Chapter 23-24
Chapter 23-24
Finance: is the field of economics that studies how people make decisions
regarding the allocation of resources over time and the handling of risk
Financial system: the group of institutions in the economy that help to match one
person's saving with another person's investment
Financial markets
1. Financial markets: are the institutions trough which savers can directly provide
funds to borrowers ⇒ bond and stock market
2. Financial intermediates: are financial institutions through which savers can
directly provide funds to borrowers ⇒ banks and investment or mutual funds
Characteristics of a bond:
- Term: the length of time until the bond matures
- Credit risk: the probability that the borrower will fail to pay some of the
interest or principal
Government bonds= the safer the credit risk the lower the interest rate
Compared to bonds stocks offer both higher ricks and potentially higher returns
Banks:
- They take deposits from people who want to save and use the deposits to
make loans to people who want to borrow
- They pay depositors interest on their deposits and charge borrowers slightly
higher interest on their loans
Investment or mutual funds: is a vehicle that allows the public to invest in a
selection, or portfolio of various types of shares, bonds, or both shares and bonds
➥ They allow people with small amounts of money to easily diversify
Present value: refers to the amount of money today that would be needed to
produce, using prevailing interest rates a given future amount of money
➥ It´s concept is useful when we make investment decisions
- In order to compare values at different point in time, compare their present value
- A firm will undertake an investment project if the present value of the stream of
income the project is expected to generate exceeds the present value of the costs
Future value: the amount of money in the future that an amount of money today
will yield, given prevailing interest rates
Compounding: the accumulation of a sum of money in say a bank account, where the
interest earned remains in the account to earn additional interest in the future
Asset valuation
Saving: If a person spends less than they earn and uses the rest either put in a
bank, or to buy stocks or investment funds.
Market for loanable funds: is the market in which those who want to save supply
funds and those who want to borrow to invest demand funds.
Loanable funds: refers to all income that people have chosen to save and lend out,
rather than use for their own consumption.
A supply–demand model of the financial system helps us understand:
● How the financial system coordinates saving & investment.
● How government policies and other factors affect saving, investment, the
interest rate.
Supply of loanable funds: comes from people who have extra income they want to
save and lend out.
● Households with extra income can lend it out and earn interest.
● Public saving, if positive, adds to national saving and the supply of loanable
funds. If negative, it reduces national saving and the supply of loanable funds.
Demand for loanable funds: comes from households and firms that wish to borrow
to make investments.
● Firms borrow the funds they need to pay for new equipment, factories, etc.
● Households borrow the funds they need to purchase new houses.
Government borrowing to finance its budget deficit reduces the supply of loanable
funds available to finance investment by households and firms.
Bartering: the exchange of one good for another (requires double coincidence of
wants)
Money: the set of assets in an economy that people use to buy goods and services
from other people
⬇
3 functions:
1. Medium of exchange: an item that the buyer gives to seller when they want
buy goods and services
2. Unit of account: the yardstick people use to post prices and record debts
3. Store value: an item that people can use to transfer purchasing power from
the present to the future
Liquidity: the ease with which an asset can be converted into the economy’s
medium of exchange
➦ Grondstof
Commodity money: has the form of a commodity with intrinsic value (Ex. gold,
cigarettes)
Gold standard: system in which the currency is based on the value of gold and
where the currency can be converted to gold on demand
Currency: the paper bills and coins in the hands of the public
Demands deposits: are balances in bank
accounts that depositors can access on
demand by writing a check or using a debit
card. (Current account)
Central bank: an institution designed to oversee the banking system and regulate
the quantity of money in the economy
- Whenever an economy relies on fiat money, there must be some agency that
regulates the system
Monetary stability: the set of actions taken by the central bank in order to
affect the money supply
Open market operations: refers to the purchase and sale of non-monetary assets
from and to the banking sector by the central bank
- To increase the money supply, the central bank buys bonds from the public
● The amount of currency in the hands of the public increases
- To reduce the money supply, the central bank sells bonds to the public
● The amount of currency in the hands of the public is reduced
Liquidity: the cash needed to ensure transactions in the financial system are
honoured
Central bank:
- To maintain financial stability, they supply liquidity to the rest of the banking system
- They can step in as a lender for the last resort
- They also assess bank's ability to meet different levels of financial stress and have
the power to impose regulations
European central bank (ECB): the overall central bank of the 19 countries
comprising the European Monetary Union
Euro system: the system made up of the ECB plus the national central banks of
the 19 countries comprising the European Monetary Union
Unlike the ECB the Bank of England does not define for itself what is meant by
price stability
How banks make a profit ?
➥ Most banks make profits by accepting deposits and making loans
Spread:the difference between the average interest rate a bank earns on its
assets and the average interest rate paid on its liabilities
Banks hold a friction of the money deposited as reserves and lend out the rest to
make their profit
NOTE: That banks operating under Islamic Sharia principles make profits from
the sharing of risk and reward between lenders and borrowers
Assets (activa): include reserves of cash, securities it hold, and loans ->(to others)
Frictional-reserve banking system => banks hold a fraction of the money deposited
as reserves and lend out the rest
When a bank creates a loan to others from its reserves, the money supply
increases
The money supply is affected by the amount deposited in banks and the amount
that banks loan
A central bank has three main tools in it´s monetary toolbox:
1. Open-market operations: it is conducted when government CB buys
government bonds from, or sell government bonds to the public
- CB buys government bonds ⇒ money supply increase
- CB sells government bonds ⇒ money supply decreases
3. Changing the refinancing rate: the interest rate the ECB lends on a
short-term basis to the euro area banking sector
- Increasing refinancing rate ⇒ decrease the money supply
- Decreasing refinancing rate ⇒ increase the money supply