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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
When staff complain, they deserve a fair hearing, not a wall of silence
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Waterfall of promotions follows Karia's move to insurance post
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  • The Green and Social Bond Principles’ executive committee has decided to leave the Principles unchanged this year, but is publishing three new documents on Thursday to help market participants. It also plans to launch an Advisory Council, to enable it to listen better to the concerns of the market.
  • The suspension of the Woodford Equity Income Fund and the collapse of London Capital & Finance show how retail investors lack regulatory protection. This is strange, when a source of safer returns — bonds issued by large banks — is often deemed too complex and risky for the ordinary person to invest in.
  • Angelo, Gordon & Co has hired former Pimco portfolio manager Sunil Kothari as managing director, responsible for originating and executing on residential and consumer debt investments across Europe.
  • The list of companies that have declared their support for the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures has grown to 671, with a combined market capitalisation of $9.3tr. This is up from 457 worth $7.9tr in September. The TCFD Secretariat issued its second status report on adoption of the recommendations this week.
  • FIG
    The European Central Bank will price the third instalment of its Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operations (TLTRO III) more harshly than expected, it revealed on Thursday. This should keep most banks using market funding. Meanwhile, expectations are rising of another round of quantitative easing, something that would boost prices of bank debt, write Tom Brown, Jasper Cox, David Freitas and Bill Thornhill.
  • The European Central Bank’s cheap lending programme for European banks will prolong the lives of some, but not cure them.