Showing posts with label regulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label regulation. Show all posts

Thursday, May 06, 2010

José Manuel Durão Barroso, President of the European Commission, Photo: Google Images

Barroso Pledges to Take on Speculators as Euro Hits 14-month Low

TIMES ONLINE: The President of the European Commission lashed out at speculators and threatened more regulation yesterday after the euro plunged to its lowest level for 14 months and stock markets suffered another battering.

Investors dumped stocks and bonds in a mass flight from risk as demonstrators in Athens clashed with police. Three people died after buildings were set alight in protests against cuts to pay and pensions in Greece.

A threat by Moody’s rating agency that it might downgrade Portugal fuelled the market mayhem. In London, leading shares joined the rout and the FTSE 100 index shed 70 points, its second day of decline. Madrid suffered worse pain, with the Ibex index of leading shares down 2.25 per cent as money fled to havens, such as the dollar and US Treasury bills.

José Manuel Barroso, the Commission President, said that it would act swiftly with further market regulation and accused credit rating agencies of pandering to the market mood. “The Commission will do whatever is necessary to ensure that financial markets are not a playground for speculation,” he said.

Michel Barnier, the Internal Market Commissioner, has already threatened regulation of rating agencies, and Mr Barroso joined the attack. He called the agencies’ working methods deficient and said that they were “too cyclical, too reliant on the general market mood rather than on fundamentals — regardless of whether market mood is too optimistic or too pessimistic”.

Investors raced to the exit, ignoring pleas from politicians to support the €110 billion rescue package for Greece. Instead they scoured the market for indications that Greece’s insolvency virus might spread to other Mediterranean eurozone states burdened with high debt, excessive spending and low growth. >>> Carl Mortished, Ian King | Thursday, May 06, 2010

Friday, April 23, 2010

Obama Slams Wall Street in Push for More Regulation

MAIL ONLINE: President Barack Obama rebuked fat cat executives for shady dealings as he pushed last night for sweeping reforms to stop another financial meltdown.

Without laws imposing stronger scrutiny of the financial industry America is doomed to repeat the past, the Presidents believes.

In a speech today at New York's Cooper Union college, near Wall Street, Mr Obama was outlining the need for new financial regulations and explaining what the nation would be risking if the existing framework is allowed to remain in place unchanged.

Echoing remarks he made in the same place two years ago, he said: 'A free market was never meant to be a free licence to take whatever you can get, however you can get it.

'That is what happened too often in the years leading up to the crisis. 'A free market was never meant to be a free licence to take what you can get': Obama slams Wall St in push for more regulation >>> Mail Foreign Service | Friday, April 23, 2010

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Saudi Arabia to Regulate Young Girls' Marriages

GLOBEANDMAIL: RIYADH — Saudi Arabia plans to regulate the marriages of young girls, its justice minister was quoted as saying on Tuesday, after a court refused to nullify the marriage of an 8-year-old to a man 50 years her senior.

The Justice Ministry aims “to put an end to arbitrariness by parents and guardians in marrying off minor girls,” Justice Minister Mohamed al-Issa told al-Watan newspaper, partly owned by members of the royal family.

Saudi Arabia is a patriarchal society that applies an austere form of Sunni Islam that bans unrelated men and women from mixing and gives fathers the right to wed their sons and daughters to whoever they deem fit.

The minister's comments suggested the practice of marrying off young girls would not be abolished. The regulations will seek to “preserve the rights, fending off blights to end the negative aspects of underage girls' marriage,” he said. >>> Reuters | Tuesday, April 14, 2009