Pressure for bank reforms is set to grow at a gathering of the world’s elite at Davos this week, shortly after US President Barack Obama set the stage with an offensive against Wall Street excesses.
However, emboldened by a growing economic recovery, bankers — who were conspicuously missing from last year’s World Economic Forum meeting in the Swiss mountain resort — are set to fight back in vocal fashion, experts said.
Excessive risk taking by the banking industry has been cited as one of the causes of the recent financial and economic crises and regulators have been tasked by top politicians to draw up new rules to rein in the banks.
But as the world slowly emerges from recession — the worst since the Great Depression — opposing voices from banks on these new rules are growing louder.
“The lobbying is getting very strong and the political will can be diluted quickly,” said Cedric Tille, professor of economics at the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies in Geneva.
“It’s urgent to put these reforms in place,” said Tille, a former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Proponents of the reform would find an ally in Obama, who announced plans on Thursday to prevent banks or financial institutions in the US from owning, investing in or sponsoring hedge fund or private equity funds.
The new rules would force firms to choose between activities such as trading in stocks and sometimes risky financial instruments for their own benefit — and traditional activities, like making loans and collecting deposits.
The G20 leading developed and emerging economies has also asked for new rules to clean up the sector, with more stringent requirements on capitalization and debt ratios due to be introduced by the end of 2012.
Rainer Skierka, an analyst at Bank Sarasin, said the new rules were unpopular since they could generate costs and cut the profit margins of banks.
In addition, banks would be required to set aside more money as capital — reducing the funds they could use for investment to generate better returns.
“Banks are doing intense lobbying as the new demands on capital reduces their profits,” Tille said.
Bankers are likely to be more vocal in their lobbying against the reforms, said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight.
“A lot of bankers can’t wait to get out of the control of governments. Some feel so stifled,” he said. “They are going to do everything they can to resist the reforms. They will be more vocal this year.”
Bankers and finance ministers are to sit together on Wednesday to discuss “structural deficiencies [that] persist in the regulation of systemic financial risk,” according to a program of the Davos meeting circulated by organizers.
On Saturday, the focus will be on how the largest financial institutions in the world should be regulated.
Central bankers like the European Central Bank’s Jean-Claude Trichet as well as Egyptian Finance Minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali and French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde, are expected to pile on the pressure, analysts said.
Regulators have cautioned that reining in banks is becoming a key issue, particularly now that governments have shown that they were willing to bail out ailing banks in a financial crisis.
Quanta Computer Inc (廣達) chairman Barry Lam (林百里) is expected to share his views about the artificial intelligence (AI) industry’s prospects during his speech at the company’s 37th anniversary ceremony, as AI servers have become a new growth engine for the equipment manufacturing service provider. Lam’s speech is much anticipated, as Quanta has risen as one of the world’s major AI server suppliers. The company reported a 30 percent year-on-year growth in consolidated revenue to NT$1.41 trillion (US$43.35 billion) last year, thanks to fast-growing demand for servers, especially those with AI capabilities. The company told investors in November last year that
Intel Corp has named Tasha Chuang (莊蓓瑜) to lead Intel Taiwan in a bid to reinforce relations between the company and its Taiwanese partners. The appointment of Chuang as general manager for Intel Taiwan takes effect on Thursday, the firm said in a statement yesterday. Chuang is to lead her team in Taiwan to pursue product development and sales growth in an effort to reinforce the company’s ties with its partners and clients, Intel said. Chuang was previously in charge of managing Intel’s ties with leading Taiwanese PC brand Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), which included helping Asustek strengthen its global businesses, the company
Taiwanese suppliers to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC, 台積電) are expected to follow the contract chipmaker’s step to invest in the US, but their relocation may be seven to eight years away, Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said yesterday. When asked by opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Niu Hsu-ting (牛煦庭) in the legislature about growing concerns that TSMC’s huge investments in the US will prompt its suppliers to follow suit, Kuo said based on the chipmaker’s current limited production volume, it is unlikely to lead its supply chain to go there for now. “Unless TSMC completes its planned six
TikTok abounds with viral videos accusing prestigious brands of secretly manufacturing luxury goods in China so they can be sold at cut prices. However, while these “revelations” are spurious, behind them lurks a well-oiled machine for selling counterfeit goods that is making the most of the confusion surrounding trade tariffs. Chinese content creators who portray themselves as workers or subcontractors in the luxury goods business claim that Beijing has lifted confidentiality clauses on local subcontractors as a way to respond to the huge hike in customs duties imposed on China by US President Donald Trump. They say this Chinese decision, of which Agence