Market liquidity risk and PLAC: Difference between pages

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Market liquidity risk refers to the risk that market transactions will become impossible due to market disruptions or inadequate market depth.
Primary Loss Absorbing Capital.


Contrasted with, though also overlapping, funding liquidity risk.
Used, especially in the UK, to refer to equity and bail-in-able long term debt of banks that can be written down in case of financial distress. It includes both equity and bail-in-able long-term debt.


The great majority of bank capital in future must be PLAC, in contrast with Secondary Loss Absorbing Capital (SLAC).




== See also ==
== See also ==
*[[Liquidity risk]]
*[[Funding liquidity risk]]


[[Category:Financial_management]]
*[[Capital adequacy]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
*[[Loss absorbing capacity]]
*[[MREL]]
*[[Principal write down]]
*[[TLAC]]
*[[Total Loss Absorbing Capacity]]
 
*[[SLAC]] - Secondary Loss Absorbing Capital
 
*[[GCLAC]] also referred to as GLAC - gone-concern loss absorbing capital
*[[MCT]]
*[[Bailin]]
 
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]

Revision as of 14:27, 13 August 2016

Primary Loss Absorbing Capital.

Used, especially in the UK, to refer to equity and bail-in-able long term debt of banks that can be written down in case of financial distress. It includes both equity and bail-in-able long-term debt.


The great majority of bank capital in future must be PLAC, in contrast with Secondary Loss Absorbing Capital (SLAC).


See also

  • SLAC - Secondary Loss Absorbing Capital
  • GCLAC also referred to as GLAC - gone-concern loss absorbing capital
  • MCT
  • Bailin