Economy

Bank CEOs, huddled in private in Davos, worry about competition, economy – sources

Bank CEOs meeting in private at the world Economic Forum on Wednesday aired concerns about the competitve risks from fintech firms and private lenders, and complained about onerous regulations, a source familiar with the matter said.

 At the meeting in Davos, attended by dozens of CEOs including JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s , opens nJamie Dimon, executives also discussed a challenging global economic picture, with shifting interest rate policies and rising debt, another person with knowledge of the meeting told Reuters.

Bank leaders were observed going into the meeting by Reuters. Before the meeting, at least one banking CEO told Reuters they see geopolitical risks potentially derailing interest rate cuts.

The private session was led by Barclays , opens new tab CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnan and Manulife, opens new tab CEO Roy Gori, according to a copy of the agenda seen by Reuters. The topics included navigating risk against a backdrop of geopolitical tension, macroeconomic uncertainty and technological disruption.

The pushback on regulation comes after Wall Street banks this week urged the U.S. Federal Reserve to completely overhaul a draft rule hiking bank capital, seeking to water down the “Basel Endgame” proposal that bankers say will hurt the economy.

UBS, opens Chairman Colm Kelleher, speaking earlier, opens in Davos, said regulators should focus on so-called shadow lenders that aren’t subject to the same rules and are more likely to cause the next crisis.

Bank failures in the United States and Europe in March reignited a debate about the risks lenders can pose to the financial system, even if capital buffers among tightly regulated lenders helped stem contagion fears.

Meanwhile, under a long-awaited move in the U.S., new regulations expected to be finalized this year should allow consumers to more easily transfer their data between financial services providers, which could prompt competition with financial technology firms.

There were about 60 CEOs of global financial firms including banks and insurance companies present, the first source said.

Among regulation concerns, UK supervisors were discussed by some as being particularly harsh, followed by European regulators, that source said.

Officials for JPMorgan didn’t have an immediate comment. Spokespeople for Barclays and Manulife couldn’t immediately be reached. Officials at the European Central Bank (ECB) and Britain’s Prudential Regulation Authority declined to comment.

The former chair of the ECB’s supervisory board said,in September that the average capital requirements for banks deemed significant to the EU would be somewhat higher under U.S. rules.

Source : Reuters

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Fiscal drag in Europe: How inflation is quietly affecting public revenue

The 2022 inflationary spike in Europe has brought renewed interest in fiscal drag. Using harmonised…

1 day ago

Credit default swaps: Analysis and policies

Credit default swap spreads have become critical benchmarks for credit risk assessment. A recent report…

1 day ago

Banking on nonbanks

Nonbank financial institutions play a central role in global credit markets, raising concerns about regulatory…

1 day ago

How sanctions can help stabilise global oil supply

There were initial concerns that the introduction of the Russian oil price cap in 2022…

1 day ago

From tariffs to trade flows: Diversion effects and China’s exports to the EU

High US tariffs on imports from China in the first half of 2025 led to…

1 day ago

The EU’s path to service growth and clean tech

The US is taking actions to reshore manufacturing while largely abandoning decarbonisation. This column argues…

1 day ago