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Investors had been concerned that the financial regulation bill would curtail bank profits by limiting financial companies' ability to trade in derivatives
-- complex securities that derive their value from other assets such as stocks, bonds or foreign currencies and which investors often use to hedge against losses. Some derivatives are purely speculative investments, and some types of derivatives have been blamed for contributing heavily to the large losses suffered by banks and other companies during the 2008 financial crisis. The bill provides for derivatives trading to be regulated, but the harshest provisions related to the investments were dropped. However, European regulators are expected to propose even harsher regulations for derivatives trading, and may see the watered down U.S. bill as not having gone far enough, analysts said. European banks are unlikely to make any strategic decisions now because they don't have enough information about the details that the European regulation might involve, said Stephen Lewis of London's Monument Securities. "We don't know the final form of the EU legislation yet," he said. European banks probably have an advantage over their U.S. counterparts because "they can redirect business currently booked in the USA to other financial centers," Lewis added. Banking institutions have come to the conclusion that "it is only prudent management to shift some of what you are doing outside the United States," Bove said. "Obviously not the whole trading operations, but why do you have to trade oil or currency in New York? Maybe you have to trade some commodities in Chicago, but there's a lot of things you don't have to trade there," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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