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◆ EU regs plan sparks debate over treatment of secured borrowing ◆ Blistering corporate and FIG issuance but why are premiums rising in one market but not the other? ◆ UK Renters' Rights Act to impact UK buy-to-let RMBS market
The US bank is showing its global credentials at a time of increased transatlantic tensions but European banks are equal to the challenge
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  • Damien Aellen has been promoted to co-head of Credit Suisse’s Swiss franc bond syndicate desk.
  • This week Keeping Tabs looks at the financial factors that drove some European clubs to try and create a breakaway super league, and what might be driving inflation other than the pandemic recovery.
  • One of the corporate bond market’s most experienced funding officials is to leave the market next month.
  • When António Horta-Osório takes over as chairman of Credit Suisse on May 1, he will be fighting fires on all fronts. While the bank has a relatively strong capital position, boosted by a $2bn fundraising announced on Thursday, shareholders are demanding answers over strategy and controls. Perhaps more ominously, the Swiss regulator Finma has instigated enforcement proceedings, writes David Rothnie.
  • SRI
    Market participants will embark in the coming weeks on the difficult task of working out how to use the European Union’s sustainable finance Taxonomy, after the first criteria were published this week. In doing so, they will be conscious that the smooth tide of green finance is now breaking against the hard reality of power politics and resistance by fossil fuel industries — a clash that is rocking the Taxonomy’s credibility, writes Jon Hay.
  • Revenues at Credit Suisse’s investment bank are up 80% year-on-year amid a boom in capital markets business, but the fallout from the firm’s dealings with Archegos Capital and Greensill Capital meant that the group reported a net loss of Sfr252m (€476m).
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