100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary Financial intermediation and regulation $8.35
Add to cart

Summary

Summary Financial intermediation and regulation

 3 purchases
  • Course
  • Institution

This summary contains all slides with notes taken during the lecture.

Preview 4 out of 80  pages

  • January 4, 2025
  • 80
  • 2024/2025
  • Summary
avatar-seller
Financial
intermediation
and regulation
BUSINESS ENGINEERING –
FINANCIAL ENGINEERING


EXAM:
- 1 question about the visit of the NBB (4 pnt)
- 1 question about the part of Jan Bouckaert (CH 1- 4: 8pnt)
- 1 question about the part of Jo (CH 5 and 7,8: 8pnt)

,Inhoudsopgave
CHAPTER 1 – WHAT’S DIFFERENT ABOUT BANKS?................................................................4
1 WHAT IS A BANK? WHAT DO BANKS DO?................................................................................................. 4
1.1 A bank: a simple, operational definition.....................................................................................4
1.2 Why do banks/ financial intermediaries exist?............................................................................4
1.3 Banks as “pools of liquidity” and “liquidity insurers”: an introduction.......................................5
1.3.1 A simple model......................................................................................................................... 5
1.3.2 Autarky.................................................................................................................................... 5
1.3.3 Market economy...................................................................................................................... 5
1.3.4 Market economy vs. optimal allocation...................................................................................6
2 BANKS AND LIQUIDITY CREATION: A SIMPLE EXPOSITION OF THE DIAMOND-DYBVIG MODEL.........................6
2.1 Liquidity...................................................................................................................................... 6
2.1.1 Consumer demand for liquidity................................................................................................ 6
2.1.2 The uncertain horizon for investors......................................................................................... 6
2.1.3 Entrepreneurial liquidity demand............................................................................................8
2.2 Bank liquidity creation................................................................................................................ 8
2.3 The optimal amount of liquidity.................................................................................................. 8
2.4 An extension: the principle of asset management......................................................................9
2.5 Bank runs.................................................................................................................................. 10
2.6 (un)stable bank system - equilibrium beliefs, locally stable equilibria, and tipping points......11
CHAPTER 2 - A RATIONALE FOR (PRUDENTIAL) REGULATION OF BANKS.........................12
1. WHAT IS A BANK?.............................................................................................................................. 12
2. (OFF-)BALANCE BANKING ACTIVITIES................................................................................................... 12
3. UNIVERSAL VS SPECIALIZED BANKING.................................................................................................. 13
4. WHY (NOT) REGULATE BANKS?........................................................................................................... 14
CHAPTER 3 – PRUDENTIAL REGULATION OF BANKS...........................................................16
1. REGULATION AND DEREGULATION....................................................................................................... 16
1.1 The deregulation record........................................................................................................... 16
1.2 Reregulation............................................................................................................................. 17
1.2.1 A regulatory incentive scheme that acts like a capital structure...........................................17
1.2.2 Microprudential..................................................................................................................... 17
1.2.3 Macroprudential.................................................................................................................... 18
1.2.4 Observations.......................................................................................................................... 18
1.2.5 Fundamental questions remain.............................................................................................. 18
2. EUROPEAN BANKING CRISIS: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE..............................................................18
3. STATE AID AND (2008) BANK BAIL-OUTS.............................................................................................. 19
4. IMPACT OF BANKING REGULATORY INITIATIVES.....................................................................................19
5. A STYLIZED EXAMPLE......................................................................................................................... 20
6. STATE AID: BANKS ARE “SPECIAL”....................................................................................................... 20
7. CONCLUSION.................................................................................................................................... 20
CHAPTER 4 – LENDER- BORROWER RELATIONS..................................................................22
1. CREDIT MARKET................................................................................................................................ 22
1.1 Moral hazard............................................................................................................................. 22
1.2 Adverse selection...................................................................................................................... 22
2. IMPERFECT CAPITAL MARKETS............................................................................................................ 23
3. COEXISTENCE OF DIRECT LENDING AND INTERMEDIATED LENDING.........................................................23
3.1 Monitoring and capital—Holmström and Tirole (1993)............................................................23
3.2 Direct lending........................................................................................................................... 24
3.3 Direct lending and bank lending............................................................................................... 24
3.4 Intermediated lending.............................................................................................................. 24
CHAPTER 5 - BELGIAN AND EUROPEAN BANKING SECTOR: STATE OF AFFAIRS AND
CHALLENGES.......................................................................................................................... 26
1. INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................................................. 26
2. THE BELGIAN BANKING LANDSCAPE.................................................................................................... 27
3. STATE OF AFFAIRS............................................................................................................................. 29
3.1. Belgian banks’ profitability...................................................................................................... 29
3.2. Solvency................................................................................................................................... 30
3.3. Liquidity................................................................................................................................... 31
PAGINA 1

, 3.4. Main components of income statement...................................................................................32
3.5. Net interest income (NII)......................................................................................................... 32
3.6. Other income and expenses..................................................................................................... 34
3.7. Impact on business model........................................................................................................ 35
4. THE CHALLENGES AHEAD................................................................................................................... 36
4.1. Challenges of the new interest rate environment....................................................................36
4.1.1 Monetary policy and yield curve (in%)...................................................................................36
4.1.2 Interest rate risk management.............................................................................................. 36
4.1.3 Factors weighing on net interest income in the future (production of loans)........................36
4.1.4 International comparison....................................................................................................... 38
4.1.5 Higher credit losses in the future?........................................................................................38
4.2. Implications for macroprudential policy – Capital buffers.......................................................41
4.3. Digitisation of financial services.............................................................................................. 42
4.4. Climate related risks................................................................................................................ 42
4.5. Anti-money laundering............................................................................................................. 44
4.6. Non bank financial intermediation (NBFI)...............................................................................44
5. CONCLUSIONS................................................................................................................................... 44
CHAPTER 6 - STUDY VISIT TO THE NATIONAL BANK OF BELGIUM 22 NOVEMBER 2024..46
1. MODERNISING THE THREE LINES OF DEFENCE MODEL. A SUPERVISORY EXAMPLE (09:35-10:30)...........46
1.1 Setting the scene: the three lines model...................................................................................46
1.2 Why has the SSM implemented the three lines?......................................................................47
1.3 Basics about SREP (detour: video on the website)...................................................................49
1.4 What does the SSM understand its three lines?.......................................................................51
1.5 Concrete examples from the second line in supervision...........................................................52
1.6 Conclusion: the modernizing perspective.................................................................................53
2. EU BANK RECOVERY AND RESOLUTION (10:30-11:30)..........................................................................53
2.1 A Crisis of Historic Proportions................................................................................................ 53
2.2 Global & European Measures to endbank-sovereign doom-loop..............................................54
2.3 SRB mission & Division of Tasks within the SRM.....................................................................55
2.4 Resolving Banks........................................................................................................................ 56
2.5 Financing of the SRB................................................................................................................ 58
2.6 Single Resolution Fund............................................................................................................. 58
2.6.1 Compatibility of fund aid........................................................................................................ 58
2.6.2 State aid procedure............................................................................................................... 59
2.7 Next steps & timelines for proposals........................................................................................ 59
2.8 CMDI......................................................................................................................................... 59
2.9 Experience from past crises cases............................................................................................ 60
2.9.1 Sberbank................................................................................................................................ 60
2.9.2 Veneto banks, ABLV............................................................................................................... 60
2.9.3 Banco popular Espanol SA..................................................................................................... 61
3. MACRO PRUDENTIAL POLICY IN BELGIUM: AN OVERVIEW (11:30-12:30)................................................61
3.1 Financial stability and macroprudential policy.........................................................................61
3.2 Macroprudential powers and instruments – Belgian and European context............................62
3.2.1 Belgian context...................................................................................................................... 62
3.2.2 European context................................................................................................................... 63
3.3 Macroprudential measures and actions in Belgium..................................................................63
CHAPTER 7 – THE ROLE OF THE NBB IN FINANCIAL SUPERVISION...................................66
1. THE ROLE OF THE NBB IN FINANCIAL SUPERVISION.............................................................................66
1.1 Context (Belgian, EU an international).....................................................................................66
1.2 The NBB mission in financial supervision.................................................................................67
1.3 A ‘Banking Union’ in the Euro Area.......................................................................................... 68
1.4 The Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM)...............................................................................69
1.5 Supervision in the Insurance Sector......................................................................................... 69
1.6 Supervision of the Financial Market Infrastructure Sector......................................................70
1.7 Anti-Money Laundering Supervision (AML/CTF)......................................................................70
1.8 NBB supervisory methodology, tools and powers.....................................................................70
2. GOVERNANCE REQUIREMENTS IN THE BANKING SECTOR.......................................................................71
2.1 Management structure............................................................................................................. 71
2.2 Fit & proper.............................................................................................................................. 72
2.3 Internal control and independent control functions.................................................................73
2.4 Other requirements.................................................................................................................. 74
CHAPTER 8 – BANK PRUDENTIAL STANDARDS – FROM BASEL I TO BASEL III/IV..............75
PAGINA 2

, 1. WHY CAPITAL?.................................................................................................................................. 75
2. FORMS OF CAPITAL............................................................................................................................ 75
3. BASEL I............................................................................................................................................ 75
4. BASEL II........................................................................................................................................... 76
5. LESSONS LEARNT FROM GREAT FINANCIAL CRISIS BASEL III/IV............................................................77
6. FOLLOW-UP? TA EXPERTS.................................................................................................................. 79




PAGINA 3

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller josefienj03. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $8.35. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

64257 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 15 years now

Start selling

Recently viewed by you


$8.35  3x  sold
  • (0)
Add to cart
Added