Question 1 NewBank started its first day of operations (1 April, 2021) with $6 million in capital. $100 million in checkable deposits is received. The bank issues a $25 million commercial loan and another $25 million in mortgages, with the following terms: Mortgages: 100 standard 30-year, fixed-rate with a nominal annual rate of 5.25% each for $250,000. Commercial loan: 3-year loan, simple interest paid monthly at 0.75%/month. If required reserves are 8%, what does the bank balance sheets look like? Ignore any loan loss reserves.
Question 1 NewBank started its first day of operations (1 April, 2021) with $6 million in capital. $100 million in checkable deposits is received. The bank issues a $25 million commercial loan and another $25 million in mortgages, with the following terms: Mortgages: 100 standard 30-year, fixed-rate with a nominal annual rate of 5.25% each for $250,000. Commercial loan: 3-year loan, simple interest paid monthly at 0.75%/month. If
Question 2 NewBank decides to invest $45 million in 30-day T-bills. The T-bills are currently trading at $4,986.70 (including commissions) for a $5,000 face value instrument. What does the
Question 3 On the 3rd day of operations (3 April, 2021), deposits fall by $5 million. What does the balance sheet look like? Are there any problems?
Question 4 To meet any shortfall in the previous question, NewBank will borrow the cash in the fed funds market. Management decides to borrow the needed funds for the remainder of the month (now 29 days). The required yield on a discount basis is 2.9%. What does the balance sheet look like after this transaction?
Question 5 The end of the month finally arrives for NewBank, and it receives all the required payments from its mortgages, commercial loan, and T-bills. How much cash was received? How are these recorded?
Question 6 NewBank also pays off its fed funds borrowed. How much cash is owed? How is this recorded?
(only ans question 6 plz)
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