Financial Times
Libor control to remain in London, Dust starts to se...
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Thursday September 12 2013
FT Trading Room
Libor control to remain in London
Brussels ditches plan to put the scandal-mired lending rate under the direct control of a European supervisor in Paris
Dust starts to settle on derivatives revolution
Higher visibility of interest rate swaps and their prices to so many traders represents a sea change in derivatives trading
Derivatives move from banks into the shadows
Bankers fear trend, underpinned by tougher capital rules, will increase as regulations come into force pushing bilateral OTC deals on to exchanges
In his own words: Terry Duffy
Terry Duff, chairman of the CME Group, one of the companies most affected by new reforms, on the future of derivatives
In his own words: Gary Gensler
CFTC chairman Gary Gensler discusses the future of the derivatives market in the aftermath or recent reforms
CME Group outspends rivals on lobbying
Chicago-based exchange operator, world's largest futures exchange by volume, has carved out a powerful position for itself in the hallways of power
Guarding against the butterfly effect
Chaos theory can be used in global markets to illustrate the unpredictable nature of risk and importance of being vigilant while monitoring
SGX and Deutsche Börse join forces in Asia
The Asian exchange and the German group are to explore developing a collateral management service in Asia, identified by both as a key growth area
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