Welcome
Copyright © SirsiDynix. All rights reserved.
(Build horizon-8.0.1.5407)
Center Of Excellence for Jordanian Public University Library System (COE-JOPULS)
العربية (السعودية)
English (United States)
Log in
Help
Welcome
Jordanian Union Catalogue
360 Search
Search Libraries Catalogue
Simple
Advanced
Power
Community Resource
Search History
My List
My Account
Search
Options
Refine
Start Over
Show details
Hide details
Duplicate Items
Add to My List
Print
Sorts and Limits
Sorts:
None
Author
Publication Date
Publisher
Subject
Title
Title:
Money, banking, financial markets & institutions / Michael W. Brandl
Main Entry:
Brandl, Michael W., author
Publisher:
Cengage Learning,
Publication Date:
[2017]
©2017
Publication Place:
Boston, MA :
ISBN:
0538748575
9780538748575
Subject:
Finance -- Textbooks
Textbooks.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Introduction -- 1-1.Why Study This Stuff? -- 1-2.The Key Components -- 1-2a.Money and Financial Assets -- 1-2b.Financial Markets -- 1-2c.Central Banks -- 1-2d.Banking System and Financial Institutions -- ch. 2 Money, Money Supply, and Interest -- 2-1.The Concept Of Money -- 2-1a.Money Defined -- 2-1b.Functions of Money -- 2-2.Amount Of Money And Money Through Time -- 2-2a.The Amount of Money Matters -- 2-2b.Money Through Time -- 2-3.Money Supplies -- 2-3a.Monetary Aggregates -- 2-4.The Price Of Money: Interest Rates -- 2-4a.Time Value of Money -- 2-4b.Present Value -- 2-5.Conclusion -- ch. 3 Bonds And Loanable Funds -- 3-1.Bonds Defined And Explained -- 3-1a.Bonds Defined -- 3-2.Bond Prices And Yields -- 3-2a.Price of Bonds -- 3-3.Supply And Demand For Bonds -- 3-3a.The Supply of Bonds -- 3-3b.Change in the Supply of Bonds -- 3-3c.The Demand for Bonds -- 3-3d.Change in the Demand for Bonds -- 3-3e.Equilibrium in the Bond Market --
Note continued: 3-3f.New Equilibrium in the Bond Market -- 3-4.Supply And Demand For Loanable Funds -- 3-4a.The Supply of Loanable Funds -- 3-4b.The Demand for Loanable Funds -- 3-4c.New Equilibrium in the Loanable Funds Market -- 3-5.The Bond Market And Loanable Funds Market Compared -- 3-5a.The Fisher Effect -- 3-5b.Business Cycles and Confidence -- 3-6.Conclusion -- ch. 4 Interest Rates in More Detail -- 4-1.Interest Rates In More Detail And Default Risk -- 4-1a.Default Risk -- 4-1b.Calculating DRP -- 4-1c.Comparing Default Risk of Different Financial Instruments -- 4-2.Real Versus Nominal: The Role Of Inflation -- 4-2a.Why We Worry About Inflation -- 4-2b.Real Versus Nominal Interest Rates -- 4-2c.Ex Post Versus Ex Ante -- 4-2d.Example of Ex Ante Versus Ex Post -- 4-3.Taxes -- 4-3a.Before- and After-Tax Returns -- 4-3b.Municipal Bonds and Taxes -- 4-4.Yield Curves -- 4-4a.Yield Curve Graph -- 4-4b.Yield Curve Facts -- 4-4c.Pure Expectations Theory --
Note continued: 4-4d.Term Premium Theory -- 4-4e.Segmented Market Theory -- 4-5.Yield Curve Applications -- 4-5a.Inverted Yield Curve -- 4-5b.Steep Yield Curve -- 4-5c.Flat Yield Curve -- 4-6.Conclusion -- ch. 5 Financial Markets Through Time -- 5-1.US Financial Markets In The Early Twentieth Century -- 5-1a.The Early Twentieth Century -- 5-1b.The Panic of 1907 -- 5-2.Federal Reserve In The Early Days -- 5-2a.Early Structure of the Federal Reserve -- 5-2b.Financial Markets During the Great Depression -- 5-3.Financial Markets During World War II -- 5-3a.Preparing for War -- 5-3b.Funding the War Effort -- 5-3c.Controlling Inflation During the War -- 5-4.Postwar Boom: Home Mortgages, Consumerism, And European Unification -- 5-4a.Financial Markets Help Fund the "American Dream" -- 5-4b.Push for European Economic and Financial Integration -- 5-5.Effects Of Stagflation And The Reagan/Thatcher Revolution On Financial Markets -- 5-5a.The Rise of Stagflation --
Note continued: 5-5b.Paul Volcker -- 5-5c.Reagan and Thatcher -- 5-6.Savings & Loans And Junk Bonds -- 5-6a.The Savings & Loan Crisis -- 5-6b.Leveraged Buyouts and Junk Bonds -- 5-7.Conclusion -- ch. 6 Aggregate Supply And Aggregate Demand -- 6-1.Introduction And Keynes's Aggregate Demand -- 6-1a.Keynes's Challenge -- 6-1b.Keynes's Aggregate Demand -- 6-2.Shifts In Aggregate Demand -- 6-2a.Changes in Consumption -- 6-2b.Changes in Investment -- 6-2c.Changes in Government Spending -- 6-2d.Changes in Net Exports -- 6-2e.Changes in the Money Supply -- 6-2f.Keynes's Spending Multiplier -- 6-3.Aggregate Supply -- 6-3a.Keynes's Original Aggregate Supply Curve -- 6-3b.Keynesian Three-Part Aggregate Supply -- 6-4.The Rational Expectations Approach To AS/AD -- 6-4a.Changing Assumptions -- 6-4b.A Different Approach to Aggregate Supply -- 6-5.Business Cycles -- 6-5a.Bringing Together Aggregate Demand, SRAS, and LRAS -- 6-5b.Business Cycles: How Fast Do Gaps Close? --
Note continued: 6-6.Conclusion -- ch. 7 Banks And Money -- 7-1.Why Banks Exist: Asymmetric Information -- 7-1a.Asymmetric Information -- 7-2.Adverse Selection In Financial Markets -- 7-2a.Overcoming Adverse Selection in Financial Markets -- 7-3.Moral Hazard -- 7-3a.Moral Hazard in Corporate Governance -- 7-3b.Moral Hazard in Financial Markets -- 7-3c.Overcoming the Moral Hazard Problem in Financial Markets -- 7-4.What Banks Do -- 7-4a.Provide Liquidity -- 7-4b.Reduce Transaction Costs -- 7-4c.Block Lending -- 7-5.Simple Deposit Multiplier -- 7-5a.Day 1 at Anchor Bank -- 7-5b.Day 2 at Anchor Bank -- 7-6.What The Simple Deposit Multiplier Tells Us And Its Problems -- 7-6a.Banks Create and Destroy Money -- 7-6b.Banks Are Subject to Bank Runs -- 7-6c.If Banks Don't Lend -- 7-6d.If There Is a Lack of Banks -- 7-6e.Problems with the Simple Deposit Multiplier -- 7-7.Conclusion -- ch. 8 Central Banks -- 8-1.Evolution Of The Fed -- 8-1a.Evolution of the Federal Reserve --
Note continued: 8-2.Current Structure Of The Fed -- 8-2a.The Chair -- 8-2b.Board of Governors -- 8-2c.Federal Reserve District Banks -- 8-2d.Federal Open Market Committee -- 8-3.Responsibilities, Functions, And Balance Sheet Of The Fed -- 8-3a.Responsibilities of the Fed -- 8-3b.The Fed's Balance Sheet -- 8-4.Other Central Banks: Bank Of Japan And Bank Of England -- 8-4a.Bank of Japan -- 8-4b.Bank of England -- 8-5.Other Central Banks: European Central Bank And Bank Of Canada -- 8-5a.European Central Bank -- 8-5b.Bank of Canada -- 8-6.Conclusion -- ch. 9 Monetary Policy Tools -- 9-1.Overview -- 9-1a.Open Market Operations as a Monetary Tool -- 9-2.Monetary Policy Tools: Discount Window And Term Auction Facility -- 9-2a.When Traditional Policies Fail -- 9-3.Monetary Policy Tools: Emergency Lending, Quantitative Easing, And The Required Reserve Ratio -- 9-3a.Emergency Lending -- 9-3b.Quantitative Easing -- 9-3c.Required Reserve Ratio --
Note continued: 9-4.Problem With Tools: Money Demand -- 9-4a.Irving Fisher on Money Demand -- 9-4b.John Maynard Keynes on Money Demand -- 9-5.Problems With Tools: Liquidity Traps And Budget Deficits -- 9-5a.Liquidity Traps -- 9-5b.Government Budget Deficits and Monetary Policy -- 9-6.Tools Of The European Central Bank -- 9-6a.ECB's OMO: Tenders and Reserve Transactions -- 9-6b.ECB's Deposit Facility -- 9-6c.ECB's Minimum Reserve Requirements -- 9-7.Conclusion -- ch. 10 The Money Supply Process -- 10-1.The Money Supply Process -- 10-1a.Monetary Base -- 10-1b.Changes in the Monetary Base -- 10-2.More Changes In The Monetary Base And The Money Supply Multiplier -- 10-2a.How the Nonbank Public Affects the Monetary Base -- 10-2b.How the Treasury Affects the Monetary Base -- 10-2c.Deriving the Money Multiplier -- 10-3.Changes In Variables Of The Money Supply Multiplier And The Great Recession -- 10-3a.Change in the Currency Ratio -- 10-3b.Change in the Excess Reserves Ratio --
Note continued: 10-3c.Change in the Required Reserves Ratio -- 10-3d.Money Supply Process and Quantitative Easing -- 10-4.Conclusion -- ch. 11 Monetary Policy and Debates -- 11-1.Monetary Policy And Debates -- 11-1a.Goals of Monetary Policy -- 11-2.More Goals Of Monetary Policy -- 11-2a.High Employment Goal -- 11-26.Financial Market Stability: Interest Rates and Exchange Rates -- 11-3.More Debates Over Monetary Policy -- 11-3a.Central Bank Independence -- 11-3b.Instruments and Targets -- 11-4.Taylor Rule -- 11-4a.Taylor Rule and Inflation -- 11-4b.Taylor Rule and Output Gap -- 11-4c.Mankiw Rule: An Alternative to the Taylor Rule -- 11-5.Monetary Policy And The Crisis -- 11-6.Conclusion -- ch. 12 Bank Management -- 12-1.Bank Management: Balance Sheets -- 12-1a.Asset Transformation -- 12-1b.Bank Management: The Big Picture -- 12-2.Bank Deposits And Other Liabilities -- 12-2a.Transaction Deposits -- 12-2b.Nontransaction Accounts -- 12-2c.Other Liabilities --
Note continued: 12-3.Bank Loans And Other Assets -- 12-3a.Cash -- 12-3b.Securities -- 12-3c.Bank Loans -- 12-4.Off Balance Sheet Activities -- 12-4a.Commercial Letters of Credit -- 12-4b.Standby Letters of Credit -- 12-4c.Financial Derivatives: Currency and Interest Rate Forward, Futures, Options, and Swap Contracts -- 12-5.Conclusion -- ch. 13 Bank Risk Management and Performance -- 13-1.Credit Risk -- 13-1a.Credit Risk in General -- 13-1b.Credit Risk with Consumers -- 13-1c.Credit Risk with Business Borrowers -- 13-2.Interest Rate Risk -- 13-2a.Managing Interest Rate Risk -- 13-2b.Gap Analysis -- 13-2c.Duration Analysis -- 13-2d.Banks, Duration, and Interest Rate Risk -- 13-3.Liquidity Risk -- 13-3a.Sources of Liquidity -- 13-3b.Solutions to Lack of Liquidity -- 13-3c.How Much Liquidity Is Enough? -- 13-4.Other Risks -- 13-5.Bank Performance -- 13-5a.Income Statement -- 13-5b.Balance Sheet -- 13-6.Conclusion -- ch. 14 Banking Regulation -- 14-1.Bank Regulation --
Note continued: 14-1a.Banks Are Special -- 14-1b.Bank Regulation in the United States -- 14-2.Bank Balance Sheet And Bank Capital -- 14-2a.Balance Sheet Regulations -- 14-2b.Liabilities: Regulation Q -- 14-2c.Bank Capital -- 14-3.Bank Regulation: How It's Done -- 14-3a.CAMELS Ratings -- 14-3b.Dealing with a Failed Institution -- 14-3c.Too Big to Fail -- 14-4.Consumer Protection And Failures -- 14-4a.Truth in Lending Act of 1968 -- 14-4b.The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977 -- 14-4c.Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970 -- 14-4d.Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 -- 14-4e.Why Has the US Bank Regulatory System Failed? -- 14-5.Conclusion -- ch. 15 Money Markets -- 15-1.Money Market Characteristics And Purpose -- 15-1a.Money Market Defined -- 15-1b.Why Are There Money Markets? -- 15-1c.Money Market Participants -- 15-2.Money Market Instruments: Treasury Bills -- 15-2a.Treasury Bills in Detail --
Note continued: 15-3.Money Market Instruments Other Than Treasury Bills -- 15-3a.Federal Funds -- 15-3b.Commercial Paper -- 15-3c.Repurchase Agreements -- 15-3d.Negotiable Certificates of Deposit -- 15-3e.Banker's Acceptances -- 15-3f.Eurodollar Accounts -- 15-4.Conclusion -- ch. 16 Bond Markets -- 16-1.The Bond Market -- 16-1a.Government and Agency Bonds -- 16-2.Corporate Bond Market -- 16-2a.Characteristics of Corporate Bonds -- 16-3.Bond Rating Debate -- 16-3a.Evolution of Bond Ratings -- 16-3b.Bond-Rating System Today -- 16-4.Debt Market During The Crisis -- 16-4a.Flight to Quality -- 16-5.Conclusion -- ch. 17 The Stock Market and Efficiency -- 17-1.The Stock Market: Buying And Selling -- 17-1a.The Stock or Equity Market -- 17-2.Pricing Common Stock -- 17-3.Stock Market Overall: Performance, Indexes, And Regulation -- 17.3a.Overall Performance -- 17-3b.Stock Market Indexes -- 17-3c.Regulation -- 17-4.The Stock Market: Efficient Or Not? --
Note continued: 17-4a.Efficient Market Hypothesis -- 17-4b.Behavioral Finance -- 17-5.Conclusion -- ch. 18 The Mortgage Market -- 18-1.Mortgages And The Bigger Picture -- 18-1a.The Broad Mortgage Market -- 18-2.Basic Mortgage Concepts -- 18-2a.Down Payment -- 18-2b.Private Mortgage Insurance -- 18-2c.Fixed-Rate or Adjustable-Rate Mortgages -- 18-2d.Insured Mortgages -- 18-2e.Discount Points -- 18-2f.Mortgage Payments -- 18-2g.A 15-Year Versus a 30-Year Mortgage -- 18-2h.Taxes and Insurance -- 18-3.New Types Of Mortgages -- 18-3a.Zero-Down Home Mortgages -- 18-3b.Teaser-Rate ARMS -- 18-3c.Negative Amortization Home Mortgages -- 18-3d.No Documentation Home Mortgages -- 18-4.The Secondary Mortgage Market And Mbas -- 18-4a.Problems in Developing a Secondary Market for Mortgages -- 18-4b.Mortgage-Backed Assets -- 18-4c.Growth of the CMO and CDO Market -- 18-5.The Mortgage Market, Government Policies, And The Global Financial Crisis -- 18-6.Conclusion --
Note continued: ch. 19 Foreign Exchange Markets -- 19-1.Foreign Exchange Market Basics -- 19-1a.Exchange Rate Basics -- 19-2.Foreign Exchange Supply And Demand -- 19-2a.Foreign Exchange Market Participants -- 19-2b.Demand in the Foreign Exchange Market -- 19-2c.Supply in the Foreign Exchange Market -- 19-3.Foreign Exchange Equilibrium -- 19-3a.Movement to New Equilibrium -- 19-4.Foreign Exchange Regimes -- 19-4a.The Gold Standard -- 19-4b.Bretton Woods -- 19-5.Conclusion -- ch. 20 Global Financial Architecture -- 20-1.Modern Exchange Rate Regimes -- 20-1a.Foreign Exchange Market Intervention -- 20-1b.Crawling Peg -- 20-2.More Modern Exchange Rate Regimes -- 20-2a.Target Zone -- 20-2b.Currency Boards -- 20-2c.Managed Float -- 20-3.The Fixed Exchange Rate Dance -- 20-3a.The Stability Advantage -- 20-3b.Toward Monetary Integration -- 20-3c.Mundell's Optimal Currency Area -- 20-4.Creation Of The Sister Institutions -- 20-4a.Development and Role of the World Bank --
Note continued: 20-5.Sister Institutions: Imf -- 20-5a.The Development and Role of the IMF -- 20-5b.IMF Changes Focus -- 20-6.Controversies Over The Sisters -- 20-6a.Problems with the World Bank -- 20-6b.Problems with the IMF -- 20-6c.Problems the Sisters Share -- 20-7.Conclusion -- ch. 21 Thrifts and Finance Companies -- 21-1.Thrifts -- 21-1a.Savings Banks -- 21-1b.Savings & Loans -- 21-1c.Evolution of Recent Thrifts -- 21-2.Savings & Loan Crisis And Today -- 21-2a.DIDMCA and the Rise of NOW Accounts -- 21-2b.DIDMCA Is Not Enough -- 21-2c.Misaligned Incentives -- 21-2d.Attempting Reforms -- 21-2e.Thrifts Today -- 21-3.Credit Unions -- 21-3a.Credit Union History -- 21-3b.Credit Union Controversies -- 21-4.Finance Companies -- 21-4a.Types of Finance Companies: Consumer Finance Companies -- 21-4b.Types of Finance Companies: Business Finance Companies -- 21-4c.Types of Finance Companies: Ownership -- 21-4d.Financing the Finance Companies --
Note continued: 21-4e.Finance Company Controversies -- 21-5.Conclusion -- ch. 22 Insurance and Pensions -- 22-1.Insurance And Pensions -- 22-1a.The Idea of Insurance -- 22-1b.Structure of Insurance Companies -- 22-1c.Insurance Regulation -- 22-2.Life Insurance -- 22-2a.Basics of Life Insurance -- 22-2b.Life Insurance Companies -- 22-3.Other Insurance -- 22-3a.Health Insurance -- 22-3b.Property and Casualty Insurance -- 22-3c.Credit Default Swaps -- 22-4.Pensions -- 22-4a.Defined Benefit Plans -- 22-4b.Defined Contribution Plans -- 22-4c.Public Pensions -- 22-5.Conclusion -- ch. 23 Mutual Funds -- 23-1.Mutual Funds Overview -- 23-1a.Mutual Fund Growth -- 23-1b.Mutual Fund Regulation -- 23-1c.Open-End Mutual Funds -- 23-2.Types Of Mutual Funds -- 23-2a.Equity Funds -- 23-2b.Bond Funds -- 23-2c.Hybrid Funds -- 23-2d.Money Market Mutual Funds -- 23-3.Mutual Fund Fees -- 23-3a.Types of Mutual Fund Fees & Controversies -- 23-4.Other Types Of Funds -- 23-4a.Close-Ended Funds --
Note continued: 23-4b.Exchange-Traded Funds -- 23-4c.Hedge Funds -- 23-4d.Real Estate Investment Trusts -- 23-5.Conclusion -- ch. 24 Investment Banks and Private Equity -- 24-1.Investment Banks And Private Equity Overview -- 24-1a.Investment Banks -- 24-1b.What Investment Banks Do -- 24-2.Investment Bank Controversies -- 24-3.Private Equity -- 24-3a.It's Private, Not Public -- 24-3b.Private Equity Is Long-Term and Risky -- 24-3c.Private Equity Structure -- 24-3d.Private Equity Payment Streams -- 24-4.Private Equity Controversies -- 24-4a.Capital Gains versus Income Tax Controversy -- 24-4b.Dumb Money versus Smart Money -- 24-4c.Job-Destroying Vulture Capitalism -- 24-5.Conclusion
Cover Image:
Results 1 - 2 of 2
Agency:
Collection:
Call No.:
Item Type:
Status:
Copy:
Barcode:
Media Type:
German
General
HG101 .B73 2017
Normal Circulation
Available
1
GJU033001
Book
German
General
HG101 .B73 2017
Normal Circulation
Available
2
GJU033000
Book