4.4 The Financial sector Flashcards
Financial markets
where buyers and sellers can buy and trade a range of services or assets that are fundamentally monetary in nature.
why do financial markets exist?
- demand for services
- to allow speculation and financial gains
role of financial market
- to facilitate savings
- lend to businesses and individuals
- they facilitate the excange of goods and services
- they provide forward markets
- provide a market to equities
market failure in the financial sector - asymmetric information
- financial institutions often have more knowledge comapred to their customers - meaning they can sell them products that they do not need, are cheaper elsewhere or are riskier than the buyer realises.
- there can be asymmetric institutions between financial institutions and regualtors
market failure in the financial sector - externalities
- There are a number of costs placed on firms, individuals and the government that the
financial market does not pay.
market failure in the financial sector - moral hazard
- This is where individuals make decisions in their own best interests knowing there are potential risks
- it will occur where individual workers take adverse risk in order to increase their salary.
- they know the central bank is the lender of last resort and so will not allow them to fail
because of the impact it would have on the economy.
market failure in the financial sector - speculation and market bubbles
- all trading in financial markets is speculative and this leads to the creation of market
bubbles, where the price of a particular assets rises massively and then falls. - herding behaviour
- housing market is a bubble
herding behaviour
- They tend to occur because investors see the price of an asset is rising and so decide to purchase this asset as they believe the price will continue to rise and will profit them in the future.
- This leads to prices becoming excessively high and eventually enough investors decide that the price will fall, so they sell their assets and panic sets in, causing mass selling.
market failure in the financial sector - market rigging
- a group of individuals or institutions collude to fix prices or exchange information that will lead to gains for themselves - insider trading
- individuals or institutions affect the price of a commodity, currency or asset to benefit themselves
role of the central bank
- controls monetary policy
- acts as a banker to the government
- act as the bank to other banks
- regulate financial system
what can financial regulation include
- banning market rigging; preventing the sale of unsuitable products
maximum interest rates to - prevent consumer exploitation and prevent excessively risky lending - deposit insurance to protect consumer deposits and
increase stability - liquidity ratios, when banks are forced to hold a certain percentage of liquid assets.
three key bodies of financial regualtion
- FPC
- PRA
- FCA
FPC
- identifies and reduces system risk and supports government
economic policy (macroprudential)
PRA
- nsures competition, ensures consumers have access to services, minimises risk should a bank fail and ensures banks take responsible action.
(microprudential)
FCA
protects consumers, promotes competition and enhances the
integrity of the system by preventing market rigging.