Alte stiri din categoria: BANCI



Interviu

Declaratia guvernatorului BNR, Mugur Isarescu, cu privire la cursul valutar

Declaratia guvernatorului BNR, Mugur Isarescu, cu privire la masurile de aparare a monedei nationale: "În ultimele săptămâni, între Banca Naţională a României şi băncile centrale din Polonia, Cehia şi Ungaria care practică de asemenea un regim al cursului detalii

Analiza

RBS Romania este o banca solida, apreciaza guvernatorul Isarescu

Sucursala RBS este una dintre cele mai solide bănci din România, a declarat guvernatorul BNR, Mugur Isărescu, sugerând că o eventuală includere a acesteia într-o "bancă rea" este nefondată. "Am citit şi eu ce a scris presa străină. Chiar m-am uitat peste bilanţul băncii şi arată foarte bine. RBS, fosta ABN Amro este una dintre cele mai solide bănci din România", a spus Isărescu, citat de NewsIn. Întrebat dacă a discutat cu reprezentanţii grupului bancar britanic, guvernatorul a afirmat că directorul sucursalei din România ar trebui să aibă o poziţie împotriva includerii RBS România într-o "bancă rea". Publicaţia britanică The Times a relatat, recent, că detalii

ENGLISH

The Central Bank of Hungary left the base rate unchanged at 9.50%

1 At its meeting on 23 February 2009, the Monetary Council reviewed the latest economic and financial developments and left the central bank base rate unchanged at 9.50%. At its meeting, the Council also discussed the February 2009 issue of the Quarterly Report on Inflation. Over recent months, global economic conditions and the prospects for growth both have deteriorated more sharply than previously expected. In 2008 Q4, output in the world’s major economies fell and growth in emerging economies slowed significantly. Governments of the world’s major economies announced substantial fiscal actions; however, so far these have had little practical effect. The sharper-than-expected decline in external demand has led to a significant deterioration in Hungary’s growth prospects. The detalii

ENGLISH

Magyar Nemzeti Bank Press Release

Since the beginning of this year, the currencies of CEE countries, including the Czech koruna, the Hungarian forint, the Polish zloty and the Romanian lei depreciated substantially vis-à-vis the euro. As potential causes of this regional depreciation high current account deficits, export-dependent economies facing a sharply falling demand from Europe and a strong dependence of local banks on foreign funding may be mentioned. In normal times there is nothing wrong with a catching-up economy running a current account deficit. Export-oriented economic structures and close financial integration with an advanced region like Western Europe are normally taken as advantages and not as potential dangers. However, these are far from normal times. As global deleveraging continues, financing detalii

 



 

Ultimele Comentarii