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Defaulting to dollars in volatile times denies the euro market the resilience it needs
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A corner of the UK market has provided one of the few pain trades so far since war broke out in the Middle East
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  • If banks have learnt one lesson from Brexit it is that hiding during debates over the UK economy does not result in their desired outcome. Now with freedom of movement under attack, the time has come to speak out.
  • Efforts to paint the European ABS market as a simple, bank dominated funding tool to charm nervy rule makers underplay the importance of the market for complex, bespoke deals for private equity firms. Each sort has its merits.
  • Moody’s move to junk Turkey's rating last Friday was met with howls of disdain from investors after they believed the agency had hinted there would be no downgrade. But no diligent fund manager should be moving positions based on a throwaway comment from a single analyst.
  • Deutsche Bank is not simply too big to fail, it is too big to function. It's time to shrink.
  • The aftermath of the UK’s decision to leave the European Union has been an uneasy calm. Inflation is at a 20 month high of 0.6%, unemployment is at a post-crisis low, and consumer spending is robust. But then of course, nothing has happened yet.
  • Leveraged finance bankers probably didn’t think their jobs could get any tougher. Not until Wednesday at least, when, at Euromoney's Levinvest conference, the ECB dropped the bombshell that it was, in all likelihood, set to introduce ‘guidance’ on leveraged lending.