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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
371

A study of automation in local Chinese banks.

January 1985 (has links)
by Cheung Bing-leung, Wong Kai-man. / Thesis (MBA)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1985 / Bibliography: leaves 81-83.
372

Application of information technology in the banking industry : meeting the challenges in the 1990s.

January 1984 (has links)
by Hung Yuk Hung Antony [and] Ng Chim Kuen Jimmy. / Includes bibliographies / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1984
373

The international syndication loan bubble, and the Banco Ambrosiano pinch : research report.

January 1983 (has links)
by Lam Kin-hing, Kenneth, Fung Tin-keung, Clarence. / Bibliography: leaves 112-114 / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1983
374

Problems encountered by international banks in financing projects in the People's Republic of China.

January 1988 (has links)
by Tong Tang, Joseph. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1988. / Bibliography: leaf 57.
375

Should there be bank services fees/charges?.

January 2001 (has links)
by Li Sze-Ming, Tam Ming-Yan. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 93-100). / ABSTRACT --- p.ii / TABLE OF CONTENT --- p.iii / CHAPTER / Chapter I. --- INTRODUCTION --- p.i / Chapter I.I. --- Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation's Announcement --- p.1 / Chapter I.II. --- Banking Industry Revolution --- p.4 / Chapter I.III. --- Major Issues --- p.6 / Chapter I.IV. --- Services Fees --- p.7 / Chapter II. --- BANK FEES AND FUTURE IMPLICATIONS --- p.8 / Chapter II.I. --- Should The Banks Impose Services Fees/Charges? --- p.8 / Chapter II.I.I. --- Analysis of Big Banks --- p.9 / Chapter II.I.I.I. --- Stagnant Growth in Banking Industry --- p.11 / Chapter II.I.I.II. --- Interest Rate Deregulation --- p.16 / Chapter II.I.I.III. --- Deposit Insurance Schemes --- p.19 / Chapter II.I.I.IV. --- Technology Advancements --- p.21 / Chapter II.I.II. --- Analysis of Medium and Small Banks --- p.24 / Chapter II.I.II.I. --- Excess Capacity --- p.28 / Chapter II.I.II.II. --- """Human"" Banking" --- p.31 / Chapter II.I.II.III. --- Deposit Insurance Scheme --- p.32 / Chapter II.II. --- How Should Fees Be Charged? --- p.34 / Chapter II.II.I. --- What Are The Criticisms? --- p.34 / Chapter II.II.I.I. --- Social Responsibilities --- p.34 / Chapter II.II.I.II. --- Commodity --- p.35 / Chapter II.II.I.III. --- Self-Servicing Facilities is Not for Everyone --- p.26 / Chapter II.II.I.IV. --- Specific Roles --- p.36 / Chapter II.II.I.V. --- Social Stratification --- p.37 / Chapter II.II.II. --- Who Could Bear the Charge? --- p.37 / Chapter II.II.III. --- What are the Fees Strategies? --- p.38 / Chapter II.II.III.I. --- Raising Existing Fees --- p.38 / Chapter II.II.III.II. --- Inventing New Fees --- p.39 / Chapter II.II.III.III. --- Making It More Difficult To Avoid Fees --- p.39 / Chapter II.II.IV. --- What Should Be the Pricing Structures? --- p.40 / Chapter II.II.IV.I. --- One-Size-Fits-All Approach --- p.40 / Chapter II.II.IV.II. --- Pay-As-You-Go Approach --- p.41 / Chapter II.II.IV.III. --- Tiered Interest Rate Scheme --- p.42 / Chapter II.III. --- Future Development of Banking Industry --- p.46 / Chapter II.III.I. --- Markets Segmentations --- p.46 / Chapter II.III.II. --- Merger and Acquisition --- p.48 / Chapter II.III.III. --- Fees-Oriented Market --- p.49 / Chapter II.III.IV. --- Customer-Value Focus --- p.51 / Chapter II.III.V. --- Branches Reform --- p.52 / Chapter II.III.VI. --- Self-Servicing Facilities --- p.53 / Chapter II.III.VII. --- Posts Offices --- p.54 / Chapter III. --- SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION --- p.55 / APPENDIX --- p.57 / Chapter 1 --- HSBC'S NEW SERVICES AND CHARGES POLICY --- p.58 / Chapter 2 --- A COMPARISON OF BANKING SERVICE FEES OF BIG BANKS --- p.65 / Chapter 3 --- A COMPARISON OF BANKING SERVICE FEES OF MEDIUM AND SMALL BANKS --- p.70 / Chapter 4 --- A COMPARISON OF SMALL DEPOSIT ACCOUNT INTEREST RATES AND FEES --- p.91 / BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.93
376

Multinationality and risk-return performance: a study of the largest U.S., Japanese and European banks.

January 1999 (has links)
by Hui Dana. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 38-39). / Abstract --- p.i / Table of Contents --- p.ii / List of tables --- p.iii / Chapter Chapter 1: --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter 2: --- Literature Review --- p.3 / Definition of Transnational Banking --- p.3 / Theoretical Considerations --- p.4 / Previous Researches on Transnational Banks --- p.8 / Chapter Chapter 3: --- Research Design --- p.12 / Objective of the Study --- p.12 / Methodology --- p.13 / Chapter Chapter 4: --- Findings --- p.18 / Pair-wise Test --- p.18 / Regression Analysis --- p.19 / Chapter Chapter 5: --- Implications --- p.23 / Chapter Chapter 6: --- Summary and Conclusion --- p.26 / Appendices --- p.29 / Bibliography --- p.38
377

Essays on Finance and Macroeconomics

Balloch, Cynthia Mei January 2018 (has links)
My dissertation studies the impact of banks on macroeconomic outcomes. Chapter 1 explores the effects of bond market growth on the financing decisions of firms, the lending behavior of banks, and the resulting equilibrium allocation of credit and capital. This chapter makes three contributions to understand the impact of bond market liberalization. First, using evidence from reforms in Japan that gave borrowers selective access to bond markets during the 1980s, it shows that firms that obtained access to the bond market used bond issuance to pay back bank debt. More importantly, this large, positive funding shock led banks to increase lending to small and medium enterprises and real estate firms. Second, it proposes a model of financial frictions that is consistent with the empirical findings, and uses the model to derive general conditions under which bond liberalization has this effect on banks. The model predicts that bond liberalization can significantly worsen the quality of the pool of bank borrowers, and so lower bank profitability. These results suggest that Japan's bond market liberalization contributed to both the real estate bubble in the 1980s and bank problems in the 1990s. Third, the model implies that bond markets amplify the effects of shocks to the risk-free rate and firm borrowing, in addition to attenuating the effects of financial shocks. In Chapter 2, I explore how the incentives of domestic banks and sovereign governments interact. I build a model of government default and banks that invest in the debt of their own sovereign. In the model, banks demand safe assets to use as collateral, and default affects bank equity. These losses inhibit banks' ability to attract deposits, leading to lower private credit provision, and lower output. This disincentivizes the sovereign from defaulting. The extent of output losses depends on characteristics of the banking system, including sovereign exposures, equity, and deposits. In turn, bank exposures are affected by default risk. The model is also used to show that policies such as financial repression can improve welfare, but worsen output losses in the event of default, and may also worsen losses in some non-default states. Underlying much research on the role of financial intermediaries in macroeconomics is an implicit recognition that there is matching between banks and firms, which I turn to in Chapter 3. Matching between banks and firms has implications for both the transmission of macroeconomic shocks and for empirical estimates of the effects of such shocks. This paper presents a theory of matching in corporate loan markets, between heterogeneous banks and heterogenous firms. The model demonstrates how assortative matching can cause shocks to have distributional consequences, where particular types of banks and firms are disproportionately affected. The framework is used to show (1) why growth without financial development is limited, (2) how capital inflows affect bank and firm outcomes, and (3) how financial regulation for certain banks also has implications for other borrowers and lenders. Further, this theory demonstrates that matching in corporate lending markets is analytically tractable, and generates predictions that are consistent with existing empirical evidence.
378

Essays in banking, finance and the macroeconomy

Kitsios, Emmanouil January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
379

Environment and strategy in the banking industry

Irons, Trisha Lynn, Robinson, George Lee January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, 1981. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND DEWEY. / Bibliography: leaves 220-224. / by Trisha Lynn Irons and George Lee Robinson, Jr. / M.S.
380

De betrekkingen tusschen banken en industrie in Zwitserland

Rhee, Jan Cornelis Martinus van. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Nederlandsche Handelshoogeschool te Rotterdam, 1934. / Includes bibliographical references (p. [325]-328).

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