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Showing 61 to 68 of 68 search results for US dollar LIBOR panel - 1 month.
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Wealth Management Association (formerly APCIMS) speech
Speech by FCA Chairman, John Griffith-Jones, delivered to the Wealth Management Association in London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
FCA consults on proposed decision to require synthetic LIBOR for 6 sterling and Japanese yen settings
FCA consults on proposed decision to require synthetic LIBOR for 6 sterling and Japanese yen settings. -
Conduct in a new era: leaders rejecting complacency
Speech by John Griffith-Jones, Chairman, the FCA, to theCityUK conference in London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
Deutsche Bank fined £227 million by Financial Conduct Authority for LIBOR and EURIBOR failings and for misleading the regulator
LIBOR is by far the most prevalent benchmark reference rate used in US dollar and sterling OTC interest rate derivatives contracts and exchange traded interest rate contracts. ... Throughout the relevant period between 7 and 16 banks contributed to the -
Regulatory co-operation between the UK and US: now and in the future
Panel appearance by Nausicaa Delfas, Executive Director of International at the BritishAmerican Business Transatlantic Finance Forum, New York City -
Transforming to a forward-looking, proactive regulator
Speech by our CEO, Nikhil Rathi, delivered at the FCA’s Our Role and Business Plan webinar. -
Bellwethers of the economy: the need to engage with corporate treasurers to shape our markets
Speech by Nikhil Rathi, FCA chief executive, delivered at the Association of Corporate Treasurers Annual Conference 2024. -
FCA fines five banks £1.1 billion for FX failings and announces industry-wide remediation programme
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has imposed fines totalling £1,114,918,000 ($1.7 billion) on five banks for failing to control business practices in their G10 spot foreign exchange (FX) trading operations: Citibank N.A. £225,575,000 ($358