From the WSJ moneybeat blog: China’s central bank extended support on Friday to a group of unnamed but large banks... the People’s Bank of China extended a longer-term but temporary liquidity facility... Details on the facility were typically vague. In recent weeks it has also injected record amounts of cash. The move gives banks some breathing room for now, just as interbank liquidity stresses escalate. The new facility, analysts from ANZ say, doesn’t require banks to post collateral like other facilities typically do. And it makes it easier for them to reach a key regulatory barometer that monitors banks’ liquidity risk in cases of depresi in the short term. A helping hand can lighten another burden–but not for long. "Interbank liquidity stresses" and central bank long term "loans" without collateral are not a good sign. An escalating war on capital flight is not a good sign either.
Sumber http://barokongnetwork.blogspot.com
pop
Senin, 05 Oktober 2020
Chinese Tidbit - Barokong
Diterbitkan Oktober 05, 2020
Artikel Terkait
- Cato took some comments I made in a recent event and produced it into a nice short video,
- As the economy recovers, public policy faces an inevitable dilemma. How do we wean the ec
- Tyler Cowen wrote an extended blog post on bank leverage, regulation and economic growth
- Peter Wallison has a worthy OpEd in the WSJ, "Forbearance." Continuing my earlier thought
- My brief exchange with Markus Brunnermeier at the end of a Covid-19 talk attracted some
- Charlie Plosser makes the case that the Federal Reserve should hold only Treasuries in it
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
EmoticonEmoticon