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  • As a crucial middleman in the oil business, Trafigura has had to cope with concerns about the creditworthiness of some of its counterparts, and unprecedented volatility in the oil price that saw the West Texas Intermediate (WTI) contract turn negative at the end of April. Christophe Salmon, the company’s chief financial officer, explained how the company has coped with the crisis, and how its funding approach, based on deep banking relationships and a secured financing structure, proved resilient to the chaos around it.
  • SSA
    The European Stability Mechanism's (ESM) Pandemic Crisis Support programme may now be in place but what it has really shown up, especially in light of Germany's Federal Constitutional Court verdict on ECB QE last week, is that the eurozone badly needs the European Commission to pull its finger out and agree a recovery fund.
  • SRI
    Companies that pay little tax have suffered worse share price declines during the coronavirus pandemic than the market as a whole — a result that suggests investors may at last be taking notice of this long ignored aspect of corporate governance.
  • SSA
    Both the European Commission and the European Court of Justice have put out statements dismissing the verdict of Germany's Federal Constitutional Court (BVG) on the European Central Bank’s Public Sector Purchase Programme, going some way to soothe concerns over the ECB’s future.
  • In this round-up, the Chinese banking and insurance regulator fines three commercial lenders, the People’s Bank of China reviews the implementation of its monetary policy in the first quarter, and the pace of local governments selling bonds moderates in April.
  • Hong Kong’s citizens are slowly returning to the office as the special administrative region loosens its Covid-19 linked restrictions. But as the world continues to battle the pandemic, bond syndicate teams are continuing to take a flexible approach to work, with some predicting a longer-term future of remote roadshows and hot-desking at banks.