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Bank intermediaries eye resurgence in profitable trades
◆ UK rule change cheers covered bonds... ◆ ... as it shelves Taxonomy plans amid wider transition shift ◆ Digital markets: what makes a swap smart
Supporters claim smart derivative contracts remove need for central counterparties
◆ Second phase could be novation of ESM's €74bn existing portfolio ◆ Dealers eye Eurex-LCH CCP basis ◆ Eurex reports 'significant onboarding' from investors ahead of Emir deadline
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The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) was set to back a significant revision of its cross-border mandate on Thursday, pulling back from overseeing non-US swap transactions.
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The European Commission is looking to change its rules on research unbundling and other aspects of MiFID II to ease the post-coronavirus recovery in the EU. It is also set to present tweaks to rules on securitization and prospectuses.
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Commodity derivatives trades are primed for a fillip from European regulators as the European Commission plans to relax position limits on their trading.
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European high grade non-financial credit spreads dipped to their lowest levels in around five months this week, though corporate bond bankers said it is the lack of primary bond market activity rather than the breakthrough in EU fiscal stimulus that has ground spreads tighter.
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Central counterparty clearing houses (CCPs) could face increased attention and greater regulation after coming through the Covid-19 crisis in good shape, Fitch Ratings analysts said this week.
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Derivatives stand to play a crucial role in the European Union’s green deal and transition to a low carbon economy, according to a study by the European Capital Markets Institute that was released on Thursday.