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  • ABS
    Delinquencies in the fastest growing segment of the consumer debt market are increasing at a heightened pace, with another wave of missed payments on marketplace loans expected on the first of the month. Amid the rise in delinquent loans, lenders are saying that they are seeing a jump in loan applications as more consumers seek a lifeline to stave off the effects of the pandemic.
  • If regulators won’t turn off banks' additional tier one capital coupons during the coronavirus crisis, they will never find reason to.
  • Investors are increasingly focused on non-call risk in European securitizations, with specialist lenders in the firing line. Investors say roadshow conversations led them to believe that non-call risk would not be a feature of the post-2008 ABS market.
  • A financial industry fightback against bans on short selling by some jurisdictions is picking up pace, as lobbyists argued against the restrictions this week.
  • If Europe's corporate bond lead managers have been learning that it is possible to bring new issues even on a day when stock markets are falling and credit spreads widening, they still know a bullish day when they see one, and Tuesday was one.
  • Conor Hennebry has been promoted from head of European debt capital markets and syndicated lending to global DCM head, following the appointment of Rafael Noya as head of global debt finance.
  • Saudi Aramco’s IPO last year was a historic event for the company and its owner, Saudi Arabia, but despite a record $29.4bn being raised at IPO, international investors stayed away. They had demanded that the shares offered a discount to other listed oil majors, in part because of the political risk associated with the company. The fact it is now a tool in Saudi Arabia’s oil price war with Russia will have vindicated many in their decision to sit out the deal.
  • The euro market for SSAs has returned to life in impressive style, but borrowers outside the ECB’s asset purchase programme are meeting with a chillier reception than their European counterparts.
  • Canadian banks are among the largest, most profitable and best rated in the world, but that does not grant them immunity from liquidity bottlenecks. A recent spree of deals — although in some ways a show of might — illustrated that even the most fortified of lenders can appear vulnerable.
  • The dollar market had looked sluggish, particularly in comparison to the volumes churned out in euros, but Tuesday's $4.5bn two year from Asian Development Bank indicates the market is back in working order.
  • The European Stability Mechanism has added a new 12-month bill programme for the second quarter as it looks to manage its collateral requirements amid volatility in rates. ESM and the European Financial Stability Facility have also set out their issuance windows for benchmark deals in April to June.
  • Equity capital markets in Europe got off to a great start in the first quarter of 2020, but any optimism about more deal flow has swiftly been killed off by the onset of a global equity market sell-off sparked by the spread of the coronavirus across the globe and the shutdown of major economies.