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Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) Frameworks and Protocols

Banking, Insurance and Financial Services November 30, 2025
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Introduction

Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) is a critical central banking tool, deployed to provide temporary liquidity support to solvent financial institutions facing exceptional and unexpected funding pressure. As a lender of last resort (LOLR), the ELA framework must be robust, transparent, and legally sound to preserve financial stability without distorting market discipline. This highly policy-focused course provides a comprehensive analysis of the legal, governance, operational, and collateral-related protocols that define an effective ELA program. Participants will dissect the key elements of decision-making under stress, including the "solvency assessment" hurdle, the operational mechanics of ELA provision, and the crucial communication strategy required to manage moral hazard and market reaction during a financial crisis.

Objectives

Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to:

  • Analyze the historical and theoretical basis for the central bank's role as the **Lender of Last Resort (LOLR)**.
  • Evaluate the legal mandate, governance structure, and political economy of an **Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA)** framework.
  • Understand the critical distinction between ELA and standard monetary policy operations (e.g., OMOs).
  • Formulate and execute a rigorous, swift **solvency assessment** of an institution requesting ELA.
  • Develop detailed operational protocols for the provision, collateralization, pricing, and monitoring of ELA facilities.
  • Analyze the complex trade-offs between ELA provision, **moral hazard**, and market discipline.
  • Design a robust and flexible framework for eligible **collateral valuation** and haircuts under stressed conditions.
  • Examine the protocols for the orderly public communication and eventual withdrawal of ELA.

Target Audience

  • Senior Management and Policy Makers involved in Financial Stability and LOLR decisions.
  • Heads of Financial Markets, Legal, and Risk Management Departments.
  • Banking Supervisors and Resolution Authority Officials.
  • Treasury and Operations Staff responsible for ELA collateral and disbursement.
  • Internal Audit and Governance Specialists.
  • Economists and Researchers focused on Crisis Management.

Methodology

  • Crisis Simulation and Decision-Making Exercises (ELA Request under Time Pressure)
  • Group Activities on Drafting ELA Collateral Eligibility and Haircut Policies
  • Case Studies on Historical ELA Provision and Policy Debates (e.g., Global Financial Crisis)
  • Expert-Led Review of Legal Frameworks for LOLR/ELA
  • Discussions on Managing Moral Hazard and Market Communication
  • Individual Assignments on Solvency Assessment Protocols for Troubled Institutions

Personal Impact

  • Deepened specialized knowledge in financial crisis management and policy-making.
  • Enhanced ability to make high-stakes, time-critical decisions under legal and political scrutiny.
  • Improved strategic understanding of the LOLR function and its delicate balance with market discipline.
  • Acquisition of valuable skills in assessing bank solvency and valuing collateral under stress.
  • Increased professional credibility in the highest levels of central bank policy execution.
  • Better decision-making on the legal, governance, and operational aspects of ELA.

Organizational Impact

  • Establishment of a robust, legally sound, and internally consistent **Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) Framework**.
  • Enhanced organizational preparedness and speed of response during a systemic liquidity crisis.
  • Mitigation of systemic risk through the effective and discreet application of the LOLR function.
  • Reduction of moral hazard through transparent and penalty-based ELA protocols.
  • Strengthened collateral management and risk control for extraordinary lending.
  • Improved public and market confidence in the central bank's ability to maintain financial stability.

Course Outline

Unit 1: Foundations and Rationale for ELA

LOLR Principles:
  • The historical evolution and theoretical justification for the Lender of Last Resort function.
  • The Bagehot Principle and its relevance in modern ELA frameworks.
  • Distinguishing between systemic and idiosyncratic liquidity crises.
  • The ELA mandate: legal basis, required parliamentary/ministerial approval, and delegation of authority.
  • The concept of "constructive ambiguity" and its role in crisis management.

Unit 2: Governance, Decision-Making, and Solvency Assessment

The ELA Hurdle:
  • Designing the ELA decision-making body (e.g., ELA Committee) and its composition.
  • The critical and urgent process of assessing an institution's **solvency** under stress.
  • Information requirements and the role of the supervisory authority in ELA due diligence.
  • Legal and political accountability for ELA decisions and potential losses.
  • Protocols for cross-border ELA provision and coordination with other central banks.

Unit 3: Operational and Collateral Protocols

Execution and Security:
  • Operational mechanics: speed of disbursement, account settlement, and control mechanisms.
  • Collateral eligibility: types, valuation, and legal perfection under crisis conditions.
  • The application of **haircuts** and risk-adjusted pricing (penalty rates) for ELA.
  • Continuous monitoring of ELA-receiving institution's financial condition and collateral value.
  • Exit strategy protocols for the orderly withdrawal and repayment of ELA.

Unit 4: Moral Hazard and Communication Strategy

Market Discipline:
  • Analyzing the risk of **moral hazard** and how ELA framework design can mitigate it.
  • The relationship between ELA and the national bank resolution framework.
  • Designing a robust **communication strategy** for ELA provision: when to disclose, what to disclose.
  • Managing public perception and political scrutiny during a crisis.
  • Case studies of ELA deployment in recent financial crises.

Unit 5: ELA and Unconventional Tools

Post-Crisis Frameworks:
  • The intersection of ELA with other central bank liquidity and asset purchase programs.
  • The role of ELA in supporting market infrastructures (CCPs) vs. individual institutions.
  • Analysis of ELA frameworks in major jurisdictions (e.g., Eurosystem, Federal Reserve, Bank of England).
  • Developing a framework for pre-positioning collateral for potential ELA requests.
  • Future challenges: ELA in a system dominated by non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs).

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Upcoming Sessions

23 Feb

Bangkok

February 23, 2026 - February 27, 2026

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09 Mar

Munich

March 09, 2026 - March 13, 2026

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