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CEB plans to print more structured notes and may launch inaugural Sofr bond in 2026
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New contracts cannot yet be traded in US
The Americas derivatives community came together in New York to recognise and celebrate outstanding achievements across the industry
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  • The appeal of populist, often nativist, agenda to electorates disgruntled with economic stagnation and rapid demographic change has been underestimated in recent years — not least by bond markets.
  • Five trade bodies began lobbying efforts on initial margin phase-in in earnest this week, warning global regulators of severe consequences if incoming rules are not amended.
  • The switch from Libor to other spread benchmarks has finally arrived in the loan markets, with at least one UK treasurer saying that they will no longer be issuing debt linked to the scandal hit pricing standard. Michael Turner reports.
  • Karel Lannoo, the chief executive of the Centre for European Policy Studies, indicated that he was optimistic about the prospects of an equivalency agreement on the oversight of clearing houses between the United Kingdom and EU 27 after Brexit.
  • JP Morgan has begun an agency clearing service for Australian and New Zealand dollar denominated over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives, becoming the first OTC clearing participant on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) to do so.
  • The chair of the influential UK Treasury select committee, Nicky Morgan, told a conference of derivatives bankers, lawyers and regulators, that despite the threat of “serious problems” for cross-border derivatives contracts in a Brexit no-deal scenario, she was “reasonably confident that a no deal scenario will not cause the whole sector to fall over”.