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Bank’s €1bn transaction is most granular so far and found new buyers
Market participants gathering in Stavanger will focus on market growth
Europe’s self-proclaimed investment banking champions are playing to their strengths, but remain far behind US peers
After quitting M&A and equity capital markets in Europe and the US last year, HSBC is striving to maintain global relevance — and London and New York still have a role to play
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  • There has been a surge in investor interest to structure cheap VIX-based tail risk trades to hedge against a sharp rise in volatility.
  • The Bank of England's Financial Policy Committee released its updated guidance on leverage ratio requirements on Friday afternoon. The new ratios look positive for the UK's largest lenders, being considerably less demanding than the worst case scenarios and with all but one of the country's global banks already meeting their requirements.
  • As the European Central Bank prepares to take over supervision of Europe's biggest banks, the rigorous approach it adopted in the Asset Quality Review, unearthing €136bn of non-performing loans that had been miscategorised, will become the norm, not the exception.
  • James Cawley, founder and ex-CEO of Javelin Capital Markets in New York, has joined BGC Partners as CEO of its swap execution facility, also based in New York.
  • ‘Credible’ is the word many are using to describe the European Central Bank’s Asset Quality Review and the European Banking Authority’s stress tests, writes Graham Bippart.
  • US stock exchanges have come under fire for providing preferential treatment to high frequency trading firms in recent years years as scores of investors learned their trades could be undercut by computerised algorithms. SEC whistleblower Haim Bodek lifts the lid on the SEC's recent approval of new order types at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).