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LIQUIDITY (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   117677


Effect of reliance on international funding on banking fragilit: evidence from East Asia / Hamid, Fazelina Sahul   Journal Article
Hamid, Fazelina Sahul Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The East Asian crisis highlights the importance of liquidity for smooth functioning of the banking system. It also shows the vulnerabilities that arise as a result of high dependence on international liquidity. This article empirically analyses the influx of liquidity before the crisis and illiquidity during the crisis in finding out whether banks in East Asia held 'too little' or 'too much' liquidity before and during a crisis and how their vulnerabilities to failure changed as a result of that. Instrumental Variable estimation is used to dissociate the effect of international illiquidity on banks' liquidity risk during a crisis year. The study finds that the effect of liquidity on the probability of bank failure varies before and during a crisis. The findings also highlight the vulnerabilities of banks to failure as a result of international illiquidity and high reliance on external funding. These findings bring forward the case for stronger regulation of banks' liquidity, which can be brought forward by better liquidity management.
Key Words East Asia  Liquidity  Banking Fragility  G21  N20 
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2
ID:   116958


Interconnections and market integration in the Irish Single Ele / Nepal, Rabindra; Jamasb, Tooraj   Journal Article
Jamasb, Tooraj Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Interconnections can be an effective way to increase competition and improve market integration in concentrated wholesale electricity markets with limited number of participants. This paper examines the potential for interconnections and increasing market integration in the Irish Single Electricity Market (SEM). We use a time-varying Kalman filter technique to assess the degree of market integration between SEM and other large, mature and interconnected wholesale electricity markets in Europe including Great Britain (GB). The results indicate no market integration between SEM and other European markets except for Elspot and GB. We show that the current state of market integration between SEM and GB is just 17% indicating potential to improve market integration via increased interconnector capacity. The results indicate that liquidity of wholesale markets might be a crucial factor in the market integration process while our results remain inconclusive in determining whether increased trade of renewables can improve market integration.
Key Words Competition  Market Integration  Liquidity 
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3
ID:   090808


Intraday information efficiency on the Chinese equity market / Cai, Chen Jun   Journal Article
Cai, Chen Jun Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Bid-ask spread is a direct measure of information asymmetry. As such, it can be used to evaluate information efficiency. In this paper, we show that both the quoted and effective spreads on the Shanghai Stock Exchange are extremely high at the open, decrease over the trading day, and experience a small rebound at the close. The spread decreases with share volume, daily trades, and market capitalization, but increases with average trade size. We further examine the beta using the unbiasedness regression from Biais et al. [Biais, B., Hillion, P., Spatt, C. (1999). Price discovery and learning during the pre-opening period in the Paris Bourse. Journal of Political Economy, 107, 1218-1248] and find that intraday prices are efficient and unbiased for more liquid stocks. This suggests that liquidity prompts information-motivated trading, which, in turn, improves information dissemination. Moreover, our findings indicate that small and medium trades are more likely to facilitate the formation of efficient prices at the open and close of the market, while large trades play a more important role during the other trading periods.
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4
ID:   171882


Monetary Policy and Borrowers’ Loan Defaults Research Based on Data from Renrendai / Song, Wenda; Zhang, Haiyang   Journal Article
Song, Wenda Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract his paper uses Renrendai data to study the relationship between monetary policy and the default behavior of borrowers, and analyzes the transmission channels. The research shows that tight monetary policy will lead to a significant increase in a borrower’s probability to default, and this effect will continue for several months. There may be two transmission channels: (i) monetary policy changes a debtor’s liquidity through credit and balance sheet channels, which directly affects their current repayment behavior; and (ii) monetary policy may affect a borrower’s investment, production and protability, thus changing their long-term solvency. The paper also nds that the repayment behavior of productive borrowers is more susceptible to monetary policy than consumptive borrowers, and that the default behavior of borrowers in coastal provinces is more susceptible to monetary policy than of borrowers in inland provinces. These ndings provide new evidence for understanding how monetary policy affects individual behavior and its transmission mechanisms.
Key Words Monetary Policy  Liquidity  Default  Online Lending 
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