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The ESN has landed


Specialist mortgage lenders are optimistic that funding for asset-backed lending will improve in the long run, despite the difficult developing situation around the fall of specialist bridging lender Market Financial Solutions, writes Tom Hall
The possible further internationalisation of the covered bond market will present challenges as well as opportunities
DLT expertise will be needed as markets are modernised
◆ Venezuela embarks on historic debt restructuring ◆ Canada suggests covered bond boost ◆ European Secured Notes are here. Regulate them
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  • International dealers are declining to become members of Japan’s credit default swap and interest rate clearinghouse unless their contribution to the guarantee fund for multiple defaults is capped.
  • The People’s Bank of China is reviewing whether the National Association of Financial Market Institutional Investors should produce an internationalized master agreement for Chinese derivatives.
  • The Monetary Authority of Singapore is preparing to unveil legislation in the next few weeks that will contain rules for mandatory clearing and reporting of standardized over-the-counter derivatives, according to lawyers in Hong Kong and Singapore.
  • The Australian government is planning to introduce rules to forbid the use of client money as collateral backing over-the-counter derivatives, bringing the nation in line with U.K. and U.S. standards.
  • Direct access to central clearinghouses and linkages between CCPs will be good for the market, says the Bank for International Settlements, but CCPs will also need to make extensive changes to their structures to mitigate risks.
  • The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced that it will raise margin requirements on 21 primary dealers in mortgage-backed securities transactions.