1 / 40

Chapter 10. The Banking Industry: Structure and Competition

Chapter 10. The Banking Industry: Structure and Competition. A Brief History Structure Thrifts International Banking The Decline of Traditional Banking. I. A Brief History A. dual banking system. banking at state level until Civil War state charters, regulation

salena
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 10. The Banking Industry: Structure and Competition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 10. The Banking Industry:Structure and Competition • A Brief History • Structure • Thrifts • International Banking • The Decline of Traditional Banking

  2. I. A Brief HistoryA. dual banking system banking at state level until Civil War • state charters, regulation • banknotes as local currency • failures, fraud were common

  3. National Bank Act 1963 • federal charters for banks • Comptroller of the Currency • federal banknotes • tax on state banknotes • state banks survived by accepting deposits -- dual banking system

  4. B. A central bank • U.S. had two prior central banks • the Bank of the U.S. (1791-1811)) • the Second Bank of the U.S. (1816-63) • U.S. central banks not popular w/ • ranchers & farmers • states rights

  5. 1863-1907 • no central bank • regular financial crises • panic of 1907 --bankers demanded a central bank • Federal Reserve System (1913)

  6. C. Branching Restrictions • McFadden Act 1927 • restricted intra and interstate branching of national banks • meant to protect small banks & increase competition • repealed 1994 (Riegle-Neal)

  7. D. Great Depression • 1930-33, 1/3 of all U.S. banks failed • Congress responded w/ legislation • FDIC • federal insurance for bank deposits • banks pay premiums

  8. Glass-Steagall Act • separated permissible activities of commercial, investment banks • idea: limit risk for commercial banks • weakened over time • repealed 1999

  9. Regulation Q • ceiling on interest rates on deposits • no interest on checking deposits • repealed 1980

  10. Regulators • Comptroller of the Currency • national banks • Federal Reserve • bank holding companies • state member banks • national banks (secondary)

  11. FDIC • nonmember state banks • state regulators • state banks (secondary)

  12. II. Bank StructureA. Decentralization & Consolidation McFadden Act resulted in many small banks • meant to protect small banks & increase competition -- but protected inefficient banks -- limited economies of scale

  13. loopholes -- bank holding companies -- owned several banks -- limited service banks -- deposits or loans, not both -- ATMs • repealed 1994

  14. Consolidation • bank failures in 1980s • loopholes in McFadden • repeal of McFadden • Over 14,000 banks in 1985 • less than 8,000 today

  15. A good thing? • economies of scale • diversification • But • risks with expansion? • responsive to small customers?

  16. B. Commercial & Investment Banking • separated by Glass Steagall 1933 • commercial banks banned from -- corporate underwriting -- securities brokerage -- real estate sales -- insurance

  17. why? • many believed investment activities led to bank failures of 1930s • not really true… • problems • less diversification • restricting economies of scale • disadvantage w/ global competition

  18. Glass Steagall weakened over time • bank holding companies • Federal Reserve weakened restrictions • repealed 1999 (Gramm-Leach-Bliley)

  19. III. Thrift Industry • S&Ls, credit unions • dual banking systems • Savings & Loans (1,049) • FDIC insured • own regulators: -- FHLBS -- OTS

  20. credit unions (10,000) • < 10% of commercial bank assets • $600 billion • commercial banks $7.6 trillion • regulator: NCUA • own federal deposit insurance • nonprofit

  21. IV. International Banking • global economy means global banking • often less regulation overseas • alternative structures

  22. Edge Act corporations • subsidiary of U.S. bank overseas • more favorable regulation

  23. IBFs • international banking facilities • in the U.S. • loans and deposits to foreign customers • favorable regulation, tax status • keep the business in the U.S.

  24. Foreign banks in the U.S. • Agency office • not full service • but less regulated • Full service branch • U.S. regulations • U.S. subsidiary • U.S. regulations

  25. V. Decline of Traditional Banking • traditional bank activities • decline in profitability • decline in importance

  26. declining share of loans

  27. rising profitability…..

  28. but due to nontraditional activities share of income NOT from interest

  29. why the decline? • liability side: • cost of acquiring funds has risen • asset side: • income generated has declined • causes: • financial innovation since 1970s

  30. Money market mutual funds • substitute for checking account from investment companies • pay interest • not insured (but low risk) • banks had to offer own version • raised the cost of funds

  31. Junk bond market • no market for new, low-rated debt prior to 1980 • only for ratings of Baa (BBB) or better • improvements in credit risk screening created market for new risky debt

  32. before 1980 • low-rated firms relied on banks • after 1980 • low-rated firms could borrow by issuing junk bonds • junk bond markets competing with banks for lending business

  33. Commercial Paper • easier to issue with improvements in credit risk screening • demanded by money market mutual funds • replaced corporate short-term borrowing from banks

  34. Securitization • transform illiquid loans into liquid debt securities • individual loans bundled together • debt securities issued, backed by pool of loans • owners of security get a share of the loan payments

  35. most often down with mortgages • 2/3 of all mortgages securitized • also down with auto loans, leases, credit cards

  36. the implication • other financial institutions take a part of the lending process -- originate the loan -- service the loan -- issue and sell security • finance companies that just specialize in originating loans

  37. in total • higher cost of obtaining funds • due to competition from money market • lower income from loans • due to competition from -- junk bond market -- commercial paper market -- financial companies

  38. Result of decline: • bank failures

  39. newer activities • fee income • credit cards • commercial real estate

More Related