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Emerging Europe preparing for rate hikes

- Consumer staples: Salmar SALM.NO -5.1% (placement completion). - - - Healthcare: Clinigen CLIN.UK -25.8% (trading update), Oasmia Pharma OASM.SE +4.0% (research update), Smith & Nephew SN.UK +3.3% (analyst action). - Industrials: Leclanche LECN.CH +1.4% (results), Aker Solutions AKSO.NO.+1.2% (agreement with Petrobras), Heidelberger Drukmaschinen HDD.DE -13.2% (results). Speakers - BOE s Haldane (chief economist, QE dissenter) noted that the domestic economy was going gangbusters at this time and needed to begin turning off the monetary policy tap. If pay and costs were picking up then inflation was not very far behind. - - Sweden Central Bank (Riksbank) Gov Ingves stated that he expected inflation to fall in the short-term and then gradually rise back towards the 2% target. Reasonable to believe that inflation sped up after July. He saw big risks in withdrawing policy measures too early.

Compliance Code Cracker – Greensill and the Covid Corporate Finance Facility | Thomson Reuters Regulatory Intelligence and Compliance Learning

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: The Greensill case illustrates the impact of the COVID-related crisis on the shadow banking sector to which riskier credit business had migrated financed by securitisation rather than deposit taking following the heavier capital requirements imposed on regulated banks after the 2008 financial crisis. It also shows that Lex Greensill s engagement in crisis-driven government funding programmes goes back to the days of the crisis and his time with Citibank. In 2020, Lex Greensill had sought financial assistance by lobbying HM Treasury and the Bank of England for inclusion in COVID-related government loan and loan guarantee schemes, initially in the Covid Corporate Finance Facility (CCFF).

The central banker s new clothes

The central banker’s new clothes May 18,2021 - Last updated at May 18,2021 LONDON Since March 2020, the Bank of England (BoE) has bought £450 billion ($639 billion) of UK government debt through its so-called Asset Purchase Facility. Virtually all of this was new debt issued by the government since the start of the COVID-19 crisis. The BoE’s purchases look like a thinly veiled attempt to use quantitative easing (QE) to finance the government’s deficit and ensure low borrowing costs. Is this still monetary policy, or is the central bank conducting fiscal policy by the back door? The BoE claims that there is no connection between monetary and fiscal policy, and that its asset purchases are aimed only at meeting its mandated 2 per cent inflation target. The fact that the amount of the bank’s asset purchases since March 2020 just so happens to match the government’s deficit over the same period is no more than a coincidence. To claim otherwise that the BoE is engaging i

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