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Turbulent market conditions of the Middle East war have pushed bond issuers and investors to try new things
A swift response is tempting, but lenders should avoid kneejerk reaction
Talk of de-dollarisation has evaporated. The dollar market remains the undisputed king of financing
Inflation caused by war threatens budding recovery in commercial real estate
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  • The S&P500 blip on the news last Friday that the FBI was reopening its investigation of Hillary Clinton’s private email server showed that markets are on edge about the US election.
  • Lending Club finally unveiled its auto lending arm this Tuesday, after dropping hints at the LendIt USA conference in April. But auto lending is a whole new ball game, and the platform needs to muster all the ammunition it can to fight for a slice of the market.
  • Forward looking statements from officials linked with the US Federal Reserve Board have been a bit of a controversial issue this year and have more often than not be a source of more confusion than clarity.
  • The European Central Bank is “reaching the limits” of its covered bond purchase programme (CBPP3) according ECB board member Ewald Nowotny, but that does not mean it is about to stop buying.
  • The EU’s most ambitious free trade agreement to date, the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (Ceta), was delayed by a Belgian region, in a development with ominous prospects for the UK’s EU negotiations and therefore, the financial services industry in London.
  • The Financial Conduct Authority’s final review of investment and corporate banking markets whiffs of the sort of light-touch regulation that aided and abetted the boom years before the 2008 financial crisis. It has looked at the wrong aspects of market behaviour and it asked the wrong questions.