Transcript for:
Understanding Banks as Financial Intermediaries

Some people want to save and invest, others want to borrow. Sometimes these people, they interact directly. Say you borrow money from your parents. But typically, savers and borrowers, they don't even know one another. So a variety of institutions act as bridges to link savers to borrowers. In this video, we'll cover banks. Banks attract savings from many different depositors by paying interest on deposits. And the banks make loans for which they charge interest. Banks earn a profit by charging a higher interest rate on the money that they lend than they pay on the deposits that they receive. They earn this money by being a valuable middleman. Not only do the banks link savers with borrowers, they evaluate the quality of the borrowers so that the loans are productive. Imagine that Howard Schultz came looking for a loan of a million dollars to buy a coffee company called Starbucks and trade it for a million dollars. transform it into something new. Now maybe you're rich, and you could afford to lend him all the money. But if his venture failed and he couldn't repay the loan, it's gonna be a pretty big hit on your wallet. So instead, perhaps you and 99 of your friends decide to share the risk, and you each lend him $10,000. Well, it would be extremely time-consuming and costly for all 100 of you to investigate the Starbucks business plan and decide whether to lend your $10,000. It would make more sense to appoint a single person to do the due diligence to evaluate the business on behalf of everyone. And maybe you would appoint someone who already was an expert in, say, the market for coffee. That's exactly what a bank does. It coordinates the lending of everyone's deposits. And a bank has specialized people and systems to evaluate loan applications. The bank scans the landscape, looking for the most qualified businesses and individuals to receive loans. By pooling the savings of many different individuals, the bank can make large loans and also spread the risk across a whole portfolio of loans. That means that even if a few loans go bad, it won't bankrupt the bank. So instead of one person lending Schultz a million dollars, it's more like 100,000 people lending Schultz 10 bucks each, and also lending a similar amount... to thousands of other entrepreneurs. Notice that since deposits are being lent out, that means that your savings doesn't just sit in the vault waiting for the day that you want to make a withdrawal. Bank managers pay careful attention to reserve enough cash on hand to fund those depositors that do come calling, while lending out the rest of the deposits to make productive loans. The cash that banks keep on hand, it's called reserves. Now as we'll see in a later video, things can fall apart pretty quickly if banks don't have enough reserves to pay back depositors when they do come calling. So let's sum up. Banks provide valuable middleman services to make our lives simpler. We deposit money in the bank and we earn interest without having to worry very much about risk, without having to give much thought to how our money is going to be used. savings are flowing into productive loans and helping to boost economic growth throughout the economy. Next up, we'll turn to another financial intermediary, stock markets, and we'll explain how stock markets turn savings into investment. You can also visit MRUniversity.com to see our entire library of videos and resources.