Indian Capital Markets
... of GDP grew from 21.2% in 1997-98, the year of the Asian crisis, to 34.7 % in 200708 and the increase in the Indian corporates’ access to external funding. In the fiveyear period from 2003 to 2008, the share of investment in India's GDP rose by 11 percentage points. Corporate savings financed roughl ...
... of GDP grew from 21.2% in 1997-98, the year of the Asian crisis, to 34.7 % in 200708 and the increase in the Indian corporates’ access to external funding. In the fiveyear period from 2003 to 2008, the share of investment in India's GDP rose by 11 percentage points. Corporate savings financed roughl ...
Box Article: Investment Accounts under IFSA
... Investment accounts are an additional avenue, complementing private equity and venture capital funds, for businesses to access financing. The level of returns generated depends on the performance of the underlying asset, with possible upside potential in returns to customers generated from equity-ba ...
... Investment accounts are an additional avenue, complementing private equity and venture capital funds, for businesses to access financing. The level of returns generated depends on the performance of the underlying asset, with possible upside potential in returns to customers generated from equity-ba ...
8. DUBSKA, D.: Real and sustainable growth (Czech only). Ekonom
... established government agencies and then those claims were sold in packages (yield from sale of bad debts was compared with similar agencies rather just average). Until 2002, the Czech government cleansed the Czech banking sector an overall amount of CZK 450 bn, which corresponded to 18% of GDP gene ...
... established government agencies and then those claims were sold in packages (yield from sale of bad debts was compared with similar agencies rather just average). Until 2002, the Czech government cleansed the Czech banking sector an overall amount of CZK 450 bn, which corresponded to 18% of GDP gene ...
position paper summary
... €10,500 billion of long-term resources in the economy. Per year, about €500 billion short-term savings are transformed by these institutions into long-term financing. The new requirements on banks and insurance companies‟ capital will alter their business model and will impact significantly on their ...
... €10,500 billion of long-term resources in the economy. Per year, about €500 billion short-term savings are transformed by these institutions into long-term financing. The new requirements on banks and insurance companies‟ capital will alter their business model and will impact significantly on their ...
Co-operative Money as a Commons - First International Social
... Today the global pervasiveness of bank created money is at the heart of the Euro crisis. The intractable nature of this crisis is linked to decades of unregulated debt growth initially with credit cards and mortgages from the late 1970s but since the 1990s with a growing plethora of other forms of s ...
... Today the global pervasiveness of bank created money is at the heart of the Euro crisis. The intractable nature of this crisis is linked to decades of unregulated debt growth initially with credit cards and mortgages from the late 1970s but since the 1990s with a growing plethora of other forms of s ...
1 Contested Capitalism: Financial Politics and Implications for China
... A) Financial Systems Across Time and Space Hall and Soskice (2001) use stock market capitalization relative to GDP as their indicator for a nation’s reliance on markets relative to relationship-based forms of financing (i.e., bank lending). This is a good measure, but it needs to be treated with ca ...
... A) Financial Systems Across Time and Space Hall and Soskice (2001) use stock market capitalization relative to GDP as their indicator for a nation’s reliance on markets relative to relationship-based forms of financing (i.e., bank lending). This is a good measure, but it needs to be treated with ca ...
The Financial Holding Company (FHC)
... Banking’s Principal Competitors • Banking’s principal competitors – credit unions, savings associations, finance companies, insurance firms, pension fund and mutual fund companies, security dealers, hedge funds, investment banks and other financial firms. • It’s all becoming blurry in many ways to k ...
... Banking’s Principal Competitors • Banking’s principal competitors – credit unions, savings associations, finance companies, insurance firms, pension fund and mutual fund companies, security dealers, hedge funds, investment banks and other financial firms. • It’s all becoming blurry in many ways to k ...
Lessons from a collapse of a financial system
... The rapid rise of the Icelandic banks is unprecedented in the recent history of banking. This was a nation with no history of international banking where a recently privatised banking system and liberalised capital markets allowed perfect capital mobility for the first time in its history. The pace ...
... The rapid rise of the Icelandic banks is unprecedented in the recent history of banking. This was a nation with no history of international banking where a recently privatised banking system and liberalised capital markets allowed perfect capital mobility for the first time in its history. The pace ...
Investment banking
... investors — ‘asset-backed securities (ABS)’. Like debt and equity securities, once ABS have been issued, they can be traded by financial market participants. The creation of a security allows a lender to easily transfer the risks and rewards from a set of loans to other investors such as other banks ...
... investors — ‘asset-backed securities (ABS)’. Like debt and equity securities, once ABS have been issued, they can be traded by financial market participants. The creation of a security allows a lender to easily transfer the risks and rewards from a set of loans to other investors such as other banks ...
M a c r o - f i n a... m a c r o p r u d e...
... (including institutional trends, and the role of highly leveraged institutions) and the capital account of the balance of payments are particularly relevant for macroprudential ...
... (including institutional trends, and the role of highly leveraged institutions) and the capital account of the balance of payments are particularly relevant for macroprudential ...
Banking Intelligence Accelerator – Decision Support
... reopening – characterized by a fastchanging set of business, regulatory, and IT requirements. It is imperative for banks to gain market share while increasing operational efficiency. An interesting view from Forrester Research is that on the IT side, existing banking platforms can be compared with b ...
... reopening – characterized by a fastchanging set of business, regulatory, and IT requirements. It is imperative for banks to gain market share while increasing operational efficiency. An interesting view from Forrester Research is that on the IT side, existing banking platforms can be compared with b ...
Treasury Management Strategy Statement 2016/17
... either accept the new rate or to repay the loan at no additional cost. All of these LOBOS have options during 2016/17, and although the Authority understands that lenders are unlikely to exercise their options in the current low interest rate environment, there remains an element of refinancing risk ...
... either accept the new rate or to repay the loan at no additional cost. All of these LOBOS have options during 2016/17, and although the Authority understands that lenders are unlikely to exercise their options in the current low interest rate environment, there remains an element of refinancing risk ...
Do Big Banks Have Lower Operating Costs?
... Reduction in Operating Cost Efficiency ($bn, quarterly) ...
... Reduction in Operating Cost Efficiency ($bn, quarterly) ...
The Instruments of Macroprudential Policy
... Banks play an important role in the provision of credit to the private sector in certain economies, not least in Ireland. Credit growth, therefore, varies with the financial soundness of the banking sector as well as economic conditions. As entities, banks can be fragile to external shocks, as they ...
... Banks play an important role in the provision of credit to the private sector in certain economies, not least in Ireland. Credit growth, therefore, varies with the financial soundness of the banking sector as well as economic conditions. As entities, banks can be fragile to external shocks, as they ...
original article in English
... figure compared to banks’ 4-5% leverage ratio, (which is defined as the ratio of a bank’s tier-I capital after deduction to its total assets). A back-on-the-envelope calculation tells that banks’ tier-I capital could be entirely wiped out if 40% of these high-risk shadow banking activities turned lo ...
... figure compared to banks’ 4-5% leverage ratio, (which is defined as the ratio of a bank’s tier-I capital after deduction to its total assets). A back-on-the-envelope calculation tells that banks’ tier-I capital could be entirely wiped out if 40% of these high-risk shadow banking activities turned lo ...
CYCLICAL PATTERNS IN PROFITS, PROVISIONING AND
... profitability and the way it relates to the business cycle, while section 4 takes a similar approach to the making of provisions for future credit losses. Section 5 then provides an empirical study of lending practices, with special focus on demand and supply factors because of their pivotal role in ...
... profitability and the way it relates to the business cycle, while section 4 takes a similar approach to the making of provisions for future credit losses. Section 5 then provides an empirical study of lending practices, with special focus on demand and supply factors because of their pivotal role in ...
Chapter 1
... The Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”) also helped homeowners borrow by selling bonds to investors and used the funds to purchase mortgages from banks. The Financial Crisis of 2007–2009 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. ...
... The Federal National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie Mac”) also helped homeowners borrow by selling bonds to investors and used the funds to purchase mortgages from banks. The Financial Crisis of 2007–2009 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. ...