Unit 3: Commercial Bank Sources of Funds: 1. Transaction Deposits
Unit 3: Commercial Bank Sources of Funds: 1. Transaction Deposits
Unit 3: Commercial Bank Sources of Funds: 1. Transaction Deposits
3.1. INTRODUCTION
Commercial banks represent the most important financial intermediary when measured by total
assets. Like other financial intermediaries, they perform a critical function of facilitating the flow
A. Deposit Accounts
1. Transaction Deposits
2. Savings Deposits
3. Time Deposits
B. Borrowed funds
3. Repurchase Agreements
4. Eurodollar Borrowings
2. Bank Capital
A. DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS
1. Transaction Deposits
The demand deposit account, or checking account, is offered to customers who desire to write
checks against their account. The conventional type of demand deposit account requires a small
minimum, balance and pays no interest. From the bank’s perspective, demand deposit accounts
are classified as transaction accounts that provide source of funds that can be used until
Another type of transaction deposit is the negotiable order of withdrawal (NOW) account, which
provides checking services as well as interest. As of 1981, commercial banks and other
depository institutions throughout the entire country were given the authority to offer them.
Because NOW accounts at most financial institutions require a minimum balance beyond what
some consumers are willing to maintain in a transaction account, the traditional demand deposit
2. Savings Deposits
The traditional savings account is the passbook savings account, which does not permit check
writing. Until 1986, Regulation Q restricted the interest rate banks could offer on passbook
savings with the intent of preventing excessive competition that could cause bank failures.
Actually, the ceilings prevented commercial banks from competing for funds during periods of
higher interest rates. In 1986, Regulation Q was eliminated. The passbook savings account
continues to attract savers with a small amount of funds, as it often has no required minimum
balance. Although it legally requires a 30-day written notice by customers to with draw funds,
most banks will allow withdrawals from these accounts on a moment’s notice.
Another savings account is the automatic transfer service (ATS) account, created in November
transfers funds to their checking account when checks are written. Only the amount of funds
needed is transferred to the checking account. Thus, the ATS provides interest and check-writing
ability to customers. Some ATS accounts were eliminated when the NOW accounts were
established.
3. Time Deposits
A common type of time deposit known as a retail certificate of deposit (or retail CD) requires a
specified minimum amount of funds to be deposited for a specified period of time. Banks offer a
wide variety of CDs to satisfy depositors’ needs. Annualized interest rates offered on CDs vary
among banks, and even among maturity types within a single bank. An organized secondary
market for retail CDs does not exist. Depositors must leave their funds in the bank until the
specified maturity or they will normally forgo a portion of their interest as a penalty.
The interest rates on retail CDs have historically been fixed. However, more exotic retail CDs
has been offered in recent years. There are bull-market CDs that reward depositors if the market
performs well and bear-market CDs that reward depositors if the market performs well and bear-
market CDs that reward depositors if the market performs poorly. These new types of retail CDs
typically have a minimum deposit insurance (assuming that the depository institution of concern
is insured).
Another type of time deposit is the negotiable CD (NCD), offered by some large banks to
corporations. NCDs are similar to retail CDs in that they require a specified maturity date and a
minimum deposit requirement is $100,000 a secondary market for NCDs does exist.
The level of large time deposits is much more volatile than that of small time deposits, because
investors with large sums of money frequently shift their funds to wherever they can earn higher
rates. Small investors do not have as many options as large investors and are less likely to shift in
The deposit size distribution among banks is shown in Exhibit 16.1. Notice that 12.4 percent of
all deposits are in banks that have less than $100 million in deposits. At the other extreme, 14.6
percent of all deposits are in banks that have more than $50 billion in deposits. The remaining 73
percent of deposits are in banks that have deposits ranging from $100 million to more than $50
billion.
Germaine Act of December 1982. It differs from conventional time deposits in that it does not
specify a maturity. MMDAs are more liquid than retail CDs from the depositor’s point of view.
Because banks would prefer to know how long they will have use of a depositor’s funds, they
normally pay a higher interest rate on CDs. MMDAs differ from NOW accounts in that they
have limited check-writing ability (they allow only a limited number of transactions per month ),
The remaining sources of funds to be described are of a no depository nature. Such sources are
necessary when a bank temporarily needs more funds than are being deposited. Some banks use
B. BORROWED FUNDS
1. Federal Funds Purchased
The federal funds market allows depository institutions to accommodate the short-term liquidity
needs of other financial institutions. Federal funds purchased (or borrowed) represent a liability
to the borrowing bank and an asset to the lending bank that sells them. Loans in the federal funds
market are typically for one to seven days. Such loans can be rolled over so that a series of one-
day loans could take place. Yet, the intent of federal funds transactions is to correct short-term
fund imbalances experienced by banks. A bank may act as a lender of federal funds on one day
and as a borrower shortly thereafter, as its fund balance changes on daily basis.
The interest rate charged in the federal funds market is called the federal funds rate. Like other
market interest rates, it moves in reaction to changes in the demand or the supply or both. If
many banks have excess funds and few banks are short of funds, the federal funds relative to a
small supply of excess funds available at other banks will result in a higher federal funds rate.
Whatever rate ket, although a financially troubled bank may have to pay a higher rate to obtain
federal funds (to compensate for its higher risk). The federal funds rate is quoted in multiples of
one-sixteenth, on an annualized basis (using a 360-day year). Exhibit 16.2 shows that the federal
fund rate is generally between 25 percent and 1.00 percent above the treasury bill rate. The
The federal funds market is typically most active on Wednesday, because it is the final day of
each particular settlement period for which each bank must maintain a specified volume of
reserves required by the Fed. Those banks that were short of required reserves on the average
over the period must compensate with additional required reserves before the settlement period
ends. Large banks frequently need temporary funds and therefore are common borrowers in the
U.S. central bank. Along with other bank regulators, the Federal Reserve district banks regulate
certain activities of banks yet, they will also provide short-term loans to banks (as well as to
some other depository institutions). This form of borrowing by banks is often referred to as
borrowing at the discount window. The interest rate charged on these loans is known as the
discount rate.
Loans from the discount window are short term, commonly from one day to a few weeks. Banks
that wish to borrow at the discount window must first be approved by the Fed before a loan is
granted. This is intended to make sure that the bank’s need for funds is justified. Like the federal
funds market, the discount window is mainly used to resolve a temporary shortage of funds. If a
bank needed more permanent sources of funds, it would develop a strategy to increase its level of
deposits.
When a bank needs temporary funds, it must decide whether borrowing through the discount
window is more feasible than alternative no depository sources of funds, such as the federal
funds market. The federal funds rate is more volatile than the discount rate because it is market
determined, as it adjusts to demand and supply conditions on a daily basis. Conversely, the
discount rate is set by the Federal Reserve and adjusted only periodically to keep it in line with
Banks commonly borrow in the federal funds market rather than through the discount window,
even though the federal funds rate typically exceeds the discount rate. This is because the Fed
offers the discount window as a source of funds for banks that experience unanticipated
shortages of reserves. If a bank frequently borrows to offset reserve shortages, these shortages
should have been anticipated. Such frequent borrowing implies that the commercial bank has a
permanent rather than a temporary need for funds and should therefore satisfy this need with
rater than a temporary need for funds and should therefore satisfy this need with a more
permanent source of funds. The Fed may disapprove of continuous borrowing by a bank unless
there were extenuating circumstances, such as if the bank was experiencing financial problems
and could not obtain temporary financing from other financial institution.
3. Repurchase Agreements
A repurchase agreement (repo) represents the sale of securities by one party to another with an
agreement to repurchase the securities at a specified date and price. Banks often use a repo as a
source of funds when they expect to need funds for just a few days. They would simply sell some
of their government securities (such as their Treasury bills) to a corporation with a temporary
excess of funds and buy those securities back shortly thereafter. The government securities
involved in the repo transaction serve as collateral for the corporation providing funds to the
bank.
Repurchase agreement transactions occur through a telecommunications network connecting
large banks, other corporations, government securities dealers, and federal funds (wish to sell
and later repurchase their securities) with those who have excess funds (are willing to purchase
securities now and sell them back on a specified date.) transactions are typically in blocks of $1
million. Like the federal funds rate, the yield on repurchase agreements is quoted in multiples of
one-sixteenth on an annualized basis (using a 360-day year). The yield on repurchase agreements
is slightly less than the federal funds rate at any given point in time, because the funds loaned out
4. Eurodollar Borrowings
If a U.S. bank is in need of short-term funds, it may borrow dollars from those banks outside the
United States that accept dollar-denominated deposits, or Eurodollars. Some of these so-called
Euro banks are foreign banks or foreign branches of U.S. banks that participate in the Eurodollar
market by accepting large short-term deposits and making short-term loans in dollars. Because
U.S. dollars are widely used as an international medium of exchange, the Eurodollar market is
very active. Some U.S. banks commonly obtain short-term funds from Euro banks.
These assets often have an expected life of 20 years or more and are usually financed with long-
term sources of funds, such as through the issuance of bonds. Common purchasers of such bonds
are households and various financial institutions, including life insurance companies and pension
funds. Banks do not finance with bonds as much as most other corporations, because their fixed
assets are less than those of corporations that use industrial equipment and machinery for
Bank capital generally represents funds attained through the issuance of stock or through
retaining earnings. Either form has no obligation to pay out funds in the future. This
distinguishes bank capital from all the other bank sources of funds that represent a future
obligation by the bank to pay out funds. Bank capital as defined here represents the equity or-net
worth of the bank. Capital can be classified into primary or secondary types. Primary capital
results from issuing common or preferred stock or retaining earnings, while secondary capital
A bank’s capital must be sufficient to absorb operating losses in the event that expenses or losses
have exceeded revenues, regardless of the reason for the losses. Although long-term bonds are
sometimes considered as secondary capital, they are a liability to the bank and therefore do not
When banks issue new stock, they dilute the ownership of the bank because the proportion of the
bank owned by existing shareholders decreases. In addition, the bank’s reported earnings per
share are reduced when additional shares of stock are issued, unless earnings increase by a
greater proportion than the increase in outstanding shares. For these reasons, banks generally
Bank regulators are concerned that banks may maintain a lower level of capital than they should
and have therefore imposed capital requirements on them. Because capital can absorb losses, a
higher level of capital is thought to enhance the bank’s safety and many increase the public’s
confidence in the banking system. In 1981 regulators imposed a minimum primary capital
requirement of 5.5 % of total assets and a minimum total capital requirement of 6 percent of total
assets. Because of regulatory pressure, banks have increased their capital ratios in recent years.
In 1988, regulators imposed risk-based new capital requirements that were completely phased in
by 1992, in which the required level of capital for each bank was dependent on its risk. Assets
with low risk were assigned relatively low weights, while assets with high risk were assigned
high weights. The capital level was set as a percentage of the risk-weighted assets. Therefore,
riskier banks were subject to higher capital requirements. The same risk-based capital guidelines
were imposed in several industrialized countries. Additional details are provided in the following
chapter.