Thailand: Financial System Stability Assessment; imf country Report No. 19/308; September 10, 2019
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND Mutual Funds: Liquidity Risk
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INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND Mutual Funds: Liquidity Risk Domain Assumptions Top-down by FSAP Team 1. Institutional Perimeter Institutions Included • 32 daily FI and 11 MMFs. Market Share • 31 percent of total AUM. Date and the baseline date • September 2018. 2. Channels of Risk Propagation Methodology • Liquidity measures by (i) cash and short-term debt securities < 1year; and (ii) cash and high-quality liquid assets. 3. Risks and Buffers Risks • Liquidity outflows and inability to liquidate assets to cope with redemptions. Buffers • Liquidity buffers. 4. Tail shocks Size of the shocks • Monthly redemption shock equal to 1 th percentile of historical net flows. 5. Regulatory and Market-Based Standards and Parameters Regulatory Standards • None. 6. Reporting Format for Results Output presentation • Redemption coverage ratio by investment fund and liquidity shortfall. • Number of funds and share of funds that cannot meet their obligations. THAILAND INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND 53 Appendix III. Thrift and Credit Cooperatives and Credit Unions 1. Financial cooperatives, such as TCCs and CUs, are important providers of financial services in Thailand, serving over 4 million members and accounting for 16 percent of household debt. The positive financial performance of TCCs could be masking over-indebtedness of many of their members and risks to other financial institutions that lend to the same customers. The low level of their NPL indicator may also be distorted by the priority that claims of TCCs have over those of other lenders and lending practices that allow for a systematic rollover of debt. The performance of CUs has been mixed, with its loan portfolio exhibiting high levels of past due loans: 58 percent in 2016 and of 26 percent in 2017, which may not be adequately provisioned for. The level of past due loans spiked in 2015 to 66 percent due to the failure of the largest CU (which managed 20 percent of the sector’s assets) in the wake of a large alleged fraud by its management. Cooperatives generally do not share information with the NCB. As a result, their borrowers’ overall debts are not taken into account by other lenders. The TCC and CU sectors are organized into federations, but these play a limited role. Download 1.73 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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