Search: solvent institutions
RBA Glossary definition for solvent institutions
solvent institutions – Institutions that maintain solvency (i.e. they can meet their financial obligations as they fall due).
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Panel Discussion on Financial Stability: Ten Questions and about Seven Answers | Conference – 2010
9 Feb 2010
Conferences
By this, I mean conducting supervision not just vertically institution by institution, but also horizontally across institutions and markets. ... solvent, and you allow the institutions that are insolvent to go to the wall.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2010/caruana-disc.html
Why Something Needs to be Done | Hedge Funds, Financial Stability and Market Integrity – March 1999 | Financial Sector | Submissions
1 Mar 1999
Submissions
If institutions are forced to sell these instruments at distressed prices, solvent institutions can quickly become insolvent, undermining financial intermediation through both markets and institutions. ... In contrast, in a large deep market, like the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/submissions/financial-sector/hedge-funds-financial-stability-and-market-integrity/why-something-needs-to-be-done.html
Discussion on Three Australian Asset-price Bubbles | Conference – 2003
18 Aug 2003
Conferences
Lending institutions played little part in financing these transactions outside the pastoral industry. ... In 1971, the ratio of the assets of financial institutions to GDP was 102 per cent.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2003/simon-disc.html
Summaries of the Papers | Conference – 1996
9 Jul 1996
Conferences
creating benefits for customers of financial institutions and challenges for the institutions themselves. ... These changes are not occurring so rapidly that institutions and regulators will be unable to respond appropriately.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/summaries-96.html
Banks, Markets and Liquidity | Conference – 2007
20 Aug 2007
Conferences
Given their fixed liabilities in the form of deposits or bonds, banks may be unable to remain solvent. ... As described in the previous section, the central idea is that when markets are incomplete financial institutions are forced to sell assets in
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2007/allen-carletti.html
Academic Views of Capital Flows: An Expanding Universe | Conference – 1999
9 Aug 1999
Conferences
Since agents cannot distinguish solvent from insolvent borrowers, any inefficiencies are ex post, not ex ante, in nature. ... Again, however, this is only the case if the underlying system is actually solvent.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1999/dooley-walsh.html
Consolidation: Efficiency and System Stability
31 May 1999
RDP
1999-05
The net effect across all institutions is no significant gain in cost performance. ... for example, the government may provide some form of support to failed institutions.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1999/1999-05/consolidation-efficiency-and-system-stability.html
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Contingent Claim Model of a Bank
1 Mar 1993
RDP
9302
Equity in the model is a contingent claim (a positive payoff to equity is contingent upon the bank being solvent at T), and its discounted value at any earlier point in ... Alternatively, a purchaser may be located for the failed institution; the
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1993/9302/contingent-claim-model-bank.html
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Retail Central Bank Digital Currency: Design Considerations, Rationales and Implications
17 Sep 2020
Bulletin
– September 2020
There has recently been increasing international focus on the possible issuance of central bank digital currencies (CBDC), or what might be considered a digital equivalent of banknotes.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2020/sep/retail-central-bank-digital-currency-design-considerations-rationales-and-implications.html
Banking in the 21st Century: The Transformation of an Industry | Conference – 1996
9 Jul 1996
Conferences
equally be done by markets, non-bank financial institutions or non-financial banking institutions. ... there will be clearly recognisable institutions called ‘insurance companies’, ‘banks’ and so on.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/llewellyn.html