DailyMarkets.com - Financial Sector Data Can Help Predict Real Economy-BIS
DailyMarkets.com - Financial Sector Data Can Help Predict Real Economy-BIS |
- Financial Sector Data Can Help Predict Real Economy-BIS
- Global Banking Market Expands Marginally In Q3 – BIS
- New Global BIS Database Shows Explosion In Total Credit
- Fed, BOE QE Programs Helped Dispel Deflation Fears-BIS
- Global Debt Rises But Governments Fail To Reform – BIS
Financial Sector Data Can Help Predict Real Economy-BIS Posted: 17 Mar 2013 01:11 PM PDT Real-time information about the financial sector, such as asset prices, interest rates and credit aggregates, can help predict future changes in the real economy, though less about inflation, according to the Bank for International Settlements. (BIS). |
Global Banking Market Expands Marginally In Q3 – BIS Posted: 17 Mar 2013 01:08 PM PDT The global banking market expanded only marginally in the third quarter of 2012 – the smallest quarterly rise in 13 years – as lending to banks in the troubled euro area contracted further while credit extended to non-banks in the United States expanded, rising according to final quarterly data from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). |
New Global BIS Database Shows Explosion In Total Credit Posted: 17 Mar 2013 01:07 PM PDT Households worldwide have boosted their borrowing since the 1970s and in some countries, such as the United States and Australia, the total amount now exceeds that of companies, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) said, introducing a new public database for total credit in 40 countries. |
Fed, BOE QE Programs Helped Dispel Deflation Fears-BIS Posted: 17 Mar 2013 01:05 PM PDT The impact of the Federal Reserve and Bank of England's large-scale asset purchases in 2008 and 2009 on economic growth may be uncertain, but it is clear their intervention in the global crises helped fend off the risk of deflation, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). |
Global Debt Rises But Governments Fail To Reform – BIS Posted: 16 Mar 2013 11:33 AM PDT Global debt by households, governments and non-financial enterprises has mushroomed by some $30 trillion since 2007, but governments in advanced economies are not taking advantage of the flood of cheap money to carry out necessary structural reforms that will pay off over time, warned the BIS. |
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