Showing 1 - 20 results of 20 for search '"toxic asset"', query time: 0.32s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Central bank liquidity and “toxic asset” auctions. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2009
    “…This column proposes a new auction design that can be used for toxic asset purchases and central bank liquidity auctions in a credit crunch.…”
    Journal article
  2. 2

    New Auction for Substitutes: Central-Bank Liquidity Auctions, "Toxic Asset" Auctions, and Variable Product-Mix Auctions. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2010
    “…Treasury planned (but later cancelled) using a related design to buy "toxic assets". …”
    Journal article
  3. 3

    New Auction for Substitutes: Central-Bank Liquidity Auctions, "Toxic Asset" Auctions, and Variable Product-Mix Auctions. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2009
    “…Treasury planned (but later cancelled) using a related design to buy "toxic assets". …”
    Working paper
  4. 4

    A New Auction for Substitutes: Central-Bank Liquidity Auctions, “Toxic Asset” Auctions, and Variable Product-Mix Auctions. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2010
    “…Treasury planned using a related design to buy “toxic assets”; it may be used to purchase electricity.…”
    Journal article
  5. 5

    A New Auction for Substitutes: Central-Bank Liquidity Auctions, “Toxic Asset” Auctions, and Variable Product-Mix Auctions. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2009
    “…Treasury planned using a related design to buy “toxic assets”; it may be used to purchase electricity.…”
    Working paper
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    Reorganising the Banks: Focus on the Liabilities, Not the Assets. by Bulow, J, Klemperer, P

    Published 2009
    “…Doing this by buying toxic assets is costly, inefficient, and risky. Governments should focus on which liabilities, rather than which assets, they need to support. …”
    Journal article
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  11. 11

    The Product-Mix Auction: A New Auction Design for Differentiated Goods. by Klemperer, P

    Published 2010
    “…Treasury planned using a related design to buy “toxic assets”; it may be used to purchase electricity.…”
    Journal article
  12. 12

    Cruelty and Austerity. Philip Hallie’s Categories of Ethical Thought and Today’s Greek Tragedy by Giorgio Baruchello

    Published 2013-11-01
    “…As such, his understanding can be utilised to interpret and assess in ethical terms the recent austerity policies pursued in many countries of the world after the 2008 economic collapse, which was induced by unsustainable deregulated trade of financial assets, particularly of toxic assets. The case of Greece is examined as exemplary, referring especially to the Loan Agreements of May 2010 between the representative of the Greek State and those of the Euro-area Member States under the aegis of the International Monetary Fund.…”
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    Article
  13. 13

    Products and Processes Innovation from the Perspective of Environmental Management by Vanessa Theis, Dusan Schreiber

    Published 2017-05-01
    “…Evidence collected provided the realization that innovations tend to be adjustments made to the legal provisions that require the mitigation of environmental impacts in the production process, especially in reducing pollution and using less toxic assets, which does not generate sufficient stimulus to the development of new products.…”
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    Article
  14. 14

    Current Economic and Financial Crisis – New Issues or Returning to the Old Problems? Paradigms, Causes, Effects and Solutions Adopted by Felix TOTIR, Ingrid-Mihaela DRAGOTĂ

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…Reaching the saturation of the three engines of economic growth worldwide in the period after the collapse of the socialist bloc is another important cause of all the failures that currently exist worldwide. Acquisition of toxic assets from bank balance sheets, their recapitalization and takeover by the state, but also the reinforcement of the prudential supervision of capitalization, liquidity and risk management system, improved transparency and speed the process of evaluating or reinforcing authorities' response to risk, can be considered short or long term anti-crisis measures, as appropriate.…”
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    Article
  15. 15

    INDUSTRIAL POLICY AND “NEW NORMALITY” by N. M. Abdikeev, A. Yu. Teplyakov

    Published 2017-09-01
    “…It is mentioned that the reasons for “new normality” is a global inability to design new forms of activity, which led to a deficit of non-toxic assets in excess of money supply. The slowdown and the decline of global economic growth are the signs of this process. …”
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    Article
  16. 16

    Current Economic and Financial Crisis – New Issues or Returning to the Old Problems? Paradigms, Causes, Effects and Solutions Adopted by Felix TOTIR, Ingrid-Mihaela DRAGOTĂ

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…Reaching the saturation of the three engines of economic growth worldwide in the period after the collapse of the socialist bloc is another important cause of all the failures that currently exist worldwide. Acquisition of toxic assets from bank balance sheets, their recapitalization and takeover by the state, but also the reinforcement of the prudential supervision of capitalization, liquidity and risk management system, improved transparency and speed the process of evaluating or reinforcing authorities’ response to risk, can be considered short or long term anti-crisis measures, as appropriate.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 17

    ASSETS LIABILITIES MODELS - A LITERATURE REVIEW by Trenca Ioan

    Published 2017-07-01
    “…Financial crisis with its main component, the banking crisis, had a negative influence on the US and European banks, affecting mostly bank assets with its toxic assets subprime mortgages. The financial crisis has affected all the economies, has had and still has a negative impact on the entire banking system. …”
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    Article
  18. 18

    The influence of the new Basel regulation rules on the Slovak banking sector by Emília Zimková, Jana Tašková

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…Movements in volumes of expected risk-weighted assets in the Slovak banking sector won´t be relevant particularly due to absence of toxic assets associated with financial markets; ii) calculated indicator of leverage is more than two times higher as the requested one; iii) the liquidity coverage ratio and the net stable funding ratio are even today in the Slovak banking sector highly above standards and they do not require any transitional period. …”
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    Article
  19. 19

    The impact of the financial crisis on the currency and the monetary system by Petre DEACONU

    Published 2010-09-01
    “…However, in terms of direct impact, the Romanian banking system was less affected by not being exposed to toxic assets, and because of prudential and administrative measures taken by the NBR. …”
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    Article
  20. 20

    DOUBLE ORAL AUCTIONS AND TENDENCIES TOWARD MORAL HAZARD by Kubák Matúš, Maliková Zuzana, Gazda Vladimír, Gróf Marek

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…Efforts to stabilise Eurozone, governments bail-outs to banks, governments purchases of toxic assets, rescue packages given to the bank sector and big companies, which are “too big to failâ€, rescue packages given to debtor nations, golden parachutes given to employees which are leaving companies are nothing but the manifestations of moral hazard in economic and politic reality. …”
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    Article