Funding liquidity risk: Difference between revisions

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2. ''Banking.''
2. ''Banking''


In relation to banks, funding liquidity risk is the risk that a bank does not have sufficient cash or collateral to make payments to its counterparties and customers as they fall due (or can only do so by liquidating assets at excessive cost).  
In relation to banks, funding liquidity risk is the risk that a bank does not have sufficient cash or collateral to make payments to its counterparties and customers as they fall due (or can only do so by liquidating assets at excessive cost).  
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*[[Liquidity risk]]
*[[Liquidity risk]]
*[[Market liquidity risk]]
*[[Market liquidity risk]]
*[[Net stable funding ratio]]
*[[Net Stable Funding Ratio]]
*[[Guide to risk management]]
*[[Guide to risk management]]
*[[Run]]
*[[Run]]

Revision as of 11:57, 17 November 2016

1.

The risk of an organisation's inability to obtain funds to meet its own obligations.

Contrasted with, though also overlapping, market liquidity risk.


2. Banking

In relation to banks, funding liquidity risk is the risk that a bank does not have sufficient cash or collateral to make payments to its counterparties and customers as they fall due (or can only do so by liquidating assets at excessive cost).

In this case the bank has defaulted.

This is sometimes referred to as the bank having become ‘cash flow insolvent’.


See also