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Highlights from January 2024

Bangladesh

The Risk Committee kicked off the year with a review of Bangladesh, where Finance Minister Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali is urging “very stern” action against the nation’s “dishonest businessmen”.

Speaking on International Customs Day, he made it clear that he considers anti-money laundering actions to be an area of focus for customs and excise. In line with the government’s stated aim of building a Smart Bangladesh: "The cost of import and export should be reduced, and this is why we have to focus on full automation."

Also focusing on digital transformation is Bangladesh Bank, the central bank and regulator. It has ambitious plans to move the whole country to digital banking. Bangladesh has enthusiastically adopted mobile technology, and it is hoped that a move to a cashless society will reach those (especially in rural areas) who are currently online but, as yet, unbanked.

Chile

Chile’s Finance Ministry has revealed its 2024 funding plan: to issue Treasury bonds up to a total of US$16.5bn.

Chile’s government states that it remains committed to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. It aims to strengthen its investments in these areas and is also thinking about adding sustainability-linked bonds (SLB), as it did in 2022 and 2023.

Official predictions for 2024 are that ESG instruments will make up 38% of the total debt – a 2% increase from the end of 2023.

The main market development continues to be the integration of the Santiago Exchange with Colombia and Peru. The process has now been completed and the new exchange, named as nuam, has now selected Nasdaq as the provider of the single trading platform for the three markets. This is expected to be introduced in 2025 together with the move to the T+1 equities settlement cycle. Since DCV is the only depository that will not be part of the new group, it is yet to be seen how they will integrate in the new structure.

Risk Committee Lead
Ana Giraldo
Ana Giraldo

Chief Risk Officer and Director Americas | Management

agiraldo@thomasmurray.com

Nation-wide elections scheduled for February
Feb
04
El Salvador (Presidential and Parliamentary)
Feb
07
Azerbaijan (Presidential)
Feb
08
Pakistan (National Assembly)
Feb
14
Indonesia (Presidential and Parliamentary)
Feb
25
Belarus (Parliamentary)
Feb
25
Senegal (Presidential)

Hungary

KELER Group, the only central depository in Hungary, has been stable and profitable for the last few years.

Its previous strategy included the renewal of its old system to align with T2S, which was successfully implemented. KELER’s new strategy involves ‘national excellence’ to ensure it services the domestic market to the best of its abilities.

North Macedonia

North Macedonia has managed to maintain a stable banking system, despite global shocks, and its economy continues to show improvement as it recovers from the European energy crisis.

Heading into 2024, the IMF had positive things to say about the central bank’s “robust monetary framework”, which has kept inflation expectations stable and the foreign exchange market resilient.

In general, North Macedonia’s banks are in good shape – they are liquid, with growing deposits and credit, and record-low non-performing loans (NPLs). Although there have been recent regulatory improvements and a new bank-resolution law is on the way, the IMF urges that the bank deposit insurance law be updated as a priority.

The Risk Committee continues to work through a first-time assessment of the CSD in Macedonia, which will be published in the coming weeks.

South Africa

There was much to say about South Africa when the Risk Committee met on 17 January.

In February 2023, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) ‘grey listed’ South Africa. In doing so, the global watchdog on financial crime cited a number of South Africa’s Know Your Customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) failings.

Around 25 of these deficiencies are still to be resolved, though 18 have been dealt with so far. South Africa has made changes to its constitution and laws and, even though a lack of enforcement remains a barrier to progress, South Africa remains confident that it will be off the grey list by 2025. Understandably, foreign investors are not so sure.

South Africa is also battling an ongoing energy crisis, as the nation continues to experience blackouts and brownouts on a regular basis. Ironically, the energy crisis has fostered a culture of operational resilience among FMIs and banks. They have put together a playbook in case they need to work through a blackout during trading.

It’s a busy election year around the world, and the Committee is keeping watch for the date of South Africa’s forthcoming general election. President Ramaphosa must hold one within 90 days of the end of the current parliamentary term, which is in mid-May.

 

In case you missed it

  1. JP Morgan Securities settles with SEC over whistleblower ‘silencing’  - JP Morgan Securities has agreed to pay the US Securities and Exchange Commission US$18m for violating whistleblower protection rules. The SEC says that JPM Securities, “impeded hundreds of advisory clients and brokerage customers from reporting potential securities law violations to the SEC.”

  2. 1MDB: Malaysia cites KYC failings as it threatens legal action against foreign banks - The long-running 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) corruption scandal took another turn at the end of January, with news that Malaysia is pondering legal action against a group of as-yet unnamed foreign banks. Johari Abdul Ghani, who is both 1MDB’s chair and Malaysia’s minister of plantations and commodities, alleges that numerous banks conducted 1MDB-related fund transfers without running proper Know Your Customer (KYC) processes.

  3. Boakai feels the heat on inauguration day - Joseph Boakai, Liberia’s new president, had to be helped from the podium mid-way through his inauguration speech in Monrovia on 22 January. Boakai had been sworn into office before feeling faint. A spokesperson for Boakai’s Unity party blamed the extreme heat, though his critics have seized on the incident as evidence that concerns voiced during the election campaign about the 79 year old’s “age and energy” were well-founded.

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