Financial Stability
UK authority calls on banks to help tackle cyber crime
UK National Crime Agency calls on banks to collaborate with authorities to reduce fraud
Italian NPL legislation should shorten bankruptcy proceedings, paper says
Legislation recently passed by the Italian parliament should shorten bankruptcy proceedings and may stimulate a private market for Italy’s non-performing loans, a Bank of Italy paper argues
Different economies need different types of structural reform, IMF paper finds
Economies at different levels of development need different types of structural reform, a policy paper by the International Monetary Fund says
Australian property market must be watched by regulators, assistant governor says
Residential and commercial property prices are rising rapidly in Sydney and Melbourne, Australian assistant governor says; evidence of some ‘slipping in lending standards’
‘Disclosure task force’ can tackle climate risks, FSB says
Industry-led group would develop voluntary disclosures relating to climate change; Mark Carney says better information could head off a ‘climate Minsky moment’
FSB unveils final TLAC standard
Global systemically important banks will need to build sizeable stocks of loss-absorbing capacity by 2019; many jurisdictions are lagging behind on implementing resolution framework
Information content of capital flows affects exchange rate impact, SNB paper finds
Private information conveyed by different kinds of capital flows affects the impact on the exchange rate, a working paper published by the Swiss National Bank finds
Central Bank of Iceland under scrutiny on crisis response
Supervisory board to investigate complaints over the handling of breaches in capital controls and legal uncertainty surrounding the holding company established by the central bank
Belarus to re-denominate its currency from July 2016
Ruble to be cut to one ten-thousandth of its value when new series rolled out; new banknotes printed years ago, but delay saw them stashed in central bank vault
‘Closed’ nature of eurozone banks increases vulnerability, Portuguese paper says
Commercial banks in the eurozone are more likely to be hit by country-specific shocks compared to US given fewer foreign branches; greater use of asset-backed securities may be a solution
Chile bides time on macro-prudential debate
Governor of the Central Bank of Chile says the bank will continue to ‘watch’ macro-prudential debate with view to ‘carefully studying’ different tools
Europe lags US in leading global financial reform, economist says at ECB event
The European Union no longer leads global efforts at financial reform, argues French economist Nicolas Véron; eurozone nations have too many seats on global reform bodies, he adds
RBA deputy disappointed by data inaccuracies
Philip Lowe discusses two problems that have emerged in reporting of loans in housing market, stressing value of high-quality data
EBA unveils plans for 2016 stress tests
European Banking Authority publishes draft guidelines for stress-testing systemically important banks; some 53 banks will be tested from February 2016
CFTC’s aim is 'not just' to expand clearing, Massad says
The agency will not 'mandate a lot of products just to increase clearing'
Yellen would ‘welcome’ vice-chair of supervision
Fed chair says an appointment to the long-vacant post would be welcome, but stresses the ‘outstanding job’ board member Tarullo has done leading work in the area
Europe would benefit from more centralised macro-prudential tools, says ECB vice-president
Macro-prudential regulation of housing sector successful in UK, and the SSM should be in a position to set similar policy in the eurozone, Constâncio says
FSB finds fault with derivatives trade reporting
Despite large volumes of trades being reported, some authorities have restricted access to data, which is often low quality; some jurisdictions are experimenting with new analysis
Eurozone macro-prudential policy should be ‘streamlined’, says Belgian director
Mathias Dewatripont praises shared responsibility as a ‘clever idea’ at ECB forum, but acknowledges this ‘leads to some complex procedures’
Caruana favours flexible supervisory tools over constant regulatory reform
BIS head stresses the value of making flexible supervisory tools available on top of regulation to help keep up with financial market innovations
Ireland: Former financial stability chief and ex-governor clash over crisis
John Hurley firmly rejects an accusation from the former financial stability head of the Irish central bank that senior management suppressed research in the lead-up to the crisis