Programme Friday 26th March 2010: Congress
8.30 Registration - Coffee and tea
09.00 Opening and welcome - Risk Management@360 degrees
Conny Dorrestijn - Conference Chair and Senior Editor Banking & Finance
09.15 Living with risk - 360 degrees risk management in a global perspective
Why we should take another step back to learn from the crisis and its impact on the entire economy, what lessons bankers and regulators should learn in going forward.
Dr. Daniel Thorniley - Senior Vice President Economist Group
10.00 The world we live in - Defining and measuring systemic risk
‘The old model did not work’ seems to be the common consensus. It endangered our institutions, our banks and our entire economy. A new pan-European directive will aim to pinpoint common components of systemic risk, detect, assess and formulate accurate indicators. Where do we stand, what does it mean for the industry?
Prof. Dr. Sylvester C.W. Eijffinger - President of the Tilburg University Society & Professor of Financial Economics, Tilburg University and Academic Member ‘Adviescommissie Toekomst Banken (Commissie Maas)’
10.30 Coffee break
11.00 Risk or the premise of a sustainable value
What is the risk management that your institution deserves, how to adapt your organisation concretely....
Rudy Hoskens - Partner PricewaterhouseCoopers, Philippe Poulain - Risk Assurance Services
11.30 Risk Management – the human factor
Financial ethics – people, the greatest risk of all; how integrity plays a major role, how to adapt and change our behaviour across the board.
George Möller - former CEO Robeco - Founder Financial Ethics Degree Course University of Groningen and Chairman Supervisory Committee AFM. Mr. Möller speaks in a personal capacity
12.00 - 13.30 Networking Lunch
13.30 Workshops/Client Case Studies round 1
14.15 Workshops/Client Case Studies round 2
15.00 Tea break
15.20 Banana Skins
On the first day of February this year, the CSFI launched its most recent version of a longstanding recurring piece of research on the major threats and risks faced by financial institutions: The Banana Skins Report 2010. Over 450 firms and regulators participated this year, with some stunning new evidence. Mr. Hilton will present both the outcome of the 2010 study and give you an analysis of remarkable developments over time.
Andrew Hilton - Director, Centre for Studies for Financial Innovation (CSFI)
16.00 Panel debate - Theme: "Macro Prudential Supervision"
In this exciting debate with national and international regulators, supervisors and market experts, we focus on the need for and ways of organising macro prudential supervision.
Prof. Dr. Sylvester C.W. Eijffinger
Prof. Dr. Peter Praet, Director National Bank of Belgium
George Möller
Dr. Andrew Hilton
16.45 Networking drinks