


| Richard Raeburn's Financial Times Column (02/12/09) |
|
|
|
Richard Raeburn, Chairman of the EACT, wrote a column in the FT (02/12/09) explaining why Brussels must stick up for the end-users of derivatives. This article can now be downloaded from the EACT website.
The article reads: Corporate users of derivatives are embroiled in a joint push for regulatory action from the US and the European Union. What began as a political response to the crisis may yet be resolved by a political judgement call in Brussels. It remains to be seen to what extent the European Commission and parliament will follow the US down a legislative path that sacrifices economic prudence for headline-catching action against an illusory demon. The routine mitigation of risk by corporates using derivatives - most commonly for currency, commodity and interest rate exposures that naturally arise within the business - is a mature part of the management process. This is not speculative trading. Nor is there any credible evidence that non-financial sector end-users of derivatives were the source of any systemic risk that caused such damage to the global economy. AIG was of course not a non-financial sector end-user; it was trading and making markets.
The rest of this article can be download in two parts. Read it by clicking these links: |
|
| Last Updated ( Friday, 25 June 2010 ) |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
| IASB exposure draft .... |
|
The EACT has submitted its response to the IASB's exposure draft on the measurement of financial instruments. This is the first of three stages of consultation in a programme designed to allow the IASB to come forward with a substantial revision to IAS 39. The EACT welcomes the IASB's initiative and looks forward to an outcome with less complexity and greater appropriateness for practical risk management by corporates ... full article click here |