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Japanese firm plucks banker from UBS
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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The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s one-month delay for registered swap execution facilities from any enforcement under the SEF rules with regard to market participants who trade on such SEFs isn’t long enough for the industry.
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As inevitably as a journalist bumping up against a deadline, the US Congress has run out of time to fund the government. In two weeks the US will default, unless some of the most pig-headed people in the Western world change their minds. But is there panic in the markets? No it’s business as usual. After all, what else can investors do?
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The Chicago Board Options Exchange has developed the CBOE S&P 500 Short-Term Volatility Index, which is calculated using S&P 500 options that expire every Friday.
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With dollar remittances pouring into the country from its citizens working overseas, the Philippines has been able to use global peso bonds to reduce its cost of borrowing. The synthetic deals have also given international investors an attractive way to play a well performing currency, although for the moment the sovereign looks unlikely to be followed by many corporates. Adrian Murdoch reports.
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With the covered bonds becoming increasingly heterogeneous, investors and other key market players met in August to discuss the market’s evolution.
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The outlook for Turkish Eurolira trades, which had been expected to be bright until investors took fright at the unrest in the streets earlier this year, now seems more challenging. In Russia, meanwhile, the hope is that the recent change to make government bonds Euroclearable can pave the way for easier issuance by corporates, writes Philip Moore.