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Lloyds names Bischoff as chairman

Bischoff spent most of his career with Schroders and was appointed chairman in 1995

Veteran banker Sir Win Bischoff today threw his support behind the embattled Lloyds Banking Group chief executive, Eric Daniels, as he was appointed chairman of the troubled bank, which owes £14bn to the taxpayer.

Linked to one of the toughest jobs in banking for many weeks, Bischoff declared Daniels was “the right man for the job”. Questions about the long-term future of Daniels have been asked since the rescue takeover of HBOS last year left Lloyds saddled with bad loans that could total £50bn over the next two years.

But Bischoff said: “From all I know [Daniels] is a superb operational manager. If execution is important he can lead this bank. He’s the right man for the job but we have to see. If you execute well your shareholders will support you.”

“I endorse him,” Bischoff said.

The 68-year-old, who was educated in Germany and South Africa, had faced criticism for not being an innovative enough candidate for the role and because of his close association with the troubled US bank Citigroup, where he was chairman until the start of this year.

One analyst said: “When you think it was Bischoff who dropped the ball at Citigroup, you have to wonder why there wasn’t a better alternative for the Lloyds job?”

But Bischoff shrugged off any such criticism, insisting his part of the business – the European operations – had not been associated with the problems at the US bank, which also once employed Daniels.

Bischoff was Lloyds’ “preferred candidate” from a list of 50 domestic and international hopefuls. He was on a shortlist of 15 after a recruitment process led by the non-executive director Sir Julian Horn Smith. Bischoff will earn £700,000 a year after he becomes chairman on 15 September, the first anniversary of the collapse of Lehman Brothers that sent the financial system into turmoil and forced HBOS into the rescue takeover by Lloyds days later.

Bischoff takes over from Sir Victor Blank, who resigned following shareholder unrest after the extent of the problems at HBOS unfolded earlier this year. Blank was seen as the public face of the HBOS takeover after clinching a deal with Gordon Brown to overturn competition rules, allowing the historic takeover.

Those competition waivers are now being questioned by the EU, which is considering which businesses Lloyds should sell off in return for participating in the government’s asset protection scheme.

Daniels said: “Sir Win brings great knowledge and insight to the group as we build the UK’s leading financial services provider, and I look forward to working with him. The board and I are immensely appreciative of the leadership and vision Sir Victor has provided during a time of great change for the group and the financial services industry in general.”

Bischoff had 14 interviews for the high-profile role, including with UK Financial Investments, the body that looks after the taxpayers’ stakes in the bailed-out banks, and City regulator the FSA, which had to approve his appointment.

UKFI, which also supported the departure of Blank, endorsed Bischoff, saying it “welcomes Sir Win’s appointment and looks forward to working with him”.

UKFI needs to sell off the taxpayer stake in Lloyds, which is still worth less than the bailouts. The shares, which had stopped trading for the day before Bischoff’s appointment, gained 7% to 83.8p yesterday – below the 122p average at which the taxpayer bought in.

Analysts agreed that Bischoff faced a tough challenge in building enough shareholder confidence in the bank to allow the stakes to be sold off.

Ian Gordon, of broker Exane BNP Paribas, who has resisted putting Lloyds shares on his list of best buys, said the move would bring the bank some much needed stability after the resignation Blank.

“After much speculation it has been done quickly and efficiently. It is not going to upset shareholders,” he said.

Analyst Sandy Chen of rival broker Panmure Gordon said Bischoff will bring significant experience to rebuild Lloyds’ finances and reputation. “However, the extent of the challenges faced by the bank are such that he is one of many people who will be needed to support the bank.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Taiwan, China Exchange 1st Direct Messages

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The presidents of Taiwan and China exchanged direct messages Monday for the first time since the two sides split 60 years ago – the latest sign of their warming relations.

According to a Nationalist Party statemen…

PCB to seek ICC assurance on govt. permission to play in World Cup

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt will meet ICC president David Morgan on Tuesday to discuss the possible solutions to a scenario in which the Pakistan cricket team is not allowed to play its 2011 World Cup home matches in India or if the Pakistan Government does not allow its team to play in [...]

Taiwan president wins party vote

By Cindy Sui
BBC News, Taipei

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou 26.7.09

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou has been elected head of the island’s ruling party, the Kuomintang, in a vote by party members.

The move will make it easier for him to pass policies through parliament and to have more say in relations with China.

China considers Taiwan as one of its provinces, not a country, and does not recognise Mr Ma as Taiwan president.

But as chairman of the ruling party, Mr Ma will now be able to meet Chinese President Hu Jintao.

Until now, negotiations between the two sides have been conducted largely between the Kuomintang (KMT) and China’s Communist Party, rather than between the two governments.

The past year has seen relations between the two countries improve dramatically, but a summit between the two presidents still may not be likely in the near future.

Local media has anticipated a summit between the two men, which would be the first between Taiwan and China since they separated in 1949 following a civil war.

But analysts say Mr Ma doesn’t want such a meeting to happen soon.

Sensitive issue

Meeting Mr Hu now would be too sensitive, as Mr Ma’s plans to bring the two sides economically closer – including the signing of a type of free-trade agreement – face opposition from those who fear he will sell out to China.

Mr Ma has indicated he is in no hurry to visit China.

Analysts say the main reason he sought the party chairmanship is to exert control over his party, which controls the legislature, so he can get his bills and appointments approved.

Being party chairman, however, will also give him more say over dealings with China.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Barry Diller: Free Web Content Is A ‘Myth’

July 24 (Bloomberg) — Barry Diller, chairman and chief executive officer of IAC/InterActiveCorp, said Web users will have to pay for what they watch and use, joining the refrain of media moguls who say an era of free Internet content is endin…

Patil to release book on Indian Constitution

President Pratibha Devisingh Patil will release a book titled “Constitution of India” authored by Dr. Adish C. Aggarwala at Rashtrapati Bhavan on Thursday evening.
The book will be released in the presence of the Chief Justice of India, K.G.Balkrishnan, Union Law and Justice Minister Veerappa Moily, Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs V.Narayanaswamy and Haryana Chief [...]

MPs to investigate sexism in the City

• Inquiry triggered by banking sector collapse
• Select committee includes just one female member

Sexism in the City and pay inequalities faced by women working in financial firms are to be investigated by the Treasury select committee of MPs as part of its attempt to prevent another financial crisis.

The committee, which includes just one woman, is calling for evidence on the role of women in the City and information about the proportion of women occupying senior positions in leading financial firms.

John McFall, chairman of the committee, intends to hold two hearings in the autumn. The investigation has been born out of the committee’s work looking into the banking meltdown.

The government is expected to respond to the 45 conclusions reached by the committee following its high-profile hearings into the banking crisis. Among the conclusions were that the review of the future of regulation by the Financial Services Authority chairman, Lord Turner, was too complacent about the role of City pay in the current crisis.

The committee had faced some criticism for calling mostly male witnesses to the banking crisis hearings when former Royal Bank of Scotland chief executive Sir Fred Goodwin gave evidence along with other key players in the events that led to the taxpayer bailouts last year.

McFall said: “At a time when pay and corporate governance are key issues in terms of redrawing financial regulation, the committee feels it is important to highlight the issue of gender equality in the financial services industry.”

“We hope our inquiry will provoke an important debate about the representation and treatment of women in the City,” he said.

The only woman on the committee is the Labour MP for Northampton North, Sally Keeble, although McFall, as chairman, has no influence over its composition. In the past the committee has included up to three women.

The inquiry wants to look at pay inequality, flexible working practices and the extent to which the culture of the City is sexist, as well as the prevalence of sexual harassment and exploitation.

Ros Altmann, an independent pensions expert, said: “There is so much of an old boy network. Men find it hard to accept [change]. Anyone looking at this dispassionately couldn’t help but be struck by the over-representation of men in financial decision-making.”

She is among those questioning whether a greater involvement of women before the banking crisis might have led to a different outcome. There might have been a “less macho culture” and more focus on long-term considerations rather than a focus on short-term gain, she said.

“It is certainly long overdue for the male domination to be challenged and this mindset that the best in the City and the financial markets are men,” said Altmann.

Ruth Lea, economic advisor at Arbuthnot Bank, was sceptical. “I don’t think this is necessary. I know women who work in the City and do fantastically well. It’s about lifestyle choices. It’s not an easy life. It’s exhausting,” said Lea.

The financial crisis has prompted a number of investigations into corporate governance and also the behaviour of the bankers, particularly after Iceland appointed two women to clean up two of its most troubled banks in October.

Researchers at Cambridge University have found that testosterone levels among City traders were higher on days when they made more than their average profit. French business school Ceram has asked if women are the “antidote” to the global financial crisis. Its study found that the fewer female managers a company had, the more its share price had dropped since the beginning of last year.

Of the French banks, BNP-Paribas has best resisted the crisis. Almost 40% of its managers are women and its shares fell by a relatively small 20%. By comparison, Crédit Agricole, where 16% of managers are women, saw its stock fall by 50%.

The committee is calling for evidence by 10 September.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Paul Szep: The Daily Szep: GOP Chairman Michael Steele

On the mend

The Fed’s chairman talks up the economy

IT HAS been a long time since comments on the economy by an official of America’s Federal Reserve comments could be described as cheerful. Yet there was no denying the upbeat tone of Ben Bernanke’s testimony to Congress on Tuesday July 21st.

Markets have experienced “notable improvements,” the Fed’s chairman told Congress. The fear of investors has “eased somewhat,” and “many markets are functioning more normally.” As for the economy, consumer spending has been stable, the drop in the housing market has moderated and many “of our trading partners are also seeing signs of stabilisation.” His fingers may be crossed but it is clear that Mr Bernanke thinks the recession, if not over now, soon will be. …

B. Croat leader backs Tadić proposal

The chairman of the Bosnian Presidency supports Serbia’s proposal for the ex-Yugoslav republics to organize the Non-Aligned Movement’s 50th anniversary summit. “My personal opinion of President Boris Tadić’s proposal is very positive… but because of Bosnia-Herzegovina’s peculiarities, my personal opinion is not enough for Bosnia to officially come on board. That kind of decision can only be taken by the Bosnian Presiency as a whole, through a consensus,“ Željko KomÅ¡ić told daily Danas.

Fed under fire

Analysis
By Steve Schifferes
Economics reporter, BBC News

<img src=”http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45125000/jpg/_45125828_-73.jpg” align=”left” width=”226″ height=”170″ alt=”US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke ” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, has played a central role in the global financial crisis.

The Fed, along with the US Treasury, organised the $700bn (£496bn) bank bail-out plan in October 2008, and has since spent an additional $3 trillion propping up the credit markets and trying to boost the economy.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight"

William Donaldson, former SEC chief

Mr Bernanke’s four-year term as Fed chairman comes up for renewal in January, and his reappointment is now the subject of an increasingly bitter debate between right and left.

Under fire

Bear Stearns office

His role in the bail-out has come under fire from conservative Republicans and left wing Democrats, who believe that he betrayed his Republican roots by providing so much state support for the banks while ordinary citizens have suffered from the economic downturn.

Other economic conservatives fear that the huge Fed lending – along with a Federal government deficit that is expected to reach $1.7 trillion this year, is likely to prove highly inflationary, and are urging the Fed to unwind its big lending programme as soon as possible.

And some influential voices argue that, since the Fed performed poorly regulating the banks before the crisis, it should not be given the lead role now.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight..and the heavy influence that the banks have on the Fed’s governance," say two former heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission, William Donaldson and Arthur Levitt.

‘No interference’

Barack Obama

But Mr Bernanke has also attracted wide support among mainstream economists and investors for his handling of the crisis.

A petition from more than 250 prominent economists, including Yale’s Robert Schiller and three Nobel Prize winners (Robert Merton, Eric Maskin, and Daniel McFadden) argues that the criticisms are putting the independence of the Fed at risk.

"When the Fed judges it’s time to begin tightening monetary conditions, it must be allowed to do so without interference," they said.

And Mr Bernanke so far has one very important backer – President Barack Obama, the man who will decide later this year whether to reappoint him.

"He is doing a fine job in difficult circumstances," Mr Obama said at a press conference in June.

Popular anger

Shoppers in Manhattan

It is highly unusual in US politics for the job of Fed chairman to be so politicised – and the previous, long-serving chairman, Alan Greenspan, always attracted bi-partisan support.

The debate over Mr Bernanke’s future, however, is also a debate about the future course of US economic policy after a year of unprecedented government intervention amid the deepest economic downturn since World War II.

Mr Bernanke, and his ally US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner (who played a key role in the financial bail-out in October when he was head of the New York branch of the Fed) have been trying to steer a middle course, providing emergency relief to the banking sector but making it clear that these are only temporary measures.

At the same time, they are planning to toughen up regulation to prevent future crises – and much of that regulatory power will be accrued by the Fed.

Critics fear that Mr Bernanke will become too powerful, and the banks would like to weaken the close regulatory oversight being proposed by the government.

At the same time, there is huge popular anger at the scale of the bank bail-out, and a belief that this constitutes "socialism for the rich", with ordinary citizens suffering from the economic fall-out from the banking crisis.

These feelings have become stronger as it has become clear that, despite President Obama’s $787bn stimulus package, the US recession is likely to be long and deep, with unemployment rising sharply and forecast to top 10%.

Recession lingering

Job seekers at a jobs fair in New York

The Fed’s own assessment of the US economy is still distinctly downbeat, and in its most recent pronouncement said that "downside risks as predominating in the near term," although it is hopeful of a mild recovery by the end of 2009.

So the Fed is likely to continue with its program of credit easing.

Despite the worries of conservative economists, it argues that there is little immediate danger of inflation at the moment with economy still weak.

The Fed’s loose monetary policy also take some pressure off the Obama administration, which is facing calls from the left for a second stimulus package to provide a further fiscal boost the the economy.

This would be politically problematic, and also make it more difficult for the President to pass his other, expensive policy iniatives, such as health care reform.

Bernanke’s Rivals

Larry Summers

But if the economy did worsen significantly, it is still possible that Mr Obama might want to replace the man who symbolises the bank bail-out in the public imagination.

The leading candidate to replace him is the charismatic figure of Larry Summers, the former US Treasury Secretary who is now a key economic advisor to the President.

Mr Summers, a former President of Harvard, is a forceful advocate of further government intervention in the economy, but has run into trouble because of his outspoken views.

Another possibility would be Janet Yellin, a former Fed governor and advisor to President Clinton, who has dovish views about inflation.

However, many investors believe that it would be a mistake to replace Mr Bernanke, and are hoping that, in the interest of policy stability, that he is reappointed.

In the opinion of David Wyss of Standard & Poor’s: "Don’t change horses in mid-stream." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

John Marshall: RNC Chairman Supports Rights of Patients to Choose Their Own Unaffordable Health Care

The Man of Steele: Truth, Justice and the Pharmaceutical Companies’ Way WASHINGTON – Michael Steele, the Chairman of the Republican Party, said President Obama’s…

Steele: Obama Is Part Of Health Care “Cabal”

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the Republican party is accusing President Barack Obama of conducting “risky experimentation” with his health care proposals, saying they will hurt the economy and force millions to drop their current coverage.

The week ahead

Iraq’s Kurds go to the polls, and other news

• THE chairman of America’s Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, delivers his semi-annual monetary-policy testimony to the House Financial Services Committee in Washington, DC, on Tuesday July 21st. Mr Bernanke may shed more light on how far he believes that America is bouncing back from the financial crisis and economic downturn. Mr Obama recently spoke of signs that the “economic storm” is waning and Timothy Geithner, his treasury secretary, has talked about “very encouraging” indications that confidence is returning to the financial system. The administration has decided not to bail out CIT, a struggling commercial lender, reinforcing its own confidence that the financial system can withstand a bankruptcy filing that could come soon.

For background, see article …

Head of $25 Billion Templeton Fund: Derivatives Will Cause Another Crisis

I have repeatedly warned that credit default swaps are not meaningfully being reigned in, and that the failure to do so will cause future problems.Mark Mobius – executive chairman of the $25 billion dollar Templeton asset management fund – agrees:A new…

Rick Wagoner Gets Over $10 Million In Exit Package From GM

DETROIT (AP) — Former General Motors Corp. Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner will retire Aug. 1 with a benefit package the automaker valued at more than $10 million.

A Securities and Exchange Commission filing says the package includes a pension…

Anglo American set for Xstrata fight

Sir John Parker, the chairman of the UK’s National Grid, takes role as mining company fights unwanted takeover bid

Anglo American has appointed Sir John Parker as chairman to bolster the mining company’s defences against an unwanted takeover bid from rival Xstrata.

Parker joins the board with immediate effect and will become chairman on 1 August. He succeeds Sir Mark Moody-Stuart, who is retiring after seven years as chairman.

Parker, who is well-respected in the City, is chairman of the UK’s National Grid. In South Africa, where Anglo was founded and still has many operations, he shares with Cyril Ramaphosa the chairmanship of the Mondi Group, the paper producer that was spun off from Anglo two years ago.

He is expected to relinquish several of his other commitments; recently, he stepped down as chair of the court of the Bank of England.

Last month, Anglo American rejected an all-share offer from Xstrata, headed by the South African-born Mick Davis, as “totally unacceptable”. The combined group would have a market value of more than £40bn.

Moody-Stuart said the board’s decision to recruit Parker after a global search that took several months was unanimous. “Sir John is recognised as a highly experienced and independent chairman, has chaired four FTSE 100 companies and brings a wealth of leadership experience across a range of industries in many countries, including in South Africa,” he said.

Parker said: “With deep roots in South Africa, a country I know very well through my years at Babcock International and my more recent role at Mondi working jointly with Cyril Ramaphosa, this global company has an opportunity to deliver considerable further growth and value in the coming years.”

Ramaphosa, a former South African union leader and head of the African National Congress, had also been shortlisted for Anglo’s chairmanship.

The takeover battle took an unusual turn yesterday when Cynthia Carroll, Anglo’s chief executive, became the target of a sexist rant from the group’s former deputy chairman, Graham Boustred. He also said Anglo was a disaster and the board had to be swept aside. “The only way for it to be swept aside is for Mick Davis to succeed with his bid.”

Carroll has been criticised by some investors for scrapping Anglo’s dividend, showing poor leadership and overpaying for assets.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds