
-
Lights out: Bali guards protect island's day of silence
-
Myanmar-Thailand quake toll passes 700 as rescuers dig for survivors
-
UK gallery to return Nazi-looted painting to heirs of Jewish collector
-
UK dreams of US trade deal before Trump tariffs
-
'Blink of an eye': survivor tells of Bangkok skyscraper collapse horror
-
The hand of GOAT, Mensik wins with Messi touch
-
Partial solar eclipse to cross swathe of Northern Hemisphere
-
Tunisian startup turns olive waste into clean energy
-
Guinea ex-dictator sentenced for 2009 massacre pardoned: junta
-
Chapman ton lifts New Zealand to 344-9 in first Pakistan ODI
-
Myanmar quake: what we know
-
Vu fires 64 to seize lead at LPGA Ford Championship
-
Resurgent Liu wins women's figure skating world title
-
Djokovic to face Mensik with 100th title within reach
-
Rescuers dig for survivors after huge quake hits Myanmar, Thailand
-
South Korea firefighters deploy helicopters as wildfires reignite
-
'Defiant' Canada autoworkers vow to fight tariff layoffs
-
Performance, museums, history: Trump's cultural power grab
-
Russian-born 12-ranked Kasatkina says to play for Australia tennis
-
Wallabies back Jorgensen suffers serious ankle injury
-
Academy apologizes after stars say it 'failed to defend' Palestinian filmmaker
-
UN rights chief demands end to 'horrific suffering' in Ukraine
-
Djokovic oozing confidence ahead of century bid
-
US regulators to investigate Disney diversity efforts
-
Elon Musk says xAI startup buying X platform
-
'Jail or death': migrants expelled by Trump fear for their fate
-
Djokovic closing in on 100th title after Dimitrov downed in Miami
-
Leverkusen beat Bochum to stay hot on Bayern's heels
-
Global markets slide as fears over US tariffs intensify
-
Dorival Junior sacked as Brazil coach after Argentina humiliation
-
Djokovic cruises past Dimitrov into Miami Open final
-
No.1 Scheffler ties Houston Open record with 62 to grab lead
-
Trump auto tariffs strike at heart of North American trade
-
Vance says Denmark has 'under invested' in Greenland
-
Green light for Winter Olympics bobsleigh slope
-
Musk's DOGE team emerges from the shadows
-
Film stars blast Academy for 'failing to defend' Palestinian filmmaker
-
Record fine for UK university renews free speech row
-
Grizzlies fire head coach Jenkins: team
-
'Game-changing' Hazlewood shines as Bengaluru thrash Chennai in IPL
-
Table-topping Bengaluru thrash Chennai by 50 runs in IPL
-
Israel warns of attacks 'everywhere' in Lebanon after rocket fire
-
Utah becomes first US state to ban fluoride in drinking water
-
Trump prompts US allies to reopen nuclear weapons debate
-
Nigerian police ban Kano Eid parade as rival emirs dispute throne
-
Ex-Barcelona star Dani Alves has rape conviction overturned
-
French lawyers condemn 'sexism' of Depardieu's defence in abuse trial
-
Stock markets slide over US inflation, tariff fears
-
King of cobbles Van der Poel adds Belgium's E3 to Milan-San Remo win
-
Vance lands in Greenland as anger mounts over Trump takeover bid

ECB pushes back against calls for looser bank rules
The European Central Bank has pushed back against calls to loosen rules for eurozone banks despite fears they could fall behind US rivals if President Donald Trump implements major deregulation.
Patrick Montagner, one of the ECB's banking regulators, told AFP in an interview that financial watchdogs "must always take a prudent approach to banking".
"The banking sector can, by its very nature, cause a lot of instability," said Montagner, whose watchdog oversees more than 100 of the euro area's biggest lenders, from Deutsche Bank to BNP Paribas and UniCredit.
Trump's return to the White House has fuelled expectations among major US banks of lighter regulation, and he is seen as likely to scale back the confrontational approach of Joe Biden's administration.
Changes are already afoot. Last week Trump tapped Michelle Bowman to be the Federal Reserve's top banking regulator, choosing a vocal critic of efforts to impose tougher rules in response to the 2007-2009 global financial crisis.
Such moves in the world's top economy will likely fuel calls for deregulation from European lenders, who had already been complaining frequently that stricter rules were undermining their ability to compete with US peers.
But Montagner said that if calls for "simplification" of regulations effectively meant "removing certain rules to the detriment of the resilience of the banking system, this does not align with our approach".
The member of the ECB's Supervisory Board pointed to the "massive cycle of deregulation" from the late 1990s to the mid-2000s, which ultimately triggered the "global shock" of the financial crisis.
The crisis began with a collapse of the US housing market, followed by the failure of banks and other businesses, and ultimately a major global downturn that the world economy took years to recover from.
- Banking rules stall -
Still, Montagner conceded it was ultimately not his call to set rules for the eurozone banking system -- that is up to European lawmakers.
There have been other warning signs about overly loose regulation in recent times, he said, pointing to the failure of US lender Silicon Valley Bank in 2023, which sent shock waves through the banking system.
"Regional banks were plunged into a severe crisis, with federal intervention required to stop it," he noted.
But his comments come at a time efforts to implement tougher global banking rules -- the so-called Basel III agreement, which came in response to the financial crisis -- already appeared to be stalling.
The US Federal Reserve has watered down its plans to implement the regulations after heavy pressure from the financial sector.
The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, has also delayed bringing in the rules until at least 2026 while the Bank of England has postponed them to the start of 2027.
The commission, under pressure to boost the eurozone's sluggish growth, is set to publish a report next year on the banking system in the single market, including on its competitiveness.
Montagner said the ECB was ready to contribute, while stressing financial sector regulations were not behind the euro area's economic woes.
"Economic forecasts have deteriorated recently owing to the prospect of a trade war and other geopolitical factors -- but not because of excessive banking regulation," he said.
A.Williams--AT