The Thursday Newspaper round up.

Standard Chartered was attacked by one of the top lawyers in the City last night for agreeing a quick settlement of the money-laundering allegations that threatened to destroy the bank and warned that it could be forced to pay out billions more before it can properly settle the scandal. City observers with experience of Wall Street say the deal may ramp up the appetite of the other watchdogs for greater amounts of blood, with the more senior regulators unlikely to settle for less than Standard Chartered paid to the DFS over allegations that it violated US laws in $250bn worth of trades with Iran. Although the bank’s shares jumped on investor relief that the issue may be resolved quickly, experienced City lawyers warn otherwise. The Independent

A majority stake in world’s largest photography and video agency has been sold for $3.3 billion to the Carlyle Group. Getty Images, which supplies images to media companies and advertising groups, said that the sale would enable it to develop its operations and invest in new technologies, such as 3-D pictures. The purchase price is significantly lower than the $4 billion that the previous private equity owner, Hellman & Friedman, is said to have been seeking. However, sources familiar with the deal said that the buyout firm had managed to double its investment in the four years since it acquired Getty. The Times

A senior Bank of England policymaker said quantitative easing was a better way of kickstarting the economy than further interest rate cuts. On a visit to Northern Ireland, monetary policy committee (MPC) member Paul Fisher told the Belfast Telegraph: “If we thought [rate cuts] would add more stimulus we would do it but asset purchase through quantitative easing is a more powerful way of aiding the economy … but we’re keeping that under review.” His comments came as minutes of the MPC’s last meeting a fortnight ago showed that it had voted unanimously to keep its interest rate at 0.5% and its quantitative easing (QE) programme unchanged at £375m. Despite the unanimous vote on QE, the minutes point to a continued split on the committee. The Guardian

George Osborne has been urged to abandon his austerity plans and boost infrastructure spending to rescue the economy by a group of top economists who backed his deficit cutting plans just two years ago. The revolt by the same experts whose support for the Tory economic strategy was a pivotal moment in the pre-election debate in 2010 will be acutely embarrassing for the Chancellor. He is already facing calls from institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and employers body the CBI to take action on growth in the wake of the double-dip recession. The Telegraph

Brazil’s president Dilma Rousseff has launched a R$133bn ($65.6bn) stimulus package to spur investment in the country’s creaking infrastructure and shore up ailing investor confidence in the world’s second-largest emerging market economy. In the first of what are expected to be a series of announcements in the coming weeks, Ms Rousseff said the government would sell concessions in nine highways and 12 railways before moving onto other areas of infrastructure. FInancial Times

Reed Elsevier, the Anglo-Dutch legal and scientific publisher, has picked Duncan Palmer, chief financial officer of Owens Corning, to replace its long-serving finance director, Mark Armour, according to people familiar with the decision. Under pressure from investors over lacklustre growth, Reed announced last October that Mr Armour would step down at the end of this year. It is set to announce on Thursday that Mr Palmer will join the company as chief financial officer designate this month and take over from Mr Armour in November. Financial Times

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