Think the snowfall amounts were extraordinary Saturday? Get a load of some of the totals that happened indoors. Astonishing college basketball numbers came one after another.
Cameron Boozer scored 32 points for Duke, and he was only the fifth…

Think the snowfall amounts were extraordinary Saturday? Get a load of some of the totals that happened indoors. Astonishing college basketball numbers came one after another.
Cameron Boozer scored 32 points for Duke, and he was only the fifth…

If your Gmail account didn’t seem to be working properly Saturday, you were not alone. But Google says the issue has been be resolved.
The official status dashboard for Google Workspace suggests that problems began at around 5am Pacific on…
A new scientific study has attempted to explain what the Star of Bethlehem actually was.
The Star of Bethlehem is referred to as the biblical ‘Christmas star’ from the Gospel of Matthew that guided the Magi (Wise Men) to the birthplace of Jesus.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — A new mural unveiled in a central Tehran square on Sunday contains a direct warning by Iran to the United States to not attempt a military strike on the country.
The painted image of several damaged planes on the…

HETROMBOPAG demonstrates high response rates and a favourable safety profile in paediatric immune thrombocytopenia, supporting its role as an effective second line treatment option when first line therapy fails. Findings from a cohort of…

A United States aircraft carrier strike group is heading towards the Gulf as tensions build with Iran.
The US military last staged a major build-up in the Middle East in June – days before striking three Iranian nuclear sites during Israel’s…

London Business School’s Hélène Rey and Vania Stavrakeva, Vice President and Economist at the Boston Fed, Jenny Tang, LBS Economics PhD programme participant, Adrien Rousset Planat, together with Sinem Hacioglu Hoke of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and Daniel A. Ostry of the Bank of England, present the clearest picture yet of how the global foreign exchange (FX) derivatives market actually works, and how it shapes exchange rates, in a new National Bureau of Economic Research working paper, Topography of the FX Derivatives Market: A View from London.
Using an unprecedented dataset covering 100m FX derivatives transactions in London, the world’s largest FX trading centre, the researchers map how different players interact day by day. Their findings show that exchange rates are influenced not just by macroeconomic news, but by who is trading and why.
The research finds that pension funds, investment funds, insurers and non-financial companies mainly use FX derivatives to hedge currency risk, especially exposure to the US dollar. Dealer banks sit at the centre of this activity, absorbing these hedging positions and providing liquidity to the market.
By contrast, hedge funds use FX derivatives primarily to speculate, frequently changing positions in response to interest rates, economic news and momentum strategies. These speculative trades play a key role in transmitting monetary policy shocks into exchange rate movements.
The study also uncovers an important but less visible group: non-bank market makers, who often end up holding the residual currency risk created by speculative trading, even though they keep little long-term exposure overall.
Crucially, the researchers show that FX derivatives trading is not just a sideshow to spot markets. Speculative flows by hedge funds help drive currency appreciation after interest-rate surprises, while the unwinding of hedges by investment funds can fuel dollar strength during periods of rising financial stress.
The findings challenge standard models of exchange rates and highlight why understanding the structure and composition of FX derivatives markets is essential for policymakers, central banks and investors alike.

Pressure mounted on Donald Trump’s administration on Sunday to fully investigate the previous day’s killing by federal immigration officers of 37-year-old nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis.
Calls for an investigation have come from all sides of…