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  • SRI
    Two groups of UK MPs held an online meeting today to welcome and promote a report into how the banking sector can support a ‘just transition’ to a low carbon economy. The report’s recommendations included creating a National Investment Bank to replace the role played by the European Investment Bank and for the UK to issue a green Gilt.
  • Kensington Mortgages is considering redeeming the notes from Kensington Mortgage Securities 2007-1, a legacy deal with the majority of the pool paid down. The issuer is considering a new deal off the back of the redemption.
  • European high grade corporate credit spreads still have the potential to tighten by double digits of basis points heading towards the end of the year, according to some analysts. This is despite the expected revelations over the coming weeks of the impact of Covid-19 on second quarter earnings.
  • The Swedish National Debt Office has selected the maturity range for its debut green bond and the banks that will lead the transaction, which will take place via syndication in August.
  • Carnival Corp, the largest cruise line in the world — badly stricken by the impact of coronavirus on its business — raised €425m and $775m of 5.5 year bonds on Wednesday, which will be subordinated to the $6.25bn of bank loans and senior secured bonds it issued in June and April respectively.
  • Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, the Danish renewable energy investor, has signed a €380m green loan to finance a wind farm in Spain, as analysts say renewable energies are now cheaper for consumers than their fossil fuel counterparts in major markets.
  • Demand for Australia and New Zealand’s first syndications of their 2020-21 fiscal year was high on Tuesday, with both issuers printing their second largest ever deals.
  • When mortgage payment holiday schemes start to run out at the end of the year, there looms a genuine risk of a wave of defaults. Allowing investors access to borrower-level data may be the only way banks can clean up their balance sheets and maintain lending to the real economy but it is fraught with hazard and must be deftly handled.
  • Ecuador’s market-friendly debt restructuring hit a bump in the road this week as bondholders put forward proposals that would include conditions around environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors.
  • A former fixed income banker at Morgan Stanley has moved to a role outside of the capital markets by joining a Paris-based e-commerce firm that offers a sizing solution to online fashion brands.
  • India’s banking sector has long been in trouble. However, while a few banks can appeal to the equity capital markets to restore their capital levels — and their reputations — this won’t be easy or cheap.
  • Equity investors have welcomed rumours that Japanese conglomerate Softbank is exploring a potential IPO for Arm, the UK semiconductor and software designer, and are hoping that the company might return to the London Stock Exchange.