- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Money, Banking, and Your World
- Chapter 2: The Financial System
- Chapter 3: Money
- Chapter 4: Interest Rates
- Chapter 5: The Economics of Interest-Rate Fluctuations
- Chapter 6: The Economics of Interest-Rate Spreads and Yield Curves
- Chapter 7: Rational Expectations, Efficient Markets, and the Valuation of Corporate Equities
- Chapter 8: Financial Structure, Transaction Costs, and Asymmetric Information
- Chapter 9: Bank Management
- Chapter 10: Innovation and Structure in Banking and Finance
- Chapter 11: The Economics of Financial Regulation
- Chapter 12: The Financial Crisis of 2007–2008
- Chapter 13: Central Bank Form and Function
- Chapter 14: The Money Supply Process
- Chapter 15: The Money Supply and the Money Multiplier
- Chapter 16: Monetary Policy Tools
- Chapter 17: Monetary Policy Targets and Goals
- Chapter 18: Foreign Exchange
- Chapter 19: International Monetary Regimes
- Chapter 20: Money Demand
- Chapter 21: IS-LM
- Chapter 22: IS-LM in Action
- Chapter 23: Aggregate Supply and Demand, the Growth Diamond, and Financial Shocks
- Chapter 24: Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanisms
- Chapter 25: Inflation and Money
- Chapter 26: Rational Expectations Redux: Monetary Policy Implications
There are no key terms for this page.
Financial Intermediaries
Like financial markets, financial intermediaries are highly specialized. Sometimes called the indirect method of finance, intermediaries, like markets, link investors/lenders/savers to borrowers/entrepreneurs/spenders but do so in an ingenious way, by transforming assetsassetsAssets are “things owned” as opposed to liabilities, which are “things owed.”. Unlike facilitators, which, as we have seen, merely broker or buy and sell the same securities, intermediaries buy and sell instruments with different riskriskThe probability of loss., returnreturnThe percentage gain or loss from an investment., and/or liquidity characteristics. The easiest example to understand is that of a bank that sells relatively low risk (which is to say, safe), low return, and highly liquid liabilitiesliabilitiesLiabilities are “things owed” to others, as opposed to assets, which are “things owned.”, called demand deposits, to investors called depositors and buys the relatively risky, high return, and nonliquid securities of borrowers in the form of loans, mortgages, and/or bonds. Note, too, that investor–depositors own claims on the bank itself rather than on the bank’s borrowers.
Financial intermediaries are sometimes categorized according to the type of asset transformations they undertake. As noted above, depository institutions, including commercial banks, savings banks, and credit unions, issue short-term deposits and buy long-term securities. Traditionally, commercial banks specialized in issuing demand, transaction, or checking deposits and making loans to businesses. Savings banks issued time or savings deposits and made mortgage loans to households and businesses, while credit unions issued time deposits and made consumer loans. (Finance companies also specialize in consumer loans but are not considered depository institutions because they raise funds by selling commercial paper, bonds, and equities rather than by issuing deposits.)
Due to deregulationderegulationGenerally, deregulation refers to any industry where regulations are eliminated or significantly reduced. In this context, deregulation refers to a series of regulatory reforms of the financial industry undertaken in the 1980s and 1990s., though, the lines between different types of depository institutions have blurred in recent years. Ownership structure, charter terms, and regulatory agencies now represent the easiest way to distinguish between different types of depository institutions. Almost all commercial and many savings banks are joint-stock corporations. In other words, stockholders own them. Some savings banks and all credit unions are mutual corporations and hence are owned by those who have made deposits with them.
Insurance companies are also divided between mutual and joint-stock corporations. They issue contracts or policies that mature or come due should some contingency occur, which is a mechanism for spreading and sharing risks. Term life insurance policies pay off if the insured dies within the contract period, while life annuities pay off if the insured is still alive. Health insurance pays when an insured needs medical assistance. Property or casualty insurance, such as fire or automobile insurance, comes due in the event of a loss, like a fire or an accident. Liability insurance pays off when someone is sued for a tort (damages). Insurers invest policyholder premiumspremiumIn this context, a sum paid for an insurance contract. in stocks, corporate and government bonds, and various money market instruments, depending on the nature of the contingencies they insure against. Life insurance companies, for example, invest in longer-term assets than automobile or health insurers because, on average, life insurance claims occur much later than property or health claims. (In the parlance of insurance industry insiders, life insurance has a much longer “tail” than property insurance.)
The third major type of intermediary is the investment company, a category that includes pension and government retirement funds, which transform corporate bonds and stocks into annuities, and mutual funds and money market mutual funds, which transform diverse portfolios of capital and money market instruments, respectively, into nonnegotiablenonnegotiableNontransferable to third parties. but easily redeemableredeemableIn this context, changeable into cash money by the fund. “shares.”
As Figure 2.4, “Share of total U.S. financial assets, year-end, 1945–2007” shows, the relative importance of commercial banks and life insurance companies has waned since World War II due to the proliferation of additional investment options. As Figure 2.5, “Assets of financial intermediaries, selected years, 1945–2005” shows, their decline is relative only; the assets of all major types of intermediaries have grown rapidly over the last six decades. The figures are in current dollars, or dollars not adjusted for inflation, and the U.S. economy has grown significantly since the war, in no small part due to the financial system. Nevertheless, as shown in Figure 2.6, “Financial assets to gross domestic product (GDP), 1945–2007”, the assets of financial intermediaries have grown steadily as a percentage of GDPGDPGDP, or gross domestic product, is one of several different measures of aggregate output, the total value of all final goods and services produced in an economy..
Figure 2.4. Share of total U.S. financial assets, year-end, 1945–2007

Figure 2.5. Assets of financial intermediaries, selected years, 1945–2005

Figure 2.6. Financial assets to gross domestic product (GDP), 1945–2007

Financial markets have exhibited similar growth. For example, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA),[31] a mechanism for tracking the prices of the shares of the nation’s most important corporations, grew from less than 200 at the end of World War II to just shy of 700 when John F. Kennedy took office in 1961, to around 1,000 when Ronald Reagan became president twenty years later, to over 3,200 in 1992 and over 10,000 by 1999.[32] Trading volumes on the New York Stock Exchange[33] and the NASDAQ[34] have likewise soared. In 1945, daily trading volumes rarely exceeded 2 million shares. By 1975, 10 million shares was considered a slow day. By 2005, over 1 billion shares were regularly traded each day.
Key Takeaway
Financial intermediaries, including depository institutions (commercial banks, savings banks, credit unions) and insurers (life, health, property and casualty), can be grouped by the composition of their balance sheets (nature of their assets and liabilities and the asset transformations they undertake) or their ownership structure, the origin of their corporate charters, and/or the identity of their regulators.

Cite this Content
Citation Information
APA Format:Wright, Robert E.., and Quadrini, Vincenzo., Money and Banking. Retrieved Mar 18, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29171 .
MLA Format:Wright, Robert E., , and Vincenzo Quadrini. Money and Banking. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 18 Mar, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/29171> .
This book is not available for adoption
Adopt this book for your course
We are happy you want to adopt this Flat World Knowledge textbook for your course! You'll need to register as a user to get started.
Why? Registering allows you to post your course's information on our website so students can find their book, and gives you access to My(flat)World where you can keep track of all the books you adopt.
Are you a new user? Sign up here for free.
Adopt this book for your course
Thank you for your interest in adopting this book for your class. It is NOT YET PUBLISHED. When it is, you will click this button and:
Fill out a short adoption form. When you submit it, we will generate (and send to you) a URL that is unique to your class. That is where your students will go to get their free online book, or to purchase affordable alternatives.
You will also be able to print out this adoption form and bring it to the bookstore so that they can order and sell copies locally of the softcover print version.
This book is not available for customization
You must log in to customize textbooks.
New user? Sign up here for free, and give it a try.
Features:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
This book is not yet published. When it does, our customization features let you:
Drag-and-drop chapters into a new table of contents that suits your syllabus. Resequence and delete down to the section level!
Even better: Annotate content at the paragraph level, giving you fine grained control over the content to suit your exact needs.
Another benefit: No more being forced to switch to new editions. Ever. You move to new editions when you have time and when you see merit. Not when we do.
We have more to do: More cool features in the works, like adding your own authored content, as well as editing existing content all the way to the sentence level. Stay tuned.
Your book has already been saved for print.
You typically should not customize your book further. If your bookstore or students have already ordered the book they will not see your future changes.
If you choose to make further customizations you can do so by choosing 'customize' for this book from My Flatworld
You have already exceeded or met your book copy limit of 5. If you would like to make another personal copy, then you will need to delete one of your copied books. If you think you have received this message in error, then please contact us.
This book does not have any Educator Supplements
Only approved educators have access to the supplements for this textbook. Please note: Educator access is manually approved within approximately 48 business hours after your registration.
If you already have an account and have been approved as an educator, then please login.
Are you a new user? Sign up for free.
You can also feel free to contact us regarding this matter.