Types Of Financial Institutions And Their Roles
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A financial institution is an establishment that conducts
financial transactions such as investments, loans and deposits. Almost everyone
deals with financial institutions on a regular basis. Everything from
depositing money to taking out loans and exchanging currencies must be done
through financial institutions. Here is an overview of some of the major
categories of financial institutions and their roles in the financial system.
Commercial Banks
Commercial banks accept deposits and provide security and convenience
to their customers. Part of the original purpose of banks was to offer
customers safe keeping for their money. By keeping physical cash at home or in
a wallet, there are risks of loss due to theft and accidents, not to mention
the loss of possible income from interest. With banks, consumers no longer need
to keep large amounts of currency on hand; transactions can be handled with
checks, debit cards or credit cards, instead.
Commercial banks also make loans that individuals and businesses use to buy
goods or expand business operations, which in turn leads to more deposited
funds that make their way to banks. If banks can lend money at a higher
interest rate than they have to pay for funds and operating costs, they make
money.
Banks also serve often under-appreciated roles as payment agents within a
country and between nations. Not only do banks issue debit cards that allow
account holders to pay for goods with the swipe of a card, they can also arrangewire transfers with other institutions.
Banks essentially underwrite financial transactions by lending their reputation
and credibility to the transaction; a check is basically just a promissory note
between two people, but without a bank's name and information on that note, no
merchant would accept it. As payment agents, banks make commercial transactions
much more convenient; it is not necessary to carry around large amounts of
physical currency when merchants will accept the checks, debit cards or credit
cards that banks provide.
Investment Banks
The stock market crash of 1929 and
ensuing Great Depression caused the United States
government to increase financial market regulation. The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 resulted in the
separation of investment banking from commercial banking.
While investment banks may be called
"banks," their operations are far different than deposit-gathering commercial
banks. An investment bank is a financial intermediary that performs a variety
of services for businesses and some governments. These services include underwriting debt and equity offerings,
acting as an intermediary between an issuer of securities and the investing
public, making markets, facilitating mergers and other corporate
reorganizations, and acting as a broker for institutional clients. They may
also provide research and financial advisory services to companies. As a
general rule, investment banks focus on initial public offerings (IPOs) and large public and private share offerings. Traditionally, investment banks
do not deal with the general public. However, some of the big names in
investment banking, such as JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup,
also operate commercial banks. Other past and present investment banks you may
have heard of include Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers and First
Boston.
Generally speaking, investment banks are subject to less regulation than
commercial banks. While investment banks operate under the supervision of
regulatory bodies, like the Securities and Exchange Commission, FINRA, and the U.S. Treasury, there are typically fewer restrictions
when it comes to maintaining capital ratios or introducing new products.
Insurance Companies
Insurance companies pool risk by collecting premiums from a large group of
people who want to protect themselves and/or their loved ones against a
particular loss, such as a fire, car accident, illness, lawsuit, disability or
death. Insurance helps individuals and companies manage risk and preserve
wealth. By insuring a large number of people, insurance companies can operate
profitably and at the same time pay for claims that may arise. Insurance
companies use statistical analysis to project what their actual losses will be
within a given class. They know that not all insured individuals will suffer
losses at the same time or at all.
Brokerages
A brokerage acts as an intermediary between buyers and sellers to
facilitate securities transactions. Brokerage companies are compensated
via commissionafter
the transaction has been successfully completed. For example, when a trade
order for a stock is carried out, an individual often pays a transaction fee
for the brokerage company's efforts to execute the trade.
A brokerage can be either full service or discount. A full service brokerage
provides investment advice, portfolio management and trade execution. In
exchange for this high level of service, customers pay significant commissions
on each trade. Discount brokers allow investors to perform their own investment
research and make their own decisions. The brokerage still executes the
investor's trades, but since it doesn't provide the other services of a
full-service brokerage, its trade commissions are much smaller.
Investment Companies
An
investment company is a corporation or a trust through which individuals invest
in diversified, professionally managed portfolios of securities by pooling
their funds with those of other investors. Rather than purchasing combinations
of individual stocks and bonds for a portfolio, an investor can purchase
securities indirectly through a package product like a mutual fund.
There are three fundamental types of investment companies: unit investment trusts (UITs), face amount certificate companies and managed
investment companies. All three types have the following things in common:
·
An undivided interest in the fund proportional to the number of
shares held
·
Diversification in a large number of securities
·
Professional management
·
Specific investment objectives
Let's take a closer look at each type of investment company.
Unit Investment Trusts (UITs)
A unit investment trust, or UIT, is a company
established under an indenture or similar agreement. It has the following
characteristics:
·
The management of the trust is supervised by a trustee.
·
Unit investment trusts sell a fixed number of shares to unit
holders, who receive a proportionate share of net income from the underlying
trust.
·
The UIT security is redeemable and represents an undivided
interest in a specific portfolio of securities.
·
The portfolio is merely supervised, not managed, as it remains
fixed for the life of the trust. In other words, there is no day-to-day
management of the portfolio.
Face Amount Certificates
A face amount certificate company issues debt
certificates at a predetermined rate of interest. Additional characteristics
include:
·
Certificate holders may redeem their certificates for a fixed
amount on a specified date, or for a specific surrender value, before maturity.
·
Certificates can be purchased either in periodic installments or
all at once with a lump-sum payment.
·
Face amount certificate companies are almost nonexistent today.
Management Investment Companies
The most common type of investment company is the management investment
company, which actively manages a portfolio of securities to achieve its
investment objective. There are two types of management investment company: closed-end and open-end. The primary differences between the two come down to where
investors buy and sell their shares - in the primary or secondary markets - and
the type of securities the investment company sells.
·
Closed-End Investment Companies: A closed-end
investment company issues shares in a one-time public offering. It does not continually
offer new shares, nor does it redeem its shares like an open-end investment
company. Once shares are issued, an investor may purchase them on the open
market and sell them in the same way. The market value of the closed-end fund's
shares will be based on supply and demand, much like other securities. Instead
of selling at net asset value, the shares can sell at a
premium or at a discount to the net asset value.
·
Open-End Investment Companies: Open-end investment
companies, also known as mutual funds, continuously issue new shares.
These shares may only be purchased from the investment company and sold back to
the investment company. Mutual funds are discussed in more detail in the
Variable Contracts section.
Read more: Series 26 Exam Guide: Investment Companies
Nonbank Financial Institutions
The following institutions are not technically banks but provide some of
the same services as banks.
Savings and Loans
Savings and loan associations, also known as S&Ls or thrifts, resemble
banks in many respects. Most consumers don't know the differences between
commercial banks and S&Ls. By law, savings and loan companies must have 65%
or more of their lending in residential mortgages, though other types of
lending is allowed.
S&Ls emerged largely in response to the exclusivity of commercial banks.
There was a time when banks would only accept deposits from people of
relatively high wealth, with references, and would not lend to ordinary
workers. Savings and loans typically offered lower borrowing rates than
commercial banks and higher interest rates on deposits; the narrower profit
margin was a byproduct of the fact that such S&Ls were privately or
mutually owned.
Credit Unions
Credit unions are another alternative to
regular commercial banks. Credit unions are almost always organized as
not-for-profit cooperatives. Like banks and S&Ls, credit unions can be
chartered at the federal or state level. Like S&Ls, credit unions typically
offer higher rates on deposits and charge lower rates on loans in comparison to
commercial banks.
In exchange for a little added freedom, there is one particular restriction on
credit unions; membership is not open to the public, but rather restricted to a
particular membership group. In the past, this has meant that employees of
certain companies, members of certain churches, and so on, were the only ones
allowed to join a credit union. In recent years, though, these restrictions
have been eased considerably, very much over the objections of banks.
Shadow Banks
The housing bubble and subsequent credit
crisis brought attention to what is commonly called "the shadow banking system." This is a
collection of investment banks, hedge funds, insurers and other non-bank
financial institutions that replicate some of the activities of regulated
banks, but do not operate in the same regulatory environment.
The shadow banking system funneled a great deal of money into
the U.S.residential mortgage market during the bubble. Insurance companies
would buy mortgage bonds from investment banks, which would then use the
proceeds to buy more mortgages, so that they could issue more mortgage bonds.
The banks would use the money obtained from selling mortgages to write still more
mortgages.
Many estimates of the size of the shadow banking system suggest that it had
grown to match the size of the traditional U.S. banking system by
2008.
Apart from the absence of regulation and reporting requirements, the nature of
the operations within the shadow banking system created several problems.
Specifically, many of these institutions "borrowed short" to
"lend long." In other words, they financed long-term commitments with
short-term debt. This left these institutions very vulnerable to increases in
short-term rates and when those rates rose, it forced many institutions to rush
to liquidate investments and make margin calls. Moreover, as these institutions
were not part of the formal banking system, they did not have access to the
same emergency funding facilities.
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