You know a market is becoming significant when the regulators start to signal alarm. Last month, the Securities & Futures Authority, which supervises investment banking and broking in the UK, expressed concern about credit derivatives. Last November the Bank of England issued a discussion paper on the same subject.
No doubt both had in mind last October’s survey of credit derivatives by the British Bankers Association. It confirmed that outstanding credit derivatives amount to just $20 billion, but predicted that London would be the centre of a $100 billion market by 2000, partly because of “its pragmatic regulatory environment”.
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