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Showing 41 to 50 of 435 search results for benchmark like LIBOR.
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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. -
Changes to LIBOR as of end-2021
Publication of 24 LIBOR settings has ended, and the 6 most widely used sterling and Japanese yen settings will be published using a changed methodology. -
2014 fines
This table contains information about fines published during the calendar year ended December 2014. The total amount of fines is £1,471,431,800. -
Chairman’s speech
Speech by FCA Chairman, John Griffith-Jones, at the Annual Public Meeting, London. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the delivered version. -
Conduct risk during LIBOR transition
Questions and answers for firms on conduct risk during LIBOR transition. -
Price: the cornerstone of markets
Speech by David Lawton, Director of Markets of the FCA at the International Capital Market Association (ICMA) Capital Market Lecture Series 2014 on Monday 3 February 2014. This is the text of the speech as drafted, which may differ from the -
2013 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 2013. -
3-month synthetic sterling LIBOR – 1 month to go
FCA issues final message before the end-March 2024 deadline and a reminder of the expected cessation of US dollar synthetic LIBOR at end-September 2024. -
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 -
FSA - PS13/6 The regulation and supervision of benchmarks
We are outlining how we will regulate benchmark submission and administration, with LIBOR as the first benchmark to be brought in to the new regime.