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217,329 result(s) for "Futures exchange"
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Trading Fixed Income and FX in Emerging Markets
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Introduction -- Acknowledgements -- Acronyms -- CHAPTER 1 EMFX and Fixed Income: Where the Opportunities Lie -- 1.1 EM Debt - Growing Too Fast to Ignore -- 1.2 Returns Too Attractive to Ignore -- 1.3 EM as an Alpha Opportunity -- 1.4 Scope for Even More Alpha -- 1.5 Summary -- CHAPTER 2 Global Macro Rules -- 2.1 What You Need to Get Right: 65% Global, 35% Local -- 2.2 When the US Sneezes, the World (Still) Catches a Cold -- 2.3 EM Central Banks Stimulate as Fast as Markets Allow -- 2.4 When Bullish on US Rates, EM Rates Outperform EM Credit -- 2.5 When Bullish on EUR, Overweight CEEMEA Over Asia -- 2.6 When Bullish on Commodities, Overweight Latam Over Asia -- 2.7 Risk Aversion Barely Hurts EM Rates -- 2.8 Rising US HY Spreads Worse than Rising VIX -- 2.9 Summary -- CHAPTER 3 China: The Only Emerging Market that Counts -- 3.1 Global Business Cycle Made in China -- 3.2 The Commodity Link -- 3.3 On Leverage -- 3.4 Current Account Surpluses No More -- 3.5 Enter the Capital Account -- 3.6 Reading the CNY Tea Leaves -- 3.7 CGBs: The JGBs for Millennials -- 3.8 The Grand Decoupling? -- 3.9 Summary -- CHAPTER 4 How to Trade EMFX -- 4.1 Only the JPY is Special -- 4.2 No Helping Hand from EM Rates -- 4.3 Carry Works - if You Are Japanese -- 4.4 Current Accounts: Measuring Risk the Old‐fashioned Way -- 4.5 Going for Growth -- 4.6 Modest Value in Valuation -- 4.7 Terms of Trade -- 4.8 Technicals to the Rescue -- 4.9 Flows Follow -- Don't Follow the Flows -- 4.10 Positioning with Positions -- 4.11 Going with the Seasons -- 4.12 Volatility: Foe, Not Friend -- 4.13 Summary -- CHAPTER 5 How to Trade EMFX: Event Guide -- 5.1 Chaining the FX Vigilantes -- 5.2 Intervention at Work -- 5.3 Emergency Rate Hikes - Only for Emergencies -- 5.4 Capital Controls, IMF, or … China.
A Taxonomy of Automated Trade Execution Systems
A taxonomy of existing and planned automated trade execution systems in financial markets is provided. Over 50 automated market structures in 16 countries are analyzed. The classification scheme is organized around the principle that such markets consist of an algorithm that performs a trade matching function, together with information display and transmission mechanisms. Automated market structures are classified by ordered sets of trade execution priority rules, trade matching protocols and associated degree of automation of price discovery, and transparency, to include informational asymmetries between classes of market participants. Systematic differences in systems across types of financial instruments, geographical market centers, and over time are analyzed.
Race to the Center: Competition for the Nikkei 225 Futures Trade
This paper examines the impact of changes in margin requirements on returns, transaction volumes, and price volatility of NIkkei 225 futures on the Osaka Securities Exchange (OSE) and the Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX). An increase in margin requirement on one exchange is shown to reduce trading volume in the implementing exchange and to shift trade to the competing exchange. Price volatility or returns are not systematically affected by changes in margin requirements. The loss of OSE's market share of Nikkei futures trade is partly due to the increased transactions costs (relative to SIMEX), including the margin requirement.
Naked Forex : high-probability techniques for trading without indicators
\"A streamlined and highly effective approach to trading without indicators. Most forex traders rely on technical analysis books written for stock, futures, and option traders. However, long before computers and calculators, traders were trading naked. Naked trading is the simplest (and oldest) trading method. It's simply trading without technical indicators, and that is exactly what this book is about.Traders who use standard technical indicators focus on the indicators. Traders using naked trading techniques focus on the price chart. Naked trading is a simple and superior way to trade and is suited to those traders looking to quickly achieve expertise with a trading method. Offers a simpler way for traders to make effective decisions using the price chart. Based on coauthor Walter Peters method of trading and managing money almost exclusively without indicators. Coauthor Alexander Nekritin is the CEO and President of TradersChoiceFX, one of the largest Forex introducing brokers in the world. Naked Forex teaches traders how to profit the simple naked way!\"-- Provided by publisher.
The Tobin tax : coping with financial volatility
In his 1972 Jane way Lectures at Princeton, James Tobin, the 1981 Nobel Prize winner for economics, submitted a proposal for a levy on international currency transactions. The idea was not greeted with enthusiasm, as the 1970s were a period of optimism and confidence in floating exchange rages. Yet, whenever currency crises erupted during the past decades, the proposal for a levy on international currency transactions would once again arise. In the 1990s, two additional facts have sharpened interest in the Tobin tax proposal. First is the growing volume of foreign exchange trading. Second, interest is coming not only from policymakers and experts concerned with the smooth functioning of financial markets. It is shared by those concerned with public financing of development—the fiscal crisis of the state as well as the growing need for international cooperation on problems such as the environment, poverty, peace and security. This work makes a systematic analysis of the proposal for a foreign exchange transactions levy. Its chapters examine the economic desirability of such a levy, its technical and political feasibility, its revenue potential, the possible uses of that revenue, and related administrative and institutional aspects.