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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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Credit default swap-bond basis have tightened, particularly for Italian corporates, after the European Central Bank unveiled its bond buying plan on Sept. 6, according to a Markit report.
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The Australian government has narrowed its definition of a derivative transaction contained within its new over-the-counter derivative regulatory framework, according to lawyers.
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Clearinghouses should cap to the amount members will have to contribute to replenish a default fund in the case of a failure, Deutsche Bank’s systemic risk management director Robert Lee said on the 2012 International Swaps and Derivatives Association North America Conference in New York last week.
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Hugo Ohta, an fx option trader at HSBC in London, and Philippe Zebouni, an fx option trader in Hong Kong, have both left the firm.
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The 8% of initial margin futures commission merchants will have to pay into clearinghouse default funds may be too high for some to afford. This will disincentivize market participants from offering clearing services, according to Robert Lee, director of systemic risk management at Deutsche Bank.
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Activity was strong in Asia Pacific last week. UBS is set to lose Mukesh Dave, managing director and co-head of emerging markets Asia macro trading in Singapore, while HSBC nabbed David Streatfield, director in synthetic equity sales at Deutsche Bank in Hong Kong, as director on its delta 1 finance sales desk.