Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
The untested youth of the blockchain market, as well as the lack of a regulatory framework, could put off widespread adoption
Supporters claim smart derivative contracts remove need for central counterparties
◆ Premium paid ◆ More market-makers required ◆ Buy-and-hold investors prevent scalability
◆ Issuance abounds despite Iran-Israel escalation ◆ European securitization regulatory proposals unveiled ◆ A digital first for sovereign bonds
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
Firms must be proactive to protect data from trawlers, and deliver it in a useful format
-
Axa invested in half of the French bank’s €10m issuance, but the true benefits of smart contracts in the bond markets are some way off
-
A lack of secondary post trade opportunities is causing a lag in development of the nascent technology, but the UK sandbox might prove the catalyst
-
More initiatives to launch soon as almost half of market says it has already used chatbots for work
-
With the heavy lifting out the way, the EU and the UK are primed for an acceleration in blockchain-based bond issuance in 2024
-
Bonds will be settled in wholesale CBDC on December 1 as part of Swiss National Bank’s tokenised asset pilot