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  • Abu Dhabi printed a stellar $5bn bond this week after a seven year absence. But it may not be as easy for other Middle East sovereigns that need to print big bonds this year. Fundamentals point to an uphill slog.
  • With so much attention on whether the UK will vote to leave the EU on June 23, there is a distinct chance of underestimating political risks developing within Europe itself.
  • You might admire Obama’s clampdown on tax inversion, but if you are a loan banker starved of dealflow, you won’t thank him for it.
  • Mario Draghi, European Central Bank president, is known for playing with his bazooka. Right now, it feels more like his Badedas. The capital markets are swimming in froth, as surely as if Draghi had doused them with revitalising bath goo.
  • Italy doesn’t mince its words on troubled assets. Loans in danger of becoming non-performing are dubbed ‘incagli’, which means ‘run aground’. When they become the ‘NPLs’ we hear so much about, they are ‘sofferenze’, which simply means suffering.
  • For assessing risk aversion in debt capital markets, the figure of how many corporate high yield bonds are sold during a certain period comes can be a handy reference, but not this year.