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ECB Monthly Bulletin, January 2004

The European Central Bank published its January 2004 Monthly Bulletin on 22 January. In the report the ECB spelt out its concern over currency volatility but showed no sign it might change its outlook for a gradual economic upturn in the eurozone.

Solbes confident of euro stability

Speaking on Tuesday 20 January, Pedro Solbes, the EU's monetary affairs commissioner, said he believes the euro will not rise excessively, following EU ministers warning of dangers amid a record rise in the currency's value.

Trichet at the Euro-Mediterranean Seminar

In a speech to the Euro-Mediterranean Seminar of Eurosystem and Mediterranean country national banks given on 15 January, Jean-Claude Trichet of the ECB said the seminar should be a platform for an exchange of views between central banks of the…

Le Pan on the future of regulatory capital

In a speech on "The future of regulatory capital: targeting a consistent regulatory approach on a regional and functional basis" Nicholas Le Pan, Superintendent of the OSFII, talks about promoting consistency with the new Basel Capital Accord.

EU to take court action over budget rules

The European Union's head office decided on Tuesday 13 January to take finance ministers to court for letting Germany and France off the hook for violating euro budget rules. An EU spokesman said the move to vary the rules "was not the appropriate…

ECB press conference with questions and answers

Speaking on Thursday 8 January, ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet said that available indicators point to an ongoing economic recovery in the euro area and that the assessment has not fundamentally changed but he said the ECB did not like excess…

ECB maintains eurozone rates at 2%

The European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged on Thursday 8 January as widely expected, defying calls that cheaper money is needed to prevent a strong euro from hurting economic recovery.

Duisenberg at a discount

Despite a splendid send-off in October, including a blizzard of awards from European countries, the image of Wim Duisenberg, the former president of the ECB, is starting to fade, CentralBankNet can exclusively reveal.

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