Funds Transfer Pricing in the New Normal
Michael Widowitz, Pascal Vogt and Peter Neu
Introduction
New Regulatory Developments for Interest Rate Risk in the Banking Book
Bank Capital and Liquidity
ALM within a Constrained Balance Sheet
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
Optimising Risk and Return of Non-Maturing Products by Dynamic Replication
Hedge Accounting
Bank Runs and Liquidity Management Tools
Strategies for the Management of Reserve Assets
Optimal Funding Tenors
Instruments for Secured Funding
Funds Transfer Pricing in the New Normal
Capital Instruments under Basel III
Understanding the Price of New Lending to Households
Funds transfer pricing (FTP) is a term used to describe the sum of policies and methodologies a bank applies in its internal steering systems to charge for the use (and credit the generation of) funding and liquidity. Commonly, FTP is embedded in economic value added (EVA) or return on equity (ROE), return on risk adjusted capital (RORAC) performance measure of single transaction or a business line’s risk-adjusted profitability or performance as a complement to capital consumption. It focuses on distributing the bank’s funding and liquidity costs to the beneficiaries of these scarce and valuable resources. As such, FTP is an extremely powerful tool, which is deeply rooted in any divisional P&L or profit centre calculation. In fact, FTP is the means by which a bank’s overall net interest income can be split into originating units and subunits, thus enabling the bank’s management to perform an effective planning, monitoring and control cycle. As a consequence of the crisis these costs are material and need to be allocated. They can turn a business line’s performance or product’s profitability from positive to negative and vice versa. Thus, FTP is a deeply strategic steering
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