Central Bank of Iceland
Gudmundsson confident of Icesave deal despite country’s ‘no’ vote
Icelandic central bank governor Már Gudmundsson says a resolution will be reached with British and Dutch governments soon despite massive wave of public opposition to the plan
Iceland can afford to repay UK and Holland: MPC member
Icelandic rate-setter says country neither too small nor weak to make Icesave repayments, but criticises “ungenerous” deal given by British and Dutch governments
Iceland’s government knew banks were in trouble: Wellink
Dutch central bank president Nout Wellink says his Icelandic counterparts had informed the government that the country’s banking sector was in trouble
Iceland’s Gudmundsson: EU legislation guilty
Central Bank of Iceland’s Már Gudmundsson says the risks in cross-border banking were underestimated
Iceland cuts by 50 bp as króna stands ground
Unexpected reduction leaves borrowing costs at 9.5%, central bank notes Icesave debacle failed to impact króna
Iceland -- Financial Stability Report 2009
Central bank's report shows a lack of international support for rescuing systemically important institutions
Iceland’s president vetoes $5.5 billion repayment
Decision underlines uncertainty caused by cross-border banking collapse; sparks rating-agency downgrade
Rate decisions this week
Korea, New Zealand hold but indicate tightening soon to come. Bank of England and Bank of Canada maintain policy stance, along with Peru and Brazil as Denmark and Iceland cut
Iceland cuts on further signs of stability
Central Bank of Iceland continues with “gradual” easing as currency stabilises
Rate decisions this week
The majority of central banks that reviewed rates this week made no change, pointing to the need for a sustainable recovery
Iceland cuts rates on krona strength
The Central Bank of Iceland shears rates and hints at further reductions as the krona regains stability
Iceland begins dismantling capital controls
Central Bank of Iceland takes first step towards capital-account liberalisation
Iceland cuts overnight rate, looks ahead to removing capital controls
Icelandic Monetary Policy Committee votes to cut only overnight lending rate, cites “encouraging signs”
Iceland names new chief economist
Thórarinn Pétursson to head economics division at the Central Bank of Iceland
Gudmundsson on Iceland’s future
New governor Már Gudmundsson says cross-border banking in Iceland should largely be banned until system is made safer by euro membership
Gudmundsson on Iceland’s collapse and recovery
Már Gudmundsson, the governor of the Central Bank of Iceland, discusses the authority’s rebuilding efforts and whether euro membership is right for them
Central Bank of Iceland – Monetary Bulletin 2009/3
Central Bank of Iceland says liberalisation of capital flows will happen by the beginning of November
Denmark cuts to halt krone rise
National Bank of Denmark lowers lending rate by a tenth of a percentage point. Iceland holds to promote appreciation
Iceland's losses soar on back of writedowns
The Central Bank of Iceland made a Ikr8.63 billion ($69m) loss in 2008 after it wrote off Ikr75 billion ($607m) in collateral loans following the collapse of the country's banking sector.
Iceland dismisses IMF advice and cuts
The Central Bank of Iceland's rate-setting board cut its key rate by a percentage point on Thursday despite the International Monetary Fund (IMF) last week supporting a "firm" monetary stance.
Iceland MPC member: too many men led to bad banks
A member of the Central Bank of Iceland's recently-founded Monetary Policy Committee has said that an overabundance of "male bankers high on testosterone" taking "too much risk" was one of the reasons why financial professionals behaved so badly in the…
Iceland cuts by 250bp, eases capital controls
The Central Bank of Iceland's Monetary Policy Committee chopped 250 basis points off its benchmark policy rate on Thursday. The cut, which leaves the rates at 13%, comes as the central bank agreed to relax some capital controls.
Central Bank of Iceland - Monetary Bulletin
In view of the uncertainty related to the global financial crisis, the Central Bank of Iceland's latest Monetary Bulletin has noted that capital controls must be removed cautiously.