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  • ESG funds listed on the London Stock Exchange have had substantial investor interest through December, capping off a particularly green year for the market.
  • JAB Holding, the consumer products holding company, steepened its credit curve this week with its dual tranche bond, as it preferred securing demand over squeezing investors on pricing.
  • After weeks of equity inflows, investors are primed for a rally in UK equities following this Thursday’s general election. Banks are hoping for strong issuance conditions through to January.
  • Deutsche Bank laid out its strategy for its investment bank at an investor "Deep Dive" event on Tuesday. As part of a plan to boost the return on tangible equity, it is focusing on cutting costs in the back office and raising revenues in financing and origination.
  • Equity markets, particularly European ones, are largely focusing on the UK election as the last opportunity for pre-Christmas volatility. But investors should remember that other shocks remain possible, including the scheduled imposition of US trade tariffs on China on Sunday.
  • Denmark’s debt officials have a highly original plan to issue green bonds in which the green element can be stripped off and traded separately. It’s going to put many a green nose out of joint. That’s no bad thing: the market needs to re-examine its claims to efficacy and virtue.
  • FIG
    European insurance companies have limited refinancing needs in 2020, but analysts say that the sector will take advantage of market conditions to clean up capital structures for Solvency II. French insurance firm Scor this week was looking to beat the rush with a tap of a restricted tier one (RT1) bond.
  • SSA
    Morgan Stanley has been fined €20m by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) for manipulation of French and Belgian government bond prices. The bank intends to appeal the fine.
  • FIG
    Sweden published a study on Tuesday of the advantages and disadvantages of joining the EU’s Banking Union, highlighting the risk of becoming politically marginalised if it remains outside of the arrangements.
  • Voters go to the polls on Thursday to pick the next UK government, with the outside possibility of a far left Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour government keeping capital markets bankers awake at night. But the return of Marxism might hold some silver linings for them.
  • The Conservatives may push for further deregulation of the UK’s financial system after Brexit, including allowing dual-class share structures on London's main market, if they emerge victorious from the general election on Thursday. This would be a mistake — they should not put at risk London's high corporate governance reputation in order to seek to compete with New York or Hong Kong.
  • Hoist Finance has issued €337m of notes in what is the first investment-grade Italian securitization to be backed wholly by unsecured non-performing loans (NPLs).