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The Swiss franc bond market weathered the collapse of one of its two biggest players in 2023 to enjoy its busiest year since 2014. Investors welcomed foreign issuers from all quarters with open arms and, as Sophie Astles writes, those visitors may be here to stay
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Observers could have been forgiven for thinking the additional tier one market might be as defunct as Credit Suisse, the bank whose demise mired it in controversy. By the autumn AT1s had come roaring back but, as Sarah Aisnworth reports, this was not 2023’s only wild ride in the FIG primary market
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For the first time since the global financial crisis, there is optimism that much-needed positive and proportionate regulatory reform is coming to European securitization. Yet there is a long way to go before glimmers of hope translate into concrete changes or have a meaningful impact, write Tom Lemmon and George Smith.
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Sponsored by Fenics Market DataYears of strategic investment in technology and personnel have turned Fenics Market Data into an industry-leader. A powerhouse of data and analytics, the firm’s expertise across different products, subject areas and regulatory issues creates a peerless business proposition. Fenics Market Data is a well-deserved winner of GlobalCapital’s Americas Data and Analytics Vendor of the Year.
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It is too early to tell if Turkey’s equity markets are truly healing
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Cyclical companies facing stormy horizons have a rare opportunity to smooth out their funding early next year
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Sponsored by European Investment BankAs the drive to finance more green projects spreads across the world, stakeholders are in need of further guidance on how to identify appropriate green project opportunities. In its ease of use, comprehensive coverage and analytic rigour, the EIB’s Green Eligibility Checker has emerged as a market-leading digital tool for the greening of the financial industry.
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GlobalCapital presents the nominations for its 21st annual Awards for the loan, leveraged finance and private debt markets.
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Sovereign, supranational and agency issuers made an early start to what promised to be a treacherous 2023 in the primary bond market. They will have been glad they front-loaded, as the year more than delivered on that promise. Rates volatility and rising inflation dictated when issuers could find a window to bring a deal and quantitative tightening, war and a banking crisis have left issuers needing to pay even more care to how they approach 2024.
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The transparency, traceability, and accountability benefits of the technology have the potential to transform the sector
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◆ Putting the AI in ABS ◆ Middle-market CLOs face more questions
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◆ Latin America’s bond markets at an (interest rate) inflection point ◆ Who’d be a primary dealer? ◆ What price briiiiidge loans?