© 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

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 370,404 results that match your search.370,404 results
  • Lehman Brothers reportedly entered over EUR3-4 billion in (notional) two-year interest-rate swaps last week, which traders said was the first massive trade of the year. Traders in London said the swaps were executed Tuesday and Wednesday and were probably on behalf of a U.S. fund manager reducing its exposure to Europe. The size of the trade caused rates in the short-end of the curve to raise approximately four basis points, according to traders. In the swaps Lehman pays fixed at between 3.93-3.87% and receives Euribor. A swaps trader at Lehman referred calls to the press office, who did not return calls.
  • Penn Mutual Life Insurance in Philadelphia has reinstated David O'Malley, v.p. of credit derivatives product management and marketing to U.S. clients for Morgan Stanley in New York, as a portfolio manager. An official at Morgan Stanley said O'Malley left the bulge-bracket firm because he received an offer from Penn that increased his annual salary and gave him more oversight of the insurance company's derivatives strategies than he had when he left. Penn had not yet filled O'Malley's position and had become a virtual non-player in the derivatives market following O'Malley's departure, one Penn official said. O'Malley now reports to Peter Sherman, cio. Sherman did not return calls and O'Malley declined to comment.
  • The Kredittilsynet, Norway's financial regulator, has drafted new legislation that would allow Norwegian fund managers to invest in over-the-counter derivatives for the first time and free up as much as EUR4.5 billion (USD4 billion) for OTC instruments. Ellen Jakobsen, advisor to the regulator in Oslo, said it has put out a draft of the revised securities rules and is now taking recommendations from the industry. The regulator expects to submit a final draft of the derivatives-specific legislation, which would allow asset managers to invest up to 10% of their portfolios in unlisted securities, to the Ministry of Finance for approval by spring, she said. Funds can currently use only exchanged-traded equity derivatives.
  • The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong is set to re-launch its warrant market next week and equity derivatives pros expect stiff competition as they look to issue warrants on the largest corporates. "It will be a war of attrition," according to Eddie Tam, director of equity derivatives at Credit Lyonnais in Hong Kong, who added, "historically, the warrant market in Hong Kong can feed five to seven houses. There will initially be 13 houses issuing." Tam expects the smaller firms who he said have been the most active in previous years, including Credit Lyonnais, Macquarie, Société Générale and KBC Financial Products, to win market share from the larger firms, such as Merrill Lynch." U.S. houses have waxed and waned on their commitment," according to Tam. James Rodríguez de Castro, managing director of global equity-linked products at Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, declined to reply to Tam's remarks.
  • Credit-default protection on The Dow Chemical Co. widened 100 basis points on Wednesday after Fitch downgraded the science and technology company, with USD30 billion in annual sales, to A from A plus and put it on negative outlook. Credit spreads on Dow widened to about 150bps last Wednesday from 50bps a week earlier as bulge bracket firms looked to buy protection.
  • Click here to download entire supplement in PDF format.
  • Trading volumes on the U.S. dollar/Argentina peso non-deliverable forward market started recovering last week. Foreign exchange options traders in New York reported NDF volume growing to about 10 trades a day from zero around year-end when market players were backing away in the wake of the country's political and economic chaos (DW, 12/24). The average notional size of last week's trades was USD1 million.
  • Barclays Capital plans to hire two interest-rate derivatives strategists for its relative value group in London. The strategists will translate the firm's macro view into trades and sell the ideas to the firm's traders and customers, according to John Maskell, director of European relative value strategy in London. He added typical strategies would include volatility plays and convergence trades.
  • Barclays Capital and Goldman Sachs are separately planning to set up onshore interest-rate derivatives desks in Korea in the coming months, according to officials at both firms.
  • BNP Paribas has pulled out of the weather derivatives market. "The long-term profitability of this business is not at a level that our shareholders necessarily expect," said Jonathan Mullen, head of corporate communications at BNP Paribas in London. He was unable to give details of the French bank's profitability projections. The move will not result in any redundancies, he added.
  • BNP Paribas has hired Jeremy Adam, foreign exchange options salesman at ABN AMRO in London, to work in a similar capacity, replacing Karim Wilkins who left last month. A BNP official said Wilkins is taking a break and traveling in New Zealand.
  • BNP Paribas is bulking up its credit derivatives desk in Tokyo, as it looks to hire two senior credit derivative traders as well as bring aboard junior staff. "We've got too much business with too few people," explained Stephane Delacote, head of credit derivatives in Tokyo, commenting on the seven-strong desk which reports to him. Delacote plans to bring the new recruits aboard within the next two months.