Citywire printed articles sponsored by:
View the article online at http://citywire.co.uk/new-model-adviser/article/a644394
US and UK strike deal on bank failure
by Daniel Grote on Dec 10, 2012 at 08:10
US and UK regulators are to announce joint plans for how to deal with failing banks, under measures that they claim will combat the problem of large global financial institutions being 'too big to fail'.
Writing in the Financial Times, Bank of England deputy governor Paul Tucker (pictured) and Martin Grueberg, chairman of the US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, have outlined proposals that would force shareholders in both the US and UK to shoulder losses if a global bank fails.
Unsecured bondholders would see their claims written down to cover any losses that shareholders could not, which did not happen during the efforts to shore up banks as the financial meltdown unfolded. They said the plans would also ensure that banks held sufficient capital at the top of their holding structures to protect taxpayers.
Interventions would remove senior management but allow critical functions and healthy subsidiaries to continue operating.
'All countries share a very strong public interest in developing the capacity to resolve global systematically important financial institutions in a credible and effective way,' the regulators said.
Markets
News sponsored by:
Today's top headlines
iShares: Time to shatter the ETF myths
As result of industry changes - the retail distribution review - and a growing focus on cost-efficient solutions, we anticipate the number of investors using ETFs will rise significantly over the coming years.
But as with any newer product, especially in the financial world, various misconceptions about ETFs have perpetuated over the years and iShares is committed to addressing and ultimately dispelling these.
More about this article:
What others are saying
Archive
Read more...
FCA probes advisers and Sipp providers' role in pensions liberation
by Alex Steger on Jun 20, 2013 at 09:00






leave a comment
Please sign in here or register here to comment. It is free to register and only takes a minute or two.