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Why are banks lending long term when their deposits are mostly short term in nature?

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Question added by Mohammed Amin Petiwala , Finance and Investment Advisor , Special Economic Zone Authority Duqm
Date Posted: 2016/03/14
Nasir Javed Awan
by Nasir Javed Awan , manager accounts , Sound of Stage Events

In Finance its called gapping financing long term liabilities with short term liabilities. Assets.These assets put to use normally have less earning capacity then long term balancing, modernization and replacements.Their effect is much more than small short term assets on earning capacity of business.

Tarig Salih
by Tarig Salih , Accounting Manager , Texas Load Runner/Tacan Transports Inc.

While at any given moment some depositors need their money, most do not. That enables banks to use shorter-term deposits to make longer-term loans. The process involves maturity transformation—converting short-term liabilities (deposits) to long-term assets (loans). Banks pay depositors less than they receive from borrowers, and that difference accounts for the bulk of banks’ income in most countries.

 

Much More:

YOU’VE got $1,000 you don’t need for, say, a year and want to earn income from the money until then. Or you want to buy a house and need to borrow $100,000 and pay it back over 30 years.

It would be difficult, if not impossible, for someone acting alone to find either a potential borrower who needs exactly $1,000 for a year or a lender who can spare $100,000 for 30.

That’s where banks come in.

Although banks do many things, their primary role is to take in funds—called deposits—from those with money, pool them, and lend them to those who need funds. Banks are intermediaries between depositors (who lend money to the bank) and borrowers (to whom the bank lends money). The amount banks pay for deposits and the income they receive on their loans are both called interest.

Depositors can be individuals and households, financial and nonfinancial firms, or national and local governments. Borrowers are, well, the same. Deposits can be available on demand (a checking account, for example) or with some restrictions (such as savings and time deposits).

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