Category: Banking

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Launch of five-part documentary series on RBI

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India, in collaboration with JioHotstar, has launched a five-part documentary series titled ‘RBI Unlocked: Beyond the Rupee’. The project has been produced by Chalkboard Entertainment.

    The project was commissioned by RBI to visually document its 90-year history, with the objective of creating awareness about its various functions and roles.

    The RBI, as a full-service central bank, performs a wide range of functions including currency management, monetary policy, regulation and supervision of banks and NBFCs, regulation of currency and interest rate, markets and payment and settlement systems, and financial inclusion. This documentary portrays the essence of RBI’s functions in an intelligible manner to a wider demographic of people.

    The documentary provides a first-time insight into the working of the RBI. The episodes, starting on June 03, 2025 can be viewed at https://hotstar.com/1271419667

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/471

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Samsung Celebrates the Inaugural Season of TGL Presented by SoFi: Defining a New Era of Golf

    Source: Samsung

    Now that TGL presented by SoFi has wrapped its groundbreaking inaugural season, Samsung Electronics America proudly celebrates its role as an Official Screen Partner, helping to redefine how fans experience the sport of golf. Throughout the season, TGL captivated audiences with team-based competition, innovative gameplay and dynamic content — all powered by Samsung Displays.
    The season culminated in a thrilling championship match, where the Atlanta Drive Golf Club claimed the first-ever SoFi Cup. Throughout the season, Samsung’s immersive display technology amplified every moment of the action, transforming the 250,000-square-foot SoFi Center in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., into a high-energy arena unlike anything previously seen in golf.
    “TGL’s goal was to harness technology to build a modern approach to sports, media and entertainment through the game of golf,” said David Phelps, Head of Display Division, Samsung Electronics America. “They turned to us as the leader in delivering the highest quality visual experiences for fans, both in the venue or watching at home.”

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: First Federal Savings Bank and ICBA Provide Tips to Support the Homebuying Process

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    EVANSVILLE, Ind., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In recognition of National Homeownership Month, First Federal Savings Bank and the Independent Community Bankers of America (ICBA) are encouraging consumers to consult their local community banker about how to make the homebuying process simple, efficient and more affordable.

    “An important component in building financial independence is owning a home,” said Elisa Snyder, FVP, Retail Lending Sales Manager. “At First Federal Savings Bank, we want to simplify the homeownership process to make it as easy and affordable as possible. After you assess your needs, we can help find suitable options to finance your home, from first homes to forever homes.”

    Whether you are refinancing or purchasing your home, First Federal Savings Bank can help you determine:

    • The ideal loan amount and products to meet your budget considerations. We can review the mortgage process in detail and flag ideal programs and loan features.
    • How mortgage rates, terms, and related expenses (including property taxes and insurance premiums) affect payments. This will help you set a home budget and manage your homeownership expenses.
    • Your rights and obligations under your mortgage contract. Today’s consumers have many financing options—each with unique stipulations outlined in fine print.
    • Suitable government-sponsored programs. In addition to federal homeownership and home-buying assistance programs, we can recommend state, local government, and specialty programs for consideration.
    • Additional resources to help create a budget and set financial targets. We offer homebuyer seminars and other helpful resources. Free online educational tools can also be found at www.hud.gov.

    “Homeownership is an important step for many Americans in establishing financial stability and strengthening community roots,” said ICBA President and CEO Rebeca Romero Rainey. “Your community bank can help guide you through the process and provide tips to improve your position as informed buyers.”

    For more information on how First Federal Savings Bank can support your homeownership needs, visit us at https://www.firstfedsavings.bank or contact our Retail Loan Advisors at (812) 492-8142.

    About First Federal Savings Bank Member FDIC Equal Housing Lender NMLS# 433121

    First Federal Savings Bank was established on Evansville, Indiana’s Westside in 1904. A community bank offering eight locations in Posey, Vanderburgh, Warrick, and Henderson County. First Federal Savings Bank is also proud to offer Home Building Savings Bank locations in Daviess and Pike County.

    About ICBA

    The Independent Community Bankers of America® has one mission: to create and promote an environment where community banks flourish. We power the potential of the nation’s community banks through effective advocacy, education, and innovation.

    As local and trusted sources of credit, America’s community banks leverage their relationship-based business model and innovative offerings to channel deposits into the neighborhoods they serve, creating jobs, fostering economic prosperity, and fueling their customers’ financial goals and dreams. For more information, visit ICBA’s website at icba.org.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Cornerstone Community Bancorp and Plumas Bancorp Report Shareholder Approval of Merger

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RENO, Nev., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Cornerstone Community Bancorp (“Cornerstone”) and Plumas Bancorp (“Plumas”) announced today that Cornerstone’s shareholders approved the principal terms of the Agreement and Plan of Merger and Reorganization providing for the merger of Cornerstone with and into Plumas (the “Merger”) and the conversion of each outstanding share of Cornerstone common stock into the right to receive cash and stock of Plumas.

    The completion of the Merger is subject to the satisfaction or waiver of the conditions set forth in the merger agreement. Plumas has received the bank regulatory approvals necessary to complete the Merger. The approval of Plumas shareholders is not required to complete the Merger.

    Cornerstone and Plumas expect that the Merger will be completed in early July 2025.

    “Our merger with Cornerstone is a pivotal milestone in our company’s evolution,” said Andrew J. Ryback, President and Chief Executive Officer of Plumas Bancorp. “Both institutions share a strong connection to the people and businesses that make Northern California thrive. By integrating Cornerstone Community Bank’s deep local expertise with Plumas Bank’s advanced technology and small business solutions, we are enhancing the services available to our communities. This partnership will create lasting value for our shareholders, clients, employees, and the broader region for years to come.”

    “We are thrilled to unite with Plumas, combining our strengths to continue delivering exceptional products, services, and support to our customers, employees, and stakeholders,” said Matthew B. Moseley, President and Chief Executive Officer of Cornerstone, who will remain with Plumas following the acquisition. “Access to Plumas’ extensive network of offices and diverse product offerings enables us to broaden our reach beyond the Shasta and Tehama communities we have proudly served for nearly two decades. Our two organizations share a deep connection to the communities we serve, and this partnership allows us to leverage our collective experience to maintain the high standards of service our customers have come to rely on.”

    The combined company is expected to have approximately $2.3 billion in total assets and 19 full-service banking branches in 11 counties in Northern California and Nevada.

    Contact:

    Investor Relations
    Plumas Bancorp
    5525 Kietzke Lane Ste. 100
    Reno, NV 89511
    775.786.0907 x8908
    investorrelations@plumasbank.com

    Investor Relations
    Cornerstone Community Bancorp
    192 Hartnell Avenue
    Redding, CA 96002
    530.222.1460
    mmoseley@bankcornerstone.com

    Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements

    This release contains “forward-looking statements” regarding Plumas, Cornerstone, the combined company and the Merger that are subject to the safe harbor provided by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements include but are not limited to plans, expectations, projections, and statements about the benefits of the Merger, the timing of completion of the Merger, and other statements that are not historical facts. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. Factors that could cause or contribute to results differing from those in or implied in the forward-looking statements include but are not limited to the occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could give rise to the right of Plumas or Cornerstone to terminate the merger agreement; the risk that the cash consideration to be paid to Cornerstone shareholders may be reduced in accordance with the terms of the merger agreement; the failure of Plumas or Cornerstone to satisfy any of the conditions to the Merger on a timely basis or at all; the ability to complete the Merger and integration of Plumas and Cornerstone successfully; costs being greater than anticipated; cost savings being less than anticipated; changes in economic conditions; the risk that the Merger disrupts the business of the Plumas, Cornerstone or both; difficulties in retaining senior management, employees or customers; and other factors that may affect the future results of Plumas, Cornerstone or the combined company. Further information regarding risk factors is contained in Plumas’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and its registration statement on Form S-4 with respect to Merger, copies of which are available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov and the investor relations section of Plumas’s website at www.plumasbank.com. Forward-looking statements made in this release speak only as of the date of this release. Neither Plumas nor Cornerstone undertake any obligation to revise or publicly release any revision or update to these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that occur after the date on which such statements were made.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Housing will become more affordable – Putin orders expansion of preferential mortgages to families with children under 14

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Mainfin Bank –

    How might preferential mortgages for families with children change?

    The government will submit proposals to revise the terms of family leave by June 15, 2025. mortgages. It is expected that the parameters for issuing preferential loans for the purchase of housing will change:

    mortgages will become available to families with children under 14, i.e. the circle of potential borrowers will be significantly expanded; credit limits will be differentiated and will depend on the size of the family; other conditions may also change, which the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Construction previously insisted on in the hope of reviving the market.

    The terms of preferential mortgages are planned to be relaxed, which will ensure housing availability for a wide range of families. The proposals are being prepared by the government and the commission of the project “Infrastructure for Life”.

    What conditions are currently in effect under the Family Mortgage program?

    The preferential mortgage program was launched in Russia in 2020 and partially curtailed in the summer of 2024. However, families with children under 6 years of age (or a disabled child) can still take advantage of state support. Loans are provided on the following terms:

    interest rate – 6% per annum; the amount is limited to 12 million rubles in large cities and 6 million in other regions; you can get a loan to buy housing in new buildings or individual housing construction; the minimum down payment is 20%.

    “Currently, preferential mortgages are as targeted as possible – families who need to expand their living space can participate in the program,” the expert noted.

    The family mortgage, which was originally planned to be completed in 2024, was extended until 2030. Russian borrowers also have access to other preferential programs – Rural, Far Eastern, Arctic, Military, IT mortgage. A preferential mortgage program at 2% per annum for SVO participants is also being developed, but the launch dates have not yet been disclosed.

    15:00 03.06.2025

    Source:

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //Mainfin.ru/novosti/ Zhil-sustain-access, more accessible-Putin-Rasyutin-Rassit-Holot-Model-Na-seven-S-Stymi-Dom-Dos-14-Let

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Secretary-General of ASEAN delivers remarks at the Opening Ceremony of 2025 Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level (MCM) in Paris

    Source: ASEAN – Association of SouthEast Asian Nations

    Secretary-General of ASEAN, Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, delivered remarks at the Opening Ceremony of the 2025 Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level (MCM) on 3 June 2025, commemorating the handover of the co-chairmanship of the OECD Southeast Asia Regional Programme (SEARP) from current Co-Chairs, Australia and Viet Nam, to the incoming Co-Chairs, Canada and the Philippines.
     
    In his remarks, Dr. Kao welcomed the continued collaboration between ASEAN and the OECD, underscoring shared commitment to promote good regulatory practices, prioritise sustainable development, and place inclusive growth at the core of region’s economic progress.

    The post Secretary-General of ASEAN delivers remarks at the Opening Ceremony of 2025 Meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level (MCM) in Paris appeared first on ASEAN Main Portal.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: May Commercial Chapter 11 Filings Increase 62 Percent over Last Month

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Commercial chapter 11 filings totaled 733 in May, an increase of 62 percent over the 453 filings in April, according to data provided by Epiq AACER, the leading provider of U.S. bankruptcy filing data. The overall May commercial filing total of 2,695 represented an 8 percent increase from the April 2025 commercial filing total of 2,489. Small business filings, captured as subchapter V elections within chapter 11, increased 3 percent to 228 in May 2025 from 223 the previous month.

    May’s 48,218 total bankruptcy filings represented a 3 percent decrease from April’s filing total of 49,610. The 45,523 noncommercial filings in May also represented a 3 percent decrease from the April 2025 noncommercial filing total of 47,121. Consumer chapter 7 filings decreased 7 percent to 28,716 from the 30,823 chapter 7s filed in April 2025, while chapter 13 filings increased 3 percent to 16,694 over the 16,198 filings in April.

    “The sharp uptick in overall commercial chapter 11 filings in May 2025 underscores the ongoing economic pressures businesses face, from elevated borrower costs, potential tariff impacts and geopolitical uncertainty,” said Michael Hunter, vice president of Epiq AACER. “Meanwhile, consumer filings continue to climb yet remain below pre-pandemic levels; however, the resumption of student loan collections and the expiration of the FHA modification programs are likely to drive further increases in filings, particularly through the end of 2025 and into 2026.”

    Overall commercial filings registered a slight increase of 1 percent in May 2025 to 2,695 from the 2,664 commercial filings in May 2024. Commercial chapter 11 filings decreased also, as the 733 filings in May 2025 represented a 4 percent decline from the 765 filings reported in May 2024.

    The 48,218 total U.S. bankruptcy filings in May 2025 increased 7 percent from the May 2024 total of 45,025. Noncommercial bankruptcy filings also registered a 7 percent increase, to 45,523 in May 2025 from the May 2024 noncommercial total of 42,361. The number of consumers filing for chapter 7 increased 11 percent to 28,716 in May 2025 from the 25,773 who filed for chapter 7 last year, while chapter 13 filings increased 1 percent to 16,694 in May 2025 from the 16,507 chapter 13 filings in May 2024.

    “The current financial landscape presents struggling businesses and consumers with additional challenges of elevated prices, higher borrowing costs and uncertain geopolitical events,” said ABI Executive Director Amy Quackenboss. “Bankruptcy provides a proven process to a financial fresh start for distressed businesses and families.”

    Epiq AACER is a division of Epiq and is the leading provider of data, technology, and services for companies operating in the business of bankruptcy. Its Bankruptcy Analytics subscription service provides on-demand access to the industry’s most dynamic bankruptcy data, updated daily. Learn more at https://bankruptcy.epiqglobal.com.

    About Epiq

    Epiq, a global technology-enabled services leader to the legal industry and corporations, takes on large-scale, increasingly complex tasks for corporate counsel, law firms, and business professionals with efficiency, clarity, and confidence. Clients rely on Epiq to streamline the administration of business operations, class action and mass tort, court reporting, eDiscovery, regulatory, compliance, restructuring, and bankruptcy matters. Epiq subject-matter experts and technologies create efficiency through expertise and deliver confidence to high-performing clients around the world. Learn more at https://www.epiqglobal.com.

    About ABI 

    ABI is the largest multi-disciplinary, nonpartisan organization dedicated to research and education on matters related to insolvency. ABI was founded in 1982 to provide Congress and the public with unbiased analysis of bankruptcy issues. The ABI membership includes nearly 10,000 attorneys, accountants, bankers, judges, professors, lenders, turnaround specialists and other bankruptcy professionals, providing a forum for the exchange of ideas and information. For additional information on ABI, visit www.abi.org. For additional conference information, visit http://www.abi.org/calendar-of-events.

    Press Contacts 

    Carrie Trent 
    Epiq, Director of Communications 
    Carrie.Trent@epiqglobal.com

    Vicki LaBrosse
    Edge Marketing, Director of Global PR
    vlabrosse@edgemarketinginc.com

    John Hartgen 
    ABI, Public Affairs Officer
    jhartgen@abi.org

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/01db2547-f52c-490f-b923-58f9b0c6ab4a

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: First Pacific Bank Recognized for Exceptional Workplace Culture, Two Years Running

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WHITTIER, Calif., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — First Pacific Bank, the wholly owned subsidiary of First Pacific Bancorp (OTC Pink: FPBC), is proud to announce that it has been awarded the 2025 Great Company Culture Award—marking the second consecutive year the Bank has received this honor. Presented by CultureID, this recognition highlights the Bank’s unwavering commitment to fostering a positive, inclusive, and high-performing workplace.

    This award is a direct result of employee feedback received from the 2025 Employee Engagement Survey and is awarded to companies that achieve strong participation and a high overall engagement score, placing First Pacific Bank in the top third of participating organizations. As a result of intentional leadership across the organization, employees have indicated that they have strong relationships, high accountability, clear alignment, consistent communication, and full capability to work and perform at their best, resulting in an engaged culture.

    “Our mission at CultureID is to help companies create environments where people thrive,” said Kelly Burns, CEO of CultureID. “First Pacific Bank has demonstrated what’s possible when you make culture a priority. Their employee-centric focus is a model for other organizations to follow.”

    “We are honored to receive the Great Company Culture Award highlighting our ongoing efforts to build a workplace that not only meets the needs of its employees but also aligns with First Pacific Bank’s core values,” said Nathan Rogge, President and Chief Executive Officer of First Pacific Bank. “This recognition reflects the dedication and hard work of our entire team in building a workplace where employees feel supported and inspired. We believe that a strong company culture is the foundation of our success, and this award motivates us to continue investing in our people and our values.”

    To learn more about First Pacific Bank’s award-winning culture, visit firstpacbank.com.

    ABOUT FIRST PACIFIC BANK

    First Pacific Bank is a wholly owned subsidiary of First Pacific Bancorp (OTC Pink: FPBC) and is a growing community bank catering to individuals, professionals, and small-to-medium sized businesses throughout Southern California. Since opening in 2006, the Bank has offered a personalized approach, access to decision makers, a broad range of solutions, and a commitment to delivering an exceptional customer experience. First Pacific Bank operates locations in Los Angeles County, Orange County, San Diego County, and the Inland Empire. For more information, visit firstpacbank.com or call 888.BNK.AT.FPB.

    ABOUT CULTUREID

    CultureID is a leading provider of workforce business intelligence. Their mission is to help organizational leaders unlock the potential of their people by providing powerful tools and data-driven strategies that sustainably increase engagement, productivity, and profitability.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Andrew Bailey: State of trade

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    It is a great pleasure to be in Dublin, and I want to start by thanking the Irish Association of Investment Managers for inviting me again to speak. I say again because I also have to begin with an apology, for standing you up last year at short notice when the General Election was called in the UK. And so, my other thanks is to my fellow Governor Gabriel, for stepping in last year when I withdrew at short notice.

    Not much has happened in the last year. To keep it topical, I am going to use my time to talk about trade, both in goods and in financial services. This is not only topical but highly relevant, because Ireland and the UK are both open economies, with long-established trade connections, and likewise strong connections in financial services.

    Trade matters. It matters at both the economy-wide or macro level, and at the level of individual firms, the micro level. And, almost needless to say, the two are closely linked.

    I am going to start by laying out key elements of the big picture, before moving on to talk about financial services. My starting point is two key elements of the macro dimension of trade. In many past times in talking about trade it would have been easy to pass over them, as points that are not contested. I think they need repeating today.

    The first point is that trade supports output in the economy – and it is good for economic welfare. As I will come on to, there are important qualifications to this point, but they don’t invalidate it. From Adam Smith onwards, it has broadly been accepted that trade supports specialisation and efficiency of production and it enables knowledge transfer, and these features support productivity and economic growth.

    The second point is that we should not expect trade between countries to be in balance all of the time. The whole world should be in balance – because it is a closed system as we have not found and started trading with extra-terrestrial life yet. But as individual countries, we are not closed, as Ireland and the UK demonstrate. Unfortunately, the world’s exports and imports don’t usually equal each other, but that’s down to our counting not ET.

    However, since trade balances between countries don’t balance – and they should not be expected to do so, – what determines the balances and patterns of trade? At the whole economy, or macro, level the answer is that trade is determined by the balance between a country’s saving and investment – macroeconomic fundamentals. And, these are shaped by factors such as business conditions and cycles, productivity growth, savings behaviour, interest rates, fiscal policy choices and exchange rates. In other words, trade is an outcome of the big driving forces of economies, and if we want to affect trade patterns on a lasting basis, that’s where we should look.

    Well, up to a point, yes. I am conscious that what I have just said is a rather a textbook espousal of the case for free trade. No apologies, I do believe in free trade. But, I’m also aware that things are not that simple – the story doesn’t end there. Trade patterns are also shaped by national policies, particularly industrial policies, and by the rules–based world trading system that seeks to set the guardrails for such policies.

    Now, the argument, as I interpret it, of the US Administration is that those rules have been stretched beyond breaking point, and actions have to be taken to put this right.

    As I read it, there are two parts to this argument.

    The first is that the rules of the world trade system – based around the World Trade Organisation – have broken down, and are in need of reform. IMF staff have pointed to more use of industrial policies around the world in recent years, and argued that these should only be used for very limited domestic objectives such as local market failures, but that has not been the case of late, and that this practice will and has exacerbated trade tensions. More concretely, between 2009 and 2022 China implemented around 5,400 so-called subsidy policies, which were concentrated in priority sectors, i.e., ones that matter. This was equal to about two-thirds of all the subsidy measures adopted by G20 advanced economies combined.

    The macro story on trade is influenced by what goes on at the micro level, and we can’t see these two as distinct. There has been an increase in the use of industrial policies – one country has been active on this front, but it’s not alone.

    The second point is around how the rules of engagement of the world trade system have come under pressure from new developments which have affected all of us. Let me briefly set out two which are closely linked. First, before the outbreak of Covid world trade had grown rapidly, more rapidly than world output, and in doing so the supply chains for final products had become much more complicated, but also efficient in the sense that they had exploited the benefits of trade.

    This meant that a lot more of world trade comprised so-called intermediate goods – inputs to the final product, but not the product itself. This exploited one of the longest standing principles of free trade – so-called comparative advantage. In other words, produce stuff where it is most efficient relatively speaking to do so, accepting that the relative point means that no country should specialise in everything. Over time, the trade system has become more and more refined – we have heard the phrase “just in time delivery”. This was highly efficient, until it wasn’t.

    Covid dealt a blow to the efficiency of the trade system. Even though initial pandemic-related supply chain disruption was resolved quite rapidly, as we recovered from Covid these trading patterns and systems did not return to normal as quickly and fully as we expected.

    Why was that? There were no doubt a number of reasons, but a large one is the growth of national security concerns as a threat to the efficiency of trade. In reality, sadly, Russia’s illegal war in Ukraine provided real evidence of the disruption that can happen, and is one factor behind a growing threat from national security to our assumptions on frictionless trade. To be clear, national security concerns are not a good reason to retreat indiscriminately from global trade. The best way to ensure resilience to geopolitical risk is not by reshoring production, but by diversifying supply chains among reliable partners who abide by international law.

    Viewed from the perspective of a central bank responsible for monetary policy, the inevitable conclusion is that we cannot assume that the supply sides of our economies behave as efficiently as they did before Covid. And this was a substantial cause of the very difficult upsurge in inflation.

    I am going to conclude on broader trade with a number of points, and then say something on financial services. Four points strike me as very important on trade.

    First, while I am an unshaken believer in free trade, I do accept that the system has come under too much strain, we have to work hard now to rebuild it, and it is incorrect to dismiss those who argue for restrictions on trade as just wrong-headed. We need to understand what lies behind these arguments. That said, I want to get back to an open trading system.

    Second, to solve the issues we face, we need to look at the macro level – the big economic drivers that I mentioned earlier, and call out where and why we think there are unsustainable trade imbalances. We need to strengthen the IMF’s surveillance in order to improve the process for calling out unsustainable trade imbalances. But we must also look at the micro-level – the rules based world trade system – and work out what we need to do to solve this problem and make it more effective again.

    Third, if it is believed that tariff action is needed to create the shock and awe to get these issues on to the table and dealt with, then something has gone wrong with the multilateral system, and we need to deal with that.

    Fourth, creating a sustainable world trading system matters to all of us. It matters to countries like Ireland and the UK, which are highly open economies, and have been throughout their development. And it matters to central bankers and economic policymakers because our jobs are much harder if we face more inflexible and uncertain supply side conditions in our economies, as we appear to do today.

    Almost all of the attention in recent months in the area of trade has been on goods trade – tangible stuff. Tariffs are a tool whose use is largely confined to the world of goods trade. But, there are two other important features of the trade world. First, alongside trade in goods sits trade in services-intangibles. For the UK, the latest numbers indicate that the total volume of trade was made up of 54% goods and 46% services. For Ireland the numbers are 28% goods and 72% services.

    Financial services are an important part of trade in services and particularly so for Ireland and the UK.

    The second important feature of the trade world is that alongside tariffs sit non-tariff barriers. These are all sorts of obstacles to trade, some put in place deliberately, some are features with their origin in other objectives than affecting the flow of trade, and others which are just there who knows why. Non-tariff barriers to trade are by no means limited to trade in services, but they are the dominant form of restriction in that world.

    This brings me to Brexit. I have to start with an important disclaimer. As a public servant, I take no position on Brexit per se – it was a decision of the British people, and has been put into effect. That said, our evolving trading and regulatory relationship with the EU requires many judgements on the most effective way to do so – what delivers the most effective outcome.

    I want to make two important points in this context. The first relates more to trade in goods, the second to financial services. Let me start with goods. I said earlier that trade enhances and supports economic activity.

    It follows that if the level of trade is lowered by some action, it will have an effect to reduce productivity growth and thus overall growth. Just as tariffs, by increasing the cost, can reduce the scale of trade, the same goes for the type of non-tariff barrier that Brexit has created. Now to reiterate, this does not mean that Brexit is wrong, because there can be other reasons for it, but it does suggest, I think powerfully, that we should do all we can to minimise negative effects on trade.

    The evidence on Brexit suggests that in the UK the changing trade relationship has weighed on the level of potential supply.

    I conclude from this that, just as the Windsor Agreement on trade involving the UK and Ireland was a welcome step forward, so too are the initiatives of the current UK Government to rebuild trade between the UK and EU, and of course there is a very particular important aspect here for the UK and Ireland.

    Let me turn to financial services. There is often an impression given that the flow of trade in financial services is predominantly from the UK to the EU. In other words, the UK is an exporter of financial services. This creates the notion of a one-way street, and that leads to the image of a dependency, and from there the notion of the dependency in some sense being unhealthy starts to come in.

    My strong view is that – contrary to this one way idea – the relationship goes both ways, and that is a good thing. And, this is very well illustrated by the relationship between Ireland and the UK in the area of financial services.

    Let me draw out the two-way street point some more, using the example of the 2022 shock to Liability Driven Investment funds connected to UK pension funds, so-called LDI funds. The LDI episode occurred when UK financial assets saw a significant repricing, with a particular impact on long-dated gilts. The Financial Policy Committee at the Bank of England judged that UK financial stability was at risk due to dysfunction in the gilt market and recommended that the Bank take action. This action took the form of intervening via temporary purchases of long-dated gilts.

    Many of the funds involved were domiciled in other jurisdictions, including here in Ireland and Luxembourg. To be very clear, domicile was not a part of the problem. But, it had to help to enable the solution, and it did. A co-ordinated response between the UK, Ireland and Luxembourg was essential, and I am very grateful to the Central Bank of Ireland and the authorities in Luxembourg for helping us to respond effectively.

    There have been important lessons from the LDI episode, which are increasingly relevant in the context of the increased market volatility we have seen in recent weeks following the US announcement on trade tariffs last month. Together, working with other UK regulators, the Central Bank of Ireland and the authorities in Luxembourg, we have taken action to build resilience in LDI funds. And I hope this close cooperation can continue as we seek to navigate another two way street by building more resilience into money market funds in the EU and the UK, as we strengthen our domestic rules.

    The benefits of open financial markets as well as the dependencies also tend to go both ways.

    The UK and EU are both seeking to strengthen our domestic capital markets. The EU’s Savings and Investment Union agenda and the UK government’s reforms to pensions are both seeking to direct savings towards productive investment. These are important measures, not least given the pressing need for financing some of the common structural challenges we face in the UK and EU – for example, defence and security, demographics, and the technological and climate transitions.

    But strengthening domestic capital markets is only part of the story. The scale of investment needed requires access to global capital, supported by open financial markets. The alternative is fragmentation, which we have unfortunately seen in the global economy in recent years, which reduces the size of markets, and makes them inherently less stable. Fragmentation also increases the cost of capital, undermining growth and investment. Financial market openness, built on a foundation of robust global standards and trust, is a much better alternative.

    To repeat, open financial markets are a good thing. As with goods trade, open financial markets support economic growth as well as increasing investment and reducing the cost of capital. So the benefits of open financial markets, as well as the dependencies, tend to go both ways, so a two-way street; and working together effectively is the best way.

    As such, there is merit in seeking to increase the openness of our financial markets by reducing non-tariff barriers.

    The Bank of England and the Central Bank of Ireland enjoy a very strong relationship, which is built on trust and respect, fostered by close cooperation and coordination and a steadfast commitment to shared values and working together in international bodies to promote global standards. And, my strong view is that this type of work benefits the industries that we oversee. The message that I get consistently, and rightly, is that firms want robust but fair and consistent regulatory standards which will support both stability and competition, and set the level playing field on which they operate.

    Thank you.

    I would like to Sarah Breeden, Lee Foulger, Mike Hatchett, Himali Hettihewa, Karen Jude, Jake Levy, Zertasha Malik, Jeremy Martin, Harsh Mehta, James Talbot, Lanze Gardiner Vandvik, Sam Woods for their help in the preparation of these remarks.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI imposes monetary penalty on India Home Loan Ltd., Mumbai, Maharashtra

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated May 27, 2025, imposed a monetary penalty of ₹32,000 (Rupees Thirty Two Thousand only) on India Home Loan Ltd., Mumbai, Maharashtra (the company) for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Know Your Customer (KYC)’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 52A of the National Housing Bank Act, 1987.

    The statutory inspection of the company was conducted by the National Housing Bank with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2023. Based on supervisory findings of non-compliance with RBI directions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the company advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said directions. After considering the company’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charges against the company were sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The company had failed to:

    1. carry out periodic review of risk categorisation of accounts with such periodicity being at least once in six months; and

    2. conduct periodic updation of KYC of its customers.

    This action is based on the deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the company with its customers. Further, imposition of monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the company.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/469

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Banking: RBI imposes monetary penalty on Khush Housing Finance Private Limited, Mumbai, Maharashtra

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated May 19, 2025, imposed a monetary penalty of ₹16,000 (Rupees Sixteen Thousand only) on Khush Housing Finance Private Limited, Mumbai, Maharashtra (the company) for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Know Your Customer (KYC)’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 52A of the National Housing Bank Act, 1987.

    The statutory inspection of the company was conducted by the National Housing Bank with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2022 and March 31, 2023. Based on supervisory findings of non-compliance with RBI directions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the company advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said directions. After considering the company’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charge against the company was sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The company had failed to carry out risk categorisation of its customers.

    This action is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the company with its customers. Further, imposition of monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the company.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/468

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: Provident Bank Mid-Year Survey Shows Business Owners Balancing Tariff Concerns with Economic Optimism

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ISELIN, N.J., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Provident Bank, a leading New Jersey-based financial institution, has released the results of its Mid-Year Business Outlook Survey, taking stock of business owner sentiment as they navigate a nuanced macroeconomic environment dominated by looming tariffs. This year’s survey revealed positivity around the economy, with lingering concerns around the impact of tariffs and businesses making short-term decisions that reflect this uncertainty.

    Business owners believe the economy will grow, yet there is mixed sentiment around tariffs.
    Overall, business owners believe the economy will grow in the back half of 2025, yet their view of tariffs is less positive. While the full effect of tariffs has yet to be felt, general sentiment is that they aren’t good for the economy.

    • Over 60% of businesses believe the economy will grow over the next six months. Yet, there is a clear level of dissatisfaction with the ongoing tariff policies, as over 55% of respondents believe they’re having a negative impact on the United States.
    • Over 70% of respondents are “very” to “moderately” concerned about the impact of tariffs on their businesses. However, the impact to date has been minimal, with over 80% of businesses saying there has been “somewhat of an impact” or “none”.
    • When looking at tariffs across the board, over 35% said to keep tariffs in some capacity, 45% said to eliminate them altogether, and just under 20% said to keep them as proposed. Over 50% of respondents said tariffs are making the United States weaker.

    Businesses anticipate tariff consequences, though the full effect is yet to be seen.
    Most business owners expect tariffs to affect their revenue, with many using careful inventory management and sales promotions to lessen the potential effect. Regarding future planning, respondents noted delaying capital expenditures, and most reported no change in hiring practices.

    • Over half of respondents believe that tariffs will, in some capacity, decrease their business’ revenue.
    • Responses to inventory adjustments were closely split. 32.55% noted that they have adjusted their inventory levels, and 31.69% are still evaluating.
    • Regarding hiring, just under 30% are planning to halt hiring, while nearly 50% say that their hiring plans remain unchanged.
    • Most business owners aren’t taking immediate action on sales promotions to account for weaker demand, with 34% taking no action and just over 30% still evaluating.
    • The slight majority (41.68%) of respondents are planning to delay major capital expenditures. In addition, just over 37% of businesses expect to pass the cost of tariffs onto their customers, and just under 30% expect to absorb the cost.

    “Despite business owners voicing concerns about tariffs, our survey demonstrates a positive growth outlook in the near future,” stated Bill Fink, Executive Vice President, Chief Lending Officer at Provident Bank. “We’re observing businesses strategically adapting to this environment by proactively managing inventory and planning capital expenditures. At Provident Bank, we deeply understand our clients’ businesses through close partnerships, which allows us to effectively address their unique challenges. We are dedicated to providing the financial support and resources they need to thrive in today’s dynamic lending landscape, leveraging our in-depth knowledge of their operations.”

    The survey was conducted by Pollfish, a market research provider, on behalf of Provident Bank. The findings are based on responses from 1,000 business owners and senior executives in the U.S. working for companies with over $1M in annual revenue. To access the full findings, please contact Provident Bank’s Public Relations Agency, Vested, at providentbank@fullyvested.com.

    About Provident Bank
    Founded in Jersey City in 1839, Provident Bank is the oldest community-focused financial institution based in New Jersey and is the wholly owned subsidiary of Provident Financial Services, Inc. (NYSE:PFS). With assets of $24.22 billion as of March 31, 2025, Provident Bank offers a wide range of customized financial solutions for businesses and consumers with an exceptional customer experience delivered through its convenient network of more than 140 branches across New Jersey and parts of New York and Pennsylvania, via mobile and online banking, and from its customer contact center. The bank also provides fiduciary and wealth management services through its wholly owned subsidiary, Beacon Trust Company, and insurance services through its wholly owned subsidiary, Provident Protection Plus, Inc. To learn more about Provident Bank, go to www.provident.bank or call our customer contact center at 800.448.7768.

    Media Contact:
    Keith Buscio – Keith.Buscio@provident.bank
    Vested – Providentbank@fullyvested.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Genesis Brings Roadshow Tracking to Bond Deal Solution

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON and NEW YORK, June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Genesis Global, the AI-native application development platform purpose-built for financial markets organizations, added bond deal Roadshow tracking tools to its Primary Bond Issuance (PBI) solution.

    According to Coalition Greenwich, 65% of institutional investors use roadshow data to evaluate deals before they formally enter the market, particularly for high-yield and emerging markets bond deals. With the new Roadshow functionality, PBI provides data management and workflow tools for the entire bond deal lifecycle.

    “Bringing roadshow data into a collaborative, repeatable investment process enables asset managers to get ahead of the market,” said Mike Grogan, Buyside Business Development Director at Genesis Global. “Our solution reduces the pressure asset managers face on pricing days, because investment teams can do their analysis and prepare orders in advance and then simply amend them, if needed, when deals launch.”

    PBI provides asset managers with a complete, real-time view of the market by aggregating users’ internal and external deal data sources. It automates investment workflow by integrating compliance, analytics, reference data and order systems into a deal-focused workspace. The solution also embeds collaboration tools to promote efficient, team-driven decision making.

    The new Roadshow features in PBI enable asset managers to:

    • Manage entire deal pipelines, from roadshow to pricing, with one platform
    • Consolidate deal information, documents and other issuer data
    • Alert investment team members about roadshow activity
    • Bring unstructured data from emails and chats into the system with Genesis AI tools
    • Facilitate internal book building for early interest communication to syndicates

    “PBI gives asset managers an edge by presenting a complete, real-time view of the market, integrating the systems investment teams use and promoting efficient decision-making,” continued Mike Grogan. “Streamlining how firms operate in primary markets helps them maintain focus on their investment process and on assessing relative value, especially on busy deal days, which stretch the capacity of investment teams.”

    About Genesis Global
    Genesis Global enables financial markets organizations to innovate at speed through its AI-native software application development platform and deep expertise in capital markets and financial services. In supercharging developers and non-technical domain experts to rapidly deliver high-performance, resilient and secure applications, Genesis replaces the buy vs. build challenge with a buy-to-build solution.

    The Genesis platform is designed with flexibility and performance at its core, providing the frameworks, integrations and components required to automate manual workflows, enhance legacy systems and build entirely new applications. Featuring a resilient, real-time service-oriented architecture, Genesis excels across the performance envelope of low-latency, high-throughput and high-scalability, powering mission-critical applications at the world’s leading financial institutions.​

    Strategically backed by Bank of America, BNY and Citi, Genesis Global has offices in London, New York, Miami, Charlotte, São Paulo, Dublin and Bengaluru.

    Media contact:
    Alex Paidas, Corporate Communications, Genesis Global
    alex.paidas@genesis.global    +1 646 246 4889

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI imposes monetary penalty on The Citizen Co-operative Bank Ltd., Noida

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated May 30, 2025, imposed a monetary penalty of ₹6.00 lakh (Rupees Six Lakh only) on The Citizen Co-operative Bank Ltd., Noida (the bank) for contravention of the provisions of Section 12B read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (BR Act) and non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Know Your Customer (KYC)’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 47A(1)(c) read with Sections 46(4)(i) and 56 of BR Act.

    The statutory inspection of the bank was conducted by RBI with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2024. Based on supervisory findings of contravention of statutory provisions/non-compliance with RBI directions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said provisions and directions. After considering the bank’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charges against the bank were sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The bank had:

    1. failed to ensure that prior permission of RBI was obtained by a person before issuing/allotting shares to him along with his relatives, beyond permissible limit; and

    2. failed to put in use a robust software, throwing alerts for identifying suspicious transactions.

    This action is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers. Further, imposition of this monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the bank.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/466

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI imposes monetary penalty on The Jammu and Kashmir State Co-operative Bank Ltd., Srinagar

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated May 30, 2025, imposed a monetary penalty of ₹2 lakh (Rupees Two Lakh only) on The Jammu and Kashmir State Co-operative Bank Ltd., Srinagar (the bank) for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI on ‘Know Your Customer (KYC)’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 47A(1)(c) read with Sections 46(4)(i) and 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (BR Act).

    The statutory inspection of the bank was conducted by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2023 and March 31, 2024. Based on supervisory findings of non-compliance with RBI directions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said directions. After considering the bank’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charge against the bank was sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The bank had failed to obtain Officially Valid Documents (OVD) of its customers while establishing the account-based relationship.

    This action is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers. Further, imposition of this monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the bank.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/467

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: RBI imposes monetary penalty on The Bathinda Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., Bathinda, Punjab

    Source: Reserve Bank of India

    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has imposed, by an order dated May 30, 2025, a monetary penalty of ₹3 lakh (Rupees Three Lakh only) on The Bathinda Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., Bathinda, Punjab (the bank) for contravention of provisions of Section 26A read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (BR Act). This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers conferred on RBI under the provisions of Section 47A(1)(c) read with Sections 46(4)(i) and 56 of the BR Act.

    The statutory inspection of the bank was conducted by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2023 and March 31, 2024. Based on supervisory findings of non-compliance with statutory provisions and related correspondence in that regard, a notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the said provisions. After considering the bank’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made by it during the personal hearing, RBI found, inter alia, that the following charge against the bank was sustained, warranting imposition of monetary penalty:

    The bank had failed to transfer eligible unclaimed amounts to the Depositor Education and Awareness Fund within the prescribed time.

    This action is based on deficiencies in statutory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers. Further, imposition of this monetary penalty is without prejudice to any other action that may be initiated by RBI against the bank.

    (Puneet Pancholy)  
    Chief General Manager

    Press Release: 2025-2026/463

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Mining in Motion: Ghana Unveils 5-Pillar Strategy to Transform the Mining Industry

    Source: Africa Press Organisation – English (2) – Report:

    ACCRA, Ghana, June 3, 2025/APO Group/ —

    Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah, Ghana’s Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, outlined a five-pillar strategy for the country’s mining industry at the Mining in Motion 2025 summit. The strategy is aimed at reforming the sector while empowering artisanal and small-scale mining (ASGM) initiatives.

    In a presentation during the opening of the summit, Minister Buah underscored how the strategy is designed to address illegal mining, which has significantly impacted the environment. Illegal mining occupies over 16% of the nation’s forests, degrading more than 5,500 hectares. As such, the strategy seeks to address this issue by enhancing ASGM developments. ASGM operations have grown to account for 52.1% of Ghana’s total gold exports in 2025, and the strategy aims to further optimize the industry’s expansion.

    “Of the $4 billion in goods shipped from Ghana in Q1, 2025, 52.1% is from artisanal and small-scale miners – hence the need to ensure that mining is done in a sustainable manner,” stated Minister Buah.

    The first pillar of the strategy focuses on reforming the licensing regime. According to Minister Buah, the Ministry is currently overhauling the existing Minerals and Mining Act to attract new investments and bring in fresh ASGM players. This includes reviewing and restructuring licenses to ensure they align with Ghana’s national development agenda.

    “The strategy came into implementation four months ago and we want to ensure we do mining right,” stated Minister Buah.

    The second pillar centers on enhancing law enforcement. The Ministry is collaborating with various government agencies to intensify the arrest and prosecution of those engaged in illegal mining. This includes the creation of an independent Anti-Illegal Mining Military Task Force and the reorganization of security operations at both district and community levels.

    Environmental restoration is also a key priority. Under the third pillar, the Ministry has reclaimed eight out of nine forest reserves previously designated as red zones for illegal mining within just four months. Reforestation programs are now underway to restore these degraded areas and ensure long-term environmental sustainability.

    The fourth pillar emphasizes stakeholder engagement and public education. The Ministry is working closely with traditional authorities, lawmakers, civil society organizations and the general public to promote sustainable practices and encourage collective responsibility in preserving Ghana’s natural resources.

    “Lack of jobs and skills has been the main cause of illegal mining and we are dealing with this directly by diversifying employment. We want to create over 150,000 new jobs,” stated Minister Buah.

    The fifth pillar aims to provide alternative livelihoods and job opportunities, especially for youth and individuals previously involved in illegal mining. Through programs such as the National Alternative Employment and Livelihood Program for Illegal Miners; the 1 Million Coders Program; and initiatives by the Youth Employment Agency, the government is offering skills training and employment placement. These efforts are designed to reduce reliance on illegal mining and diversify economic opportunities across the country.

    The pillars will be achieved through various strategies such as the Ghana Gold Board, the Minerals Development Fund, the Minerals Income Investment Fund, Geofencing of Excavators, the Investment in Geological Investigations of Mineralized Areas, Small-Scale Mining Cooperatives, the Blue Water Initiative, the Tree for Life Initiative and the Anti-Illegal Mining Secretariat.

    Organized by the Ashanti Green Initiative – led by Oheneba Kwaku Duah, Prince of Ghana’s Ashanti Kingdom – in collaboration with Ghana’s Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, World Bank, and the World Gold Council, with the support of Ghana’s Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources, the summit offers unparalleled opportunities to connect with industry leaders.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • Markets decline for third straight day amid global weakness

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Indian equity benchmarks closed lower for the third consecutive trading session on Tuesday, as weak global cues and investor caution weighed on sentiment.

    The BSE Sensex dropped 636.24 points, or 0.78%, to end at 80,737.51, while the NSE Nifty fell 174.10 points, or 0.70%, to settle at 24,542.50.

    IT, PSU banks, financial services, FMCG, and energy stocks led the decline. However, midcap and smallcap indices fared better. The Nifty Smallcap 100 inched up 0.10% to 18,114, while the Nifty Midcap 100 shed 0.45% to close at 57,517.

    “After an initial uptick, the Nifty oscillated sharply in early trade; however, a sharp decline below the 20-day exponential moving average in the latter half of the session kept the tone negative,” said Ajit Mishra of Religare Broking.

    Analysts cited sustained foreign fund outflows, geopolitical tensions, and uncertainty over global trade deals as key factors behind the market’s weakness. They added that strength in select banking stocks may cushion further downside.

    Investors also appeared to be in wait-and-watch mode ahead of the Reserve Bank of India’s upcoming interest rate decision.

    On the currency front, the rupee gave up Monday’s gains, impacted by risk aversion, a stronger U.S. dollar, and continued outflows. HDFC Securities’ Dilip Parmar expects the USD/INR pair to trade in the 85.10–85.90 range in the near term.

    Gold prices remained steady near ₹97,700 on the MCX after a sharp rally on Monday. Analysts said the market is consolidating ahead of key economic data releases from the U.S.

    -IANS

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Thales reinvents secure payment systems for a data-driven future, showcasing leadership at Money20/20 Europe

    Source: Thales Group

    Headline: Thales reinvents secure payment systems for a data-driven future, showcasing leadership at Money20/20 Europe

    • Payment systems must evolve beyond traditional card-based models to handle growing volumes of data and changing user expectations.
    • Thales’ D1 platform is already empowering issuers to simplify, secure, and scale payment services with over 200 million active cards.
    • With a modular, API-first approach, the D1 platform helps issuers stay ahead of regulatory, technological, and consumer shifts—without needing to rebuild their infrastructure.

    As the global shift toward digital payments accelerates, Thales is setting the standard for how financial institutions adapt to this fast-changing landscape. At the core of this transformation is Thales’ D1 platform, a real-time, cloud-native platform, which is helping issuers reimagine their payment systems for a world that’s moving beyond cards—and into a data-first era.

    With 35% of global transactions now driven by mobile wallets and tokenization, traditional card systems are straining under rising data volumes and fragmented architectures. Issuers face increasing pressure to adapt to new payment flows, regulations, and customer expectations—all at speed.

    Thales’ D1 platform is already doing just that, powering over 200 million active cards. Designed for fast, secure integration via APIs, the D1 platform enables banks to quickly roll out services like Click to Pay, virtual cards, or digital wallets—typically within three to four months. The platform’s modular approach allows issuers to scale new services from thousands to millions of users without reworking their backend, while Thales ensures ongoing compliance, updates, and zero-trust security—all included as standard.

    Meet Thales at Money20/20 Europe in Amsterdam, where the team will showcase how the D1 platform is helping transform payment infrastructure for the digital age.

    “In the coming years, the way we authenticate, authorize, and personalize digital payments will change dramatically,” said Bertrand Knopf, SVP at Thales PAY. “To keep pace, issuers need flexible, secure platforms that can adapt quickly to new payment methods, regulatory changes, and user expectations. That’s exactly what D1 platform was built for.”

    Decades of Expertise, Built for the Future

    With more than 180 digital payment deployments worldwide and one in every three physical cards globally produced by Thales, the company brings a deep legacy of trust and innovation to the payments industry. D1 platform is the next chapter in that leadership—offering issuers a flexible, forward-looking foundation for the evolving world of commerce.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Vice Premier of the State Council of China calls on SCO member states to strengthen financial cooperation

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: People’s Republic of China in Russian – People’s Republic of China in Russian –

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    BEIJING, June 3 (Xinhua) — Chinese Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, on Tuesday called for strengthening financial cooperation among member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) to give strong impetus to the development of countries in the region.

    He made this statement during a collective meeting with foreign representatives present at the meeting of finance ministers and heads of central banks of SCO member states.

    Ding Xuexiang said that Chinese President Xi Jinping put forward a series of important proposals and measures to build a more beautiful common home for the SCO at the SCO Plus meeting in Astana in 2024.

    China is willing to seize the opportunity of its SCO presidency and work with other member states to prioritize development, strengthen financial cooperation, increase the share of settlements in their national currencies, promote the development of digital and inclusive finance, and actively work on the establishment of the SCO Development Bank, Ding Xuexiang said.

    Speaking on behalf of the foreign guests, SCO Secretary General Nurlan Yermekbayev praised the work carried out by China as the country chairing the organization. He expressed readiness to work with the Chinese side, adhering to the “Shanghai Spirit”, to promote prosperity and development in the region. -0-

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: GPDRR 2025 highlights: Monday 2 June 2025

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    The 8th Global Platform on Disaster Risk Reduction 2025 (GPDRR2025) began with preparatory events on Monday, 2 June, ahead of the upcoming official programme with highlevel meetings from 4-6 June in Geneva, Switzerland. GPDRR 2025 is organized by the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) and hosted by the Government of Switzerland. Two parallel events took place on Monday: the Third Stakeholder Forum and the Global Early Warning for All (EW4All) MultiStakeholder Forum.

    Third Stakeholder Forum

    Opening

    The Third Stakeholder Forum opened with statements by the Governments of Switzerland and Indonesia and senior UN leaders under the theme “United for Resilience.” Speakers highlighted progress on the Bali Agenda for Resilience, an outcome of the 7th Global Platform in 2022, and the opportunities for inclusive disaster risk reduction (DRR).

    Mirjam Macchi, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, appreciated stakeholders’ solidarity around the evacuation and assistance to the historic village of Blatten, destroyed last week by a glacial landslide 200 km from Geneva. She noted that even livestock were cared for-a powerful reminder that “resilience begins with local people” and inclusive solutions are more effective when those directly affected by disasters bring vital knowledge to action.

    Achsanul Habib, Permanent Representative of Indonesia to the UN, reaffirmed Indonesia’s commitment to risk-informed policies and inclusive approaches. He encouraged all participants to use the Stakeholder Forum as “not only a platform to listen and share, but a platform to act together.”

    The event also showcased the Sendai Framework Voluntary Commitments online platform (SFVC), where stakeholders can register their commitments, and users can identify areas of activity as well as gaps. Yuki Matsuoka, Head, UNDRR Office in Japan, noted that 729 individual organizations so far have registered their commitments.

    Celeste Saulo, Secretary-General, World Meteorological Organisation

    Whole-of-society approach for the Sendai Framework on DRR: A collective responsibility

    Sarah Wade-Apicella, UNDRR, moderated the session. On effective methods to implement inclusive DRR, Marcie Roth, World Institute on Disability, underscored the need for people with disabilities to be involved early in co-development of disaster risk strategies, and for foresight processes to incorporate diverse voices. Major Hamad Sabah Al-Sawar, Director of Crisis and Disaster Management, Bahrain, described Bahrain’s communication platform providing diverse modes of information sharing in multiple languages, the use of a phone application, and a common hashtag used to mobilize public action.

    On intersectional and intergenerational knowledge sharing, Tom Colley, HelpAge International, drew attention to the wide network of older people associations worldwide as opportunities to engage this age group in DRR. He noted these associations can also harness and serve as channels for bringing Indigenous Peoples’ knowledge into DRR strategies. Barrise Griffin, Disaster Risk Management Authority, The Bahamas, emphasized moving away from one-off, extractive approaches to information gathering, and instead facilitating ongoing dialogue. Josefina Miculax Sincal, Huairou Commission, called for frameworks and trainings to strengthen good practices at the community level.

    A slide showing the numbers of internal displacement by hazard for 2015- 2024.

    Participants then heard comments and questions from the floor on the role of national DRR platforms in community-level participation, engagement, and school programs for children; managing conflicts of interest; looking beyond immediate impacts of DRR; measuring the effectiveness of stakeholder engagement; shifting risk ownership to local communities to handle disasters; and securing resources.

    Data and financing for disaster displacement as loss and damage

    Steven Goldfinch, Asian Development Bank (ADB), moderated this session.

    Christelle Cazabat, Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, explained that research into Hurricane Milton’s impacts in the US shows how people’s aspirations change when displacement stretches into the long term. She noted 2024 saw the highest number of people displaced in a single year globally (45.8 million), as well as the highest number of people continuing to live in displacement (9.8 million).

    Noralene Uy, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, the Philippines, noted that her country ensures children have access to child-friendly spaces during displacement, and that national protocols guide national and local assessments and reporting. Isoa Talemaibua, Ministry for Maritime and Rural Development, Fiji, highlighted Fiji’s risk assessment activities and stressed the value of financial tools such as green and blue bonds, and parametric insurance that enables rapid payouts based on environmental triggers.

    Hoang Phuong Thao, ActionAid Vietnam, highlighted the organization’s work with marginalized and remote communities to use smartphones for receiving early warnings, as well as for reporting on local conditions, thereby informing the government’s trend analysis. Catalina Díaz Escobar, Corporación Antioquia Presente, emphasized that data collection itself is a political process and should be conducted in an ethical and respectful manner.

    From Paris to Sendai: the fundamental connection of climate and DRR

    Jamie Cummings, Sendai Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism, moderated the session. Animesh Kumar, UNDRR, underlined that risk is a common denominator across the Sendai Framework, Paris Agreement, and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), stating that all these global frameworks share the goal of resilience. He encouraged the institutionalization of the agreements at the national level and highlighted the need to localize them. On technical assistance, he stressed that funding applications under the Santiago Network -a mechanism to support countries recovering from loss and damage due to climate change -should be designed to catalyze downstream impacts. Hisan Hassan, National Disaster Management Authority, Maldives, described his country’s focus on EW4All and slow-onset losses. Manon Robin, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) Secretariat, discussed integration of national adaptation plans and DRR strategies and emphasized, supported by Le-Anne Roper, UNDRR, the need to focus on coordinating actors on different aspects of climate resilience. Amber Fletcher, University of Regina, emphasized that slow-onset disaster management and funding are crucial for food producers, and stressed the significance of non-economic loss and damage.

    View of the panel during the “From Paris to Sendai: the Fundamental Connection of Climate and DRR” event.

    Innovative financing and private sector leadership in DRR

    Camila Tapias, UNDRR ARISE Global Board Member, moderated the session. Manisha Gulati, ODI Global, noted that most funding goes toward emergency response after disasters occur. She highlighted that when the private sector invests in critical services, DRR becomes an outcome, not only a target.

    Yezid Niño, Private Sector Liaison, UNDRR Americas, emphasized the relevance of understanding that DRR is part of the development of the countries and pointed toward the role of regulatory frameworks in involving the private sector in financing DRR. Terry Kinyua, Co-Chair of the ARISE Global Board, stressed that the resilience of communities amounts to the resilience of a country.

    Through digital interaction, attendees identified cost-benefit analysis, data gaps, and trust as the major barriers to private sector investment in DRR. Among the actions leaders can take to accelerate investment in resilience, attendees mentioned political incentives, regulatory alignment, resilience as a national priority, and the involvement of local leaders.

    View of the panel during the “Innovative Financing and Private Sector Leadership in DRR” event.

    Implementation of climate and DRR gender action plans at the national level-Synergies and strategies

    Mwanahamisi Singano, Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO), moderated this panel discussion unpacking synergies between the different Gender Action Plans (GAPs) under multiple conventions and frameworks, including the Sendai GAP. She noted the need to avoid duplication and ensure cost effectiveness.

    Mary Picard, Humanitarian and Development Consulting, gave a keynote address describing the actions leading to the launch of the Sendai GAP in 2024. Panelists mentioned key lessons from their experiences with governments in implementing the GAPs, including the challenge of competing priorities and political preferences among different ministries when attempting to coordinate the different GAPs. Other interventions focused on holding governments and agencies accountable for implementing GAPs and enhancing communication among women’s networks, particularly those involved in DRR. Following interventions on regional mapping tools and GAP observatories that monitor implementation progress, Singano invited participants to provide inputs towards developing a universal DRR gender equality observatory.

    Community-led action for resilience, building partnerships for inclusive action

    Maité Rodríguez, Fundación Guatemala, moderated this session. The panel featured grassroot women leaders and related international organizations. Godavari Dange, Swayam Shikshan Prayog, a women-led organization of farmer-producers, highlighted women farmers’ work in drought preparedness to cultivate and stockpile animal fodder. She also highlighted technology training conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic for women to use online platforms. Norma Choc Botzoc, Community Practitioners’ Platform for Resilience in Guatemala, described grassroot women’s own development of risk and vulnerability assessments, which, she noted, are being used as tools for advocacy to local authorities to direct resources appropriately. Speakers from ADB and the Centre for Coordination of Disasters in Central America and the Dominican Republic (CEPREDENAC) affirmed the central importance of cooperation and co-design of programs for climate resilience and recovery after disasters.

    Disaster preparedness and risk reduction in urban areas—Building back better

    Ladeene Freimuth, The Freimuth Group, moderated the session. Guilherme Simões, National Secretary for Peripheries, Ministry of Cities, Brazil, outlined the Live Peripheries program, which provides access to better urban infrastructure, social services, and opportunities; and the Peripheries Without Risk strategy, a community-based risk reduction and climate adaptation plan.

    Marcie Roth, World Institute on Disability, highlighted EWS as one of the best-proven and cost-effective methods for reducing disaster deaths and losses. She drew attention to “Infinite Access,” a communication platform designed to deliver emergency alerts in multiple accessible formats.

    Mario Flores, Habitat for Humanity International, discussed the challenges and opportunities of urban environments, stressing the need to build better in the first place; to have risk-informed development; and to consider housing as a platform for a peoplecentered resilience approach.

    Debbra Johnson, ARISE-US Network, addressed the report “Navigating the sustainability-resilience nexus,” which brings together the SDGs, the Paris Agreement, and the DRR Sendai Framework.

    Breaking the DRR financing silos: A systematic shift in DRR financing for localization of inclusive resilience

    Camila Tapias, UNDRR ARISE Global Board Member, moderated the session. Noting that financial capital existed but is not reaching local levels, Tanjir Hossain, Stakeholder Engagement Mechanism, called for breaking down silos so funding is not sitting around while millions of people suffer. Steve Goldfinch, ADB, described the National Disaster Management Fund of Pakistan that finances projects with high economic benefits using a 70% – 30% funding model from provincial governments. He also highlighted the National Disaster Risk Management Fund of the Philippines that encourage local governments to invest in disaster response, relief, preparedness and risk reduction measures. Emma Haight, UNDRR Investor Advisory Board, described the adoption of a green sewer design, first developed in Washington DC, which proved so successful that the design was replicated in London, UK, Cape Town, South Africa, and Quito, Ecuador, highlighting its environmental and financial risk reduction, and over USD 200 million in cost savings. Michelle Chivunga, Global Policy House, discussed using artificial intelligence to shift DRR responses, optimize data utilization in local governments, track and mobilize funding, and to use digital capital during humanitarian crisis to make up for funding shortfalls. Sara Hoeflich, United Cities and Local Government, recommended investment in basic services such as water supply, street cleaning, and sewer solutions to ensure clean cities as an investment and risk mitigation measure. Marcos Concepción Raba, Global Network of Civil Society Organisations for Disaster Reduction, discussed effective localization.

    Global Early Warning for All (EW4All) Multistakeholder Forum

    Opening

    Julien Thöni, Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, Switzerland, said timely early warning action should provide critical time to act and respond, and noted that innovation better predicts and reaches people faster. Celeste Saulo, Secretary-General, World Meteorological Organization (WMO), suggested key criteria for improving early warning systems (EWS), including that science must connect people; and systems and partnerships must include actors “outside the DRR tent,” especially those most at risk. Kamal Kishore, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction, and Head of UNDRR, said EWS should not be regarded as a once-off intervention. He said national ownership must be strengthened, and the concept of leaving no one behind should be embedded into all efforts. Selwin Hart, Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Climate Action and Just Transition, via video, suggested EWS is the most basic tool for saving and protecting lives, and called for high-level political support, a boost in technology access, and public and private finance at scale.

    Fireside chat: The state of EWS

    Johan Stander, WMO, drew attention to national ownership, stakeholder engagement, and the involvement of funding partners when investing in EW4All. Sujit Kumar Mohanty, Chief of Branch, UNDRR, emphasized co-design and co-ownership approaches to meaningfully engage stakeholders for successful EW4All.

    Good practices: Stakeholder perspectives on EWS

    Interventions during this panel session included: calls to integrate women and youth in all decisions focused on EWS; investing in women’s leadership, particularly those with disabilities; ensuring young people are equitably involved; reaching those living in remote rural areas and conflict zones; and leveraging the communication power of mobile networks through private-public partnerships.

    UNDRR Disability Leaders gather at the end of the day.

    Perspectives from across regions on EWS

    Panelists in this session focused on: successful collaboration and EWS progress in Zimbabwe after the 2019 Cyclone Idai; institutionalization of the community-based approach to EWS in Barbados; main challenges to integrate scientific tools and remote sensing into EWS in Lebanon; integration of the private sector in EWS decision-making process in Makati, the Philippines; and the role of cross-border cooperation, knowledge sharing, and educating people for effective EWS in Poland.

    Thematic Sessions 

    Four thematic sessions took place during the day. These were:

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Scam alert related to banks

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

    The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) wishes to alert members of the public to the press releases issued by the banks listed below relating to fraudulent websites, internet banking login screens, phishing emails or other scams, which have been reported to the HKMA. Hyperlinks to the press releases are available on the HKMA website.
     

    Bank Type of Scam
    Shanghai Commercial Bank Limited Fraudulent websites and internet banking login screens
    The Bank of East Asia, Limited Fraudulent websites and internet banking login screens
    Chong Hing Bank Limited Fraudulent websites and internet banking login screens

    The HKMA wishes to remind the public that banks will not send SMS or emails with embedded hyperlinks which direct them to the banks’ websites to carry out transactions. They will not ask customers for sensitive information, such as login passwords or one-time password, by phone, email or SMS (including via embedded hyperlinks).

    Anyone who has provided his or her personal information, or who has conducted any financial transactions, through or in response to the scams concerned, should contact the relevant bank with the information provided in the corresponding press release, and report the matter to the Crime Wing Information Centre of the Hong Kong Police Force at 2860 5012.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: FactSet Announces CEO Succession Plan

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Sanoke Viswanathan Appointed Chief Executive Officer Effective Early September 2025

    Phil Snow to Retire After Accomplished 30-Year Career with FactSet, Including 10 Years as CEO

    NORWALK, Conn., June 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — FactSet (NYSE: FDS | NASDAQ: FDS), a global financial digital platform and enterprise solutions provider, today announced that its Board of Directors has appointed Sanoke Viswanathan as Chief Executive Officer, effective early September 2025. He will succeed Phil Snow, who will retire as CEO and a member of the Board at that time. Snow will serve as a senior advisor up to the end of the calendar year to support the transition.

    Viswanathan is a respected global business leader in strategy, innovation, and operations across banking, capital markets, and wealth management. He is a 15-year veteran of JPMorgan Chase, most recently serving as CEO of International Consumer and Wealth and as a member of JPMorgan’s Operating Committee. In this role, Viswanathan launched the international consumer business and led strategic acquisitions and alliances in global wealth management and digital banking, positioning these businesses for long-term growth across global markets. Prior to that, Viswanathan served as Chief Strategy and Growth Officer as well as Chief Administrative Officer of JPMorgan’s Corporate and Investment Bank. He began his career at McKinsey & Company, where he became the Co-Head of the Global Corporate and Investment Banking Practice, serving buy-side and sell-side financial institutions around the world.

    “We are excited to welcome Sanoke as FactSet’s next CEO,” said Robin A. Abrams, Independent Director and Chair of the FactSet Board of Directors. “With a proven track record of leading and transforming global organizations and implementing technology-driven growth strategies at scale, he is ideally positioned to lead FactSet into the future. Sanoke’s background in international wealth management services complements the success FactSet has achieved in this area of financial services. He brings expertise in areas central to our strategy including AI, research and analytics, and has a unique understanding of our customer base.”

    Abrams continued, “On behalf of the Board, I would like to thank Phil for his unwavering leadership as FactSet’s CEO. Over his three decades of dedicated service, Phil has made invaluable contributions to the Company’s success. Under his leadership over the last decade, FactSet has more than doubled its revenue and delivered annualized double-digit EPS growth and total shareholder return. Phil has successfully positioned FactSet for its next era, and we wish him well in his retirement.”

    Snow said, “I am incredibly proud of what we have achieved together over the past 30 years. The Board and I have been diligently planning for my succession, and with a foundation that has never been stronger, I am confident that now is the right time for FactSet to transition to a new leader to take the Company into the future. Sanoke brings the strategic vision and innovation-first mindset that FactSet needs to build on its momentum and sustain itself as the leader in data-driven finance. As I look ahead to retirement, I’d like to thank the entire FactSet team for bringing their passion to work, always putting our clients first and tirelessly advancing our capabilities to supercharge financial intelligence.”

    Viswanathan said, “It’s an honor to have been selected to lead FactSet’s remarkable team. I was drawn to FactSet given its central role in global financial markets and ability to create value for clients with its cutting-edge technology and tools. FactSet is recognized throughout the industry for the quality and depth of its data and excellence in client service. I look forward to supporting the evolution of FactSet’s unique value proposition as a leading data and workflow solutions provider, and delivering new products and services to drive sustainable growth. I’m excited to work closely with Phil and the entire management team to ensure a seamless transition.”

    About Sanoke Viswanathan

    Viswanathan has held a range of leadership roles, most recently served as the Chief Executive Officer of International Consumer and Wealth of JPMorgan and as a member of JPMorgan’s Operating Committee where he oversaw international consumer businesses as well as the International Private Bank and Workplace Solutions. Prior to that, Viswanathan served as JPMorgan’s Chief Strategy and Growth Officer from 2022 to 2024 and Chief Administrative Officer of the Corporate and Investment Bank. Earlier in his career, he was a Managing Director and Head of Corporate Strategy for JPMorgan and a Partner and Co-Head of Global Corporate and Investment Banking for McKinsey & Company.

    About FactSet

    FactSet (NYSE:FDS | NASDAQ:FDS) supercharges financial intelligence, offering enterprise data and information solutions that power our clients to maximize their potential. Our cutting-edge digital platform seamlessly integrates proprietary financial data, client datasets, third-party sources, and flexible technology to deliver tailored solutions across the buy-side, sell-side, wealth management, private equity, and corporate sectors. With over 47 years of expertise, a presence in 20 countries, and extensive multi-asset class coverage, we leverage advanced data connectivity alongside AI and next-generation tools to streamline workflows, drive productivity, and enable smarter, faster decision-making. Serving more than 8,600 global clients and nearly 220,000 individual users, FactSet is a member of the S&P 500 dedicated to innovation and long-term client success. Learn more at www.factset.com and follow us on X and LinkedIn.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This news release contains forward-looking statements based on management’s current expectations, estimates, forecasts, and projections about industries in which FactSet operates and the beliefs and assumptions of management. All statements that address expectations, guidance, outlook, or projections about the future, including statements about the Company’s strategy for growth, product development, revenues, future financial results, anticipated growth, market position, subscriptions, expected expenditures, trends in FactSet’s business and financial results, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements may be identified by words like “expects,” “believes,” “anticipates,” “plans,” “intends,” “estimates,” “projects,” “should,” “indicates,” “continues,” “may” and similar expressions. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve a number of risks, uncertainties, and assumptions. Many factors, including those discussed more fully elsewhere in this release and in FactSet’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, particularly its latest annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, as well as others, could cause results to differ materially from those stated. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made, and FactSet assumes no duty to and does not undertake to update forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in forward-looking statements and future results could differ materially from historical performance.

    Contacts

    Investor Relations:
    Kevin Toomey
    +1.212.209.5259
    kevin.toomey@factset.com

    Media Relations:
    Kelsey Goldsmith
    +1.207.712.9726
    Kelsey.Goldsmith@factset.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Abdul Rasheed Ghaffour: The significance of Malaysian government bond market – resilience against global backdrop

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    The significance of Malaysian government bond market – resilience against global backdrop

    It has been a challenging first half of the year, as global markets weather multiple episodes of volatility. Risks of higher inflation and slower growth remain major concerns amid trade policy uncertainty. Despite slower global growth and policy easing in some economies, bond yields have not declined in tandem, as investors demand higher term premia to compensate for the heightened risk environment. 

    Being a small and open market economy, Malaysia is not shielded from this global development. But I am glad to say that the country has been managing this volatility from a position of strength. Domestically, Malaysia’s bond market reached RM2.2 trillion in market size this year. Government bonds which make up nearly 60% of the market continues to grow at a stable pace, reaching about RM1.3 trillion of outstanding issuance as of May 2025. Malaysian government bond yields have been largely stable throughout the year, anchored by resilient domestic demand as well as higher foreign inflows. Domestic demand for government bonds remains robust, driven by both institutional investors and banking institutions.

    This is reflected in the primary bond market, where government bond issuances consistently record robust demand. The secondary market is also seeing healthy two-way flows, with higher daily trading volume, amid effective intermediation by market participants and market-making by Principal Dealers. Positive foreign inflows reflect foreign investors’ confidence in the local market which is seen as a stable investment destination in the region. Year-to-date, non-resident holding of our government bonds has increased to around 22% in May 2025 with a significant portion comprising stable and long-term foreign investors.

    I would like to attribute this positive development to years of effort by the MOF, BNM and financial market participants, to broaden and deepen the domestic ringgit securities market. Over the years, BNM has undertaken proactive efforts to improve bond market liquidity. This includes to promote an interbank securities-driven repo market and to facilitate bond switching operations for the Government. In addition, the dynamic hedging programme, which debuted in 2016, serves to encourage foreign investor participation in the domestic bond market, by providing market access for institutional investors who wish to actively manage FX exposures of their ringgit assets. We have come a long way in this. It is worth recalling that one of the lessons of the Asian Financial Crisis was the lack of or an underdeveloped government bond market that had exacerbated the crisis. The absence of the domestic risk-free investment avenue led to portfolio investors exiting the domestic currency when volatility and uncertainty were high. Today, I am glad to say that we are no longer in such a position.

    Lesson to be learnt from recent global experience

    While market development is a crucial element, ultimately, investor confidence and market stability rest upon healthy sovereign credit ratings. Recently, global bond markets have had to weather considerable turbulence as investors grappled with growing fiscal challenges and sovereign ratings downgrade in advanced economies. This situation underscores the importance of responsible governance and prudent fiscal management. It is paramount that we find a balance between providing support and demonstrating fiscal discipline in striving for sustainable economic growth. As such, policymakers must learn from these experiences and prioritise sustainable public finances and pursue structural reforms to safeguard trust and credibility.

    For instance, it is important to maintain sound fiscal policy by optimising public spending and generating healthy revenue streams to keep fiscal deficits at a sustainable level. In this regard, the Malaysian Government is committed to fiscal consolidation efforts as reflected in various measures such as tax and subsidy reforms. The enactment of the Fiscal Responsibility Act is also crucial to strengthening governance and institutions in the long term.

    In ASEAN, Malaysia alongside our regional peers are working closely to support prudent sovereign debt management by fostering regional cooperation, sustainable infrastructure financing, and resilient financial markets. For example, efforts are being made to facilitate regional economic and debt market integration under the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) framework. Under the ASEAN Bond Market Initiative, ASEAN member states strive to promote the development of local currency bond markets, channelling regional savings into long-term investments in the region. Meanwhile, the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office (AMRO) also plays a crucial role in monitoring ASEAN members’ debt risks and providing policy recommendations. As the ASEAN Chairman this year, Malaysia looks forward to further advancing ASEAN’s aspirations to deepen regional financial integration and advancing a more connected, sustainable, and inclusive ASEAN financial ecosystem.

    Opportunities and challenges

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    The road ahead is marked with challenges, particularly for a small open economy like Malaysia. Exogenous factors such as rising global interest rates may influence the Government’s borrowing costs. This may make debt refinancing relatively costly and could lead to higher debt servicing costs that could impact fiscal sustainability.

    It is therefore crucial to maintain a liquid and resilient sovereign bond market, not only to safeguard investor confidence and facilitate efficient public financing, but to also ensure financial stability, which is a core objective shared by both debt managers and central banks alike.

    On this note, I would like to highlight the rising role played by alternative instruments such as sukuk in developing a market with both diverse instruments, and a diverse investor base. There is a huge growth opportunity to tap the large and previously underserved base of investors who abide by Islamic finance principles. Malaysia boasts an active sukuk market with 50% of new government bonds being issued in the Islamic structure. As of May 2025, the outstanding government sukuk papers stood at around RM600 billion or 48% of total government bonds. As such, we are happy to work together with interested parties to share our expertise and knowledge and promote further development in this growing sector. 

    In closing, let me take the opportunity to thank our esteemed moderators, panellists and participants for sharing their insights and expertise over these past two days. I trust that they have led to productive discussions and contributed towards a more efficient and sustainable sovereign debt management practices. I’m sure all of us have useful insights and key takeaways to bring back to our respective countries and organisations.

    Congratulations to the organising committee comprising the IMF, the Ministry of Finance, and BNM for organising this successful event. To Miguel and the team at the IMF, on behalf of the organisers, allow me to express our deepest gratitude. We look forward to working again with the IMF to organise forums and exchanges like this one.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Olli Rehn: Macroeconomic policy in times of global political upheaval

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and Gentlemen, Colleagues and Friends,

    Welcome to the sunny, spring-time Helsinki. On behalf of the Bank of Finland and the Centre for Economic Policy Research, it is my great pleasure to open this year’s research conference on monetary economics – which again has an excellent and a most fascinating programme!

    Let me begin with a mission statement – and a confession. Our slogan at the Bank of Finland is: “Securing stability – in science we trust.” That is, we lean on evidence- and theory-based economic analysis and policy-relevant research to support our stability mission.

    However, I must make a confession. In this turbulent world, it is comforting to return to a familiar setting and reflect on policy challenges alongside leading economists. Although only eight months have passed since our last gathering, it feels like the global landscape has shifted dramatically.

    And the confession is this, in front of you as researchers, scholars, scientists, leading economists; in these times of pervasive uncertainty, we need plenty of judgment and scenario analysis to supplement our economic and econometric research and regression equations, thus making monetary policy, by necessity, is as much an art as a science. Such is life in these strange times – but finally, at least, it dis make me understand why the Governor at Bank of Finland is, ex officio, also the chair of the arts committee of the Bank!

    Talking about geopolitics and its effects, just look at the ECB’s evolving language. Uncertainty went from “increased” to “high,” then “pervasive,” and now, per President Lagarde, “exceptional.” This isn’t linguistic inflation. It reflects how genuinely hard forecasting has become, with markets pricing in risk at levels not seen in years.

    Risks abound: from trade wars to faltering global alliances. For central bankers and researchers alike, this is no time for complacency. Instead of dissecting every new risk, today I want to focus on three key areas:

    • Lessons from the recent inflation surge;
    • Open questions around fiscal policy, particularly defence spending;
    • And finally, the role of productivity and innovation.

    Low inflation – past and future

    Let’s nevertheless recall there are some good news. The European economy is recovering. Unemployment is at 6.1%, the lowest since the euro’s creation. Inflation has been hovering just above 2% since late 2023, allowing the ECB to cut rates seven times.

    The energy shock that hit Europe in spring 2022 has played out very differently than in the 1970s, with the economic cost being much lower this time. Thanks to increased labour supply and lower working hours, wage-price spirals were avoided. Today’s labour market is more flexible, less unionised, and better educated.

    Importantly, inflation expectations were much better anchored before the recent inflation surge. This underlies the importance of central bank independence and a strong commitment to the inflation target. The ECB has focused firmly on maintaining these, and will continue to do so.

    Before Covid, the main challenge was that inflation remained stubbornly below the target. Most risks to the inflation outlook were deflationary, including population ageing and the related increase in savings, and the low investment demand. And before the ECB’s 2021 review and move to a symmetric 2% target over the medium term, which has worked well, the inflation target was perceived as a ceiling, creating a downward bias.

    From around 2021, inflationary pressures reappeared. First this was due to the pandemic-broken supply chains and stimulus-fuelled demand, then due to the energy shocks arising from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    We learned how demand and supply shocks can be deeply intertwined. But we still face many unknowns in that regard. Current geopolitical tensions may expose us to new surprises that we have little historical experience of. Preferably, the spectre of a prolonged trade war with the US will dissipate sooner rather than later, as an economic conflict between long-standing friends and allies is the last thing we need in a world challenged by dictatorial impulses and by a neocolonial mentality.

    Furthermore, what if China shifts exports away from the US to Europe, slashing prices to compete? That could bring deflationary forces and industrial strain to the EU. Would it benefit consumers or hurt our economy overall? The policy response would not be straightforward.

    Let’s hope we don’t have to answer these questions through crisis. Whatever the challenge, the ECB will remain focused on price stability and its symmetric 2% inflation target over the medium term.

    Defence spending – new pressures

    Since the pandemic, fiscal spending pressures have risen. Now, security concerns are adding fuel. Russia’s aggression and doubts about US defence commitments are prompting big spending shifts across Europe. Germany is paving the way and has eased its constitutional debt limits.

    We can assume that with normal execution lags the most substantial fiscal impact will start to be felt from next year 2026 and 2027 onwards. This implies that the fiscal impact on the growth and inflation outlook will take effect in the medium term, as an ordinary citizen perceives is, although this timespan of fiscal impulse will mostly be beyond the projection horizon of medium term as understood in monetary policy. Our assessment indicate a moderately significant impact on growth and limited impact on inflation in the relevant timespan.

    Waking up and substantially increasing defence spending is welcome. Security is the bedrock of economic stability. Peace and security within European borders are fundamental to the European project and its economy.  Defence should be seen as a European public good. Further support for Ukraine should also be seen in the same light.

    But what does this mean for inflation? Historical comparisons to war-time money printing don’t apply here. Independent central banks like the ECB remain focused on keeping inflation expectations anchored.

    Still, we need to understand what type of shock defence spending represents. Is it demand or supply driven? Likely both, depending on how and where the money is spent.

    We also face the question of how to pay for it. EU-level spending would offer more stability and efficiency. That might mean higher membership fees, new revenue sources, or even treaty changes. Defence bonds – as safe assets – are one option, but only if backed by solid future income.

    Meanwhile, demands on public budgets are rising across the board: infrastructure, climate policy, aging populations.

    What guidance do we have so far from economics research?

    There is a large body of literature on fiscal multipliers, which incidentally often uses defence spending as a natural experiment or exogenous shock. These multipliers are frequently estimated to be below one, because public spending or investment usually crowds out private one.

    However, evidence suggests that multipliers tend to be larger in times of recession and economic slack. Moreover, some of the best evidence on the magnitude of fiscal multipliers is based on US data, where the multiplier may be smaller. This is simply because the US defence industry is very large compared to its European counterpart and is thus more likely to face diminishing marginal returns.

    All these issues mean that for European defence spending to be successful and sustainable, we must make every euro count. The additional defence spending should focus on investment in building up industrial network capacity and R&D, rather than simply procurement of defence equipment, which may be largely imported.

    Then there is also the aspect of defence efficiency. For this, we need sound planning and coordination at the European level, as well as a common market for defence, as stressed in last year’s Letta Report. Recent experience has shown that training in the use of unfamiliar weapons and problems with shortages of spare parts can become critical bottlenecks. Therefore, further harmonisation of technical standards and types of arms and equipment across European defence forces is key.

    With a history of independent and diminished national defence industries, the EU has some considerable catching up to do. We need to increase both national and EU-level defence spending, e.g. as Bruegel has suggested, by establishing a European Defence Mechanism formed by a coalition of the capable and willing. Such a fund would bypass the limitations to raising EU-level income, be resilient to any intra-EU obstruction and could also accommodate countries from outside the European Union, like the United Kingdom and Norway.

    In short: defence spending won’t necessarily be inflationary. But to be effective, it must be efficient. We need smart investments – in industrial capacity, innovation, and R&D – not just procurement. And we must avoid fragmented efforts. A European Defence Mechanism, built by a coalition of the capable and willing, could also help to pursue these goals.

    Innovation – defence and civilian

    Let’s now turn to innovation. Defence spending often yields big returns beyond the battlefield. Its effectiveness should be assessed from a long-term perspective, not only via short-run multipliers. Historically, it has given rise to technological breakthroughs that have not only found direct civilian applications but created whole new non-defence industries.

    Walkie-talkies were created during the Second World War at Motorola for infantry and artillery communication. Radar gave us microwave ovens. Military satellites gave us GPS and digital imaging. Jet engines, nuclear energy, the internet – all have military origins. Dual-use in action.

    Yes, these are cherry-picked examples. But they highlight that basic research often needs public support. The private sector tends to shy away from “unknown unknowns.”

    Modern defence is about technology, not just steel and troops. And there’s often more pressure to innovate efficiently. Look at Ukraine – it has rapidly developed drone tech, despite scarce resources.

    We know that Europe needs a productivity boost. For years, we depended on cheap energy from Russia, cheap goods from China and the security shield from the U.S. abroad. That stability was a mirage, if not a hallucination.

    To maintain our living standards and sovereignty, we must double down on innovation by investing on human capital and creating a conducive environment for research and researchers. Whether it’s AI, clean tech, green transition or digitalisation, we can’t afford to lag behind. Innovation is not optional; it’s vital for Europe’s future – a necessary condition for sustaining Europe’s quality of life and democratic values.

    Why not use the EU Horizon programme to create a scholarship and visa programme for returning and moving scientists to attract talent to Europe, where critical thinking and academic freedom in universities are encouraged and safeguarded?

    Dear friends,

    Let me conclude. Europe finds itself in a puzzling paradox, which would be funny if it were not purely pathetic. As Polish PM Donald Tusk put it starkly recently by quipping as follows: “500 million Europeans are asking 300 million Americans to protect them from 140 million Russians.”

    We need to put an end to that paradox. Europe must take responsibility for its own external security, in today’s harsh geopolitical world.

    This isn’t just about military strength. It’s about cohesion, economic resilience and long-term growth. We need to spark Europe’s industrial renewal, reinforce technological leadership, and enhance productivity.

    As history shows, Europe tends to move forward in times of crisis. In every crisis there is an opportunity – this time round we must use it particularly wisely to make Europe more resilient and capable of thriving again.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Anita Angelovska Bezhoska: Building stronger partnerships for economic growth

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Ladies and gentlemen,

    It is a pleasure to join you today at this important event organized by the Macedonian American Alumni Association. On this occasion, allow me to share some insights on the topic of regional economic collaboration and its potential to unlock new opportunities for sustainable growth in the Western Balkans region.

    Let me begin my address with a dose of realism. Despite 3 decades of transition, economic convergence in the Western Balkans remains low  income is less than half of the EU income, and the progress has been particularly slow since the GFC. In our case, the income level stands at 41% of the EU average. This remains one of the most pressing challenges across the region. In addition, let me add a dose of honesty. This slow progress cannot be attributed solely to recent external shocks. Indeed, the crises of the past few years, such as the global pandemic, energy disruptions, and inflationary pressures, have all undoubtedly taken their toll. These shocks, however, did not create our vulnerabilities, they only exposed them and amplified structural weaknesses that have already existed. Data clearly show that the slowdown in convergence was already in motion well before the recent crises, reflecting cyclical downturns as well as deeper structural challenges. Over the past two decades, the region’s potential growth has nearly halved, from about 5% during 2000-2008 to just 2.5% between 2009 and 2024. Macedonian potential growth fell even more sharply, from 3.1% to 2.3%. It is a fact that the potential growth of the EU economy has declined as well, but less than ours (2.9% to 1.8%), pointing that future convergence may be even more challenging.

    What explains the decline in potential and actual growth across the Western Balkans?

    The analysis shows that it is broad-based, stemming from weaker contributions from all three key drivers of long-term growth: productivity, labor, and capital. First, productivity has stalled, with productivity levels remaining at approximately half the EU average. This is due to the fact that innovation, technological diffusion, and digital transformation have not kept pace with global shifts. For example, the Global Innovation Index (2024) ranks North Macedonia at the 58th position out of about 130 countries, with the lowest ranking in the R&D segment, where we have invested 10 times less than advanced economies. Second, labor input is weakening too. One in five people born in the WB region is now living abroad, and one in three considers leaving the country (OECD Survey). And finally, the stock of capital remains low at only about 30% of the EU stock, reflecting insufficient investments both in terms of size and quality.

    These are not just economic figures. They highlight the persistent gap between the economic achievements so far and the still untapped potential within our economies.

    And this is precisely where the power of regional partnership can be harnessed, creating a clear path to accelerate growth. Indeed, empirical research shows that multilateral free trade agreements and regional cooperation can contribute to growth directly, through trade and FDI flows1, and indirectly, through increased productivity2. For example, some studies3 find that CEFTA led to increased trade among members by at least 74%. In addition, evidence4 shows that its implementation has not only deepened trade ties but also contributed to the economic growth of its members.

    So, where does the WB region stand today in terms of trade and financial integration?

    Well, regarding trade, data shows that despite the progress, regional integration remains low. As of 2024, total intra-regional trade stood at about 11% of the total WB trade, and continued to follow the downward trend that began after the pandemic crisis. In the Macedonian case, trade with WB peers makes up only 14% of our total exports and 9% of imports. These are modest shares indicating significant room for expansion by making trade easier, faster, and cheaper.

    When it comes to FDIs, intra-regional FDI flows also remain limited, with a significant portion of investment coming from outside the region, mainly from the EU. In the Macedonian case, investment originating from WB countries accounts for only around 3% of the total FDI inflows over the last decade, which is among the lowest shares in the region. In this context, boosting intra-regional FDI could help diversify investment sources, promote knowledge and technology transfer, and deepen economic linkages in the region. And a more integrated regional market, through the economy of scale, can be a more attractive destination for investments outside the region.

    Looking forward, what can be done to further strengthen regional integration and growth prospects?

    It appears that there are a couple of priorities. First, intensify reforms to address common structural issues such as low productivity, capital investments, but also tight labor markets. Recent findings from the Balkan Barometer (2024) indicate that 70% of WB businesses call for public policies specifically designed to keep talent within the region. Then, continue aligning regional regulations and standards, and eliminating administrative obstacles to address market fragmentation and increase regional competition. As an example, trucks spend 28 million hours waiting at borders every year – a burden that costs 1% of the region’s GDP. Of course, this has to be done in a way that means aligning with European standards and practices. As the 2024 OECD’s competitiveness data show, since 2018 the policy environments across the WB countries have steadily converged toward EU standards, but the pace of convergence varies across different dimensions and countries. No country has so far reached EU standards in any of the 15 policy dimensions assessed.

    One important area, which is within the remit of the central banks, is improving the efficiency of cross-border payments, which can act as engines of growth by facilitating trade, commerce, and tourism. In this regard, a significant milestone was reached earlier this year when our country officially joined the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA).

    No doubt, all these reform efforts are costly, but the EU’s Growth Plan for the Western Balkans introduces a 6 billion EUR facility in grants and concessional loans, aimed at supporting them. In fact, a Common Regional Market initiative is one of the key pillars of the Growth Plan and is expected to be a catalyst for the deeper integration of 18 million people. Some estimates show that this initiative, through increased harmonization, could add 10% to the GDP of the economies in the region5.

    Still, to effectively use the provided funding and implement reforms, the quality of institutions is of key importance. According to the World Bank institutional quality indicators, our country ranks slightly above the average for the WB region, but if we compare the entire region with developed countries, a significant gap is evident. Empirical research has shown that in lower-income countries, strengthening institutions has a significant positive contribution to higher economic growth.

    To conclude, the path to sustainable and inclusive growth in the Western Balkans does not lie in isolation, but in collaboration. As the well-known Japanese poet Satoro wisely said, “Individually, we are one drop. Together, we are an ocean.”

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Ukrainian strategic raw materials – E-000675/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The EU reaffirms its continued and unwavering support for Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity within its internationally recognised borders. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine and its repercussions for European and global security constitute an existential challenge for the EU.

    In 2021, the EU and Ukraine signed a strategic partnership on the critical raw materials (CRM) sector. This agreement supports the EU’s commitment in diversifying and securing the supply chains for CRM resources, with a view to the EU’s goal of sustainable growth and energy security.

    The Partnership is important in advancing the EU’s green and digital transitions, enhancing competitiveness, and increasing the resilience of both EU and Ukrainian industries. The cooperation between the two partners is mutually beneficial and based on EU standards.

    The Partnership roadmap extending into 2025-2026 outlines a comprehensive strategy for cooperation.

    In the implementation of the Strategic Partnership, the Commission is engaged in a series of technical assistance projects, most notably with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Further, an EU-led technical assistance project will support the implementation of the roadmap.

    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Billions of euro in cash sent from EU banks to Russia before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine – E-001344/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    Since March 2022, the Commission has taken unprecedented actions in response to Russia’s unprovoked military aggression against Ukraine. In close coordination with Group of Seven (G7) partners, the EU has adopted 17 packages of sanctions[1].

    Many of the recent measures focus on reinforcements of existing sanctions in place since 2014, address circumvention and cut the remaining revenues that Russia draws from its exports.

    With the adoption of the 16th package in February 2025[2], the restrictive measures applicable to the financial sector were further strengthened.

    As a result of all such measures, some EUR 28 billion of private assets have been frozen in the EU under individual measures and more than EUR 200 billion of Russian Central Bank assets have been immobilised under sectoral sanctions.

    The Commission was not informed in advance about the alleged cash transfers by EU credit institutions to Russia mentioned in the investigation by the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project.

    It is for the Member States, which remain competent for sanctions implementation and enforcement, to investigate whether the concerned transfers may have been used to circumvent EU financial sanctions, considering that in principle restrictive measures apply as of the day of entry into force in line with the legal acts.

    The Commission continues monitoring the implementation of sanctions by Member States, gives regular guidance to them and welcomes information about concrete sanctions violations to be followed up with the national competent authorities.

    Tackling possible circumvention attempts, including by the financial sector, is a key priority. The EU Sanctions Envoy continues his outreach to third countries identified as being high risk jurisdictions for circumvention.

    • [1] https://finance.ec.europa.eu/eu-and-world/sanctions-restrictive-measures/sanctions-adopted-following-russias-military-aggression-against-ukraine_en.
    • [2] https://finance.ec.europa.eu/news/eu-adopts-16th-package-sanctions-against-russia-2025-02-24_en.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: European Commission and EIB to further support decarbonisation projects from the Innovation Fund

    Source: European Investment Bank

    • The agreement allows EIB Advisory to further increase its impact on supporting innovative decarbonisation projects in line with the Clean Industrial Deal.
    • Companies can now apply for project development assistance via the EIB Innovation Fund Project Development Assistance website.
    • The renewed agreement for the Innovation Fund Project Development Assistance (PDA) is building on the success of the first Innovation Fund PDA programme.

    The European Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB) have signed an agreement renewing Project Development Assistance (PDA) under the Innovation Fund to increase technical and financial advisory support for innovative decarbonisation projects that are either not selected via the Fund or are preparing to apply. The renewed PDA agreement aligns with the EU’s Clean Industrial Deal, which aims to increase the deployment of net-zero technologies and boost the competitiveness of industries across the EU.

    Under the renewed agreement, EIB Advisory will provide PDA to up to 250 projects between 2025 to 2028, offering broader sectoral coverage and a smooth application process. This builds on the initial Innovation Fund PDA programme, which supported 62 innovative projects – 16 of which have already secured Innovation Fund grants, seven more have received funding from national sources or other programmes; and one has been designated an EU project of common interest.

    With the expanded scope for broader coverage, the Commission has increased the budget available for EIB Advisory and its new PDA phase from €24 million to €90 million. This will further accelerate the deployment of cutting-edge decarbonisation technologies across Europe:

    • New sectors such as net-zero and low-carbon mobility including maritime, rail and road transport, and buildings have been added to the mandate following the changes to the Emission Trading System (EU ETS) which included these sectors in the Innovation Fund project scope.
    • New Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) have been added to help achieve geographical and sectoral balance and to promote small–scale projects as well as support immature projects.

    The PDA contributes directly to the EIB’s strategic goals in climate action and innovation, reinforcing the shared commitment to support the development of high-impact projects that will help the EU meet its climate neutrality target and foster the growth of a sustainable and clean industrial base.

    EIB Advisory services will be more easily accessible as projects can receive PDA through direct requests (‘open PDA’), in addition to the standard support mechanisms linked to Innovation Fund calls. This flexibility enhances the accessibility of the programme and allows for faster and more tailored support to promising innovative clean tech and industrial decarbonisation projects.

    Under the open PDA, promoters will be able to contact the EIB advisory services directly to receive advice. EIB Advisory will carry out an assessment to identify the eligible projects’ needs and the potential of the PDA to address these, substantially increase the maturity of the project and with it the chances of success in relevant Innovation Fund calls. PDA will be awarded on a ‘first-come-first-served’ basis following this assessment.

    For more information

    EIB Innovation Fund Project Development Assistance website

    Commissioner Hoekstra said:

    “Through the Project Development Assistance from the Innovation Fund the EIB is providing further technical and financial help for promising decarbonisation projects. We lay the foundations of the innovative and competitive industrial base of tomorrow. This proves the EU’s long-term commitment to industrial decarbonisation and innovation. We are confident that the EIB with this renewed agreement will continue delivering a successful tailor-made support to Innovation Fund projects.”

    Christoph Kuhn, EIB Deputy Director General Projects Department said:  
    “With the renewed PDA agreement, EIB Advisory is not only building on past success. It’s setting a new standard for how Europe can support its most innovative and transformative clean technologies.”

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: EU Fact Sheets – Financing the Trans-European Networks – 02-06-2025

    Source: European Parliament

    The Trans-European Networks (TENs) are jointly funded by the European Union and the Member States. Financial support from the EU serves as a catalyst, with the Member States providing the bulk of the financing. The financing of the TENs can be complemented by Structural Fund assistance, aid from the European Investment Bank (EIB) or contributions from the private sector. A major reform was introduced across the TENs with the establishment of the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) in 2013, renewed in 2021.

    MIL OSI Europe News