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HSBC hires BNP Paribas syndicate banker


Jumbo take-private of games company is largest LBO in history, showing animal spirits have returned. But the outlook for M&A activity remains complicated
Hire follows two senior departures from SMBC
Hybrids specialist changes shop
Iles and Poensgen step up
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  • SRI
    The polite world of sustainable finance has collided with the ugly reality of politics in the past week, as open strife has broken out over the European Union’s sustainable finance legislation, especially the Taxonomy. Conservative and progressive elements are battling over a host of issues, above all whether gas power should ever be classed as sustainable, and the validity and even legality of the Taxonomy is being called into question.
  • SRI
    A leaked letter from the European Parliament, seen by GlobalCapital, shows the Parliament has joined in the debate about the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation, which has been watered down to make life easier for institutional investors. The Parliament is calling for the rules to be strengthened, to help savers know which investments are green and ensure compliance does not become just a “tick box exercise”.
  • Sustainability-linked bonds with variable coupons are winning wide acceptance among investors, according to a survey by Natixis of 40 investment managers with $20tr of assets between them. Investors think they could be used by issuers of all kinds, want to see robust standards, and are open to structural innovations.
  • SRI
    The reliability of Science-Based Targets — one of the most promising systems for helping companies decarbonise — has been questioned after RWE, the German power company, was excluded by Axa, the French insurance group, for being too wedded to coal, despite having an approved SBT.
  • Crédit Agricole has appointed Christian Haller to head up its debt capital markets operation in Germany and Austria.
  • MUFG has for the first time chosen a single leader for its banking and securities divisions in EMEA. John Winter will take the post from April 1, meaning that the most senior executive in EMEA will be non-Japanese for the first time.