Bad loans expected to show up on banks' balance sheets in 2021, according to S&P Global.
Leaving the EU poses problems and opportunities for banks under the UK’s new regulation framework.
Tougher Covid-19 restrictions in Q4 could cause asset quality to deteriorate and NPLs to rise.
Lenders must respond by November 12 to Bank of England request on whether in-house tech is ready for below zero rates.
Government support has mitigated credit risks but impact of Covid-19 second wave likely to ramp up pressure on lenders, says DBRS Morningstar.
Bad debts could eat into profits and restrict lending, holding back recovery throughout the decade, according to Capital Economics.
Speed of technological change and the ethical conundrums it raises top concerns of over 300 senior executives in new survey.
Negative impact on creditworthiness will increase in proportion to severity and duration of crisis, says rating agency.
Write-offs at big banks in the UK, the US and Australia are expected to rise as government stimulus expires, according to Moody’s.
Government-backed initiative to allow registered third-party providers access to consumers’ financial data has two million users.
Rise in corporate tax rate could hit net income but spending plans might also drive growth and boost overall profits.
Incumbent banks' tendency to prioritise larger clients has created a gap in the market during Covid-19 crisis.
Revelations lenders turned blind eye to money laundering have fuelled calls to overhaul suspicious activity reports system.
Rapid uptake of online services because of pandemic has created new risks that are tricky to monitor, admits EU banking watchdog.
Central bank support has helped keep markets open for high yield issuance and avoided fire sale of downgraded assets.
Total sovereign exposure at private sector lenders has risen this year on back of weak loan demand.
As Covid-19 batters its economy, we look at asset quality of country’s top lenders.
The Banker tracks governments' and central banks' emergency measures in worst-hit areas.