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Europe’s regulator proposes preserving capital requirements while trimming the complexity that hampers cross-border M&A
Banks face an uncertain future as finance goes digital
Europe's regulator seeks to reduce complexity while 'preserving banks' resilience and resolvability'
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Nomura saw a Brexit-related bounce in its fixed income division when it reported its quarterly performance on Thursday, thanks to a healthy dispersion of client trading views. But the bank’s European operations still delivered an overall loss.
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Did Juncker just shut the Barnier door?
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Back in July 2010, not long after the first Greek bailout, results of stress tests conducted by the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (the predecessor of the EBA) were released on the EU’s banks. They didn’t make for happy reading.
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A strong second quarter performance in fixed income trading has bolstered BNP Paribas’ corporate and investment banking results and helped cushion falls in its equities business and domestic retail banking arm.
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Heeding the recommendations of a European Commission expert group, the European Central Bank (ECB) has disclosed that it considers some capital requirements non-binding, meaning the trigger that stops coupon payments on additional tier one instruments will be harder to hit.
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The woes of the Deutsche Bank, proclaimed the world’s riskiest global systemically important bank (G-Sib) by the International Monetary Fund, were compounded on Wednesday morning when it reported second quarter results. Headline figures confirmed that a challenging operating environment, as well as the bank’s painful 2020 restructuring plan, are hitting operations hard.