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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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  • Danish credit asset management boutique Capital Four is expanding in the US and has hired former MidOcean CLO portfolio manager Jim Wiant to establish and lead the US business. Wiant has been appointed CEO of US Capital Four and portfolio manager. He will be based in the New York office.
  • SRI
    Tesco, the UK supermarket chain, has reacted quickly by setting new targets to sell healthier food, less than a month after a group of shareholders filed a resolution calling for this — a sign of how sensitive companies are to having environmental, social and governance motions voted on at their annual general meetings.
  • This week in Keeping Tabs — on International Women's Day — damning research into C-suite diversity and six women discussing gender equality in banking; a warning from history about real-time settlement and finally, a podcast from a man convicted in a national scandal about how to deal with crises.
  • Much of Notebook’s focus was on the UK this week where the government's Budget threw up the creation of a new SSA issuer (maybe, at some point) and the distinct possibility of Threadneedle Street turning green.
  • Large US banks want the Federal Reserve to extend a measure allowing them to exclude Treasury bond exposures from their leverage ratio calculations. But other industry figures are pushing back. Senators have warned against the risks of letting temporary Covid support become more permanent.
  • In this round-up, smaller Chinese firms see the slowest growth in manufacturing and services activity since mid-2020, the head of the Chinese banking and insurance regulator is wary of bubbles bursting in foreign markets, and the onshore sale of the so-called ‘carbon neutrality bonds’ moves from the interbank market to the smaller exchange market.
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