financial markets

Cards (209)

  • Where does the money that banks lend come from?
    From savers who spend less than their income
  • What products do financial institutions create for savers and borrowers?
    • For savers: bank accounts, pension funds
    • For borrowers: loans, mortgages
  • What are personal loans?
    Loans to individuals over a small number of years
  • What distinguishes secured loans from unsecured loans?
    Secured loans are backed by an asset
  • What happens if a borrower defaults on a secured loan?
    The bank can sell the asset to recover debt
  • What is an example of a secured loan?
    A mortgage on a house
  • What are unsecured loans?
    Loans with no asset backing them
  • What is a mortgage?
    A loan used to buy property
  • How do credit cards function?
    They allow spending up to a borrowing limit
  • What are pay-day loans?
    Short-term, unsecured loans for emergencies
  • What is a significant risk associated with pay-day loans?
    Interest rates can exceed 1000% per year
  • What is an overdraft?
    A pre-agreed loan from the bank
  • What distinguishes planned overdrafts from unplanned overdrafts?
    Planned overdrafts have an agreement with the bank
  • What are the two main forms of finance for firms?
    Debt finance and equity finance
  • What is debt finance?
    Borrowing money that must be repaid with interest
  • What is equity finance?
    Issuing shares in return for a share of profits
  • Why are financial institutions necessary?
    They facilitate borrowing and lending activities
  • How do banks reduce information failure in lending?
    By gathering borrower information before matching loans
  • How do banks aid economic growth?
    By providing easy payment methods for purchases
  • What types of financial markets should you know about?
    Money markets, capital markets, foreign exchange markets
  • What do money markets provide?
    Short-term finance for various entities
  • What are capital markets used for?
    Medium to long-term finance
  • What is the primary capital market?
    Market for new shares and bonds
  • What is the secondary capital market?
    Market where second-hand assets are traded
  • What is the foreign exchange market?
    Market that trades currency
  • What is the spot market?
    Market for immediate transactions
  • What is the forward market?
    Market for future transactions at an agreed time
  • How do forward markets help firms?
    They reduce exchange rate risk for transactions
  • What are bonds?
    A form of borrowing through promises to repay
  • What does it mean to be a bondholder?
    You own a bond and expect repayment
  • What can bondholders do with their bonds?
    They can sell them in secondary markets
  • What is a yield in relation to bonds?
    A return on investment similar to interest
  • How do you calculate the yield of a bond?
    Yield % = [Coupon / Market Price] x100
  • What is the yield percentage if the coupon payment is £7 and the market price is £80?
    8.75%
  • What happens when a bond matures?
    The bondholder is repaid the nominal value
  • What have we learned about the financial sector?
    • Purpose of banks
    • Financial products
    • Financial markets
    • Bonds
  • What are the primary roles of commercial banks?
    Accept savings, lend, move funds, allow payments
  • What is the role of commercial banks as financial intermediaries?
    They move funds from lenders to borrowers
  • What additional products do commercial banks offer?
    Insurance and financial advice products
  • What is retail banking?
    Providing banking services to individuals and small firms