GFMA: News on the global financial markets
mercredi 23 novembre 2011 GFMAIMF offers aid to solid countries facing risks from
debt crisis
The International Monetary Fund updated its lending tools and
rolled out a six-month liquidity line to help nations with strong
policies that might face risks related to Europe's sovereign-debt
crisis. The IMF wants to ensure liquidity is available to countries
that haven't already been dragged into the crisis. Reuters(22 Nov.)
Germany rejects calls to do more to counter market
turmoil
Bond yields in Spain, Italy and France increased as progress toward
resolving the sovereign-debt crisis stalled. Investors, officials
and other interested parties called on Germany to do more, but the
European powerhouse indicated resistance to taking additional
steps. "We don't have any new bazooka to pull out of the bag," said
Michael Meister, finance spokesman for the Christian Democratic
bloc. "We see no alternative to the policy we are following."
Bloomberg(22 Nov.)
France's credit rating doesn't merit downgrade,
Juncker says
Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the euro-zone finance ministers,
said France's AAA credit rating should not be cut. "I don't believe
that the rating of France should be downgraded. I can see no short-
or medium-term reasons for doing so," Juncker said, responding to a
Moody's warning.
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UK regulator says banks' attempts to alter rules
could backfire
Robert Jenkins, a member of the UK Financial Policy Committee,
warned that bankers' efforts to rein in regulations could prompt an
even tougher crackdown. Financial Times(tiered subscription model)(22
Nov.), The Wall Street Journal(22 Nov.)
Commentary: Financial-transaction tax is
unthinkable in UK
Financial services account for a significant portion of gross
domestic product in the UK, making a tax on financial transactions
unthinkable, columnist David Cottle writes. "Now, with growth
slowing, debt reduction proving even harder than it looked and
unemployment rising, it is absurd to even suggest it," Cottle
writes. The Wall Street Journal/The Source blog(22
Nov.)