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CEB plans to print more structured notes and may launch inaugural Sofr bond in 2026
Japanese firm plucks banker from UBS
The Americas derivatives community came together in New York to recognise and celebrate outstanding achievements across the industry
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A lawsuit involving Lehman Brothers as the counterparty in a synthetic collateralized debt obligation may see another ruling in U.S. courts in the next few weeks.
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Indian moves to create a domestic credit default swap linked to corporate bonds could flounder because of restrictions on seller hedging, according to respondents to a set of Reserve Bank of India draft proposals (DW, 8/11) that closed for comment earlier this month.
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Infighting sparked by Credit Suisse, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan led to the departure of Greg Zerzan, head of global public policy at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association. At the time, ISDA officials called the departure a mutual agreement (DW, 10/12/09). [Zerzan has landed at Koch Industries, where he is director of federal government relations for finance and trading. He is also a senior fellow at the University of Melbourne, where he teaches a course in OTC derivatives policy implication
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--Keith Noyes, regional director of policy for Asia Pacific at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association in Hong Kong, on why sellers of credit default swaps feel that the Indian domestic CDS market may struggle to grow significantly.
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In a joint statement last week, the Chairman of the Commodities and Futures Trading Commission, Gary Gensler and European Commissioner Michel Barnier reaffirmed their determination to co-operate closely in strengthening the global financial system. Based on the European Commission's proposal for regulatory reform of the over-the-counter derivatives market and the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, Gensler expressed confidence that strong and consistent regulation will be brought to both the European and U.S. swaps markets.
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Members of an E.U. wide supervisory task force are looking at the possibility of a legislative change in Europe that would require derivatives traded by retail investors to be accompanied by a key investor information document.