The Governor of the Bank of England has warned that Britain could face another financial crisis if the banking sector is not reformed.
Mervyn King said that imbalances in the banking sector remain and are “beginning to grow again” according to an interview published late on Friday on the Web site of Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper.
The UK allowed a banking sector to build up “which contained the seeds of its own destruction,” King said. In the interview, he also expressed regret for not sounding a louder warning over his concerns before the last banking crisis, which culminated in a multibillion dollar state bailout of the financial sector.
“We’ve not yet solved the ‘too big to fail’ or, as I prefer to call it, the ‘too important to fail’ problem,” he said. “The concept of being too important to fail should have no place in a market economy.”
King accused banks of exploiting customers, citing a culture where it is “perfectly acceptable” for banks to “make money out of gullible or unsuspecting customers.” That approach — coupled with an eye for short-term profits and banker bonuses — could be driving problems in the banking sector, King said.
“Why do banks in general want to pay bonuses?” he said in the interview. “It’s because they live in a ‘too big to fail’ world in which the state will bail them out on the downside.”
His comments come after the British government last month struck a deal with the country’s top banks to curb bonus payments and boost lending to businesses — moves aimed at addressing a public outcry over lenders’ role in the financial crisis.
In the interview, King urged lenders to take a longer-term approach toward customers, saying that good businesses are “run by people who don’t think they should simply maximize profits next week.”
The British government is currently considering whether to force banks to separate their retail and investment-banking arms. Business Secretary Vince Cable has been pressing for the separation, but any such moves await the publication of the report of the Independent Commission on Banking in September.
Napoleon Osorio is proud of being the first taxi driver to have accepted payment in bitcoin in the first country in the world to make the cryptocurrency legal tender: El Salvador. He credits Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s decision to bank on bitcoin three years ago with changing his life. “Before I was unemployed... And now I have my own business,” said the 39-year-old businessman, who uses an app to charge for rides in bitcoin and now runs his own car rental company. Three years ago the leader of the Central American nation took a huge gamble when he put bitcoin
Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips should spur growth for the semiconductor industry over the next few years, the CEO of a major supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) said, dismissing concerns that investors had misjudged the pace and extent of spending on AI. While the global chip market has grown about 8 percent annually over the past 20 years, AI semiconductors should grow at a much higher rate going forward, Scientech Corp (辛耘) chief executive officer Hsu Ming-chi (許明琪) told Bloomberg Television. “This booming of the AI industry has just begun,” Hsu said. “For the most prominent
PARTNERSHIPS: TSMC said it has been working with multiple memorychip makers for more than two years to provide a full spectrum of solutions to address AI demand Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said it has been collaborating with multiple memorychip makers in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications for more than two years, refuting South Korean media report's about an unprecedented partnership with Samsung Electronics Co. As Samsung is competing with TSMC for a bigger foundry business, any cooperation between the two technology heavyweights would catch the eyes of investors and experts in the semiconductor industry. “We have been working with memory partners, including Micron, Samsung Memory and SK Hynix, on HBM solutions for more than two years, aiming to advance 3D integrated circuit
Former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman Mark Liu (劉德音) yesterday warned against the tendency to label stakeholders as either “pro-China” or “pro-US,” calling such rigid thinking a “trap” that could impede policy discussions. Liu, an adviser to the Cabinet’s Economic Development Committee, made the comments in his keynote speech at the committee’s first advisers’ meeting. Speaking in front of Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), National Development Council (NDC) Minister Paul Liu (劉鏡清) and other officials, Liu urged the public to be wary of falling into the “trap” of categorizing people involved in discussions into either the “pro-China” or “pro-US” camp. Liu,