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An accurate picture of liquidity could help London compete for listings
Creating unified trading data feeds is proving much harder — and more controversial — than foreseen
Little green men could be closer than they appear
Scrutiny of regulatory proposals by those without securitization expertise is a feature, not a bug
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Banks active in capital markets outside the European Union are using their exemption from the bloc’s onerous market abuse rules as a selling point to attract issuers, with the Swiss francs, Canadian dollars, and yen markets in particular focus.
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The updated Market Abuse Regulation (MAR) has been in effect for 18 months, but its force in the markets is due to burn brighter as regulators take hold of the data deluge generated by MiFID next year. And fixed income will be in focus for the first time.
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Repo traders convened this week in Brussels to rethink how to fix the plumbing of financial markets and mulled using other forms of collateral in the market.
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The Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) is set to face more pressure to diverge from the Solvency II framework after the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) recommended no change to risk margin rules.
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The European Commission has published a consultation on how European banks ought to recognise their non-performing loans (NPLs), weighing in on a bitter debate between the European Central Bank and certain members of the European Parliament — and coming down broadly on the ECB’s side.
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The hubbub over China’s five-yearly Party Congress is now behind us and the country’s regulators are ready to get back to business. In that vein, unusually forceful comments from Zhou Xiaochuan, outgoing governor of the People's Bank of China, on the urgency of deleveraging are more than welcome.