The Bank of England's Deputy Governor Ramsden has outlined a cautious stance on potential regulatory changes. According to his remarks, dismantling the ring-fencing requirements that separate retail and investment banking operations would represent a significant challenge to the UK's financial stability framework. The ring-fencing rules, implemented following the 2008 financial crisis, have become a cornerstone of the nation's banking supervision architecture. Removing or substantially modifying these protections would require careful consideration of systemic risks and market implications, Ramsden emphasized. This position reflects the central bank's commitment to maintaining robust safeguards within the traditional financial sector.

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LiquidityWizardvip
· 01-17 15:03
Ring-fencing is being tightly protected; the BoE is just afraid of another nightmare like 2008.
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DataOnlookervip
· 01-17 14:49
Protectionism is back again, and we still have to stick to this ring-fencing approach.
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MetaverseMigrantvip
· 01-17 06:17
Ring-fencing is the legacy of 2008. To put it simply, it's because they were scared. Now they want to change it? The BoE clearly chickened out.
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NoStopLossNutvip
· 01-14 16:54
You really need to keep ring-fencing; we haven't even gotten over the lessons from 2008, so why are you thinking of dismantling it? What are you thinking?
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MetaverseLandladyvip
· 01-14 16:53
Ha, the BoE is still stubbornly sticking to ring-fencing, are they scared? --- Basically, they just don't dare to move. The 2008 framework has now become a protective umbrella. --- Your circle is really united, all revolving around retail banking. --- Is Ramsden just providing insurance for big banks? --- Traditional finance, this old-fashioned system, is still holding on stubbornly... --- Risk management, just listen and forget about it. --- Why does it seem like the more cautious they are, the greater the risk?
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ShibaSunglassesvip
· 01-14 16:30
Ring-fencing has been in place for so long, and now you want to move it? That's tough.
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token_therapistvip
· 01-14 16:30
Really? It's the same old rules again, and the banks still want to break free.
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just_here_for_vibesvip
· 01-14 16:26
Ngl Ramsden's rhetoric is still the same old story; ring-fencing indeed protected retail banks, but the real risks had already shifted to shadow banking... They're just guarding an old fortress.
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