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				Over the next four months, regulators at the ECB's Single 
				Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) will simulate "adverse and extreme 
				hypothetical shocks in which banks face increasing liquidity 
				outflows" to determine each bank's "survival period".
 "The exercise will focus on banks’ expected short-term cash 
				flows to calculate the 'survival period', which is the number of 
				days that a bank can continue to operate using available cash 
				and collateral with no access to funding markets," the ECB said.
 
 The results of the test won't feed directly into how much 
				capital and cash each bank must hold, but they will be used to 
				identify weak points.
 
 "The results will inform the supervisor about the relative 
				vulnerability of banks to different liquidity shocks applied in 
				the exercise and will also identify improvements needed in 
				banks’ liquidity risk management," the ECB said.
 
 (Reporting By Francesco Canepa, editing by Larry King)
 
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