-
Mercati
athexgroup.grAthens Exchange GroupLeggi tuttoTogether for a unified, stronger European capital market.
-
Azioni
Sustainable finance2025 Euronext ESG Trends ReportLeggi tuttoA data-driven snapshot of how Euronext-listed companies are advancing their Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) practices.
-
Indici
Access the white paperInvesting in the future of Europe with innovative indicesLeggi tuttoThe first edition of the Euronext Index Outlook series with a particular focus on the European Strategic Autonomy Index.
-
ETF
The European market place for ETFsEuronext ETF EuropeLeggi tuttoInvestors benefit from a centralised market place that will not only bring transparency but also better pricing due to the grouping of liquidity.
- Fondi
-
Obbligazioni
European Defence BondsGroupe BPCE lists the first bondLeggi tuttoFirst financial institution in Europe to issue a bond dedicated to the defence sector
- Prodotti strutturati
-
Derivati
Where European Government Bonds Meet the FutureFixed Income derivativesLeggi tuttoTrade mini bond futures on main European government bonds
-
Commodities
- Panoramica
- Agricultural quotes
- Power Derivatives
- Milling Wheat derivatives
- Corn derivatives
- Spread contracts
- Rapeseed derivatives
- Durum Wheat derivatives
- Salmon derivatives
- Container Freight Futures
- Consegna e liquidazione
- Specifiche e disposizioni
- Commitments of Traders (CoT) report
- Commodity brokers
Building a sustainable and liquid power derivatives market.Euronext Nord Pool Power FuturesLeggi tuttoEuronext and Nord Pool, the European power exchange, announced the launch of a dedicated Nordic and Baltic power futures market.
-
Documenti e risorse
Designed to help students navigate the complexities of financial marketsEuronext Trading gameLeggi tuttoJoin the Euronext Trading Game and step into capital markets. Learn from today’s leaders, explore sustainable opportunities, and trade with confidence.
Bank of England tests resilience of private markets to severe global shock
LONDON, June 19 (Reuters) - The Bank of England on Friday set out the scenario for this year’s stress test of private markets, modelling a severe global shock that sends equity markets down 35% and pushes inflation to 7%.
The test assumes unspecified geopolitical events disrupt supply chains, triggering a deep downturn in which Britain’s economy shrinks by 4% and unemployment rises.
More than 40 firms are taking part in the system-wide exploratory scenario (SWES), the first of its kind globally, including 17 alternative asset managers such as Apollo Global Management, Ares , Bain Capital and KKR. As the BoE does not regulate asset managers, their participation is voluntary.
The exercise is designed to assess how banks and non-bank financial institutions active in private markets would respond to a severe but plausible global recession, and how their behaviour could interact to amplify stress across the financial system.
Regulators globally have stepped up scrutiny of private markets. The Financial Stability Board in May said signs of underlying stress are emerging across private credit - typically non-bank lending to mid-sized companies. The BoE has previously expressed concern that opacity in private markets could exacerbate isolated failures.
The BoE said the scenario - like others in previous stress tests - is not a prediction of what it thinks is likely to happen to the world economy. It plans to share results from the first round of the test by year-end, before running a second stress early next year followed by a final report.
(Reporting by David Milliken and Phoebe Seers; editing by William James, Kirsten Donovan)
Find it fast
Looking for more insights? Explore our other news sections for updates on sustainable finance, companies and financial education