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  • BNP Paribas is shaking up its equity-linked unit in Asia with the transfer of a senior banker to Singapore and a new hire, sources close to the matter said.
  • The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) plans to carve out two windows for equity block trades that bankers say could significantly reduce incidences of slippage.
  • Deutsche Bank is still struggling to deploy the €8bn of new capital it raised in March as well as excess liquidity that is streaming back to the bank, leaving its third quarter numbers looking disappointing.
  • Equity volatility has threatened a comeback in the past week as markets prepared for the European Central Bank meeting on Thursday. But after the ECB performed within market expectations, announcing a 50% reduction in its bond buying programme, fear gauges settled down once again.
  • Companies planning to float in the UK will no longer be able to meet analysts from banks that want to manage their IPOs, under new rules published by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) this week.
  • The growth in passive asset management has been one of the biggest trends in equity markets over the past decade. Savers are constantly told passive funds are a much cheaper way to buy the market than active asset managers, who try to beat the market. The logic of that is questionable, but as Jon Hay reports, new research from UBS suggests active managers are outperforming — in Europe, at least.