Quoted currency and Reserves: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Link with Quoted and Quoted rate pages.)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
(Added numbering to the two definitions and more spacing)
 
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The currency which is quoted as the number of units per 1 unit of the base currency.
1.
 
''Accounting''. 
 
Reserves represent the amount of money ‘owed’ to the owner (shareholder) of the company.
 
In a profitable and conservative company, reserves will normally comprise a significant balance of accumulated undistributed profits.
 
 
2.
 
''Banking''.
 
Deposits maintained by non-[[central bank]] [[monetary financial institution]]s with their central bank in the latter's capacity as 'the bankers' bank'. Central banks may require institutions to maintain minimum balances with the central bank, in which case balances in excess of the minimum are known as 'excess reserves'.
 
Of course banks publish accounts and use the term in the accounting sense also - do not be confused by this.
 


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Base currency]]
* [[Interest on excess reserves]]
* [[Direct quote]]
* [[Merger reserve]]
* [[Foreign exchange]]
* [[Official reserves]]
* [[Quoted]]
* [[Reserve requirements]]
* [[Quoted rate]]
* [[Special drawing rights]]
* [[Trapped cash]]
 
[[Category:Long_term_funding]]

Revision as of 09:44, 30 May 2015

1.

Accounting.

Reserves represent the amount of money ‘owed’ to the owner (shareholder) of the company.

In a profitable and conservative company, reserves will normally comprise a significant balance of accumulated undistributed profits.


2.

Banking.

Deposits maintained by non-central bank monetary financial institutions with their central bank in the latter's capacity as 'the bankers' bank'. Central banks may require institutions to maintain minimum balances with the central bank, in which case balances in excess of the minimum are known as 'excess reserves'.

Of course banks publish accounts and use the term in the accounting sense also - do not be confused by this.


See also