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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Lecture
# 1
FinancialEnvironment
& Role of
FinancialInstitutions
Theeconomic
transformation underway in
the former centrallyplanned
economies
(FCPEs)
was motivated in part by
therecognition that
centralplanning has failed
to allocate
financial
and real resources
efficiently.This paper
addresses thequestion of
what kind of
financialsystem
should replace centralplanning in
allocating capital and
maintaining
effectivecorporate
governance duringthe
transformation period.Financial sector
reform
has,
at times, been portrayed as a
question of adopting either a
bank-based or a (securities)
market-based
model. In the
bank-basedmodel, commercial banks,
oftenlicensed as
universalbanks,
take the lead in financingenterprise
restructuring and investment.
Proponents
of the market-based model argue
thatthe structural problems
in the banking
sector
cannot be overcome easily; so
firms will have to look to
equity and bond
marketsfor
sources
of new capital. Equity and
bond markets in the
FCPEsare not
sufficientlywell
developed
to support significant issues of
new securities or to provide a
mechanism for
corporatecontrol.
They lack adequateliquidity,
regulatory
oversight,information
disclosure,
and clearing and payment systems.
Theimportant role of banks in
maintaining
thepayment
system and in providingcredit to
market participants to support
trading and
settlementmeans
that until banks
arerestructured and
recapitalized,securities
market
development
will be constrained.
Investmentfunds
emerging from
massprivatization schemes
maycreate concentrations
of
equityownership
that would allowthem to
play an importantrole in
corporate control and
perhaps,
too, in finding sources of
investment capital. They are
a relatively recent
innovation,however,
and it remains to be seenhow
active they will be in financing
and
managingprivatized
enterprises.
Theauthorities
should firstestablish a
healthy bankingsector,
because it is the banks
that
arethe
most promising source of working
capital and corporatecontrol.
This does not mean
thatsecurities
market developmentshould be
ignored, only that it
should not be a
priority
use
of scarce government resources at
the present time.
Many
observers recommend that banks be
giventhe power to act as
universalbanks,
combininglending
with securitiesmarket
operations and equityinvestment.
Thepotential
problemsassociated
with such a model in the
FCPEs during
thetransformation
period
outweighany
potential benefits. It is recommended,
therefore, thatcommercial
banking and
investmentbanking
activities be separated, at least until
banks have demonstrated
competence
in their commercial
lendingoperations.
Long
Run Performance of
FinancialInstitutions
for
EconomicGrowth:
Therecent
economic difficulties in Southeast Asian
economies are oftenlinked to
the
financial
sector in these countries.
Thebusiness and popular
pressaround the
worldare
repletewith
stories connecting theeconomic
crisis withdifficulties in
the financialsectors
in
these economies. The
connectionbetween the
troubled banking sector and the
economic
slowdown
is especially stressed. Asian economies
that have been
lessimpacted by the
economiccrisis,
for example Taiwan,are
often characterized as having
more stable
financialinstitutions
then theirneighbors.
Yet
this is not the
firsttime "financial
difficulties"have been
linked withpoor
macroeconomicperformance.
Many todaybelieve the
Great Depression of the 1930s
was
mademuch
more sever by problems in the
banking sector specifically and financial
markets
inefficiencies
in general. More
recentlythe dramatic
economicslowdown in the
1980s in
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of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
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thestate
of Texas in the UnitedStates
are often linked to the
banking and savings and
loan
crisisthat
gripped the state at the
same time. Thisraises
the question, what is the
link
betweenfinancial
institutions and themacroeconomic
performance of an economy?
Economistshold
dramatically differentviews
regarding thisquestion. From
a muchearlier
time,Bagehot
(1873), and Schumpeter(1911) argued
that an efficientfinancial
system
greatlyhelped
a nation's economy to grow. As
Ross Levinehas pointed
out it was
Schumpeter'scontention
that well-functioning banks spurred
technological innovation by
offeringfunding
to entrepreneurs thathave
the best chances of
successfully implementing
innovativeproducts
and productionprocesses.
Morerecent
economists have
moreskeptical about the
role of the financial sector
in
economicgrowth.
Joan Robinson (1952)asserted
that economicgrowth
creates
(emphasis
added)
demand for financial instruments and
that where enterprise
leadsfinance follows.
RobertLucas
(1988) has also dismissed
the finance-economicgrowth
relationshipstating
thateconomists
"badly over-stress"the role
financial factorsplay in
economicgrowth.
However
in recent years thanks to
thework of Ross Levine
(1997,1998), Robert
King
(King
and Levine 1993a, 1993b, 1993c) and
others (Pagano 1993), economists
are again
reexaminingthe
role financial marketsplay
in economic growth. On the
theoretical side
complexmodels
have been developed to
illustrate the manychannels
through whichthe
development
of financial markets affect and
are affected by
economicgrowth. These
channelsinclude
the facilitation of trading
hedging, diversifying, and pooling of
risk; the
efficientallocation
of resources; the monitoring of managers
and exerting
corporatecontrol;
themobilization
of savings; and thefacilitation of
the exchange of goods and
services.
On
the empirical side a
growingbody of studies at the
firm-level,industry-level,
country-
level
and cross-country comparisons have demonstrated
the strong link
betweenthe
financial
sector and economic growth. King and
Levine's (1993a, 1993b, and
1993c)
researchhas
shown that level of
financial depth (defined as
the ratio of liquid assets
to
GDP)does
in fact help to
predicteconomic growth.
Other work by Levine
(1997,1998)
hasshown
that financialintermediary
development doespositively
influenceeconomic
growth,these
results are shown to be
robust, that is
therelationships still
holdwhen other
factorsthat
are know to
influenceeconomic growth are
heldconstant. In many
waysthe
currentresearch
has opened as manynew
questions as it hasattempted to
answer. On the
theoreticalside,
questions still exist on
how and why do financial markets and
institutions
evolve?
Why are financial markets at
different levels of development in
different markets?
Thisresearch
has also raised a number of
very interestingpublic
policy questions.Such
as:
underwhat
legal environment do financial
institutions developmentmore
rapidly?Financial
regulation
-- how are
countries'financial systems regulated and
supervised, how can
these
be
quantified, and to what extent do
the differences matter. What
is role of regulation in
encouragingfinancial
market development?What
impacts both positive and
negative will
therecent
bailout of financialinstitutions and
financial marketshave on the
longrun
development
of financial markets?
I
would like to turn
ourattention to one of these
issuesthat I find most
intriguing: why do
financialmarkets
develop at differentrates in
differenteconomies?
Thatis,
why do
financialinstitutions
tend to cluster in high-income
areas or economies and low-income
areasseem
to suffer from a lack of
financial institutions? A
relatedquestion is; do
financial
marketsdrive
economic growth or does
economic growth drivethe
creation of financial
market
and institutions?
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FINANCIAL MARKETS & INSTITUTIONS:
In
economics a financialmarket
is
a mechanism that allows people to
easily buy and sell
(trade)financial
securities (such as stocks and bonds),
commodities (such as precious
metals
or
agricultural goods), and other
fungibleitems of value at
lowtransaction costs and
at
prices
that reflect the
efficientmarket
hypothesis.
Financialmarkets
have evolvedsignificantly
over severalhundred years and
areundergoing
constantinnovation
to improveliquidity.
Bothgeneral
markets, where
manycommodities are traded and
specialised markets (where
only
one commodity is traded)
exist.Markets work by
placing manyinterested
sellers in
one
"place", thus making
themeasier to find
forprospective buyers. An
economywhich
reliesprimarily
on interactions betweenbuyers and
sellers to allocateresources is
known as
a
market economy in
contrasteither to a command
economy or to a non-market
economy
that
is based, such as a
gifteconomy.
In
Finance, Financial
marketsfacilitate:
Theraising
of capital (in thecapital
markets);
·
Thetransfer
of risk (in thederivatives
markets); and
·
International
trade (in the
currencymarkets).
·
Theyare
used to match those
whowantcapital
to those who haveit.
Typically
a borrower issues a receipt to
the lender promising to pay
back the capital. These
receipts
are securitieswhichmay
be freely bought or sold. In
return for lendingmoney
to
theborrower,
the lender will expect some
compensation in the form of
interest or dividends.
Definition
Theterm
financialmarkets
can
be a cause of
muchconfusion.
Financialmarkets
could mean:
1.
Organizations that
facilitatethe trade in financial
products.i.e. Stockexchanges
facilitate
the
trade in stocks, bonds and
warrants.
2.
The coming together of
buyers and sellers to trade
financialproducts. i.e.
stocks
and
sharesare
traded between buyers and sellers in a number of
ways including: the use
of
stock
exchanges; directly between buyers and
sellers etc.
In
academia, students of finance will
use both meanings
butstudents of economics will
only
usethe
second meaning.
Financialmarkets
can be domestic or they can be
international.
Types
of financial markets:
Thefinancial
markets can be dividedinto
differentsubtypes:
Capitalmarkets
which consistof:
·
Stockmarkets,
which providefinancing
through theissuance of
shares or
o
commonstock,
and enable the subsequent
tradingthereof.
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of Financial Institutions - MGT
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Bondmarkets,
which providefinancing
through theissuance of
Bonds, and
o
enable
the subsequent
tradingthereof.
Commoditymarkets,
which facilitatethe trading
of commodities.
·
Moneymarkets,
which provide shortterm debt
financing and investment.
·
Derivativesmarkets,
which provideinstruments for
the management of financial
·
risk.
Futuresmarkets,
which provide standardized forward
contracts fortrading
o
products
at some future date; see also
forward market.
Insurancemarkets,
which facilitatethe
redistribution of
variousrisks.
·
Foreignexchange
markets, whichfacilitate the
trading of foreign
exchange.
·
Thecapital
markets consist of primary
markets and secondarymarkets.
Newly formed
(issued)securities
are bought or sold in
primary markets.Secondary
markets
allowinvestors
to
sell securities that
theyhold or buy
existingsecurities.
Raising
Capital
To
understand financial
markets,let us look at what
theyare used for,
i.e.what is their
purpose?
Withoutfinancial
markets, borrowerswould have
difficultyfinding
lendersthemselves.
Intermediariessuch
as banks help in thisprocess.
Banks take depositsfrom those
who have
money
to save. They can then
lendmoney from this
pool of deposited money to those
who
seek
to borrow. Banks
popularlylend money in the
form of loans and mortgages.
Morecomplex
transactions than a simple
bank deposit requiremarkets
where lenders and
theiragents
can meet borrowers and their agents, and
where existing borrowing or
lending
commitments
can be sold on to other parties. A good
example of a financial market is
a
stockexchange.
A company can raisemoney by
selling shares to investors and
itsexisting
shares
can be bought or sold.
Thefollowing
table illustrateswhere
financial markets fit in
the
relationshipbetween
lenders
and borrowers:
FinancialEnvironment
Lenders
FinancialIntermediaries
FinancialMarkets
Borrowers
Inter
bankIndividuals
Banks
Stock
Exchange
Companies
Individuals
Insurance
Companies
Money
MarketCentral
Government
Companies
Pension
Funds
Bond
MarketMunicipalities
MutualFunds
ForeignExchange
PublicCorporations
Lenders
Manyindividuals
are not aware that they
are lenders,but almost
everybody doeslend
money
in many ways. A person
lendsmoney when he or
she:
putsmoney
in a savings account at a
bank;
·
contributes
to a pension plan;
·
pays
premiums to an
insurancecompany;
·
invests
in government bonds; or
·
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invests
in company shares.
·
Companiestend
to be borrowers of capital. When
companies have surplus
cashthat is not
neededfor
a short period of time,they
may seek to make moneyfrom
their cash surplus
by
lending
it via short term
marketscalled money
markets.
Thereare
a few companies thathave
very strong cashflows. These
companies tend to be
lendersrather
than borrowers. Such companies
may decide to returncash to
lenders (e.g.via
a
share buyback.)
Alternatively,they may seek
to make moremoney on their
cash by
lending
it (e.g. investing in bonds and
stocks.)
Borrowers
Individualsborrowmoney
via bankers' loans forshort
term needs or longerterm
mortgages
to
help finance a house purchase.
Companiesborrowmoney
to aid short term or long
term cash flows.They also
borrow to
fundmodernization
or future
businessexpansion.
Governments
oftenfind
their spendingrequirements
exceed theirtax revenues. To
make up
thisdifference,
they need to borrow.
Governments also borrow on behalf of
nationalized
industries,municipalities,
local authorities and other
public sector bodies. In the UK,
the
totalborrowing
requirement is oftenreferred to as
the public sector borrowing
requirement
(PSBR).
Governmentsborrow
by issuing bonds. In the UK,
the government also borrows
from
individuals
by offering bank accounts and
Premium Bonds. Government debt
seems to be
permanent.Indeed
the debt seemingly expands rather
than being paid off.One
strategy used
by
governments to reduce the value
of
the debt is to influence inflation.
Municipalities
and local authorities mayborrow
in their own name as well as
receiving
fundingfrom
national governments. In the UK,
this would cover an
authority like
HampshireCounty
Council.
PublicCorporations
typicallyinclude
nationalised industries. These may
include thepostal
services,
railway companies and utility
companies.
Manyborrowers
have difficultyraising money
locally. Theyneed to
borrowinternationally
withthe
aid of Foreign
exchangemarkets.
DerivativeProducts
Duringthe
1980s and 1990s, a majorgrowth sector in
financial markets is the trade in
so
calledderivativeproducts,
or derivatives
forshort.
In
the financial markets, stock
prices, bond prices, currency
rates,interest rates
and
dividends
go up and down, creating risk.
Derivative products
arefinancial
productswhich
areused
to controlrisk
or paradoxically exploitrisk.
Currencymarkets
Seemingly,
the most obvious
buyers and sellers of
foreign exchange
are
importers/exporters.While
this may havebeen
true in the distantpast,
whereby
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of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
importers/exporterscreated
the initial demand for
currency markets,importers and
exporters
now
represent only 1/32 of
foreignexchange dealing,
according to BIS.
Analysis
of financial markets
Mucheffort
has gone into thestudy of
financial markets and how prices
vary withtime.
CharlesDow,
one of the founders of Dow
Jones & Company and The
Wall Street Journal,
enunciated
a set of ideas on
thesubject which are
nowcalled Dow Theory.
This is the basis
of
the so-called
technicalanalysis method of
attempting to predict future changes.
One of
the
tenets of "technical analysis" is
thatmarket trends give an
indication of the future,
at
least
in the short term.
Theclaims of the
technicalanalysts are
disputed by many
academics,
whoclaim
that the evidencepoints
rather to the randomwalk
hypothesis, whichstates
that
thenext
change is not correlated to the
last change.
Thescale
of changes in priceover some
unit of time is called the
volatility. It was
discovered
by Benoīt Mandelbrot
thatchanges in prices do not
follow a Gaussian
distribution,but
are rather modeledbetter by
Lévy stable distributions.The
scale of change,
or
volatiliy, depends on
thelength of the time
unit to a power a bit more
than1/2. Large
changes
up or down are more
likelythat what one
wouldcalculate using a
Gaussian
distributionwith
an estimated standard deviation.
Financialmarkets
in popularculture
Onlynegative
stories about financialmarkets
tend to make thenews. The
general
perception,for
those not involved in the
world of financialmarkets is of a place
full of
crooks
and con artists. Big stories
like the Enron scandal serve to enhance
this view.
Stories
that make the
headlinesinvolve the
incompetent, thelucky and
thedownright
skillful.The
Barings scandal is a classic story of
incompetence mixed withgreed
leading to
direconsequences.
Another story of note is
that of BlackWednesday, when
sterlingcame
underattack
from hedge fundspeculators.
This led to major problems
for theUnited
Kingdom
and had a serious impact on its course in
Europe. A commonly
recurringevent is
thestock
market bubble, wherebymarket
prices rise to dizzying heights in a so
called
exaggerated
bull market. This is not a
new phenomenon; indeed
thestory of Tulip mania
in
theNetherlands
in the 17thcentury
illustrates an early recorded
example.
Financialmarkets
are merely tools.Like
all tools theyhave
both beneficialand
harmful
uses.Overall,
financial marketsare used by
honest people. Otherwise, people
wouldturn
awayfrom
them en
masse. As in
other walks of life,
thefinancial markets have
theirfair
share
of rogue elements.
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