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The post-reform guide to derivatives and futures [[electronic resource] /] / Gordon F. Peery
The post-reform guide to derivatives and futures [[electronic resource] /] / Gordon F. Peery
Autore Peery Gordon F
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (384 p.)
Disciplina 332.64/52
Collana Wiley finance series
Soggetto topico Derivative securities - United States
Derivative securities - Government policy - United States
Futures - United States
Futures - Government policy - United States
Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009
ISBN 1-118-20542-1
1-119-20029-6
1-283-42520-3
9786613425201
1-118-20540-5
Classificazione BUS027000
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgments Preface Introduction Part I: The Crises That Led to Derivatives Reform Chapter 1: Seven Causes of the 2008 Market Crises Ignoring the Warning Signs More than Seven Causes of the 2008 Market Crises An Incomplete Response to Problems Stemming from the Enron Bankruptcy Enron Finance Used by Banks and the Lack of Regulation The Absence of Effective Regulation The Shadow-Banking System Development of an Unregulated Global Derivatives Market The Rise of Credit Derivatives and the Credit Default Swap Private-Label Residential Mortgage-Backed Securitization U.S. Policy Fostering Home Ownership and GSE Mismanagement Derivatives and Structured Products Accounting Practices Notes Chapter 2: Timeline for U.S. Derivatives Reform March 17, 2008: Bear Stearns Is Sold March 27, 2008: Barack Obama Introduces Reform Principles September 15, 2008: A Bankrupt Lehman Brothers November 2008-January 2009: American Leadership Ascends March 26, 2009: Geithner Provides Testimony to Congress on Reform May 13, 2009: Geithner Writes a Letter to Harry Reid June 2, 2009: An Early Voice Speaks Out against the Clearing Mandate June 22, 2009: American Corporations Lobby against Central Clearing Mandates for OTC Derivatives July 22, 2009: Introduction of Legislation Favoring Exemptions to the Clearing Mandate July 30, 2009: Introduction of Broad Outlines of the New Law September 8, 2009: The Industry Attacks Centralized Clearing October 2, 2009: House Releases Draft of OTC Derivative Legislation November 11, 2009: Senate Releases Draft of OTC Derivative Legislation December 11, 2009: House Passes the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2009 January 1, 2010: The New York Fed Publishes the "Policy Perspectives on OTC Derivatives Market Structure" April 7, 2010: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Begins Hearings April 16, 2010: Senator Lincoln Introduces the Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010 April 22, 2010: President Obama Returns to Cooper Union to Speak on Reform April 26-27, 2010: Senate Votes to Delay Debate on Derivatives Reform April 27, 2010: The Goldman Hearing April 28, 2010: Senate Votes Again on Proceeding with Financial Services Reform May 20, 2010: Senate Passes Its Version of the Legislation June 30, 2010 and July 15, 2010: Congress Approves Legislation and Seeks the President's Approval July 21, 2010: President Obama Signed Dodd-Frank into Law U.S. Rule Making in 2010 and 2011 U.S. Reform Blazes the Trail for Global Derivatives Reform Notes Part II: Derivatives Reform Introduction to Part II Chapter 3: Introduction to Futures, Margin, and Central Clearing Three Crises and the Need for the Futures Model A Brief History of Futures Contracts and Markets The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 Introduction to the Futures Model and Basic Futures Concepts Regulation of Futures Examples of Futures and Other Listed Products A Futures Contract in Action Default by a Clearing Member in the Futures Model Global Reform and the Futures Model Chapter 4: U.S. Derivatives Law in Title VII of Dodd Frank Organization of Dodd-Frank Introduction to Titles VII and VIII The Approach to Understanding New Derivatives Law in the United States Products People Taxpayers Whistleblowers Platforms Chapter 5: Title VIII of Dodd Frank Opposition to Title VIII Before Title VIII What Exactly Does Title VIII Set into Motion and When? What Is a Systemically Important Activity? Practical Results of the New Law Notes Chapter 6: A Primer on Legal Documentation Background "Let's Use an ISDA" History of the ISDA Basic OTC Architecture The ISDA Documentation in Practice, and Problems in 2008 Notes Chapter 7: The Life Cycle of a Cleared Derivatives Trade Step One: Legal Documentation Step Two: Trade Execution via an SEF, SB-SEF, or DCM Step Three: Alleging and Affirming a Trade; Reporting in Real Time Step Four: The FCM Take-Up Step Five: Trade Is Centrally Cleared Step Six: The Trade Is Reported for the Second Time Part III: Trading Before and After Reform Chapter 8: The History of Derivatives and Futures The Earliest Derivative Trees, Forests, and Wildfires Did They Exist in Antiquity? OTC and Exchange Derivatives Back to Biblical Times The Dark Ages and Medieval Europe The Muslim Empire Development and Early Use of the Bill of Trade or Exchange After the Protestant Reformation An Early Sighting of the Term Commodity Pools Ten Wise Men The Modern Era Begins in the States in 1848 Early-Twentieth-Century America S&Ls and Mortgage Finance Functions Well Before Abuses The Creation of Fannie and Freddie Disco, Dealers, Swaps, and Redlining in the 1970's U.S. Regulators Formally Recognize Swaps The Birth of the OTC Market The Evolution of Option Markets The Futures Trading and Practices Act and the 1993 Swaps Exemption ISDA The 1987 Crash and 1990's Crises The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 Enron Loophole The First Decade of the Twenty-First Century Notes Chapter 9: Market Structure Before and After 2010 Ancient Commodity Markets Earliest Modern Exchanges The Great Depression and Bucket Shops Open Outcry and Pits Give Way to the Machines Reform of U.S. Market Structure Derivative Clearing Organizations Swap Data Repository Market Participants in the OTC Derivatives Trade Part IV: Continuing Education Chapter 10: Survey of Derivatives Overview of the Strategies and Trade Structure Early Derivatives and the Beginnings of the OTC Market Forwards versus Options Option Basics Options Pricing Basic Option Strategies Exchange-Traded Options Swaps Follow Options in the Evolution of Derivatives Credit Derivatives Credit-Linked Notes and Other Securities Total Return Swaps Interest Rate Swaps Equity Swaps Currency Derivatives Property Derivatives Commodity Derivatives Energy Swaps Structured Products, Securitization, CDOs and CDOs Squared Exchange-Traded Derivatives: Futures and Other Listed Products Additional Resources Online Resources Glossaries About the Author Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910139297003321
Peery Gordon F  
Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The post-reform guide to derivatives and futures [[electronic resource] /] / Gordon F. Peery
The post-reform guide to derivatives and futures [[electronic resource] /] / Gordon F. Peery
Autore Peery Gordon F
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (384 p.)
Disciplina 332.64/52
Collana Wiley finance series
Soggetto topico Derivative securities - United States
Derivative securities - Government policy - United States
Futures - United States
Futures - Government policy - United States
Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009
ISBN 1-118-20542-1
1-119-20029-6
1-283-42520-3
9786613425201
1-118-20540-5
Classificazione BUS027000
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Machine generated contents note: Acknowledgments Preface Introduction Part I: The Crises That Led to Derivatives Reform Chapter 1: Seven Causes of the 2008 Market Crises Ignoring the Warning Signs More than Seven Causes of the 2008 Market Crises An Incomplete Response to Problems Stemming from the Enron Bankruptcy Enron Finance Used by Banks and the Lack of Regulation The Absence of Effective Regulation The Shadow-Banking System Development of an Unregulated Global Derivatives Market The Rise of Credit Derivatives and the Credit Default Swap Private-Label Residential Mortgage-Backed Securitization U.S. Policy Fostering Home Ownership and GSE Mismanagement Derivatives and Structured Products Accounting Practices Notes Chapter 2: Timeline for U.S. Derivatives Reform March 17, 2008: Bear Stearns Is Sold March 27, 2008: Barack Obama Introduces Reform Principles September 15, 2008: A Bankrupt Lehman Brothers November 2008-January 2009: American Leadership Ascends March 26, 2009: Geithner Provides Testimony to Congress on Reform May 13, 2009: Geithner Writes a Letter to Harry Reid June 2, 2009: An Early Voice Speaks Out against the Clearing Mandate June 22, 2009: American Corporations Lobby against Central Clearing Mandates for OTC Derivatives July 22, 2009: Introduction of Legislation Favoring Exemptions to the Clearing Mandate July 30, 2009: Introduction of Broad Outlines of the New Law September 8, 2009: The Industry Attacks Centralized Clearing October 2, 2009: House Releases Draft of OTC Derivative Legislation November 11, 2009: Senate Releases Draft of OTC Derivative Legislation December 11, 2009: House Passes the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2009 January 1, 2010: The New York Fed Publishes the "Policy Perspectives on OTC Derivatives Market Structure" April 7, 2010: Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Begins Hearings April 16, 2010: Senator Lincoln Introduces the Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act of 2010 April 22, 2010: President Obama Returns to Cooper Union to Speak on Reform April 26-27, 2010: Senate Votes to Delay Debate on Derivatives Reform April 27, 2010: The Goldman Hearing April 28, 2010: Senate Votes Again on Proceeding with Financial Services Reform May 20, 2010: Senate Passes Its Version of the Legislation June 30, 2010 and July 15, 2010: Congress Approves Legislation and Seeks the President's Approval July 21, 2010: President Obama Signed Dodd-Frank into Law U.S. Rule Making in 2010 and 2011 U.S. Reform Blazes the Trail for Global Derivatives Reform Notes Part II: Derivatives Reform Introduction to Part II Chapter 3: Introduction to Futures, Margin, and Central Clearing Three Crises and the Need for the Futures Model A Brief History of Futures Contracts and Markets The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 Introduction to the Futures Model and Basic Futures Concepts Regulation of Futures Examples of Futures and Other Listed Products A Futures Contract in Action Default by a Clearing Member in the Futures Model Global Reform and the Futures Model Chapter 4: U.S. Derivatives Law in Title VII of Dodd Frank Organization of Dodd-Frank Introduction to Titles VII and VIII The Approach to Understanding New Derivatives Law in the United States Products People Taxpayers Whistleblowers Platforms Chapter 5: Title VIII of Dodd Frank Opposition to Title VIII Before Title VIII What Exactly Does Title VIII Set into Motion and When? What Is a Systemically Important Activity? Practical Results of the New Law Notes Chapter 6: A Primer on Legal Documentation Background "Let's Use an ISDA" History of the ISDA Basic OTC Architecture The ISDA Documentation in Practice, and Problems in 2008 Notes Chapter 7: The Life Cycle of a Cleared Derivatives Trade Step One: Legal Documentation Step Two: Trade Execution via an SEF, SB-SEF, or DCM Step Three: Alleging and Affirming a Trade; Reporting in Real Time Step Four: The FCM Take-Up Step Five: Trade Is Centrally Cleared Step Six: The Trade Is Reported for the Second Time Part III: Trading Before and After Reform Chapter 8: The History of Derivatives and Futures The Earliest Derivative Trees, Forests, and Wildfires Did They Exist in Antiquity? OTC and Exchange Derivatives Back to Biblical Times The Dark Ages and Medieval Europe The Muslim Empire Development and Early Use of the Bill of Trade or Exchange After the Protestant Reformation An Early Sighting of the Term Commodity Pools Ten Wise Men The Modern Era Begins in the States in 1848 Early-Twentieth-Century America S&Ls and Mortgage Finance Functions Well Before Abuses The Creation of Fannie and Freddie Disco, Dealers, Swaps, and Redlining in the 1970's U.S. Regulators Formally Recognize Swaps The Birth of the OTC Market The Evolution of Option Markets The Futures Trading and Practices Act and the 1993 Swaps Exemption ISDA The 1987 Crash and 1990's Crises The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 Enron Loophole The First Decade of the Twenty-First Century Notes Chapter 9: Market Structure Before and After 2010 Ancient Commodity Markets Earliest Modern Exchanges The Great Depression and Bucket Shops Open Outcry and Pits Give Way to the Machines Reform of U.S. Market Structure Derivative Clearing Organizations Swap Data Repository Market Participants in the OTC Derivatives Trade Part IV: Continuing Education Chapter 10: Survey of Derivatives Overview of the Strategies and Trade Structure Early Derivatives and the Beginnings of the OTC Market Forwards versus Options Option Basics Options Pricing Basic Option Strategies Exchange-Traded Options Swaps Follow Options in the Evolution of Derivatives Credit Derivatives Credit-Linked Notes and Other Securities Total Return Swaps Interest Rate Swaps Equity Swaps Currency Derivatives Property Derivatives Commodity Derivatives Energy Swaps Structured Products, Securitization, CDOs and CDOs Squared Exchange-Traded Derivatives: Futures and Other Listed Products Additional Resources Online Resources Glossaries About the Author Index.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910825835503321
Peery Gordon F  
Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui