Top Section/Ad
Top Section/Ad
Most recent
After quitting M&A and equity capital markets in Europe and the US last year, HSBC is striving to maintain global relevance — and London and New York still have a role to play
Deal raises questions about whether transaction was done at arm's length
Public pension schemes have sold shares in coal, oil and gas companies but are still funding expansion of the gas industry through infrastructure funds
Bot claims funding is ‘cheaper than peers who borrow from independent banks or credit funds’
More articles/Ad
More articles/Ad
More articles
-
A US presidential memo from Trump against China kicks off what could become a series of tit-for-tat tariff moves.
-
The head of the banking watchdog keeps his job after merger with insurance regulator, officials waive taxes on RMB-denominated oil futures for international brokers and investors, and Fitch says it is maintaining China’s sovereign rating thanks to positive growth and debt trends.
-
New technologies are marching into the securities issuance process. This week came bids to shake up two very different kinds of private debt — traditional corporate Schuldscheine and funky structured notes.
-
The European Union repeated this week that after Brexit, the UK’s financial services access to Europe will be dealt with through “improved equivalence mechanisms”, despite uncertainty over what “improved” means and concerns that granting equivalences could be used as a negotiating tool.
-
A deal between Nex and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) which could infuse European secondary bond trading and repo markets with the kind of liquidity that the CME has on offer, might be heating up.
-
Equity market volatility in the US spiked this week as investors scrambled to position for emerging risks, including impending tech regulation, an escalating trade war and rate hike worries.