...LIQUIDITY MANAGEMENT 2.0 OBJECTIVES: In this unit, an attempt has been made to understand the following aspects of liquidity management: ● Definition of Liquidity ● Dimensions and Role of Liquidity Risk Management ● Measuring and Managing Liquidity ● Measurement of Liquidity through Ratio Analysis 2.1 INTRODUCTION: The objectives of ALM are two fold: ensuring profitability and ensuring liquidity. Liquidity which is represented by the quality and marketability of assets and liability exposes the organization to liquidity risk. Unlike other risks like interest rate risk, market risk, operational risk etc. that can threaten the very solvency of the bank, liquidity risk is a normal aspect of every day management of a financial institution. In extreme cases, liquidity problems translate into solvency risk problems. As such, bankers should be more aware of the need for bank liquidity. 2.2 DEFINITION: Banks need liquidity to meet deposit withdrawals and to fund loan demands. The variability of loan demand and variability of deposit determine a bank’s liquidity needs. Liquidity represents the bank’s ability to accommodate decreases in liability and to fund increases in assets. A bank is said to have sufficient liquidity when it can obtain sufficient funds either by increasing liabilities or by converting assets, promptly at a reasonable cost. 2.3 DIMENSIONS & ROLE OF LIQUID & RISK MANAGEMENT: Bank’s liquidity management is the process of generating...
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...organizational culture appropriability construct DefinitionSave to FavoritesSee Examples The values and behaviors that contribute to the unique social and psychological environment of an organization. Organizational culture includes an organization's expectations, experiences, philosophy, and values that hold it together, and is expressed in its self-image, inner workings, interactions with the outside world, and future expectations. It is based on shared attitudes, beliefs, customs, and written and unwritten rules that have been developed over time and are considered valid. Also called corporate culture, it's shown in (1) the ways the organization conducts its business, treats its employees, customers, and the wider community, (2) the extent to which freedom is allowed in decision making, developing new ideas, and personal expression, (3) how power and information flow through its hierarchy, and (4) how committed employees are towards collective objectives. It affects the organization's productivity and performance, and provides guidelines on customer care and service, product quality and safety, attendance and punctuality, and concern for the environment. It also extends to production-methods, marketing and advertising practices, and to new product creation. Organizational culture is unique for every organization and one of the hardest things to change Organizational culture is the collective behavior of humans who are part of an organization and the meanings that the...
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...the review and analysis of Treasury Finance initiatives relating to FX hedging activities, assist in liquidity risk management analytics and actively participate in Treasury projects. The incumbent will be liaising with Treasury Capital Project Management, Corporate Actuarial, Corporate and Investment Controllers, Derivatives Middle Office, Asset Liability Management, Variable Annuity Hedging, Treasury Operations, Corporate Tax, Corporate Law, Investments and Audit. Responsibilities: • Responsible for data gathering, data mining to support liquidity risk management analytics, including liquidity sensitivity analysis, assessment of stress testing scenarios, impact of different asset mix on liquidity, evaluation of collateral funding alternatives • Determine the impact of regulatory reforms on the company's collateral obligations and liquidity (Dodd Frank Act) • Support monthly and quarterly reporting associated with the Liquidity Risk Management Policy and FX Risk Policy • Contribute in the preparation of cash flow forecasts and FX exposure forecasts • Support the maintenance of the FX VaR model and FX model back-testing • Prepare trade requests for FX Forwards to hedge net investment in foreign operations and ensure compliance with hedge accounting requirements • Support the review and monitoring of Treasury Finance Risk Policies (Liquidity Risk Management Policy, Foreign Exchange Risk Policy), ensuring continued compliance • Provide...
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...Financial Crises: Theory and Evidence Franklin Allen University of Pennsylvania Ana Babus Cambridge University Elena Carletti European University Institute June 8, 2009 1. Introduction Financial crises have been pervasive phenomena throughout history. Bordo et al. (2001) find that their frequency in recent decades has been double that of the Bretton Woods Period (1945-1971) and the Gold Standard Era (1880-1993), comparable only to the Great Depression. Nevertheless, the financial crisis that started in the summer of 2007 came as a great surprise to most people. What initially was seen as difficulties in the US subprime mortgage market, rapidly escalated and spilled over to financial markets all over the world. The crisis has changed the financial landscape worldwide and its costs are yet to be evaluated. The purpose of this paper is to concisely survey the literature on financial crises. Despite its severity and its ample effects, the current crisis is similar to past crises in many dimensions. In a recent series of papers, Reinhart and Rogoff (2008a, 2008b, 2009) document the effects of banking crises using an extensive data set of high and middle-to-low income countries. They find that systemic banking crises are typically preceded by credit booms and asset price bubbles. This is consistent with Herring and Wachter (2003) who show that many financial crises are the result of bubbles in real estate markets. In addition, Reinhart and Rogoff find...
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...1. Introduction 3 2.Company Profile- Brief Overview 3 2.1 Consumer banking: 6 3. Liquidity Risk: 7 3.1 Measuring Liquidity Risk –SCB 7 3.2 Measuring Credit Risk Exposure 10 3.3 Market Rate Risk 11 3.4 Value at Risk (VaR) 12 4. CAMEL RATING SYSTEM 13 1. Executive Summary International Banking can be defined as banking transactions crossing national boundaries. The activities involves like international lending; claims of domestic bank offices on foreign residents, claims of foreign bank offices on local residents, claims of domestic bank offices on domestic residents in foreign currency are the major activities involved in International Banking. The evolution of banking history dates back to 2000 BC in Assyria and Babylonia; while the modern banking systems originated in Renaissance Italy. The major incentive for the growth of international banking was migration of domestic customers who were MNE’s growing foreign activities and the impacts of regulatory differences. The report is comprised of Liquidity risks, market risks, credit risks of Standard Chartered Bank Plc. The company also demonstrates the firm efficiency of the firm using CAMEL RATING SCALE. The overview of the analysis states that the firm is operating proficiently under the guidelines of BASEL. Introduction According to Lewis & Davis (1987, p. 219), international banking is a denotation of cross-border and cross currency facets of banking business. They classify international banking into...
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...Market liquidity From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search "Liquidity" redirects here. For the accounting term, see Accounting liquidity. In business, economics or investment, market liquidity is an asset's ability to be sold without causing a significant movement in the price and with minimum loss of value. Money, or cash in hand, is the most liquid asset, and can be used immediately to perform economic actions like buying, selling, or paying debt, meeting immediate wants and needs.[1] An act of exchange of a less liquid asset with a more liquid asset is called liquidation. Liquidity also refers both to a business's ability to meet its payment obligations, in terms of possessing sufficient liquid assets, and to such assets themselves. Contents [hide] * 1 Overview * 2 Futures * 3 Banking * 4 References [edit] Overview A liquid asset has some or more of the following features. It can be sold rapidly, with minimal loss of value, any time within market hours. The essential characteristic of a liquid market is that there are ready and willing buyers and sellers at all times. Another elegant definition of liquidity is the probability that the next trade is executed at a price equal to the last one. A market may be considered deeply liquid if there are ready and willing buyers and sellers in large quantities. This is related to the concept of market depth that can be measured as the units that can be sold or bought for a...
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...Table of Contents |Sl no |Topics |page | |01 |Executive Summary |02 | |02 |Background of ONE Bank Limited |03 | |03 |Company Milestones |04 | |04 |Common Ways of Risk Handling |05-06 | |05 | |07-09 | | |Risks associated in Banking Services | | |06 |Bank Risk Management Systems |09-21 | |07 |Insurance Coverage |22-25 | |08 |Bibliography |26 | Executive summary The report has been prepared as a mandatory requirement of our course F-636 (Risk Management and...
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...Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Basel III: A global regulatory framework for more resilient banks and banking systems December 2010 (rev June 2011) Copies of publications are available from: Bank for International Settlements Communications CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland E-mail: publications@bis.org Fax: +41 61 280 9100 and +41 61 280 8100 © Bank for International Settlements 2010. All rights reserved. Brief excerpts may be reproduced or translated provided the source is stated. ISBN print: 92-9131-859-0 ISBN web: 92-9197-859-0 Contents Contents ...................................................................................................................................3 Introduction ...............................................................................................................................1 A. Strengthening the global capital framework ....................................................................2 1. 2. 3. 4. Raising the quality, consistency and transparency of the capital base ..................2 Enhancing risk coverage........................................................................................3 Supplementing the risk-based capital requirement with a leverage ratio ...............4 Reducing procyclicality and promoting countercyclical buffers ..............................5 Cyclicality of the minimum requirement .................................................................5 Forward looking provisioning ....
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...EBB20603 RISK MANAGEMENT IN ISLAMIC FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS DR. FEKRI ALI MOHAMMED SHAWTERI (IF70) REPORT CIMB ISLAMIC BANK BERHAD REPORTED BY: Nur Atteya Amanda binti Amirudin 62289214273 Syamimi Fatihah binti Mohd Sobri 62289214372 Nur Aizat binti Mun 62289214006 Norhafiza binti Alalguring 62289214119 Noor Rahimah binti Abdul Rauf 62289214281 TABLE OF CONTENTS NO | TOPIC | PAGES | 1.0 | Introduction | 3 | 2.0 | Bank Profile | 5 | 3.0 | Financial Analysis | 7 | 4.0 | Credit Risk | 14 | 5.0 | Liquidity Risk | 24 | 6.0 | Operational Risk | 27 | 7.0 | Market Risk | 30 | 8.0 | Shariah Risk | 34 | 9.0 | Capital Requirement | 36 | 10.0 | Conclusion | 39 | 11.0 | References | 39 | 1.0 INTRODUCTION CIMB Islamic was officially launched by Malaysia’s Bank Negara Governor Tan Sri Dato' Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz in June 2003. Since then, CIMB Islamic has won numerous accolades for its innovative Shariah-compliant solutions. It providing the consumer market with an Islamic alternative for deposit accounts and financing. CIMB Islamic offers a range of deposit and investment products to help manage business cash flow and cash reserves more effectively such as Wadiah Current Account-I, Fixed Return Income Account-I, and Special Investment Account-I. The money will only be invested in Shariah-Compliant activities. In the context risk, risk refers to the probability of loss. Risk actually elucidates the probability that an actual return on an investment will be lower...
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...Running Head: Bond Valuation: Liquidity Risk in the Pricing of Corporate Bonds Term Paper: Bond Valuation: Liquidity Risk in the Pricing of Corporate Bonds Group #5: Christina Adams Dorcas Adewunmi Nakia Hillsman Princess Mitchell Marquita Wilson Presented to: Dr. Felix Ayadi ABSTRACT Liquidity risk in the pricing of corporate bonds and the importance of investors knowing liquidity risk in the pricing of corporate bonds and how it affects returns on investments is an important factor in the performance of financial institutions. This paper summarizes the research of several different researchers and their take on the importance and significance of liquidity risks. Furthermore, it addresses the assumptions, a review of different studies as well as a contrast of different methodologies on how liquidity of risk in the pricing of bonds has an affect on investments. PURPOSE OF THE STUDY The purpose of this study is to demonstrate how to conduct an analysis and predict future situations of the liquidity risk in the pricing of corporate bonds. We will also study different companies and previous studies to see how they handled liquidated risk. Corporate bonds are good for businesses with a high credit value. It is easy for them to be able to issue higher bond amounts with a low interest rate. Many people believe that corporate bonds put you at a higher risk because of its taxable terms, ability to collect...
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...to balance the Relationship between risk and return. In reality we can say that management of financial institution is nothing but a management of risk managing financial risk systematically and professionally becomes an even more important task. Rising global competition, increasing deregulation, introduction of innovative products and delivery channels have pushed risk management to the forefront of today's financial landscape. Ability to gauge the risks and take appropriate position will be the key to success. It can be said that risk takers will survive, effective risk managers will proper and risk averse are likely to perish. The risk arises due to uncertainties, which in turn arise due to changes taking place in prevailing economic, social and political environment and lack...
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...1 introduction 2. how Qantas Airways manages financial risk? 2.1 what is financial risk in Qantas Airways between 2009 to2012 ? 300s According to Qantas annual reports, there are different types of financial risk which are including liquidity risk, interest rate, foreign exchange and fuel price risks, and credit risk. Firstly, liquidity risk is the risk that the company will encounter difficulty in meeting obligations related with financial liabilities. The Qantas Group manages this risk by targeting a minimum liquidity level, ensuring long-term commitments are managed with respect to forecast available cash inflows, maintaining access to a variety of additional funding sources including commercial paper and standby facilities and managing maturity profiles. The Qantas Group has indicated its market risk in the following areas: interest rate, foreign exchange and fuel price. For interest rate risk, it refers to the risk that the fair value or future cash flows of a financial instrument will fluctuate due to changes in market interest rates. The company manages interest rate risk by reference to pricing intervals spread across different periods of time with the proportion of floating and fixed rate debt managed separately. The mix of fixed and floating interest rate funding is managed by using three types of financial instrument: interest rate swaps, forward rate agreements and options. The other risks of market risk are foreign exchange and fuel price risks which are emphasised...
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...Thesis for the Degree of Master of...? INCORPORATING LIQUIDITY RISK INTO VAR MODEL TO IMPROVE RISK MANAGEMENT AND APPLYING THE LIQUIDITY ADJUSTED VALUE AT RISK MODEL ON VIETNAMESE STOCK MARKET Student: Ten truong: Ten khoa hoc: September, 2012 INCORPORATING LIQUIDITY RISK INTO VAR MODEL TO IMPROVE RISK MANAGEMENT AND APPLYING THE LIQUIDITY ADJUSTED VALUE AT RISK MODEL ON VIETNAMESE STOCK MARKET by student Avised by Ten giao su Submitted to Ten khoa of Ten truong in the partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of ...? Dissertation Committee ...Ten thanh vien hoi dong ABSTRACT In this paper, based on Bangia et. al (1999) Liquidity Adjusted Value at Risk, an explanation and demonstration for the importance of integrate liquidity risk component into Value at Risk Model are presented. The component is considered to be resulted from the exogenous liquidity risk, indeed, the bid-ask spread of a stock or a portfolio. This research is conducted from the analysis of an estimation of Value at Risk (VaR) and Liquidity adjusted Value at Risk for two portfolios containing stocks that are currently trading on Vietnamese Stock Market. After applying the Bangia Model to calculate, the backtesting will be executed to check the accuracy level of the results. The difference between the results of two portfolios, according to separate approaches will be the evidence to reach the conclusion of the research. Table of Contents List of...
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...to market liquidity and interest rate risks in connection with the process of Asset Liability Management. Failure to identify the risks associated with business and failure to take timely measures in giving a sense of direction threatens the very existence of the institution. It is, therefore, important that the strategic decision makers of an organization assume special care with regard to the Balance Sheet Risk management and should ensure that the structure of the institute’s business and the level of Balance Sheet risk it assumes are effectively managed, appropriate policies and procedures are established to control the direction of the organization. The whole exercise is with the objective of limiting these risks against the resources that are available for evaluating and controlling liquidity and interest rate risk. Asset Liability Management (ALM) can be defined as a mechanism to address the risk faced by a bank due to a mismatch between assets and liabilities either due to liquidity or changes in interest rates. Liquidity is an institution’s ability to meet its liabilities either by borrowing or converting assets. Apart from liquidity, a bank may also have a mismatch due to changes in interest rates as banks typically tend to borrow short term (fixed or floating) and lend long term (fixed or floating). A comprehensive ALM policy framework focuses on bank profitability and long-term viability by targeting the net interest margin (NIM) ratio and Net Economic Value (NEV)...
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...have been the most vocal opponents of the shift to marking to market. We are grateful to both our editor, Ray Ball, for his advice and comments and to an anonymous referee for many useful comments. We also thank participants at the 2007 Journal of Accounting Research conference as well as participants in various seminars, and, in particular, Doug Diamond, Ron Dye, Xavier Freixas, Milt Harris, Charles Goodhart, Raghu Rajan, Rafael Repullo, Jean-Charles Rochet, and Lars Stole for their comments. Catherine Xu provided excellent research assistance. Sapra acknowledges Financial Support from the FMC Faculty Research Fund at the Graduate School of Business, the University of Chicago. Shin acknowledges support from the United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council under its World Economy and Finance Programme. 1...
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