Date of meeting: 26 March 2026
Time: 2pm – 4pm | Location: Bank of England, 20 Moorgate, London, EC2R 6DA
Minutes
Item 1: Welcome and Apologies
Andrea Rosen (Chair, Bank of England) welcomed James Ellery (Goldman Sachs) and Oliver McCausland (FCA) to the Committee.Ms Rosen also welcomed Alina Ishmuratova (JPMorgan), Paul Robson (NatWest Markets) and Vasileios Gkionakis (Aviva Investors) as guest presenters; and Mark Wyatt (Barclays) as an observer.Ms Rosen announced that Alan Barnes (FCA), Nina Moylett (M&G) and Richard Bibbey (HSBC) would be stepping down from the Committee and thanked them all for their longstanding contributions. Ms Rosen also noted that Jatin Vara had departed from the Committee following his move from BlackRock and thanked him for his contributions.Ms Rosen noted apologies from Galina Dimitrova (The Investment Association), with Hugo Gordon attending as her alternate.
Item 2: November Meeting Minutes
The minutes of the 27 November 2025 were approved.
Item 3: Market Update
Paul Robson (NatWest Markets) and Vasileios Gkionakis (Aviva Investors) presented an update on recent FX market developments.Mr Robson provided an overview of UK‑related drivers for sterling performance, noting that sterling had remained relatively resilient, supported by interest rate differentials and easing political risk premia, and discussed the potential implications of the Middle East conflict for sterling.Mr Gkionakis discussed the outlook for the US dollar, noting that developments in the Middle East had supported short‑term safe‑haven demand for the US dollar, while longer‑term structural factors would impact US dollar performance going forward. Mr Gkionakis emphasised that the duration of the supply shock from the Middle East conflict would be an important driver of near‑term currency dynamics.The Committee discussed current market conditions, noting the cautious “wait‑and‑see” behaviour in FX which was reflected in the moderate observed FX volatility since the beginning of the Middle East conflict. The Committee highlighted that FX market functioning had remained orderly, although noted that the start of the conflict had been challenging as the market digested the news.
Item 4: FXJSC Turnover Survey Results
Muna Lisimba (Bank of England) presented the key findings of the October 2025 FXJSC Turnover Survey. Mr Lisimba noted that daily average FX turnover had declined by 5% survey-on-survey to $3,850 billion following the record high April 2025 survey, but was 20% higher year-on-year. Mr Lisimba highlighted that FX swap activity was the main driver of turnover in October, despite lower volumes across most other FX instruments. Mr Lisimba also noted that the composition of turnover by currency pair remained broadly unchanged, with USD/EUR continuing to be the most traded currency pair.
Item 5: Digital Assets in FX
Alina Ishmuratova (JPMorgan) presented an overview of emerging digital asset use cases in FX, including intraday FX funding and settlement solutions supported by distributed ledger technology. Ms Ishmuratova outlined the potential benefits of such solutions, including balance sheet optimisation, enhanced transparency and reduced settlement risk.
Ms Ishmuratova noted that adoption of digital asset solutions had been slow so far, as the FX market continued to assess the use cases for these new technologies.
The Committee discussed current levels of adoption and generally agreed that these technologies were not yet being actively used across mainstream FX markets and discussed potential drivers for increased adoption.
Item 6: GFXC Update
Natalie Lovell (Bank of England) provided an update on the work of the Global Foreign Exchange Committee (GFXC). Ms Lovell noted that preparations were underway for the upcoming FX Global Code review and outlined ongoing work on FX settlement data, including that of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) to refine and publish the April 2025 FX settlement survey data.
Lisa Dukes (Association of Corporate Treasurers) provided an update on recent outreach activities, including a CFA webinar series and ongoing work on the concept of proportionality in Statements of Commitment.
Ms Dukes also presented on the GFXC corporates’ letter, outlining its purpose in encouraging broader corporate engagement with the FX Global Code and discussed expected next steps. Ms Dukes noted that the letter had been shared with Local FX Committees for wider distribution and invited Committee members to support outreach efforts to corporates.
Item 7: FXJSC Sub-committee Updates
James Kaye (Chair of the Operations Sub-Committee) provided an update on recent work related to market resilience. Mr Kaye highlighted the publication of the workflow on the Cross Market Operational Resilience Group (CMORG) website, which sets out escalation arrangements for a market-wide sterling disruption event.
Sharon Blackman (Chair of the Legal Sub-Committee) provided an update on recent discussions, including developments in EU benchmark and stablecoin regulation. Ms Blackman noted that the changes to the scope of EU benchmark regulation included adjustments to the criteria for determining whether certain FX benchmarks fell within the scope of the new regulation.
Item 8: Regular Updates
James Kemp (Financial Markets Standards Board) provided a brief update on recent FX market structure developments. Mr Kemp noted that FX trade allocations remained a key area of focus in the FX market. Mr Kemp suggested that potential provisions for good market practice on trade allocations should be considered as part of any future Code review. Additional material can be found in a recent Global FX Division paperfootnote [1].
Mr Kemp provided an update on pre-hedging, noting that the Financial Markets Standards Board (FMSB) was considering whether further guidance would be beneficial, and extent to which recent IOSCO guidance may need to be reflected in the Code.
Mr Kemp also highlighted recent developments related to UK benchmark regulation (BMR), including the recent UK consultation paperfootnote [2], and flagged that this raises the need to explore potential exemptions for certain overseas benchmarks used for deliverable forwards (as recently enacted in the EU). Mr Kemp also briefly noted ongoing GFXD discussions around FX settlement finality considerations across a number of non-CLS jurisdictions.
Attendees
Andrea Rosen – Bank of England (Chair)
James Ellery – Goldman Sachs
James Kaye – HSBC (Chair, FXJSC Operations Sub-committee)
James Kemp – Financial Markets Standards Board
Jeremy Smart – XTX Markets
Kate Hill – Aviva Investors
Lisa Dukes – Corporate Representative, Association of Corporate Treasurers
Mani Natarajan – Morgan Stanley
Marc Bayle de Jesse – CLS
Mimi Rushton – Barclays
Neehal Shah – BNP Paribas
Nina Moylett – M&G
Oliver McCausland – FCA
Paul Houston – CME Group
Philippe Lintern – Bank of England
Richard Bibbey – HSBC
Sally Francis-Cole – London Stock Exchange Group
Sarah Boyce – Association of Corporate Treasurers
Sharon Blackman – Citigroup (Chair, FXJSC Legal Sub-committee)
Simon Manwaring – NatWest Markets
Sophie Rutherford – State Street
Stephen Jefferies – JP Morgan
Alternates
Hugo Gordon – The Investment Association
Guest attendees
Alina Ishmuratova – JPMorgan
Paul Robson – NatWest Markets
Vasileios Gkionakis – Aviva Investors
Observers
Mark Wyatt – Barclays
FXJSC Secretariat
Muna Lisimba – Bank of England
Natalie Lovell – Bank of England
Sakshi Gupta – Bank of England
Shiv Khetia – Bank of England
Apologies
Galina Dimitrova – The Investment Association