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Financial Crisis and Cross Border Too Big To Fail Perception
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2011We exploit the exogenous shock to the Brazilian banking system caused by the international turmoil of 2008 and find evidence that the run to systemically important banks is better explained by the perception of a too-big-to-fail policy than by bank fundamentals.
Raquel de F. Oliveira+2 more
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The Governance of 'Too Big to Fail' Banks
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2010This paper considers possible and proposed responses to the “To Big (complex, interconnected, important) To Fail (TBTF) Problem.” It argues that the corporate governance of large shareholder-owned deposit taking banks is particularly problematic because of the implicit insurance their shareholders and bondholders enjoy, at the taxpayers expense.
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European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry, 2014
AbstractPhosphorus has a paramount importance in our life. Unfortunately, phosphorus deposits are increasingly becoming depleted, the element being discarded once it is used. Therefore, the need arises for a form of phosphorus stewardship. First steps have been taken towards this goal.
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AbstractPhosphorus has a paramount importance in our life. Unfortunately, phosphorus deposits are increasingly becoming depleted, the element being discarded once it is used. Therefore, the need arises for a form of phosphorus stewardship. First steps have been taken towards this goal.
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Too Big to Fail or Too Big to Succeed
2013There is an optimality issue with all functional activities. In businesses the optimality is related to size. It maybe stated that there is an optimal size for all organizations.
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netWorker, 2009
Dependence on Google services motivates our common interest in seeing the company survive and thrive.
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Dependence on Google services motivates our common interest in seeing the company survive and thrive.
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Too small to profit, too big to fail
Early Years Educator, 2017The government claims to put social mobility at the top of its agenda, with early years education a key factor, but there is enough evidence available to suggest that funding models will undermine progress.
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2010
Too big to fail (TBTF) is a doctrine postulating that the government cannot allow very big firms (particularly major banks and financial institutions) to fail, for the very reason that they are big. Dabos (2004) argues that TBTF policy is adopted by the authorities in many countries, but it is rarely admitted in public.
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Too big to fail (TBTF) is a doctrine postulating that the government cannot allow very big firms (particularly major banks and financial institutions) to fail, for the very reason that they are big. Dabos (2004) argues that TBTF policy is adopted by the authorities in many countries, but it is rarely admitted in public.
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2014
According to the Bank for International Settlements, “Institutions that are too big to fail—those that created intolerable systemic risk by themselves, because others are exposed to them —pose a significant challenge.”1 Moreover, “Mergers and acquisitions that have formed a part of the crisis response … may have increased the number of such ...
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According to the Bank for International Settlements, “Institutions that are too big to fail—those that created intolerable systemic risk by themselves, because others are exposed to them —pose a significant challenge.”1 Moreover, “Mergers and acquisitions that have formed a part of the crisis response … may have increased the number of such ...
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“Too Big to Fail” Is Too Costly to Continue
2014Finance is central to the growth and development of the world economy, and a relatively small number of global systemi-cally important financial institutions (G-SIFIs) are central to finance. But this interdependency is dangerous. The failure of one or more G-SIFIs could disrupt financial markets and put the world economy into a tailspin.
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Dynamic and reconfigurable materials from reversible network interactions
Nature Reviews Materials, 2022Matthew J Webber, Mark W Tibbitt
exaly