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Japanese firm plucks banker from UBS
The Americas derivatives community came together in New York to recognise and celebrate outstanding achievements across the industry
The derivatives market gathered in London on Thursday night to celebrate its leading players
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The U.K. Financial Services Authority says more than 90% of the interest rate swaps sold by big banks to small businesses did not comply with at least one or more regulatory requirements.
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Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and the Royal Bank of Scotland may pay up to GBP5 billion (USD7.94 billion) to compensate small businesses that claim losses from interest-rate swaps mis-sold to them by the banks, according to analysts.
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The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission will focus on the shift from swaps to futures as exchanges have set “extremely low threshold sizes for block trades in the futures contracts,” according to Scott O’Malia, a Republican member of the CFTC in a speech.
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Michel Barnier, the European Union’s commissioner of internal markers, has written a letter to European lawmakers warning them not to vote down proposed derivatives regulations.
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The corporate and investment banking unit of Apsa Bank has become the first local South African bank to clear derivatives through a central clearing counterparty, LCH. Clearnet.
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The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce has sold USD3.25 million for an 18-month structured note linked to the S&P 500, its first such offering in the U.S. in nearly nine years.