Liquidity management a funding risk handbook

"Robust management of liquidity risk within the changing regulatory framework Liquidity Management applies current risk management theory, techniques, and processes to liquidity risk control and management to help organizations prepare in case of future economic crisis and changing regulatory f...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Otros Autores: Soprano, Aldo, author (author)
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Chichester, England : Wiley 2015.
Edición:1st edition
Colección:Wiley finance series.
Materias:
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull:https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009630025906719
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • 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 sources 1.3.10 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 month 2.3 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 needs 2.4.7 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 assets 3.2 Customer Deposit Modelling; 3.2.1 Regulatory approaches on deposit stability; 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