简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
Abstract:JPMorgan, the US-based investment bank, said on Monday that Russia would be excluded from all its fixed-income indexes on March 31. According to a statement quoted by Reuters, the maneuver was decided by the bank after Russia was placed on an index watch in March following sanctions imposed by the United States.
An investors' poll took place over the weekend about the matter.
JPMorgan put Russia on index watch on March 1.
JPMorgan surveyed investors on the possibility of including Russia's local and hard currency debt in its benchmarks over the weekend. In a “Survey Monkey” poll seen by Reuters, Wall Street bank asked whether sovereign and corporate bonds and securities denominated in hard currency and roubles should be retained or removed.
Those anticipating that securities will be removed are asked about their preferred timing - at the end of March or the end of April. The bank runs a family of hard-currency sovereign indexes called EMBI, as well as a corporate debt index called CEMBI. In addition, there is the GBI-EM benchmark for local debt in emerging currencies and JESG, which is based on environmental, social, and governance factors.
Based on bank information, assets worth $842 billion are benchmarked against those indexes. The EMBIG Diversified index of the bank weights Russia at 0.89% and the ESG version has an even higher weighted rating of 1.03%. It is also being investigated whether or not the debt from Russian ally Belarus should be removed from JPMorgan's ESG index series.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
FBK Markets, a young South African forex broker, targets both beginners and experienced traders within this region. This broker shines at its low minimum deposit required, 100% deposit bonus, and flexible account options, yet we cannot consider it reliable as it operates without any regulation. Furthermore, it features an approximately 70% withdrawal failure rate.
OlympTrade is a relatively young online broker registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, a shady spot with a booming of unlicensed entities. Tradable assets on the OlymTrade are not extensive, and this broker does not tell many essential trading conditions. As for trading platforms, I found trades can only operated on a simple web-based trading platform, no Metatrader platform at all.
T4Trade, established in 2021 and regulated by the FSA in the Seychelles, allows trading on a modest portfolio of over 300 instruments, spanning forex, metals, indices, commodities, futures, and shares, all accessible via the popular MetaTrader 4 and their proprietary WebTrader platforms. Notably, T4Trade offers a zero-commissions pricing model where both floating and fixed spreads are offered on its MetaTrader—flexible leverage up to 1000:1 to increase trading flexibility. T4Trade also introduces a copy trading service called “TradeCopier”, which enables traders who lack experience or time to join in the markets by copying the trades of seasoned professionals.
Swissquote is a unique online broker with a solid banking background in Switzerland. As a forex-focused platform, it provides one of the most respective range in the industry, over 80 currency pairs in major, minor and exotic. Notably, Swissquote offers different trading conditions for traders from Switzerland, Europe, Middle East, Hong Kong, South Africa, and other regions, and traders at Swissquote can enjoy the benefit of trading with its well-regulated brand and entities. Besides, Swissquote offers excellent research offerings along with its product offerings.