Extent: | Online Ressource (9712 KB, 208 S.) |
---|---|
Series: | |
Type of publication: | Book / Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Notes: | Description based upon print version of record Liquidity Management; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introductory Note; 1 Funding and Market Liquidity; 1.1 Liquidity in the Financial Markets; 1.1.1 Definition of funding and liquidity risks; 1.2 Managing Liquidity Risk; 1.2.1 Liquidity risks framework; 1.2.2 Chief Risk Officers role; 1.3 Regulatory Frameworks; 1.3.1 Total net cash outflows; 1.3.2 Long-term funding requirements; 1.3.3 Banks funding; 1.3.4 Funding through securitization; 1.3.5 Behavioural changes of customers or investors; 1.3.6 Payment systems; 1.3.7 Correspondent and custody activities; 1.3.8 Accounting treatment and liquidity 1.3.9 Diversification of funding sources1.3.10 Rating agency approaches to internal methodologies; 1.3.11 Transparency to the market; 1.3.12 Contingency plans; 2 Short-Term Funding; 2.1 Cash Flow Ladder; 2.1.1 Contractual cash flows; 2.1.2 Rules for mapping flows on the maturity ladder; 2.1.3 Flows without contractual certainty; 2.1.4 Unexpected cash flows; 2.1.5 Funds available for refinancing; 2.1.6 Funds transferability; 2.1.7 Total ladder calculation; 2.2 Liquidity Coverage Ratio; 2.2.1 Regulatory prescriptions; 2.2.2 Liquid assets available for refinancing 2.2.3 Total net cash outflows in the upcoming month2.3 Liquidity Risk Indicators; 2.3.1 Using indicators; 2.3.2 Testing indicators; 2.3.3 Government bond yield curves and cross-spreads; 2.3.4 Credit default swap levels; 2.3.5 Foreign exchange cross-values; 2.3.6 Central bank refinancing; 2.3.7 Crisis indicators; 2.3.8 Risk aversion indexes; 2.4 Intraday Liquidity Risk; 2.4.1 Intraday liquidity management; 2.4.2 Cooperative mechanism; 2.4.3 Analysing the possible impact of the stressed scenario on intraday liquidity risk; 2.4.4 Haircuts to pledges; 2.4.5 Monitoring requirements 2.4.6 Structural and intraday liquidity needs2.4.7 Payment systems liquidity saving features; 2.4.8 Intraday liquidity risk in the case of Lehman Brothers; 2.4.9 Some intraday liquidity monitoring indicators; 2.4.10 Intraday liquidity stress scenarios; 2.5 Funding Concentration; 2.5.1 Significant counterparties; 2.5.2 Significant instruments/products; 2.5.3 Significant currencies; 2.5.4 Time buckets; 2.6 Measuring Asset Liquidity; 2.6.1 Standard liquidity ratio; 2.6.2 Determining implied spread; 3 Long-Term Balance; 3.1 Structural Funding; 3.1.1 Determining the available funding 3.1.2 Required stable funding for assets3.2 Customer Deposit Modelling; 3.2.1 Regulatory approaches on depositstability; 3.2.2 Depositor behaviours; 3.2.3 Modelling assumptions and impacts on funding costs; 3.2.4 Dynamic regression models; 3.3 Stress Testing and Scenario Analysis; 3.3.1 Using stress testing to improve banks' own risk governance; 3.3.2 Liquidity stress testing rationale; 3.3.3 Improving controls; 3.3.4 Stress testing methodology; 3.3.5 Reverse stress testing; 3.3.6 Scenario analysis; 3.3.7 Internal capital and stress testing; 4 Liquidity Value At Risk 4.1 Market Liquidity Effects |
ISBN: | 1-118-41399-7 ; 1-118-41396-2 ; 978-1-118-41396-8 ; 978-1-118-41399-9 |
Source: | ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011834491