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:A British court determined that IS Primes dispute against ThinkMarkets has no real prospect of succeeding. The ruling comes after the former claimed an exclusive liquidity contract breach.
IS Prime Risk Services Inc acquired Think Liquidity in 2017.
Losses of $15 million were alleged as a result of contract breaches.
According to court documents, the claimant, IS Prime alleges that from about September 18, 2018, in breach of a Liquidity Addendum signed between the companies after the acquisition of Think Liquidity by IS Risk Analytics, the defendants used the services of another broker or brokers for business they were obliged to give exclusively to the claimant until January 17, 2020.
The claimant says it suffered losses of $15 million approximately as a result, and it claims damages, an account, and inquiry as to damages.
In 2017, the risk management unit of IS Prime, IS Prime Risk Services Inc, has acquired the assets of one of the most popular risk management service providers for brokers at the time, Think Liquidity. Both parties signed an exclusivity agreement dated January 19, 2017, entitled ‘Liquidity Addendum’ as part of the deal for IS Prime to provide liquidity to ThinkMarkets via its FCA-regulated matched principle license.
ThinkMarkets Disputing an Amendment to the Deal
IS Prime stated that it was transferring its index swap business to a Hong Kong affiliate with effect from December 18, 2017, and thereafter ceased itself to trade index swaps. The defendant, ThinkMarkets hence didn‘t agree to the change, and claimed it’s discharged from any continuing obligation under the Liquidity Addendum concerning that class of product.
As a result, ThinkMarkets had no open positions to close and never instructed an index swap transaction with IS Prime via its IS Prime Hong Kong subsidiary. IS Prime claimed that existing terms of trade between IS Prime and ThinkMarkets continued in full force and effect, but the latter disagreed.
“I have accordingly come to the conclusion that the claim by IS Prime, insofar as it relates to the trading of index swaps after 18 December 2017, has no real prospect of succeeding. IS Prime has no real prospect of overcoming the defense pleaded in paragraph 28(3) of the Amended Reply to Defence to Counterclaim. There is no other compelling reason why the matter should be disposed of at trial. I will therefore give summary judgment under CPR Part 24 in favour of Think on that issue,” the court determined.
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.
The Japanese yen faces both internal and external pressures, with a potential intervention by the Japanese government looming.
Oil prices dropped more than 1% on Wednesday, mainly due to the strengthening of the dollar and the increase in U.S. fuel inventories, which collectively suppressed the price rise.
A private contractor in Malaysia faced a devastating loss of over RM5.9 million after falling victim to a fraudulent investment scheme promoted on Facebook. Tempted by the scheme’s impressive claims and credentials, the victim began investing in September 2024. The investment process required him to download an application called A-Trade, which was readily available on the Apple Store.
Gold Continues to Rise, can the Bulls Keep Going? Recently, gold prices have been on the rise, especially following the release of the non-farm payrolls data, as demand for gold as a safe-haven asset continues to increase.