Bank recovery and resolution : a conference book / / Matthias Haentjens and Bob Wessels, editors ; contributors Alexander Bornemann [and nine others] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (254 p.) |
Disciplina | 346.4073 |
Collana | Hazelhoff financial law series Bank recovery and resolution |
Soggetto topico | Financial services industry - Law and legislation - European Union countries |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN | 94-6274-033-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Table of Contents; Notes on contributors; Series Preface; Editorial Preface; A note on the NACIIL and the HCFL; Part 1 Introduction; 1 Work of International Organizationson Bank Recovery and Resolution: an Overview; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The earliest history of bank insolvencies; 1.2 Background of recent legislative initiatives; 1.3 Theme of today's conference; 2 Territorial; 2.1 General; 2.2 Global; 2.2.1 FSF/FSB; 2.2.2 Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BIS); 2.2.3 IMF; 2.2.4 UNCITRAL; 2.3 Regional; 2.3.1 EU; 2.3.2 United States; 2.4 National; 2.4.1 United Kingdom
2.4.2 Germany2.4.3 Spain; 2.4.4 The Netherlands; 3 Thematic; 3.1 General; 3.2 Scope; 3.2.1 Insurance companies; 3.2.2 Financial Market Infrastructures; 3.2.3 Securities and investment firms; 3.3 Recovery and resolution plans; 3.4 Bail-in; 3.5 Counterparties/contractual early termination; 3.6 Cooperation/cross-border groups; 3.7 Rule of law; 4 Conclusion; 5 Chronological overview; Part 2 Recovery Plans; 2 Bank Recovery Plans: Strengths and Weaknesses; 1 General introduction; 2 Early warning and recovery plans in other industries; 2.1 Recovery plans: early warning 2.2 Recovery plans: turnaround process2.3 Recovery plans: content; 3 Characteristics of banks and the banking industry; 4 EU Directive on the Recovery and Resolution of Credit Institutions and Investment Firms; 5 Recovery plans: triggers, concepts, criteria, strengths and weaknesses; 6 Conclusions; Literature; 3 Bank Failure and Pre-emptive Planning; 1 Introduction; 2 The special purpose of a bank resolution regime; 2.1 'Too big to fail'; 2.1.1 Special requirements in a bank failure scenario; 2.1.2 The shortcomings of insolvency proceedings in bank failure 3 The proposed EU bank resolution mechanism3.1 The scope: financial institutions; 3.2 The decision: made by resolution authorities; 3.2.1 Reasons for a 'dictated' resolution plan; 3.2.2 The indispensable involvement of courts; 3.3 Decision content: pre-packaged; 3.3.1 (Pre-packaged) resolution plans; 3.3.1.1 Right to set up a plan; 3.3.1.2 Duties to report; 3.3.1.3 Resolution planning and the core issue of resolvability; 3.3.1.4 Resolution tools; 3.3.1.4.1 Sale of business (and asset separation); 3.3.1.4.2 Bridge institution (and asset separation) 3.3.1.4.3 Who shall wind up a failing bank's business and assets?3.3.1.4.4 The bail-in tool - reorganization efforts in a bank failure regime?; 3.3.1.5 Implementing a resolution plan; 3.3.2 Side-effect: recovery plans; 4 Early intervention by supervisors and recovery plans; 4.1 When should a supervisor intervene?; 4.2 What may a supervisor do?; 5 Addressing banking groups; 5.1 Group recovery plans and group financial support agreement; 5.2 Group resolution plans; 6 Evaluation; 7 Outlining a 'default resolution option; 7.1 Resolution planning and resolvability 7.2 Resolution of a failing financial institution |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910464949103321 |
Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Bank recovery and resolution : a conference book / / Matthias Haentjens and Bob Wessels, editors ; contributors Alexander Bornemann [and nine others] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (254 p.) |
Disciplina | 346.4073 |
Collana | Hazelhoff financial law series Bank recovery and resolution |
Soggetto topico | Financial services industry - Law and legislation - European Union countries |
ISBN | 94-6274-033-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Table of Contents; Notes on contributors; Series Preface; Editorial Preface; A note on the NACIIL and the HCFL; Part 1 Introduction; 1 Work of International Organizationson Bank Recovery and Resolution: an Overview; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The earliest history of bank insolvencies; 1.2 Background of recent legislative initiatives; 1.3 Theme of today's conference; 2 Territorial; 2.1 General; 2.2 Global; 2.2.1 FSF/FSB; 2.2.2 Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BIS); 2.2.3 IMF; 2.2.4 UNCITRAL; 2.3 Regional; 2.3.1 EU; 2.3.2 United States; 2.4 National; 2.4.1 United Kingdom
2.4.2 Germany2.4.3 Spain; 2.4.4 The Netherlands; 3 Thematic; 3.1 General; 3.2 Scope; 3.2.1 Insurance companies; 3.2.2 Financial Market Infrastructures; 3.2.3 Securities and investment firms; 3.3 Recovery and resolution plans; 3.4 Bail-in; 3.5 Counterparties/contractual early termination; 3.6 Cooperation/cross-border groups; 3.7 Rule of law; 4 Conclusion; 5 Chronological overview; Part 2 Recovery Plans; 2 Bank Recovery Plans: Strengths and Weaknesses; 1 General introduction; 2 Early warning and recovery plans in other industries; 2.1 Recovery plans: early warning 2.2 Recovery plans: turnaround process2.3 Recovery plans: content; 3 Characteristics of banks and the banking industry; 4 EU Directive on the Recovery and Resolution of Credit Institutions and Investment Firms; 5 Recovery plans: triggers, concepts, criteria, strengths and weaknesses; 6 Conclusions; Literature; 3 Bank Failure and Pre-emptive Planning; 1 Introduction; 2 The special purpose of a bank resolution regime; 2.1 'Too big to fail'; 2.1.1 Special requirements in a bank failure scenario; 2.1.2 The shortcomings of insolvency proceedings in bank failure 3 The proposed EU bank resolution mechanism3.1 The scope: financial institutions; 3.2 The decision: made by resolution authorities; 3.2.1 Reasons for a 'dictated' resolution plan; 3.2.2 The indispensable involvement of courts; 3.3 Decision content: pre-packaged; 3.3.1 (Pre-packaged) resolution plans; 3.3.1.1 Right to set up a plan; 3.3.1.2 Duties to report; 3.3.1.3 Resolution planning and the core issue of resolvability; 3.3.1.4 Resolution tools; 3.3.1.4.1 Sale of business (and asset separation); 3.3.1.4.2 Bridge institution (and asset separation) 3.3.1.4.3 Who shall wind up a failing bank's business and assets?3.3.1.4.4 The bail-in tool - reorganization efforts in a bank failure regime?; 3.3.1.5 Implementing a resolution plan; 3.3.2 Side-effect: recovery plans; 4 Early intervention by supervisors and recovery plans; 4.1 When should a supervisor intervene?; 4.2 What may a supervisor do?; 5 Addressing banking groups; 5.1 Group recovery plans and group financial support agreement; 5.2 Group resolution plans; 6 Evaluation; 7 Outlining a 'default resolution option; 7.1 Resolution planning and resolvability 7.2 Resolution of a failing financial institution |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910786525103321 |
Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Bank recovery and resolution : a conference book / / Matthias Haentjens and Bob Wessels, editors ; contributors Alexander Bornemann [and nine others] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (254 p.) |
Disciplina | 346.4073 |
Collana | Hazelhoff financial law series Bank recovery and resolution |
Soggetto topico | Financial services industry - Law and legislation - European Union countries |
ISBN | 94-6274-033-X |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Title Page; Table of Contents; Notes on contributors; Series Preface; Editorial Preface; A note on the NACIIL and the HCFL; Part 1 Introduction; 1 Work of International Organizationson Bank Recovery and Resolution: an Overview; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The earliest history of bank insolvencies; 1.2 Background of recent legislative initiatives; 1.3 Theme of today's conference; 2 Territorial; 2.1 General; 2.2 Global; 2.2.1 FSF/FSB; 2.2.2 Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BIS); 2.2.3 IMF; 2.2.4 UNCITRAL; 2.3 Regional; 2.3.1 EU; 2.3.2 United States; 2.4 National; 2.4.1 United Kingdom
2.4.2 Germany2.4.3 Spain; 2.4.4 The Netherlands; 3 Thematic; 3.1 General; 3.2 Scope; 3.2.1 Insurance companies; 3.2.2 Financial Market Infrastructures; 3.2.3 Securities and investment firms; 3.3 Recovery and resolution plans; 3.4 Bail-in; 3.5 Counterparties/contractual early termination; 3.6 Cooperation/cross-border groups; 3.7 Rule of law; 4 Conclusion; 5 Chronological overview; Part 2 Recovery Plans; 2 Bank Recovery Plans: Strengths and Weaknesses; 1 General introduction; 2 Early warning and recovery plans in other industries; 2.1 Recovery plans: early warning 2.2 Recovery plans: turnaround process2.3 Recovery plans: content; 3 Characteristics of banks and the banking industry; 4 EU Directive on the Recovery and Resolution of Credit Institutions and Investment Firms; 5 Recovery plans: triggers, concepts, criteria, strengths and weaknesses; 6 Conclusions; Literature; 3 Bank Failure and Pre-emptive Planning; 1 Introduction; 2 The special purpose of a bank resolution regime; 2.1 'Too big to fail'; 2.1.1 Special requirements in a bank failure scenario; 2.1.2 The shortcomings of insolvency proceedings in bank failure 3 The proposed EU bank resolution mechanism3.1 The scope: financial institutions; 3.2 The decision: made by resolution authorities; 3.2.1 Reasons for a 'dictated' resolution plan; 3.2.2 The indispensable involvement of courts; 3.3 Decision content: pre-packaged; 3.3.1 (Pre-packaged) resolution plans; 3.3.1.1 Right to set up a plan; 3.3.1.2 Duties to report; 3.3.1.3 Resolution planning and the core issue of resolvability; 3.3.1.4 Resolution tools; 3.3.1.4.1 Sale of business (and asset separation); 3.3.1.4.2 Bridge institution (and asset separation) 3.3.1.4.3 Who shall wind up a failing bank's business and assets?3.3.1.4.4 The bail-in tool - reorganization efforts in a bank failure regime?; 3.3.1.5 Implementing a resolution plan; 3.3.2 Side-effect: recovery plans; 4 Early intervention by supervisors and recovery plans; 4.1 When should a supervisor intervene?; 4.2 What may a supervisor do?; 5 Addressing banking groups; 5.1 Group recovery plans and group financial support agreement; 5.2 Group resolution plans; 6 Evaluation; 7 Outlining a 'default resolution option; 7.1 Resolution planning and resolvability 7.2 Resolution of a failing financial institution |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910818919603321 |
Hague, Netherlands : , : Eleven International Publishing, , 2014 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|