Structured products are useful in that they help invest money for a specific purpose for a specific time frame. Typically, structured products are available only to sophisticated investors holding a ...
Structured financial products are engineered instruments that blend elements of traditional assets with derivative components, thereby offering customised risk–return profiles. These products are ...
Financial innovation has been a mainstay of economies for hundreds of years. Loans during ancient times, the creation of the stock market and the trading of various assets represent examples of how ...
Structured products have significantly evolved over the past several years, and providing asset managers with greater transparency into these particular investment vehicles is essential for continued ...
Periods of market turbulence have long been a test of investor conviction. When uncertainty grips financial markets—driven recently by shifting U.S. administrative policies, fluctuating interest rates ...
Traditionally in the domain of institutional investors, structured products combine various assets and derivatives to create tailored risk-return profiles. With the advent of blockchain, the potential ...
Abdessamad Khaled, Bloomberg’s Head of Structured Products, and Gaurav Kapoor, Bloomberg’s APAC Head, Sell-Side Risk and Valuations, discuss how structured products have performed during the pandemic ...
Structured notes are linked to a reference asset, the most common being equities but they can also cover various indices, interest rates, and currency, commodity, or property markets, as a few ...
The Structured Products market makes up nearly $11 trillion of U.S. public and private bond market debt. Banks employ financial engineering to transform a variety of assets, such as residential and ...
Many of you may have heard about so-called structured products, which are usually sold by banks to clients with a decent amount of capital (sometimes, to ...