Global ETF News Older than One Year


Low emerging markets returns have investors wary

December 23, 2013--Just when pension funds across the globe were getting comfortable with the idea of investing in emerging markets, their faith is being tested by disappointing performance.

The question is where performance in emerging markets-and institutional investments -go from here. Experts have different answers.

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Source: Pensions & Investments


ASIC helps develop IOSCO report on the regulation of retail structured products

December 23, 2013--The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) today published a final report on Regulation of retail structured products, which provides a toolkit outlining regulatory options that securities regulators globally may find useful to regulate retail structured products.

ASIC Chairman Greg Medcraft and staff co-led the development of the report, together with representatives from the French Autorité des Marchés Financiers.

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Source: ASIC


IMF Working paper-The Benefits of International Policy Coordination Revisited

December 23, 2013--Summary: This paper uses two of the IMF's DSGE models to simulate the benefits of international fiscal and macroprudential policy coordination. The key argument is that these two policies are similar in that, unlike monetary policy, they have long-run effects on the level of GDP that need to be traded off with short-run effects on the volatility of GDP.

Furthermore, the short-run effects are potentially much larger than those of conventional monetary policy, especially in the presence of nonlinearities such as the zero interest rate floor, minimum capital adequacy regulations, and lending risk that depends in a convex fashion on loan-to-value ratios. As a consequence we find that coordinated fiscal and/or macroprudential policy measures can have much larger stimulus and spillover effects than what has traditionally been found in the literature on conventional monetary policy.

view the IMF Working paper-The Benefits of International Policy Coordination Revisited

Source: IMF


IMF Working Paper-Global Spillovers into Domestic Bond Markets in Emerging Market Economies

December 23, 2013--Summary: While fiscal conditions remain healthier than in advanced economies, emerging economies continue to be exposed to negative spillovers if global conditions were to become less favorable.

This paper finds that domestic bond yields in emerging economies are heavily influenced by two international factors: global risk appetite and global liquidity. Using a novel approach, the analysis goes on to show that the vulnerability of emerging economies to these factors is not uniform but rather depends on country specific characteristics, namely fiscal fundamentals, financial sector openness and the external current account balance.

view the IMF Working paper-Global Spillovers into Domestic Bond Markets in Emerging Market Economies

Source: IMF


DECPG Weekly Global Economic Brief

December 20, 2013--The US Federal Reserve announced that it will begin a gradual tapering of its asset purchase program beginning in January 2014, initially reducing it from $85bn to $75bn per month. The communication around the policy change was effective, with most markets reacting calmly to the news.

Stock-markets and currencies in selected developing countries had already come under renewed pressure in recent weeks, but did not suffer additional adverse effects with the announcement. The recent WTO trade facilitation agreement reached in December has the potential to significantly ease the transactions cost of moving goods across borders, with significant benefits to developing countries

The US Federal Reserve decided this week to start gradually reducing its quantitative easing policies, reinforcing at the same time its commitment to maintaining short-term policy rates close to zero until at least mid-2015. The Fed decision reflects a convergence of factors including the decline in the US unemployment rate, improving housing markets and progress in fiscal negotiations in the US Congress. Markets reacted calmly to the news, taking comfort in the upbeat assessment of the outlook for the US economy and the reinforced commitment to keep short-term policy rates unchanged "well past the time that the unemployment rate declines below 6-1/2 percent", which by the Fed’s own forecasts will not happen until the end of 2015. Given the role the US Fed has come to play on US bond markets (holding at present more than 50 percent of the outstanding amount of Treasuries of 8 to 10 year maturity), market volatility and potentially abrupt changes in yields and risk premia may yet arise. The process of withdrawing quantitative easing is expected to span most of 2014.

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Source: World Bank


IMF Working paper-Procyclicality and the Search for Early Warning Indicators

December 20, 2013--Summary: This paper compares three types of early warning indicators of financial instability-those based on financial market prices, those based on normalized measures of total credit and those based on liabilities of financial intermediaries. Prices perform well as concurrent indicators of market conditions but are not suitable as early warning indicators.

Total credit and liabilities convey similar information and perform better as early warning indicators, but liabilities are more transparent and the decomposition between core and non-core liabilities convey additional useful information.

view the IMF Working paper-Procyclicality and the Search for Early Warning Indicators

Source: IMF


IMF Working paper-External Imbalances and Financial Crises

December 20, 2013-- Summary: Consider two views of the global financial crisis, One view looks across the border: it blames external imbalances, the unprecedented current account deficits and surpluses in recent years, Another view looks within the border: it faults domestic financial systems where risks originated in excessive credit booms.

We can use the lens of macroeconomic and financial history to confront these dueling hypotheses with evidence. The credit boom explanation is the most plausible predictor of crises since the late nineteenth century; global imbalances have only a weak correlation with financial distress compared to indicators drawn from the financial system itself.

view the IMF Working paper-External Imbalances and Financial Crises

Source: IMF


IOSCO Publishes Report on Regulation of Retail Structured Products

December 20, 2013--IOSCO Publishes Report on Regulation of Retail Structured Products The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) today published the final report on Regulation of Retail Structured Products, which provides a toolkit outlining regulatory options that securities regulators may find useful to regulate retail structured products.

The Toolkit has been developed with the goal of enhancing investor protection by providing securities regulators with possible approaches to address certain concerns with retail structured products. The proposed tools are intended to allow for a wide range of application and adaptation in different jurisdictions, and regulators may choose to implement some, all, or none of them in their jurisdiction.

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view the IOSCO report-Regulation of Retail Structured Products Final Report

Source: IOSCO


Joint Forum issues final paper on longevity risk transfer markets

December 20, 2013--The Joint Forum released today its final report on Longevity risk transfer markets: market structure, growth drivers and impediments, and potential risks.

Ageing populations pose serious social policy and regulatory/supervisory challenges in many countries. Longevity risk-the risk of paying out on pensions and annuities for longer than anticipated- is significant when measured from a financial perspective. For example, certain estimates of the total global amount of annuity-and pension-related longevity risk exposure range from $15 trillion to $25 trillion. At the same time, pension funds are increasingly looking to transfer this risk. The Joint Forum is therefore publishing this forward-looking report on longevity risk transfer markets that makes a set of recommendations to policymakers and supervisors:

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view the Joint Forum Longevity risk transfer markets: market structure, growth drivers and impediments, and potential risks paper

Source: IOSCO


EPFR Global News Release-Fund flows slump as US Federal Reserve finally pulls the trigger on QE3

December 20, 2013--Redemptions from EPFR Global-tracked Bond Funds hit a 24 week high in mid-December as the US Federal Reserve, after months of talking about tapering its current quantitative easing program (QE3), announced on December 18 that the process will begin in January.

The week leading up to the Fed's decision also saw heavy redemptions from Global Equity and Bond, Balanced, Gold and Energy Sector and Emerging Markets Bond Funds while Japan Equity Funds posted back-to-back weekly outflows for the first time since 4Q12.

Visit www.epfr.com for more info

Source: EPFR


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Americas


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Europe ETF News


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Asia ETF News


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Middle East ETP News


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Africa ETF News


June 16, 2026 Stablecoins in Nigeria: A Growing Cross-Border Channel
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ESG and Of Interest News


May 26, 2026 Infographic-Ranked: The World's Largest Stock Markets
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White Papers


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