The U.S. Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) rule is designed to promote resiliency of the banking sector by requiring that certain large U.S. banking organizations (Covered Companies) maintain a liquidity ...
In her International Banking column, Arnold & Porter counsel Kathleen A. Scott writes that after protests from the banking industry that the imposition of a "liquidity coverage ratio," aimed at making ...
On February 10, the Fed, OCC and FDIC rescinded public FAQs from October 2017 related to the 2014 Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) rule (covered by InfoBytes here), leaving the FAQs online while ...
Daniel Tarullo, former governor of the Federal Reserve, was one of several authors on a paper that proposes new liquidity requirements for large banks. Revised liquidity standards are the key to ...
Adam Hayes, Ph.D., CFA, is a financial writer with 15+ years Wall Street experience as a derivatives trader. Besides his extensive derivative trading expertise, Adam is an expert in economics and ...
“For the first time in regulatory history, we have a truly global minimum standard for bank liquidity,” announced the head of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Bank of England governor ...
Motilal Oswal says liquidity shift from 1 April could enable higher loan-to-deposit ratios, with PSBs likely to benefit the most from surplus buffers ...
On 17 June 2025, the European Commission (the "Commission") published its proposed measures to revive the securitisation framework in the European Union ("EU"), with a view to making it simpler and ...
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