Germany
The problems in the eurozone are unleashing volatility across the continent's indexes, thereby making it easier for bankers in Germany to offer good coupons on autocallables
UBS index meets demand from German retail investors for regular income that beats the European Central Bank's base rate.
Investors and economists have identified German banks’ exposure to Europe’s indebted peripheral sovereigns as a potential risk to state finances.
Banks are increasingly using their IT infrastructure to increase their competitive advantage. Learn how this can work in practice.
More Germany articles
BNP Paribas has made three hires to its equity derivatives flow sales team in an effort to target German, Swiss and Austrian investors. Patrick Busch joined the bank's London office at the start of June from the equity derivatives team at Bank of America....
The reaction to a ban on naked short selling introduced in Germany last month was probably not what the country’s regulator, the Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht (Bafin), or the German finance ministry had been expecting. The rules themselves,...
The Bafin decree on short selling in May signalled a lack of agreement by European regulators, say participants
Ballooning credit default swap spreads on European sovereigns have encouraged some market participants to sell credit protection on their own country. But how much is this protection really worth, and could this selling contribute to systemic risk? Mark...
The Lombard Street Research chairman tells Credit the German economy is far weaker than has been supposed.
Credit fund veteran Mark Okada says Bafin restrictions on short selling have increased market volatility
Germany narrows shorting ban
This handy guide reviews the various steps banks are taking to improve their risk management techniques, looking at the benefits and pitfalls of each one.
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