Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Changes to ECB collateral eligibility requirement could lead to more blockchain-based covered bonds, Moody's suggests
Wells Fargo, JP Morgan and Citi are among the top US bank buyers of CLOs
Former US undersecretary for international trade expects more stockpiling
PRA and FCA go much further than EU in loosening rules
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
The land grab for financial supremacy in Europe is under way. After the UK voted to leave the EU last week, rival financial centres are lining up to snatch business form London, and one of the early battlegrounds is clearing euro-denominated business. Dan Alderson reports.
-
Clearing looks set to be one the first areas of London’s dominance as a financial centre to be challenged, following last week’s vote to leave the European Union, with uncertainty over the future of euro business putting pressure on central counterparties based in the UK to relocate their clearing operations elsewhere.
-
The London Stock Exchange (LSE) could be closing in on an equity trading link for UK-listed depositary receipts by Chinese firms that would see the participation of Euroclear and LCH.Clearnet, GlobalRMB has learned.
-
Capital Markets Union, one of the European Commission's most lauded initiatives, is likely to be one of the early casualties of the UK's decision to exit the European Union.
-
There are those who believe a vote for the UK to leave the European Union represents a chance to peel back onerous regulations on business and finance. Those people are in for an unpleasant surprise.
-
HSBC and Bank of China were among the first banks to act as market makers for the newly established direct trading of the Korean won and the RMB this week, just as a first batch of offshore-based banks got approval from Chinese authorities to access the onshore currency markets.