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By Liam Vaughan, Gavin Finch and Ambereen Choudhury |
June 11, 2013
Traders at some of the world’s biggest banks reportedly have manipulated benchmark forex rates.
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By Ben Moshinsky |
May 20, 2013
The top U.K. markets regulator criticized a European Union cap on banker bonuses as the bloc’s banking watchdog prepares to expand the limits.
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By Michael McFarlin |
May 3, 2013
A wrap-up of hires and promotions from around the trading industry.
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By Michael McFarlin |
April 19, 2013
Wrap-up of hires and promotions from around in the industry.
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By Ben Moshinsky |
April 2, 2013
The U.K.’s new banking regulator must explain to a panel of British lawmakers how it will restrict lenders’ proprietary trading.
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By Kit Chellel |
December 10, 2012
Stefan Hunt, a former Harvard and Yale economist who now works with the U.K.'s Financial Services Authority, is using new tools to protect consumers from old-fashioned fraud.
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By Steve Zwick |
November 1, 2012
Corzine may have moved rogue trading to the boardroom, but that’s only the latest in a line of offenses.
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By Ben Moshinsky and Lindsay Fortado, Bloomberg |
September 28, 2012
Proposals to overhaul Libor, including enhanced powers for U.K. regulators to prosecute rate rigging, may be enacted early next year in a bid to revive confidence in the scandal-ridden benchmark and banking industry.
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By Lindsay Fortado and Ben Moshinsky, Bloomberg |
August 10, 2012
The U.K.’s chief markets regulator said that material changes to the way Libor is calculated risks invalidating millions of financial contracts, covering products ranging from mortgages to derivatives.
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By Lindsay Fortado and Ben Moshinsky |
August 9, 2012
The U.K.’s chief markets regulator said banks that set the Libor interest rate are seeking a “scientific” process that will limit future liability.