Betekenis van:
bank failure

bank failure
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • the inability of a bank to meet its credit obligations

    Hyperoniemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. After the failure of the privatisation negotiations with […], the main private creditors of PZL Hydral, i.e. Bank […] and Bank […], settled their claims vis-à-vis PZL Hydral.
    2. The priority should be to create or expand specialised providers of risk capital and bank guarantees, where there is market failure.
    3. Restructuring aid could be justified in individual cases given the serious negative consequences of a bank failure for the banking system and public confidence.
    4. For example the plan explains that ING intends to amend its remuneration policy to orientate the bank more towards longer-term achievements and thus avoid rewards for failure.
    5. A failure of the third privatisation round would have endangered the bank and might in the aftermath even have led to BB’S insolvency, triggering Ausfallhaftung.
    6. If specific, previously absent signs of such a failure were to appear, the bank would have to increase its level of risk provisioning accordingly.
    7. Especially during the second attempt, which ended in failure in August 2005, a Lithuania-based bank with a Russian owner had taken part and Austria had reason to believe that the FMA would have forbidden such a deal.
    8. For prudential reasons, the Province of Burgenland assumed a worst-case scenario for BB in which a failure of Active Bank would seriously jeopardise BB and, ultimately, even result in BB’s insolvency.
    9. In view of the fairly sizeable stock of large loans, the Commission, in line with Mazars’ findings, is aware that exceeding the risks provided for is theoretically possible in the event of the failure of a large loan amounting to at least EUR [...]*. If specific, previously absent signs of such a failure were to appear, the bank would have to increase its level of risk provisioning accordingly.
    10. Restructuring aid could be justified in individual cases given the serious negative consequences of a bank failure for the banking system and public confidence. Unlike in previous cases decided by the Commission, however, the aid recipient here operated on a limited regional scale so that the effect of the aid was concentrated on only a few competitors.
    11. Since the Commission was unable in the spring of 2003 to allay, on the basis of its own analysis, the remaining doubts as to the bank’s viability raised by the failure of the privatisation process and the strongly negative aggregate result for 2002 and since a suitable, effective insulation of the credit risks existing above all in the real estate financing field was, according to Germany, impossible to achieve without further aid, the Commission made sure with the help of independent experts that, apart from a few points, the bank had made adequate provision for the existing risks and had built up suitable reserves.
    12. Single rate auction (Dutch auction): an auction in which the allotment interest rate (or price/swap point) applied for all satisfied bids is equal to the marginal interest rate. Solvency risk: the risk of loss owing to the failure (bankruptcy) of an issuer of a financial asset or to the insolvency of the counterparty. Standard tender: a tender procedure used by the Eurosystem in its regular open market operations. Standard tenders are carried out within a time frame of 24 hours. All counterparties fulfilling the general eligibility criteria are entitled to submit bids in standard tenders. Standardised deduction: the fixed percentage of the amount outstanding of debt securities with an agreed maturity of up to two years (including money market paper) which can be deducted from the reserve base by the issuers which cannot present evidence that such outstanding amount is held by other institutions subject to the minimum reserve system of the Eurosystem, by the ECB or by a national central bank. Standing facility: a central bank facility available to counterparties at their own initiative. The Eurosystem offers two overnight standing facilities: the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility. Start date: the date on which the first leg of a monetary policy operation is settled. The start date corresponds to the purchase date for operations based on repurchase agreements and foreign exchange swaps.
    13. Settlement account: an account held by a direct participant in a national RTGS system with the central bank for the purpose of processing payments. Settlement agent: an institution which manages the settlement process (e.g. the determination of settlement positions, the monitoring of payment exchanges, etc.) for transfer systems or other arrangements requiring settlement. Settlement date: the date on which a transaction is settled. The settlement might take place on the same day as the trade (same-day settlement) or one or several days after the trade (the settlement date is specified as the trade date (T) + the settlement lag). Single rate auction (Dutch auction): an auction in which the allotment interest rate (or price/swap point) applied for all satisfied bids is equal to the marginal interest rate. Solvency risk: the risk of loss owing to the failure (bankruptcy) of an issuer of a financial asset or to the insolvency of the counterparty. Standard tender: a tender procedure used by the Eurosystem in its regular open market operations.