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Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

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Page 1: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial Services

1

UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch

National Accounts Section

UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Page 2: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

1. Definition of financial corporations

2. Treatment of own funds

3. Treatment of SPE and customers

4. Identifying financial services

5. Treatment of holding gains and losses

6. Choice of the reference rate

7. Treatment of market makers

Page 3: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Background

Developments in the financial markets have changed the way financial corporations operate

Is the 1993 SNA recommendation for calculating output of financial corporation services still relevant?

Page 4: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Current SNA –FISIM

The total value of FISIM is measured in the System as

the total property income receivable by financial

intermediaries minus their total interest payable,

excluding the value of any property income receivable from the investment of their own funds, as such income does not arise from financial intermediation

(par 6.125) 

Page 5: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Current SNA - allocation

When the output is allocated among different users, one way is to base the allocation on the difference between the actual rates of interest payable and receivable and a "reference" rate of interest.  

    (a)  For those to whom the intermediaries lend funds: the difference between the interest actually charged on loans, etc. and the interest based on a reference rate;

    (b)  For those from whom the intermediaries borrow funds: the difference between the interest based on the reference rate and the interest they actually receive.

Page 6: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Current SNA - allocation

The reference rate to be used represents the pure cost of borrowing…

Alternatively, allocation in proportion to the total financial assets and liabilities …, or other relevant financial variables.

Some flexibility is accepted in the way in which the output is allocated.  Some countries preferred to continue to use the convention in the 1968 SNA by recording output of FISIM to intermediate consumption of a nominal industry.  

Page 7: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

What has changed?

Risk managementand

Liquidity transformation

Page 8: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

SNA93 focuses on activities of the financial corporations

Financial corporations are defined as: “…all resident corporations or quasi-

corporations principally engaged in financial intermediation or in auxiliary financial activities which are closely related to financial intermediation” (Paragraph 4.77).

Page 9: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

• Definition mainly related to activity (financial intermediation)

• Key elements: “Risk taking’’ and “repackaging’’

• No services or composition of assets and liabilities are specified

• Ambiguity about the role of own funds

Definition of financial corporationsSNA 93 perspective

Page 10: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial corporations consist of all resident

corporations and quasi corporations that are principally

engaged in providing financial services including

insurance and pension funding services to other

institutional units. The production of financial services is

the result of financial intermediation, risk management,

liquidity transformation and/or auxiliary financial

activities.

Definition of financial corporations

Page 11: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial intermediation, financial risk management

and liquidity transformation are productive activities in

which an institutional unit incurs financial liabilities for

the purpose of acquiring mainly financial assets.

Corporations engaged in these activities obtain funds

by taking deposits and issuing bills, bonds or other

securities. They use these as well as own funds to

acquire mainly financial assets by making advances or

loans to others and by purchasing bills, bonds, or other

securities.

Definition of financial corporations

Page 12: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial services provided include

monitoring services, convenience

services, liquidity provision services,

risk assumption services,

underwriting services and trading

services.

Definition of financial corporations

Page 13: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Definition of financial corporations

Auxiliary financial activities facilitate the provision of financial services

Financial auxiliaries – the units that are primarily engaged in auxiliary financial activities – typically act on behalf of other units and do not put themselves at risk by incurring financial liabilities or by acquiring financial assets.

Page 14: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

In principle, financial services can be provided

as a secondary activity. In practice, however, in

many countries, the provision of financial

services is so strictly regulated that there may

be no other unit providing financial services. By

convention, even if financial services are

provided by non financial corporations, no

indirect charges are imputed. On the other

hand, financial services provided for explicit

charges are recorded as such.

Definition of financial corporations

Page 15: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Own funds SNA 93 perspective

• Relates to units that finance themselves exclusively via

equity.

• SNA (6.134): lending of own funds “ (…) is not financial

intermediation as [units] do not channel funds from one

group of institutional units to another. Lending as such

is not a process of production and the interest received

from the lending of own funds cannot be identified with

the value of any services produced.”

Page 16: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

The 1993 SNA states that lending own funds does not give

rise to production. While it is true that units lending own

funds do not engage in financial intermediation, with a

broader definition of financial services, units lending own

funds may provide a financial service.

Own funds

Page 17: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

At a minimum, an incorporated enterprise (thus with

a full set of accounts) which, as its main activity,

provides loans to a range of clients and incurs the

financial risk of the debtor defaulting, should be

treated as a financial corporation. Its allocation to

the appropriate sub-sector has yet to be determined.

Own funds

Page 18: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

In addition, some unincorporated enterprises which

provide loans to a range of clients (other than just

family and friends) on a regular business basis may

also be treated as providing financial services. The

advice of experts from countries where this practice is

widespread is needed to specify when and how such

units are to be identified and whether they are to be

treated as unincorporated enterprises in the household

sector or quasi-corporate enterprises in the financial

sector.

Own funds

Page 19: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

What about units which :

• Are set up to carry out well-specified activities or transactions directly related to a specific purpose ?

For example: Asset management, corporate treasury services, special purpose vehicle companies

Activities and customers

Provide financing and asset holding services to one company ?

For example holding companies and trusts but also Government sector (public-private partnerships, securitization programs, etc)

Page 20: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Special Purpose Entities (SPEs): Institutional units?

Ancillary units:

1. Restriction: “…providing services to the parent corporation” (SNA 93,paragraph 4.40).

2. “(…) not treated as separate institutional units because they can be regarded as artificial units created to avoid taxes, to minimise liabilities in the event of bankruptcy, or to secure other technical advantages under the tax or corporation legislation in force in a particular country’’ (SNA93,paragraph 4.44).

Page 21: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

An entity providing financial services to only one unit or

a group of units is considered to be a separate

institutional unit (and a financial corporation) if it keeps

a complete set of accounts and is capable of acquiring

assets and incurring liabilities on its own account.

Activities and customers

Page 22: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

A similar entity which does not have a complete set of

accounts is treated an institutional unit (and a financial

corporation) only if it is resident in a country other than

any of the units to which it is providing the services, in

accordance with SNA/BPM practice of treating non-

resident unincorporated enterprises as quasi-

corporations

Activities and customers

Page 23: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

• Financial services: output provided by financial

corporations to customers, either explicitly or

implicitly

• Financial instruments: means through which financial

corporations provide packages of financial services to

their customers.

Identifying financial services

Page 24: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial institutions charge for some services explicitly and some implicitly. From an economic perspective, all financial instruments are potentially involved in the production of financial services. Some financial instruments attract only explicit charges but several may attract implicit charges alone or in addition to explicit charges. Deposits and loans attract implicit charges and these instruments are included in the calculations of FISIM. Other instruments may attract FISIM but will not be included unless a clear allocation to users is possible. Thus, in practice, FISIM may be limited by convention to loans and deposits.

Identifying financial services

Page 25: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

• Expectations of holding gains provide incentives to engage in productive processes.

• Holding gains expectations are part of the decision making process.

• Holding gains are components of returns on financial assets.

Treatment of holding gains and losses

Page 26: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

When measuring the implicitly valued output of financial institutions, the question arises of whether expected holding gains and losses of financial institutions on their own account should be included in the measure. There is no question of including holding gains and losses as such in a direct measure of output in the SNA. However, for certain financial instruments, expected price changes constitute an important part of expected returns. In principle, therefore, they could be considered when approximating the value of financial services indirectly measured.

Treatment of holding gains and losses

Page 27: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Despite this conceptual position, given the empirical

difficulties in estimating expected holding gains and

losses, it is presently not recommended to include

expected holding gains and losses in the measurement

of financial services output.

Treatment of holding gains and losses

Page 28: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

• SNA 93: the reference rate “…represents the pure cost of borrowing funds – that is a rate from which the risk premium has been eliminated to the greatest extent possible and which does not include any intermediation services”.

The choice of the reference rate

Page 29: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

The reference rate used in the compilation of

FISIM should be a risk-free rate that has no

service element in it and that reflects the

maturity structure of the financial assets and

liabilities to which FISIM applies.

It is recommended that a single reference rate

be used for transactions in the local currency,

but different reference rates may be used for

transactions in other currencies.

The choice of the reference rate

Page 30: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

In practice, virtually all transactions in foreign exchange and securities are carried out via financial corporations. Two prices are quoted for transactions in securities: a bid price and an ask price. The first is the price which the potential buyer is to pay, and the second is the price that the owner receives on sale. The mid-price is by convention taken to be the average of these two prices. The difference between the bid price and the mid price is a margin paid by the buyer to the financial corporation, and the difference between the mid price and the ask price is a margin paid by the seller. The value of securities in the balance sheet is at mid price and excludes theses margins.

Market makers

Page 31: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Financial corporations buy and sell securities both on their own account and on behalf of clients. Buying and selling on behalf of clients may be on demand, that is in immediate response to an instruction from the client to buy or sell a specific security. Alternatively, a financial corporation may acquire a stock of securities in order to meet future demand immediately. This activity is called market making and may be undertaken by specialised financial corporations or financial corporations providing a wide range of financial services.

Market makers

Page 32: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

The SNA should measure the margins on the buying and selling of all securities by all financial corporations and attribute these as being paid by the seller and the buyer respectively, regardless of the purpose for which the securities and other instruments are being bought or sold.

When there is a delay between the purchase and sale of a security, in order to avoid including holding gains and losses, the margins are calculated on the basis of the prices prevailing at the time the purchase and sale take place.

Quotes, market makers and margins

Page 33: Financial Services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November 2005

Thank You