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Regulation

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Liberated issuers will still have to follow European regulations if they want to sell in EU
Public versus private distinction scrapped for disclosure plus new, simplified templates for mature asset classes
Established, well-known corporates could be among the first to use new regime
An accurate picture of liquidity could help London compete for listings
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  • In this round-up, China says it will hold its most high-profile political meeting in May after a two-month delay due to the Covid-19 pandemic, both the official and Caixin manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) slide in April, and the successor to failed Baoshang Bank launches.
  • Some banks in the eurozone tightened their lending standards in the first quarter of 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic spread across the globe, even as loan demand surged, according to a European Central Bank survey that provides the first systematic evidence on the subject.
  • While emerging market bond investors are spending their days in the Covid-19 crisis battling with poor liquidity, cash calls from end investors, and even the odd new issue, debt relief has remained a threat, albeit only a vague one. But at policy level the topic is of growing importance, and what began as a matter for official institution creditors took a step closer to embroiling the private sector this week. Ross Lancaster, Phil Thornton and Oliver West report.
  • FIG
    The European Central Bank (ECB) gave lenders even more of an incentive to use its Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operations (TLTRO) this week, dropping the potential rate of funding down to minus 1%. But the unveiling of a new unconditional lending scheme set tongues wagging, with market participants debating which banks might use the money and what they might put it towards, writes Tyler Davies.
  • Open access, the much fought over and delayed section of the second Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II), is facing further pushback, according to a European Council document seen by GlobalCapital.
  • ABS
    The Federal Reserve reassured jittery markets on Wednesday that it is committed to using the full range of policy responses available to it in order to blunt the impact of the Covid-19 crisis, though some in the market fear that the central bank’s aggressive response will do longer term damage to market efficiency once the pandemic subsides.