Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)

JP Morgan Chase set to increase lead as largest US derivatives bank

JP Morgan Chase, the bank with the largest exposure to derivatives in the US, is set to increase its lead with the takeover of Bank One. The derivatives exposure of the combined banks will approach $35.5 trillion, nearly 54% of the combined value of the…

Glass-Steagall and Dingell?

Congressman John D. Dingell, the indefatigable Democrat from Michigan, has embarked on a crusade against the practice of 'tying' – where banks use loans to secure further business.

US Congress Basel II bill is put on hold, for now

Washington DC – The bill written by the House of Representatives' Financial Services Committee, which was designed to take control of the Basel II negotiation process away from US regulators and hand it to Congress, has been shelved for now, say…

BoA’s Mooney joins Trafigura

David Mooney has left Bank of America in New York and joined Trafigura, a privately owned Swiss-based commodity trading company with offices in 30 countries. Mooney, former head of commodity derivatives at BoA, joined Trafigura’s London office as head of…

US Senate calls for structured finance probe

The structured finance businesses of leading financial institutions in the United States are set to face a major business practice investigation during the next six months, with top US regulators set to introduce a new code of governance for structured…

Derivatives volumes soar in US, says OCC

Notional derivatives volumes held by US commercial banks increased by $3.8 trillion in second-quarter 2002, to $50.1 trillion - the second highest amount ever recorded, the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) reported yesterday in its…

OCC says derivatives revenues, notionals down

US commercial banks’ revenues from derivatives fell by $805 million, to $2.65 billion, from the third to the fourth quarters of 2001, according to figures released yesterday by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).

Hawke highlights "thorny issues" of Basel II

John Hawke, the US Comptroller of the Currency, this week said that “there are a number of thorny issues that remain to be worked out” in the Basel II bank capital adequacy Accord. Speaking at a conference held by the Institute of International Bankers…

BOTCC to process Nasdaq Liffe

Nasdaq Liffe Markets (NQLX), in a preparatory move before the start of trading in single-stock futures (SSF) in the US, agreed to let the Delaware-based Board of Trade Clearing Corporation (BOTCC) process certain deals known as 'give-ups'.

Moving to the centre

Basel II means banks will have to centralise the management of operational risk or lose out to competitors.

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