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Creating unified trading data feeds is proving much harder — and more controversial — than foreseen
Little green men could be closer than they appear
Scrutiny of regulatory proposals by those without securitization expertise is a feature, not a bug
Tom Hall goes through a sterling week of deals for European ABS, while Thomas Hopkins dissects the dangers that a rise in LMEs would pose for European CLOs
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In this round-up, new tariffs on both Chinese and US goods took effect on Sunday, China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index declined, and protesters in Hong Kong paralysed the city’s airport yet again.
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Christine Lagarde suggested that the European Central Bank, which she is set to lead later this year, could apply green criteria to its asset purchase programme once the EU’s Taxonomy of Sustainable Economic Activities is completed, in comments published on Thursday.
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In this round-up, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce indicated that it might hold off tariff retaliation, the country announced the establishment of six new free trade zones (FTZs) and the People’s Bank of China has asked banks to price loans based on the new loan prime rate (LPR) mechanism immediately.
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Buy and sell-side firms have rejected suggestions that they should have to post additional margin or participate in default funds in the aftermath of last year’s default at Nasdaq clearing.
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Europe’s patchwork of insolvency laws gives canny corporates and creditors the chance to pick the jurisdiction they want to use. That leads to absurd outcomes — and the sooner it ends, the better.
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A no-deal Brexit has the potential to cleave the European securitization market by seeing different rules apply in the the UK — its largest component — from the rest of the EU. Tom Brown reports.