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  • The number of outstanding five-year Treasury futures expiring at the end of the month has ballooned, far surpassing the eligible securities available to fulfill these contracts.
  • A new law firm is looking to specialize in advising leveraged finance investors to help them push for tighter covenants and more favorable terms.
  • Edinburgh-based Baillie Gifford is looking to reduce risk across its portfolios by shifting funds out of lower-rated bonds and into higher-rated assets within high-yield and investment-grade.
  • --Ellen Cammer, managing director and senior portfolio manager at Smith Barney Asset Management, on whether being short this year would have been more beneficial.
  • Volatility in Treasuries could decrease due to the Federal Open Market Committee's intention to begin pushing up the release of its meeting minutes from six weeks to three.
  • International Finance Corp., the investment arm of the World Bank, is overweight Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and will continue to bulk up on them in the current environment of rising rates and inflation.
  • Barclays Capital has hired Yasuhiro Ishibashi, director in global markets at Deutsche Bank, as a director and Japanese head of structuring in Tokyo.
  • Bank of America is preparing to enter the domestic Taiwan dollar credit derivatives market in the coming months.
  • Citigroup in Australia has structured a principal protected note referenced to global equity markets, because some local investors think the domestic bull run is about to end.
  • Derivatives users outside the major financial institutions may be left behind when the Inland Revenue, the U.K. tax authority, starts its second bout of consultation on derivatives taxation under International Accounting Standards.
  • Tim Blake, co-head of structured credit derivatives trading at Credit Suisse First Boston in London, has moved to New York to replace Matthew Zames, co-head of global U.S. rates trading, who has jumped to JPMorgan.