Topic 1. Liquidity and its Sources
Topic 2. Liquidity Management Challenges and Risks
Topic 3. Liability (Borrowed Liquidity) Management
Topic 4. Balanced Liquidity Management
Timing Factor: Some liquidity needs are immediate (e.g., maturing certificates of deposit) while others are longer-term, allowing institutions to access funds from a wider range of sources
Cascading Effects: When customers face liquidity problems, these often transfer to the institutions supplying them with liquidity, creating systemic pressure
Q1. Genny Richards is the liquidity manager for Legend Bank. In evaluating the bank’s net liquidity position, Richards anticipates the following amounts:
Legend Bank’s net liquidity position is closest to:
A. $2,330,000.
B. $2,445,000.
C. $3,385,000.
D. $3,405,000.
Explanation: B is correct.
The net liquidity position is equal to the difference between the supplies of
liquidity and the demand for liquidity. Supplies include asset sales ($1,325,000), incoming deposits ($2,500,000), and non deposit services revenue ($950,000).
Demands include deposit withdrawals ($1,015,000), dividend payments
($470,000), and loan requests ($845,000). The net liquidity position is therefore equal to: ($1,325,000 + $2,500,000 + $950,000) – ($1,015,000 + $470,000 + $845,000) = $2,445,000.
Strategy Overview: A liquidity management approach, often used by smaller financial institutions, that maintains liquidity through holding liquid assets (cash and marketable securities) that are converted into cash as needed to meet liquidity demands
Strategy Overview: This strategy, commonly used by larger institutions, involves borrowing funds to cover anticipated liquidity demands rather than converting assets
Q2. A bank utilizing the liability management strategy is most likely to use which of the following sources of liquidity?
A. U.S. Treasury securities.
B. Federal agency securities.
C. Repurchase agreement sales.
D. Municipal bond investments.
Explanation: C is correct.
Of the choices given, only repurchase agreement sales (sales of liquid securities) would be a component of a liability (borrowed liquidity) management strategy. U.S. Treasury securities, federal agency securities, and municipal bond investments are all components of an asset liquidity management strategy.
Topic 1. Liquidity Estimation: Need and Approaches
Topic 2. Sources and Uses of Funds Approach
Topic 3. Structure of Funds Approach
Topic 4. Liquidity Indicator Approach
Topic 5. Market Signals/Discipline Approach
Fundamental Principle: Liquidity changes based on deposits and loans; deposit increases drive liquidity higher, while loan increases drive liquidity lower
Creating scenarios and assigning probabilities to them allows the liquidity manager to create a weighted average liquidity requirement using the following equation:
A liquidity manager forecasts the following scenarios for deposits and loans for next week. Calculate the expected liquidity requirement.
| Possible Outcomes | Est. Deposit Volume | Est. Loan Volume | Est. Liquidity Surplus/Deficit | Probability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best Possible | $90 million | $62 million | +$28 million | 20% |
| Worst Possible | $75 million | $85 million | -$10 million | 25% |
| Most likely | $84 million | $78 million | $6 million | 55% |
Core Principle: Uses financial ratios to measure liquidity. Changes in these ratios are more important than their absolute levels.
Ratios that indicates Higher Liquidity:
Cash position indicator (cash + interbank deposits/total assets)
Liquid securities indicator (U.S. government securities/total assets)
Core deposit ratio (core deposits/total assets). Core deposits are total deposits less those over $100,000.
Hot money ratio (money markets assets/volatile liabilities)
Net federal funds and repurchase agreements position: (federal funds sold and reverse repo agreements − federal funds purchased and repo agreements) / total assets.
Ratios that indicates Higher Illiquidity:
Capacity ratio (net loans and leases/total assets)
Loan commitments ratio (unused loan commitments/total assets)
Pledged securities ratio (pledged securities/total securities holdings)
Deposit composition ratio (demand deposits/time deposits)
Deposit brokerage index (brokered deposits/total deposits)
Q1. Which of the following indicators would create concern for a liquidity manager looking to stabilize liquidity and create confidence in the bank’s position?
A. An increasing hot money ratio.
B. An increasing deposit composition ratio.
C. Increases in reverse repurchase agreements.
D. An excess of federal funds sold over federal funds purchased.
Explanation: B is correct.
The deposit composition ratio compares demand deposits to time deposits. An increasing ratio means that more deposits are demand (relative to time). Demand deposits are more volatile, as they fluctuate based on customer activity. Time
deposits are more stable in that they have set maturities and penalties for early withdrawal. Higher demand deposits create a greater liquidity concern. An increasing hot money ratio, increases in reverse repo agreements, and an excess of federal funds sold over federal funds purchased will all improve liquidity positions.
Core Principle: A bank's liquidity position is judged by external market signals.
Useful Market Signals:
Public confidence in the institution.
Institution's stock price performance.
Frequency and losses on asset sales.
Risk premiums on CDs and borrowings (interest rates paid).
Frequency and size of borrowings from the central bank.
Ability to meet loan requests from credit customers.
Topic 1. Money Position Management
Topic 2. Clearing Balances, Sweep Accounts, and Fed Funds
Topic 3. Different Sources of Reserves
The factors that drive the decision as to which source to use are:
Q1. Which of the following statements is correct in regard to reserve sources?
A. Long-term asset sales are typically used to cover immediate needs.
B. Monetary policy and interest rate movements are relatively independent.
C. The federal funds market is available anytime a bank has an immediate cash need.
D. Deficits which must be covered relatively quickly are often funded through the central bank discount window.
Explanation: D is correct.
Deficits that are of a more immediate nature are often funded through the central bank discount window. Long-term asset sales are typically used to cover long-term (nonimmediate) deficits. Monetary policy and interest rate movements are
highly related, as monetary policy impacts the money supply, which in turn impacts interest rates. The federal funds market is only available during the trading day.