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Creating unified trading data feeds is proving much harder — and more controversial — than foreseen
Bond specialists sceptical that auctions can yield better results than bookbuilding
Viswas Raghavan’s move to Citi from JP Morgan 18 months ago has shaken up both institutions and provoked an intense Wall Street rivalry
New firm mine. aims to build 'institutional memory' for borrowers
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The European Commission has published its Green Paper on Capital Markets Union, alongside consultations on securitization and prospectus regulations.
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Citi has announced the successor to Paul Young as head of EMEA debt capital markets and syndicate
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Deutsche’s European Capital Markets and Treasury Solutions business has a new top team following Raj Bhattacharyya’s move to head Latin American corporate banking and securities out of New York. This left his former role as head of capital markets and treasury solutions for Western Europe vacant.
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) have made changes to the regulations governing foreign investment in government and corporate bonds. The new rules are an attempt by India to encourage long term investment in the country, say bankers.
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The European Commission’s draft green paper on Capital Markets Union, is “remarkably realistic and unidealistic”, according to Clifford Chance’s Simon Gleeson, a partner in financial market and regulatory law. The paper, due to be released on February 18, proposes tackling prospectus rules, SME credit scoring, revamped securitization rules, private placements and long term investment funds in the first phase of the project.
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Capital Markets Union merits the three capital letters. It is a grandiose project planned by a Commission which is fresh to the task, full of energy, and dealing with a European leadership more aware than before of the need to cooperate in economics and finance. It is also the perfect cover for a project to fix the past five years of poor regulation in Europe.