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When staff complain, they deserve a fair hearing, not a wall of silence
Benin reaped the rewards of its sukuk debut last week, and will do so for years to come
Little green men could be closer than they appear
Scrutiny of regulatory proposals by those without securitization expertise is a feature, not a bug
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  • The Italian banking system finished the year strongly with UniCredit making good progress on Project FINO (the bank's plan for asset disposal, named Failure Is Not an Option) and Genoa’s Banca Carige finalising the all-important capital raising part of its turn-around plan, but there is still a lot of work to be done to resolve Italy’s banking problems in 2018.
  • Bank regulators are being encouraged to incentivise green investment through bank capital relief because others have been too slow to take up the fight against climate change. But capital requirements are not designed for this purpose.
  • Asia’s green financing market has made great strides since issuance started to pick up two years ago, with 2017 seeing more regulators and issuers giving the asset class a push. But for all its impressive feats, the region’s green market is yet to come of age.
  • Qatar's banks face a wall of maturities in 2018 and need the door to capital markets funding to be flung open for them. But it does not have to be the Qatar sovereign that does the opening.
  • The student loan servicing infrastructure in the US is ripe for an overhaul. But the Department of Education’s (DoE) plan to outsource student loan servicing to big tech and big finance may not erase all of the existing problems.
  • The Single Resolution Board (SRB) should not have needed an appeal panel to determine that the Banco Popular resolution could have been more transparent. It was blatantly obvious from the outset.