Derivatives Regulation - Rules and Reasoning from Lehman to Covid provides an indepth examination of the changes made to the regulation of derivatives that were enacted following the global financial crisis of 2008, considering the motivations behind these changes and including insights from the Covid pandemic. Key areas of derivatives regulatory reform are examined, including bank capital and leverage rules, the clearing mandate, uncleared margin rules, and the principles for the regulation of central counterparties. After providing an overview of the global financial crisis, the motivations for these reforms in its immediate aftermath are considered, as well as the impact of these rules on the financial system, using insights from the market stress around the onset of the Covid pandemic in 2020. The book analyses the construction of financial regulation, as well as its nature and how this should be assessed, using tools from the law, economics, and regulatory theory. Global administrative law, cost benefit analysis, and the results of regulatory interventions in other areas throw light on the legitimacy, efficiency, and effectiveness of derivatives regulation. Insights from international political economy are also discussed, situating financial regulation within the regulatory state, while showing how its institutional arrangements shape regulatory outcomes. Suggestions for improving both rules and regulatory processes are considered in the conclusion of the book.
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The first complete survey of post crisis derivatives regulation, this book provides an indepth examination of the changes made to the regulation of derivatives that were enacted after the global financial crisis, with insights from the Covid pandemic.
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Preface Introduction 1: Core Ideas in Derivatives 2: The 2008 Crisis 3: The Financial System during Covid 4: The Basel 3 Leverage Ratio 5: Risk-based Capital Regulation 6: Clearing and Collateralisation 7: Central Counterparties and their Regulation 8: Legal Perspectives on Financial Regulation 9: The Quantitative Analysis of Financial Regulation 10: Derivatives Regulation as Modelling 11: Perspectives from Social and Political Science 12: Rules and Arrangements in Derivatives Regulation
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David Murphy is a visiting professor in practice in the Law Department at the London School of Economic and Political Science. He is a leading expert on derivatives regulation, central clearing, and prudential policy, having published extensively in these areas, and worked in both bank and central counterparty policy at national and international levels.
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First indepth analysis of post financial crisis derivatives regulation Clear insight into both the rule-making process of derivatives regulation and the institutional arrangements that underpin them Interdisciplinary approach includes insights from legal scholarship, the economic analysis of regulation, the theory of modelling, and international political economy An authoritative, accessible treatment of complex areas of public policy from a leading expert in this area
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780192846570
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
774 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
406

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

David Murphy is a visiting professor in practice in the Law Department at the London School of Economic and Political Science. He is a leading expert on derivatives regulation, central clearing, and prudential policy, having published extensively in these areas, and worked in both bank and central counterparty policy at national and international levels.