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Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Lecture
# 15
ROLE
OF COMMERCIAL BANKS
A
bank
is
a commercial or state institution
that provides financial services,
including
issuing
money in various forms,
receiving deposits of money,
lending money and
processing
transactions and the creating of
credit.
A
commercial bank accepts
deposits from customers and in
turn makes loans, even
in
excess
of the deposits; a process known as
fractional-reserve banking. Some banks
(called
Banks
of issue) issue banknotes as legal
tender. A commercial
bank is usually
defined as
an
institution that both
accepts deposits and makes
loans; there are also
financial institutions
that
provide selected banking services
without meeting the legal
definition of a bank.
Many
banks
offer ancillary financial services to
make additional profit; for
example, most banks
also
rent safe deposit boxes in their
branches. Currently in most jurisdictions
commercial
banks
are regulated &
require permission to operate.
Operational authority is granted
by
bank
regulatory authorities which
provides rights to conduct
the most fundamental
banking
services
such as accepting deposits and
making loans.
Purpose
of a bank
Banks
have influenced economies & politics
for centuries. Historically,
the primary
purpose
of a bank was to
provide loans to trading companies.
Banks provided funds
to
allow
businesses to purchase inventory, and
collected those funds back with
interest when
the
goods were sold.
Commercial
Lending
For
centuries, the banking
industry only dealt with
businesses, not consumers.
Commercial
lending
today is a very intense
activity, with banks carefully
analyzing the
financial
condition
of their business clients to
determine the level of risk
in each loan
transaction.
Banking
Services
Banking
services have
expanded to include services directed at
individuals, and risks in
these
much smaller transactions
are pooled.
A
Bank's Profit
A
bank
generates a profit from
the differential between the
level of interest it pays
for
deposits
and other sources of funds, and
the level of interest it
charges in its
lending
activities.
This difference is referred to as
the spread
between
the cost of funds and the
loan
interest
rate. Historically, profitability
from lending activities has
been cyclic and dependent
on
the needs and strengths of
loan customers. In recent
history, investors have
demanded a
more
stable
revenue
stream and banks have therefore placed
more emphasis on transaction
fees,
primarily
loan fees but also including
service charges on array of deposit
activities and
ancillary
services (international banking, foreign
exchange, insurance, investments,
wire
transfers,
etc.). However, lending
activities still provide the
bulk of a commercial bank's
income.
44
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
The
name bank
derives
from the Italian word
banco
"desk/bench",
used during the
Renaissance
by Florentines bankers, who used to make
their transactions above a
desk
covered
by a green tablecloth.
However,
there are traces of banking
activity even in the
Babylonian times, and indeed a
book
about the history of banking
is named : Banking,
from Babylon to Wall
Street.
Services
Typically Offered by
Banks
Although
the basic type of services
offered by a bank depends
upon the type of bank and
the
country,
services provided usually
include:
1.
Taking
deposits from
their customers and issuing
current (Pak) or checking
(US)
accounts
and savings accounts to individuals and
businesses.
2.
Extending
loans to individuals and
businesses.
3.
Cashing
cheque
4.
Facilitating
money transactions such as
wire transfers and cashier's
checks
5.
Issuing
credit cards, ATM cards, and
debit cards
6.
Storing
valuables, particularly in a safe deposit
box
7.
Consumer & commercial financial
advisory services
8.
Pension & retirement planning
Financial
transactions can be performed through
many different
channels:
1.
A
branch, banking
centre or financial centre is a
retail location where a bank
or financial
institution
offers a wide array of face to face
service to its
customers.
2.
ATM
is
a computerized telecommunications device
that provides a financial
institution's
customers
a method of financial transactions in a
public space without the
need for a human
clerk
or bank teller
3.
Mail
is
part of the postal system
which itself is a system
wherein written
documents
typically
enclosed in envelopes, and also small
packages containing other
matter, are
delivered
to destinations around the
world
4.
Telephone
banking is a service
provided by a financial institution
which allows its
customers
to perform transactions over
the telephone.
5.
Online
banking is a term
used for performing
transactions, payments etc.
over the
Internet
through a bank, credit union
or building society's secure
website.
Types
of banks
Banks'
activities can be divided into
retail banking, dealing
directly with individuals
and
small
businesses; business banking,
providing services to mid-market business;
corporate
banking,
directed at large business
entities; and investment banking,
relating to activities on
the
financial markets.
Most
banks are profit-making, private
enterprises. However, some are
owned by
government,
or are non-profits.
Central
banks are non-commercial bodies or
government agencies often charged
with
controlling
interest rates and money
supply across the whole
economy. They
generally
provide
liquidity to the banking
system and act as Lender of last
resort in event of a
crisis.
45
Management
of Financial Institutions - MGT
604
VU
Commercial
bank: the
term used for a normal
bank to distinguish it from an
investment
bank.
After the Great Depression,
the U.S. Congress required
that banks only engage
in
banking
activities, whereas investment banks were
limited to capital market
activities. Since
the
two no longer have to be
under separate ownership,
some use the term
"commercial
bank"
to refer to a bank or a division of a
bank that mostly deals
with deposits and
loans
from
corporations or large
businesses.
Community
Banks: locally
operated financial institutions
that empower employees
to
make
local decisions to serve their customers
and the partners
Community
development banks: regulated
banks that provide financial services and
credit
to
underserved markets or
populations.
Postal
savings banks: savings
banks associated with national
postal systems.
Private
Banks: manage
the assets of high net
worth individuals.
Offshore
Banks: banks
located in jurisdictions with
low taxation and regulation.
Many
offshore
banks are essentially private
banks.
Savings
bank: in Europe,
savings banks take their roots in
the 19th or sometimes even
18th
century.
Their original objective was to
provide easily accessible
savings products to
all
strata
of the population. In some
countries, savings banks were
created on public
initiative,
while
in others socially committed
individuals created foundations to
put in place the
necessary
infrastructure. Nowadays, European
savings banks have kept
their focus on retail
banking:
payments, savings products,
credits and insurances for
individuals or small and
medium-sized
enterprises.
Apart
from this retail focus,
they also differ from
commercial banks by their
broadly
decentralized
distribution network, providing
local and regional outreach and by
their
socially
responsible approach to business and
society.
Building
societies and Landesbanks: conduct
retail banking.
Ethical
banks: banks that
prioritize the transparency of
all operations and make only
what
they
consider to be socially-responsible
investments.
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