Wednesday, 1 July 2015
BoE archives reveal little known lesson from the 1974 failure of Herstatt Bank
From Bank Underground –
“In June of 1974, a small German bank, Herstatt Bank, failed. While the bank itself was not large, its failure became synonymous with fx settlement risk, and its lessons served as the impetus for work over the subsequent three decades to implement real-time settlement systems now used the world over. Documents from the Bank of England’s Archive shed light on a lesser known aspect of Herstatt’s failure – the chain reaction it caused across financial centres as banks in different countries delayed settling their payments to each other. The lesson for policymakers today to grapple with is: when a bank fails, could we still expect surviving banks to delay making payments, with a potential chain reaction in the payment system?
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Labels:
Bank of England,
banks,
foreign exchange,
Forex,
fx,
payment risk,
settlement risk