International banks and other payment service providers (PSPs) may incur the cost of holding liquidity and collateral in different currencies across multiple jurisdictions to facilitate intraday payments in large-value payment systems.
      
    
    
      
 This fragmentation can drive up the 
cost of cross-border payments or even discourage PSPs from expanding 
their services to more markets.
 
Central bank liquidity bridges could help alleviate these costs by 
helping international banks and other PSPs manage their global liquidity
 requirements more efficiently. A central bank liquidity bridge is a 
short-term intraday liquidity arrangement set up between two or more 
central banks. In a liquidity bridge, collateral held by a PSP with one 
central bank can be used by a PSP's related entity in another 
jurisdiction to get intraday liquidity from that other central bank. 
Liquidity bridges may also help reduce credit and settlement risks to 
PSPs arising from foreign exchange (FX) transactions and reduce intraday
 settlement risk across borders. If the financial risk for the central 
banks involved is managed carefully, liquidity bridges can support 
financial stability.
 
This report provides a practical framework for central banks in 
considering the potential design and feature choices of central bank 
liquidity bridges. The report is intended to help central banks make 
informed decisions whether to establish liquidity bridges, by laying out
 the benefits, risks, and challenges in the design and operation of 
liquidity bridges.
				 full paper
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        © BIS - Bank for International Settlements
     
      
      
      
      
      
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