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New contracts cannot yet be traded in US
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
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  • New futures on a 10 year US Treasury Note Volatility Index, which allow investors to hedge interest rate volatility with a single product for the first time, are gaining traction. As the US is ending quantitative easing, market participants are tipping volumes to surge in the first quarter of 2015 as investors look to hedge their fears over looming rate hikes. Beth Shah reports.
  • Harmonisation and crossborder issues are key concerns for the International Swaps and Derivatives Association as markets enter 2015. As Scott O’Malia, CEO of ISDA and former commissioner at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, tells Beth Shah, regulators need to ensure that crossborder oversight is based on risk and not location.
  • Concern is growing over the European Securities and Markets Authority’s process of establishing definitions and thresholds in the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive – a critical part of which is the process for determining whether an instrument is liquid. If thresholds are calculated incorrectly, market makers may be less willing to provide liquidity to clients, prompting concerns that other market participants may use public data to trade against them, according to the International Swaps and Derivatives Association.
  • Synthetic collateralised debt obligations, one of the financial products synonymous with the global crisis, are set to accelerate their recent tentative comeback. Real money investors are joining hedge funds in chasing the controversial instruments’ double-digit yields, write Will Caiger-Smith and Beth Shah.
  • The Intercontinental Exchange has added five new currency contracts to its suite of FX contracts, highlighting investor demand for more access to currency risk management and hedging strategies via emerging market currencies.
  • Real money investors, and other investors with a long cash portfolio, have been buying volatility on European credit default swap indices.