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By Lindsay Fortado, Ben Moshinsky and Jim Brunsden, Bloomberg |
June 14, 2013
Global regulators reportedly may start overseeing currency rates in a widening response to benchmark-rate setting scandals.
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By Ambereen Choudhury, Gavin Finch and Liam Vaughan |
June 13, 2013
Britain should investigate currency rate manipulation, E.U. officials said, following accusations traders have rigged rates.
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By Jim Brunsden |
June 10, 2013
The U.K. and Germany disagree over the competition plans, which target exchanges that clear trades in-house.
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By Jim Brunsden and Stephanie Bodoni |
June 9, 2013
The U.K. goes to the EU's top court tomorrow in a bid to overturn the powers of an agency to ban short selling.
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By Jim Brunsden and Rebecca Christie, Bloomberg |
May 14, 2013
The European Central Bank clashed with Germany over how the European Union will handle struggling banks and whether to create a common agency and fund to manage failures.
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By Jim Brunsden |
April 22, 2013
The European Union intensified its campaign against U.S. Federal Reserve proposals to toughen oversight of bank units belonging to overseas lenders.
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By Silla Brush |
April 19, 2013
The $639 trillion global swaps market is starting to fragment because regulators are failing to agree on the cross-border rules.
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By Liam Vaughan |
April 14, 2013
Banks are leaving the panel that sets ISDAFix, the benchmark for the $379 trillion swaps market, as regulators probe suspected manipulation.
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By Kevin Crowley, Ambereen Choudhury and Jesse Westbrook , Bloomberg |
March 22, 2013
The European Parliament’s vote to cap bonuses in the asset-management industry could affect two-thirds of senior fund managers in the U.K., U.S. funds in Europe and hedge funds open to small investors.
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By Jim Brunsden, Bloomberg |
March 21, 2013
Fund managers are facing a push by European Parliament lawmakers to limit their bonuses, hours after Britain failed to water down planned EU banker-pay rules that are set to take effect from 2015.