The Trump administration's sabre rattling on trade has produced little in the way of concrete results. But this may be about to change, writes Brian Caplen.
Latest articles from Brian Caplen
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China’s industrial revolution: was it the last one?
October 9, 2017If robots become the mainstay of manufacturing, the advantage of cheap labour disappears and with it the prospects for poor countries to get rich, writes Brian Caplen.
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Is it really all about the customer?
October 3, 2017The customer service mantra is constantly chanted but would banks do better by being more honest about the trade-offs a business has to make? Brian Caplen looks into the situation.
Intesa Sanpaolo CEO’s strategy for growth
October 2, 2017Carlo Messina, CEO of Italy’s biggest bank, Intesa Sanpaolo, talks to Brian Caplen about moving beyond restructuring into a new era of prioritising growth.
Swift chief looks to bring correspondent banking up to date
October 2, 2017The chief executive of Swift, Gottfried Leibbrandt, talks to Brian Caplen about changes to the correspondent banking model in the face of new technology, the role of fintechs, cybersecurity and the move towards instant payments.
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German election kills eurozone reform
September 25, 2017The big loser in Germany’s surprise election result is much-needed eurozone reform. Investors must accept that the eurozone and some banks remain prone to crises, writes Brian Caplen.
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Is open banking the industry’s Netflix moment?
September 19, 2017Analysts are making great claims for open banking under PSD2, but does it have the wow factor? Brian Caplen looks into the matter.
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Beware of tech purists and their flying saucers
September 6, 2017Bank CEOs desperately need a map of the future but should be cautious of visions that are too neat and tidy, writes Brian Caplen.
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It’s the environment, stupid
September 5, 2017Banks are on the front line in the war against climate change. Getting it wrong could destroy them.
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Is Lagarde’s Beijing card a Trump joker?
August 29, 2017Managing director Christine Lagarde says that within the next 10 years the IMF could be headquartered in Beijing rather than Washington. Maybe, writes Brian Caplen, there is a hidden message for the IMF sceptics in the Trump administration.