How are Standard Setting Bodies changing Banking for good? The view from Standard Setting Bodies

  • 13 February 2024
  • Webcast | Regulation & Compliance | Professionalism and Ethics
  How are Standard Setting Bodies changing Banking for good? The view from Standard Setting Bodies

How are Standard Setting Bodies changing Banking for good? The view from Standard Setting Bodies

In July 2023, the Institute in partnership with Starling Insights, a knowledge-sharing platform dedicated to bringing new solutions to the management of nonfinancial risks, compiled a retrospective white paper focusing on culture and conduct reform efforts over the past decade.

We invited a small group of global leaders to contribute remarks, and among those who contributed were Baroness Kramer (PCBS member), Stuart Mackintosh (G30 director), Peter Routledge (Canada’s Superintendent of Financial Institutions), Clare Bolingford (New Zealand’s Financial Markets Authority), and several others.

This webcast series follows on from that publication and we will be inviting some of those authors, and other leading experts, to consider in more detail their views and practical solutions to banking sector culture and conduct reform.   

This joint series of webcasts, hosted by the Chartered Banker Institute in partnership with Starling Insights, will bring together policymakers, regulators, standard-setting bodies, senior banking professionals, renowned academics, and other leaders to discuss how conduct and culture risks are managed and supervised across different jurisdictions. A key theme will explore potential solutions that can be deployed globally, in a consistent and data-driven manner that permits for effective horizontal peer review. Please see here to view Episode 1.

Episode 2 is hosted by Joanne Murphy (COO, Chartered Banker Institute)Featuring:  Myles McGuinness (CEO, Financial Markets Standards Board), Stephen Scott (Founder & CEO, Starling Trust Sciences), Simon Thompson (CEO, Chartered Banker Institute and Member, Global Banking Education Standards Board), and Martin Moloney (Secretary General, IOSCO).