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Bank’s €1bn transaction is most granular so far and found new buyers
Market participants gathering in Stavanger will focus on market growth
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
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  • UBS has brought its futures business under the fixed income umbrella in New York as it continues the move away from principal-based trading to an agency model.
  • Concerns are mounting in the derivatives market and beyond that it is all starting to feel a bit like 2007 as market players pile into ever-riskier trades and strategies — in turn devouring greater amounts of precious capital — in a bid to overcome the deleterious effect of an enduring era of low volatility and rates on P&L targets.
  • In this round-up, Sri Lanka signs a Rmb10bn currency swap line with China, Taiwan deposits inch up 0.7% to Rmb295.24bn, and the Chinese authorities officially launch the international gold trading board in the Shanghai FTZ.
  • The European Central Bank said on Thursday that European banks only drew €82.6bn in the first round of its Targeted Long Term Refinancing Operation (TLTRO) – far below consensus expectations and previous rounds of cheap central bank money.
  • The European Securities and Markets Authority will hold a public hearing on new market abuse rules, which threaten to choke the new-issue process with burdensome reporting standards, and restrict syndicates’ ability to sound the market, writes Owen Sanderson
  • US investors aiming to play the eurozone recovery are increasingly looking at the Eurostoxx50 via structured products with so-called airbag features that provide a buffer against depreciation.