FT Banking Weekly - podcast cover

FT Banking Weekly

Financial Timeswww.ft.com
The Financial Times banking team discusses the biggest banking stories of the week, bringing you global insight and commentary on the top issues concerning this sector. To take part in the show or to comment please email audio@ft.com

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Episodes

Results at HSBC, RBS and Lloyds, and EU bonus-cap fallout

FT banking correspondents discuss the latest round of bank results, with HSBC lifting its dividend by half in the fourth quarter and RBS and Lloyds moving somewhat closer to reprivatisation, as well as looking at the impact of the EU’s move to cap bonuses at banks. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mar 04, 201312 min

RBS, calculations of risk-weighted assets and threats to the bulge bracket

The FT's banking correspondents look at RBS' plans for a partial float of its US business, Lloyds' plans to defer its chief's bonus until 2018, big investment banks losing market share and a regulatory push to limit banks' scope for discretion in calculating risk-weighted assets Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 25, 201317 min

Barclays, bank stocks and bonuses

This week the banking team is joined by David Oakley, investment correspondent, to discuss Barclays’ recent restructuring plans and whether bank stocks can outperform all others in the coming decade. The team also looks at the possibility that the European Parliament could put a cap on bankers’ bonuses, as talks on EU banking reforms enter a potentially decisive week Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 19, 201313 min

UK small banks round on regulations

This week the banking team look at small UK banks' claim that a "glass ceiling" hands larger competitors an advantage. Also up for discussion are RBS' Libor settlement, Barclays' cost-cutting strategy plan and the latest European bank results Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 11, 201314 min

Osborne's reform of banking

This week: chancellor George Osborne's warning that banks face break-up if they do not comply with rules designed to make the banking system safer, Barclays' woes as senior management figures step down and UK authorities probe the bank's Qatar connections, and risk weighted assets and the differences between the models global banks use to calculate how much capital to hold. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Feb 04, 201325 min

Barclays’ Libor fight, 'living wills' and LTRO repayments

In this week’s podcast FT banking correspondents discuss the naming of some former Barclays chiefs in a Libor court case, the lack of regulatory co-ordination on 'living wills' and repayments by European banks of cheap ECB funding Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jan 28, 201326 min

Wall Street results, PPI claims and property lending

FT banking correspondents discuss Wall Street banks’ latest results, British lenders’ calling for a deadline for claims over the misselling of Payment Protection Insurance and the effects of a change in capital rules will have on lending to the property industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jan 21, 201312 min

Taxman set to lose as Goldman considers delaying UK bonuses

In this week’s podcast the banking team discuss the possibility that Goldman Sachs might delay paying its UK bonuses until the start of the new tax year, when the top rate of income tax drops from 50 to 45 per cent. They also look at RBS considering recouping half of its imminent libor fine from its 2012 bonus pool, and UBS chiefs giving evidence to the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Jan 14, 20131 min

Easing of Basel rules boosts banks

Why the loosening of the new global liquidity standards has given a lift to European banks, private equity firms take a bet of UK retail banks, and what should be the role of banks in classroom-based financial education? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Jan 07, 20131 min

US banks call for an easing of Basel III liquidity requirements

This week Brooke Masters is joined by US banking editor Tom Braithwaite, James Shotter, Switzerland and Austria correspondent, and insurance correspondent Alistair Gray to talk about the call by US banks for an easing of the Basel III liquidity requirements as the Federal Reserve starts a new round of stress tests. Also discussed are recent developments in the Libor scandal and whether insurance companies should face the same kinds of regulation as giant banks and be designated as global systemi...

Dec 17, 201213 min

The scramble for settlements

After Standard Chartered's announcement that it will pay an additional $330m to resolve investigations into US sanction breaches and a deal expected from UBS in the next few weeks over the Libor scandal, the banking team asks why lenders are rushing to reach settlements with regulators. They also discuss the consequences for Deutsche Bank after it emerged that three former employees told regulatory authorities that the bank hid up to $12bn of paper losses during the financial crisis. Hosted on A...

Dec 10, 20121 min

A new governor for the Bank of England

The announcement that Mark Carney will take over as the governor of the Bank of England next year came as a surprise to many. But what does the market think of his appointment and will he change his executive team? Also discussed are the latest developments in the libor scandal as Deutsche Bank provisions for a potential settlement, and concerns from the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi’s chief executive over the state of Japanese government bond investments Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for mo...

Dec 03, 201214 min

A new governor for the Bank of England

The announcement that Mark Carney will take over as the governor of the Bank of England next year came as a surprise to many. But what does the market think of his appointment and will he change his executive team? Also discussed are the latest developments in the libor scandal as Deutsche Bank provisions for a potential settlement, and concerns from the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi’s chief executive over the state of Japanese government bond investments Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for mo...

Dec 03, 20121 min

Suitors for RBS

It's good news for RBS as private equity groups including AnaCap Financial and JC Flowers join Virgin Money and Nationwide in expressing interest in the lender's 316 branches, following the collapse of a deal with Santander in October. The banking team also discuss whether Barclays will follow the lead of UBS in winding down its global investment operations, following pressure from the bank's biggest investors. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Nov 26, 20121 min

Clawing back bonuses

As scandal after scandal hits lenders, the banking team talk about the Financial Services Authority's warning to banks operating in London that they must reduce bonus payouts. Also under discussion are proposals by the Financial Stability Board to tackle shadow banking, an industry worth half the size of the global banking sector. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Nov 19, 20121 min

Scandals continue to plague banks

As Goldman Sachs joins a plethora of lenders including HSBC and Barclays that face renewed scrutiny over rule breaches, the banking team talk about the impact of legacy issues on banks. Also under discussion are radical proposals by Hermes to scrape annual bonuses and Commerzbank’s decision to repay €10bn of ECB loans early. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Nov 12, 20121 min

When will PPI pain end?

This week the team discuss payment protection insurance as the bill for mis-selling the product tops £11bn for UK banks. Also under discussion are Sifi surcharges, the amount of extra capital that certain banks need to hold, after the Financial Stability Board published an updated list of "global systemically important financial institutions", and whether being on the list could be a good thing for lenders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Nov 05, 201212 min

When will PPI pain end?

This week the team discuss payment protection insurance as the bill for mis-selling the product tops £11bn for UK banks. Also under discussion are Sifi surcharges, the amount of extra capital that certain banks need to hold, after the Financial Stability Board published an updated list of "global systemically important financial institutions", and whether being on the list could be a good thing for lenders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Nov 05, 201212 min

Will UBS's restructuring plans work?

This week the banking team discuss UBS's move to split its investment unit and whether other banks will take similar decisive action as they come under regulatory and cost-saving pressures. Also under discussion is Lloyds' scheme to scrap incentives linked to product sales, as UK lenders face renewed scrutiny following mis-selling scandals. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Oct 29, 20121 min

What now for Citigroup?

Following Vikram Pandit’s surprise resignation from Citigroup, the banking team analyses events leading up to the chief executive’s departure and whether his replacement, Mike Corbat, is what the troubled group needs. Also under discussion are plans by Lloyds to reform its remuneration structure by ditching annual bonuses, as the bank attempts to appease the government, shareholders and the public. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 21, 201214 min

Will third-quarter results be a blessing for US banks?

This week the banking team ask whether strong third-quarter results from JP Morgan and Wells Fargo bode well for other US banks and the implications of the FSA's decision to loosen capital and liquidity rules for lenders. Alistair Gray, insurance correspondent, and Sharlene Goff, retail banking correspondent, also discuss RBS' future after its deal to sell more than 300 branches to Santander collapsed. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 14, 201212 min

UK banks retreat from interest-only mortgages

This week the team is joined by Elaine Moore, deputy personal finance editor, to discuss Nationwide Building Society’s decision to stop offering interest-only mortgages to new borrowers. Also, what is the significance of plans by James Gorman, Morgan Stanley’s chief executive, to sacrifice staff and reduce bonuses, and how has the banking sector reacted to recommendations of the Liikanen report? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Oct 07, 201211 min

Pressure on Spanish banks

This week the team look at the Spanish banking system, after a recent report into the country’s 14 largest lenders found they could need up to €60bn in new capital. But are recent stress-tests enough to restore confidence? They also discuss JPMorgan’s recent deal that saw it snap up three quarters of the first European commercial mortgage bond launched since the financial crisis and regulatory pressures on the banking sector Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....

Sep 30, 201213 min

SocGen focuses on Russia and Romania

This week the Banking team are joined by Paris correspondent Scheherazade Daneshkhu to discuss Société Générale's plans to boost profits in Russia and Romania by the end of next year. They also look at Standard Chartered's signing of a $340m settlement to resolve allegations it violated US sanctions on Iran and they debate what the future holds for London, as strict enforcement of new EU regulation begins to push debt deals away from the City. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more info...

Sep 23, 201212 min

China Construction Bank targets Europe

As Chinese businesses do more deals in Europe, its big banks are starting to look at potential acquisitions in Europe, why former HBOS banker Peter Cummings was singled out personally by the regulator and the trial of the former UBS’s trader Kweku Adoboli accused of causing the largest unauthorised trading loss in British history gets underway. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sep 16, 201213 min

Restructuring banks, Libor and European banking regulation

Is there a new round of job cuts looming at Europe’s banks? The FT’s banking team also looks at the latest in the Libor rate fixing scandal and with a month to go until the Liikanen review is due to be completed whether a consensus is emerging that Europe’s big banks could be forced to ringfence trading assets. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sep 09, 201215 min

A new CEO for Barclays

This week the banking team discuss the swift appointment of internal candidate Antony Jenkins as the new chief executive of Barclays. Alistair Gray, insurance correspondent joins to talk about RBS floating Direct Line and the team look into the possibility that banking liquidity rules could be softened. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Sep 02, 201216 min

What next for Standard Chartered?

This week the banking team analyse Standard Chartered's decision to pay a settlement of $340m to a New York regulator related to its handling of payments to Iran. But with other regulators still circling, will the bank face further fines? They also discuss HSBC's dealings with Iran and Syria and the latest on the Libor scandal Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aug 19, 201216 min

StanChart pushes for a settlement

This week the banking team is joined by Anousha Sakoui, the FT’s M&A correspondent, to discuss the latest developments in the Standard Chartered scandal, as the bank pushes for a settlement against allegations from US regulators that it breached Iranian sanctions. Also under consideration are Julius Baer’s proposed purchase of Merrill Lynch’s overseas wealth management arm and the challenges facing Sir David Walker in his new role as Barclays chairman Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy f...

Aug 13, 20121 min

Standard Chartered storm

This week the banking team discusses the Standard Chartered scandal as New York state’s financial watchdog accuses the bank of hiding $250bn of transactions with Iran. Also under the spotlight are RBS’s latest results and the debate over whether the bank should be fully nationalised, plus refunds of mis-sold payment protection insurance boosting Britain’s stuttering economy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aug 06, 20121 min
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