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Showing 61 to 70 of 132 search results for LIBOR Transition Briefing.
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Future into focus
Speech by Martin Wheatley, Chief Executive, the FCA, at the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) conference, London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
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). -
Facing the future – challenges and priorities for the FCA
Speech by our CEO, Nikhil Rathi, given at the Address to the City Regulators, Mansion House. -
FCA issues final messages on LIBOR before end-2021
Final LIBOR publications before end-2021 deadline and remaining actions firms need to take. -
FCA welcomes Financial Services Bill
The FCA welcomes the Financial Services Bill introduced in Parliament, which will help to maintain high standards and provide greater clarity to firms. -
LIBOR – are you ready for life without LIBOR from end-2021?
Speech delivered by Edwin Schooling Latter, Director Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA, at City & Financial's Managing LIBOR transition event -
Instrument Reference Data
Trading venues and systematic internalisers (SIs) are responsible for providing us with instrument reference data. -
5 Conduct Questions Programme
The FCA has engaged with firms on conduct and risk and is now feeding back findings on good and bad practice. The 5 Conduct Questions Programme covers the importance of overall governance, identifying conduct risk and fostering staff engagement -
FCA announces decision on synthetic US dollar LIBOR
In November 2022, we consulted on proposals to require the continued publication of 1-, 3- and 6-month synthetic US dollar LIBOR after 30 June 2023 when the US dollar LIBOR panel is due to cease. -
PS18/5: Powers in relation to LIBOR contributions
This Policy Statement sets the approach, criteria and methodology that we propose to apply if we needed to use powers to compel banks to contribute to LIBOR. These are based on responses to our proposals in CP17/15: Powers in relation to LIBOR