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  2. Central bank liquidity swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_bank_liquidity_swap

    Central bank liquidity swap is a type of currency swap used by a country's central bank to provide liquidity of its currency to another country's central bank. [1] [2] In a liquidity swap, the lending central bank uses its currency to buy the currency of another borrowing central bank at the market exchange rate, and agrees to sell the borrower's currency back at a rate that reflects the ...

  3. Companies bolster currency hedges after Trump win as tariffs loom

    www.aol.com/companies-bolster-currency-hedges...

    Multinational companies are beefing up their foreign exchange hedging strategies to guard their overseas earnings from larger currency swings that could come from a second Donald Trump presidency.

  4. Currency swap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency_swap

    A cross-currency swap's (XCS's) effective description is a derivative contract, agreed between two counterparties, which specifies the nature of an exchange of payments benchmarked against two interest rate indexes denominated in two different currencies.

  5. Currency intervention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency_intervention

    Currency intervention, also known as foreign exchange market intervention or currency manipulation, is a monetary policy operation. It occurs when a government or central bank buys or sells foreign currency in exchange for its own domestic currency, generally with the intention of influencing the exchange rate and trade policy.

  6. On Trade, Trump 2.0 Won’t Be Like Trump 1.0—for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/trade-trump-2-0-won-210922167.html

    As shown in the table above, retaliation from foreign governments against U.S. exports or investments would add to the economic pain, and—based on experience during Trump 1.0 and recent ...

  7. Exchange Stabilization Fund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_Stabilization_Fund

    The Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) is an emergency reserve fund of the United States Treasury Department, normally used for foreign exchange intervention. [1] This arrangement (as opposed to having the central bank intervene directly) allows the US government to influence currency exchange rates without directly affecting domestic money supply.

  8. Lebanese liquidity crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebanese_liquidity_crisis

    Bundles of Lebanese pound banknotes, their value now drastically reduced. The Lebanese liquidity crisis is an ongoing financial crisis affecting Lebanon, that became fully apparent in August 2019, and was further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic in Lebanon (which began in February 2020), the 2020 Beirut port explosion and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

  9. Fed's Waller still sees rate cuts in 2025 despite Trump ...

    www.aol.com/finance/feds-waller-still-sees-rate...

    When excluding volatile food and energy costs, the so-called core PCE was down to 2.8% in November — compared with a peak of 5.6% in September 2022.