Managing Corporate Liquidity


Book Description

Cash, as every manager knows, is the life-blood of a business. Managing cash flow, interest rates, and banking relations are some of the most important functions of treasury management. Managing Corporate Liquidity is a practical and concise guide designed specifically to offer advice and insight into the fundamental decisions of liquidity management. This book also takes into account the increased use of liquidity instruments, looking in detail at interest-rate hedging and the various control mechanisms that have been developed in recent years. An essential guide for treasury managers, financial managers at all levels, and entrepreneurs, business owners, and their advisers.




Managing Corporate Liquidity


Book Description

First Published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.




Corporate liquidity


Book Description




Corporate Liquidity


Book Description

Parkinson and Kallberg show corporations how to meet short-term objectives and improve relationships with outside credit institutions and banks. Corporate Liquidity is an essential guide for those actively involved in short-term corporate finance and also serves as a refresher for candidates studying for the Certified Cash Manager (CCM) exam.




Market Liquidity


Book Description

This book presents the theory and evidence on the effect of market liquidity and liquidity risk on asset prices and on overall securities market performance. Illiquidity means incurring a high transaction cost, which includes a large price impact when trading and facing a long time to unload a large position. Liquidity risk is higher if a security becomes more illiquid when it needs to be traded in the future, which will raise trading cost. The book shows that higher illiquidity and greater liquidity risk reduce securities prices and raise the expected return that investors require as compensation. Aggregate market liquidity is linked to funding liquidity, which affects the provision of liquidity services. When these become constrained, there is a liquidity crisis which leads to downward price and liquidity spiral. Overall, the volume demonstrates the important role of liquidity in asset pricing.







Corporate Liquidity


Book Description