Bank funding, liquidity, and capital adequacy : a law and finance approach / Jose Gabilondo.
2016
INTERNET
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Author
Title
Bank funding, liquidity, and capital adequacy : a law and finance approach / Jose Gabilondo.
Published
Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Pub., [c. 2016]
Call Number
INTERNET
ISBN
9781783479177 (e-book)
Description
1 online resource (176 pages) ; cm.
System Control No.
eep9781783479177
Summary
Focusing primarily on the banking system in the United States, this book offers an innovative framework that integrates a depository bank's liquidity and its capital adequacy into a unified notion of funding that helps to explain how the 2007-2008 crisis unfolded, why central banks succeeded in resolving the crisis, and how the conceptual legacy of the crisis and its resolution led to lasting changes in bank funding regulation, including new objective requirements for bank liquidity. To provide a comparative context, the book also examines the funding models of non-bank intermediaries like dealer banks and insurers. This book provides a nuanced understanding of bank funding practices for legal academics interested in banking regulation or corporate finance and helps place prudential regulation and the private law of funding in the context of the banking business model. Business model scholars, financial academics, and bank regulators will appreciate its readable, integrated approach to understanding some of the most current and conceptually challenging aspects of prudential regulation.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Table of Contents
Why bank funding?
2. The wages of intermediation
3. Other funding models
Part II the crisis and its conceptual legacy
4. Funding lessons from the 2007-2008 crisis
Part III post-crisis funding reform
5. Regulatory capital
6. Regulatory liquidity
Concluding observations.
2. The wages of intermediation
3. Other funding models
Part II the crisis and its conceptual legacy
4. Funding lessons from the 2007-2008 crisis
Part III post-crisis funding reform
5. Regulatory capital
6. Regulatory liquidity
Concluding observations.