money, banking & finance lecture 1 the nature of financial intermediation k matthews

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Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

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Page 1: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Money, Banking & FinanceLecture 1

The Nature of Financial Intermediation

K Matthews

Page 2: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Aims

• Explain the theory and purpose of financial intermediation.

• Describe the structure of financial markets• Show that financial intermediation is welfare

superior to direct transformation of current consumption to future consumption.

• Describe the process of financial intermediation and the markets that enable its efficient functioning.

Page 3: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Financial Intermediation• The mechanism whereby surplus funds from

ultimate savers are matched to deficits incurred by ultimate borrowers

• The process by which ultimate savers are matched to ultimate borrowers.

• Saving = Income – Consumption

• Typically decisions to save are made independently of decisions to invest

Page 4: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Chanelling of Funds

• In a simple economy we have firms and households

• Households are the savers and firms are the investors.

• The mechanism by which households save is by demanding securities from firms

• The mechanism by which firms invest is by supplying securities to households

• These securities are claims to the assets of the firm

Page 5: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Simple model of direct finance

HOUSEHOLDS FIRMS

FUNDS LENT

FINANCIAL CLAIMS

Page 6: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Direct Finance

• Lending and borrowing can occur as a result of direct transacting.

• But there are costs associated with direct finance• Search costs – searching for potential transactors• Verification costs – costs in evaluating investment

proposals• Monitoring costs – costs of monitoring the actions

of borrowing• Enforcement costs – costs of enforcing contracts

Page 7: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Efficient Direct Finance

• Some of these costs can be reduced through the organisation of a market.

• Direct financing requires the existence of an efficient securities market.

• However not all costs are minimised through a securities market.

• An additional issue is that the maturity period of finance for the firm is long term.

• The maturity period of the household is mostly short term.• The maturity mismatch of households and firms provide the

incentive for the development of intermediated finance.

Page 8: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Indirect (Intermediated) Finance

HOUSEHOLDS Financial Intermediary FIRMS

Funds Lent

Financial Claims

Page 9: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Who are the savers and borrowers?

• Savers or lenders are households, firms, governments and foreigners

• Investors or borrowers are households, firms, governments and foreigners.

• Savers can hold corporate securities (shares), government securities (bonds), currency, bank deposits, foreign currency assets

• Borrowers can sell shares, sell bonds, issue currency, take bank loans, issue foreign currency liabilities

Page 10: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

General Flow of Funds

Lenders – Savers

1. Households

2. Firms

3. Government

4. Foreigners

FINANCIAL MARKET

Borrowers – Spenders

1. Firms

2. Government

3. Households

Foreigners

Financial Intermediary

Indirect Finance

Direct Finance

Page 11: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

A Flow of Funds Analysis

• S = Saving• I = private investment• G = government spending• T = taxes• X = exports• M = imports• Y = C + I + G + X – M• Y = C + S + T• 0 = (I – S) + (G – T) + (X – M)

Page 12: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Financial Assets

• H = high powered money = Currency + bank reserves

• D = Stock of Bank deposits• L = Stock of Bank loans• Q = Stock of Private securities• B = Stock of government bonds• F = Stock of foreign financial assets• A superscript ‘d’ represents demand and a

superscript ‘s’ represents supply.

Page 13: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Stocks and Flows

• A stock is measured at a point in time

• Stock of assets, money, bonds, physical capital measured at 31 December 2007

• Flows are measured over a period of time

• Examples of flows are GDP, Savings, Investment measured quarterly, or annually

Page 14: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Converting stocks into flowsLet Xt be the stock at a point in

time t

1 ttt XXX

Page 15: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Flow of Funds

)()()()(0

)()()(0

)()(

)()(

DHLFFBBQQ

MXTGSI

MXTGIS

FHBLQMXTGI

FQBDS

dsdsds

sss

ddd

Page 16: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Implications of Financial Intermediation

• Assumptions• Two-period analysis• Perfect capital market – (a) can borrow or lend at

the same rate of interest, (b) perfect information, (c) costless access to capital market.

• Investment opportunities are infinitely divisible• PIF – physical investment opportunities frontier• FIL – financial investment opportunities line

Page 17: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Physical Investment Opportunity Frontier

Period 1

Period 0Y0

C1

C0

Cost of investment

Return on investment

E

Page 18: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Financial Investment Opportunity Line

0 A

B

-(1+r)

0B = (1+r)0A

Period 0

Period 1

Page 19: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Borrowing

E

AA’

Page 20: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Lending

E

B

B’

Page 21: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Structure of Financial Markets

• Firm (or individual) obtains funds in the debt market or the equity market

• A debt instrument (bond or mortgage) pays a fixed income stream over a specified period.

• The maturity of the debt instrument is short term if less than a year, long term if more than 10 years and intermediate term if in between,

• Equities (common stock) are claims to shares in the profits and assets of a business.

• Equities pay periodic sums called dividends.• The disadvantage of equity is that the holder is a residual

claimant

Page 22: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Primary and Secondary Markets

• Primary market is the market for new issues of securities, or initial public offerings (IPOs)

• Secondary market is where existing securities are traded (NYSE, NASDAQ, LSE, etc)

• Some IPOs are well known and advertised and attract a lot of attention but many are of unknown enterprises and are underwritten by a known investment bank.

• Brokers are agents of investors who match buyers and sellers of securities. Dealers link buyers and sellers by buying and selling securities at stated prices. A Market Maker buys/sells at the quoted bid-ask spread with the aim of making a profit on the spread.

Page 23: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Money and Capital Markets

• Markets are sometimes distinguished on the basis of maturity of the securities traded.

• The Money Market is a financial market where short term debt instruments are traded (less than a year) – Commercial paper, Bills etc

• The Capital Market is where long term debt (longer than one year such as bonds) and equities are traded.

• The money market is usually more liquid and more traded and so is used by financial institutions to earn income on surplus funds.

Page 24: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

International Financial Markets

• Foreign bonds are denominated in the currency of the market in which it is sold.

• Eurobond is bond denominated in in a currency other than the currency of the market in which it is sold.

• Eurocurrencies are foreign currencies deposited in banks outside the home country.

• Eurodollars are dollars deposited in banks outside the USA

Page 25: Money, Banking & Finance Lecture 1 The Nature of Financial Intermediation K Matthews

Summary

• We have looked at the process and theory of financial intermediation.

• Efficient direct finance is conducted through the mechanism of an efficient capital market

• Indirect finance is through the process of a financial intermediary.

• Financial intermediation is welfare superior to non-market direct financing.