No matter how unlikely the financial sector thinks Greece exiting the euro will be, it is taking every precaution possibile to make sure it doesn't get hurt by the process.
Lloyd's of London is preparing for a collapse of the single currency, and has reduced its exposure to the continent "as much as possible", according to a report in the Sunday Telegraph. Despite that, Europe still accounts for 18 per cent of Lloyd's £23.5bn of gross written premiums, with much of that concentrated in Spain and Italy, as well as the safer markets of France and Germany.
Richard Ward, the chief executive of Lloyd's, said:
I'm quite worried about Europe. With all the concerns around the eurozone at the moment, we've got to be careful doing business in Europe and there are a lot of question marks over writing business in the future in euros. I don't think that if Greece exited the euro it would lead to the collapse of the eurozone, but what we need to do is prepare for that eventuality. . .
We've got multi-currency functionality and we would switch to multi-currency settlement if the Greeks abandoned the euro and started using the drachma again.
Other institutions are putting their own houses in order. Two weeks ago, ITV's Laura Kuenssberg tweeted from a trading floor where the drachma had already been installed into the systems, and Reuters reported that a number of banks were quietly preparing for the exit, in which case those problems would be the least of their worries:
Some banks never erased the drachma from their systems after Greece adopted the euro more than a decade ago and would be ready at the flick of a switch if its debt problems forced it to bring back national banknotes and coins. . .
A Greek departure from the euro would create legal and practical problems for the banks which would dwarf the relatively straightforward technical job of dealing in a new currency.
But how unlikely does everyone think exit actually is? Are they covering for an extreme black swan event, or is it something which they are all expecting? Joe Weisenthal at Business Insider provides this chart, from Credit Suisse:
For those of you without the maths skills, that's a roughly 15 per cent total chance of a Greek exit, and another 20 per cent chance of a third round of elections (which, of course, takes us right back where we are already). Not definitely going to happen, but worth preparing for in case. No one wants to shout "fire" and spark a run, but no one wants to be the last one in the burning room either.
Middle Eastern Accountancy & Finance Excellence Awards becomes annual event - Zawya.com
Following the great success of last year's inaugural awards ceremony, the leading professional body has confirmed the event will be annual, celebrating the best and brightest in accountancy, finance and business. Open to finance professionals, business leaders and organisations, the awards programme is based around the themes of excellence, leadership and best practice.
Arabian Radio Network (ARN) anchor Richard Dean will be Master of Ceremonies and Lord Sebastian Coe KBE, former sprinter, politician and London Olympics Chief, will provide the after-dinner speech.
Last year saw accolades awarded in 11 categories, with Adel Ali of Air Arabia crowned Business Leader of the Year and His Excellency Sheikh Nahayan Bin Mabarak Al Nahayan attending to collect the Outstanding Individual Contribution to the Accountancy Profession. For the 2012 Awards new categories have been introduced, including Chartered Accountant of the Year, Firm of the Year and Corporate Finance Deal of the Year. The entries will be judged by a 14 strong panel of top business and finance leaders from across the Middle East.
Amanda Line, Regional Director, ICAEW Middle East, said: "These awards exist to celebrate the efforts and hard work of people who are often overlooked but without whom business would cease to function. Last year's entries reflected the wealth of talent in finance and business right across the Middle East.
"This year we have added more categories so that we can recognise even more of the people who are striving behind the scenes to drive business and the economy. Now we need people who work in the profession to start nominating themselves or the people they know who are demonstrating such excellence."
Surya Subramanian, Group Chief Financial Officer, Emirates NDB said: We are delighted to once again be involved with these awards. They are a great way to recognise the vital contribution the finance profession makes to driving growth in the Middle East. These Awards also demonstrate the huge and varying range of skills and abilities in the finance world, and remind us that we need to nurture our next generation of business and finance leaders. Hopefully, this also goes some way to show how stimulating and rewarding it can be to work in this area. "
Amanda Line concluded: "Anyone who is, or who knows, someone who constantly demonstrates excellence in business and finance - whether they are at the beginning of an exciting career, or have reached the top of their chosen field - should enter these awards."
For more information on the Middle East Accountancy and Finance Excellence Awards, visit www.accountancyandfinanceawards.ae
About ICAEW
ICAEW is a professional membership organisation, supporting over 138,000 chartered accountants around the world. Through our technical knowledge, skills and expertise, we provide insight and leadership to the global accountancy and finance profession.
Our members provide financial knowledge and guidance based on the highest professional, technical and ethical standards. We develop and support individuals, organisations and communities to help them achieve long-term, sustainable economic value.
Because of us, people can do business with confidence.
ICAEW is a founder member of the Global Accounting Alliance, which represents around 775,000 of the world's leading professional accountants in over 165 countries around the globe, to promote quality services, share information and collaborate on important international issues.
About Emirates NBD
Emirates NBD is a leading banking Group in the region. As at 31 March 2012, total assets were AED 296.7 billion. The Group has a leading retail banking franchise in the UAE, with over 163 branches and over 760 ATMs and CDMs. It is a major player in the UAE corporate banking arena and has strong Islamic Banking, Global Markets & Treasury, Investment Banking, Private Banking, Asset Management and Brokerage operations.
The Group has operations in the UAE, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Singapore, the United Kingdom and Jersey (Channel Islands), and representative offices in India and Iran.
The Group is an active participant and supporter of the UAE's main development initiatives and of the various educational, environmental, cultural, charity and community welfare establishments.
Media enquiries:
Hasan Badwan, email: Hasan.badwan@hillandknowlton.com tel: +971 (50) 708 2500
Kirstina Reitan, email: kirstina.reitan@icaew.com, tel: +44 (0)207 920 8607
© Press Release 2012
My speech to the finance graduates of this world - Times of Malta
At this time of year, at graduation ceremonies in America and elsewhere, those about to leave university often hear some final words of advice before receiving their diplomas. To those interested in pursuing careers in finance – or related careers in insurance, accounting, auditing, law or corporate management – I submit the following address:
Best of luck to you as you leave the academy for your chosen professions in finance. Over the course of your careers, Wall Street and its kindred institutions will need you. Your training in financial theory, economics, mathematics and statistics will serve you well. But your lessons in history, philosophy, and literature will be just as important, because it is vital not only that you have the right tools, but also that you never lose sight of the purposes and overriding social goals of finance.
Unless you have been studying at the bottom of the ocean, you know that the financial sector has come under severe criticism – much of it justified – for thrusting the world economy into its worst crisis since the Great Depression. And you need only check in with some of your classmates who have populated the Occupy movements around the world to sense the widespread resentment of financiers and the top one per cent of income earners to whom they largely cater (and often belong).
While some of this criticism may be over-stated or misplaced, it nonetheless underscores the need to reform financial institutions and practices. Finance has long been central to thriving market democracies, which is why its current problems need to be addressed. With your improved sense of our interconnectedness and diverse needs, you can do that. Indeed, it is the real professional challenge ahead of you, and you should embrace it as an opportunity.
Young finance professionals need to familiarise themselves with the history of banking, and recognise that it is at its best when it serves ever-broadening spheres of society. Here, the savings-bank movement in the United Kingdom and Europe in the 19th century, and the microfinance movement pioneered by the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh in the 20th century, comes to mind. Today, the best way forward is to update financial and communications technology to offer a full array of enlightened banking services to the lower middle class and the poor.
Graduates going into mortgage banking are faced with a different, but equally vital, challenge: to design new, more flexible loans that will better help homeowners to weather the kind of economic turbulence that has buried millions of people today in debt.
Young investment bankers, for their part, have a great opportunity to devise more participatory forms of venture capital – embodied in the new crowd-funding websites – to spur the growth of innovative new small businesses. Meanwhile, opportunities will abound for rookie insurance professionals to devise new ways to hedge risks that real people worry about, and that really matter – those involving their jobs, livelihoods, and home values.
Beyond investment banks and brokerage houses, modern finance has a public and governmental dimension, which clearly needs reinventing in the wake of the recent financial crisis. Setting the rules of the game for a robust, socially useful financial sector has never been more important. Recent graduates are needed in legislative and administrative agencies to analyse the legal infrastructure of finance, and regulate it so that it produces the greatest results for society.
A new generation of political leaders needs to understand the importance of financial literacy and find ways to supply citizens with the legal and financial advice that they need. Meanwhile, economic policymakers face the great challenge of designing new financial institutions, such as pension systems and public entitlements based on the solid grounding of intergenerational risk-sharing.
Those of you deciding to pursue careers as economists and finance scholars need to develop a better understanding of asset bubbles – and better ways to communicate this understanding to the finance profession and to the public. As much as Wall Street had a hand in the current crisis, it began as a broadly held belief that housing prices could not fall – a belief that fuelled a full-blown social contagion. Learning how to spot such bubbles and deal with them before they infect entire economies will be a major challenge for the next generation of finance scholars.
Equipped with sophisticated financial ideas ranging from the capital asset pricing model to intricate options-pricing formulas, you are certainly and justifiably interested in building materially rewarding careers. There is no shame in this, and your financial success will reflect to a large degree your effectiveness in producing strong results for the firms that employ you.
But, however imperceptibly, the rewards for success on Wall Street, and in finance more generally, are changing, just as the definition of finance must change if is to reclaim its stature in society and the trust of citizens and leaders.
Finance, at its best, does not merely manage risk, but also acts as the steward of society’s assets and an advocate of its deepest goals. Beyond compensation, the next generation of finance professionals will be paid its truest rewards in the satisfaction that comes with the gains made in democratising finance – extending its benefits into corners of society where they are most needed.
This is a new challenge for a new generation, and will require all of the imagination and skill that you can bring to bear.
Good luck in reinventing finance. The world needs you to succeed.
© Project Syndicate, 2012, www.project-syndicate.org.
The author is professor of economics and finance at Yale University. His new book is Finance and the Good Society.
Operation Weeting: 42-year-old woman arrested over alleged money laundering - The Guardian
A 42-year-old woman has been arrested by police investigating phone hacking on suspicion of money-laundering offences.
The woman was arrested by appointment at a south-west London police station on Monday morning by Metropolitan police detectives from Operation Weeting.
Police said the woman was being questioned in a statement shortly after 1pm on Monday.
Scotland Yard said: "A 42-year-old woman [W] was arrested this morning, Monday 28 May 2012 by officers from Operation Weeting, the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) investigation into the hacking of voicemail boxes.
She was arrested after attending a south-west London police station by appointment at approximately 11:00hrs on suspicion of money laundering offences, contrary to section 327 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 and is currently being questioned."
Scotland Yard confirmed that the woman is the first to be held on suspicion of money laundering offences as part of its Operation Weeting probe.
The force could not confirm whether the woman is a journalist or public official. She is the 25th person to be arrested as part of the investigation into phone hacking.
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Banks told to display 'your money is protected' notices - Daily Telegraph
The notices will also have to state whether banking licences are shared with another brand, as in this case customers who have money in both are still subject to an overall compensation limit of £85,000.
For example, Halifax and Bank of Scotland – which also own BM Savings – count as one group, whereas NatWest and Royal Bank of Scotland are treated as separate entities by the FSCS.
Andrew Bailey, the FSA's director of UK banks and building societies, said: "Customers need to feel confident about their money and to do this they need to know what the compensation limits are and which scheme would provide cover in the event of a bank, building society or credit union failure.
"Too many people assume that because their branch is located on a local high street in the UK, they are covered by the FSCS. This is not true for UK branches of EEA [European Economic Area ] banks where the home country's deposit guarantee scheme applies."
He added: "Banks, building societies and credit unions will have to display these compensation stickers or posters in the branch window along with a sticker at the cashier's window or desk and a further poster in a prominent position inside."
Similar stickers must also be displayed on websites. The rules will take effect on August 31.
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