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The liquidity coverage ratio requires banks to hold enough high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) – such as short-term government debt – that can be sold to fund banks during a 30-day stress scenario ...
Banks' LCR will improve by around 6 percentage points at an aggregate level, as per an impact analysis undertaken by RBI.
The Reserve Bank of India's relatively relaxed final guidelines on banks' liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) is expected to free ...
The interest coverage ratio is $625,000 / $90,000 ($30,000 x 3) = 6.94. This indicates the company has no liquidity issues and can cover almost seven times its obligations. An interest coverage ...
In the final guidelines on liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) released on Monday, RBI said that banks need to assign a run-off factor of only 7.5% on these retail deposits instead of the 10% proposed ...
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may relax Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) norms to inject additional liquidity into the ...
The new guidelines on liquidity coverage ratio (LCR), net stable funding ratio (NSFR), and leverage ratio (LR) will require banks to raise their available cash above the current 20 percent of ...