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  1. Assessing global liquidity: beyond borders1. Bryan Hardy, Bank for International Settlements. 1 This presentation was prepared for the meeting. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the BIS, the IFC or the central banks and other institutions represented at the meeting. 1/1.

  2. Publications. "Sovereign Risk and Bank Lending: Evidence from 1999 Turkish Earthquake", with Soner Baskaya, Sebnem Kalemli-Ozcan, and Vivian Yue, NBER Working Paper 22335, BIS Working Paper 1093, Journal of International Economics (2024). “Foreign Currency Borrowing, Balance Sheet Shocks, and Real Outcomes” Journal of International Money ...

  3. 6-4 , 240lb (193cm, 108kg) Born: March 26, 1977 in New Hyde Park, NY. Draft: Drafted by the Cleveland Indians in the 35th round of the 1995 MLB June Amateur Draft from James W. Martin HS (Arlington, TX). High School: James W. Martin HS (Arlington, TX) Full Name: Bryan J. Hardy. View Player Info from the B-R Bullpen.

  4. Beliebt bei Bryan Hardy. I am a research economist at the Bank for International Settlements, working in the Financial Systems and Regulation unit. My research covers topics in international finance, banking, prudential regulation, and corporate finance. Some of my work has examined foreign currency debt in emerging markets, capital flows and ...

  5. Worldwide monetary tightening has curbed foreign currency credit, notably in dollars and to borrowers. in emerging market economies, potentially heralding a new phase of global liquidity. second phase began in the aftermath of the GFC and featured a shift to bond market credit.4 Overall, foreign currency credit grew more moderately than in the ...

  6. 663 Followers, 85 Following, 29 Posts - Bryan Hardy (@bryan54hardy) on Instagram: "Outside stuff Tahoe Top 0.2% HR Middle Manager 🦖 Touch the sap".

  7. 1 de jun. de 2022 · This paper studies the impact of investor composition on the sovereign debt market. We construct an aggregate data set of sovereign debt holdings by foreign and domestic bank, non-bank private, and official investors for 95 countries over twenty years. We find that private non-bank investors absorb most of the increase in sovereign debt supply.