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Showing 271 to 280 of 564 search results for LIBOR panels.
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Fair and Effective Markets Review published
The Fair and Effective Markets Review (FEMR) was a comprehensive and forward-looking assessment of the way fixed income, currency and commodity (FICC) markets operate. -
The FCA’s view of green mortgages
Speech by David Geale, Director of Retail Banking, delivered at the London Institute of Banking & Finance mortgage conference. -
How the discontinuation of LIBOR may affect your members and stakeholders [pdf]
Joint letter from Bank of England and FCA to trade associations on how LIBOR transition will affect their members and stakeholders and next steps to take -
Business Plan 2023/24
The FCA's Business Plan details the work it will do over the next 12 months to help deliver the commitments in its Strategy. -
FCA to regulate seven additional financial benchmarks
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) will regulate seven additional major UK-based financial benchmarks in the fixed income, commodity and currency markets from 1 April 2015. This extends the FCA’s initial regulation of LIBOR (the London -
What makes good conduct regulation?
Speech by John Griffith Jones, Chairman at the FCA, delivered at the Cambridge Judge Business School. -
FCA Enforcement and the Wholesale Markets
Speech by Tracey McDermott, Director of Enforcement and Financial Crime at the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), delivered at the 13th Annual FX Week Europe, London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered -
Penny James appointed Chair of the FCA’s Practitioner Panel
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has appointed Direct Line Group CEO, Penny James, as Chair of its Practitioner Panel. -
Financial Lives 2020 survey: the impact of coronavirus [pdf]
Key findings from the FCA’s Financial Lives 2020 survey and October 2020 Covid-19 panel survey. FIle updated with autotag accessibility. -
Fair and effective markets review
And where firms had failed, despite the lessons of LIBOR, to identify and manage the risks they faced. ... They fall into six categories:. Market structures presented opportunities for abuse – so, the design of benchmarks like LIBOR gave opportunities