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By Gonzalo Vina |
May 18, 2013
An independent Scotland would have a banking system too big to save in the event of a crisis, the U.K. Treasury said.
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By Jim Brunsden and Rebecca Christie, Bloomberg |
May 14, 2013
The European Central Bank clashed with Germany over how the European Union will handle struggling banks and whether to create a common agency and fund to manage failures.
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By Tom Stoukas, Maria Petrakis and Marcus Bensasson, Bloomberg |
March 28, 2013
Cyprus’s banks opened for the first time in almost two weeks, with new rules curbing access to cash preventing an initial panic to withdraw deposits.
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By Annette Weisbach |
January 22, 2013
Germany’s biggest bank was asked by the nation’s financial regulator to simulate a split of its consumer banking and trading businesses.
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By Rita Nazareth and Namitha Jagadeesh, Bloomberg |
December 5, 2012
U.S. stocks were little changed, after a two-day decline in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as China eased restrictions on investing in banks and investors watched developments on budget negotiations in Washington.
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By Cheyenne Hopkins and Kathleen Hunter, Bloomberg |
December 4, 2012
U.S. Senator-elect Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard University law professor and critic of Wall Street, is poised to join the Senate Banking Committee after she’s sworn into office in January.
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By Press Release |
November 9, 2012
The Federal Reserve Board on Friday launched the 2013 capital planning and stress testing program, issuing instructions to firms with timelines for submissions and general guidelines.
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By Ambereen Choudhury, Elisa Martinuzzi and Kevin Crowley |
November 1, 2012
London’s attempt to maintain its financial muscle while boycotting Europe’s move toward a banking union risks isolating the city from its major trading partners.
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By Matthew Brockett and Stefan Riecher, Bloomberg |
October 4, 2012
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the bank is ready to start buying government bonds as soon as the necessary conditions are fulfilled by any countries needing assistance.
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By Anne-Sylvaine Chassany, Bloomberg |
September 20, 2012
European banks pledged last year to cut more than $1.2 trillion of assets to help them weather the sovereign-debt crisis. Since then they’ve grown only fatter.