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  • SwapsWire, an electronic derivatives trading platform owned by 23 dealers, including Morgan Stanley,Credit Suisse First Boston andMerrill Lynch, is set to start brokering over-the-counter derivatives trades next week, according to interest-rate derivatives professionals. Henry Hunter, chief marketing officer at SwapsWire in London, said it has taken since the beginning of last year to develop the platform. Still, "in the realm of complex technology projects it's been a relatively short" gestation period, he added. He said the launch is imminent, but declined to give an exact date. Hunter said SwapsWire will help interest-rate derivatives dealers become more efficient. "We're not looking to significantly change the way business is done, we're looking to make it cheaper and less risky," he said, declining further comment.
  • One-week U.S. dollar/ Japanese yen implied volatility hovered around 11% Wednesday coming down from its high of 15% a week earlier as last week's surprise yen rally lost steam and investors bought dollar calls/yen puts. The majority of the positions were three-month options with strikes between JPY135 and JPY140. Spot was at JPY129.5 compared to JPY128.6 during the yen's rally a week earlier. Investment banks were the big players in the market. "The major currency pairs have been really subdued. People were taking up short positions and the front end of the curve has really flattened out," said one options trader in New York.
  • ADIG Investment, a German retail fund manager with EUR27.4 billion (USD24 billion) in assets under management, has structured a guaranteed equity-linked note using an equity put option as the guarantee. The five-year fund is referenced to a basket of global equity indices comprising equal amounts of the Standard & Poor's 500, Dow Jones Euro STOXX 50 and Topix, according to Thomas Heib, head of portfolio insurance in the financial engineering department in Frankfurt. The five-year notes are being targeted to retail investors. "A lot of investors suffered big losses in actively managed sector funds, so there is a trend to get back into the market and to not just bet on one horse but to have the whole market," he said. "The idea is to get investors back into the market" as the global economy appears poised to head higher.
  • Bear Stearns has hired Bill Bamber, senior v.p. of structured products at HSBC in New York, as an equity derivatives structurer at Bear Stearns in New York. During his stint at HSBC, Bamber reported to Russell Schreiber, fellow senior v.p. of structured products, according to Linda Stryker-Luftig, spokeswoman at HSBC.
  • The cost of 10-year sovereign Japan default protection surged roughly seven basis points wider to 60bps last week on the back of a string of downgrades by Moody's Investors Service and a subsequent flurry of trading activity. Among the more active players last week, Goldman Sachs turned heads after reportedly snapping up USD50 million in Japanese sovereign default swap protection, a transaction that is approximately five times the average size of a single trade. "You don't have to buy that much of Japan to make it move," said a trader in London. Another in Tokyo added that daily volume for the 10-year doubled to roughly USD100 million per day Tuesday and Wednesday.
  • Kansai Electric Power Co. and Kyushu Electric Power Co. are separately considering entering their first weather derivatives contracts to hedge against a cold summer reducing the revenue they generate from powering air conditioning units, according to officials familiar with the companies' plans.
  • HypoVereinsbank has structured an innovative EUR1.6 billion (USD1.4 billion) synthetic collateralized loan obligation that offers investors exposure to medium-sized German corporates, according to an official at the bank in Munich. The deal contains a static pool of loans, differentiating it from the only other securitization Hypo has done under the Promise banner with German state-owned bank KFW. That deal, as well as all the other Promise deals KFW has been part of in the last two years, had revolving pools of loans. The official said the static pool was used for economic reasons but declined to quantify any cost benefit.
  • Macquarie Bank plans to structure synthetic securitizations referenced to portfolios of asset-backed securities for its clients' portfolios. The move comes as the firm is set to price its first deal on behalf of its subsidiary Macquarie Leasing. Robert Harris, division director of treasury and commodities in Sydney, said the firm is speaking to clients in Australia, primarily financial institutions about structuring synthetic securitizations where the risks of the underlying assets, such as receivables, are transferred from the balance sheet using credit derivatives to free capital.
  • Moody's Investors Service has reorganized its structured finance group in New York by promoting one senior analyst to a managing director and delineating the teams covering the collateralized debt obligations market, according to Lisa Tibbitts, spokeswoman in New York. She added that the plan has been prompted by the rapidly growing CDO market. Bill May, a senior analyst, was promoted to managing director of the rating agency's derivatives team.
  • Salomon Smith Barney has merged its credit derivatives structuring team in New York with its trading operation, according to a former employee. The team, known for its much-publicized Yosemite product that was used by Enron to reduce its credit risk on balance sheet transactions, has been disbanded and absorbed by Salomon's existing credit derivatives trading group. Firm spokesman Dan Noonan downplayed the change, saying it was a minor internal move. He said the structuring and trading groups we're merged as a way to streamline the firm's focus. However, the former staffer said the move has surprised many of the structures, who were taken aback by the merger and are now uncertain of their new roles at the firm and the future vision of the structuring group.
  • Robert Machin, marketer for derivatives to U.K. financial institutions at Gen Re Securities, has joined Merrill Lynch as a director in the flow interest-rate marketing team in London. He reports to Reuben Barrett, head of flow interest-rate derivative marketing.
  • Finance houses in Australia have been making changes to their internal arrangements because of new regulations, which came into effect March 11. It is quite clear that these changes will create uncertainty and discomfort, and there will be a period of settling-in. When the industry looks back on the changes, the adjustment and readjustment, particularly to over-the-counter derivative transactions, the hope is that the end result will be better than the previous law.