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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
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Internal restrictions mean SSAs issue fewer CMS-linked notes
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JP Morgan and Dutch pension fund PGGM transacted derivatives margin trade
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  • New rules requiring market participants to settle fixed income securities transactions in two days, instead of three, are leading some buyside firms to pass on the new responsibilities to their dealers in return for a fee. Settlement deadlines in 28 European countries moved to T+2 on October 6.
  • Asset managers are scrambling to amend swap documents so that they clear derivatives with EU clearing houses before the expiry of a December 15 deadline. If the EU decides not to recognise other countries' clearing houses by that date, or doesn't extend the deadline, then firms that clear trades with non-EU clearing houses will face sky-high capital requirements.
  • Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group has hired a well-known credit structurer to play a senior role in its structured products business
  • CNY swaps have been better bid as the International Monetary Fund's upgraded economic outlook for China has more than offset the post-holiday improvement in liquidity conditions. Hong Kong dollar swaps also picked up a bid as the market responded to the Occupy Central pro-democracy protests, writes Deirdre Yeung of Total Derivatives.
  • Market participants have been trading very short-dated options on the euro against the dollar in a bid to hedge other cash positions that they still have on the currency pair.
  • We remarked last week that volatility had returned to the credit markets, and the spread oscillations this week suggests the trend is set to continue.