2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions: Difference between revisions
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{{a|eqderiv|[[File:Hindenburg.jpg|450px|thumb|center|the [[2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions]] at their launch in June 2011. As far as anyone knows, they're still there.]]}}Ah, the ill fated [[2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions]]. It seemed such a good idea. So advanced. So high-tech, incorporating the very latest [[mark-up language]] — the much vaunted [[Financial products Markup Language]]. There are [[Linklaters]] lawyers who have not yet | {{a|eqderiv|[[File:Hindenburg.jpg|450px|thumb|center|the [[2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions]] at their launch in June 2011. As far as anyone knows, they're still there.]]}}Ah, the ill fated [[2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions]]. It seemed such a good idea. So advanced. So high-tech, incorporating the very latest [[mark-up language]] — the much vaunted [[Financial products Markup Language]]. There are [[Linklaters]] lawyers alive today — alive, though ''changed'' — who have not yet refilled the existential void hollowed out from their souls by the years lost to converting all that ludicrous text into [[FpML]]. | ||
It’s been | It’s been eight years, and no-one’s using ’em. Like one of those millennial cults which predicted the end of the world in June 2010, woke up with a surprise on the first of July, did a double take, scratched its head, and said “well it ''is'' coming, just not today”. [[ISDA]], who manages the standard, is still confidently predicting that “all categories of privately negotiated derivatives will eventually be included within the standard”. | ||
{{sa}} | {{sa}} | ||
*[[Mark-up language]] | |||
*[[Equity Derivatives Anatomy]] | *[[Equity Derivatives Anatomy]] | ||
*[[Equity derivative]]s | *[[Equity derivative]]s | ||
*[[2008 ISDA Master Agreement]] | *[[2008 ISDA Master Agreement]] | ||
Revision as of 16:53, 3 December 2019
Equity Derivatives Anatomy™
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Ah, the ill fated 2011 ISDA Equity Derivatives Definitions. It seemed such a good idea. So advanced. So high-tech, incorporating the very latest mark-up language — the much vaunted Financial products Markup Language. There are Linklaters lawyers alive today — alive, though changed — who have not yet refilled the existential void hollowed out from their souls by the years lost to converting all that ludicrous text into FpML.
It’s been eight years, and no-one’s using ’em. Like one of those millennial cults which predicted the end of the world in June 2010, woke up with a surprise on the first of July, did a double take, scratched its head, and said “well it is coming, just not today”. ISDA, who manages the standard, is still confidently predicting that “all categories of privately negotiated derivatives will eventually be included within the standard”.