google.com, pub-7842875684800919, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0

Friday Newspaper round up.

Senior Royal Bank of Scotland bankers may step down in the coming weeks as part of the bailed-out bank’s multimillion-pound settlement with regulators over the Libor-rigging scandal. John Hourican, head of the RBS investment bank, and Peter Nielsen, head of markets, may leave even though neither of them had personal knowledge of the attempts to manipulate interest rates that have already led to four staff being fired and others being suspended.

The chief executive of RBS, Stephen Hester, has been preparing the ground for a substantial Libor fine since the summer when Barclays was hit with a £290m penalty that forced out chief executive Bob Diamond. Hester was parachuted in to turn around RBS after £45bn taxpayer bailout, and while the manipulation of the benchmark rate carried on while he was at the helm, he is not thought to be under pressure. [The Guardian]

Japanese prime minister, Shinzo Abe, unveiled a Y10.3tn ($116bn) economic stimulus package that the government expects will lift the country’s gross domestic product by 2 per cent and create 600,000 jobs. “We are making a bold shift . . . towards an economic policy that will create wealth through economic growth,” Mr Abe said on Friday. The stimulus package will exacerbate Japan’s deteriorating fiscal health as government debt is already at 220 per cent of GDP. The newly-elected Mr Abe, however, is under significant pressure to lift the economy out of its fifth recession in 15 years before Upper House elections in July. [Financial Times]

The Financial Ombudsman Service plans to take on 1,000 staff this year to deal with a surge of complaints relating to mis-sold payment protection insurance (PPI). The expansion comes on top of the 1,000 it hired last year, when it increased its number of case workers to 2,500. Deputy chief ombudsman Tony Boorman said: “While we see some businesses using complaints positively, many continue to frustrate their customers with delays and inconvenience. This has a marked impact on our workload.” [The Scotsman]

One of the most senior bankers in London should be kicked out of the City, the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards suggested yesterday. Alex Wilmot-Sitwell, who heads Bank of America Merrill Lynch in London, was one of four former UBS chiefs accused by the commission of being “ignorant and grossly incompetent” over the Libor interest rate rigging scandal. Andrew Tyrie, the chairman of the commission, lamented the fact that some of the four were still holding senior jobs in the City and had not been struck off the Financial Services Authority’s approved persons register. [The Times]

Google will be forced to change the way it presents search results in Europe or face sanctions from Brussels for unfairly manipulating its position as the world’s biggest internet search engine. The European Union’s competition chief, Joaquin Almunia, told a newspaper that it is his “conviction” that Google is unfairly promoting links to its own services above those of third party companies, and that he fears it is abusing its dominant position. [The Telegraph]

Chinese inflation accelerated in December as a bout of cold weather led to a spike in vegetable prices. Consumer prices posted their biggest increase in seven months, rising 2.5 per cent in December from a year earlier, up from a 2.0 per cent pace in November. The main contributor to inflation was the cost of food, which the statistics bureau said accounted for nearly two-thirds of the month-on-month increase.Large swaths of China have experienced their coldest winter in three decades, raising energy prices as well as the production and distribution costs of agricultural products. [Financial Times]

Channel 4 has ended a dispute with its biggest advertiser, WPP, that was costing the state-owned broadcaster up to £5m a week. The sides agreed a new deal today, meaning that WPP’s clients will start advertising again on C4’s portfolio of channels. WPP’s media-buying arm, Group M, which spends upwards of £250m a year with C4, pulled all its ads from 1 January, after a previous two-year deal ran out. [The Independent]

You may also like...

google.com, pub-7842875684800919, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
Verified by MonsterInsights