Issues
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The Fed is unlikely to revise its plans as oil prices rise due to the cut in production
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Common language ‘absolutely essential’ to process of digitalisation, says co-founder
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- Banking crisis not over, says veteran analyst - Why European banks are sitting out the primary market revival - From Berlaymont to Berlin: reading the runes in the SSA market
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Garlanded banker led FIG origination in EMEA
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Iceland is uniquely placed to support the economic development of the Arctic region. But alongside the vast potential around transport, energy, tourism, mining and fishing are key concerns around its fragile ecosystem and geopolitics, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Philip Moore reports
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Icelandic banks have become enthusiastic issuers of labelled bonds, sensing that they gain extra interest from investors. The government, however, has delayed joining them, partly because it does not need much funding. Meanwhile, as Philip Moore reports, the banks’ focus has now shifted to accelerating the growth of their green lending, as they try to contribute to Iceland’s ambitious decarbonisation targets
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Iceland has bounced back strongly after the pandemic, with tourism leading the way. But there are signs that a more balanced economy is developing. Philip Moore reports
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To many Icelanders, the crises engulfing US banks such as SVB, Signature and First Republic, as well as the dramatic takeover of Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse by its domestic rival UBS will have triggered painful memories of their own banking and economic disaster 14 years ago, in December 2008.
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Savings banks clobbered by bond losses in 2022 have recovered their appetite for deals
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Premiums to rocket but how high? Euro locals leave it to international banks in covered bond market in aftermath of Credit Suisse affair
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Loose regulatory status of SLBs has made them a harder sell than simpler green bonds
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Second and third movers paid 'next to no premium' at own peril, while bankers praised issuers merely for getting over the line