The Los Angeles Post
California & Local U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: January 30, 2025
Today: January 30, 2025

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

54th WEF annual meeting in Davos
July 02, 2024

By Stefania Spezzati and Megan Davies

DAVOS (Reuters) - Bank CEOs meeting in private at the World Economic Forum on Wednesday aired concerns about the competitive 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 Jamie 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.

Bank CEOs, huddled in private in Davos, worry about competition, economy - sources
Global bank CEOs testify before US Congress in Washington

The private session was led by Barclays CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnan and Manulife 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 Chairman Colm Kelleher, speaking earlier 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.

(Reporting by Stefania Spezzati and Megan Davies; Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa; Editing by Elisa Martinuzzi and Mark Potter)

Related Articles

SoftBank in talks to invest up to $25 billion into OpenAI, says source Japan, US planning meeting between PM Ishiba and President Trump on Feb 7, Asahi reports Meta to pay $25 million to settle Trump's 2021 lawsuit over suspended accounts

Related

Business|Economy|Finance|Political|US

Oil steady as markets await clarity on tariffs by Trump on Canada, Mexico

Oil prices were little changed in early trading on Thursday, as markets watched for tariffs by U.S.

Oil steady as markets await clarity on tariffs by Trump on Canada, Mexico
Asia|Business|Finance|Stock Markets|Technology

Microsoft, Meta CEOs defend hefty AI spending after DeepSeek stuns tech world

Days after Chinese upstart DeepSeek revealed a breakthrough in cheap AI computing that shook the U.S. technology industry, the chief executives of

Microsoft, Meta CEOs defend hefty AI spending after DeepSeek stuns tech world
Asia|Business|Economy|US

Nissan cuts shifts, offers employee buyouts at 3 US plants in bid to shed jobs

Japan's Nissan Motor is offering buyouts to workers and cutting back shifts at three U.S. factories, a company spokesperson said on Thursday, as the automaker pushes to slash $2.6

Nissan cuts shifts, offers employee buyouts at 3 US plants in bid to shed jobs
Business|Crime|Environment|US

Exposed utility wires may have contributed to LA's Eaton Fire, law firm says

A law firm representing victims of the Eaton Fire in Los Angeles has submitted photos with a legal filing on Wednesday that appear to show exposed wire at the

Exposed utility wires may have contributed to LA's Eaton Fire, law firm says
Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Finance

Bank of Japan board reshuffle to bring it closer to 'normal' central banking

Bank of Japan board reshuffle to bring it closer to 'normal' central banking
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|Stock Markets|US

Stock market today: Asia shares mostly rise while some regional markets stay closed for holidays

Stock market today: Asia shares mostly rise while some regional markets stay closed for holidays
Asia|Business|Economy|Finance|US|World

Hong Kong central bank keeps base rate unchanged as Fed holds steady

Hong Kong central bank keeps base rate unchanged as Fed holds steady
Asia|Business|Economy

Philippines Q4 GDP grows 5.2% y/y, below expectations

Philippines Q4 GDP grows 5.2% y/y, below expectations