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  • One of the worst ever weeks in markets spared no asset class, and investors warned that Latin America’s mostly commodity-oriented economies were in a particularly bad spot as the region’s oil producers led EM losses in both corporates and sovereigns.
  • JP Morgan appoints syndicate head for private markets — RBC loses M&A banker — Mizuho names sustainability head
  • As the coronavirus pandemic threatens every facet of capital markets activity, trading floors and back offices have emptied in recent days, leading to questions about how efficiently business can be done from home and alternative sites, write Paola Aurisicchio, Jasper Cox, Jennifer Kang and Ross Lancaster.
  • ABS
    Figure issued a $149m private securitization backed by loans originated, serviced and sold on blockchain on Wednesday. The unexpected takeaway, sources say, is that at a time when remote working is quickly becoming the norm, investors are likely to reconsider the value of technologies like blockchain as operations move online or away from central locations.
  • Financial market tumult and global instability as a result of the coronavirus pandemic are hitting CLO primary issuance, while activity in the secondary market is accelerating as investors hunt for opportunities amid the chaos.
  • JP Morgan faced down a global market rout this week to print its first senior unsecured dollar bond of 2020, jumping ahead of Wall Street rivals before markets froze in fear over the coronavirus pandemic.
  • The world’s largest economy is, among advanced societies, the least prepared to deal with containing the spread of Covid-19. This will have grave repercussions for the global economy.
  • Governments and central banks failed to prevent fear from taking hold of the capital markets this week, as Covid-19 reached pandemic status. European equity indices faced record falls on Thursday, before the Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced a $500bn repo operation to combat "highly unusual disruptions" in the US Treasury market. But it is far from clear if such extraordinary intervention will be enough to stop the panic.
  • Bankers are confident that companies up and down the ratings scale can lean on their lending groups during market volatility. But borrowers in the most stretched groups are not waiting to find out, with some clients already drawing their lines, adding backup loans, and trying to negotiate waivers on debt limits. Silas Brown, Jon Hay and Owen Sanderson report.
  • The European Central Bank failed to cheer bank debt investors with a stimulus package at the end of a difficult week that saw credit spreads soar. However, some analysts think that the ECB offered more than was immediately apparent, with its moves amounting to €800bn of capital relief.
  • Lloyds is among several lenders to announce that it will join NatWest, TSB and Nationwide in allowing borrowers affected by the coronavirus to take payment holidays on their mortgages, but that has raised legal questions for RMBS deals if borrowers require deferrals beyond the three month relief period.
  • Bankers hope a massive liquidity injection by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York will help stabilise the dollar corporate bond new issue market after the Covid-19 crisis triggered a global market rout this week.