Finance 561: Financial Intermediation, Fall 2010

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Finance 561: Financial Intermediation, Fall 2010 1. Instructor. Morgan J. Lynge, Professor Emeritus of Finance. Office hours. My office is in 435 Wohlers Hall. I will have office hours 3:00 to 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday or by appointment. When possible, please use these times to see me. If you cannot come during my scheduled office hours, make an appointment after class or by phone or e-mail for another time. I welcome your visits to my office for discussions of class material or subjects of your choice. Contact information. You may always contact me by e-mail. My e-mail address is m-lynge@illinois.edu. I will generally respond to e-mail inquiries within one business day. My office phone is 333-7099. 2. Course objectives. Both financial intermediaries and financial markets are essential components of a financial system and they interact with one another. Finance 561 has a focus on financial intermediaries with the objective to develop an understanding of: The economic functions and roles of financial intermediaries and financial markets; How and why financial intermediaries are regulated and how this affects their management; Financial management of financial intermediaries; how banks manage their risk exposures; and The special role and impact of the central bank and its policy actions. 3. Class meetings. 11:00 to 12:20 Tuesday and Thursday, in 241 Wohlers Hall. 4. Class materials. Financial Institutions Management: A Risk Management Approach, Sixth Edition, 2008, by Anthony Saunders and Marcia Millon Cornett. (referred to as Text). The Federal Reserve System: Purposes and Functions, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 2005 (Fed). I will provide this booklet to you free of charge. WEB REFERENCES: For some topics, I will assign material that is available on the web. For this material I will provide the web address (Web). 1

5. Topic outline and reading assignments. THE FINANCIAL SECTOR AND FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES Class 1 (8/24) Introduction to Finance 561 Class 2 (8/26) Class 3 (8/31) Class 4 (9/2) Class 5 (9/7) Class 6 (9/9) Class 7 (9/14) Class 8 (9/16) Direct finance and financial intermediation Text: Chapter 1 Depository financial intermediaries (DFIs) Text: Chapter 2 Non-deposit FIs Pension funds and insurance companies Text: Chapters 3 and 19 (pp. 575-577) Non-deposit FIs Mutual and other funds and investment banks Text: Chapters 4, 5, and 6 Regulation of depository FIs Text: Chapters 1, 2, 21, and Appendices 2B and 7A (pp. 1-2) Bank or BHC selection for Bank Project due today Structural change in US banking and bank regulation Text: Chapters 21 and 22 and Appendix 21A FI risks and performance evaluation Text: Chapter 7 and Appendices 2A and 7A MEASURING RISK IN FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES Class 9 (9/21) Class 10 (9/23) Class 11 (9/28) Class 12 (9/30) The lending process Text: Chapters 11 and 13 (pp. 380-386) Credit risk assessment I Text: Chapter 11 and Appendix 11A Part A of Bank Project due today Credit risk assessment II Text: Chapters 11 (pp. 328-332) and 12 and Appendix 12A Interest rate risk: Interest flows and the WATM gap model Text: Chapter 8 2

Class 13 (10/5) Class 14 (10/7) Class 15 (10/12) Interest rate risk: Firm value and the duration gap model Text: Chapter 9 and Appendix 9B Measuring market risk using value at risk (VAR) Text: Chapter 10 (pp. 266-277) Assignment #1 due today Measuring liquidity risk Text: Chapter 17 Class 16 (10/14) Mid-Term Examination, in class, covering classes 1-14 Class 17 (10/19) CURRENT TOPIC #1: Fannie and Freddie: The Future? Web: Rosen, Role of Securitization... http://www.chicagofed.org/publications/fedletter/cflnovember2007_244.pdf MANAGING RISK IN FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES Class 18 (10/21) Class 19 (10/26) Class 20 (10/28) Class 21 (11/2) Class 22 (11/4) Liability and liquidity management Text: Chapter 18 and Appendix 18A Fed: Chapter 7 Managing interest rate risk with futures and options Text: Chapters 23 (pp. 691-708) and 24 (pp. 728-748). Managing interest rate risk with caps/floors/collars and swaps Text: Chapters 24 (pp. 751-760) and 25 (pp. 769-778) CURRENT TOPIC #2: Managing a Community Bank SPEAKER: Van Dukeman, President and CEO, First Busey Corp Managing credit risk exposure for the bank Text: Chapters 26 and 27 Text: Chapters 23 (pp. 716-720), 24 (pp. 749-751) and 25 (pp. 782-788) Part B of Bank Project due today 3

Class 23 (11/9) Managing credit risk II Text: Appendix 20A Web: Stephanou and Mendoza, Credit Risk... Under Basel II (pp. 1-16) http://econ.worldbank.org/external/default/main?pagepk=64165259&t hesitepk=469372&pipk=64165421&menupk=64166093&entityid= 000012009_20050408122404 Web: Neely, High Loan Loss Reserves: Virtue or Vice? http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/mt/19990301/cover.pdf CHANGES IN BANKING INDUSTRY REGULATION Class 24 (11/11) Class 25 (11/16) Class 26 (11/18) Deposit insurance and the FDIC Text: Chapter 19 and Appendices 19A, 19B, and 19C Capital regulation and Basel Text: Chapter 20 The last US banking crisis Text: Chapters 19 and 20 (again) FALL BREAK, NOVEMBER 20-28 THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY EFFECTS Class 27 (11/30) Class 28 (12/2) Class 29 (12/7) The Federal Reserve and its goals Fed: Chapters 1 and 2 and Appendix A The Fed s monetary policy tools and operations Fed: Chapters 2 and 3 Part C of Bank Project due today The effects of Fed actions Fed: Chapters 2 and 3 (again) Web: Walsh, Transparency in Monetary Policy http://www.frbsf.org/publications/economics/letter/2001/el2001-26.html Final Examination 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, December 14 4

6. Basis for course grade. The following components will enter the computation of your grade for this course: CLASS PARTICIPATION: Most of our class periods will be devoted to covering material from the textbook and other assigned readings, current developments, and assignments and projects. Class participation via discussion, questions, and contributions of examples from current events is required. A portion of your grade will depend on your contribution to the class, either during class periods or through conferences with me. In addition, each student is required to make a brief presentation (no more than 5 minutes, please) of a current events topic relating to the subject matter of the course (financial intermediaries). Typically your presentation will relate to an article from a current business publication. On the day of your presentation you must provide me with a copy of the article you are using. I expect each of you, as serious students of finance, to remain abreast of current developments in financial markets and financial institutions in general. One way to accomplish this is to read the Wall Street Journal daily. In addition certain weekly publications like The Economist and Business Week are useful for keeping up to date. See me for a variety of other business publications that you can obtain at a student (reduced) subscription rate, if you choose to do so. EXAMINATIONS: There will be a mid-term examination during the regular class meeting time and a final examination, which will be comprehensive, at the end of the semester. Reserve these dates since no make-up examinations will be provided without prior arrangement. Mid-Term Examination Thursday, October 14, in class Final Examination 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, December 14 ASSIGNMENTS: There will be some written assignments during the semester. These assignments will include: Short assignments. These two assignments will be problem sets. Bank project. Each of you (or in a group of two) will perform a financial analysis of a specific commercial bank or bank holding company using the bank s accounting data and other available data. More information on this project will be provided soon. The project will be due in several stages during the semester. 5

Due dates. All assignments and projects have due dates. In most cases I will allow a grace period until noon one day after the due date during which the assignment or project may be submitted without penalty. For example, if an assignment is due in class on a Thursday, the grace period will usually extend to noon on the following day (Friday). Work received after the grace period is over will be penalized for being late, or rejected if too late. OPTIONAL PAPER: If you wish to explore further some topic in the area of financial intermediaries, you may write a paper to accomplish this purpose. If you write a paper, the paper grade may be used to substitute for your mid-term exam grade (provided it is a higher grade). This option is not provided so that you can choose to miss the mid-term examination. You must write your paper on a topic approved by me. Some guidelines are listed below. See me for more details. The paper must be no longer than 12 pages (number the pages) and must be typed (double spaced). Footnotes, section headings, and a good bibliography are required. You should submit an outline of your proposed topic to me for approval at any time, but no later than Thursday, November 4. Analysis is required in your paper. Empirical studies are preferred, but not required, and grades will generally be higher on well-done empirical studies. The paper is due the last day of class, Thursday, December 9. GRADING: Your course grade will be determined using the following weights: Mid-Term Examination 30% Final Examination 30% Assignments 10% Bank project 25% Class contribution 5% TOTAL 100% Plus (+) and minus (-) grades will be used in assigning course letter grades. 6

7. Academic integrity: The University statement of your obligation to maintain academic integrity is: If you engage in an act of academic dishonesty, you become liable to disciplinary action. Such acts include cheating; falsification or invention of any information or citation in an academic endeavor; helping or attempting to help others commit academic infractions; plagiarism; offering bribes, favors, or threats; academic interference; computer-related infractions; and failure to comply with research regulations. Part 4 of Article 1 of the Student Code gives complete details of rules governing academic integrity for all students. You are responsible for knowing and abiding by these rules which are available on the web at http://www.uiuc.edu/admin_manual/code/. 8. Professional integrity: You are expected to conduct yourself in a professional manner at all times in your dealings with me and with other students in this class. In addition, professionalism must be demonstrated in your speaking and writing abilities in this class. Your assignments and project will be graded on overall quality of presentation, effective writing, and proper grammar and punctuation. Take time to proofread and edit your work before submitting it to me. Promptness and independent work are also components of professionalism. 9. World wide web and financial intermediaries. There are many excellent web sites containing information and/or data on financial intermediaries, financial markets, and information about the economy. A few of them are listed below, but I encourage you to search the web for particular sites of interest to you. http://www.fdic.gov/ (individual bank and BHC data is here) http://www.occ.treas.gov/ (the national bank regulator) http://www.federalreserve.gov/ (the US central bank) http://www.newyorkfed.org/index.html (a regional Fed bank) http://www.chicagofed.org/ (another regional Fed bank) http://www.stlouisfed.org/ (good economic data at this site) http://www.ffiec.gov/ (the coordinator agency for all bank regulators) http://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/nichome.aspx http://www.bis.org (Basel capital info is here) http://door.library.uiuc.edu/crx/ (the library of the Business College) http://www.imf.org/ http://www.worldbank.org/ http://www.mhhe.com/saunders6e (web site for the textbook) Besides the above web sites, most individual financial corporations (banks, bank holding companies, or financial holding companies) have their own web sites. 7