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The Americas derivatives community came together in New York to recognise and celebrate outstanding achievements across the industry
The derivatives market gathered in London on Thursday night to celebrate its leading players
SSA
Internal restrictions mean SSAs issue fewer CMS-linked notes
SSA
JP Morgan and Dutch pension fund PGGM transacted derivatives margin trade
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  • Options market participants have demanded higher premiums to bear exposure to volatility in the British pound after talks in Brussels failed to produce a decisive deal to help UK prime minister David Cameron win the upcoming referendum.
  • The extraordinary versatility of convertible bonds — but also the market’s unpredictability — were highlighted on Thursday when Vodafone launched an unprecedented £2.88bn bond designed to achieve the near impossible: debt-like funding that counts as equity but is not dilutive to shareholders, writes Jon Hay.
  • JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley, bookrunners of Vodafone’s unprecedented £2.88bn mandatory convertible bond, have just gone out with a message saying the book for the deal is covered. The book will close at 7.45pm London time.
  • Regulators in the US are close to proposing rules that would require banks to lock in derivatives counterparties in other countries to US resolution regimes and give up their termination rights.
  • Singapore Exchange (SGX) is looking to make changes to rules governing futures trading on the exchange, as well as clearing derivatives and a number of other contract specifications.
  • The shrinking of balance sheets has become a common theme in recent years, particularly in the financial sector. Investors are punishing banks that are either unwilling or unable to implement a more conservative financial strategy.