Difference between revisions of "Supplementary leverage ratio"
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− | [[wikipedia:Supplementary leverage ratio]] | + | [[wikipedia:Supplementary leverage ratio]] part of the United States implementation of [[Basel III]] |
+ | The [[Federal Reserve]] (Fed) announced on April 1, 2020 that it would temporarily exclude U.S. Treasuries ([[USTs]]) and banks’ deposits with the Fed (Fed deposits) from its calculation of banks’ supplementary leverage ratio (SLR) until March 31, 2021. | ||
+ | == See also == | ||
* {{Banks}} | * {{Banks}} |
Latest revision as of 04:25, 29 March 2021
wikipedia:Supplementary leverage ratio part of the United States implementation of Basel III
The Federal Reserve (Fed) announced on April 1, 2020 that it would temporarily exclude U.S. Treasuries (USTs) and banks’ deposits with the Fed (Fed deposits) from its calculation of banks’ supplementary leverage ratio (SLR) until March 31, 2021.
See also[edit]
- Banks, Acquiring bank, Investment bank: Chase Bank, Citizens Financial Group, Citibank, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, IBAN, SWIFT, BIN, BIC, Neobank, bank account, FDIC, U.S. Bancorp, CGD, Emirates NBD, KYC, Singapore, Hong Kong, KYC, PCI DSS, Revolut, Nordigen, Standard Chartered, UAE banks, ICBC, ANZ, Open banking, NBFI, BFSI, RBI, FSB, SIFI, African Export–Import Bank, BCBS, Central bank, E-Money Directive, Investment bank, Solaris, Saltedge, ABN Amro, Raisin Bank
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