Wall Street will pressure regulators, says NYU Professor Viral Acharya

Wall Street is likely to exploit differences among national regulators to weaken oversight of their business as governments struggle with anaemic growth and rising unemployment, says Viral Acharya, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

“Global banks will exploit weaknesses among national regulators to get concessions,” says Acharya.

He says Wall Street needs better regulation and the Volcker rules, which bar banks from trading on their own account, are no panacea to avoid financial crises.

“Banks like leverage,” says Acharya. “Leverage is a way in which the financial sector can extract value through a taxpayer put.”

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As the Magnificent Seven fade, CFS looks further afield for returns

Colonial First State chief investment officer Jonathan Armitage says a shift away from reliance on US mega-cap tech stocks is reshaping portfolio resilience, with emerging markets, private debt and catastrophe bonds helping to drive returns across the portfolio.

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