Find Bank of Canada publications by keyword, author, content type, JEL code, topic or publication date.
1415
result(s)
December 21, 2008
A Model of Housing Boom and Bust in a Small Open Economy
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Financial System Review articles
December 21, 2008
The Role of Bank Capital in the Propagation of Shocks
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Financial System Review articles
December 21, 2008
Financial System Review - December 2008
The turmoil in global financial markets entered a new phase in September, moving to a more acute and broad-based loss of confidence in the context of a series of failures and near-failures of large financial institutions in the United States and Europe.
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Financial Stability Report
December 9, 2008
Senior Loan Officer Survey - Fourth-Quarter 2008
Survey respondents reported a further widespread tightening in lending conditions. Respondents attributed the tightening of lending conditions mainly to concerns about the general economic outlook, although a worsening of industry-specific factors was also cited as a contributing cause.
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Senior Loan Officer Survey
December 6, 2008
Beads to Bytes: Canada's National Currency Collection
This volume explores money and the role it has played, and continues to play, in society, through the lens of Canada's National Currency Collection. The Collection is an extraordinary repository of coins, bank notes, and related paraphernalia from around the world. Soft cover, 124 pages (2008).
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Books and monographs,
Souvenir books
Research Topic(s):
Bank notes
November 11, 2008
The Role of Dealers in Providing Interday Liquidity in the Canadian-Dollar Market
Access to information about the future direction of the exchange rate can be extremely valuable in the foreign exchange market. Evidence presented in this article suggests that Canadian dealers are more likely to provide interday liquidity to foreign, rather than Canadian, financial customers, since foreign financial flows can be more informative about future movements in the exchange rate. The author reveals a statistical relationship between the supply of liquidity provided by non-financial firms and that provided by dealing institutions across time, and across markets, and suggests that the relationship between the positions of commercial clients and market-makers, and the role played by dealers in interday liquidity provision, has been understated in the market microstructure literature.
Content Type(s):
Publications,
Bank of Canada Review articles
Research Topic(s):
Exchange rates,
Financial institutions,
Financial markets,
Market structure and pricing