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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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  • Bank of America Merrill Lynch Investors named Bank of America Merrill Lynch as a leader in fx citing strength in pricing across a variety of vanilla products. They also lauded the expansion of its electronic platforms over the past 12 months. The firm rolled out a platform which can auto-quote swaps of Fenics’ request-for-quote system, one of only three firms currently capable of doing so. The firm was also praised for its eFX offering, which last year launched a new capability for institutional and corporate clients to trade fx options electronically. The team is run by Tom Gillie, global head of fx options.
  • Citigroup The firm has moved up the ranks in equity derivatives globally, partly as a result of senior level hires over the last 12 months who’ve brought more complex derivative product knowledge to the business. One noteworthy development has been its innovation in providing products and services to investors which allow them to take advantage of the arbitrage between the roll of the VXX and the VIX. Simon Yates in the U.S., Rachel Lord in Europe and P.J. Andersson in Asia, head up equity derivatives in their respective regions. Notable hires over the last 12 months include Frederic Valmorin and Rory Hill in equity derivatives trading in London, and Brennan Warble as head of equity sales trading in New York.
  • Barclays Capital Barclays Capital’s credit derivative business was cited by investors as a constant provider of liquidity in the market and as one of the market share giants. Led by Eric Felder, head of global credit trading, the dealer has stood out for leading innovation in the credit derivatives market. BarCap was the first dealer to clear an over-the-counter credit derivative for a European asset manager, Robeco. The firm also began making markets on General Motors credit default swaps, despite the fact there were no outstanding GM bonds to reference after the company emerged from bankruptcy. In December, the firm began sending out initial price runs on the CDS, which quickly became a liquid two-way market.
  • The editors of Derivatives Week/Derivatives Intelligence have selected 42 nominees across nine categories for its 2011 Global Derivatives Awards.
  • The Securities and Exchange Board of India has clarified a reporting of offshore derivative instruments and participatory notes for foreign institutional investors and extended the compliance deadline from Aug. 7 to Oct. 7.
  • Wing Hang Bank has launched an equity-linked deposit program in Hong Kong, the first structured retail platform to launch since new laws took effect May 13.