June 2015
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LATEST ARTICLES
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Demand rising, busy second half expected; Par Corretora holds key to Brazil return.
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The $5.6 billion of fines handed out to six leading foreign exchange banks will not be the end of the crisis afflicting FX, but it might be the beginning of the end. The people at the top of the industry are starting to think more deeply about what will drive success in the FX markets of the future. How can foreign exchange rebuild its zest, and its reputation?
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The headline results of Euromoney's 2015 foreign exchange survey show the leading banks have been remarkably consistent, despite the upheavals in the sector. But, beneath the surface there are changes that will transform the competitive landscape of the industry. Deeper analysis of the survey results demonstrates that’s already starting to happen.
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View full results from Euromoney's 37th annual survey of liquidity consumption within the global FX markets.
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Gortázar targets big boost in ROE; Abjures more M&A, after BPI
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Fintech start up aims to spot market rigging, using clues in how traders talk, not what they say
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Any hopes the $5.7 billion settlement between the leading FX banks and US authorities will finally put the FX fixing scandal to bed are likely to prove misplaced.
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Investor concerns mount as liquidity fragments; banks seek to aggregate orders.
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The rising star of the UK’s victorious Conservative Party now has a mandate to help business. However, in his previous incarnation as an investment banker, he was at the heart of the credit trading business, and was responsible for structuring an emerging-market synthetic CDO that incurred millions of dollars worth of losses for investors.
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Bank accused of an “enormous magnitude of falsity” by judge long seen as hostile to bank defendants