POPULARITY
The Agility Mindset Podcast launches today with an introduction episode hosted by Fiona Cannon OBE, Director of the Agile Future Forum and Group Responsible Business, Sustainability and Inclusion Director at Lloyds Banking Group, alongside business journalist Maggie Pagano. The episode is supported by Lloyds Banking Group with guest Sir Win Bischoff, Chairman of the Financial Reporting Council and former chairman of Lloyds Banking Group. The first episode will air on 8 January 2019.
The UK government is poised to return Lloyds Banking Group to the private sector at a profit, in a watershed moment for the banking sector. Patrick Jenkins talks about the outlook for the high street lender with Martin Arnold, the FT's banking editor, and Sir Win Bischoff, former Lloyds Bank chairman. Music credit: Kevin MacLeod See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Patrick Jenkins and guests discuss the return of Lloyds to the private sector, the decision by Singapore's GIC to cut its stake in UBS and consolidation and competition in the US money transfer market. With special guests Sir Win Bischoff, former Lloyds chairman, and Western Union's Elizabeth Chambers. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Patrick Jenkins is joined by Martin Arnold for the fallout from US stress tests, where CitiGroup failed qualitative elements of the tests, putting CEO Michael Corbat under increased pressure. Six foreign-owned US banks also failed some elements, including Santander, HSBC and RBS. Sam Fleming has news of the Financial Conduct Authority, which has come in for criticism after comments about life insurers saw shares for some firms fall 20 per cent before a hasty clarification settled the markets. Simon Gleeson, a partner at Clifford Chance, joins on the line to add his thoughts on an increasingly hands-on FCA. Finally, Sam and Martin weigh in on personnel movements at UK state-owned banks, with Lloyds chairman Sir Win Bischoff stepping down and Ewen Stevenson taking over as finance chief at RBS See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Patrick Jenkins is joined by Martin Arnold for the fallout from US stress tests, where CitiGroup failed qualitative elements of the tests, putting CEO Michael Corbat under increased pressure. Six foreign-owned US banks also failed some elements, including Santander, HSBC and RBS. Sam Fleming has news of the Financial Conduct Authority, which has come in for criticism after comments about life insurers saw shares for some firms fall 20 per cent before a hasty clarification settled the markets. Simon Gleeson, a partner at Clifford Chance, joins on the line to add his thoughts on an increasingly hands-on FCA. Finally, Sam and Martin weigh in on personnel movements at UK state-owned banks, with Lloyds chairman Sir Win Bischoff stepping down and Ewen Stevenson taking over as finance chief at RBS See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
More careful judgement, more capital and better liquidity ratios - Sir Win Bischoff talks to London Business School about how an economy can lead itself to less financial trouble in the future.
Sir Win Bischoff discusses the progress that has been made since the financial crisis at London Business School's event, "Lehman Brothers - Five years on".