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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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Retail got bullish on U.S. equities this year, but that didn't feed through to demand for complex and risky structured products.
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The U.S. market for property derivatives is set to pick up next year, with growth driven by physical property hedgers in the commercial sector and by property-linked notes on the residential side.
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Dear Derivatives Week subscribers: Welcome to our year-end issue, which is packed with highlights from 2009 and outlook for 2010. Don’t miss the following features: -our comparison of all four OTC clearing platforms -our Q&A with the International Swaps and Derivatives Association -our roundups on global regulation, Lehman Brothers and bonuses -our juiciest quotes of the year—including some of the mind-blowing comments regulators made about the OTC market, and -a regulatory outlook Learning Curve submitted by law firm Mayer Brown. Managing Editor, Katy Burne
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Attorneys for American International Group have asked a federal judge in New York to dismiss a lawsuit brought by Brookfield Asset Management.
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A Pennsylvania school board has voted to drop its use of derivatives, even though it hasn’t lost money on them, because at least one of its peers has.
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The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said that U.S. commercial banks reported an 11% rise in trading revenues for the third quarter, specifically USD5.7 billion compared to USD5.2 billion in the second quarter.