Liquidity Management Policy
Liquidity Management Policy
Liquidity Management Policy
CONTENTS
1. Introduction .......................................................................................................... 3
2. Purpose ................................................................................................................. 3
3. Policy objectives................................................................................................... 3
4. Trigger Points ....................................................................................................... 4
5. Funding Crisis Committee ................................................................................... 5
6. Responsibilities, Authorities and Delegated Authorities ..................................... 6
6.1 Liquidity risk management responsibilities and authorities of the ALM
Committee ............................................................................................................ 6
6.2 Delegated authority ............................................................................................ 7
7. Integrated Risk Management ............................................................................... 8
7.1 The Board of Directors ....................................................................................... 8
7.2 Head of Treasury ................................................................................................ 9
8. Contingency Action Plan ..................................................................................... 9
8.1 Impending Crisis – Phase 1 ................................................................................ 9
8.2 Crisis situation – Phase 2 ................................................................................. 10
9. Critical contact information ............................................................................... 14
10. Review ................................................................................................................ 15
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1. INTRODUCTION
Liquidity is crucial to the on-going viability of NBS Bank (the Bank) and any other
bank, as illiquidity can have dramatic and rapid adverse effects on even well
capitalized banks. Where a crisis develops in a bank as a result of other problems
such as deterioration in asset quality, the time available to the bank to address the
problem will be determined by its liquidity. Therefore, the measurement and
management of liquidity are amongst the most vital activities of banks.
2. PURPOSE
To establish a framework for management of liquidity risk that will assure that the
bank will have sufficient liquidity resources to meet its legal obligations to meet the
requests of depositors to withdraw their funds from the bank and for loans from its
creditors in a timely way, and to provide funding to customers who have firm
commitments from the bank.
3. POLICY OBJECTIVES
- To assure that the bank has adequate liquidity resources to meet its liquidity
needs while, at the same time, avoiding, to the extent possible, an excess of
liquidity;
- To assure that the liquidity policy is properly coordinated with other related
asset/liability policies of the bank;
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- To assure that guidance is provided on how liquidity resources are to be drawn
down to meet a funding need;
- To assure that the ALM Committee receives regular reports on the bank’s
liquidity condition and is informed immediately if any problems should arise;
- To assure that the liquidity risk management policy, and the bank’s contingency
liquidity risk management policy, are compatible and reinforcing;
4. TRIGGER POINTS
• Breach of the liquidity ratio by more than 50% for seven successive days.
• Branch or unit experiences large and unusual withdrawals that are out of line
with normal requirements. In such cases it is important to identify reasons for
withdrawals, is it pricing or a reputational issue.
• Systemic risk affecting Malawi financial markets which will affect NBS Bank
as a result of normal sanctioned counterparty activity.
• Rapid asset growth, especially when funded with potentially volatile liabilities.
• Growing concentrations in assets or liabilities.
• Increases in currency mismatches.
• Decrease of weighted average maturity of liabilities.
• Repeated incidents of positions approaching or breaching internal or regulatory
limits.
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• Negative trends or heightened risk associated with a particular product line,
such as rising delinquencies.
• Significant deterioration in the bank’s earnings, asset quality, and overall
financial condition.
• Negative publicity.
• Credit rating downgrade.
• Stock price declines or rising debt costs.
• Widening debt or credit-default-swap spreads.
• Rising wholesale or retail funding costs.
• Counterparties that begin requesting or request additional collateral for credit
exposures or that resist entering into new transactions.
• Correspondent banks that eliminate or decrease their credit lines.
• Increasing retail deposit outflows.
Funding Crisis Committee will be formed and will comprise of the CEO, Head of
Treasury, Head of Finance, Head of Credit and the Head of Risk.
Any funding difficulties will be examined by the Committee and, depending on the
circumstances and their severity, the following courses of action may inter alia be
considered:
Attempt to reinstate the bank’s name in the market, if it is perceived that the
liquidity crisis has been caused by such;
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Limit asset growth;
- To assure that the liquidity risk management policy is coordinated and properly
integrated with other ALM Committee policies for the bank.
- To set targets and ranges for key balance sheet or income statement ratios to
assure that the needed liquidity capacity of the bank is maintained at all times,
while providing sufficient flexibility to enable the bank to address short term
fluctuations in liquidity pressures.
- To establish and change policy for interest rates paid on deposits or charged on
loans.
- To establish internal controls for liquidity risk management and conduct reviews
of findings of internal auditors and examiners relative to these controls.
In order to adequately carry out its’ duties, the ALM Committee should meet at
least four times a year.
Additional roles and responsibilities for the Committee should be guided by the
Assets and Liabilities Terms of Reference.
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6.2 Delegated authority
Authority is delegated to the Treasury Department under the direction of the Head
of Treasury, to carry out the following activities and functions. Departments at the
branches of the Bank should carry out the functions specified and report results to
their Head. The International Trade Manager should carry out these functions for
the bank’s foreign currency exposure and report the results to the Head of Treasury:
- Day to day management of the bank’s reserve/clearing balance, assuring that the
balance at all times complies with the requirements of the RBM and whilst
avoiding balances that are substantially above these requirements.
- Manage target liquidity reserves to cover daily funding needs and meet strategic
liquidity targets. Liquidity reserves should be diversified (cash deposits with
banks and securities).
- Decisions on the general order for drawing down resources to meet temporary
liquidity pressures, consistent with the ALM Committee’s general guidance.
- Monitor market conditions and report any unusual developments to the ALM
Committee.
- Maintain liquidity ratios within ranges specified by the ALM Committee and
promptly report any deviation from these ranges to the ALM Committee.
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- Assure that all staff is adequately trained and that staff members in key positions
are backed up by qualified staff members.
- Assess the degree of diversity of credit and deposit sources and the strength of
relationships the bank has with these sources.
- Assure that lines of credit from each specified source are frequently tested.
- Prepare monthly reports of bank’s liquidity risk exposure for the ALM
Committee.
- Develop recommendations for necessary policy changes and refer them to the
ALM Committee for action.
- When providing collateral to secure contracts, use less liquid assets when
possible in order to conserve assets that are more liquid for emergency
conditions.
- Formally identifies key funding liquidity limits and approval levels, as well as
those authorities delegated to senior management committees or those
executives accountable for approving detailed strategies, goals, procedures,
limits, and exceptions.
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with other closely associated risks to facilitate enterprise-wide risk-management
solutions.
- Regularly informs the Board of the funding liquidity position of the Bank
(metrics, indicators, and outlooks);
- Immediately notifies the Board if there are any material changes in the firm’s
current or prospective funding liquidity positions.
A. Phase 1 – Team
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statement, etc
1.2 Liquidate any long forex positions and switch Head of Treasury
to local currency position
A. Phase 2 – Team
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B. Action Points Responsibility
1.1 Communication
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9. CRITICAL CONTACT INFORMATION
Contact Work Home
Telephone Tel/Mobile
1. Management Team
- Act CEO 01 01
Gilford Kadzakumanja
- DCEO 01
01 876 222
01 876 519
2. Central Bank
- Governor
Charles Chuka 01 770 600
- Deputy Governor- Economic Services 09 967 028
Dr. Naomi Ngwira 01 770 600 08 837 286
- Other Treasury personnel
Mbane Ngwira
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