Infrastructure
Rescue remedy
Governments and central banks have finally acted to attempt to stem the crisis that engulfed the world's financial markets. But is their response too little too late? Laurence Neville finds out
Lee Olesky
The new CEO of e-trading platform Tradeweb, who has been involved with the firm - and the modern derivatives market - since their inception, talks to Matthew Attwood
The great liquidity illusion ... and how regulators can make sure it never happens again
The root cause of the recent credit crisis was a misplaced belief that liquidity in the global financial markets was abundant, argues Anastasia Nesvetailova. This misconception enabled a localised crisis in the US subprime mortgage market to leach into…
Some of life's key lessons
Sponsored Roundtable
Hoax hedges
Currency derivatives
Too hot to handle?
Special Report - Hedge funds
Aging tigers
Pensions
Catching the wave
Special Report - Volatility products
Remodelling required?
Economic capital
Oiling the wheels
Profile
Isda applauds $25 trillion reductions in CDS notionals
Daily news headlines
DTCC closes out over $500 billion of Lehman exposure
The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), which provides post-trade clearing and settlement services in the US capital markets, has completed the largest close out in its history, clearing over $500 billion of market participants’ exposure to…
Ice picks off ClearCorp
Atlanta-based Intercontinental Exchange (Ice) is to take over Chicago-based clearing house The Clearing Corporation (ClearCorp) as part of an effort to establish itself in the credit default swap (CDS) market.
Aegon receives €3 billion government support
The Dutch government has indirectly purchased €3 billion in shares in Aegon, the insurance giant, making it the second prominent company to tap the €20 billion scheme provided by the Dutch state.
Japanese ban naked shorts despite liquidity fears
The Japanese Financial Services Agency today banned naked shorting of stocks on the Tokyo exchange until the end of Q1 in 2009. But the experience of other countries implies the country now risks making the stock market even more volatile and illiquid.
US Treasury considering allowing insurers, auto-makers to access Tarp
The US Treasury is considering allowing non-banking institutions such as insurers and auto-makers to access federal funds under the government’s $700 billion bailout package, a senior Treasury official has confirmed.