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Showing 51 to 60 of 111 search results for sterling LIBOR settings at the end.
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Martin Brokers (UK) Limited fined £630,000 for significant failings in relation to LIBOR
The misconduct involved Martins deliberately disseminating incorrect or misleading LIBOR submission levels by:. ... LIBOR is by far the most prevalent benchmark reference rates used in euro, US dollar and sterling OTC interest rate derivatives contracts -
FCA commits to being a more innovative, assertive and adaptive regulator
The commitment reflects the FCA’s Business Plan for 2021/22, the first annual plan since Nikhil Rathi joined the FCA as Chief Executive in October 2020 -
Where next for UK Market Structure
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, FCA Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy and Wholesale Supervision, delivered at Rosenblatt's European Market Structure conference. -
Deutsche Bank fined £227 million by Financial Conduct Authority for LIBOR and EURIBOR failings and for misleading the regulator
LIBOR has been regulated since 1 April 2013; SONIA (Sterling Overnight Index Average) and RONIA (Repurchase Overnight Index Average), the WM/Reuters London 4pm Closing Spot Rate, ISDAFIX, the London Gold ... LIBOR is by far the most prevalent benchmark -
UK EMIR news
Read our archive of news relating to EMIR dating back to August 2013. -
CP22/11: Winding down 'synthetic' sterling LIBOR and US dollar LIBOR [pdf]
We seek views on winding down the 1, 3 and 6-month synthetic sterling LIBOR settings, and information on market participants’ exposure to US dollar LIBOR. -
Next steps in transition from LIBOR
Speech by Edwin Schooling Latter, Director of Markets and Wholesale Policy at the FCA, delivered at the Risk.net LIBOR Summit, 2019. -
LIBOR contractual triggers
How the FCA would announce LIBOR contractual triggers. -
US dollar LIBOR panel – 1 month to go
FCA issues final messages before the important end-June 2023 deadline. -
Impact of the coronavirus on firms’ LIBOR transition plans
The FCA, Bank of England and members of the Working Group on Sterling Risk-Free Reference Rates have discussed the impact of the coronavirus on firms’ LIBOR transition plans over the coming months.