TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's Nomura Holdings plans to beef up its interest rate and currency trading operations globally, believing increased market volatility will lift demand, a senior executive said.
Nick Lioudis is a writer, multimedia professional, consultant, and content manager for Bread. He has also spent 10+ years as a journalist. Samantha (Sam) Silberstein, CFP®, CSLP®, EA, is an ...
The forint weakened after the Hungarian central bank unexpectedly lowered the interest rate on its foreign-currency swaps ...
FX volatility has been subdued. Looking across asset classes, it is fair to say that just like equities and credit, FX ...
The BoE interest rate outlook has shifted as higher energy prices, rising gilt yields and political uncertainty raise ...
A confident Chair Powell declared a hold for rates, and sounded a glass-half-full narrative for the US economy; we sniff some rates upside ahead. In the eurozone, a stronger euro is unlikely to push ...
The carry trade, where investors buy high-yielding major currencies and sell low-yielding ones, is having its best run in years, even with major risk-driven moves in global markets.
Key delayed U.S. data on jobs and inflation will be closely watched as investors gauge how much further the Federal Reserve is likely to cut interest rates. Also in focus will be central bank ...
Below are the most important global events likely to affect FX and bond markets in the week starting Nov. 3. U.S. ISM survey data will be closely watched as investors assess whether or not the Federal ...
Global foreign-exchange turnover jumped nearly 30% in April as heightened volatility after President Trump's announcement of sweeping tariffs boosted trading activity, according to the preliminary BIS ...
The gold market looks like a market that will remain noisy, as interest rates in the US and beyond are rising. In this environment, movements tend to be volatile.