
Investors Shift to Cleared Derivatives
Traders: “It is notable that, even at this late date, roughly three in 10 buy-side firms are uncertain about their level of preparedness for Libor transition,” says Stephen Bruel.
Traders: “It is notable that, even at this late date, roughly three in 10 buy-side firms are uncertain about their level of preparedness for Libor transition,” says Stephen Bruel.
Markets Media: David Easthope said in a blog that greater regulatory certainty is needed before traditional investors can further embrace the digital asset ecosystem.
Financial Advisor IQ: More than two-thirds of advisors believe the growth in do-it-yourself investing will have a neutral or positive effect on their practices.
Forbes: ...over two-thirds of the over 600 financial advisors participating in a new Coalition Greenwich study expect that the DIY investing trend will either have no impact or, conversely, generate more demand for financial advice over time.
Bloomberg: “Even if you don’t directly have a Russian sanctioned bank as a client you’re not entirely sure whether the transaction you’re handing will go through a Russian correspondent bank,” Eric Li said. “The chain is very complex.
Investment Executive: As far as financial advisors are concerned, the rise of do-it-yourself investing is just fine. Most expect the trend to boost demand for their services in the long run, Coalition Greenwich reports.
CNBC: A recent report from Coalition Greenwich shows that the total annual budget for enterprise blockchain applications within the capital markets domain has been roughly $1.7 billion since 2018.
Finextra: A Coalition Greenwich study found that 93 percent of exchanges, trading systems and data providers offered cloud-based data and services and that 100 percent planned to offer new cloud services, including in derived data, in the...
Bloomberg: “Dealers need a certain level of conviction in the pricing of a portfolio, since it’s generally a pretty large notional risk transfer,” said Kevin McPartland.
The Trade: NCoalition Greenwich report found that almost half of equity traders see proposed changes to payment for order flow (PFOF) as the most important ongoing regulatory initiative.