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Solaris Payments

2 Woodberry Grove, London, United Kingdom
Finance Company

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London-based Bureau de Change with multiple FX pairs & International Remittances.

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Bank of America

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Trump Bond Sell-Off Should Scare Central Banks

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The Minneapolis Plan to end "Too Big To Fail" banks. https://www.minneapolisfed.org/publications/special-studies/endingtbtf/the-minneapolis-plan-to-end-too-big-to-fail/summary-of-the-minneapolis-plan-to-end-too-big-to-fail …

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MBNA

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Why did the pound “flash crash”? Several theories have emerged about why the British pound tumbled from about $1.26 against the US dollar to about $1.18 in just two minutes on Friday morning, but we may never know the precise reason despite the Bank of England looking into the cause. Foreign exchange markets are complex. There are many trading systems operating in the market across time zones and there’s no single collector or provider information. The crash happened just after midnight London time, when liquidity in forex markets is typically low. Forex trading in Asia is spread across many key centres like Tokyo, Hong Kong, Singapore and Sydney. But low liquidity itself isn’t a cause for a so-called “flash crash”. It could be down to a so-called “fat-finger” trade where a person types in a wrong number in an order. In a market increasingly dominated by algorithmic trading done by computers it could also have been caused by a glitch in a programme (‘algo’ for short). These sorts of glitches have happened before, notably in 2010 in the US stock market. If it was a fat finger by a person at a bank, we should have found out fairly quickly as counterparties acknowledge the error and wipe the trades out. If it’s an algo glitch, then we may never find out. There are other possible explanations that are often trotted out when market moves can’t be explained, including a build up of stop loss orders at a certain point and when those are triggered there’s a large subsequent move. There’s not a lot traders can do about flash crashes. They can’t be predicted, and thankfully they’re rare. But sterling markets have been highly volatile ever since the UK voted to exit the EU, and traders need to consider mechanisms like guaranteed stops. It also pays to use common sense – the pound is now highly susceptible to the kind of surprise headlines (‘tape bombs’ to use the lingo) that can cause rapid movements in prices. As well as using guaranteed stops, it makes sense from both a financial and a psychological approach, to use smaller position sizes. FX markets are volatile at the best of times, but now newsflow is combining with low liquidity (compared to previous years) to make this asset an even more volatile place.

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Covent Garden, London like it should be: with statuesque street performers!

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This is how the sovereign debt crisis unfolded amongst Eurozone countries. They had the resources but lacked the will to contain the crises!

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Long-term interest rate changes of Eurozone countries. One reason Brexit was inevitable.

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