MiFID 2: Reloaded: Difference between revisions

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{{a|myth|{{image|AET1|png|The Bringing Into Scope of Cash-Settled Commodities, a culminating scene from MiFID 2: Reloaded.}}}}[[Muriel Repartee]]’s horrifying sequel to her 1950 [[Fi-Fi]] blockbuster {{br|The Day of the MiFID}}, in which some [[Emission allowances derivatives|carbon emission derivatives]] spontaneously catch fire setting the markets on fire and ultimately destroying the financial system.
{{a|myth|{{image|AET1|png|The Bringing Into Scope of Cash-Settled Commodities, a culminating scene from MiFID 2: Reloaded.}}}}[[Muriel Repartee]]’s horrifying sequel to her 1950 [[Fi-Fi]] blockbuster {{br|The Day of the MiFID}}, scripted as was the original by gonzo [[Fi-Fi]] beat sensation [[Hunter Barkley]], in which some [[Emission allowances derivatives|carbon emission derivatives]] spontaneously catch fire, which spreads to the an underground blockchain which quickly infects a n ujmber of above-ground derivative markets on fire and ultimately threatens the entire destruction of the financial system. This film was the first on-screen appearance of {{author|Hunter Barkley}}’s legal hero, [[Opco Boone]], played here by French swaps dreamboat [[Marc du Marquette]].
 
The film has been criticised for its finantific accuracy (many pointed out, for example, that CO2 is non-flammable).


The film was criticised on release for its dubious finantific accuracy (many pointed out, for example, that CO2 is non-flammable) but it has since become a cult classic in late-night drunk-tank fantasy theatres, often playing alongside such forgettable classics as ''Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow''.


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*[[Opco Boone]]
*[[Finance fiction]]
*[[Finance fiction]]
*{{br|The Day of the MiFID}}
*{{br|The Day of the MiFID}}