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Book
Liquidity risk management
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Year: 2002 Publisher: [Place of publication not identified] Thomson/Sheshunoff

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Managing liquidity
Author:
ISBN: 1855733358 9781845699079 1845699076 9781855733350 Year: 1997 Publisher: Cambridge

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Abstract

Managing cash flow, interest rates and relations with the bank are fundamentally issues for every business. This clear and concise guide is specifically designed to describe the fundamental decisions in liquidity management and set them in an overall business context.


Book
A quantitative liquidity model for banks
Authors: ---
ISBN: 3834918229 9786613560582 1280382678 3834985546 Year: 2009 Publisher: Wiesbaden : Gabler,

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Internal liquidity models for banks have gained considerable importance since German regulators have decided to accept them for regulatory reporting. Christian Schmaltz identifies product cash flows, funding spread, funding capacity, haircuts, and short-term interest rates as key liquidity variables. Then, he assumes specific stochastic processes for the key variables leading to a particular liquidity model. The modelling focus lies on the product cash flow that is described by a jump-diffusion process. Finally, the author applies the model to the allocation, internal pricing, and optimization of liquidity.


Book
Measuring Systemic Liquidity Risk and the Cost of Liquidity Insurance
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1475540558 1475569416 Year: 2012 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund,

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I construct a systemic liquidity risk index (SLRI) from data on violations of arbitrage relationships across several asset classes between 2004 and 2010. Then I test whether the equity returns of 53 global banks were exposed to this liquidity risk factor. Results show that the level of bank returns is not directly affected by the SLRI, but their volatility increases when liquidity conditions deteriorate. I do not find a strong association between bank size and exposure to the SLRI - measured as the sensitivity of volatility to the index. Surprisingly, exposure to systemic liquidity risk is positively associated with the Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR). The link between equity volatility and the SLRI allows me to calculate the cost that would be borne by public authorities for providing liquidity support to the financial sector. I use this information to estimate a liquidity insurance premium that could be paid by individual banks in order to cover for that social cost.


Book
The domestic credit supply response to international bank deleveraging
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1475580916 1475564996 1475562349 1283866870 1475582943 9781475562347 9781475580914 Year: 2012 Volume: WP/12/258 Publisher: Washington, D.C. International Monetary Fund, Asia and Pacific Dept.

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Abstract

During the global financial crisis, European banks contracted foreign claims on recipient economies sharply. This paper examines the impact of that deleveraging on credit supply in recipient economies, with a particular focus on Asia. Identification is achieved by exploiting heterogeneity in ex-ante patterns of funding reliance on different European banking systems, and in variation in the ratio of local claims in local currency to total foreign claims in recipient economies. These sources of variation are used to create instruments for the deleveraging shock. We find that the contraction in European bank foreign claims was associated with a substantial reduction in domestic credit supply in a broad sample of countries. However, the credit supply response in Asia was only about half the size of the response in non-Asian countries, possibly due to a more robust policy response and healthier local bank balance sheets at the outset of the crisis.

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