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Showing 81 to 90 of 131 search results for yen LIBOR settings.
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The USD LIBOR panel ceases at end-June 2023: Are you ready?
It is now less than 90 days until the USD LIBOR panel ceases on 30 June 2023, marking another critical milestone in the necessary transition to robust Risk-Free Reference Rates (RFRs). -
Journey towards a conduct regulator
Speech by Clive Adamson, Director of Supervision, the FSA at the Westminster Forum, London -
FCA publishes its approach to regulatory failure
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has today published its approach to investigating and reporting on regulatory failure, as required by the Financial Services Act 2012 (the Act). The Act requires the FCA to publish a statement of policy setting -
Fair and effective markets review
And where firms had failed, despite the lessons of LIBOR, to identify and manage the risks they faced. ... New regulators like the FCA, setting clear expectations and taking stronger and quicker action against identified failures. -
Meeting the challenge in our changing global markets
Speech by Sarah Pritchard, Executive Director of Markets, and Executive Director of International, at the UK Finance and EY: Capital Markets insights launch conference. -
Article 21(3) Benchmarks regulation - Notice of First Decision [pdf]
Our decision to compel the continued publication of the 3 US dollar LIBOR settings until the end of September 2024 under Article 21(3) -
Do I need to worry about benchmark regulation?
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, Head of Markets Policy, FCA, delivered at CISI European Regulation Forum on 2 February 2016. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
What makes good conduct regulation?
Speech by John Griffith Jones, Chairman at the FCA, delivered at the Cambridge Judge Business School. -
Finding opportunity in a world of uncertainty
Speech by Sarah Pritchard, Executive Director, Markets, at the CityUK Annual Conference. -
Finalising LIBOR transition – achievements in sterling markets and what remains to be done
Bank of England, FCA and Working Group set out what more needs to be done and update on how the Working Group will operate in the future