International Finance and Accounting Handbook

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cial banking, securities and investment banking, insurance, and asset management)
as well as within and among national financial systems.
At least so far, the most valuable financial services franchises in the United States
and Europe in terms of market capitalization seem far removed from a financial-in-
termediation monoculture, as Exhibit 2.13 suggests. In fact, each presents a rich mix-
ture of banks, asset managers, insurance companies, and specialized players. How
the institutional structure of the financial services sector will evolve is anybody’s
guess. Those who claim to know often end up being wrong. Influential consultants
sometimes convince multiple clients to do the same thing at the same time, and this
spike in strategic correlation can contribute to the wrongness of their vision. What is
clear is that the underlying economics of the industry’s microstructure depicted in
Exhibit 2.1 will ultimately prevail, and finance will flow along conduits that are in
the best interests of the end users of the financial system. The firms that comprise the
financial services industry will have to adapt and readapt to this dynamic in ways that
profitably sustain their raison d’être.


SOURCES AND SUGGESTED REFERENCES


Cumming, C. M., and B. J. Hirtle. The Challenges of Risk Management in Diversified Finan-
cial Companies. Federal Reserve Bank of New York Policy Review, EPR7.01 (01), 2001.
Dermine, J., and P. Hillion (eds.). European Capital Markets with a Single Currency. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1999.
Kane, E. J. Competitive Financial Reregulation: An International Perspective, in Threats to In-
ternational Financial Stability. Edited by R. Portes and A. Swoboda. London: Cambridge
University Press, 1987.
Lamfalussy Report. Final Report on the Regulation of European Securities Markets. Brussels,
February 2001.


SOURCES AND SUGGESTED REFERENCES 2 • 25

North America Europe

Citigroup 250,143 HSBC 140,693
AIG 206,084 Allianz 86,530
GECS 194,636 ING 77,806
Berkshire Hathaway 105,238 UBS 73,497
J.P. Morgan Chase 103,133 RBS Group 60,865
Morgan Stanley 99,055 Lloyds TSB 60,663
Bank of America 82,745 Munich Re 60,532
American Express 72,069 AXA 58,235
Merrill Lynch 60,883 CS Group 57,719
Goldman Sachs 54,297 Barclays 53,630
Banc One 46,395 Deutsche 51,047
Schwab 41,609 Aegon 50,753
Bank of New York 41,466 Zurich 50,194
MBNA 33,007 BSCH 48,310
Marsh & McLennan 30,457 BBVA 46,774


Source: Financial Times, May 11, 2001.


Exhibit 2.13. 15 Most Valuable Financial Services Businesses in North America and Europe
(market capitalization in US $ million, May 4, 2001).

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