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
European Banking Authority unveils framework for classifying high-quality securitisations
Consultation proposes system for classifying securitisations that are ‘simple, standard and transparent’ and therefore may benefit from more lenient regulation
Bank of Lithuania invests $100 million into Chinese capital markets
Central bank becomes one of the first in Europe to invest in Chinese securities, as part of a new investment policy seeking higher returns
Focus on risk culture is ‘remaking’ the banking system
Patricia Jackson highlights ‘big shift’ in banking as firms implement more rigorous risk frameworks; BoE’s Andrew Bailey sets out the PRA’s approach
Hong Kong protests trigger emergency action by HKMA
HKMA activates its business continuity plan and takes extraordinary measures to maintain stability as thousands of pro-democracy protesters take to the streets
Rebel incursion has not halted central bank operations, says Yemen deputy
Ibrahim Alnahari says the central bank is doing its best to maintain normal operations despite continued violence on the streets of Sana’a, with action taken to protect banking sector
Financial Stability Board prepares to publish FX benchmark reforms
Recommendations due to be published within days; broad consensus among market participants, but questions hang over certain elements
Kenyan High Court blocks charges against Ndung’u
Njuguna Ndung’u granted temporary reprieve from corruption charges after High Court intervenes, but possibility of arrest fuels fears of turbulence in the vulnerable economy
ECB to house new SSM in old ‘Eurotower’
Central bank decides to use existing headquarters for around 1,000 new staff responsible for single supervisory mechanism; plans being implemented to avoid overflow while new tower is completed
Fed’s Powell downplays QE impact on emerging markets
Governor admits Fed policy has played a part in capital flows to and from emerging markets, but argues other factors are more important; follows fresh complaints from Asian economies
Slovene bank clean-up provides stress test dry run for ECB
IMF urges country to recapitalise banks quickly; academics see country as 'methodology experiment' for ECB, and warn comparisons with Greece and Cyprus could be self-fulfilling prophecies
Politically-aligned governors more likely to 'survive', research finds
Paper unearths evidence that central bank governors with the same political leanings as the government in power last significantly longer in their roles
Central banks behind curve on innovation, says World Payments Report
Central banks are struggling to keep up with rapid growth of innovative new payment systems, report warns; risk to European firms that regulation will cause mobile payments to fall behind
Bank of Lithuania’s Vitas Vasiliauskas on Europe’s push to banking union
As Lithuania takes on the presidency of the European Union, Bank of Lithuania governor Vitas Vasiliauskas speaks with Daniel Hinge about the efforts to end the euro crisis
Fischer says Frenkel will face ‘completely different' world
In his departing press conference at the Bank of Israel, Stanley Fischer highlights many changes that Jacob Frenkel will find when he returns; Frenkel still faces investigation over improper payments
Frenkel to rejoin Bank of Israel as Fischer replacement
Former Bank of Israel governor nominated to replace Stanley Fischer; decision surprises some as deputy governor Karnit Flug appeared to have Fischer's backing for the role
UK Payments Council prepares 'roadmap' for reform
'Payments Roadmap' seeks to boost competition and innovation in UK payments, even as a government consultation leaves the future of the Payments Council in doubt
National Bank of Austria vice-governor faces bribery charges
Wolfgang Duchatczek and eight others charged with bribery in connection with note-printing deals with Syria and Azerbaijan
Lithuanian governor says banking union does not require treaty change
As Lithuania gears up to take over the EU rotating presidency, central bank governor Vasiliauskas is confident of reaching a compromise on banking union within the existing legal framework
IMF warns China on rapid growth of social financing
Article IV consultation urges China to tighten prudential standards to rein in fast credit growth and rebalance economy away from investment; growth forecast trimmed again
VocaLink: Seven-day account switching set to shake up UK banks
Chris Dunne says UK payments are undergoing important changes that could see ‘economic battle' between banks; expects closer scrutiny of infrastructure by regulators
Germans clash over banking union treaty change
ECB board member opposes German finance minister's plan to introduce limited version of banking union to allow time for treaty change
Philippines central bank braces for impact of rating upgrades
Central bank says it is ‘vigilant’ to asset bubbles resulting from country’s upgrade to investment grade status by two of the three main rating agencies
Bank of Thailand prepares to counter rising baht
Monetary Policy Committee agrees ‘framework for exchange rate management’, but does not yield to government demands for a rate cut
Basel intra-day liquidity standards a ‘box-ticking exercise'
Industry panel questions limited detail in Basel Committee document; says numerous problems remain in fleshing out details, levelling playing fields and managing vast volumes of data