ECON 2000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 98: Capital Requirement, Financial Intermediary, Financial System

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ECON 2000
Lecture 98
Bank capital, leverage and capital requirements
- Starting a bank requires some capital
- Bank owners must start with some financial resources
- Those resources are called bank capital – equity of bank’s owners
- Bank obtains resources from its owners, who provide capital, and
also by taking in deposits and issuing debt
- Uses these resources in three ways
- Some funds held as reserves, some used to make bank loans, some
used to buy financial securities (e.g. govt or corporate bonds)
- Bank allocates its resources among these asset classes, taking into
account the risk and return that each offers and any regulations that
restrict its choices
- Reserves, loans and securities on left side of balance sheet have to
equal the deposits, debts and capital on the right side
- Leverage – use of borrowed money to supplement existing funds for
purposes of investment
- This leverage ratio is the ratio of the bank’s total assets to bank
capital
- In bad times, a bank can lose much of its capital quickly – implication
of leverage
- The fear that bank capital may be running out, and thus that
depositors may not be fully repaid, is typically what generates bank
run when there is no deposit insurance
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Document Summary

Bank owners must start with some financial resources. Those resources are called bank capital equity of bank"s owners. Bank obtains resources from its owners, who provide capital, and also by taking in deposits and issuing debt. Some funds held as reserves, some used to make bank loans, some used to buy financial securities (e. g. govt or corporate bonds) Bank allocates its resources among these asset classes, taking into account the risk and return that each offers and any regulations that restrict its choices. Reserves, loans and securities on left side of balance sheet have to equal the deposits, debts and capital on the right side. Leverage use of borrowed money to supplement existing funds for purposes of investment. This leverage ratio is the ratio of the bank"s total assets to bank capital. In bad times, a bank can lose much of its capital quickly implication of leverage.

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