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  • European high yield bonds and leveraged loans have maintained interest this week for investors, despite a lack of deals, as other parts of the corporate market have finally been lulled to summer slumber.
  • Dovish actions taken by the Bank of England last week, particularly its sterling corporate bond buying programme, helped send short dated credit and equity implied volatility near to their post-crisis lows, prompting traders to begin to roll out of short volatility trades and size up potential bumps in September.
  • Sterling bond yields may be sinking but that has rekindled investor demand for UK bond exchange traded funds at the expense of Gilts, according to IHS Markit.
  • An auction to settle credit default swaps referencing Grupo Isolux Corsán Finance is expected to take place on August 24, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association’s (ISDA’s) EMEA Determinations Committee (DC) said on Wednesday, as it published an initial list of deliverables that only contained one bond.
  • Two weeks into August and the anticipated summer slowdown is still not that slow, with big name borrowers continuing to test both the investment grade and high yield bond market, as well as bringing leveraged loans.
  • Guillaume du Cheyron, head of high yield bond origination and execution for Asia, has left Deutsche Bank.