Regulation News
-
PRA and FCA go much further than EU in loosening rules
-
Liberated issuers will still have to follow European regulations if they want to sell in EU
-
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
-
Despite a tepid response in a 2024 consultation, there are signs EU authorities are laying the groundwork
-
The conditions are set so that 2026 promises to be even better than the already impressive 2025. A deepening of esoteric asset classes, combined with entirely new deal types, as well as more debut issuers are set to be the key themes, writes Tom Hall
-
◆ Simplification plans boggle banking boffins ◆ Hungry, hungry hyperscalers to push utilities into bond market ◆ A loan in the sand: private credit jostles for place in Middle East debt markets
-
Deutsche moved from 1.5% to 1% bucket ◆ "Direct impact" on Deutsche's leverage ratio ◆ Two banks upgraded
-
Reforms to Solvency II rules make non-STS securitizations cheaper investments for insurers
-
◆ Private credit, banks or securitization — which one is regulated too lightly? ◆ How AI capex will affect Europe's bond market ◆ What do defence bonds achieve?
-
-
Proposed reduction in EU insurer regulatory capital requirements expected to encourage CLO investment