Capital markets in the Dominican Republic / Tapping the potential for development
Material type:
- 9789264177611
- 9789264177628
- 2012
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Oficina Leonel Fernández | Colección 6to. Piso | 2012 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000102959 |
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Foreword and Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Executive summary -- The state and general framework of the financial markets -- Macroeconomic context -- Characteristics and challenges of the financial system -- The public debt market -- The private debt market and capital market regulation -- Institutional investors -- Financial literacy, new instruments and market expansion.
This report presents a detailed analysis of the Dominican Republic's financial system and offers a series recommendations to develop the country's capital markets. The country has recently made big advances in the development of its capital markets, achieving high solvency in the banking sector, improving the institutional framework for the management of public debt and experiencing steady growth in the value of both the private bond market and the assets of pension funds. However, the level of financing directed to the economy is still small, given the country's level of development, and there are important structural challenges that need to be addressed. Both the Central Bank and the Finance Ministry issue public debt, each with different purposes, and there appears to be little coordination between the two organs in terms of rate of returns and maturity of the issued bonds. The primary market of private bonds suffers from a long and complicated issuing process that stems from coordination and communication problems among the different regulators. The bond secondary market lacks key aspects of market infrastructure. Finally, institutional investors invest mostly on public debt instruments and bonds issued by finance sector firms.
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