Determinants of CORPORATE Cash HoldingS During the Recent Crisis b.sc. Thesis 2010-05-24 Lucas Kuijsters 722689 Abstract In this thesis I investigate the development of determinants of corporate cash holdings during the recent crisis. I create two categories of firms; one with financially constraint and unconstraint firms classified on their size and one with financially constraint and unconstraint firms based on the de size of their dividend payments. Unconstraint firms do not manage
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Large investors and liquidity: a review of the literature Matthew Pritsker 1 Abstract A growing share of financial assets are held by large institutional investors whose desired trades are large enough to move prices in markets. Because large investors’ trades have “price impact”‚ asset markets are not perfectly liquid from their perspective. This illiquidity is likely to influence their decisions of which assets to hold and which assets to trade‚ and may influence how assets are priced. These
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2009)‚ many banks struggled to remain adequately liquid during global financial crisis in mid-2007. Unprecedented levels of liquidity support were required from central banks in order to sustain the financial system. Even with such extensive support‚ a number of banks failed‚ were forced into mergers or required resolution. The crisis showed the importance of adequate liquidity risk measurement and management. Commercial banks were heavily exposed to maturity mismatch both through their balance sheet
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REQUIRED: As a Business Consultant of the company‚ you have been instructed by the Managing Director to conduct a review on the company’s performance and to recommend improvements to meet the challenges of the rapid changing business environment. Your mission will cover the following tasks. Task 1 1.1 Select s small business enterprise (a private firm or a published-listed company based in Singapore). You are required to access to the following information and describe the business profile of
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assessment of liquidity risk faced by Chinese banking institutions‚ based on calculation of Loan-to-Deposit Ratio and Liquidity Coverage Ratio By Wenbo Zhang & 1317611 A project submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of BA (Hons) International Finance and Banking 08/05/2014 Abstract After the financial crisis occurred in 2007‚ China experienced a rapid recovery period. However‚ the extraordinary development has brought various risks. Liquidity risk is
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:Capital adequacy is measured by the ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets (CRAR). A sound capital base strengthens confidence of depositors (b) Asset Quality : One of the indicators for asset quality is the ratio of non-performing loans to total loans (GNPA). The gross non-performing loans to gross advances ratio is more indicative of the quality of credit decisions made by bankers. Higher GNPA is indicative of poor credit decision-making. (c) Management : The ratio of non-interest expenditures to
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Current Ratio Interpretation From the calculation of the current ratio it is evident that the company’s current ratio for the year 2010 is 1.30:1 ‚2011 is 1.80:1‚ 2012 is 1.54:1 and 2013 is a 1‚53:1‚ that is company’s current assets in year 2013 was Rs. 1.53 for every 1Re of current liability‚ while in the year 2012 the current asset was Rs 1.54 Re of its current liability‚ while in the year 2011 the current assets was Rs 1.80 Re of its current liability‚ and while in the year 2010 the
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faced by NAB from the low cash level is liquidity risk‚ and there are two risks derived from liquidity risk: contagion risk and funding risk. Liquidity risk refers to an ADI will have insufficient funds to meet its financial obligations when due. In fact‚ a low liquidity ratio in one bank could affect the entire system‚ in other words‚ it can lead to contagion risk that the payment system collapses as a result of default by ADIs in general. Hence manage liquidity adequately could minimise serious problems
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Kohinoor Mills Limited Submitted By: Faisal Qaiser Shehzad Section: C Instructor: Sumaira Sajjad Lahore School of Economics Working capital is a financial measurement that shows the amount of operating liquidity available to a business. The working capital of KML was a positive 598649621 showing that the business had plenty of current assets available to it in order to meet its current obligations. It remained negative from FY09-FY11 after which things started to get better and the working capital
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(meaning that it is required that the business pay its obligation on demand from the creditor). Since their liabilities are not callable‚ most businesses can afford to invest in assets that are illiquid. Indeed‚ this is what is known as matching the liquidity of assets and liabilities. Since most business assets are illiquid businesses can afford to hold illiquid assets as well. Historically bank liabilities have been very liquid. Checking accounts are “demand” deposits meaning that banks are required
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