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By Silla Brush, Bloomberg |
May 21, 2013
Top executives of the two largest U.S. derivatives exchanges say regulators must take further steps to align Dodd-Frank Act rules with those of foreign counterparts to avoid oversight splits that could harm markets.
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By Silla Brush, Bloomberg |
May 16, 2013
JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and the world’s largest banks won rollbacks in final Dodd-Frank Act rules that promise to transform the private swaps market by increasing competition.
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By Alexander Kwiatkowski and Winnie Zhu, Bloomberg |
May 15, 2013
Two weeks after Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Platts changed the way more than half of the world’s crude is valued, the companies along with BP Plc and Statoil ASA are being probed by European antitrust regulators about potential manipulation of oil prices.
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By Press Release |
May 14, 2013
CFTC orders MB Trading Futures Inc., a registered retail foreign exchange dealer, to pay $200,000 penalty to settle charges of violating minimal financial requirement rules
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By Jonas Bergman, Bloomberg |
May 14, 2013
Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Statoil ASA said they were targeted by European antitrust officials in an investigation into plotting to manipulate published prices.
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By Silla Brush and Jim Brunsden, Bloomberg |
May 7, 2013
U.S. regulators face renewed pressure from congressional lawmakers to ease Dodd-Frank Act derivatives requirements amid mounting criticism from Wall Street and overseas officials that the rules overreach.
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By Press Release |
May 6, 2013
Court enters order freezing Defendant’s assets and protecting books and records.
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By The New York Times |
May 3, 2013
Government investigators have found that JPMorgan Chase devised “manipulative schemes” that transformed “money-losing power plants into powerful profit centers.”
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By Silla Brush and Dave Michaels |
May 1, 2013
JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and other U.S. swap dealers could gain limits on the Dodd-Frank Act’s reach for overseas trades.
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By Andrew Zajac and Nina Mehta, Bloomberg |
April 30, 2013
NYSE Euronext, Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. and other exchanges can set prices for proprietary market data, a U.S. appeals court ruled.