The money market is a component of the financial markets where participants borrow and lend on a short term basis, typically less than one year. It provides liquidity to the global financial system through various instruments like treasury bills, commercial paper, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements. The money market consists of banks, corporations, governments, and other institutions that either have surplus short term funds or need to borrow short term funds. It functions to transfer large sums of money efficiently and helps implement monetary policy.
The money market is a component of the financial markets where participants borrow and lend on a short term basis, typically less than one year. It provides liquidity to the global financial system through various instruments like treasury bills, commercial paper, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements. The money market consists of banks, corporations, governments, and other institutions that either have surplus short term funds or need to borrow short term funds. It functions to transfer large sums of money efficiently and helps implement monetary policy.
The money market is a component of the financial markets where participants borrow and lend on a short term basis, typically less than one year. It provides liquidity to the global financial system through various instruments like treasury bills, commercial paper, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements. The money market consists of banks, corporations, governments, and other institutions that either have surplus short term funds or need to borrow short term funds. It functions to transfer large sums of money efficiently and helps implement monetary policy.
The money market is a component of the financial markets where participants borrow and lend on a short term basis, typically less than one year. It provides liquidity to the global financial system through various instruments like treasury bills, commercial paper, certificates of deposit, and repurchase agreements. The money market consists of banks, corporations, governments, and other institutions that either have surplus short term funds or need to borrow short term funds. It functions to transfer large sums of money efficiently and helps implement monetary policy.
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Money market
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Money market (disambiguation). Finance
Financial markets[show] Financial instruments[show] Corporate finance[show] Personal finance[show] Public finance[show] Banks and banking[show] Financial regulation[show] Standards[show] Economic history[show] v t e As money became a commodity, the money market became a component of the financial markets for assets involved in short-term borrowing, lending, buying and selling with original maturities of one year or less. Trading in the money markets is done over the counter and is wholesale. Various instruments exist, such as Treasury bills, commercial paper, bankers' acceptances, deposits, certificates of deposit, bills of exchange, repurchase agreements, federal funds, and short-lived mortgage-, and asset-backed securities. [1] It provides liquidity funding for the global financial system. Money markets and capital markets are parts of financial markets. The instruments bear differing maturities, currencies, credit risks, and structure. Therefore they may be used to distribute the exposure. [2]
Contents 1 History 2 Participants 3 Functions of the money market 4 Common money market instruments 5 Discount and accrual instruments 6 See also 7 References 8 External links History The money market developed because there are parties that had surplus funds, while others needed cash. [3][4] Today it comprises cash instruments as well. Participants The money market consists of financial institutions and dealers in money or credit who wish to either borrow or lend. Participants borrow and lend for short periods of time, typically up to thirteen months. Money market trades in short-term financial instruments commonly called "paper." This contrasts with the capital market for longer-term funding, which is supplied by bonds and equity. The core of the money market consists of interbank lendingbanks borrowing and lending to each other using commercial paper, repurchase agreements and similar instruments. These instruments are often benchmarked to (i.e. priced by reference to) the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) for the appropriate term and currency. Finance companies typically fund themselves by issuing large amounts of asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) which is secured by the pledge of eligible assets into an ABCP conduit. Examples of eligible assets include auto loans, credit card receivables, residential/commercial mortgage loans, mortgage-backed securities and similar financial assets. Certain large corporations with strong credit ratings, such as General Electric, issue commercial paper on their own credit. Other large corporations arrange for banks to issue commercial paper on their behalf via commercial paper lines. In the United States, federal, state and local governments all issue paper to meet funding needs. States and local governments issue municipal paper, while the US Treasury issues Treasury bills to fund the US public debt: Trading companies often purchase bankers' acceptances to be tendered for payment to overseas suppliers. Retail and institutional money market funds Banks Central banks Cash management programs Merchant banks Functions of the money market The money market functions are: [5][6]
Transfer of large sums of money Transfer from parties with surplus funds to parties with a deficit Allow governments to raise funds Help to implement monetary policy Determine short-term interest rates Common money market instruments Certificate of deposit - Time deposit, commonly offered to consumers by banks, thrift institutions, and credit unions. Repurchase agreements - Short-term loansnormally for less than two weeks and frequently for one dayarranged by selling securities to an investor with an agreement to repurchase them at a fixed price on a fixed date. Commercial paper - short term usanse promissory notes issued by company at discount to face value and redeemed at face value Eurodollar deposit - Deposits made in U.S. dollars at a bank or bank branch located outside the United States. Federal agency short-term securities - (in the U.S.). Short-term securities issued by government sponsored enterprises such as the Farm Credit System, the Federal Home Loan Banks and the Federal National Mortgage Association. Federal funds - (in the U.S.). Interest-bearing deposits held by banks and other depository institutions at the Federal Reserve; these are immediately available funds that institutions borrow or lend, usually on an overnight basis. They are lent for the federal funds rate. Municipal notes - (in the U.S.). Short-term notes issued by municipalities in anticipation of tax receipts or other revenues. Treasury bills - Short-term debt obligations of a national government that are issued to mature in three to twelve months. Money funds - Pooled short maturity, high quality investments which buy money market securities on behalf of retail or institutional investors. Foreign Exchange Swaps - Exchanging a set of currencies in spot date and the reversal of the exchange of currencies at a predetermined time in the future. Short-lived mortgage- and asset-backed securities Discount and accrual instruments There are two types of instruments in the fixed income market that pay the interest at maturity, instead of paying it as coupons. Discount instruments, like repurchase agreements, are issued at a discount of the face value, and their maturity value is the face value. Accrual instruments are issued at the face value and mature at the face value plus interest. [7]
See also Interbank lending market Liquidity crisis Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market One of the earliest popular books on the money market Money fund Money market account Money supply Overnight market Sweep account References 1. Jump up ^ Frank J. Fabozzi, Steve V. Mann, Moorad Choudhry, The Global Money Markets, Wiley Finance, Wiley & Sons (2002), ISBN 0-471-22093-0 2. Jump up ^ Money Market, Investopedia. 3. Jump up ^ Foreign Trade and the Money Market, Felix Schuster, 1903. 4. Jump up ^ Bill of Exchange, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1911. 5. Jump up ^ Money Market and Money Market Instruments 6. Jump up ^ Functions and importance of Money Market 7. Jump up ^ Discount Instrument, riskglossary.com, accessed 2012-05-14. External links
Look up money market in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Money Market Funds Enter a World of Risk September 18, 2008, New York Times. Difference between Money Market and Capital Market Study on the identification of euro money market transactions in TARGET2 Categories: Money market instruments Financial markets