Managing Liquidity in Banks (eBook)
304 Seiten
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-1-119-99109-0 (ISBN)
management. It has been much neglected by financial institutions
and regulators in recent years and receives, in the course of the
sub-prime crisis, sudden and great attention. This book is
well-structured and provides a comprehensive and systematic
approach to the topic. It will help risk controllers to
systematically set up a liquidity risk framework in their
bank."
--Peter NEU, European Risk Team Leader, The Boston
Consulting Group, and co author of Liquidity Risk Measurement
and Management
"Mr Duttweiler's book is a welcome addition to the literature on
liquidity risk measurement and management. In addition to his
contributions to liquidity risk theory and liquidity pricing, the
author provides a good overview of all of the critical
elements."
--Leonard Matz, International Solution Manager, Liquidity
Risk and co-author of Liquidity Risk Measurement and
Management
Liquidity Risk Management has gained importance over
recent years and particularly in the last year, as major bank
failures have led to a re-evaluation of the significance of
liquidity in stressed market conditions. Liquidity risk is closely
related to market risk and solvency, suggesting its significance in
times of volatile and 'bear' markets, where a single bank's
failure can have dramatic effects on market liquidity.
The term liquidity is not well-define, and a comprehensive
understanding of its common elements is often missing within a
banking organisation. In too many cases, liquidity risk management
has not been developed with a coherent framework and generally
accepted terms and methods, creating weaknesses in its structure
and vulnerability to market risk. In this title, Duttweiler
advances the study of quantitative liquidity risk management with
the concept of the 'Liquidity Balance Sheet', which allocates
portfolios into a specific structure, and consequently is able to
account for potentially negative surprises so that the necessary
buffers can be quantified.
The book begins with an overview of liquidity as part of
financial policy and highlights the importance of liquidity as part
of a general business concept and as protector and supporter of a
business as a going concern. The author examines the role o
liquidity in helping managers to achieve high-level liquidity aims
to support operating units to achieve business goals. He looks at
quantitative methods of assessing a banks liquidity levels,
including LaR and VaR, to establish an integrated concept in which
liquidity is incorporated into the framework of financial policies.
He also presents methods, tools, scenarios and concepts to create a
policy framework for liquidity and to support contingency
planning.
Rudolf Duttweiler is an economist. He gained his Ph.D. from the University of St Gallen, Switzerland. Liquidity has played an important part in his professional life. His first practical experience in banking was gained in Zurich and London as Treasurer of Swiss Bank corporation (now UBS) and Credit Suisse. From 1993 until 2006 he headed the Group Treasury of Commerzbank at their Headquarters in Frankfurt. This was the formative period during which his comprehensive understanding of liquidity policy and concepts to manage liquidity were developed. Throughout his professional life he has continued to publish and lecture on market and liquidity related subjects. His last publication in 2008 refers to liquidity as part of banking related financial policy, and laid the basis for the integration of liquidity into the framework of business policy for banking. Mr Duttweiler is a lecturer on Bank Treasury Management at the University of St Gallen, Switzerland.
Foreword.
Preface.
Acknowledgements.
About the Author.
1 Liquidity and Risk: Some Basics.
1.1 Some understanding of liquidity.
1.2 The meaning of liquidity risk.
2 Liquidity in the Context of Business and Financial
Policy.
2.1 Introduction.
2.2 Equilibrium as a tool within financial policy.
2.3 The concept enlarged to fit banks.
3 Liquidity as an Element of Banking Risk.
3.1 Some clarifications.
3.2 The concept of downside risk (VAR) and its circle of
relationships.
3.3 LAR: liquidity risk and the missing theoretical concept.
3.4 An attempt at an integrated concept for LAR.
3.5 Summary.
4 A Policy Framework for Liquidity.
4.1 Some thoughts and considerations.
4.2 An overview of elements regarding liquidity policy.
4.3 The elements of a liquidity policy in detail.
4.4 Contingency planning.
4.5 A technical framework supporting liquidity policy.
4.6 The link to liquidity management.
5 Conceptual Considerations on Liquidity
Management.
5.1 Introduction.
5.2 From accounting presentation to defining the liquidity
balance sheet.
5.3 The liquidity balance sheet and liquidity flows.
6 Quantitative Aspects of Liquidity
Management.
6.1 General consideration.
6.2 Liquidity at risk as one determinant of the buffers.
6.3 Defining and quantifying the buffers.
6.4 Limit-related input for liquidity policy.
6.5 Transfer pricing and an alternative concept.
7 The Concept in Practice.
7.1 Introduction.
7.2 Establishing the base.
7.3 Case 1: a shock event (9/11).
7.4 Case 2: a name-related stress (Commerzbank in autumn
2002).
7.5 'Subprime' crisis: a stress in progress.
7.6 Final remarks and considerations.
8 Acting Within the Supervisory Frame.
8.1 High-level risks.
8.2 The regulatory focus set by supervisors.
8.3 Considerations and conclusions for bank management.
Bibliography.
Index.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 9.11.2011 |
---|---|
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► Wirtschaftsrecht |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Finanzierung | |
Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Spezielle Betriebswirtschaftslehre ► Bankbetriebslehre | |
Schlagworte | Finance & Investments • Finanz- u. Anlagewesen • Institutional & Corporate Finance • Institutionelle Finanzplanung |
ISBN-10 | 1-119-99109-9 / 1119991099 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-119-99109-0 / 9781119991090 |
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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