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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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  • Tighter trading levels for bank tier two in the dollar market could shed light on the future of the equivalent market in Europe. Stand by for spread tightening.
  • The controversial all-male panel discussing Women in Securitization (WiS) at the SIFG conference in Las Vegas brought up valid points, but the industry must realize that lasting change has to include policing language.
  • Though Deutsche Bank’s revamped org chart looks suspiciously familiar, the bank’s strategy is a more radical departure than anything it has tried since the crisis. Perhaps it is making a virtue of necessity, but for the first time in years, the bank is racing to the top of the pack in its capital levels.
  • European high yield bond issuance is being squashed by central banks and CLOs, with primary supply heavily concentrated on the double-B names that need the market least. Keeping the market healthy means finding a new purpose.
  • Singapore’s status as the go-to hub for Asia’s real estate investment trusts appears to be under some threat, with two Asian issuers taking their business to Hong Kong and Indonesia in recent weeks. But concerns that Singapore could lose its Reit crown are overblown — the asset class is set to remain well under its dominion.
  • The ECB’s bank supervision unit has revealed more details about its ‘TRIM’ exercise, which, if successful, could be another nail in the coffin for Basel IV.