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Asian buyers driving callable SSA market have resurfaced in public benchmark deals
Public sector issuers have become more flexible when executing cross-currency interest rate swaps
Politically motivated prosecutions endanger democracy
Solutions exist but political will is necessary
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Wall Street workers hoping for a regulatory sea change under president Donald Trump are going to have to adjust their expectations, as empty posts at all levels of government are set to hinder lasting reform.
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Bankers around Europe are breathing easier on news that Geert Wilders will not be forming part of the next Dutch government. But why?
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Investment grade companies seeking bridge loans are sitting pretty. Banks have not lent at lower rates for decades, and there is little room for margins to go lower.
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If there was ever an idea whose time has come, it is green securitization. Action to green the economy is super-urgent, and progress so far has been worryingly slow.
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Syndicate bankers often joke that Brazil issuing is a sign that it’s time to sell Latin American bonds, and a sell-off indeed began this week just as the sovereign was pricing its latest deal. But market jitters should not distract from an improving picture in the country.
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The European Central Bank, after two years spent rewriting the central banker’s rule book doing “whatever it takes” to drive up inflation, is now in the tricky position of maybe having overshot. But while tapering QE is already on the cards, the biggest threat to the cost of debt in the eurozone for many years is closer than ever.