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| Global systemically important bank.
| | Banking services which a retail customer of a financial institution can access using a telephone (either fixed-line or mobile), a television set, a terminal or a personal computer. |
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| A G-SIB is a large bank whose potential failure would have widespread negative effects in the broader financial system.
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| For this reason, these banks are subject to more stringent regulation and capital adequacy requirements than other institutions.
| | == See also == |
| | | * [[Bank]] |
| | | * [[Return]] |
| UK-headquartered G-SIBs include HSBC, Barclays and Standard Chartered Bank.
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| ==See also== | |
| * [[Capital adequacy]] | |
| * [[Contagion]]
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| * [[D-SIB]]
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| * [[G-SIFI]] | |
| * [[HLA]]
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| * [[R-SIB]]
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| * [[SIB surcharge]]
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| * [[Significant institution]]
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| * [[Systemically Important Financial Institution]]
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| * [[Too Big To Fail]]
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| [[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
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| [[Category:The_business_context]]
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Revision as of 22:17, 5 December 2016
Banking services which a retail customer of a financial institution can access using a telephone (either fixed-line or mobile), a television set, a terminal or a personal computer.
See also