The Nonbank-Bank Nexus and the Shadow Banking System

The present way of thinking about financial intermediation does not fully incorporate the rise of asset managers as a major source of funding for banks through the shadow banking system. Asset managers are dominant sources of demand for non-M2 types of money and serve as source collateral ?mines'' for the shadow banking system. Banks receive funding through the re-use of pledged collateral ?mined'' from asset managers. Accounting for this, the size of the shadow banking system in the U.S. may be up to $25 trillion at year-end 2007 and $18 trillion at year-end 2010, higher than earlier estimates. In terms of policy, regulators will need to consider the re-use of pledged collateral when defining bank leverage ratios. Also, given asset managers'' demand for non-M2 types of money, monitoring the shadow banking system will warrant closer attention well beyond the regulatory perimeter.
Publication date: December 2011
ISBN: 9781463927233
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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , International - Economics , collateral , banking , banking system , banking sector , holding company , bank funding , bank claims , foreign exchange , off balance sheet , bank holding , banking community , bank holding company , capital adequacy , accounting framework , banking statistics , bank exposures , bank c

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