Central Banking
ECB lauds 2012 as year of ‘great achievement' for T2S programme
Annual report details progress in 2012 including 22 participating clearing houses and new governance and legal frameworks, though one deadline has already been missed
New Zealand central bank publishes macro-prudential ‘tool-kit' consultation
Four new tools proposed by Reserve Bank of New Zealand; former RBNZ chief economist says implementation will take time, but anticipates an ‘announcement effect'
NY Fed paper says monitoring is essential to fix Dodd-Frank’s ‘significant limitations’
A growth in shadow banking is one risk from the Dodd-Frank Act that must be addressed by broad and forward-looking monitoring, a staff report says
Dutch paper suggests using loan-to-deposit ratio in macroprudential policy
Study says LTD ratio could be a useful tool for regulator to address liquidity risk; suggests counter-cyclical policy to encourage lending in tough times
Benoît Cœuré says ECB can only 'buy time for political bodies to act'
ECB executive board member calls on Europe's governments to 'redefine the European social contract' - saying rebalancing is 'inevitable'
Bernanke evaluates long-term interest rates
Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke expects long-term interest rates to rise gradually; says upside and downside risks to rate level are 'roughly symmetric'
Yellen says monetary easing needed to support labour market
Federal Reserve vice-chair says labour market should take centre stage in Fed’s monetary policy; does not believe asset purchases are threatening financial stability
BoE Funding for Lending Scheme sees loans contract in first 6 months
Data out today show lending down following the introduction of FLS; BoE points to the counterfactual and says transmission 'takes time'
People: Bank of England reappoints Dale and Haldane to committee posts
BoE hands Spencer Dale and Andrew Haldane – both executive directors – further three-year terms on the financial and monetary policy committee respectively; Sweden deputy stands down
Latvia submits application for a seat at the euro table
Baltic nation sees membership of European single currency as the 'logical next step' of further integration into the European Union
Norges Bank ‘takes note’ of report criticising its communication
Norges Bank governor Øystein Olsen unintentionally misled markets over Norges Bank rate cut last year, according to a report funded by Ministry of Finance
Japan’s Kuroda signals ‘substantive step change’ in fight against deflation
Haruhiko Kuroda, nominated as the next Bank of Japan governor, says the central bank is not doing enough to stimulate inflation
Thailand deputy defends rate hold in wake of appreciating currency
Pongpen Ruengvirayudh says surge in capital inflows is a cause for concern, but says abandoning inflation targeting would be ‘counterproductive’
ECB under pressure to act as eurozone unemployment hits new heights
Analysts see growing chance of rate cut as eurozone unemployment rises 10%, while it falls in the rest of the European Union
ECB's Mersch calls for 'true banking union' to unblock policy transmission channel
Yves Mersch says banking union and single supervisory mechanism are necessary to allow European Central Bank to effectively set monetary policy in the eurozone
Hungary PM picks finance minister Matolcsy for central bank top job
Government seeks to ‘harmonise’ policy with central bank by nominating finance minister György Matolcsy as András Simor’s successor; appointment could herald greater policy easing
Hungary central bank staff review their monetary policy model
The National Bank of Hungary's Monetary Policy Model has been in place for two years - staff publish a review of its performance ahead of governor switch
Central banks are 'not competing' over currencies, says Swiss bank chief economist
Central banks are pursuing domestic priorities and are not engaged in competitive devaluation, says keynote speaker at FX Invest Europe conference
Kyrgyzstan's Asankojoeva weighs emerging stability threats
Governor of the Kyrgyz central bank talks of efforts to maintain stability in the face of corruption, limited financial inclusion and a spat over the Kumtor gold mine
Emerging markets exports most sensitive to FX changes, says French paper
Banque de France researchers find exports in emerging markets are relatively sensitive to exchange rate changes, while US imports are relatively impervious
Bank of Japan paper shows popping bubbles may require volatile inflation
Research finds inflation can remain stable while asset price bubbles develop, implying optimal monetary policy should tighten to reduce the bubble at the cost of below-target inflation
BIS paper urges inclusion of financial cycle in output gap calculation
Working paper warns ignoring the financial cycle when calculating the output gap can cause policy-makers to overlook unsustainable output movements
Central Bank of Ireland economist says monetary policy will not save euro
Lars Frisell suggests loosening monetary policy in the eurozone is unlikely to have much effect on the distressed periphery; instead advocates risk sharing through common deposit guarantees
National Bank of Slovakia backs controversial law
Slovakian central bank supports draft law to prohibit foreign bank branches from offering mortgage loans; questions over legality of law under EU treaty