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LATEST ARTICLES
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Barclays doesn’t want Tim Throsby’s exit to be about Tim Throsby, but it is.
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From Deutsche Bank to Santander or ING, banks in Europe need to change with the times and accept accountability to a wider public, represented by their governments: as with weak capital, deficient ethics will only entail greater state control.
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Thursday’s announcement by Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) that it is suspending the sale of its wealth business may trigger similar turnarounds by other big four banks. They have unexpected latitude after the Royal Commission.
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The argument that India will be the first cashless society doesn’t take into account the country’s most vulnerable people and the cultural attachment to cash.
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Monetary policy is now much more effective in Brazil and it’s having some interesting consequences.
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The 50th anniversary issues of Euromoney are forcing journalists to take a broader sweep of the issues we cover than the usual month-by-month perspective.
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In response to Euromoney's article EBRD: There’s no place like home, January 24.
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Of all the global corridors of trade and investment, the one between Latin America and the Middle East is among the least travelled.
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Andrea Enria must open up the European Central Bank’s (ECB) bank data and supervision to scrutiny, but he faces resistance, and not just from banks.
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The rationale to accelerate cuts in its US investment bank is obvious, but an orderly withdrawal will be hard to execute.
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JPMorgan is trying to advance its master plan for global fintech domination with a discipline that is often lacking in a sector better known for wildly over-promising than actually delivering practical solutions.
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I am delighted to see two large sustainable bond issues from US banks already this year.
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The country is now in default on almost all of its foreign currency bonds; investors need to think ahead about the debt renegotiation to come.
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There is a price to pay for postponing QT.
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Results week showed record profits at Singapore’s banks – but all three institutions had footnotes in the numbers that we should pay attention to.
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Back-office hubs are at greater risk than London.
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Handing Ukraine’s largest bank back to its former shareholders would amount to economic suicide – but speculation is rising that leading presidential candidates plan to do just that.
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JPMorgan says that its new dollar stablecoins are collateralized against client dollar deposits but it also emphasizes its own strong balance sheet as surety.
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Euromoney spent a day in February in Jakarta with Bank Mandiri executives past and present as they approach the bank’s 20th year of existence. In our own 50th anniversary year, it was a useful reminder of just how much things can change in a relatively short space of time.
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The Greek banks’ bad debt reduction targets look eye-wateringly ambitious for a country that is only just getting to grips with a coordinated strategy to deal with the issue.
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Some digital finance firms are taking liberties with client data. If they aren’t careful, they will lose their core customers.
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Even though this business is notoriously sticky, Goldman Sachs’ entry into cash management business could shake up the industry.
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The bizarre communications management of the announcement prompts more head shaking than the actual event itself.
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Looking back over 50 years, it is surprising how finance has changed its role in protest.
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Bank shares have bounced back from recent lows in early 2019, but investors tempted to bet on a sustained rally risk yet another year of disappointment.
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President Donald Trump has pulled off the almost impossible task of making America’s banks look good, if not exactly great, again.
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Branch closures in the name of digitalization, on top of wider woes in the retail sector, could exacerbate the kind of community breakdown that led to Brexit.
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Before it sets off into Africa, the international financial institution needs to look to its roots.
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They aren’t making headlines – for the right reasons.
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Berlin alone cannot change the costly quirks of Germany’s state-owned corporate banks.