Central Banks
Bear bust led to dollar-support plans - report
The financial authorities in Frankfurt, Washington and Tokyo considered joint action to stabilise the falling dollar, a leading Japanese business newspaper has reported.
Chile's De Gregorio hints at further hikes
Jose de Gregorio, the president of the Central Bank of Chile, warned that its key rate, now at a ten-year high, is likely to become steeper still.
Dollar less important when reserves abundant
The share of the dollar in global foreign currency reserves falls when reserve levels increase, finds a new paper from the European Central Bank.
Turkey's Yilmaz confident on inflation targets
Inflation targets set for the next three years are attainable even if food and energy prices continue to rise quickly, said Durmus Yilmaz, the governor of the Central Bank of Turkey.
Sri Lanka's Cabraal: invest reserves regionally
South Asian central banks should consider investing their foreign-exchange reserves within the region, said Ajith Cabraal, the governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.
Thailand braves politician's wrath, hikes rates
The Bank of Thailand has raised its key rate a quarter point for the second-straight month to 3.75% despite the Thai finance minister's objections to the July decision.
Rate rise next move: Fed
The next change to the federal funds rate is likely to be an increase, the latest Federal Open Market Committee minutes show.
Domestic inflation influenced by global factors
Common shocks, similar policy reactions, international trade and financial links are significant common components in global inflation rates, finds a new paper from the St Louis Federal Reserve.
Fed's Evans: rate cuts cannot solve market woe
The Federal Reserve's key rate, the federal funds rate, is neither an adequate nor even an entirely appropriate tool for addressing instability in financial markets, said Charles Evans, the president of the Chicago Federal Reserve.
Inflation dynamics in Turkey
A new paper from the Central Bank of Turkey examines monetary pressures and inflation dynamics in the domestic economy.
Danish central bank buys bust lender
Denmark's central bank has announced a Dkr4.5 billion ($900m) bailout of Roskilde Bank, the country's eighth largest retail bank, in a bid to stem fears that funding problems could spread through the system.
Ex-BoE's Buiter attacks Fed at Jackson Hole
Willem Buiter, a founding member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee, has panned the Federal Reserve's response to the financial turmoil.
People's Bank buys $246m stake in UK insurer
The People's Bank of China has bought up to £134m-worth ($246m) of shares in the UK's second-largest insurer.
Papua New Guinea's Kamit on independence
It was crucial that the central bank's independence was accompanied with wide-reaching finance industry reforms, said Wilson Kamit, the governor of the bank of Papua New Guinea.
Focusing on headline could induce volatility
Policies that react to headline inflation can induce different macroeconomic effects than those reacting to core inflation, a new paper from the Federal Reserve Board finds.
Bernanke outlines steps to let a Bear go bust
Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, has laid out plans to remove the threat of banks becoming too big to fail.
Deputy Rarawa set to replace Solomons' Hou
Denton Rarawa, the deputy governor of the Central Bank of the Solomon Islands, looks likely to succeed Rick Hou as head of the central bank.
Iran issues high-value notes, hints at reform
The Central Bank of Iran is swapping high-denomination paper notes for private banks' promissory notes in a bid to exert tighter control over the country's money supply as it plans broader currency reforms.
Germany to curb SWF investment with takeover rules
Berlin is to block big investment in strategic industries by companies from outside the European Union, in a move widely interpreted as an attempt to limit sovereign wealth fund investment.
IMF: emergency liquidity frameworks not ideal
There are shortcomings in the existing emergency liquidity frameworks of central banks, said Saleh Nsouli, the director for offices in Europe at the International Monetary Fund.
BoJ minutes: Japan's economy slowing
Japan's economic growth has slowed further, reflecting weaker growth in business fixed investment and private consumption, say the minutes of the Bank of Japan's Monetary Policy Council meeting on 14 and 15 July.
Integration raises solvency risks
More financial integration and innovation increases the risk of market and liquidity stress resulting in insolvency, a new paper from the International Monetary Fund finds.
Banking system fundamentally sound: RBNZ
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand on Thursday moved to assuage fears that the country's financial system is unstable.
SA may target different inflation measure
The South African Reserve Bank may target a different measure of inflation from 2009 onwards, the country's finance minister is reported as saying.