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  • Singapore's DBS Bank and local-player Taishin International Bank are preparing to enter the nascent onshore credit derivatives market in Taiwan in the coming months. The market was kick-started at the onset of the year with Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas and Credit Lyonnais receiving the first batch of licenses (DW, 1/26). An official at JPMorgan said he expects the firm to receive the go-ahead in the next two or three months.
  • Andrew Isaacs, interest rate derivatives salesman at Deutsche Bank in New York, has jumped ship to work for Barclays Capital. It could not be determined to whom Isaacs will report. Linda Wynns, spokeswoman at Barclays in New York, did not return calls and Isaacs could not be reached.
  • BNP Paribas has hired Bruno Lebeda, treasurer at Credit Lyonnais in Seoul, for the same role. Officials at Credit Lyonnais said the move leaves the door open for Gin Lee, treasurer at Crédit Agricole Indosuez in Seoul, to head the merged office unchallenged. Lee declined comment.
  • Quincy Evans and Christophe Thomas, convertible arbitrage traders at CDC IXIS North America, have both left the firm. Evans will join hedge fund manager DKR Capital, according to an official familiar with the matter, while it could not be determined whether Thomas has as yet joined a competitor.
  • David Norris, former credit derivatives trader at UBS in Stamford, Conn., is heading to Barclays Capital to take on a similar role. At Barclays Norris will report to Vince Balducci, managing director in risk finance, according Linda Wynns, spokeswoman in New York. Balducci didn't respond to messages. Norris could not be reached.
  • Collateralized debt obligation houses including Bank of America, JPMorgan and Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein are working on creating a new market in options on CDOs. Tight spreads mean many investors are shying away from purchasing CDO tranches but still want exposure to the sector and bankers say options are the answer.
  • The DKK20 billion (GBP1.86 billion) Danish pension fund for lawyers and economists, the Juristernes og Økonomernes Pensionskasse (JØP), increased its synthetic equity exposure by some 3% to around 25% of assets, from the low 20s, by unwinding a short call position on the Standard & Poor's 500. Henrik Frank, cio in Copenhagen, said the pension fund wrote a call at the turn of the year with a strike around 1,000 and bought the option back on June 27. The option was due to mature in December. The S&P opened at 1,007.2 on Wednesday.
  • Major credit derivatives houses are reviewing their back office procedures because of the huge volumes of credit-default swaps needing to be settled on particular dates. Earlier this year the default swap market switched to quarterly roll dates, where trades mature and settle once a quarter, rather than when they are traded. This has resulted in firms, such as Deutsche Bank, processing an additional 12,000 payments on a single day each quarter, according to Keith Rake global head of derivatives operations at Deutsche Bank in London.
  • Deutsche Bank has hiredCraig Delaurier, convertible bond trader at Goldman Sachs in New York, for a similar role. Jeremy Howard, global head of Deutsche Bank's convertible bond flow business in New York, said the hire is part of the German firm's strategy to build its client facing convertibles business in both sales and trading. He added that part of Delaurier's role will be to execute convertible bond arbitrage trades. Further hires may be made, he added. Delaurier declined comment.
  • Philippe Hatstadt, former senior managing director and head of credit derivatives trading at Bear Stearns in New York, has resurfaced at Merrill Lynch, more than a year after leaving, as managing director and head of structured credit derivatives trading. Hatstadt, who declined comment, left Bear Stearns in February last year after the firm reorganized its credit derivatives division, according to one credit derivatives professional.
  • Popular derivative pricing theory begins with assumptions about perfect, frictionless markets. All markets, however, are illiquid to a certain extent. Individual buy orders tend to make prices rise and sell orders tend to make prices fall. Even where the size of an order is too small to change the bid-offer spread in a security, any market (non-limit) trade reduces both the remaining order depth and, as a result, the minimum size needed for the subsequent order to cause a change in price.
  • Credit-default swap spreads on Fiat widened from 585 basis points to 625-640bps last week after Moody's Investors Service downgraded the corporate to Ba3 from Ba1 on Monday. Most of the trading actively was executed by hedge funds with only a few asset managers entering the market to hedge their bond positions. Fiat's downgrade did not affect the rest of the auto sector because it is the only major