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  • It was a question of unfinished business for Nomura this week, as the Japanese firm came to the dollar market with a rebooted $3.25bn three part dollar trade.
  • For those in the world of grown-up finance, the cryptocurrency world has often been the subject of amused scorn or mild envy. It is very much its own game, and it scarcely seems to inhabit the same world as staid, professional markets like that for commercial paper. But all that is changing and regulators must pay attention.
  • As the debate over emerging market debt restructuring rages on, market participants have expressed their frustration at the lack of clarity over the outcomes.
  • SRI
    The European Commission signalled this week that it would extend regulation into many more aspects of sustainable finance, driving an agenda that could change the role of capital markets in society. But although responsible investing experts welcomed it, the complex package of at least 30 measures is likely to provoke a wide variety of reactions, from enthusiastic support to complaints that it is too slow and unambitious, to outright opposition. Jon Hay reports.
  • Covered bond supply is likely to remain anaemic over the second half of this year, with many analysts sharply downgrading their forecasts. As cheap central bank financing is expected to remain in place well into next year and deposits will probably remain high, an improvement in supply may be slow in coming.
  • SSA
    A sharp and mysterious drop in US Treasury yields blindsided investors this week, which swiftly fed through to European markets. The moves came perilously close to wreaking havoc in primary markets and issuers in many asset classes are thinking twice before pressing ahead with issuance, write Richard Metcalf, Lewis McLellan, Bill Thornhill, Mike Turner and Oliver West.
  • SRI
    Enel smashed a series of records when it came to the dollar market with a $4bn sustainability-linked bond on Wednesday.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • The European Union is expected to come to the market next week with a dual tranche deal comprising bonds for both its Next Generation EU (NGEU) and European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSFM) programmes.
  • Tough legacy mortgage securitizations are resisting the switch away from Libor, as the Financial Conduct Authority calls on issuers to contact investors before the six month deadline hits. A group of mortgage securitizations issued by defaulted Lehman Brothers pre-2008 are seen as particularly high risk.
  • The Federal Housing Finance Agency is set to take a different direction under the the presidency of Joe Biden from the one it took under Donald Trump, with a laser-like focus on affordable housing. To further the affordable housing agenda, the US's government-sponsored enterprises are expected to ramp up their volumes of RMBS issuance to boost the availability of mortgages.