the rate of return flowing to the
    banks shareholders
  • ROA measures managerial efficiency -- how well
    management converts assets into net earnings

62
Relationship between ROE and ROA
63
DuPont Identity
64
Decomposition
65
Decomposition
  • Equity Multiplier
  • Reflects the leverage or financing policies (the
    choice of debt or equity)
  • Profit Margin
  • Reflects the effectiveness of expense management
    control
  • Asset utilization
  • Reflects the ability to manage the mix and yield
    on the banks assets

66
Example changes through time
67
Average returns on Banks 1999
lt 100 Million 100 Million to 1 Billion 1Billion to 10 Billion gt 10 Billion
ROA 1.01 1.36 1.49 1.28
ROE 9.07 14.24 16.02 15.97
68
Asset Utilization and Profit Margin
  • Both reflect Management decisions regarding
  • Mix of funds raised and invested
  • Size of Bank
  • control of operating Expenses
  • Pricing of Services
  • Minimization of tax liability

69
Asset Utilization
70
Asset Utilization
71
Profit Margin
72
Decomposition of ROA
73
Decomposition of ROA Part 2
74
Decomposition of ROA Part 2
75
Other Important Ratios
76
Obtaining Information on Banks
  • Data for banks is available from the Uniform Bank
    Performance Report (UBPR).
  • UBPR developed by the Fed, FDIC, and office of
    the comptroller of Currency so that there would
    be a standardized way to compare institutions.
  • Also peer group and state reports for comparable
    banks.

77
UBPR
  • Goal is to provide uniform reporting of
    information
  • Developed by the Federal Financial Institutions
    Examination Councils quarterly reports.
  • Available online at www.FFIEC.org

78
Using the UBPR
  • Compare across years
  • each report has 5 years of data
  • Year end or current quarter plus 1 year prior to
    current and three previous years
  • Compare to peer groups
  • also available are peer groups reports based on
    both size of bank and geographic location
  • Allows you to benchmark

79
UBPR Security National
  • Table 5-5 from Rose
  • Total Assets increased by 600 million, rate of
    9.3
  • all types of loan rose except ones hit by
    economic downturn (lines 1-11)
  • decrease in short term securities, increase in
    long term, maybe seeking higher yields (lines 14
    and 18)
  • Large increase in US treasury Securities (line
    24) and municipal securities (line 25)

80
UBPR Security National
  • Table 5-6 in Rose
  • Deposits increased except for sectors hit by
    economic down turn.
  • Large increase in need for federal funs and
    repurchase agreements (line 10). Indicate that
    loans and securities grew faster than deposits.
    Also may reduce profitability since it is an
    expensive source of funds.

81
UBPR Security National
  • Table 5-7 in Rose
  • Loans increased as a percentage of assets, but on
    average still less than peer group (line 1).
    Loans are high yielding -- may reduce income.
  • Holds more long term 18.57 than average of 8.95
    (line 5). Higher market risk due to interest rate
    sensitivity. Fewer short term securities 2.54
    than average 3.41 (line 10).
  • Low amount of non interest bearing cash deposits
    from other banks and deposits due (line 13)
    indicates higher liquidity risk. May force
    increased borrowing in fed funds market. And
    increased liquidity risk

82
UBPR Security National
  • Table 5-7 in Rose
  • Smaller portion of checkable deposits which are a
    cheap source of funds (line 19)
  • Also smaller portion of core deposits (demand,
    NOW, savings accounts, money market and time
    deposits less than 100,000) (line 23). Assumed
    to be stable source of funds decreasing chance of
    illiquidity

83
UBPR Security National
  • Table 5-8 in Rose
  • Interest income increased by 7 million or 1.2
    (line 15), interest expense increase by 18
    million or 14.6 (line 23)
  • Net interest income declined by 6.3 (line 24)
  • Interest on borrowed money increased by 10 (line
    20)
  • Interest paid on large CDs increased by 14.6
    (line16)
  • Provision for loan losses increased by 83 (line
    28)
  • Non interest income increased by 22.2 (line 25)
  • Net income decreased by 28.3 (line 37)

84
UBPR Sec Nat
  • Recent Year
  • NIM (165/6951) 2.37
  • Last year
  • NIM (176/6361) 2.77
  • Peer Group (table 5-9)
  • NIM Recent year 3.91 Last year 3.66
  • The industry increased while security national
    decreased, both much lower than average

85
UBPR Security National (Rose)
  • Current Tot assets 6951 Tot equity 482 Net
    income 33
  • Last 6361 381 46

86
UBPR Security National
  • From last slide
  • ROA declined and the equity multiplier declined
  • Higher equity multiplier is riskier, but here the
    decrease is helping to decrease profitability.
  • Alternative EM definition 1/EM is the of
    assets that can default before insolvency

87
UBPR Security National
  • Current Tot assets 6951 Tot equity 482 Net inc
    33 Tot inc 604
  • Last 6361
    381 46 593

88
UBPR Security National
  • Asset Utilization decreased form .0932 to .0869
    and profit margin declined from .0776 to .0546
  • Decline in profit margin and equity multiplier
    are the largest.
  • Profit margin hurt by increased provision for
    loan losses and increase in applicable income
    taxes
  • Pretax income declined by 11 Net income declined
    by 28 higher tax burden and lower adjustment

89
UBPR Security National
  • current non interest expense 72 Tot income 604
  • last 70 593
  • Burden (noninterest expense - noninterest income)
    from 52 to 50 while asset grew.
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