Daniel Hinge
Editor, Benchmarking
Daniel Hinge es editor del servicio de evaluación comparativa de Central Bankingy especialista en economía y política monetaria. Lleva informando sobre la comunidad bancaria central desde 2012, desempeñando funciones como editor de noticias y editor de comentarios. Es licenciado en Política, Filosofía y Economía por la Universidad de Oxford.
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Artículos de Daniel Hinge
RBNZ investigating possible leak
Central bank launches external investigation, after former RBNZ economist was told there would be an unexpected rate cut before the decision was made public
Bank of Israel establishes banking innovation division
New section of banking supervision department formed to help foster innovation but contain the accompanying risks; Dudi Bavli chosen to head division
Norges Bank willing to consider move into negative territory
Central bank cuts rates to 0.5% and signals further action likely to follow; executive board concerned by side-effects of negative rates, but willing to use them if necessary
RBNZ’s Gordon offers advice on building a sound risk management system
Former risk head at RBNZ offers advice on what should be the focus for central banks looking to build an enterprise risk management system
NY Fed says ‘no evidence’ systems breached
Spokeswoman says there is “no evidence” of attempts to penetrate Federal Reserve systems, amid reports saying Bangladesh Bank was concerned funds were stolen from its account
Central banks running out of room amid turbulence, BIS warns
Confidence in central banks is “faltering” as policies prove impotent, while negative rates erode bank profitability and debt levels weigh on global growth
Turkey’s Kenç sheds light on central bank ‘roadmap’
Deputy governor tells Central Banking conference that a 'roadmap' of policy changes helps improve confidence in the economy; says the central bank has gained market trust despite independence fears
Book notes: The end of alchemy, by Mervyn King
King’s book on how to fix everything that is wrong with the financial and economic system lays out radical proposals that deserve serious consideration
Mervyn King calls for radical banking reform
Former Bank of England governor wants to curtail banks’ use of maturity transformation, putting the central bank’s lender-of-last-resort role at the heart of his new banking system
UK regulators refuse to comply with part of EU bonus cap
FCA and PRA say they will not be imposing European bonus cap rules on small firms, arguing CRD IV’s proportionality principle has not been properly applied
UK regulator wants banks to sell their stake in payments infrastructure
PSR says the ownership of infrastructure by a handful of banks damages competition and innovation; unveils a raft of proposals, including forcing banks to sell their interest in VocaLink
End of sanctions offers chance to fix Iran’s banking sector
Iranian banks struggling with high levels of non-performing loans may see their situation improve, but deep reforms are needed and the political situation remains complex
BoE and Vickers clash on capital rules
Both central bank and ring-fencing committee chair claim to have recommended higher capital requirements than the other – but a look at the proposals suggests the differences are slim
Riksbank cuts to new low, despite signs of overheating
Central bank pushes policy rate 15bp deeper into negative territory even as economy moves close to full capacity; board responding partly to policy easing abroad
BIS data sheds light on complex shift in global liquidity
There are signs global liquidity might be going into reverse for emerging markets; digging into the data shows situation is more complicated than aggregate figures imply
Caruana marks out dangerous nexus between debt, oil and the US dollar
BIS chief points to interactions of dollar borrowing by emerging markets, US rate hikes and the oil price, as latest data suggests world may be balanced on the edge of a drop in global liquidity
Riksbank pushes for FSA to gain stronger tools amid delays
Amortisation requirement looks set to enter force in June, but more powerful tools for Swedish FSA may be delayed; government says negotiations take time, and it fears triggering crisis
IMF staff tell Turkey to fix imbalances
Fund mission says central bank must tighten policy to head off growing external imbalances and inflation; low oil price keeping a lid on problems but longer-term solutions needed
Former BoE officials warn low rates are feeding imbalances
Marian Bell and John Gieve say the Bank of England should start hiking rates soon, as signs of supply-side problems, unsustainable debt, rising house prices and inflation grow more serious
BoE reveals final element of ring-fencing framework
Systemic risk buffer will apply to ring-fenced assets, with the aim of preventing banks amplifying stress; BoE also hopes it will give smaller banks a competitive boost
Capital controls essential for small open economies, Guðmundsson says
Small open economies cannot conduct fully independent monetary policy if they are unwilling to use capital controls at least some of the time, Icelandic governor says
Bank of England prepares to overhaul ageing RTGS system
Central bank will spend year outlining plans for replacement to high-value payments system, keeping an open mind at present as to what features it should have
State Bank of Pakistan reveals first MPC members
Formation of monetary policy committee is part of a broader drive towards independence and inflation targeting; one seat remains unfilled
People: Tombini takes FSB committee chair; Al-Wazir moves to IMF
Alexandre Tombini is appointed to chair budget committee; former PMA governor joins IMF; Kazakh sovereign wealth fund replaces its chairman; and more