© 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

Search results for

Tip: Use operators exact match "", AND, OR to customise your search. You can use them separately or you can combine them to find specific content.
There are 370,706 results that match your search.370,706 results
  • Crédit Agricole Indosuez is looking to hire a credit analyst to evaluate the firm's counterparty risk in cash and derivatives transactions with other financial institutions. The role, a new one, has been created as the bank decentralizes its counterparty credit analysis from Paris into satellite offices, said Nils Johnson, manager of the financial institutions department in London.
  • Lehman Brothers has transferred Satu Parikh, interest-rate options trader in New York, to Tokyo as its Asian head of interest-rate derivatives, in a position that was set up to allow the firm to expand its derivatives desk. Parikh reports to Koji Tsubouchi, managing director of fixed-income in Tokyo. Tsubouchi said Parikh joined three weeks ago. Parikh declined comment.
  • Credit Lyonnais has hired Tony Au, head of capital markets at Fortis Bank Hong Kong, as a regional fixed-income structurer in Hong Kong to kick start its credit structured products business. Up until now the firm only had credit-default swap traders, according to Frédéric Lainé, Asian head of fixed-income and derivatives in Hong Kong. Au declined comment.
  • This Learning Curve will focus on the empirical application of option replication rather than the theoretical foundation. We restrict ourselves to the foreign exchange markets where transaction costs are low and liquidity high. These two factors are indeed the necessary conditions for the use, if at all, of dynamic strategies.
  • U.K. mobile operator mm02 has entered a cross-currency interest-rate swap to convert a fixed-rate euro-denominated liability into a floating-rate sterling denominated one. Anthony Lawrinson, group treasurer in London, said the company converted half of a EUR1 billion (USD884 million) bond it sold earlier this month into a floating sterling liability. It also entered a plain-vanilla interest-rate swap to convert the remaining EUR500 million into floating euros. At the same time, the company also issued a fixed 10-year GBP375 million (USD536 million) bond, for which it will not enter a swap.
  • BNP Paribas plans to hire up to 20 foreign exchange marketers with knowledge of over-the-counter derivatives as part of the firm's effort to offer more structured fx products to generate higher margins in a commoditized plain-vanilla market. Ligia Torres, head of fx sales in Paris, said, "we are concerned that fx is becoming a commodity and we are trying to find a solution," adding, "we are trying to recruit people with a strong background in derivatives."
  • Nikko Salomon Smith Barney is planning to double its credit derivatives desk in Tokyo within the next six months amid growing client interest, in part driven by the weakening credit environment. The firm plans to hire two or three traders and the same number of structurers, according to an official in Tokyo. "It's in the game plan," he quipped.
  • U.K. sandwich chain Pret A Manger may increase its use of foreign exchange swaps to hedge currency exposure as the company opens more stores around the globe and more of its revenues are non-sterling. John Clarck, finance director in London, said the company has opened a handful of take-out stores in New York and Hong Kong recently and "we probably will use a bit more [fx swaps] in the future because we are developing overseas."
  • UBS Warburg plans to set up a cross-rates business in Stamford, Conn. and London as part of a move to increase its distribution of interest-rate derivatives. Rafael Geys, managing director and global head of fixed income derivatives marketing and structuring in London, said the cross-rates business would offer a package of risks made up of swaps, agencies and government bonds that can be traded and sold from a single desk. Currently UBS clients have to call separate desks to trade each asset class, but the new desk will give them one point of call and allow them to reallocate their positions more quickly, Geys said.
  • Dresdner RCM Global Investors will add European telecoms and industrials to its £120 million sterling-denominated credit portfolio. Jamie Stuttard, London-based portfolio manager, says Dresdner will add new issues from France Telecom, which he expects will come with a deal with a sterling tranche this year, if it features a coupon step-up to protect investors from a ratings downgrade. He will add KPN's 81Ž4% of '08, because he views the company as a huge recovery story.
  • Prescott Crocker, a high-yield portfolio manager with Boston-based Evergreen Investment Management, says he will increase the firm's cyclical bond allocation by $22.5 million, or 5%, based on the assumption that an economic recovery is underway, as indicated by improved commodity prices. He will finance reducing defensive names by $13.5 million, or 3%--as well as energy bonds, by $9 million, or 2%. The manager will buy bonds at a minimum spread of 650 basis points over the curve, while selling at spreads tighter than 450 basis points. Most of the sales will be double-B rated bonds while the buys will target single-B paper. The rotation is duration neutral.