Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
JP Morgan and Dutch pension fund PGGM transacted derivatives margin trade
◆ Chinese bank treasury shift from USTs to dollar callables considered ◆ Some European SSAs face cross-currency limitations ◆ Previous market staple 'almost non-existent'
Bank intermediaries eye resurgence in profitable trades
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
JP Morgan’s head of CEEMEA credit trading has left his job, according to market sources.
-
Concerns that a ‘hard Brexit’ will lay waste to the pound and ratchet up UK inflation are furnishing a wave of innovation in structured products, as market participants look for more sophisticated ways to play a breakdown in previously dominant correlations between different asset classes, writes Dan Alderson.
-
There is no shortage of factors that have troubled market participants this year: Brexit; US monetary policy direction; fragility in European banks; oil prices. All of these issues, and others, have caused credit spreads to widen at various intervals in 2016.
-
Eurex and CME Group both lined up new futures contracts this week as the market assessed a generational shift from bilateral derivatives towards cleared, exchange traded products.
-
The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation has named the replacement for a departing senior official from its solutions and sales business.
-
CME Group is set to introduce six currency futures on its European exchange, taking the number of crosses it has available to 36.