Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Joanna Penn"


3 mentions found


LONDON, June 26 (Reuters) - Companies will face more pressure to disclose how climate change affects their business under a new set of G20-backed global rules aimed at helping regulators crack down on greenwashing. The norms published on Monday have been written by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) as trillions of dollars flow into investments that tout their environmental, social and governance credentials. David Harris, head of sustainable finance strategic initiatives at London Stock Exchange Group, said the new norms bring more rigour to sustainability reporting, more aligned with financial reporting. Under the ISSB rules, companies would need to disclosure material emissions, with checks by external auditors. The European Union finalises its own disclosure rules next month and it and the ISSB have sought to make each other's norms "interoperable" to avoid duplication for global companies.
Persons: Emmanuel Faber, Faber, Joanna Penn, Jean, Paul Servais, David Harris, Harris, haven't, Huw Jones, Alexander Smith, Robert Birsel Organizations: International Sustainability, Reuters, Force, London Stock Exchange Group, Union, Thomson Locations: Canada, Britain, Japan, Singapore, Nigeria, Chile, Malaysia, Brazil, Egypt, Kenya, South Africa
Britain's EU exit largely severed its financial sector's previously unfettered access to the bloc, raising concerns over London's role as a global financial centre. As part of Brexit terms, the EU agreed to formalise cooperation between financial watchdogs. The MoU will create a joint EU-UK Financial Regulatory Forum, similar to one the EU already has with the United States. Joanna Penn, treasury minister in the UK parliament's upper house, welcomed the "positive move" given how EU and UK financial markets are deeply interconnected. The EU has granted 'equivalence' or EU market access to derivatives clearing houses in London until the end of June 2025.
Sabatin said writing as many posts as possible gives you the best chance at making more money. If you'd asked me if I'd be making money from writing my thoughts and opinions online, I would've laughed in your face. "Write or don't eat"I kept a sticky note on my computer with the words "write or don't eat" written on it. Trust me, I thought it was at first too, but the two cents I made my first month of writing online humbled me. It took me nearly two years to make $5,000, and that was from hustling daily and having multiple writing income streams.
Total: 3