In The News

Robert Cookson September 1, 2010
As China’s economy continues to grow, the largest banks from around the globe seek favor and rapid profits there. HSBC relocated its chief executive from London to Hong Kong and, along with Citigroup and some other banks, HSBC offers discounts for companies that use the renminbi rather than the dollar for trading. “With renminbi trade settlement volumes expected to increase rapidly, banks are...
Wolfgang Reuter July 20, 2010
The US approved a financial reform law that could nudge the rest of the world, especially Europe, into preventing another financial meltdown. In an interconnected system, fast action on regulating complex securities and speculation can set global patterns into play, as noted by Wolfgang Reuter: “Americans have established a benchmark. European banks that do business in the United States will now...
Jeffrey E. Garten June 3, 2010
Markets around the globe analyze and quantify risk. But governance and politics present too much uncertainty, and investors are increasingly troubled by governments’ inability to address pressing problems and coordinate responses to problems including climate change, massive debt of any one country and other imbalances. Because of countless interconnections through labor, capital, environment,...
Pierre Paulden June 3, 2010
Trust breaks down in banking when investors question whether deposits are safe and when banks worry about loan repayment. Banks only keep a percentage of cash on hand, and a lack of trust can disrupt efficient lending and borrowing with that limited cash. Global banks could have a capital deficit of $1.5 trillion, by some reports, and troubled banks could request additional government assistance...
Nelson D. Schwartz, Eric Dash May 17, 2010
As Europe strives to bail out Greece and other nations in serious debt, global investors ponder the long-term effects of huge imbalances. The worry is that countries with massive debt like Spain and Portugal can weaken strongholds like Germany and France, reports an article in the New York Times. Economically strong countries that hold problem debt may be forced into restructuring plans even as...
Jonathan Fenby May 5, 2010
Membership in the 16-nation euro zone was supposed to boost Europe’s wealth – but the debt crisis in Greece reveals how a weak link in the chain could also risk spreading misery. Deeming Greece, a nation of 10 million, “too big to fail,” EU members scramble to put together a bailout package. Meanwhile, Greeks take to the streets, burning EU flags and protesting austerity measures, with three...
Jeffrey E. Garten April 23, 2010
Global capital markets have been footloose and fancy free since the 1980s, boosted by rapid globalization in transportation, communication and technology industries. Prowling for profits, investors leap boundaries in an instant, manipulating growth, jobs and industries. In this series, two economists explore global capitalism’s growing reach that defies even the world’s greatest economic power....