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  • The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has been looking into bondholder concerns after HSBC decided to reclassify four legacy bank capital instruments earlier this year, leading to a plummet in their value.
  • Banco de Sabadell broke open the market for subordinated bank debt on Thursday, taking advantage of a steady improvement in conditions throughout the week.
  • All eyes are on Banco Santander in the run-up to a busy 2019 for additional tier one redemptions. Brutal trading conditions have left the Spanish bank at high risk of becoming the first issuer to leave a deal outstanding past its first call date. Tyler Davies reports.
  • The European Council and Parliament overcame deep disagreements to reach a provisional agreement on a new version of the bank recovery and resolution directive (BRRD 2) this week, which includes cap on MREL requirements that will help Europe’s lowest-risk banks. The breakthrough has lifted hopes that EU lawmakers will approve a broader overhaul of European financial regulation before the European Parliamentary elections in May.
  • After another volatile week, during which primary issuance went from hero to zero and the secondary market tumbled, Asian bond bankers are preparing for what they hope will be a busy last few weeks of the year — possibly until the very last working day of 2018, writes Addison Gong.
  • An alarming sell-off in the additional tier one market this week has added to investor woes after a brutal year for returns. New supply of subordinated debt is likely to be off the table in 2018, unless banks find the stomach for huge new issue premiums.