Michael Lafferty

Michael Lafferty
Michael Lafferty
Born Michael Lafferty
17 July 1950 (1950-07-17) (age 61)
Kilvaloon, Ballaghaderreen, County Roscommon, Ireland
Website
www.lafferty.com

Contents

Early life

Michael Lafferty (born in Kilvaloon, Ballaghaderreen, County Roscommon, Ireland on 17 July 1950) was a Financial Times[1] journalist and is now the Chairman of Lafferty Group[2] and Co-chairman of Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF).[3]

Education

Lafferty was educated at St. Nathy's College in Ballaghadereen, County Roscommon before qualifying as a chartered accountant[4] in 1972 and later becoming a Fellow of Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales.

Career

A former banking correspondent, accounting correspondent and LEX columnist with the Financial Times, Lafferty received the Wincott Foundation’s Young Financial Journalist of the Year award in 1977.[5]

In 1981, he founded Lafferty Group,[6] which has come to occupy a preeminent position in the global financial services industry and received The Queen’s Award for Export Achievement (now known as the Queen's Awards for Enterprise) Queen's Awards for Enterprise in 1988. Lafferty is recognised internationally as an expert in the areas of retail banking, cards, payments and accounting and financial reporting and is often featured in the press worldwide.

He is also heavily involved with the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF),[7] a global organisation and joint venture with his former Financial Times colleague, David Marsh which goes to the root of the challenges confronting the world economy by providing a convenient yet discreet means for high-level financial market dialogue aimed at controlling risks and enhancing prosperity. OMFIF’s activities are crystallised around two essential areas: improving the effectiveness of individual public sector institutions through better asset and liability management; and increasing the cohesiveness of the new supervisory and regulatory architecture for international banks and capital markets after the shocks of 2007-09.


References

External links


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