Table 4 - uploaded by Cyril Pineau-Valencienne
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Context 1
... respect to consolidation, and problem loan reporting and provisioning) ( Trofimova et al. (2007), p. 29-30) (see also Table 2). (Table 4). ...
Context 2
... relatively less important as sources of finance, credits and funds received from other banks -including foreign banks -grew most dynamically. Largely as a result of buoyant capital inflows since the second quarter of 2006, Russian credit institutions' external debt (primarily comprising syndicated loans and eurobonds) grew as a share of banks' total liabilities from about 15% at end-2004 to 22% at end-2006 (Table 4). Credit institutions turned to foreign borrowing due to the credit boom, Russia's traditionally relatively high credit/ deposit ratio (110% in 2006), the fact that taking up funds abroad became cheaper thanks to the country's improved credit ratings and an abundance of liquidity on world markets, Russia's full capital account liberalization in mid- 2006, and persistent nominal appreciation pressures on the ruble. ...