IAS 2 and Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Difference between pages

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International Accounting Standard 2, dealing with inventories.
''Bank regulation''.


Issued by the International Accounting Standards Board.  
(LCR).
 
The LCR is a requirement under Basel III for a bank to hold high-quality liquid assets (HQLAs) sufficient to cover 100% of its net cash requirements over 30 days.
 
It applies throughout the European Union.
 
The LCR has been implemented in stages from 2015, to reach the 100% requirement by January 2019.
 
 
It reduces the value to a bank of cash deposits of less than 30 days tenor because they are only worth the income on the HQLAs if a bank forecasts no short term cash receipts to cover repayment.
 
The purpose of this requirement is to ensure that banks can manage stressed market conditions, under which the bank is assumed to suffer substantial outflows of the cash previously deposited with it.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[International Financial Reporting Standards]]
* [[Basel III]]
* [[European Union]]
* [[Net Stable Funding Ratio]]
* [[Cash investing in a new world]]
* [[HQLA]]
* [[Level 1 liquid assets]]
* [[Level 2 liquid assets]]
* [[Leverage Ratio]]
* [[Liquidity buffer]]
* [[Liquidity risk]]
* [[LR]]
* [[OLAR]]
* [[Pillar 1]]
* [[Required Stable Funding]]
* [[Survival period]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Liquidity_management]]

Revision as of 11:55, 17 November 2016

Bank regulation.

(LCR).

The LCR is a requirement under Basel III for a bank to hold high-quality liquid assets (HQLAs) sufficient to cover 100% of its net cash requirements over 30 days.

It applies throughout the European Union.

The LCR has been implemented in stages from 2015, to reach the 100% requirement by January 2019.


It reduces the value to a bank of cash deposits of less than 30 days tenor because they are only worth the income on the HQLAs if a bank forecasts no short term cash receipts to cover repayment.

The purpose of this requirement is to ensure that banks can manage stressed market conditions, under which the bank is assumed to suffer substantial outflows of the cash previously deposited with it.


See also