© 2026 GlobalCapital, Derivia Intelligence Limited, company number 15235970, 161 Farringdon Rd, London EC1R 3AL. 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 371,661 results that match your search.371,661 results
  • 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.
  • Tokyo-Mitsubishi International is considering structuring a synthetic collateralized loan obligation to free up capital that would otherwise be committed to its parent's USD500 billion loan portfolio. Naoto Hirota, managing director and head of financial derivatives and securitization in London, said it depends on the financial health of its parent Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi after Japanese year-end, which occurs at the end of the month. But he predicts the bank will want to improve its capital position in light of recent downgrades and the potential of more to come.
  • UBS Warburg has hired Grant Lovett, head of credit derivatives at Barclays Capital in London, and Jerry Wong, synthetic collateralized debt obligation structurer at Schroder Salomon Smith Barney in London, in senior credit positions. Lovett will be a senior trader responsible for growing the credit-default swap and convertible bond arbitrage businesses and Wong will by a senior credit derivatives structurer. Both will report to Sal Naro, global head of credit derivatives in Stamford, Conn. Naro confirmed the hires but declined further comment.
  • Cavanaugh Capital Management is looking to swap 13% of its portfolio, or $43 million, out of government securities and into mortgage-backed securities, corporates and taxable municipals. Jim Dugan, manager of a $334 million taxable fixed-income portfolio, says the firm wants to pick up additional yield as the economy gains steam. Dugan planned to begin the trades last week, and continue over the next two weeks. He says Cavanaugh will look to sell seven- to 10-year maturities to buy in the three- to five-year range because the steepness of the curve at the short-end will allow him to gain additional yield while reducing duration risk. He says he is not waiting for further signs of economic stability to make the trade, but only to find the product he is looking for.
  • After a downtown LA source meeting with a group of loan bankers, one of II Newsletters more intrepid reporters was witness to a Reservoir Dogs-style moment. "The intersection was empty as four cop cars were blocking the road. LA's finest were wielding shotguns and screaming at two guys to get out of a pick-up truck. More cops with shotguns then arrived outside a Bank of America building a block away," the reporter said. When told it was a bank robbery, the reporter was reminded of Tarantino's epic, but noted, "without the cool music, nicely-tailored suits and (fortunately) blood."
  • Bryan Johanson, portfolio manager with C.S. McKee & Co., will rotate $22 million, or 3% of a $730 million fund he manages, from 10-year Treasuries Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) into 10-year Treasuries. The move will be triggered when the 10-year Treasury yield reaches 5.38%. Last Monday, the 10-year yielded 5.28%.
  • This chart, provided by Citibank/Salomon Smith Barney Inc., tracks bid-ask prices for par credit facilities that trade in the secondary market. It also tracks facility amounts, ratings, pricing and maturities.