Industry association: Difference between revisions

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*[[ISLA]]: International Securities Lending Association. The {{gmsla}} and its American cousin the {{msla}}
*[[ISLA]]: International Securities Lending Association. The {{gmsla}} and its American cousin the {{msla}}
*[[ICMA]]: [[International Capital Markets Association]]. [[Repo]]s are their main bag. They publish the [[GMRA]] and [[MRA]]. Once were called the [[Bond Market Association]]
*[[ICMA]]: [[International Capital Markets Association]]. [[Repo]]s are their main bag. They publish the [[GMRA]] and [[MRA]]. Once were called the [[Bond Market Association]]
*[[BBA]]: the [[British Bankers’ Association]]. Their main contribution to the world of finance was, ah, [[LIBOR]]. Oh dear. Oh, dear, oh dear.
*'''[[UK Finance]]''': The artist formerly known as the [[British Bankers’ Association]]. Their main contribution to the world of finance was, ah, [[LIBOR]]. Oh dear. Oh, dear, oh dear. Now they don’t touch interbank rates with a barge-pole — no-one would let them even if they wanted to — so they restrict their activities to “enhanc[ing] competitiveness, support[ing] customers and facilitating] innovation”. So that’s nice.
 


Fun fact: the collective noun for a group of [[industry associations]] — seldom used, because so rare and disconsolate are the circumstances in which they get together — is a [[torpidity]].
Fun fact: the collective noun for a group of [[industry associations]] — seldom used, because so rare and disconsolate are the circumstances in which they get together — is a [[torpidity]].

Revision as of 14:48, 17 September 2019

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Those self-appointed keeper of the various flames of the different cottages that make up our industry. Traditionally thought of as bland, sleepy places, they are from time to time cast into the terrible glare of publicity, which generally doesn’t play out too well for them.

Fun fact: the collective noun for a group of industry associations — seldom used, because so rare and disconsolate are the circumstances in which they get together — is a torpidity.

See also