Search: foreign-currency liquidity

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RBA Glossary definition for foreign-currency liquidity

foreign-currency liquidity – The capacity to exchange foreign currency for domestic currency without significantly moving the exchange rate. The extent to which a foreign currency may be traded readily without causing a significant movement in price.

RBA Glossary definition for liquidity

liquidity – The capacity to sell an asset quickly without significantly affecting the price of that asset. Liquidity is also sometimes used to refer to assets that are highly liquid.

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Current Account Deficits: The Australian Debate

12 Mar 2007 RDP PDF 289KB
of the depreciation on foreign-currency-denominated debt); since then it has risen to about 52 per cent. ... 8 Indeed, the depreciation, by raising the Australian-dollar values of debt denominated in foreign currency, also saw a widening of the net
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2007/pdf/rdp2007-02.pdf

What the Campbell Committee Expected | Conference – 1991

21 Jun 1991 Conferences
Tom Valentine
It provides liquidity and enables investors to obtain reasonable interest returns on cash holdings. ... Also, it is possible that foreign banks may have speeded up the introduction of financial innovations.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1991/valentine.html

Profitability of Reserve Bank Foreign Exchange Operations: Twenty Years After the Float

2 Dec 2009 RDP PDF 584KB
with the market, the Government, and all other counterparties. Foreign currency received as earnings on foreign assets has been included as a ‘purchase’ of foreign exchange. ... r and r are the short-term interest rates on Australian dollar and
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2004/pdf/rdp2004-06.pdf

Alternative Models of Financial System Development | Conference – 1996

9 Jul 1996 Conferences
Stephen Prowse
Germany. The relative importance of corporate securities markets across industrialised countries differs dramatically, both in terms of size and liquidity. ... Issuance of foreign currency bonds prohibited until 1990. Equity. Heavy taxes on transactions
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1996/prowse.html

Reforming the International Financial Architecture: Limiting Moral Hazard and Containing Real Hazard | Conference – 1999

9 Aug 1999 Conferences
Michael Mussa
The judgment has been effectively confirmed that the Mexican Government faced fundamentally a liquidity problem in 1995. ... Defaults or restructurings of these foreign credits would have been forced in some instances, with larger losses to creditors.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/1999/mussa.html

Setting Monetary Policy in East Asia: Goals, Developments and Institutions

26 Nov 2006 Conferences PDF 297KB
RBA Conference Volume 2001
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2001/pdf/mccauley.pdf

Exchange Rate Policies at the Zero Lower Bound

4 Jan 2018 Research Workshop PDF 1012KB
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/workshops/research/2017/pdf/rba-workshop-2017-javier-bianchi.pdf

Wrap-up Discussion | Conference – 2008

14 Jul 2008 Conferences
At one extreme would be an approach that offered banks unlimited liquidity support on demand. ... The 1990s brought the Asian crisis, which was associated with fixed exchange rates and the assumption that domestic financial systems could borrow in
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2008/wrap-up-disc-2008.html

From the Asian Miracle to an Asian Century? Economic Transformation in the 2000s and Prospects for the 2010s | Conference – 2011

24 Jul 2000 Conferences
Yiping Huang and Bijun Wang
gradual appreciation of the currency; balance of the external accounts; and slower accumulation of foreign reserves. ... External surpluses grew larger in the following years and foreign currency reserves surged.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2011/huang-wang.html

The Sub-prime Crisis: Causal Distortions and Regulatory Reform | Conference – 2008

14 Jul 2008 Conferences
Adrian Blundell-Wignall and Paul Atkinson
So it is with liquidity, financial bubbles, crises due to excess leverage and regulation. ... Regulation cannot, and should not have to, compensate for serious macroeconomic distortions that drive rolling liquidity bubbles.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2008/blundell-wignall-atkinson.html