Luxury, Banking, and Finance

Author(s):  
Hubert Bonin

Luxury-specific production has expanded through upstream–downstream integration, from commodities (silk, precious metals, etc.) to processing industries and luxury houses. Banks financed companies, trade, foreign exchange, and flows of payment. They were partners for the valuation of treasuries and for the lightening of the debts of their clients. They accompanied them through the transferrals of property, within dynasties or outside. Starting in the 1980s, business bankers supported companies building capital for luxury firms: they helped them to integrate the game of financial markets, to open their capital and to ensure the dynastic transition within family companies. For managers of companies in the luxury sector, the challenge has ever been to create strong self-financing capacities in order to allow a distribution of dividends that will ensure the loyalty of family shareholders, finance investments (workshops, shop networks), and contain indebtedness. The volatility of markets and the financialisation of capitalism led investment bankers to join offensive or defensive pools when bids were launched, or to be part of the M&A teams.

1993 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 332-335
Author(s):  
Willem Van der Geest

This volume reviews the nature and scope of informal financial markets in developing countries and elaborates on the theoretical and conceptual models which analyse 'financial repression' and other aspects of government intervention in financial markets. It also focuses on the consequences which the prevalence of informal financial markets in developing countries may have for monetary and exchange rate policy. In particular, it attempts to capture the functioning of informal, unregulated markets into macroeconomic models, working towards a general eqUilibrium model with informal financial markets. Two types of informal markets are analysed. The first are for informal lending at terms and conditions which differ greatly from those prevailing in the official banking system. The second are the 'parallel' markets for foreign exchange which tend to emerge in response to quantity restrictions on trade and administered allocation of foreign exchange to certain users at official rates, which are well below those on the parellel markets. The key question is whether these informal markets change the efficacy of monetary and credit policy-and, if they do, to what extent and in what direction? Two supporting appendices present econometric analyses of the efficiency of parallel currency markets and the degree of capital mobility in developing countries.


Author(s):  
Yilmaz Akyüz

Recent years have also seen increased openness of EDEs to foreign direct investment (FDI) in search for faster growth and greater stability. However, FDI is one of the most ambiguous and least understood concepts in international economics. Common debate is confounded by several myths regarding its nature and impact. It is often portrayed as a stable, cross-border flow of capital that adds to productive capacity and meets foreign exchange shortfalls. However, the reality is far more complex. FDI does not always involve inflows of financial or real capital. Greenfield investment, unlike mergers and acquisitions, makes a direct contribution to productive capacity, but can crowd out domestic investors. FDI can induce significant instability in currency and financial markets. Its immediate contribution to balance-of-payments may be positive, but its longer-term impact is often negative because of high-profit remittances and import contents.


2021 ◽  
pp. 54-70
Author(s):  
S. R. Moiseev

In 2022, Russian investors will get access to the wide possibilities of the global financial market. The Bank of Russia opens the market for foreign exchange-traded funds (ETFs) — one of the main savings instruments for households. The economy of ETFs differs from other investment funds, whose shares do not have secondary market. The opening of the ETFs market is intended to solve a number of issues for retail investors: moving away from the preference to individual foreign shares towards portfolio diversification, cost reduction, ensuring sustainable profitability, abandoning the aggressive securities trading, and supporting market competition. Soon, ETFs will be one of the driving forces in financial markets. However, their rapid growth is fraught with little-studied effects.


Investments in financial markets not only pay attention to promising profits, but also need to consider the risks that follow. Risks can be minimized by establishing an investment portfolio. This research was conducted with the aim of analyzing optimal portfolios on foreign exchange investments, so that investments made provide maximum returns at certain risks, or minimal risk on certain returns. The data analyzed in this study are foreign exchange traded at Bank Indonesia. Data analysis is carried out quantitatively using the Kelly Strategy model. The steps: (i) Calculation of individual foreign exchange returns, (ii) Determine the average value of individual foreign exchange returns, (iii) Determine the optimal portfolio using the Kelly strategy approach, and (iv) Determine portfolio returns and risks. Based on the results of the analysis obtained the allocation of weights that provide returns and risks to the optimal portfolio. A 95% USD currency is an optimal portfolio of the five currencies used. So that it can be used as a consideration for investors, in making investment decisions in the foreign exchange being analyzed.


Author(s):  
Karin Knorr Cetina

AbstractFinancial markets are one of the most iconic and influential structures of our time. The foreign exchange market in particular is also the most genuinely global market—and the largest market worldwide, with an average daily turnover of 1.8 trillion US dollars. The foreign exchange market is also structurally like a massive conversational interaction system; many of its transactions are conducted through electronically mediated ‘conversations’. Transactions not conducted through conversations but through an electronic broker also display a sequential turn-taking structure. In this paper, I analyze the streaming ‘flow’ architecture of this market in terms of its sequential structures and their technological and economic aspects. I also specify and analyze several types of texted sequences that articulate and illustrate the response-based interaction system of this market. I argue that informational sequences are particularly important; the informational liquidity of this market sustains and supports the market's economic liquidity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (2_suppl) ◽  
pp. S183-S212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suparna Nandy (Pal) ◽  
Arup Kr. Chattopadhyay

The article attempts to examine interdependence between Indian stock market and other domestic financial markets, namely, foreign exchange market, bullion market, money market, and also Foreign Institutional Investor (FII) trade and foreign stock markets comprising one regional stock market represented by Nikkei of Japan and other stock market for the rest of the world represented by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) 500 of the USA. Attempts are also made to examine asymmetric volatility spillover, first, between the Indian stock market and other domestic financial markets and second, between the Indian stock market and global stock markets (represented by Nikkei and S&P 500) along with the foreign exchange market. To measure linear interdependence among multiple time series of financial markets multivariate Vector Autoregression (VAR) analysis, Granger causality test, impulse response function and variance decomposition techniques are used. For estima-ting the volatility spillover among the aforesaid markets Dynamic Conditional Correlation-Multivriate-Threshold Autoregressive Condi-tional Heteroscedastic (DCC-MV-TARCH) (1, 1) model is applied on daily data for a quite long period of time from 01 April 1996 to 31 March 2012. The results of multi­variate VAR analysis, Granger causality test, variance decomposition analysis and impulse response function estimation establish significant interdependence between domestic stock market and different other financial markets in India and abroad. The results of DCC-MV-TARCH (1, 1) model estimation further show signi- ficant asymmetric volatility spillover between the domestic stock market and the foreign exchange market and also from the domestic stock market to bullion market and changes in gross volume of FII trade. We also find (a) both way asymmetric volatility spillover between the domestic stock market and the Asian stock market and (b) its unidirectional movement from the world stock market to the domestic stock market. The results of the study may help market regulators in setting regulatory policies considering the inter-linkages and pattern of volatility spillovers across different financial markets. JEL Classification: G15, G17


Author(s):  
Bijan Bidabad

In this paper, we are going to introduce a new Islamic financial institution with elaborated economic and financial characteristics. «Non-Usury Bank Corporation» (NUBankCo) is defined in a way that depositors are the shareholders of the Bank. This corporation is a new kind of shared ownership corporation which its shareholders are deposit holders and their deposits work as corporation’s equities. The defined bank can perform non-usury operations, and by designing a behavioral model, it is shown that NUBankCo can draw an environment that the welfare of society is to be maximized. Mobility of deposit resources in NUBankCo is less than conventional banks, and there are fewer conflicts between large and small shareholders/depositors and limits the emergence of shareholders’ cartels and thus huge sudden outflow of funds which creates bankruptcy crises.OECD’s corporate governance criteria are completely adaptable to this bank. Other pronouncements like Basel, AAOFI, IFSB, and FSF can be applied to this bank. NUBankCo can be established in different countries and can be adapted to different monetary, banking, foreign exchange, and commercial laws and regulations and can coexist in competition with conventional banks.NUbankCo will be Islamic in deposit mobilization side and will be Islamic in the loan/credit side for certain Islamic contracts and banking operations. Foreign currency exchange operations, bonds, commercial papers, and precious metals transactions, cash and draft operations, and credit and beneloan (non-interest loan) operations are characterized for NUBankCo to be fully Islamic.


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