Market-based finance: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 14:55, 8 June 2025
Financial services regulation - supervision - risk - financial stability - refinancing risk - Bank of England.
(MBF).
As defined by the Bank of England, market-based finance is an important supplement to the financial services provided by banks.
It includes:
(1) Non-bank financial intermediaries such as pension funds and insurers;
(2) Equity markets, debt markets, and other financial markets; and
(3) Financial infrastructure.
See also
- Balance sheet
- Bank
- Bank of England
- Bank supervision
- Broker-dealer
- Capital adequacy
- Capital buffer
- Credit
- Credit risk
- Deposit
- Derivative instrument
- Exposure
- Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
- Financial intermediary
- Financial stability
- Financial Stability Board (FSB)
- Hedge fund
- Infrastructure
- Insurance company
- Intermediation
- Investment firm
- Investment fund
- Leverage
- Liquidity
- Liquidity buffer
- Liquidity risk
- Liquidity transformation
- Market risk
- Maturity transformation
- Monetary financial institution
- Non-bank financial intermediaries
- Pension fund
- Prudential
- Prudential Regulation Authority
- Real economy
- Refinancing risk
- Regulation
- Security
- Solvency II
- Spillover risk
- Stress
- Structured finance
- Supervisor
- Systemic risk