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Bank Funding in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe Post Lehman
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 47

Bank Funding in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe Post Lehman

CESEE banks are reducing foreign funding sources in response to reduced external imbalances, reduced ability to tap international savings, banking group own strategies, initiatives by some regulators, and consistently with uncertainties surrounding the future of the banking union project. In the medium term, the global regulatory agenda and the high foreign presence and stock of FX loans exert opposite forces on rebalancing trends. In the long-term, any funding “new normal” will be determined by the future design of the EU financial architecture. In the meantime, limiting leverage, the use of FX loans and promoting aggregate saving through macro policies and capital market reforms will increase resilience against shocks going forward.

Bank Funding in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe Post Lehman
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 47

Bank Funding in Central, Eastern and South Eastern Europe Post Lehman

CESEE banks are reducing foreign funding sources in response to reduced external imbalances, reduced ability to tap international savings, banking group own strategies, initiatives by some regulators, and consistently with uncertainties surrounding the future of the banking union project. In the medium term, the global regulatory agenda and the high foreign presence and stock of FX loans exert opposite forces on rebalancing trends. In the long-term, any funding “new normal” will be determined by the future design of the EU financial architecture. In the meantime, limiting leverage, the use of FX loans and promoting aggregate saving through macro policies and capital market reforms will increase resilience against shocks going forward.

Is Banks’ Home Bias Good or Bad for Public Debt Sustainability?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 37

Is Banks’ Home Bias Good or Bad for Public Debt Sustainability?

Motivated by the recent increase in domestic banks’ holdings of domestic sovereign debt (i.e., home bias) in the European periphery, this paper analyzes implications of banks’ home bias for the sovereign’s debt sustainability. The main findings, based on a sample of advanced (AM) and emerging market (EM) economies, suggest that home bias generally reduces the cost of borrowing for AMs and EMs when debt levels are moderate to high. A worsening of market sentiments appears to dimish the favorable impact of home bias on cost of borrowing particularly for EMs. In addition, for AMs and EMs, higher home bias is associated with higher debt levels, and less responsive fiscal policy. The findings suggest that home bias indeed matters for debt sustainability: Home bias may provide fiscal breathing space, but delays in fiscal consolidation may actually delay problems until debt reaches dangerously high levels.

Corporate Financing Trends and Balance Sheet Risks in Latin America
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 31

Corporate Financing Trends and Balance Sheet Risks in Latin America

Easy global liquidity conditions, stronger risk appetite and a retrenchment in cross-border bank lending led to a surge in emerging market firms’ bond issuance in international markets (what we term “The Bon(d)anza”). Using firm-level data for five large Latin American economies, we provide evidence of a significant change in companies’ external funding strategies and liability structures after 2010, as well as in the balance sheet risks that firms face. We find that stepped up bond issuance was mostly aimed at re-financing rather than funding investment projects, as firms extended the average duration of their debt while securing lower fixed-rates, reducing roll-over and interest ra...

The IMF and Argentina, 1991-2001
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 132

The IMF and Argentina, 1991-2001

This report evaluates the role of the IMF in Argentina during 1991-2001, focusing particularly on the period of crisis management from 2000 until early 2002. The primary purpose of the evaluation is to draw lessons for the IMF in its future operational work. The evaluation suggests ten lessons, in the areas of surveillance and program design, crisis management, and the decision-making process, and, on the basis of these lessons, offers six sets of recommendations to improve the effectiveness of IMF policies and procedures.

Cronache di Cardezza e Cuzzego
  • Language: it
  • Pages: 400

Cronache di Cardezza e Cuzzego

  • Categories: Art
  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2023-12-23
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  • Publisher: Mnamon

C’era un tempo in cui le acque del Toce arrivavano a lambire i fianchi delle montagne con periodiche inondazioni, le strade e le case venivano quindi costruite ad una quota “di sicurezza” lasciando sgombera la piana. Così è stato anche per la strada lastricata che già dal 196 d.C. collegava il Lago Maggiore con l’Ossola e il Sempione. La strada venne fatta costruire (o restaurare) dall’imperatore Settimio Severo. Su questa strada si trovavano e tuttora si trovano le due località. Umberto De Petri è andato a scovare sui giornali ossolani le cronache di questi due Comuni antichissimi, nel periodo da fine ottocento fino agli anni '70 del secolo scorso.

The Global Banking Network in the Aftermath of the Crisis: Is There Evidence of De-globalization?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 45

The Global Banking Network in the Aftermath of the Crisis: Is There Evidence of De-globalization?

Post-crisis dynamics show a shrinkage in the overall amount of crossborder bank lending, which has been interpreted in the literature as a retreat in financial globalization. In this paper, we argue that aggregate figures are not sufficient to support such a claim in terms of the overall structure of the global banking network. Based on a systematic approach to measuring, mapping and analyzing financial interconnectedness among countries using network theory, we show that, despite the decline in aggregate lending volumes, the structure of the network has developed increased connections in some dimensions. Some parts of the network are currently more interlinked regionally than before the cri...

Contingent Liabilities from Banks
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 30

Contingent Liabilities from Banks

In this paper, we develop a methodology to assess potential losses to the government that could arise from bank failures. The approach is intended to be simple, parsimonious, and used in real time. It generates an index that we call the banking sector contingent liability index (BCLI), based on the banking sector’s size, concentration, diversification, leverage, and riskiness of assets. The index is illustrated for 32 advanced and emerging market economies from 2006 to 2013, as well as a group of banks including global systemically important banks (G-SIBs).

Pension Privatization and Country Risk
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 27

Pension Privatization and Country Risk

This paper explores how privatizing a pension system can affect sovereign credit risk. For this purpose, it analyzes the importance that rating agencies give to implicit pension debt (IPD) in their assessments of sovereign creditworthiness. We find that rating agencies generally do not seem to give much weight to IPD, focusing instead on explicit public debt. However, by channeling pension contributions away from the government and creating a deficit of resources to cover the current pension liabilities during the reform's transition period, a pension privatization reform may transform IPD into explicit public debt, adversely affecting a sovereign's perceived creditworthiness, thus increasing its risk premium. In this light, accompanying pension reform with efforts to offset its transition costs through fiscal adjustment would help preserve a country's credit rating.

Wildlife in a Changing World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 184

Wildlife in a Changing World

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009
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  • Publisher: IUCN

"Wildlife in a Changing World" presents an analysis of the 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Beginning with an explanation of the IUCN Red List as a key conservation tool, it goes on to discuss the state of the world s species and provides the latest information on the patterns of species facing extinction in some of the most important ecosystems in the world, highlighting the reasons behind their declining status. Areas of focus in the report include: freshwater biodiversity, the status of the world s marine species, species susceptibility to climate change impacts, the Mediterranean biodiversity hot spot, and broadening the coverage of biodiversity assessments."