Results 261 to 270 of about 56,045 (311)

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.
openaire   +1 more source

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
openaire   +2 more sources

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
openaire   +2 more sources

Commercial banking in the United States: Japanese Commercial banks' presence

Journal of Asian Economics, 1993
Abstract Presence of foreign commercial banks, especially the Japanese Commercial banks, in the United States has become the subject of much attention. As of December 1990, assets owned by branches of foreign banks amount to $626.4 billion of which Japanese bank branches hold a 59.4 percent share and of the $154.5 billion worth of assets held by ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Banking (III) — Commercial Banking

1993
Commercial banks are essentially banks which are in the classic banking business of accepting deposits and making loans. Banks like Citibank, Chase Manhattan, Dai Ichi Kangyo, Barclays and National Westminster are all commercial banks. Other banks, like Deutsche and Union Bank of Switzerland would say that they were ‘universal’ banks: that is, they ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Commercial Banks

1969
Publisher Summary This chapter provides an overview of commercial banks. There many books that contain information on the activities of commercial banks within their more general scope of describing all types of banks and banking. Because of their inclusive nature they were considered under the earlier Dewey Decimal Classification heading.
openaire   +2 more sources

City Commercial Banks

2007
City commercial banks (CCBs) are local financial institutions that were set up in the reform era under the aegis of local governments. Most of them are headquartered in urban centres and their development is clearly linked to their narrow scope and environments.
openaire   +2 more sources

Deposit Composition and Commercial Bank Earnings [PDF]

open access: possibleThe Journal of Finance, 1971
THE PURPOSE of this study is to provide quantitative estimates of the marginal net rates of return which commercial banks realize on their demand deposits, time deposits, and capital stock. To estimate these rates of return, multiple regression analysis is applied to balance sheet data on earnings, costs, deposits, and capital.
openaire   +1 more source

The Demand for Reserves by Commercial Banks

Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1977
Relatively little effort has been devoted so far to lay the microeconomic foundations of the behavior of commercial banks. The omission is unjustifsed in view of the role of commercial banks in the money creation process. The present enquiry constitutes an attempt to further the understanding of the behavior of commercial banks with respect to their ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Commercial Bank Instability

2011
In early 2001, a colleague of mine expressed concern that the deregulation of banking witnessed in the previous ten years would make the U.S. vulnerable to another experience similar to the Great Depression. Between 1929 and 1933, close to 10,000 commercial banks failed, costing depositors millions of dollars.
openaire   +2 more sources

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy