What is the primary purpose of financial innovations?
Distributing money from those have a surplus of funds to those who need funds.
Channeling of funds from savers to borrowers
What are the differences between primary and secondary markets?
What are the two types of secondary markets?
What is the money market?
Financial market in which only short-term debt instruments (generally those with one year or less) are traded.
Less risky due to the shorter term.
What is the capital market?
The market in which longer-term debt instruments (+1 year) are traded.
More risky due to the longer term.
What are the four main money market interest rates?
What is U.S. Treasury bills?
Short-term debt instruments: 1, 3 or 6 months.
The most safe you can own.
What is a negotiable bank certificate of deposits?
CDs.
Debt instrument sold by a bank to depositors that pay annual interest of a given amount and at maturity pays back the original purchase price.
What is a commercial paper?
Short-term debt instrument issued by large banks and well-known corporations.
What is a repurchase agreement?
Short-term loans (usually with maturity in less than two weeks) for which Treasury Bills serve as collateral.
What are Federal funds?
Typically overnight loans between banks of their deposits at the Federal Reserve.
What are the four main capital market interest rates?
What are mortgage-backed securities?
Bond-like debt instruments backed by a bundle of individual mortgages (like CDOs)
What are corporate bonds?
Long-term bonds issued by corporations with strong credit ratings.
What is adverse selection?
The problem created by asymmetric information BEFORE the transaction occurs.
In financial markets, adverse selection occurs when the potential borrowers who are the most likely to produce an undesirable (adverse) outcome are the ones who most actively seek out a loan and are thus most likely to be selected.
What is moral hazard?
The problem created by asymmetric information AFTER the transaction occurs.
It is the risk (hazard) that the borrower might engage in activities that are undesirable (immoral) from the lender’s point of view, because they make it less likely that the loan will be paid back.
What are the three main categories of financial intermediaries?
What does depository institutions consist of?
MAIN FOCUS IN THE COURSE
What does contractual savings institutions consist of?
What does investment intermediaries consist of?
What are the six types of regulations to ensure soundness of the financial intermediaries?
What is a barter system?
A system where you lack a common value / currency ⇒ Money
What is money?
What is DCW?
The double coincidence of wants important in barter systems wherefore the transaction costs are much larger than in systems with money.