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Innovation and ambition have been hallmarks of mergers and acquisitions activity this year, but there are some signs of weakness in private equity
Bank’s relationship with SpringCash is ‘commercial’
Bank M&A is back on the agenda, but talk of SMBC buying Jefferies is premature. The two firms are prioritising their multi-stranded alliance and a takeover now would jeopardise it
World first deals could break new ground in sport risk management
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In this round up, trade tension carried on intensifying as both sides rolled out more punitive moves, the People’s Bank of China and the Monetary Authority of Singapore signed a three year currency swap agreement and April’s industrial production and retail sales growth declined.
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The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has given a boost to derivatives exchanges that are introducing passive liquidity protection for some of their contracts.
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The European CMBS market has defied its ineligibility for the European Securities and Markets Authority's (ESMA) new ‘simple, transparent and standardised’ (STS) securitization framework intended to boost confidence in the market. The asset class that appeared dead and buried after the financial crisis has outpaced other asset classes in recent times. But the resurgence did not stop one deal this week from suffering heavy investor scrutiny, writes Tom Brown.
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Index provider MSCI has confirmed, following this month's semi-annual review, that it will raise the inclusion factor of Chinese A-shares from 5% to 10%, effectively increasing the weight of A-shares in its MSCI Emerging Market Index from 0.72% to 1.46%.
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In this round up, China-US trade tension peaked with US president Donald Trump’s market-moving tweet, Chinese FX reserves dipped in April and the amount of Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFII) quotas approved in April surpassed that of all of last year.
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The Reserve Bank of New Zealand cut rates for the first time since 2016 to a record low of 1.5% on Wednesday. The RBNZ Monetary Policy Committee decision was the first under its new set-up, which included three external members on the committee.