SELIC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[1]

The Sistema Especial de Liquidação e Custodia (SELIC) (Special System for Settlement and Custody) is the Brazilian Central Bank's system for performing open market operations in execution of monetary policy. The SELIC rate is the Bank's overnight rate.

Selic launched on November 14, 1979, and is a computerized system intended for the registration, custody and settlement of public securities issued by the National Treasury.

Only financial institutions accredited by the Central Bank of Brazil have access to Selic, which operates in real time, allowing businesses to have same-day settlement.[2] The operators of the institutions involved in a transaction with these securities, after arranging the deals, transfer these operations, via terminal, to Selic. The system immediately transfers the title registration to the buyer and credits the title seller's account. Both parties receive a guarantee of the validity of the transaction carried out.

The securities are book-entry and managed by the Central Bank's Open Market Operations Department (Demab).[3] Selic basically operates with bonds issued by the National Treasury, for the Central Bank of Brazil.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Banco Central do Brasil".
  2. ^ "Banco Central do Brasil (archived)".
  3. ^ "Banco Central do Brasil".