Chapter 13-FIM

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Transcript Chapter 13-FIM

Chapter 17

Liquidity Risk

1 Power Point Presentation Created by Dr. Halit Gonenc for Bus 423 at Hacettepe University

I.

What is liquidity risk?

2 the uncertainty that an FI will be unable to generate sufficient cash to meet cash outflows.

II.

What creates liquidity risk?

3 Liquidity risk is derived from the balance sheet .

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity 2300 400

2700

$300

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

$3,000

Liability side reasons involve liability holders (i.e., depositors) cashing in their financial claims (i.e. deposits).

4

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity 2000 400

2400

$300

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

$2,700 Deposits went down by $300 because of withdrawals 5 $ $ $

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2000 400

2400

$300 $2,700 6 $ $ A positive net deposit drain occurs when a FI receives insufficient additional deposits to offset deposit withdrawals.

$

7

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000

Liabilities

Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2000 400

2400

$300 $ $ $2,700 $

BYOD decides to sell $ 300 of its securities to meet the drain. The cost of deposits is 5% and the return on securities is 6%. What is the cost for BYOD?

Cost of drain= (.06-.05)(300)= $3

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

Asset side reasons involve demands from those holding loan commitments.

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$ $

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2600 100 $3,300 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

Asset side reasons involve demands from those holding loan commitments.

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III. What are the sources for meeting liquidity needs?

10

A.

Purchasing liquidity using the markets for purchased funds is a liability management tool.

11

1. What instruments are involved?

a)

b)

c)

Federal funds market Repurchase Agreements (Repo) market Wholesale (Negotiable) Certificates of Deposit 

a)

b)

c)

Bankalararası Para Piyasası T.C. Merkez Bankası Kredileri Repo

2.What is the effect on the balance sheet?

12 Using purchased funds, there is no reduction in the size of the balance sheet.

a)

liability side of the balance sheet (i.e., deposit withdrawals),

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total L and O E

2000 400

2400

$300 $2,700

…….

one type of liability is being replaced with 14 another and the size of the institution remains the same.

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

& Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Fed Funds Purchase Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total L and O E

2000 300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

BOYD decides to buy $ 300 in Fed Funds to

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cover the drain. The cost of Fed Funds is 5.5%, but this allows BOYD to keep securities earning 6%. What is the cost for BOYD?

Cost of drain= (.055-.05)(300)= $1.5

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

& Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Fed Funds Purchase Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total L and O E

2000 300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

b)

asset side of the balance sheet (i.e., the drawing-down of loan commitments ),

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2600 100 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

$3,300 Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

…..

the additional assets are funded by additional liabilities and the size of the institution increases.

17 Cash Securities Net Loans Premises

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

& Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2600 100 $3,300 Deposits Repos Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 300 400

3000

$300 $3,300

III. What are the sources for meeting liquidity needs?

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B.

Stored liquidity is an asset management tool where assets are reserved to be sold or used when cash is needed.

19

1. What instruments are involved?

a)

b)

c)

Vault Cash Reserves at the Federal Reserve Banks Securities such as Treasury Bills

2.What is the effect on the balance sheet?

20 Using stored liquidity, there is no growth in the size of the balance sheet .

a)

liability side of the balance sheet (i.e., deposit withdrawals),

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total L and O E

2000 400

2400

$300 $2,700

…….

22 both liabilities and assets are removed and the size of the institution contracts.

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$50 250 2300 100 $2,700 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total L and O E

2000 400

2700

$300 $2,700

b)

asset side of the balance sheet (i.e., the drawing-down of loan commitments ),

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2600 100 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

$3,300 Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

….

one type of asset (i.e., loans) replaces 24 another (i.e., cash and securities ) and the size of the institution remains the same.

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$ 50 250 2600 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

IV.

How is a bank’s liquidity exposure measured?

25 The methodologies include:

A.

of liquidity. A FI manager must be able to measure its liquidity position on a daily basis, if possible.

What are the sources of liquidity?

a)

Cash-type assets (i.e., T-bills) that can be sold.

b)

The maximum amount of funds the bank can borrow on the money/purchased funds market.

c)

Excess cash reserves not needed to meet regulatory reserve requirements

A.

The net liquidity statement lists the sources and uses of liquidity.

2.

What are the uses of liquidity?

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A) Deposit withdrawals B) The increase in loans

That have already been met by drawing down sources of liquidity (i.e. Borrowing in the fed funds market or from the discount window)

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 BOYD has $50m in cash, $50 m in cash reserves at the Fed not needed to meet reserve requirements, $300m in Treasury bills, and, a $5m line of credit to borrow in the repo market. What is the $ amount of their sources of funds?

Sources of liquidity= 50+50+300+5=$405 million 28

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Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 BOYD has repos of $3 million. What is their $ uses of liquidity?

Uses of Liquidity= $3 million What is their net liquidity position?

Net Liquidity= $405 - $3 million = $402 million

B. Peer group comparisons where ratio analysis is used.

What ratios are examined to make inferences about liquidity?

30

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 31 Loans Deposits = 2300 2300 =

1

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 32 Borrowed Funds Total Assets = 400 3000 =

13.3%

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Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 A high ratio of loans to deposits and borrowed funds to total assets means that the bank relies heavily on the short term money market rather than on deposits to fund loans. Maturity differences on loans and deposits will also be important to judge liquidity position of the bank.

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 34 Loan Commitments Total Assets = 300 3000 =

10%

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 35 Loan Commitments Total Assets = 300 3000 =

10%

Off-Balance Sheet Item

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2300 100 $3,000 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000 36 A high ratio of loan commitments to assets indicates the need for a high degree of liquidity to fund any unexpected takedowns of these loans by customers.

C. The liquidity index

measures the potential losses suffered by an FI from the immediate sale of assets compared to the market value of the assets established under normal market conditions.

I  i N   1 [( w i ) P i P i * ] Where P i = fire sale prices P i *= fair market prices wi is the percentage of each asset in the FI’s portfolio  xi=1 37

38 The liquidity Index The greater the differences between immediate fire-sale asset prices and fair market prices, the less liquid the FI’s portfolio of assets. Example: 50 percent in one month t-bills and 50 percent in real estate loans. If the FI has to liquidate its T-bills today, it will receive $99 per $100 of face value. If the FI had to liquidate its real estate loans today, it would receive $85 per $100 of face value, while liquidation at the end of one month would be expected to produce $92 per $100 of face value. Thus, one month liquidity index value for this FI’s asset portfolio would be; I=(1/2)[(.99/1.00)]+1/2[(.85/.92)]= 0.495+0.462= 0.957.

The liquidity index will always lie between 0 and maximum of 1. This index could also be compared to similar indexes for a peer group of similar Fis.

D.

The Financing Gap and the Financing Requirement capture liquidity by examining the following relationships: 39 Financing Gap= Average Loans - Average Deposits Financing Gap= -(liquid Assets) + Borrowed Funds Financing Gap + Liquid Assets=Financing Requirement

40 Financing Gap= Average Loans - Average Deposits Financing Gap= 2600 - 2300= 300 This must be funded by using liquid assets or borrowing in the money market.

Balance Sheet The Bank of your Dreams Assets Liabilities

Cash Securities Net Loans Premises & Fixed Assets

Total Assets

$150 450 2600 100 $3,300 Deposits Corporate Bonds

Total Liabilities

Owner’s Equity

Total Owners’ Equity

Total Liabilities and Owners Equity

2300 400

2700

$300 $3,000

V.

What are the causes of unexpected deposit drains and and more severe bank runs?

41 We are not talking about the expected drains, for instance banks can have seasonal anticipated needs for liquidity. Major liquidity problem arise if deposit drains are abnormally large and unexpected. Such deposit withdrawal shocks may occur following reasons:

V.

What are the causes of unexpected deposit drains and and more severe bank

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runs?

A.

Explicit triggers include:

1.

Public Concerns about a Bank’s Solvency

2.

Failure of Similar or Related Banks (Contagion Effects)

3.

Changes in Investor Preferences

V.

What are the causes of unexpected deposit drains and and more severe bank

43

runs?

A.

Explicit triggers include:

1.

Public Concerns about a Bank’s Solvency

2.

Failure of Similar or Related Banks (Contagion Effects)

3.

Changes in Investor Preferences

V.

What are the causes of unexpected deposit drains and and more severe bank

44

runs?

A.

Explicit triggers include:

1.

Public Concerns about a Bank’s Solvency

2.

Failure of Similar or Related Banks (Contagion Effects)

3.

Changes in Investor Preferences

B.

The structure of the demand deposit claim is an underlying factor that magnifies reactions.

45 Demand deposits are first come, first served contracts

VI. What tools have regulators provided

46

to deal with the liquidity-based instabilities of the banking system?

Regulatory mechanism

A.

Deposit Insurance provides protection for the insured depositor that deters runs.

B.

The discount window (of the Federal Reserve banks) exists to provide funds to institutions having liquidity problems to stabilize the banking system.

V!I. Do financial institutions, other than depository institutions, have liquidity risk problems?

47

A.

Life Insurance companies have exhibited liquidity risk problems when concerns about the solvency of the insurer have occurred .

B.

Property-Casualty insurance companies have liquidity crises relating to disasters (i.e., Hurricane Andrew)

C.

Mutual Funds exhibit more stability because mutual fund shares are distributed on a pro rata (proportional) basis at net asset value. (P= Value of assets / shares outstanding) thus eliminating the first-come, first-served incentives associated with other FIs’ contracts.