ISBN-13: 9781606498729 / Angielski / Miękka / 2014 / 120 str.
The financial crisis of 2007-2009 had a deleterious effect on liquidity in the global banking system, resulting in the introduction of the new Basel III liquidity regulation. In this book, we apply such regulation to global liquidity data for 391 hand-selected LIBOR-based banks in 38 countries for the period 2002 to 2012. We show how to develop a framework for proposed Basel III liquidity regulation and demonstrate how to decide on methodologies for studying the aforementioned regulation. Basel III emphasizes both the use of liquidity coverage ratios (LCR) and net stable funding ratios (NSFR) as measures of liquidity risk. We show how these ratios may be approximated to measure risk and how liquidity affects bank insolvency and failure. Using LIBOR-OISS, we also demonstrate how market-wide liquidity risk was a major predictor of bank failures in 2009 and 2010, while idiosyncratic liquidity risk (determined by other liquidity risk measures) was a less reliable predictor. Further, we determine how to analyze the connections between Basel III liquidity regulation and bank capital. Finally, we discuss how the implementation of Basel III liquidity regulation will affect sovereign credit as well as macroeconomic variables such as GDP, investment, inflation, consumption, personal disposable income, personal savings and employment. The book is intended to be used in executive banking courses, advanced undergraduate, Masters and MBA courses in banking; by banking practitioners, consultants and in consulting seminars as well as banking libraries.
Liquidity involves the degree to which an asset can bebought or sold in the market without affecting its price.The 2007 to 2009 financial crisis was characterized by a decreasein liquidity and necessitated the introduction of BaselIII capital and liquidity regulation in 2010. Inside, youlllearn how such regulations are applied on a broad crosssectionof countries in order to understand and demonstratethe implications of Basel III.This book summarizes the defining features of the BaselI, II, and III Accords and their perceived shortcomings, aswell as the role of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision(BCBS) in promulgating international bankingregulation.Basel III quantifies liquidity risk by using the measuresliquidity coverage ratio (LCR) and net stable fundingratio (NSFR). This book discusses approximationtechniques that may be used to estimate these liquiditymeasures. Inside, the authors highlight the connectionsbetween liquidity creation and bank capital and provideyou with the details of an investigation of the risks liquiditycreation generates for banks. In addition, we considerthe impact of the implementation of Basel III liquidityregulation on macroeconomic variables such as GDP, investment,inflation, consumption, income, savings, andemployment.