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The necessity of clauses that help developing countries recover from catastrophes is getting more acute
Data-deprived markets should give the shutdown the attention it deserves
Triple-C loan pricing has been shunted wider while the true credit quality of loans trading at par is obscured
Credit Suisse AT1 bondholders should consider alternatives after this week's sharp repricing
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In the past few months, the European Central Bank's policy of buying almost everything in sight has pushed investors to the very frontiers of the maturity spectrum in a desperate hunt for yield. But the game might be up.
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The Basel Committee is familiar with criticism, but the sharp worldwide turn towards political populism, and its inherent distrust of globalisation, presents a real threat to the idea of global coordination within banking regulation.
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This week, those in the capital markets showed it’s not just electorates that can deliver surprises. Investors got one back — by making markets rise on a shock Donald Trump election victory.
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One thing needs to be made clear about a Trump presidency in the US: the president-elect is not a Wall Street Republican and he did not rely on the support of bankers to win the White House.
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The US stock market and the dollar have been falling since last week, as fears have grown that Donald Trump might win the US presidency in Tuesday's election.
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The US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is thinking of introducing federal charters for fintech firms. But with the move come untested new regulations for community investments, which have the potential to hamstring the industry.