1 lecture 3: financial intermediaries mishkin chapter 2 – part b page 35-42

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1 Lecture 3: Financial Intermediaries Mishkin chapter 2 – part B Page 35-42

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Page 1: 1 Lecture 3: Financial Intermediaries Mishkin chapter 2 – part B Page 35-42

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Lecture 3: Financial Intermediaries

Mishkin chapter 2 – part B

Page 35-42

Page 2: 1 Lecture 3: Financial Intermediaries Mishkin chapter 2 – part B Page 35-42

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Review

Financial markets

1. Money markets and capital markets

2. Debt markets and equity markets

3. Primary markets and secondary markets

4. Exchanges and Over-the-Counter (OTC) markets

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Financial system – revisited

Financial Intermediaries(e.g. bank)

Financial markets

Money

MoneyMoney

Indirect finance

Direct finance

Lender BorrowerRegulation

Financial instrument B(e.g. student loans)

Financial instrument A

(e.g. saving account)

Financial instruments (e.g. bond, stock)

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Financial intermediaries

Financial intermediaries are institutions that borrow funds from people who have saved and make loans to other people.

Financial asset transformation More important source of finance than

financial markets, engage in process of indirect finance.

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Direct and indirect finance

Direct finance: through trading securities (financial

instruments) in financial markets. only happen in primary market

Indirect finance: transfer funds via financial intermediaries. involves financial asset transformation

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Function of financial intermediaries Indirect finance

facilitate borrowing and lending

Lower transaction costs Economies of scale, develop expertise Liquidity services ( but bank charges premium)

Reduce risk Risk Sharing (e.g. insurance companies) Diversification

Alleviate ‘asymmetric information problem’

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Asymmetric information

Adverse selection Adverse selection is a problem that arises for

a buyer of a good, service, or asset when the buyer has difficulty assessing the quality of this item before purchase.

‘lemon car’loan market:

risky borrower are more likely to be ‘selected’

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Asymmetric information – Cont’d

Moral hazard Moral hazard is said to exist in a market if,

after the signing of a contract or transaction:

1. one party changes behavior which might have undesirable results;

2. only imperfectly able to monitor/control insurance, stock market: engage in

undesirable (risky) activities

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FIs come to the rescue FIs can reduce adverse selection by:

Check up on borrowers/do credit research.Develop reputation (keep credit report) for

repaying. reduce moral hazard by:

develop monitoring expertise. joint ownership

FIs make profits from producing information.

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Financial asset transformation Financial asset transformation (FAT)

means to purchase one kind of financial asset from borrowers (long-term loan contract, e.g., a mortgage) -- and sell a different kind of financial asset to savers (generally relatively liquid contract, e.g., a deposit account).

Financial intermediaries make profits from financial asset transformation.

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Recap

Direct vs. indirect finance Functions of financial intermediaries Adverse selection and moral hazard in

financial markets. How can financial intermediaries solve

these asymmetric information problems?