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  • The Financial Stability Board released the final term sheet for its Total Loss Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) proposals on Monday, projecting that compliance with the rules will cost the world’s biggest banks more than €1tr. Big banks in China, which were exempted from TLAC rules in last year's draft plan, have furthest to go.
  • Singapore has received a new batch of initiatives to strengthen cross-border renminbi flows and capital market connectivity with China which will support greater use of the RMB outside the Mainland, says the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in a press release.
  • Products under the umbrella in the Mutual Recognition of Funds scheme (MRF) will not require institution or product level quotas, the Chinese regulator said on November 6. But experts argue the MRF’s rules may limit its appeal among foreign asset managers, in particular those without an established joint venture in the Mainland.
  • Mark Carney, chair of the Financial Stability Board, shrugged off industry accusations that the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is readying a new capital requirement regime, unofficially termed “Basel IV” by industry participants.
  • Nine offshore RMB clearing banks have been given approvals from the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) to participate in China’s onshore foreign exchange derivative sector, marking another step in China's capital market liberalisation China’s capital market.
  • In this round-up, Chinese government sets capital account convertibility goal for 2020, IMF yet to decide on RMB SDR inclusion, Shenzhen Connect unlikely in 2015, and cross-border RMB trade settlement in Hong Kong hits new record.