Chapter 4 FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
Chapter 4 FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
Chapter 4 FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
Borrowers Investors
Direct / Primary Security
(Deficit Units) (Surplus Units)
1. Commercial banks
a. Ordinary Commercial banks
2. Thrift banks
e. Credit unions
3. Rural banks
Risk is the possibility that actual returns will deviate or differ from
what is expected. If you expect prices to go up and you buy securities, you
are taking risk because prices could either go up or down. If prices go up,
you gain; if prices go down, you lose. Financial intermediation is highly
market sensitive; that is it changes with the market environments.
1. Interest rate/Market Price risk
It is the risk that the market value (price) of an asset will decline (when
interest rate rises), resulting in a capital loss when sold. The market value of
an asset or liability is theoretically equal to its discounted future cash flows.
Therefore, when interest rates increase, the discount rate on those cash
flows increases and reduces the market value of the asset or liability. On the
other hand, when interest rates fall, the market values of the assets and
liabilities increase. In short, securities decline in price when interest rates
rise.
2. Reinvestment risk
3. Refinancing risk
It is the risk that the cost of rolling over or re-borrowing funds could
be more than the return earned on asset investments. If the cost of rolling
over borrowed funds is, say 8%, and the return that will be earned or
investing the borrowed funds will only result in a rate of, say 7%, the
financial intermediary loses 1%.
4. Default/Credit risk
It is the risk that the borrower will be unable to pay interest on a loan
or principal of a loan or both.
6. Political risk
9. Liquidity risk
It deals with the spread of risk made possible by the pooling funds
through diversification through economies of scale by bearing a large
part f the cost that individuals and small borrowers should have
shouldered if they themselves had done what the financial
intermediaries are doing, absorbing transaction costs and gathering
information.