Deposit insurance and Funding: Difference between pages

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The guarantee of certain bank and building society depositors' funds - subject to limits - should the bank or building society fail.
1.


Medium to longer term borrowing by a non-financial undertaking to meet its operational needs.


Deposit insurance operates under formal schemes, variously named, in the majority of developed economies.


:<span style="color:#4B0082">'''''Fund early'''''</span>


==See also==
:"... the ease with which treasurers have secured debt funding may start to lessen.
* [[Deposit Guarantee Scheme]]
 
* [[DGSD]]
:As panellists pointed out, the situation calls to mind the ACT's mantra: fund early, fund often and fund long."
* [[Financial Services Compensation Scheme]]
 
* [[Insurance]]
:''The Treasurer magazine, December 2018 / January 2019, p13''.
* [[International Association of Deposit Insurers]]
 
* [[Retail]]
 
 
2.
 
More generally, the provision or the sources of finance necessary for the continuing operation of an undertaking.
 
In this context, sources of finance for non-financial organisations would include, bank lenders, bondholders and shareholders.
 
 
3.
 
More broadly, sources of finance including certain other creditors, as well as bank lenders, bondholders and shareholders.
 
 
4. ''Pensions.''
 
The provision in advance for future liabilities in a defined benefit pension scheme by the accumulation of assets.
 
 
5. ''Banking.''
 
In the banking context, sources of funding include retail customer deposits and equity, as well as wholesale and longer term borrowings.
 
Banks' funding - very broadly - can be categorised as 'own funds' or 'borrowed funds'.
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Accrued benefits funding method]]
* [[Available Stable Funding]]
* [[Borrowed funds]]
* [[Capital]]
* [[Defined benefit pension scheme]]
* [[ESG funding]]
* [[FFL]]
* [[Flighty]]
* [[Fund]]
* [[Funding concentration risk]]
* [[Funding level]]
* [[Funding liquidity risk]]
* [[Funding management]]
* [[Funding method]]
* [[Funding ratio]]
* [[Funding risk]]
* [[Funding stack]]
* [[Funds]]
* [[Liquidity]]
* [[Loan to stable funding ratio]]
* [[Net Stable Funding Ratio]]
* [[Prospective benefits funding method]]
* [[Own funds]]
* [[Required Stable Funding]]
* [[Scheme Specific Funding]]
* [[Stability]]
* [[Stability]]
* [[Statement of funding principles]]
* [[Statutory funding objective]]
* [[Sticky]]
* [[Term out]]


[[Category:Identify_and_assess_risks]]
[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]
[[Category:Risk_reporting]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 15:46, 22 October 2022

1.

Medium to longer term borrowing by a non-financial undertaking to meet its operational needs.


Fund early
"... the ease with which treasurers have secured debt funding may start to lessen.
As panellists pointed out, the situation calls to mind the ACT's mantra: fund early, fund often and fund long."
The Treasurer magazine, December 2018 / January 2019, p13.


2.

More generally, the provision or the sources of finance necessary for the continuing operation of an undertaking.

In this context, sources of finance for non-financial organisations would include, bank lenders, bondholders and shareholders.


3.

More broadly, sources of finance including certain other creditors, as well as bank lenders, bondholders and shareholders.


4. Pensions.

The provision in advance for future liabilities in a defined benefit pension scheme by the accumulation of assets.


5. Banking.

In the banking context, sources of funding include retail customer deposits and equity, as well as wholesale and longer term borrowings.

Banks' funding - very broadly - can be categorised as 'own funds' or 'borrowed funds'.


See also