News
India names new deputy governor
Kamalesh Chandra Chakrabarty is the new deputy governor at the Reserve Bank of India.
Greece to study climate change
The Bank of Greece is to establish a group to study the economic impact of climate change.
Sri Lanka softens forex restrictions
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka on Tuesday said it would relax foreign-exchange restrictions on banks after pressure on the rupee abated.
What will Bric leaders discuss?
When leaders from the four biggest emerging-market economies meet in Russia on Tuesday and Wednesday, they will have plenty to talk about.
Obama wants Fed to monitor systemic risk - report
The US administration will reveal that it wants the Federal Reserve to regulate America's largest and most interconnected financial firms later this week, reports say.
Bank of Israel, fin min fall out over new law
The governor of the Bank of Israel has lashed out at what he sees as renewed attempts by the Israeli finance ministry to block the passing of a new central bank law.
Bank paper unveils new systemic-risk model
A paper published by the Bank of England on Monday has revealed a systemic-risk monitor that accounts for the relationship between liquidity risk and financial stability.
Latvia buys euros for first time since November
The Bank of Latvia bought euros for the first time in seven months last week after the lats gained on hopes that Riga would not have to devalue the currency.
China, Malaysia to use own currencies to trade
Trade between Malaysia and China will soon be conducted in ringgit and renminbi as well as dollars, Zeti Akhtar Aziz, the governor of Bank Negara Malaysia, said on Friday.
Ex-Indonesia governor gets two years
Syahril Sabirin, a former governor of Bank Indonesia, will face two years in jail after the country's highest court overturned a verdict given seven years ago.
Ex-Fed's Volcker backs global currency
Paul Volcker, a former Federal Reserve chairman, on Thursday argued that the "ultimate logic" of an international financial system was a world currency, but acknowledged that there were no credible alternatives to the dollar for "many tomorrows".
Bosnia, Turkey sign supervisory MoU
The central banks of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Turkey have agreed to share information on banks operating in both jurisdictions.
Mexico to contribute more to IMF: Ortiz
Guillermo Ortiz, the governor of the Bank of Mexico, has said that the country will contribute more to International Monetary Fund (IMF) coffers in future.
Fed emails point to BoA pressure on Merrill deal
Emails sent by Federal Reserve officials and subpoenaed by government investigators appear to back claims that Ben Bernanke pressurised Bank of America to go ahead with its takeover of investment bank Merrill Lynch after the bank attempted to back out of…
Lithuania's Sarkinas parries currency concerns
Reinoldijus Sarkinas, the governor of Bank of Lithuania, has said that the country's economy is on a much sounder footing than Latvia in an attempt to soothe fears that a devaluation by its Baltic neighbour would threaten regional stability.
Zuma names Mminele as new SARB deputy
Daniel Mminele will become a deputy governor at the South African Reserve Bank at the beginning of next month.
Fed's supervision head to step down
Roger Cole, the director of the Federal Reserve's division of banking supervision, and regulation is to retire after 30 years at the central bank.
Argentina halts some dividend payouts - report
The Central Bank of Argentina has reportedly asked some banks to stop paying dividends to shareholders after stress tests revealed banks could require more capital.
Basel Committee expands membership
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision on Wednesday expanded its membership to include all G20 countries.
Krugman hints at inflation remedy to fix crisis
Reducing the real value of debt burdens by stoking inflation is possibly the best bet to spur a global economic recovery, Paul Krugman, the Nobel laureate, said on Tuesday.
Riksbank raids euro swap line to shore up stabilit
The Riksbank on Wednesday said it would tap €3 billion ($4.2 billion) from a swap line set up with the European Central Bank (ECB) to ensure it was "well-prepared to continue safeguarding stability."
Bank announces stability committee members
The Bank of England on Wednesday named the non-executive directors who, along with senior Bank staff, will sit on the new Financial Stability Committee.
Europe's ACHs bemoan Sepa's slow start
Europe's leading automated clearing houses (ACHs), which process and route payments, hit out at the lack of progress on the Single Euro Payments Area (Sepa) on Wednesday and called for an end date for national standards to hasten its implementation.
Krugman: there is a liquidity trap, we're in it
In the first of a three-night stint at the London School of Economics, Paul Krugman sounded the death knell for economists' faith in monetary policy as a means of avoiding depressions.