Products and Services – Retail Banking
Retail banking encompasses a wide variety of products and services, including:
- Checking
and savings accounts – customers are generally charged a monthly fee for
checking accounts; savings accounts offer slightly higher interest rates
than checking accounts but generally cannot have checks written on them.
- Certificates
of Deposit and Guaranteed
Investment Certificates (in Canada) – these are the most popular
investment products with conservative investors, and an important funding
source for banks since the funds in these products are available to them
for defined periods of time.
- Mortgages on
residential and investment properties – because of their size, mortgages
account for both a substantial part of retail banking profits, as well as
the biggest chunk of a bank’s exposure to its retail client base.
- Automobile
financing – banks offer loans for new and used vehicles, as well as
refinancing for existing car loans.
- Credit
cards – the high interest rates charged on most credit cards makes this a
lucrative source of interest income and fees for banks.
- Lines of
credit and personal credit products – Home
equity lines of credit (HELOC) have diminished significantly in their
importance as a profit center for banks after the housing collapse in the
U.S. and subsequent tightening of mortgage lending standards.
- Foreign
currency and remittance services – the increase in cross-border
banking transactions by retail clients, and the higher spreads on
currencies paid by them, makes these services a profitable offering for
retail banking.
Retail banking clients may also be offered the
following services, generally through another division or affiliate of the
bank:
- Stock
brokerage (discount and full-service)
- Insurance
- Wealth
management
- Private
banking
The level of personalized retail banking services
offered to a client depends on his or her income level and the extent of the
individual’s dealings with the bank. While a client of modest means would
generally be served by a teller or customer service representative, a high net
worth individual who has an extensive relationship with the bank would
typically have his or her banking requirements handled by an account manager or
private banker.
The Corporate Banking is
banking
services for large companies.
Usually,
the
definition of the business of banking for the purposes of corporate banking,
directed at large business
entities.
Banks often maintain specific divisions for
handling
the needs
of corporate clients,
separate from
consumer or retail banking activities for individual accounts. This type of banking is designed to
deal with major financial transactions that do not generally a transaction for
retail or consumer or such kind of banking services.
Products and Services – Corporate Banking
The corporate banking segment of banks typically serves a diverse range of
clients, ranging from small to mid-sized local businesses with a few millions
in revenues to large conglomerates with billions in sales and offices across
the country. Commercial banks offer the following products and services to
corporations and other financial institutions:
- Loans and
other credit products – this is typically the biggest area of business
within corporate banking, and as noted earlier, one of the biggest sources
of profit and risk for a bank.
- Treasury
and cash management services – used by companies for managing their working
capital and currency conversion requirements.
- Equipment
lending – commercial banks structure customized loans and leases for a
range of equipment used by companies in diverse sectors such as
manufacturing, transportation and information technology.
- Commercial
real estate – services offered by banks in this area include real asset
analysis, portfolio evaluation, debt and equity structuring.
- Trade
finance – involves letters of credit, bill collection, and factoring.
- Employer
services – services such as payroll and group retirement plans are
typically offered by specialized affiliates of a bank.
Importance to the Economy
Retail and commercial banks are of critical importance to the domestic and
global economies. Retail banking brings in the customer deposits that largely
enable banks to make loans to their retail and business customers. Commercial
banks, for their part, make the loans that enable businesses to grow and hire
people, contributing to expansion of the economy.
For proof of the importance of banks to the economy, one needs to look no
further than the global
credit crisis of 2007-08. The crisis had its roots in the U.S. housing bubble
and the excessive exposure of banks and financial institutions around the world
to derivatives and securities based on U.S. home prices. As iconic American
investment banks and institutions either declared bankruptcy (Lehman Brothers)
or were on the verge of it (Bear Stearns, AIG, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac), banks
grew increasingly reluctant to lend money, either to their counterparts or to
companies. This resulted in a near-total freeze in the global banking and
lending mechanism, causing the most severe recession
worldwide since the 1930s’ Depression. This
near-death experience for the global economy led to renewed regulatory focus on
the largest banks that are deemed “too big to fail” because of their importance
to the worldwide financial system.