FX Markets - 19 Jun 2017
Articles in this issue
‘Cartel’ three surrender as lawyers question efficacy of DoJ case
US DoJ presses on with Obama-era promises to prioritise prosecution of individuals and stop corporate wrongdoing
Saxo signs up to FX Global Code
The Danish bank is the second firm to commit after Barclays
Northern Trust launches FX algo suite
The bank aims to deliver greater transparency and flexibility to clients
Broadridge and Spence Johnson join forces
The strategic alliance enables asset managers to analyse retail and institutional data together
Algo trading increasingly attractive to corporates, says Greenwich report
Number of corporates using algos up slightly in 2016; significant boost from earlier adopters
ADS Securities appoints Chui as head of brokerage risk
Abu Dhabi-based Fabian Chui joins from IG Group
Michael Davie returns to LCH to lead rates business
Davie takes over from Daniel Maguire, who became chief operating officer in April
Phil Weisberg joins AxiomSL
Thomson Reuters' former global head of FX becomes a strategic adviser
Nedeltchev sails to Credit Suisse
Kristian Nedeltchev will focus on FX and emerging market products for French-speaking clients
Lawrence Pregiato joins Nomura
Pregiato becomes an executive director, focused on FX options
UK clearing houses could be moved to European Union
European Commission proposal comes days before divorce negotiations are set to begin between UK and EU
Tibor Gergely joins UniCredit
Gergely joins the Italian bank after spending six years at Bank of America Merrill Lynch
Challenger platforms hot on the heels of legacy peers
FastMatch's volumes doubled year-on-year, while GTX saw volumes rise 50% over the same period
Oanda expands partnership with TradingView
Building on the integration of TradingView’s advanced charting solution with Oanda’s fxTrade web and desktop platforms
Just six banks caught by phase two of IM regime
Four EU, one Japanese and one Australian bank start posting initial margin on non-cleared trades from September
Monex Europe: muted sterling reaction after UK hung parliament no surprise
With a new government more likely to go for a softer Brexit, the lack of a big sell-off is nothing shocking, says broker