The primary regulators of savings institutions are
A) the Federal Reserve and the FDIC.
B) the Office of Thrift Supervision and the FDIC.
C) the FDIC and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
D) the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Comptroller of the Currency.
E) the Federal Reserve and the Comptroller of the Currency.
The primary regulators of savings institutions are A) the Federal Reserve and the FDIC. ...
By 2016, the number of savings institutions is closest to which of the following? a.about 2,900 b.about 800 c.about 3,100 d.about 1,400 The three main regulators of savings institutions are: a.the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the NYSE b.the FDIC, the World Bank, and state regulators c.the OCC, the FDIC, and state regulators d.the OTS, the Federal Reserve, and the U.S. Department of Commerce In 1989, the chartering agency for savings institutions, at the federal level, was:...
12) Which of the following is an entity of the Federal Reserve System? A) The U.S. Treasury Secretary B) The FOMC C) The Comptroller of the Currency D) The FDIC 13) The Federal Reserve Banks are institutions since they are owned by the A) quasi-public; private commercial banks in the district where the Reserve Bank is located B) public; private commercial banks in the district where the Reserve Bank is located C) quasi-public; U.S. Treasury D) public; U.S. Treasury 14)...
Question 9 Which of the following are not depository institutions? The Federal Reserve credit unions savings banks commercial banks
The predominate asset class on the Balance Sheet of the Federal Reserve Banks is: A. Reserves of Depository Institutions B. Gold and Foreign Currency held C. Currency in circulation D. Vault Cash of Depository Institutions E. U.S. Treasury Securities
Regulated Institution Match (by number) each regulated institution with its regulatory agency: Regulatory Agency Commodities Futures Trading Commission Office of Thrift Supervision OOOO 1. Commercial banks 2. Savings and loan associations 3. Organized exchanges and financial markets 4. Futures market exchanges 5. Federally chartered commercial banks 6. All depository institutions Comptroller of the Currency SEC
1.The Fed purchases $100,000 of U.S. government securities from One Bank. Assuming the desired reserve ratio is 10 percent, banks loan all excess reserves, and the currency drain is 20 percent, how much does the quantity of money increase? A. $1,000,000 B. $10,000,000 C. $1,100,000 D. $900,000 E. $100,000 2.A bank maximizes its stockholders' wealth by ______. A. colluding with other banks to keep interest rates high colluding with other banks to keep interest rates high B. lending for long...
1. ____ are the primary assets of those savings institutions whose Total Assets are under $50 Billion. A. Mortgages B. Cash balances C. Investment securities D. Business loans E. Customer deposits 2. The predominant liabilities for savings institutions with less than $50 Billion in Total Assets are: A. commercial deposits B. wholesale money market notes and reserves at the Fed. C. transaction accounts, MMDAs and other savings deposits, and time deposits. D. money market mutual funds. E. FHLB borrowings....
1). National chartered banks receive chartering and merger approval from the: Office of Comptroller of the Currency Securties and Exchange Commission FDIC o Federal Reserve System
1) The power within the Federal Reserve was effectively transferred to the Board of Governors by Select one: A. Supreme Court decisions in the 1960s. B. the Treasury-Federal Reserve Accord of 1951. C. the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980. D. the Federal Reserve Act of 1935. 2) The monetary base consists of Select one: A. government securities held by the Fed and discount loans. B. currency in circulation and reserves. C. government securities held by the...
5. The Federal Reserve's organization There are Federal Reserve regional banks. The Federal Reserve's role as a lender of last resort involves lending to which of the following financially troubled institutions? O U.S. banks that cannot borrow elsewhere O Governments in developing countries during currency crises O U.S. state governments when they run short on tax revenues . In order to increase the number of dollars in The Federal Reserve's primary tool for changing the money supply is _ the...