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The World Cup is being played outside European trading hours, but don't underestimate its potential for disruption
Hybrid capital is open to the big US tech companies. But who needs an umbrella when the sun is shining?
◆ UMG takes €1bn with first public trade in three years ◆ Trade punches through fair value ◆ Investors not concerned by AI or M&A
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A lion walks the streets of Rome, an owl shrieks in the marketplace at noon.
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The pace at which central banks are accelerating towards skewing monetary policy to support the fight against climate change was brought home this week by a speech by Isabel Schnabel, an executive board member at the European Central Bank, in which she went further than ever before in calling for strong action and hinted at how the ECB might do it.
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Hybrids and crossover rated corporate bond issuers hit screens this week, as the thirst for yield returned to the European market.
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Office owners and operators found a warm reception in the high grade corporate bond market this week, with investors and analysts growing increasingly bullish on the sector despite the risks it faces.
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A reverse enquiry from an institutional investor drove Raiffeisen to reopen its Swiss franc additional tier one (AT1) note this week, which was bumped up even further by demand from retail buyers.
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Heimstaden Bostad, the Swedish housing company, had a trickier time in the market with its hybrid capital issue on Thursday than Poste Italiane had a day earlier, suggesting that there is still some sectoral sensitivity among yield-hungry corporate bond buyers.
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