Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Eight conditions banks must satisfy to issue a covered deal have been proposed by Israel's regulator
The interventionist approach of the US government in forcing Anthropic to pull cutting edge model should worry Europeans
◆ What now for European Secured Notes ater long-awaited debut? ◆ The mood in European securitization amid MFS fallout and reg reform ◆ Digitalisation of bond market is up to the regulators
Markets are looking to the authorities to simplify blockchain issues, but they may not have the purest motives
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
The European Commission has given 12 EU member states 60 days to implement the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) into their national laws or face legal action.
-
The UK government has left stakeholders completely in the dark over its plans for financial services after Brexit leading to calls from some EU politicians that the City try to bypass the stalled government talks and offer a payment for access to the bloc.
-
China’s banking regulator prioritises deleveraging of financial institutions and individuals, the Chinese government tightens grip on overseas investment with new guidelines, and regulators encourage financing for the maritime industry in an effort to promote the Belt and Road Initiative.
-
The retirement of Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), and the possible appointment of Liu He to the job will signal a shift in priorities for the central bank, according to Zhu Haibin, chief China economist at JP Morgan.
-
While Emmanuel Macron wined and dined 140 business leaders at Versailles with the promise that France was open for business, the French financial regulator announced it would pave the way for anyone in UK financial services to transfer to France in under a month.
-
Two influential derivatives trade bodies have questioned elements of a European Commission proposal that would centralise supervisory powers with pan-European securities watchdog ESMA, arguing that national supervisors have a “strong knowledge of local markets” and that the move seemed “premature”.