- G-20 officials say currencies reflect economic trends not war (Bloomberg)
- G20 plan for investment targets runs into stiff opposition (Reuters)
- SNB will be active in FX market if needed – Jordan (Reuters)
- Carney says U.K. is just starting to see pickup in wage growth (Bloomberg)
- BOJ’s Morimoto says Japan won’t return to deflation despite oil rout (Reuters)
- Plosser says Fed does not fully understand low U.S. yields: Fox (Reuters)
- Turkish lira falls to record as Erdogan attacks monetary policy (Bloomberg)
- PBOC sees shakeup at the top as three of four deputies to leave (Bloomberg)
- Central banks move to drive down currencies, yielding domino effect (WSJ)
- Speculation against Denmark’s central bank proving relentless (Bloomberg)
- South Korea says to continue with easy monetary, fiscal policy (Reuters)
- Bank of England set to hint at an earlier rise in interest rates (City A.M.)
- Global forex rules update warns banks on “last look” practice (Reuters)
- Volcker invoked by Nabiullina to fight inflation menacing Russia (Bloomberg)
- Russian inflation for 2015 may exceed 15%, then drop–central bank head (Sputnik)
- BSP likely to keep rates steady – ING Bank (Manila Standard)
- Rand Paul attacks Fed, calls for audit of central bank (WSJ)
- Belka moves toward currency wars amid Polish rates debate (Bloomberg)
- Bank of Italy boosts GDP growth estimates on ECB measures (Bloomberg)
- Honduras central bank to cut interest rate to 6.75 pct (Reuters)
- Albania elects new central bank governor (AP)
- Ukraine forex market in confusion after bank removes official peg (Reuters)
- Cape Verdean central bank wants more lending to the economy (Macauhub)