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FUNDAMENTAL FORCES OF CHANGE IN BANKING
Chapter 1
Bank ManagementBank Management, 5th edition.5th edition.Timothy W. Koch and S. Scott MacDonaldTimothy W. Koch and S. Scott MacDonaldCopyright © 2003 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning
What makes a bank ‘special?’Why do we call Bank of America a ‘bank,’ Merrill Lynch a ‘securities brokerage company’ and State Farm an ‘insurance company?’
The answer lies in our history; with the implementation of: The Glass-Steagall Act which created three separate
industries: commercial banking, investment banking, and insurance.
The Bank Holding Act determined activities closely related to banking and limited the scope of activities a company could engage in if it owned a bank.
The McFadden Act limited the geographic market of banking by allowing individual states to determine the extent to which a bank could branch intra- or inter-state.
As a result of these acts, the United States developed a unique banking system which had a large number of smaller banks; limited in the scope of products and services offered; and limited in the geographic areas covered by banks.
The banking industry is consolidating and diversifying simultaneously. The traditional definition of a bank has been blurred by
the introduction of new products and a wave of mergers, which have dramatically expanded the scope of activities that banks engage in and where products and services are offered. Formerly, a commercial bank was defined as a firm that
both accepted demand deposits and made commercial loans.
Today, these two products are offered by many financial services companies: including commercial banks, savings banks, credit unions, insurance companies, investment banks, finance companies, retailers, and pension funds.
What constitutes a bank, today is not as important as what products and services are offered and in what geographic markets the financial services company competes in.
While competition has increased the number of firms offering financial products and services, … the removal of interstate branching restrictions in the U.S. has dramatically reduced the number of banks but increased the number of banking offices (primarily branches).
Consolidation, in turn, has increased the proportion of banking assets controlled by the largest banks.
Not surprisingly, the same trends appear globally. The United States currently has several banks that
operate in all 50 states and many locales outside the U.S.
The largest foreign banks have significant operations in the U.S. and throughout the world.
Increased competition… quickly changing the nature of commercial banking.
Competition also means geography no longer limits a financial institution’s trade area or the markets in which it competes. Individuals can open a checking account at:
a traditional depository institution, a brokerage firm, or a nonbank firm, such as GE Capital, State Farm Insurance, and
AT&T. You can deposit money electronically, transfer funds from one
account to another, purchase stocks, bonds and mutual funds, or even request and receive a loan from any of these firms.
Most allow you to conduct this business by phone, mail, or over the Internet.
Regulatory restrictions on products and services offerings worked effectively in promoting a safe banking system until the later half of the twentieth century.
Product innovations and technological advances of the later half of the twentieth century allowed investment banking firms to circumvent the regulations restricting their banking activities. In the late 1970s Merrill Lynch
effectively created an “interest bearing checking account,” something banks had not been legally allowed to offer.
Junk bonds became an alternative financing source for small business and other companies began to encroach upon the banks primary market.
Banks were heavily regulated …state banking agencies, the FDIC, the Federal Reserve and the Office of Comptroller of the Currency
Merrill Lynch was only regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission. This allow investment companies to move into the banks
market, circumventing Glass-Steagall and the Bank Holding Company Act
Not until the late 1980s and early 1990s did banks find ways around Glass-Steagall using a Section 20 affiliate which allowed them to offer a limited amount of investment banking products and services. During this same period, the rise in the U.S. stock market
increased the average person’s awareness of higher promised returns from mutual funds and stock transactions.
This lead to a greater acceptance of non-FDIC insured deposit products (mutual funds and stocks)
Banks, however, were generally restricted to offering CD’s and savings accounts which increased the erosion of the banks share of the consumer’s investment wallet.
Branching restrictions were primarily responsible for the structure of the banking system.
This created a system of many more but smaller banks as compared to other countries. By the late 1990s, all branching restrictions were
removed from the banking system and the number of independent banks was reduced by almost half, the number of branches increased by almost 50 percent and the size of the largest U.S. banks increased dramatically.
In fact, by size rankings, U.S. banks did not reach the largest 10 banks in the world until the late 1990s and today, some of the largest banks in the world are U.S. banks.
Branching restrictions were effective at reducing competition among depository institutions and promoting a safe banking system until the later half of the twentieth century.
These same branching restrictions, however, prevented banks from geographically diversify their product and credit risk and quite possibly contributed the loss of several large Texas banks during the late 1980s.
The removal of branching restrictions during the later half of the twentieth century allowed banks to offer services anywhere in the country and lead to the creation of the first coast-to-coast bank…forever changing the banks market from local to global.
Merrill Lynch and State Farm already operated branches across the nation and in comparison there were significantly fewer, but larger, investment and insurance companies.
In addition to relaxation of branching restrictions, technological advances allowed banks to open electronic branches, first by using the ATM network and later by using the Internet.
This structural change is frequently attributed to deregulation of the financial services industry.
In fact, deregulation was a natural response to increased competition between depository institutions and nondepository financial firms, and between the same type of competitors across world markets.
In fact, some regulations can be credited for the development of new products to avoid regulation—hence increased competition from firms not regulated like a bank; i.e., investment banks.
Five fundamental forces have transformed the financial services market
1. Deregulation/re-regulation2. Financial innovation3. Securitization4. Globalization5. Advances in technology.
The latter factors actually represent responses to deregulation and
re-regulation.
Historically, commercial banks have been the most heavily regulated companies in the United States
Regulations took many forms including : maximum interest rates that could be paid on
deposits or charged on loans, minimum capital-to-asset ratios, minimum legal reserve requirements, limited geographic markets for full-service
banking, constraints on the type of investments
permitted, and restrictions on the range of products and
services offered.
Banks and other market participants have consistently restructured their operations to circumvent regulation and meet perceived customer need
In response, regulators or lawmakers would impose new restrictions, which market participants circumvented again.
This process of regulation and market response (financial innovation) and imposition of new regulations (re-regulation) is the regulatory dialectic.
Today banks are accessing the formerly forbidden areas of investment banking, by the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act via the Financial Services Modernization Act (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999).
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act effectively eliminates the majority of the remaining restrictions that have separated commercial banking, investment banking and insurance industries for over 50 years.
The Glass-Steagall Act shaped the structure, products and business models of the banking industry for the later half of the 20th century.
Increased competition
The McFadden Act of 1927 and the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 determined the framework within which financial institutions operated for the next 50 years. The McFadden Act saw to it that banks would
be sheltered from competition with other banks by extending state restrictions on geographic expansion to national banks.
The Glass-Steagall Act forbade banks from underwriting equities and other corporate securities, thereby separating banking from commerce.
The fundamental forces of change… increased competition
Competition for deposits Competition for loans Competition for payment services Competition for other financial services
Competition for deposits
High inflation abruptly ended the guaranteed spread between asset yields and liability costs in the late 1970s.
In 1973 several investment banks created money market mutual funds (MMMFs). Without competing instruments, MMMFs
increased from $10.4 billion in 1978 to almost $189 billion in 1981.
Congress passed legislation enabling banks and thrifts to offer similar accounts including money market deposit accounts (MMDAs) and Super NOWs.
Competition for loans
Loan yields fell relative to borrowing costs, as lending institutions competed for a decreasing pool of quality credits.
High loan growth also raises bank capital requirements.
Junk bonds, commercial paper, auto finance companies, credit unions, and insurance companies compete directly for the same good quality customers.
Competition for loans (continued)
As bank funding costs rose, competition for loans put downward pressure on loan yields and interest spreads.
Prime corporate borrowers have always had the option to issue commercial paper or long-term bonds rather than borrow from banks.
Because the Glass-Steagall Act prevented commercial banks from underwriting commercial paper, banks lost corporate borrowers, who now bypassed them by issuing commercial paper at lower cost.
Competition for loans (continued)
The competition for loans comes in many forms: Commercial paper Captive automobile finance companies Other finance companies
The development of the junk bond market extended loan competition to medium-sized companies representing lower-quality borrowers.
The growth in junk bonds reduced the pool of good-quality loans and lowered risk-adjusted yield spreads over bank borrowing costs.
Today, different size banks generally pursue different strategies. Small- to medium-size banks continue to
concentrate on loans but seek to strengthen the customer relationship by offering personal service.
These same banks have generally rediscovered the consumer loan.
The largest banks, in contrast, are looking to move assets off the balance sheet. Regulatory capital requirements and the new
corporate debt substitutes often make the remaining loans too expensive and too risky.
Loan concentrations:Consumer and commercial credits
Credit Risk Diversification
69% 67% 65% 64% 62% 60% 58% 57% 55% 55% 57% 57% 59% 60% 60% 59%
31% 33% 35% 36% 38% 40% 42% 43% 45% 45% 43% 43% 41% 40% 40% 41%
0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
Commercial borrowers
Consumer loans
Per
cent
of
loan
s
Captive automobile finance companies
The three largest U.S. automobile manufacturers as well as most foreign automobile manufactures are aggressively expanding in the financial services industry as part of their long-term strategic plans.
Competition for payment services
In an American Banker article, Diogo Teixeira comment that:
GE Capital has almost $300 billion of financial assets. GMAC has $12 billion of financial
services revenue, more than Microsoft's total corporate revenue. Microsoft has no leasing
subsidiary, takes no deposits, makes no loans, and offers not a single financial product -- in an age when everybody has financial products. Yet Microsoft is viewed as the threat, not GE
Capital or GMAC.
Competition for payment services…the impact of technology
Once the exclusive domain of banks and other depository institutions, the nations payment system has become highly competitive.
The real challenge for the Federal Reserve System and the banking industry is in the delivery of payment processing services.
This competition is coming from emerging electronic payment systems, such as: smart and stored-value cards automatic bill payment bill presentment processing
It's not just electronic payment systems that are eroding the banks traditional markets
Cash money can be acquired at any teller machine all over the country.
You can open a checking account, apply for a loan and receive the answer and funds electronically.
Direct deposit of paychecks, credit cards, electronic bill payment, and smart cards means that competition for financial services goes well beyond the traditional banking services lines we think of from the recent past!
Although cash remains the dominate form of payment, the average payment size of cash is the smallest
2000% Total
2000
% of Cashless Payments
2000
Growth: 1995-2000 1995 2000
% Total 2000
Growth: 1995-2000
Cash 550,000 82.3% #N/A #N/A 2,200,000 0.3% 4.00$ Cheques issued 69,000 10.3% 58.2% 1.8% 73,515,000 85,000,000 10.9% 2.9% 1,231.88$ Electronic Transactions:
ACH 6,900 1.0% 5.8% 14.6% 12,231,500 20,300,000 2.6% 10.7% 2,942.03$ ATM 13,200 2.0% 11.1% 6.4% 656,600 800,000 0.1% 4.0% 60.61$ Credit Card 20,000 3.0% 16.9% 6.0% 879,000 1,400,000 0.2% 9.8% 70.00$ Debit Card 9,275 1.4% 7.8% 42.1% 59,100 400,000 0.1% 46.6% 43.13$
Total retail electronic 49,375 7.4% 41.7% 10.7% 13,826,200 22,900,000 2.9% 10.6% 463.80$ Chips 58 0.0% 0.0% 2.6% 310,021,200 292,147,000 37.4% -1.2% 5,037,017$ Fed Wire 108 0.0% 0.1% 7.3% 222,954,100 379,756,000 48.6% 11.2% 3,516,259$
Total wholesale electronic 166 0.0% 0.1% 5.5% 532,975,300 671,903,000 85.9% 4.7% 4,047,608$ Total Electronic 49,541 7.4% 41.8% 10.7% 546,801,500 694,803,000 88.8% 4.9% 14,025$
Volume of Transactions Value of Transactions
Average Transaction Size 2000
Competition for other bank services
Banks and their affiliates offer many products and services in addition to deposits and loans. Trust services Brokerage Data processing Securities underwriting Real estate appraisal Credit life insurance Personal financial consulting
“Non-bank” activities of banks…the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
Since the Glass-Steagall and Bank Holding Company acts, banks could not directly underwrite securities domestically.
Today, a bank can enter this line of business by forming a financial holding company through provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. A financial holding company owns a bank or
bank holding company as well as an investment subsidiary.
The investment subsidiary of a financial holding company is not restricted in the amount or type of investment underwriting engaged in.
Investment banking
Commercial banks consider investment banking attractive because most investment banks: already offer many banking services to prime
commercial customers and high net worth individuals and
sell a wide range of products not available through banks.
can compete in any geographic market without the heavy regulation of the FRS, FDIC, and OCC.
earn extraordinarily high fees for certain types of transactions and can put their own capital at risk in selected investments.
Investment banking
Investment banking encompasses three broad functions: 1. underwriting public offerings of new
securities2. trading existing securities3. advising and
financing mergers and acquisitions
Deregulation and re-regulation
Deregulation is the process of eliminating regulations, such as the elimination of Regulation Q (interest rate ceilings imposed on time and demand deposits offered by depository institutions.)
Deregulation is often confused with reregulation, which is the process of implementing new restrictions or modifying existing controls on individuals and activities associated with banking.
Efforts at deregulation and re-regulation generally address: Pricing issues
removing price controls on the maximum interest rates paid to depositors and the rate charged to borrowers (usury ceilings).
Allowable geographic market penetration The Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and
Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 has eliminate branching restrictions.
New products and services Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 has
dramatically expanded the banks’ product choices; i.e., insurance, brokerage services, and securities underwriting.
Financial innovation
Financial innovation is the catalyst behind the evolving financial services industry.
Innovations take the form of new securities and financial markets, new products and services, new organizational forms, and new delivery systems.
Regulation Q brought about financial innovation as depository institutions tried to slow disintermediation.
Financial innovation (continued)
Banks developed new vehicles to compete with Treasury bills, money market mutual funds, and cash management accounts.
Regulators typically responded by imposing marginal reserve requirements against the new instrument, raising the interest rate ceiling, and then authorizing a new deposit instrument.
Recent innovations take the form of new futures, options, options-on-futures, and the development of markets for a wide range of securitized assets.
Response of banks
One competitive response to asset quality problems and earnings pressure has been to substitute fee income for interest income by offering more fee-based services.
Banks also lower their capital requirements and reduce credit risk by selling assets and servicing the payments between borrower and lender rather than holding the same assets to earn interest.
This process of converting assets into marketable securities is called securitization.
Securitization
Securitization is the process of converting assets into marketable securities.
It enables banks to move assets off-balance sheet and increase fee income.
It increases competition for standardized products such as: mortgages and other credit-scored loans
Eventually lowers the prices paid by consumers by increasing the supply and liquidity of these products.
The objectives behind securitization include the following: Free capital for other uses Improve ROE via servicing income Diversify credit risk Obtain new sources of liquidity Reduce interest rate risk
Generally, any loan that can be credit scored can potentially be securitized.
Securitization allows nonbank firms to originate loans, package them into pools, and sell securities
collateralized by securities in the pools. This increases the competition for the securitized
asset and will eventually lead to lower rates.
Off-balance sheet activities, asset sales and Enron Enron engaged in questionable activities including not
reporting losses from business activities that the firm inappropriately moved off-balance sheet. Enron was thus able to hide losses on the business
activities and/or use its off-balance sheet activities to artificially inflate reported earnings.
Many banks also enter into agreements that do not have a balance sheet reporting impact until a transaction is effected. An example might be a long-term loan commitment to a
potential borrower. Until the customer actually borrows the funds, no loan is
reported on the bank’s assets. Obviously, off-balance sheet positions generate
noninterest income but also entail some risk as the bank must perform under the contracts.
From 1999-2001, PNC moved out of certain lending businesses by selling off $20 billion in loans and reducing unfunded loan commitments by $25 billion Jan. ‘02. , PNC took a $615 million charge as it wrote down
loans PNC took a $424 million charge for moving loans to the
“held for sale” category Indicated it would sell about $3.1 billion in loans and $8.2
billion in letters of credit and unfunded commitments. PNC’s stock price increased, the positive response
echoed the market’s sentiment that the sooner you recognize bad loans and move them off the balance sheet, the better.
Late Jan. ‘02, the FED and SEC questioned the special third-party structure used to shift assets off the balance sheet. PNC’s shares dropped--the use of such off-balance sheet
accounting was reminiscent of the Enron fiasco. PNC reclassified its treatment of the problematic deals and
lowered its reported income for 2001 several times. Earnings were restated due to new risks of special
purpose vehicles.
Globalization
The gradual evolution of markets and institutions so that geographic boundaries do not restrict financial transactions.
Financial markets and institutions are becoming increasingly global in scope.
Firms must recognize that businesses in other countries as well as their own are competitors, and that international events affect domestic operations.
Increased consolidation
The dominant trend regarding the structure of financial institutions is that of consolidation.
With the asset quality problems of Texas banks in the 1980, regulators authorized acquisitions by out-of-state banks.
By 1998, effectively all interstate branching restrictions had been eliminated this has lead to
consolidation frenzy in which we have almost half as many banks as compared to the 1980’s
The later half of the 1990s saw not only a large number of bank mergers but also several of the largest bank consolidations:
Citicorp merges with Travelers Chase Manhattan acquires Chemical Banking Chase Manhattan acquires J.P. Morgan Mellon Bank acquires Dreyfus NationsBank acquires BankAmerica Bank of New York acquires Irving Bank Corp Fleet Financial Group acquires BankBoston Bank One acquires First USA Southern National acquires BB&T Financial
The removal of restrictive branching laws as well as “merger mania” of the late 1990s has dramatically reduced the number of banks.
The primary factor leading the reduction in the number of banks from a high of 14,364 in 1979 to about 8,000 at the beginning of 2002 can be attributed to the removal of branching restrictions provided by Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994
GE Capital Services is the financial subsidiary of General Electric GECS divides its operations into two segments, Financing and
Specialty Insurance. The operations of GECS Financing are divided into four areas: Consumer services provides products such as private-label and bank
credit card loans, personal loans, time sales and revolving credit and inventory financing for retail merchants, auto leasing and inventory financing, mortgage servicing, and consumer savings and insurance services .
Equipment management provides leases, loans, sales, and asset management services for commercial and transportation equipment.
Mid-market financing provides loans and financing and operating leases for middle-market customers for a variety of equipment.
Specialized financing provides loans and financing leases for major capital assets, commercial and residential real estate loans, and investments; and loans to and investments in management buyouts and corporate recapitalizations.
Specialty insurance provides U.S. and international property and casualty reinsurance; specialty insurance and life reinsurance; financial guaranty insurance (principally on municipal bonds and structured finance issues); private mortgage insurance; and creditor insurance covering international customer loan repayments.
2001 GE Capital Services operating companies and lines of business
Segment Data (12/31/2001) Sales (000s) Net Earnings
General Electric Co. 74,037,000 13,684,000
GECS 58,353,000 5,417,000
Consumer Services 23,574,000 2,319,000
Equipment Management 12,542,000 1,607,000
Mid-Market Financing 8,659,000 1,280,000
Specialized Financing 2,930,000 557,000
Specialty Insurance 11,064,000 522,000
All Other -416,000 -699,000
11,851 13,053 14,418
19,875
26,492
32,713
39,931
48,694
55,749
66,177
58,353
17,276
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Mil
lio
ns
of
Do
llar
s
Growth in GECS Revenues 1990 – 2001
Source: GE’s Annual Report, 2001 (http://www.ge.com/)
Most of the legal and regulatory differences which have historically separated various types of depository institutions are gone.
Banks now compete with: traditional depository institution
local commercial bank, savings bank, or credit unions brokerage firms
such as Charles Schwab or Merrill Lynch, nonbank firm
such as GE Capital, State Farm Insurance, and AT&T. All of these firms compete for business, pay and
charge market interest rates, and are generally not limited in the scope of products and services they offer or the geographic regions where they offer these products.
FUNDAMENTAL FORCES OF CHANGE IN BANKING
Chapter 1
Bank ManagementBank Management, 5th edition.5th edition.Timothy W. Koch and S. Scott MacDonaldTimothy W. Koch and S. Scott MacDonaldCopyright © 2003 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning