The truth about Asian investment banking
The money network:

The money network:

Why crowdfunding threatens traditional bank lending

January 1999

Internet reconciles 100 lawyers


The euro may cause glitches in some areas of the capital markets, but probably relatively few in swaps or derivatives, thanks to some smart thinking last year, says Christopher Stoakes


The International Swaps and Derivatives Association's Emu protocol should be voted the legal deal of 1998. It allows counterparties that have existing deals on Isda standard terms to adopt new provisions to cope with the euro. The trick was to get the market to agree.

"It was crisis management," says Jeffrey Golden, a partner at Allen & Overy. "Although there had been a lot of discussion about the effects of the euro, we weren't able to take practical action until the decision in May 1998 over which countries would be in or out. That left little time to obtain formal amendments to outstanding documentation, even assuming a market consensus about how the necessary changes could be achieved."

Isda documentation is used by a wide variety of entities, including investment banks, multinational companies, governments, central banks, supranationals and investment institutions. Each has its particular sensitivities. Through a series of roundtable discussions, it...


You must be a trialist or subscriber to view this content

Please Subscribe or take a Free Trial below.
Already a subscriber? Log in here.





Download the Free Euromoney iPad app today