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Published byAdam Douglas Modified over 9 years ago
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Major Financial Institutions
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Banks and Credit Unions Federal Reserve Types of Business: Sole Proprietorship, Partnerships, and Corporations Stock Market Labor Unions
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The major financial institutions have several purposes Help manage and invest our money Help conduct our monetary policy Help create wealth and innovation in order to grow the economy Help develop our labor policy
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What is money? Money refers to the medium of exchange used to conduct economic activity No gold standard, so our money is not fixed to specific value Money stock refers to supply of money in circulation Fiat money refers to hard money-think cash Most of the money stock is in the form of bank deposits Beyond financial assets, such as stocks, and property also represent wealth but must be converted or liquidated into money in order to use that wealth as a medium of exchange
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BANKSTHE FEDERAL RESERVE Place to store and access money in form of deposits More importantly, banks create wealth and enable the economy to grow Wealth is created when banks issue loans and receive interests of those loans Businesses and individuals receive loans for a variety of reasons but typically that loan is used to increase their wealth The interests allow banks to earn a profit and invest more in the economy The amount of loans banks lend is determined by two factors Reserve Requirement regulations on the amount of reserves that banks must hold against their deposits A percentage set by the Fed of their total deposits Judgment of Bankers Banks manipulate the money stock through lending The more they lend, the more money is in circulation, which causes inflation The less the lend the less money is in circulation, which cause deflation This is largely do to the reserve requirement Established after a banking panic in the early 1900’s it serves as the central bank of the nation It is the bank of the government Bank of banks Creates and manages our monetary policy Enforces regulation on banking industry The Fed has to balance the value of money by controlling long term inflation while maintaining short term goal of high employment and production output Interest Rate (discount rate) Rate they charge banks for loans Higher the rate the less banks will borrow, reducing the money stock; vice versa Reserve Requirement Amount banks must hold in the Federal Reserve Bank Higher the rate the more the have to hold, the less money stock Open Market Operations Buy or sell government bonds Buying bonds increases supply; vice versa
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SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP PARTNERSHIPS Only one owner Advantage: Pride in business All profit Disadvantage: All financial risk Difficult to raise capital More than one owner but traded publically Duties and liability defined contractually Advantage Spreads financial liability and risk Disadvantage Conflict over decisions Multiple Ownership through sale of stock Advantage Disperse risk and liability Raise financial capital easily Disadvantage Lose total control More vulnerable to market conditions Corporations
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LABOR UNIONS Labor and entrepreneurship have conflicted over control historically Labor has fought for the ability to collectively bargain for better pay, better wages, and better conditions, better benefits Today they have a lot if political influence
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Stocks in publicly traded companies are bought and sold at a stock market(also known as a stock exchange ). NYSE - New York Stock Exchange AMEX - American Stock Exchange NASDAQ - National Association of Securities Dealers A share a piece of ownership in a company Companies sell shares in order to quickly and cheaply gain financial capital, for loans cost the amount of interest
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Stock prices aren't fixed. From the second a stock is sold to the public, its price will rise and fall based on free market forces. It is these ever-shifting market forces that make short-term movements of the stock market so difficult to predict. And that is precisely the reason why short-term stock market investing is so risky. Prices rise and fall primarily because of changes in supply and demand. In a free market system, the price of any commodity will rise as demand for it increases, as long as there's a fixed amount of the commodity in circulation. The same is true for stocks. If there are a fixed number of shares in circulation, then the price of the stock will rise as more people want to buy it, and fall as more people want to sell it. Quarterly earnings reports also play a major role in the price of stocks; shortfalls in earning can drastically drop the price of a share The value, or price of a share, can create or destroy wealth because you buy it at one value and it becomes another value; if you sell it and it is worth more it is called a capital gain; if it is less a capital loss.
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