‘ECB should raise the deposit rate to 4, 5 or even 6 percent’
Eurozone interest rates will rise further in the near future as evidence grows that inflation has become entrenched, leaving the European Central Bank no option but to continue to hike its policy rates. At Ethenea, ECB watchers believe official deposit rates could more than double from current levels.
EDB to support Arab Bank’s real estate ambitions in Emea
European Depositary Bank, a Luxembourg-based provider of banking, depositary and custody solutions that is part of the Apex Group, on Monday said it has been appointed by Arab Bank to support its real-estate ambitions in the European, Middle East and Africa region (Emea) with digital banking services.
EDB said it has been selected to provide services for 32 bank accounts for 14 special purpose vehicles as part of Arab Bank’s 400 million euro pan-European real estate strategy.
PGIM Investments: Greater Clarity On Fed Policy Improves Bond Market Outlook
PGIM Fixed Income’s co-chief investment officer, Greg Peters, shares his interest rate outlook and resulting implications for bond markets in 2023.
Graph of the week: a major mismatch
The latest ‘chart of the week’ shows a difference between market expectations of what the Federal Reserve will do and what the central bank wants, a fascinating development, says True Insights’ Jeroen Blokland. The Fed as well as the European Central Bank will update their views on interest rates later this week.
The ECB should learn from the Fed
Forget about all those bars of gold that are heavily guarded because they are incredibly valuable. Credibility is the most valuable asset for a central bank. It is the monetary version of what goodwill is to a company. In this respect, the ECB could learn a lot from the Fed. An analysis.
The more credible a central bank is, the more effective its policy is. With high credibility, a central bank needs to do less actual work to achieve the desired result: bludgeoning inflation. More words, and less action, so to say.
‘ESG reporting requires clear, consistent EU framework’
The EU’s top financial markets authority on Thursday invited the European Commission to clarify new sustainability reporting requirements for European companies and to make its legislation for non-financial reporting standards more consistent with other pieces of EU legislation.
Top 5: UBS leads in high-yield bond funds
After a dramatic first half of the year where global high-yield bond funds lost 7.3 per cent of their value, the second half of last year saw a small gain of 1.4 per cent, in euro terms. The consensus among fund managers remains that despite recession fears, we will not see a wave of defaults in 2023 either.
Mike Gitlin to replace Tim Armour as Capital Group CEO
Los Angeles-based Capital Group, a major global investment manager also present in Luxembourg, on Thursday said that Mike Gitlin from October will assume the management responsibilities of Tim Armour, chairman and chief executive officer. Armour and vice chairman president Rob Lovelace Armour and Lovelace will both step down from Capital Group’s management committee in October of this year.
CSSF asks firms to use EBA’s threshold monitoring tools
Luxembourg’s financial supervisor CSSF on Thursday published an update to its Reporting Handbook for investment firms. The update integrates the latest version of the reporting framework designed in recent years by the European Banking Authority and introduces a module for threshold monitoring.
Morgan Stanley IM - 2023: Rebalancing in a Year of Transition - Video
Jim Caron, co-chief investment officer of the Global Balanced Risk Control team, shares his views on markets and discusses portfolio positioning.