Mondo Visione Worldwide Financial Markets Intelligence

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  • London Stock Exchange Group PLC Transaction In Own Shares

    Date 20/02/2023

    London Stock Exchange Group plc (LSEG) announces that it has purchased the following number of its voting ordinary shares of 679/86 pence each on the London Stock Exchange from Morgan Stanley & Co. International Plc (Morgan Stanley) as part of the second tranche of its share buyback programme, as announced on 7 October 2022:

  • ASIC Prosecutes Fifteen Companies For Failing To Lodge Financial Reports

    Date 20/02/2023

    ASIC prosecuted fifteen companies between 1 July 2022 and 31 December 2022 for failing to comply with their obligations to lodge financial reports with ASIC, obtaining over $115,000 in financial penalties.   

  • The New Zealand Financial Markets Authority Opens Consultation On Draft Guidance For The Intermediated Distribution Of Financial Products

    Date 19/02/2023

    To prepare for the Conduct of Financial Institutions (CoFI) regime, the Financial Markets Authority – Te Mana Tātai Hokohoko (FMA) – is seeking feedback on proposed guidance that covers arrangements where financial institutions distribute products and services through intermediaries. 

  • Qatar Stock Exchange: FTSE Russell Global Equity Index Series - March 2023 Semi-Annual Review

    Date 19/02/2023

    Qatar Stock Exchange would like to announce that the results of FTSE Russell Global Equity Index Series Semi-Annual Review, published on February 17th 2023, will be effective on 16th March 2023 after the close for the Qatari market.  

  • Excerpt From Speech By US Deputy Secretary Of The Treasury Wally Adeyemo At The Council On Foreign Relations On International Sanctions On Russia

    Date 18/02/2023

    One year on, our economic tools are constraining Russia. Our sanctions and export controls—implemented in partnership with the Department of Commerce—have degraded Russia’s ability to replace more than 9,000 pieces of military equipment lost since the start of the war, forced production shutdowns at key defense-industrial facilities, and caused shortages of essential components for tanks, aircraft, and submarines. Russia is running out of serviceable munitions and has probably lost as much as 50 percent of its supply of tanks. While the U.S. and our allies have provided Ukraine with state-of-the-art military equipment like M1 Abrams tanks, Russia has been forced to turn to mothballed Soviet-era equipment. Going forward, our export controls will continue to prevent Russia from accessing the equipment and parts needed to make up for these losses, and our economic and financial sanctions will make it harder for Putin to use the resources Russia can access to pay for new weapons.