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Little green men could be closer than they appear
Scrutiny of regulatory proposals by those without securitization expertise is a feature, not a bug
Weak or half-hearted response to Greenland threats will leave markets crumbling
Over the last week the US president has pushed to make homes and consumer credit more affordable but these policies risk unintended consequences
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With South Korea and the Philippines heading to euros for new bond transactions, more issuers from Asia should take courage and consider funding in the needlessly neglected currency.
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While other central banks have started to grapple with climate change, the Federal Reserve has been conspicuous by its absence. But as green shoots begin to emerge in the US, the Fed will not be able to ignore the topic for much longer.
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The Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party’s success in Sunday’s general election is expected to keep the country’s climate action programme on track, which includes the possibility of issuing a debut green bond.
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The retail industry is in deep trouble, especially in the UK, where every other week it seems a storied High Street name tumbles into financial distress. Private equity sponsors, which owned many of the collapsed names, take much of the blame, but they were also victims of structural changes that battered the industry.
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A year ago, Hong Kong’s stock exchange (HKEX) added a new chapter to its regulations, allowing pre-revenue biotechnology companies to list. The historic move has turned the city into the biotech IPO hub of Asia. But its fortune could change if the Mainland’s new Nasdaq-style Shanghai tech board, which offers similar pre-revenue concessions, stems the flow of its primarily Chinese issuers.
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China made big strides developing its green bond market last year, moving closer to international standards and producing a volume of issuance that placed it only behind the United States. But this year, the market has gone backwards. What has happened to Chinese green bond issuance?