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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
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Abengoa will come under further scrutiny from ISDA’s Determinations Committee on Friday, only days after the Spanish renewable energy company narrowly avoided triggering a bankruptcy credit event for most credit default swaps.
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The US Securities and Exchange Commission will meet on Friday and is expected to propose tough restrictions on the use of derivatives in funds sold to retail investors.
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Intercontinental Exchange expects to complete its acquisition of Interactive Data Corporation early next week, having received all regulatory approvals.
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European regulators have dealt a blow to credit default swap investors who are seeking legal reparations against banks on charges of collusion, after the European Commission ditched its long-running antitrust investigation of 13 major banks, citing insufficient evidence.
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Abengoa avoided triggering a bankruptcy credit event on Tuesday by only a single word change in legal documentation after ISDA spent more than a week boggling over Spanish laws and its own credit derivative definitions. But as GlobalCapital went to press, the firm looked to be on the brink of triggering a failure to pay credit event instead, having acknowledged it had missed commercial paper repayments. Dan Alderson reports.
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Nasdaq Commodities this week introduced a German Wind Index Futures contract, with EDF Trading and Energi Danmark executing the first trade.