Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
Markets are looking to the authorities to simplify blockchain issues, but they may not have the purest motives
The new European Secured Note market is keen to secure regulatory recognition for the new product but there are advantages to not having it
The possible further internationalisation of the covered bond market will present challenges as well as opportunities
Record-tight dollar spreads flatter public sector borrowers — and flag a deeper unease about the benchmark itself
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
-
Market participants are clamouring for sovereigns to join France and enter the green bond market. It would likely help the market, but would it help the environment?
-
The EU has caught the rest of the world on the hop. Years of neglecting structural reform, anaemic growth, all manner of financial crises, domestic political disruption, ructions with Greece — and now divorce with the UK — have variously driven predictions of death for both the Union and the euro. It hasn’t turned out like that.
-
A trend in the US over the past couple of years has involved securitization issuers doing everything possible to avoid using the term subprime. Such verbal chicanery does their market no favours.
-
The European Union is set to reveal its policy on the clearing of euro denominated products in 'third countries' on Tuesday. Implementing a location policy that would deny liquidity to foreign clearing houses would stifle cross-border competition, and ramp up costs. It must not happen.
-