UK pushes Europe for tougher finance rules October 3, 2012 NEW TREASURY minister Greg Clark last night praised the EU’s tough new banking proposals, and demanded the authorities get even stricter on rogue financiers. But analysts warned the proposals derived from a report by Finnish central banker Errki Liikanen could drive up banks’ funding costs by splitting retail and investment operations, and push down stocks [...]
Don’t read too much into shift of focus – it started under Bob October 9, 2012 BARCLAYS’ purchase of ING Direct UK is being seen by many as yet another sign that the bank’s focus, under new chief executive Antony Jenkins, has shifted firmly to its retail arm. Jenkins’ early speeches have certainly been littered with regulator-pleasing pledges to shape up, putting him at the front of a queue of UK [...]
A strange kind of green shoots: Welcome to the New Normal October 1, 2012 GREEN shoots in the economy are a bit like beauty: they are in the eye of the beholder. Such is the confused, contradictory state of the British economy that one can just as easily be bullish or bearish, depending on which facts one chooses to pick out. For every piece of good news, one can [...]
A strange kind of green shoots: Welcome to the New Normal October 1, 2012 GREEN shoots in the economy are a bit like beauty: they are in the eye of the beholder. Such is the confused, contradictory state of the British economy that one can just as easily be bullish or bearish, depending on which facts one chooses to pick out. For every piece of good news, one can [...]
What you need to know about inheritance tax planning October 28, 2012 WEALTH taxes have remained high on the political agenda in recent months. After the latest party conferences, it seems increasingly unlikely that we will see any new measures introduced in the immediate future. So, we are left with the UK’s only existing form of wealth tax: inheritance tax (IHT). Rather than being an annual tax [...]
EU reveals new crackdown on biggest banks October 2, 2012 BANKS across Europe will be split by new ringfencing rules, and be forced to hold more capital against mortgages in EU plans outlined yesterday. The new plans are aimed at making banking safer, but lawyers warned they will increase banks’ costs, hitting consumers and the wider economy, as well as causing confusion as they do [...]
Financial regulation is worsening Europe’s demographic time bomb October 31, 2012 THERE is more to Europe’s current challenges than debt, stagnation and unemployment. There is an elephant in the room that could become the biggest issue of all: an ageing population. Europe’s baby boom started in the 1950s and the proportion of retirees relative to the working population, therefore, is beginning to rise. This will inevitably [...]
You can bank on Tesco to become competitive in financial services August 6, 2012 TESCO has had a challenging 2012 to date. We saw the rebasing of group earnings in January; an unwelcome slowdown in trading at loss-making Fresh & Easy in the US; decelerating trading conditions in Central Europe; and impacts from restrictions on large store opening hours in South Korea – its most significant market outside the [...]
Don’t blame developers: Britain’s planning system pushes up prices September 6, 2012 DURING recent planning rows, opponents of reform have argued that our lack of new homes was nothing to do with our 1940s planning system, but a case of greedy developers sitting on land with planning permission. Yesterday, the Local Government Association argued that the problem is big developers sitting on “land banks”. But big developers [...]
London housing market booms driving average prices upwards August 29, 2012 LONDON proved yet again to be the driving force behind a continued house price recovery in July, Land Registry data showed yesterday. With prices up 2.7 per cent in July, the London market was behind the overall 0.8 per cent increase seen across England and Wales. Downward pressure came from slipping prices in the north [...]