News
IMF's Koehler named candidate for presidency
Horst Koehler, managing director of the IMF, is to become the candidate of the opposition parties for president of Germany. If he is elected by parliament in a vote on May 23, he will leave his IMF post a year before his term runs out.
China rejects Greenspan's forex warning
China dismissed warnings by Fed chief Alan Greenspan that it faces serious economic consequences if it continues to mount up massive US dollar holdings as it defends the dollar pegged yuan system.
Norway says no plan to resume forex buying
Norway's central bank reaffirmed on Wednesday it had no plans to resume purchases of foreign exchange for the country's USD 121 billion oil fund.
Japan says Greenspan remarks not criticism
Japan's Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda said Wednesday he does not see the warning by US Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan against Japan's currency interventions as criticism of Japan's policies.
US Mint ships in new nickels
180 million new US nickels are currently being shipped to the Federal Reserve and will sport their first new look for 66 years as part of the Mint's new Westward Journey Nickel Series.
G20: Imbalances pose risk to world recovery
Finance officials from the G20 group of developed and big emerging market economies agreed on Wednesday that global imbalances were a risk to the improving world economy.
Bank of Canada cuts rates by quarter point
The Bank of Canada announced on Tuesday 2 March that it is lowering its target for the overnight rate by one-quarter of one percentage point to 2 1/4 per cent.
Bank of Japan's Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes
Two members of the Bank of Japan's Policy Board voted against the decision to ease policy at its January 19-20 meeting, the minutes showed. The two members said economic conditions made the move unnecessary and that it could cause misunderstanding in the…
Bank of England told to release BCCI case files
The Bank of England lost an appeal on Monday 1 March to keep sensitive internal documents under wraps in a lawsuit seeking almost £1 billion ($2.7 billion) over its role in the world's biggest banking fraud.
Greenspan says yuan float now would pose risks
A letter from Alan Greenspan to the US Senate has said that a free-floating yuan could threaten the world economy and destabilise the Chinese banking system if capital controls are removed.
China plans central bank inspection
China plans to launch an extensive inspection of the central bank as well as three policy banks and five commercial banks, in an effort to strengthen state supervision over China's ailing banking sector, the official news agency said.
SARB removes apartheid's forex overhang
South African Reserve Bank governor Tito Mboweni said on Monday 1 March that the SARB last month closed out its oversold forward book to eliminate a structural overhang in the economy caused by apartheid.
Sri Lanka cb implements RTGS and SSS system
With the implementation of the integrated RTGS/SSS system, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) has marked another milestone in the country's payment reforms.
Putin pledges full convertibility for rouble
President Vladimir Putin refused to predict further changes in the dollar rate, at a meeting with university students on Friday 27 February, but he did promise to make all efforts to strengthen the rouble.
India's RTGS launch likely by end of March
The Reserve Bank of India has now proposed "hopefully" to launch its Real Time Gross Settlement System before the end of March.
Bahrain strengthens anti money-laundering laws
Bahrain is developing anti-money laundering (AML) laws for the insurance sector and capital market players as part of a drive to tighten up on the industry and remove any threat that could jeopardize monetary and banking policies, a central bank official…
China's Premier suggests end to yuan's dollar peg
China's Premier Wen Jiabao has said that the country is working toward a more flexible exchange rate mechanism for the value of the yuan, the first clear statement that the government aims to end the currency's nine-year fixed link to the dollar.
IMF's Koehler confident on Brazil's growth
IMF Managing Director Horst Koehler said on Sunday 29 February that he had a "good feeling about Brazil", expressing confidence in the country's growth prospects for this year.
Reynders says ECB may have room for manoeuvre
Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders has said that it is up to the European Central Bank to stimulate Europe's sluggish economic recovery, because widening budget deficits prevent governments from boosting spending.
The bad news - Greenspan must go!
Chairman Greenspan's busy week of testimony and speeches didn't go without its critics. Republican Senator Bernie Sanders sent a letter to President "Dubya" asking for Greenspan's removal.
The good news - White House wants Greenspan again
The White House repeated on Tuesday that President George W. Bush will support another term for Alan Greenspan as Federal Reserve Chairman.
Bank of France unions call for worker walk-out
Six unions representing employees at Banque de France, the French central bank (CFDT, CGT, FO, CFTC, SIC and SNA), called staff out on a one-hour work stoppage on Tuesday 24 February.
Fazio faces fraud investigation
Governor Antonio Fazio of the Bank of Italy is under investigation in connection with a probe of alleged fraud in the sale of securities by an Italian bank.
Spain enters race for ECB seat
Spain has entered the frame proposing a candidate for a place on the governing council of the European Central Bank against both Ireland and Belgium, who have already thrown their hats into the ring.