When global regulators started talking to some of the world's largest investment banks a couple of years ago about whether they should tighten the rules governing banks' trading books, they faced a hostile reaction.
Back then, credit markets were booming and the banks were recording fat profits. Financiers felt confident enough to fight suggestions that policymakers should impose new controls on their trading activities. "They were quite angry," admits one senior western central banker with a chuckle.



