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Showing 121 to 130 of 364 search results for LIBOR Summit.
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FCA announcement on future cessation and loss of representativeness of the LIBOR benchmarks [pdf]
We announce the future cessation or loss of representativeness of the 35 LIBOR benchmark settings currently published by the IBA. -
Transaction reporting
We use transaction reports to detect and investigate suspected market abuse. Find out more about the submission of transaction reports and the data they should contain. -
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. -
Helping people access cash
How new legislation has given the FCA powers to act where it finds or anticipate significant impacts on consumers’ ability to access cash. -
Policy development update
The policy development update provides some information on our recent and upcoming publications but should not be regarded as comprehensive. -
2014 Disclosure Log
The aim of the FCA's Disclosure Log is to keep information that it has released under the Freedom of Information Act and which it thinks is of wider public interest. Find the Disclosure Log for 2014. -
Leadership and conduct
Speech by Martin Wheatley, Chief Executive, the FCA, at City Week 2014: International Financial Services in the Post-Reform World: Opportunities and Challenges. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
The fairness challenge
Speech by Martin Wheatley, Chief Executive of the FCA, at Mansion House, London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
AI: Moving from fear to trust
Speech by Jessica Rusu, FCA Chief Data, Information and Intelligence Officer, at the City and Financial Global summit: Regulation and risk management of Artificial Intelligence in financial services. -
Lloyds Banking Group fined £105m for serious LIBOR and other benchmark failings
In relation to LIBOR, the firms’ misconduct between May 2006 and June 2009 included:. ... The remaining contributions were then arithmetically averaged to create the final published LIBOR rate.