Results 301 to 310 of about 1,258,530 (358)
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Consequences of Deregulation for Commercial Banking

The Journal of Finance, 1984
ABSTRACTIn recent years, many of the restrictions on banking activities adopted following the banking collapse of the 1930s have been eroded by improvements in technology and high interest rates, which led to increasing direct competition from unregulated institutions.
Kaufman, George G   +2 more
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Portfolio Diversification at Commercial Banks

The Journal of Finance, 1979
IN PERFECT CAPITAL MARKETS, financial intermediaries lack a raison d"etre. Traditionally, intermediaries have been portrayed solely as issuers of indirect debt who develop and exploit a wedge between equilibrium borrowing and lending rates.' But this explanation ignores the fact that nonmutual depository institutions intermediate for their shareholders,
Kane, Edward J, Buser, Stephen A
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Commercial Banking in the Sixties

The Journal of Finance, 1961
IF THE TRENDS EMERGING in the late 1950's and in 1960 are not reversed by marked changes in economic conditions or tax and regulatory policy, the commercial banks will not be able to play as important a role in financing the 1960's as they have done in years past.
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Commercial-Bank Uniqueness

Journal of Political Economy, 1970
Since the challenge to monetary theory by Gurley and Shaw in 1955, the " uniqueness" of commercial banks has been a live issue. In a recent contribution to the debate in this Journal, Guttentag and Lindsay aim to provide "the rationale that has been sought by defenders of the traditional view that commercial banks are 'unique' ever since the Gurley ...
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The Uniqueness of Commercial Banks

Journal of Political Economy, 1968
a) Fluctuations in bank reserve ratios have a significantly greater impact on total intermediary credit than comparable, or even substantially larger, fluctuations in ratios of non-bank intermediaries. b) This greater potential impact of banks on credit is most pronounced in credit expansions, but it is also evident in credit contractions.
Jack M. Guttentag, Robert Lindsay
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Commercial Banks and Savings Banks [PDF]

open access: possible, 2019
Both commercial banks and savings & loans provide banking and loan products to consumers. Commercial banks are classified as: retail banks and wholesale banks. Commercial banks are intermediaries between the central bank (FED) and the ultimate money borrowers.
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THE CAPITAL DECISION IN COMMERCIAL BANKS

The Journal of Finance, 1974
THIS PAPER presents a theoretical analysis of the economic role of capital from the standpoint of the individual commercial bank. In this analysis, the word "capital" is the label given to long-term financial claims issued by banks, and will not be used to refer to real (physical) assets. Major purposes of the paper are to clarify the functions of bank
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