Bank Management《银行管理学》(第五版)课后习题答案 .doc
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1、银行管理学(第五版)课后题答案Chapter 1 Fundamental Forces of Change in Banking1. The fundamental competitive forces of change are deregulation/reregulation, financial innovation, securitization, globalization, and technological advances. Each increases competition by expanding the number and nature of competitors
2、 in different products and services. Regulators respond to competitive pressures to level the playing field by either imposing new restrictions on activities allowed certain participants or relaxing existing restrictions. Legislation often follows to formalize the new constraints or opportunities. C
3、onsider interest-bearing checking accounts. At one time, no firm could pay interest on checking accounts. Now everyone does in one form or another. In the interim, regulators and legislators slowly allowed different firms to offer interest-checking, often after investment banks circumvented restrict
4、ions against it. The same result occurred with the initial passage of Glass-Steagall legislation, which separated banking from commerce. For many years, commercial banks could not underwrite most securities while investment banks could not make commercial loans and accept transaction accounts. Prior
5、 to the passage of the Financial Modernization Act, Citigroup was formed and it offered full-scale commercial and investment banking services, insurance services via its Travelers subsidiary, and effectively forced the U.S. Congress to pass the Act making all this legal. 2. Securitization generally
6、reduces the overall quality of assets because the loans that can be best securitized are the highest quality, most marketable assets with standardized features are that readily understood and valued. 3. Banks that have strong senior management, a welltrained staff, large amounts of capital, and good
7、 market share are best positioned to benefit from increased competition. They can choose the lines of business to enter and exit, have access to capital, and can expand geographically where appropriate. Strong management is evidenced by a constant reevaluation of strategies necessary to compete and
8、the ability to implement the strategies. A banks Board of Directors should play a key role in ensuring the viable operation of the firm and continual strategic planning. 4. Investment banks generally offer services in the areas of: 1) making a market in securities, 2) underwriting securities, and 3)
9、 assisting in mergers and acquisitions, and 4) asset management. Most of these are fee-based services, which are not subject to credit risk. Commercial banks have become increasingly interested in the last three because of the possibility of earning fee income. Banks that underwrite securities help
10、a firm or government unit place a debt or equity issue with the investing public. They do so either on a best efforts basis for a fee, or actually buy the securities from the original issuer before selling them to investors. When assisting in mergers and acquisitions, banks charge substantial fees f
11、or their efforts without taking much risk. Banks that manage assets for customers charge a fee for the service.5. Commercial paper and junk bonds provide alternative financing to bank credit for business customers. The commercial paper market came first and allowed lowrisk businesses to access funds
12、 directly from investors on a short-term, unsecured basis. The junk bond market allows higherrisk businesses the same access. Firms with the best reputations and operating performance can readily access funds in this form. Thus bank loan portfolios have been directed less at the highest quality borr
13、owers and those lower quality borrowers with access to the junk bond market. Many commercial loan portfolios are subsequently concentrated in real estate and middlemarket business loans.6. Many banks have felt the competition from foreign banks operating in the U.S. Bank customers have more outlets
14、for their funds and borrowers have more alternatives. Lowrisk businesses can borrow domestically or via foreign institutions that have a competitive advantage if the business operated outside the U.S. Banks with U.S. operations only thus will find that the pool of available customers is shrinking wh
15、ile the number of competitors with a global perspective is increasing. Bankers often fear globalization because it represents the unknown. There are cultural and language barriers that managers must overcome in order to effectively compete. Nationwide financial services companies will be greatly aff
16、ected because they compete in many geographic markets throughout the U.S. and many of their customers conduct business outside the U.S. while non-U.S. based customers also conduct considerable business in the U.S. Community banks will be less affected because they compete in limited geographic marke
17、ts, but their customer base is changing with the changing U.S. demographics, such that they too will need to be aware of global issues, global payment systems, and the needs of customers from different cultures. Chapter 2 Analyzing Bank Performance: Using the UBPR1. For a large bank, assets consist
18、approximately of marketable securities (20%), loans (70%), and other assets (10%). Liabilities consist of core deposits (40%60%), noncore, purchased liabilities (20%40%), and other liabilities (5 %10%) as a fraction of assets. Small banks typically obtain more funds in the form of core deposits and
19、less in the form of noncore, purchased liabilities. Small banks often invest more in securities as well. Of course, the actual percentages for any bank depend on that banks business strategy, market competition, and ownership.2. A banks interest income consists of interest earned on loans and securi
20、ties while noninterest income includes revenues from deposit service charges, trust department fees, fees from nonbank subsidiaries, etc. Interest expense consists of interest paid on interest-bearing core deposits and noncore liabilities while noninterest expense is comprised of overhead costs, per
21、sonnel costs, and other costs. A banks net interest income equals its interest income minus interest expense. Note that interest income may be calculated on a taxequivalent basis in which taxexempt interest is converted to its pretax equivalent. A banks burden is defined as its noninterest expense m
22、inus noninterest income. This is often quoted as a fraction of total assets. A banks efficiency ratio is calculated as noninterest expense divided by the sum of net interest income and noninterest income. The denominator effectively measures net operating revenue after subtracting interest expense.
23、The efficiency ratio measure the noninterest cost per $1of operating revenue generated. Analysts often interpret the efficiency ratio as a measure of a banks ability to control overhead relative to its ability to generate noninterest income (and overall revenue). A lower number is presumably better
24、because it reflects better cost control compared with revenue generation.3.Income statementInterest on U.S. Treasury & agency securities $44,500Interest on municipal bonds 60,000Interest and fees on loans189,700Interest income =$294,200Interest paid on interest-checking accounts$33,500Interest paid
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