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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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Falling oil prices and China concerns sent credit spreads to the record wides of recent years this week as equity markets plummeted, with a credit index options expiry coming right at the sharp end of the spike and adding to the turmoil.
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The latest push lower in oil prices caused additional pain for investors this week after forced liquidations in two levered exchange-traded notes (ETNs) linked to the energy sector locked in losses just as oil prices marked fresh multi-year lows.
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The economies of Italy and China do not appear to have much in common. Italy’s government would welcome a GDP growth rate of 1%, while China expands at less than 7% and investors take flight. One is a sclerotic, decaying Western country, the other is a dynamic Asian tiger. Such is the conventional wisdom.
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Iran's return to the world market is exacerbating pressure on oil prices and pushing commodity traders and producers to prepare for more disruption
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JP Morgan has changed its equity capital markets leadership in EMEA, making a new push in equity solutions and creating a vacancy on the syndicate desk.
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A large group of investors is determined to reject a buyback offer on billions of euros in soured bonds guaranteed by the Austrian State of Carinthia — an offer that may represent the province's only chance of avoiding an unprecedented bankruptcy, writes Graham Bippart.