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Balance Sheet A
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Net Worth + Liabilities |
Balance Sheet B
Assets |
Net Worth + Liabilities |
The Third National Bank has reserves of $20,000 and checkable deposits of $100,000. The reserve ratio...
Suppose that Third National Bank has reserves of $20,000 and checkable deposits of $100,000. The reserve ratio is 20 percent. The bank sells $20,000 in securities to the Federal Reserve Bank in its district, receiving a $20,000 increase in reserves in return. Instructions: Enter your answer as a whole number. What level of excess reserves does the bank now have? $
Third National Bank has reserves of $10,000 and checkable deposits of $100,000. The reserve ratio is 10 percent. Households deposit $15,000 in currency into the bank and that currency is added to reserves. What level of excess reserves does the bank now have?
2. Required and excess reserves Suppose that Best National Bank currently has $100,000 in checkable deposits and $65,000 in outstanding loans. The Federal Reserve has set the reserve requirement at 10%. Using these values, fill in the empty cells for reserves, required reserves, and excess reserves in the following table Best National Reserves Required Reserves Excess Reserves (Dollars) (Dollars) (Dollars)
ommercial Bank has $5,000 in excess reserves, $90,000 in checkable deposit and the reserve ratio is 30 percent. The bank must have: A. $35,000 in reserves. B. $32,000 in reserves. C. $10,000 in reserves. D. 15,000 in reserves 23. Suppose a commercial bank has checkable deposits of $100,000 and the legal reserve ratio is A. are $17,000. 10 percent. If this bank has $ 17,000 in reserves, then its excess reserves: B. are $10,000. C. are $7,000. D. are $1,700...
A bank has $100,000 of checkable deposits and a roquired reserve ratio of 25 excess reserves? percent. The bank currently holds $75,000 in reserves How much of these reserves are Excess reserves are s.(Round your response to the nearest dollr)
Suppose that Mountain Star Bank discovers that its reserves will temporarily fall slightly below those legally required. How might it temporarily remedy this situation through the Federal funds market? Now assume Mountain Star finds that its reserves will be substantially and permanently deficient. What remedy is available to this bank? How would a decrease in the reserve requirement affect the (a) size of the money multiplier, (b) amount of excess reserves in the banking system, and (c) extent to which...
Exhibit 13-1 Exhibit 13-1 Bank Increase in Checkable Deposits New Required Reserves New Checkable Deposits Created by Extending New Loans A $0 $0 $1,000 B $1,000 (A) (B) C (C) $90 (D) D $810 (E) (F) Assume that the required reserve ratio is 10%, that there are no cash leakages, and that banks hold zero excess reserves. Refer to Exhibit 13-1. Suppose that the Federal Reserve conducts open market operations by purchasing $1,000 worth of government securities from Bank A....
If a bank has $100,000 of checkable deposits, a required reserve ratio of 20 percent, and it holds $40,000 in reserves, then the maximum deposit outflow it can sustain without altering its balance sheet is A) $30,000. B) $25,000. C) $20,000. D) $10,000.
Assets Liabilities + Net Worth Reserves $120,000 Checkable Deposits $300,000 Loans 140,000 Stock Shares 200,000 Securities 40,000 Property 200,000 The accompanying balance sheet is for the First Federal Bank. Assume the required reserve ratio is 20 percent. If the original bank balance sheet was for the whole commercial banking system rather than a single bank, loans and deposits could have been expanded by a maximum of: $40,000. $100,000. $200,000. $300,000.
The balance sheet for the newly formed Last National Bank is shown below. The reserves listed on the balance sheet are reserves on deposit at the Federal Reserve. The cash is vault cash held at the bank. Last National Bank Balance Sheet 1 Liabilities and net worth Assets Cash $ 8,000 Checkable $ 138,000 $ deposits 140,000 Stock shares 295,000 $ Reserves Property 305,000 $ Instructions: Enter your answers as whole numbers. a. Suppose a depositor at the bank writes...