News
Qatar appoints Lord Woolf to regulatory tribunal
Lord Woolf, formerly Lord Chief Justice, is to be appointed as the senior judge for Qatar's new financial centre. He will become the first President of the Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) Tribunal, which he will help establish, and he will preside over…
Treasuries' safe-haven status faces growing threat
According to this article published Wednesday 17 May, long-term threats to the status of Treasury bonds as a safe haven are gathering even as global investors pour money into U.S. government debt.
The new Fed chairman faces the same old dilemma
Ben Bernanke is facing the age-old test all central bankers eventually have to confront: what to do in the face of slowing growth and rising inflation, according to this article published Thursday 18 May.
Work on converging accounting standards must go on
According to this article by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, published Friday 19 May, convergence between IASB and US standards is just one step on the road towards high quality, understandable and enforce-able global accounting standards.
Rato appoints committee to study IMF costs
IMF Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato on Thursday 18 May announced the appointment of a committee of eminent persons to provide the Fund with an independent view of the available options for ensuring that it has a sustainable and durable income base with…
IMF's Rato proposes new first deputy MD
Rodrigo de Rato, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), on Thursday 18 May proposed the appointment of John Lipsky to the position of First Deputy Managing Director.
Kyrgyzstan approves new central bank chief
Kyrgyzstan's parliament on Thursday 18 May approved by majority vote the appointment of Marat Alapayev as chairman of the National Bank of Kyrgyz Republic, RIA Novosti reported.
Kohn going to be next Fed vice-chairman
US president George W. Bush on Thursday 18 May announced plans to nominate Fed governor Donald Kohn to be vice chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
Nout Wellink to chair Basel Committee
The Group of Ten (G10) central bank governors and heads of banking supervision said Friday 19 May that they have appointed Nout Wellink, President of the Netherlands Bank, as the new Chairman of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
Liikanen: EU must improve cross-border payments
ECB governing council member Erkki Liikanen said in comments published on Thursday 18 May that the EU must strengthen its payments system.
Liebscher says ECB worried on inflation
Austrian national bank governor Klaus Liebscher told reporters Friday 19 May that the European Central Bank is worried about risks to the eurozone's inflation outlook.
Bank of England's next move should be a rate cut
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee would be making a mistake if it raises UK interest rates, according to this article published Wednesday 17 May.
As yuan breaches 8, focus shifts to Japan
According to this article published Wednesday 17 May, the dollar has fallen 6.4 percent against the yen this year, and Japanese officials aren't happy about it.
Launch of BoE's new framework
The Bank of England launched its new framework for the implementation of monetary policy to modernise sterling money markets on Thursday 18 May.
Plenderleith to be named Sanlam director - report
According to a report, the South African life assurance and financial services giant Sanlam has proposed making former South African Reserve Bank (SARB) deputy governor Ian Plenderleith an independent non-executive director.
Central bank carries out management changes
This article published Sunday 14 May looks at recent management changes that have taken place at the Bank of Uganda (BOU). It quotes the BOU's spokesman as saying that the changes will help the bank meet demands and changes in the financial and monetary…
The Gambia's central bank creates new deputy posts
The Point newspaper has quoted an unnamed reliable source as saying that Bamba Saho, general manager of the Central Bank of The Gambia, has been appointed first deputy governor of the central bank.
EU parliament backs Stark for ECB
MEPs approved the appointment of Jurgen Stark to the Executive Board of the European Central Bank in a vote on Wednesday 17 May.
Ex-SBV chief nominated as prime minister
Former governor of the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV), Nguyen Tan Dung, has been nominated as the next prime minister of Vietnam.
So yuan is at 8? Wake me up when it reaches 7.5
Greater currency flexibility is all about speed, and according to this article published Tuesday 16 May, the yuan continues to disappoint.
Norges Bank names new communications director
Siv Meisingseth, Chief Information Officer, SAS Braathens Airline, has accepted the position of communications director at Norges Bank, commencing on 1 September.
Minutes show BoE split 3 ways on rates
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee was split three ways on this month's decision to keep interest rates at 4.5 percent, minutes released on Wednesday 17 May showed.
Meister sees need for hedge funds code of conduct
Bundesbank board member Edgar Meister told the Financial Times in an interview that hedge funds should introduce a code of conduct to make the industry more transparent.
Shrinking central bank asset buys worry for dollar
Foreign central banks' net purchases of U.S. assets have slumped to a mere $1.6 billion, the lowest in a year, according to this article published Monday 15 May.