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Corporate Finance (Canadian Edition)

v3.0 Stan Eakins and William McNally

1.1 The Financial System

In this section, we provide an overview of the financial system, and in the two following sections we focus on financial markets. The , as shown in Figure 1.1, transfers money from suppliers (such as individual households), to users, such as companies. Suppliers have savings that they want to invest to earn a return. Users need money to fund their activities. For example, individuals borrow to finance a home purchase, businesses expand their factories, and governments build roads. The financial markets are the places in which suppliers and users transact. They usually transact through intermediaries and seldom transact directly with each other. The intermediaries include (commercial) banks, investment banks, funds, and insurance companies.

Figure 1.1 The Financial System

This figure shows the relationship between the Suppliers of funds (individuals and businesses) ad users of funds (individuals, businesses and governments). Financial intermediaries facilitate the transfer of funds.

Table 1.1 Definitions of Terms in Figure 1.1

Individuals (Suppliers) Individuals are the primary investors in the economy. Ultimately, they own every business asset. As individuals plan for retirement (or set aside money for other goals), they invest their savings in the financial system with the expectation of converting them into greater savings for the future.
Businesses (Suppliers)Businesses supply funds in the form of retained earnings (money earned in prior periods that is not distributed to shareholders).
Individuals (Users)Individuals borrow to finance homes, cars, and holidays.
Businesses (Users)Businesses use money to start new projects. They borrow money and raise equity.
Governments (Users)Governments borrow to pay for operating deficits and to fund capital improvement projects—like new highways.
Banks (Financial Intermediaries)Take deposits from savers and lend to individuals (i.e., mortgages) and businesses (i.e., lines of credit and commercial loans). They profit from spread between rate charged on loans and rate paid on deposits.
Investment Banks (Financial Intermediaries)Investment banks help companies, municipalities, and states raise capital by selling securities to the public. They profit from spread between price paid to security issuer and price charged to investor. They provide financial consulting to companies.
Mutual and Hedge Funds (Financial Intermediaries)Funds invest in private businesses and financial securities on behalf of individual savers. They profit from management fees charged to savers.
Insurance Companies (Financial Intermediaries)Insurance companies collect premiums from individuals/businesses for life and property insurance. They invest premium income prior to paying out claims. They profit if premium plus investment income exceeds claims.
Money Markets (Financial Markets)Assets that mature in less than one year, such as treasure bills. 
Capital Markets (Financial Markets)Assets that mature in more than one year, such as stock.

To give you a sense of who the suppliers and users are, let’s look at two specific markets: the bond and equity markets. Figure 1.2 shows the users and suppliers of capital in the Canadian .

Figure 1.2 Canadian Bond and Money Market Suppliers and Users

Breakdowns of Users (Issuers) and Suppliers (Holders) in a pie chart. Users (issuers) non-financial corporations 14%, financial corporations 43%, government 43%. Suppliers (holders) non-financial corporations 2%, financial corporations 53%, government 7%, household 2%, non-residents 36%.

Figure 1.2 shows that, in Q1 of 2024, the largest users of capital in the money and bond markets are the government and financial institutions. Federal, provincial, and local governments account for 43% of bond and bill issuance. Non-financial corporations only account for 14% of issuance. On the supply side, the largest supplier is financial corporations who bought 53% of all money market securities and bonds. You should note that households don’t generally buy bonds directly. Direct holdings account for only 2% of the market. It is more common for households to own bonds through mutual funds or through their retirement accounts which is reflected in the financial corporation share. The bond markets are not retail markets in the sense that public investors buy the securities directly.

Figure 1.3 Canadian Equity Market Suppliers and Users

Users (Issuers) non-financial corporations 28%, financial corporations 27%, government 45%. Suppliers (holders) residents 77% and nonresidents 23%.

As shown in Figure 1.3, in Q1 of 2024 55% of issuance in Canadian equity markets was accounted for by domestic corporations. In that same quarter, 45% of issuance was by foreign corporations. On the supply side, more than three quarters of the capital invested in the Canadian equity markets was from domestic sources. The equity market is much more of a retail market. In the United States, households directly account for about 40% of the supply of capital. Of course, households also supply capital to equity markets indirectly through mutual funds and retirement accounts.