Contract for differences: Difference between revisions

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#redirect[[Synthetic prime brokerage]]
{{a|spb|[[File:2319.jpg|450px|thumb|center|A full-scale [[CDA]] call-out, yesterday.]]}}For most purposes in these pages, a [[contract for differences]]  (“'''[[CFD]]'''”) is just another name for a [[synthetic equity swap]].
 
That product, so a googling will tell you, was invented in the 1990s by a couple of chaps from UBS Warburg. While their product morphed into today’s beloved [[delta-one]] [[equity derivative]], documented under an {{isdama}} and, by old school types, still is documented that way, for the new generation of [[Retail client|gullible millennials and Gen-Zers]], a “CFD” is a product offered by a number of retail brokers giving a commoditised exposure to pretty much anything you like. These retail products are still, technically, unfunded derivatives, you buy them on margin, and you can lose your shirt easily, so European regulators are taking an increasingly dim view of them, especially where offered to [[Retail client|gullible millennials and Ge-Zers]].
 
You could imagine a [[UCITS]] fund confusing its regulator by referring to an [[over-the-counter]] [[synthetic equity swap]] — a more refined, professionals-only sort of affair — as a “[[CFD]]”, triggering an unseemly [[twenty-three nineteen]] alert and full [[CDA]] call out.
 
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*[[Synthetic equity swap]]