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No rest for RBA governor in final year

According to this article published on Thursday 22 September, Reserve Bank of Australia governor Ian Macfarlane has one last tricky year to negotiate before bowing out as arguably the country's most successful central bank chief.

No formula for selecting Fed chair

With the US Senate having to confirm a new chair of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors soon, this article published on Tuesday 20 September asks what is more important to formulating successful monetary policies, profound study of economics or…

Fed to publish Bulletin online

The Federal Reserve Board announced on Thursday 22 September that beginning in 2006, the content of the Federal Reserve Bulletin will be published on the Board's public website (www.federalreserve.gov) on a continuing basis, as it becomes available.

IMF endorses adjustment to (AML/CFT) program

The IMF said on Thursday 22 September that it has endorsed an adjustment of the IMF's anti-money laundering/combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) program to focus more on tackling the challenges faced by countries implementing standards and…

Oil set to be main topic for G7 meeting

Japan's finance minister said Friday's G7 meeting of top finance ministers and central bankers would discuss soaring oil prices as the main topic and talks on China's currency reform may be low-keyed for now.

Hungary central bank row could trigger sell-off

Souring relations between the Hungarian government and the country's central bank could unnerve investors and trigger some sell-off in Hungarian assets such as bonds and stocks, according to a report issued by Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein cited by MTI…

UK completes world's first 50 year indexed bond

The UK completed the syndication of its first fifty-year inflation linked bond on Friday 23 September, achieving a price and coverage which demonstrated the strong demand for long-dated bonds, and investors' enthusiasm for inflation protection at this…

Venezuela central bank transfers US$3bn

Venezuela's central bank has transferred US$3 billion of its foreign exchange reserves to a newly created fund to support public projects, the finance minister said Friday 23 September.

Statement by Roger Ferguson on the IMFC meeting

The Financial Stability Forum (FSF) held its fourteenth meeting on 8-9 September 2005 in London. The issues discussed included: risks and vulnerabilities in the international financial system; the resilience of the financial system to shocks and lessons…

Italian economy minister resigns

Italy's Economy Minister Domenico Siniscalco has resigned because of government infighting over the 2006 budget and the administration's failure to oust Bank of Italy Governor Antonio Fazio over a banking scandal, the Treasury said.

BoJ's Nishimura sees no need for liquidity cut

Kiyohiko Nishimura, one of the Bank Japan's nine policy board members, sees no need to end the bank's super-loose monetary policy and cut its liquidity reserve target any time soon even as the country shows signs of pulling out of its deflationary cycle,…

Hurricanes may delay US current account correction

European Central Bank board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi said in an interview that costs resulting from hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico could mean that the US will be unable to correct its large current account deficit for some time.

RBA to dispose of gold coin holding

The Reserve Bank of Australia said on Wednesday 21 September that it has decided that it does not need to continue to hold the large quantity of gold coins it has held for many years.

Fed hikes rates again, but Olson dissents

The FOMC decided on Tuesday 20 September to raise its target for the federal funds rate to 3.75%. In a statement it maintained its 'measured' pace for removing policy accommodation and revealed that Mark Olson had voted to keep rates unchanged.

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