
2019: a year for innovation and technology
No longer weighed down by regulatory concerns, the FX industry can focus on innovation for its own sake

After a decade of focusing their attention on addressing regulatory and structural changes, it is with a certain degree of relief that FX market participants can shift their sights to innovating and investing in technology in 2019, for the sake of differentiation and efficiency.
“I think [a] characteristic of [the FX] industry in 2019 will be a greater confidence in applying new technologies in foreign exchange than perhaps we’ve seen in the past 10 years,” says Jason Vitale, chief operating
More on Trading
Chinese corporates shunned hedging during tariff upheaval
High hedging costs and increasingly stable spot rate meant exporters opted not to add FX hedges as RMB rose
For variation margin payments, cash is no longer king
Dealers are being pressed to accept corporate bonds and even equities as collateral for non-cleared trades
BNP Paribas eyes selective algo white label tie-ups
The French bank struck its first FX algo white-labelling partnership with Lloyds
Will Taiwan lifers ramp up FX hedging amid tariff convulsions?
As TWD remains strong against the US dollar, Taiwanese life insurers are still poised to act
Macro traders tread carefully ahead of tariff pause deadline
Uncertainty has held buy-siders back from both hedging and directional trades
Hedge funds return to HKD carry trade after May stop-outs
Widened interest rate differentials spur investors to re-enter positions, but risks remain
Why asset owners aren’t turning their backs on America (yet)
Pension and sovereign wealth investors see US exceptionalism outlasting policy-driven turmoil
Limited-loss hedges help US firms dodge costly FX moves
Structurers say US corporates’ use of options-based net investment hedging helped soften impact of USD selloff