Bank Capital and Liquidity
Marc Farag, Damian Harland and Dan Nixon
Bank Capital and Liquidity
Introduction
Bank Capital and Liquidity
ALM in the Context of Enterprise Risk Management
The New Basel Standards on IRRBB and Their Implications for ALM
Measuring and Managing Interest Rate and Basis Risk
The Modelling of Non-Maturity Deposits
Modelling Non-Maturing Deposits with Stochastic Interest Rates and Credit Spreads
Managing Interest Rate Risk for Non-Maturity Deposits
Replication of Non-Maturing Products in a Low Interest Rate Environment
Managing Mortgage Prepayment Risk on the Balance Sheet
Considerations for ALM in Low and Negative Interest Rate Environments
Credit Spreads
Hedge Accounting
Supervisory Views on Liquidity Regulation, Supervision and Management
Measuring and Managing Liquidity and Funding Risk
Managing Reserve Assets
Instruments for Secured Funding
Asset Encumbrance
Capital Management
A Global Perspective on Stress Testing
Reverse Stress Testing: Linking Risks, Earnings, Capital and Liquidity – A Process-Orientated Framework and Its Application to Asset–Liability Management
XVAs and the Holistic Management of Financial Resources
Optimal Funding Tenors
Funds Transfer Pricing in the New Normal
Balance-Sheet Management with Regulatory Constraints
Bank capital, and a bank’s liquidity position, are concepts that are central to understanding what banks do, the risks they take and how best those risks should be mitigated both by banks themselves and by prudential regulators. As the 2007–9 financial crisis powerfully demonstrated, the instability that can result from banks having insufficient financial resources – capital or liquidity – can acutely undermine the vital economic functions they perform.
This chapter is split into three sections. The first section introduces the traditional business model for banks of taking deposits and making loans. The second section explains the key concepts necessary to understand bank capital and liquidity. This is intended as a primer on these topics: while some references are made to the 2007–9 financial crisis, the aim is to provide a general framework for thinking about bank capital and liquidity. For example, the chapter describes how it can be misleading to think of capital as “held” or “set aside” by banks; capital is not an asset. Rather, it is a form of funding: one that can absorb losses that could otherwise threaten a bank’s solvency. Meanwhile, liquidity problems arise due to
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