Monday, October 23, 2017

REPORT: The owner of the New York Stock Exchange set to buy a stake in one of Europe's most important clearing houses

REPORT: The owner of the New York Stock Exchange set to buy a stake in one of Europe's most important clearing houses

new york stock exchange tradersTraders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange December 18, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
  • Sky News reported that NYSE owner Intercontinental Exchange will buy a 4% stake in clearing house Euroclear.
  • The stake is believed to be worth around £200 million ($263 million).
  • ICE's purchase will give it an important role in European securities trading post-Brexit.


LONDON — The owner of the New York Stock Exchange, Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), is set to purchase a significant stake in one of Europe's most important clearing houses, according to reports.
Sky News reported on Sunday evening that ICE will buy a 4% stake in Euroclear from RBS,worth roughly £200 million, with an announcement coming as early as this week.
It will represent another step in the exit from assets bought by the bank before it had to be bailed out by the government during the financial crisis.
ICE, RBS, and Euroclear have so far declined to comment on the reports.
Euroclear is a firm that flies somewhat under the radar, but plays a crucial role in European markets infrastructure, clearing trades on assets like stocks and bonds worth trillions of pounds every year.
Clearing houses like Euroclear act as a middle-man to guarantee the contract in the event that one of the parties involved in the trade goes bust. They have grown in importance since the financial crisis as a means of limiting systematic risk. 
Founded by JPMorgan in the 1960s, Euroclear currently has around 130 shareholders, including the likes of Euronext, one of the continent's largest stock exchange groups.
The location of euro-denominated trade clearing has been a hot topic since the euro first entered circulation in the late 1990s.
European policymakers have argued that euro clearing should take place within the euro area. Britain has repeatedly had to defend its right to clear euro trades, given that it does not have the euro. Years of disputes culminated in a legal battle in 2015, which the UK ultimately won.
However, Brexit has provided fresh impetus for those seeking to move clearing out of London. The ECB proposed a change to its statutes that would give it "a clear legal competence in the area of central clearing," back in June.

The gloom surrounding the US dollar looks like it's slowly starting to lift

The gloom surrounding the US dollar looks like it's slowly starting to lift

US fansMario Tama/Getty Images
After months of selling, it appears that the gloom surrounding the US dollar is slowly starting to lift.
According to data released by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), traders continued to buy the US dollar last week, extending the pattern seen in the previous two weeks.
“Leveraged funds were net buyers of USD for the third consecutive week,” said Khoon Goh, Head of Asia Research at ANZ Bank.
“Dollar demand was broad-based, with only the NZD not seeing net selling, though this was before the announcement that there would be a change in government.”
This chart from ANZ shows the change in net US dollar positioning from the CFTC data against the EUR, JPY, GBP, CHF, CAD, AUD and NZD since the start of 2014.
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2017. Follow Business Insider Australia on Twitter.

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