© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX. Part of the Delinian group. All rights reserved.

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement | Event Participant Terms & Conditions | Cookies

Regulation

Top Section/Ad

Top Section/Ad

Most recent


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
More articles/Ad

More articles/Ad

More articles

  • The Fixed Income, Currencies and Commodities Market Standards Board (FMSB) has issued its draft guidelines for hedging new bond issues, to help deal with what the board describes as ‘conduct risks’. These include new issue hedging, moving the reference rate for the new bond; picking the reference rate in an unfair manner; and leaking out material non-public information through hedging activity.
  • The European Commission officially announced on Tuesday that it will withdraw its “proposal for a regulation on structural measures improving the resilience of EU credit conditions”, also known as “Banking Structural Reform”.
  • While China has presented Panda bonds as a key pillar of renminbi internationalisation, the market has long been dominated by Chinese red chip companies raising cash for their onshore operations. Regulators are now looking to change that by bringing more sovereign issuers into the market, experts told GlobalRMB.
  • Nobody really believes that €126bn of debt issued under English law will stop counting towards the minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL) as soon as the UK leaves the EU. So why should European authorities pretend that it’s a risk?
  • The investigative arm of the US Congress has told US regulators that the leveraged lending guidelines should be open to review. But this is nothing new — borrowers have been acting as if they are open to interpretation for some time.
  • The Banque de France has set out its own criteria for the linguistics of the Basel reforms — if only reaching an agreement was as easy.