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Europe’s self-proclaimed investment banking champions are playing to their strengths, but remain far behind US peers
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
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Société Générale has become the latest big name bank to pull back from a government’s bond business, after it resigned as a Gilt-edged market maker for the UK Debt Management Office on Friday.
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Deutsche Bank said on Thursday that it will leave its Asia Pacific business intact, highlighting the region’s strategic importance to German companies and the bank’s solid presence in the region. This, it said, gives it an edge over European and American competitors.
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Credit markets endured another rollercoaster week as persistent nervousness prevailed over intermittent optimism and soured an earlier rally.
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Two new working groups of the Green Bond Principles will begin work next week, on defining greenness and on impact reporting. The move is part of the green bond market’s effort to define itself more clearly, partly in the hope that governments might ultimately subsidise it.
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Recent Middle East loans that have struggled in syndication indicate some lenders are having second thoughts about the regions’ borrowers just at the point when the latter need the loan market more than ever. The imbalance is about to upset the entire structure of the market, writes Elly Whittaker.
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Monte dei Paschi di Siena may be the ugly sister of Italian banks for investors, but it’s the Italian sovereign’s favourite son when it comes to primary dealerships.