Finance 354

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Chapter 13
-    Because of the vital nature of the services they provide, commercial banks (CBs) are regulated at the federal level to protect against a disruption in the provision of these services and the cost this would impose on the economy and society.
-    6 types of regulation: (1) safety  and soundness (2) monetary policy (3) credit allocation (4) consumer protection (5) investor protection (6) entry and chartering
o    safety  and soundness
?    prevent CBs from investing in an asset portfolio that produces cash flows that are insufficient to make the promised payments to the CB’s liability holders
•    banks are prohibited from making loans exceeding 10% of their own equity capital funds
?    minimum ratio of capital to risk assets.
•    The higher the proportion of cap contributed by owners, the greater the protection against insolvency risk liability claimholders such as depositors.
?    Provision of guarantee funds:
•    deposit insurance mitigates a rational incentive depositors have to withdraw their funds at the first hint of trouble.
•    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) monitors and regulates participants in both BBIF and SAIF in return for providing explicit deposit guarantees of up to $100K per depositor per bank.
?    Monitoring and surveillance
•    On-site examination of the CB by regulators as well as the CB’s production of accounting statements and reports on a timely basis for off-site evaluation.
?    Net regulatory burden: the difference btw private costs of regulati ...
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