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  • Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi is gearing up to restart its weather derivatives business in Japan. Earlier this year the bank decided to shift its derivatives-related businesses to Mitsubishi Securities to integrate cash and derivatives products (DW, 4/4). Hiroshi Yoshimine, global head and general manager of the derivatives and structured products division, said that as part of the move, the firm is in the process of obtaining a weather derivatives license for the securities house and should receive the green light from the regulators in the next few months.
  • Bank of America has hired market veteran Franck Sylvain, a senior corporate bond trader at Morgan Stanley in London, as a senior trader on its European high-grade credit flow trading desk. John Brewer, head of the desk at BofA in London, said the move is part of the bank's on-going expansion into credit trading.
  • Bank of America has hired Andrew Jackson, head of credit derivatives at Fitch Ratings in London. He will report to Hans-Jurg Lips, managing director in global structured products, who declined comment.
  • "Interest rates are less than 2% and we want to see how we can take advantage of that."--Panos Koumandos, general director in finance at the Hellenic Railways Organization in Athens, explaining his motivation for looking at derivatives to shorten the duration of its debt portfolio. For complete story, click here.
  • Fitch Ratings will start rating collateralized debt obligations using correlation and simulation technology later this month. "This means we can get closer to real world events," explained Stefan Bund, managing director responsible for the new criteria in London. Fitch will start using the model, dubbed the Vector Model, on July 14.
  • Credit Lyonnais' dreams of becoming an equity derivatives market maker in the U.S. looks less likely following another high-profile departure from the New York-based operation it launched in earnest in September. Christian Lengelle, managing director and head of equity derivatives for North America in New York, has left the firm amid market scuttlebutt saying the French bank is pulling back from the arena. Lengelle could not be reached and Mary Guzman, spokeswoman in New York and Jean-Paul Brasier, former head of the desk, declined comment.
  • The Hellenic Railways Organization is considering synthetically shortening the duration of its debt portfolio to gain exposure to short-term interest rates. The move follows several similar efforts by high profile organizations, such as the Agency France Trésor, which started reducing the average duration of its debt in March 2001.
  • The International Swaps and Derivatives Association has circulated a pre-publication draft of an agreement, which updates ISDA documents to work with the 2002 master agreement. Definitions and supplements drawn up before the 2002 master often refer to the 1992 master agreement, which could pose problems if the counterparties have signed the 2002 docs. The ambiguity stems from having to decide whether to enforce the 1992 agreement or select the equivalent outcome in the 2002 agreement, according to John Berry, associate at Allen & Overy in London and who assisting ISDA with drafting of the protocol.
  • LG Insurance, one of Korea's largest insurers by assets, is looking to invest in synthetic collateralized debt obligations for the first time in the coming months. "As the Korean bond market's yields are too low we need to find products with yield pickup," said Sang Heon Kim, manager of the fixed income department in Seoul. "We're currently reviewing CDOs," said Kim. The insurer has a KRW2.5 trillion (USD2.09 billion) fixed income portfolio.
  • The International Swaps and Derivatives Association is considering setting up a securitized derivatives forum, which would deal with a variety of issues surrounding structured listed derivatives. The trade association is due to discuss the plan at its board meeting on July 15.
  • Derivatives professionals expect the equity derivatives markets in Korea and Taiwan to take off in the coming months on the back of regulators loosening restrictions on foreign institutions shorting stock in Taipei and anticipated changes in Seoul. Taiwan legalized borrowing shares for hedging late last month, with further changes expected early next year, and Korea will likely increase the amount foreign institutions can short.