Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
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
Issuance volumes may be high but demand is even higher. Credit issuers in particular should take full advantage
Hounding the Fed does not make the US bond market more attractive
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
There has been feverish talk over the past few days that the UK and European Union are close to agreeing a deal to determine the future of the continent’s financial services industry, but that talk is premature: real negotiations likely haven’t even started yet.
-
Evergrande’s $1.8bn bond at the end of October sent ripples through Asia’s bond market. It also set a dangerous precedent for a market that is already accused of letting standards slip.
-
Recent developments may help push the risk of cyber attacks onto the capital markets through catastrophe bonds and other insurance-linked securities (ILS). But investors are likely to be wary about taking on too much exposure.
-
Central banks and international financial institutions have raised a storm over vanishing investor protection covenants in leveraged loans. But most warnings about the market have avoided assigning blame where it is richly deserved — to the private equity industry.
-
Nothing is scarier than the idea that your risk management is special. Deutsche should look again at its leveraged finance business.
-
India’s securities regulator has reworked the much-maligned Institutional Trading Platform (ITP), giving it a new name and more flexible rules in the hopes of attracting technology start-ups. But like its last iteration, the reformed listings platform is probably doomed to fail.