Between the creation of nationally chartered banks in 1863 and the launch of the Federal Reserve System in 1914, an organization of most New York City banks—originally formed to simplify settling clearing balances—joined together during banking panics to reallocate liquidity and restore market confidence. In the absence of a central bank, this organization, the New York Clearing House Association (NYCH), issued clearinghouse loan certificates (CLCs) that association members could use as temporary cash substitutes for settling clearing balances between banks. CLCs allowed borrowing banks to maintain their cash reserves without costly asset liquidations. The NYCH used CLCs in six crises across this period: 1873, 1884, 1890, 1893, 1907, and 19...
The paper provides a brief history of central banking institutions in the United States. Specificall...
This working paper reports the preliminary results of an effort to analyse under what conditions liq...
WSJ article describing the practices of savings banks limiting convertibility of deposit
Before the advent of the Federal Reserve System, private clearinghouses provided emergency liquidity...
In the absence of a central bank, the New York Clearing House Association (NYCH), a group of 60 New ...
The New York Clearing House Association (NYCH), whose membership included most banks in New York, ac...
Signs of financial panic had marked the months leading up to mid-October 1907 when depositors began ...
As World War I began in 1914 and European stock markets shuttered, foreign investors turned to remov...
The Panic of 1893 was one of the deepest economic depressions before the Great Depression of 1931. A...
Clearinghouses were private organizations that not only had the power to audit member banks’ balance...
Before the Panic of 1907 the large New York City banks were able to maintain the call loan market’s ...
internal report of the Loan Committee written after the Panic of 1907, and later made public, detail...
Elmus Wicker draws a picture of banking panics under the National Banking System (NBS). He considers...
Caught between the end of the National Banking Era and the beginning of the Federal Reserve System, ...
Article analyzing the use of CLCs in 1907 and the importance of gold imports during that crisi
The paper provides a brief history of central banking institutions in the United States. Specificall...
This working paper reports the preliminary results of an effort to analyse under what conditions liq...
WSJ article describing the practices of savings banks limiting convertibility of deposit
Before the advent of the Federal Reserve System, private clearinghouses provided emergency liquidity...
In the absence of a central bank, the New York Clearing House Association (NYCH), a group of 60 New ...
The New York Clearing House Association (NYCH), whose membership included most banks in New York, ac...
Signs of financial panic had marked the months leading up to mid-October 1907 when depositors began ...
As World War I began in 1914 and European stock markets shuttered, foreign investors turned to remov...
The Panic of 1893 was one of the deepest economic depressions before the Great Depression of 1931. A...
Clearinghouses were private organizations that not only had the power to audit member banks’ balance...
Before the Panic of 1907 the large New York City banks were able to maintain the call loan market’s ...
internal report of the Loan Committee written after the Panic of 1907, and later made public, detail...
Elmus Wicker draws a picture of banking panics under the National Banking System (NBS). He considers...
Caught between the end of the National Banking Era and the beginning of the Federal Reserve System, ...
Article analyzing the use of CLCs in 1907 and the importance of gold imports during that crisi
The paper provides a brief history of central banking institutions in the United States. Specificall...
This working paper reports the preliminary results of an effort to analyse under what conditions liq...
WSJ article describing the practices of savings banks limiting convertibility of deposit