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Chemical sector's growing uncompetitiveness a problem when it comes to attracting investment in the capital markets
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
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  • Germany’s jewel in the SSA crown, KfW, drew a gasp of horror on Tuesday when it set out to sell a seven year benchmark, but only limped to €2bn. That should ring alarm bells in the offices of every European public sector borrower.
  • Greece’s imminent cash shortage might be grabbing most sovereign bond watchers’ attention, but the European Court of Justice has handed its creditors an extra bargaining chip in negotiations.
  • In the corporate market investors aren’t buying and issuers aren’t mandating. But borrowers are still keen to roadshow. That is giving false hope to bond syndicates, and the costs could outweigh the benefits.
  • More than five years of intense lobbying later, and the securitization market still has the same set of complaints. Maybe next year things will be better.
  • The Singapore Exchange has been languishing this year, with no sizeable IPOs hitting the market. But things could be finally looking up, with Canada’s Manulife Financial Corp making headway with a real estate investment trust listing in the southeast Asian city-state. It’s time for issuers to prepare for a market revival.
  • What’s a CEO worth? Based on the price action in Deutsche Bank on Monday, roughly $2.7bn. But how much can one man ever expect to change a business?