• Найдите в тексте и выпишите 2 простых предложения.
    Найдите в тексте и выпишите 2 сложных предложения.
    Repurchase agreements, known as repos, play a critical role in the
    money markets. They serve to keep the markets highly liquid, which in
    turn ensures that there will be a constant supply of buyers for new
    money-market instruments.
    A repo is a combination of two transactions. In the first, a securities
    dealer, such as a bank, sells securities it owns to an investor, agreeing to
    repurchase the securities at a specified higher price at a future date. In
    the second transaction, days or months later, the repo is unwound as the
    dealer buys back the securities from the investor. The amount the
    investor lends is less than the market value of the securities, a difference
    called the haircut, to ensure that it still has sufficient collateral if the
    value of the securities should fall before the dealer repurchases them.
    For the investor, the repo offers a profitable short-term use for
    unneeded cash. A large investor whose investment is greater than the
    amount covered by bank insurance may deem repos safer than bank
    deposits, as there is no risk of loss if the bank fails. The investor profits
    in two different ways. First, it receives more for reselling the securities
    than it paid to purchase them. In effect, it is collecting interest on the
    money it advances to the dealer at a rate known as the repo rate.
    Second, if it believes the price of the securities will fall, the investor can
    sell them and later purchase equivalent securities to return to the dealer
    just before the repo must be unwound. The dealer, meanwhile, has
    obtained a loan in the cheapest possible way, and can use the proceeds
    to purchase yet more securities.
    In a reverse repo the roles are switched, with an investor selling
    securities to a dealer and subsequently repurchasing them. The benefit
    to the investor is the use of cash at an interest rate below that of other
    instruments.
    Repos and reverse repos allow dealers, such as banks and investment
    banks, to maintain large inventories of money-market securities while
    preserving their liquidity by lending out the securities in their portfolios.

    They have therefore become an important source of financing for deal-
    ers in money-market instruments. Many dealers and investors also take

    positions in the repo market to profit from anticipated interest-rate
    changes, through matched book trading. This might entail arranging a
    repo in one security and a reverse repo in another, both to expire on the

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    GUIDE TO FINANCIAL MARKETS

    same day, in the expectation that the difference in the prices of the two
    securities will change.
    Investors like repos partly because of their flexibility. The average
    maturity of a repo is only a few days, but it is possible to arrange one
    for any desired term. An investor can arrange an overnight repo, which
    carries the lowest interest rate but must be repaid the following day; a
    term repo, which is settled on a specific date usually three to six months

    hence and carries a slightly higher rate; or an open repo, which contin-
    ues until one or the other party demands its termination at a rate close

    to the overnight repo rate. Any type of security can be used, although in

    practice the overwhelming majority of repos involve national govern-
    ment notes or, in the United States, the notes of federally sponsored

    agencies.
    The repo market was originally a result of government regulations
    limiting the interest banks can pay on short-term deposits. It has grown
    rapidly in the United States, the largest single market. The British repo
    market was slower to develop, and was not officially recognised by the
    Bank of England until January 1996. Since then the market has grown
    significantly.
    Repos have historically been discouraged in France, where the legal
    basis for them was unclear before 1993, and in Germany, where banks
    were forced to set aside reserves for repo transactions until 1997, making

    such transactions uneconomic. Much trading in repos on German secu-
    rities still occurs in London, for legal reasons. The French repo market

    has become quite large, but in Italy the market has remained small
    because of unfavourable regulations. In Japan, gensaki, repos with
    Japanese government bonds, have been traded since 1976. The gensaki

    market declined during the 1980s as a result of the increased use of com-
    mercial paper and a tax on transactions. By 1998 the average amount of

    gensaki outstanding was only about $90 billion. As part of its 1998 finan-
    cial-market reform programme the Bank of Japan, the central bank,

    announced its intention to revive the Japanese repo market.

Ответы 1

  • 2 простых предложения. 1) A repo is a combination of two transactions. 2) For the investor, the repo offers a profitable short-term use for unneeded cash.2 сложных предложения.1) They serve to keep the markets highly liquid, which in turn ensures that there will be a constant supply of buyers for new money-market instruments. 2) In the second transaction, days or months later, the repo is unwound as the dealer buys back the securities from the investor.
    • Автор:

      francis42
    • 6 лет назад
    • 0
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