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  • SRI
    Enel is banking on saving money on its cost of debt by using sustainable finance, as it increases its use of sustainability-linked bonds. But it sees this as a halfway house, until the rating agencies properly reflect the company’s sustainability with better credit ratings.
  • Trading in Bakkt bitcoin futures reached a new record high this week, pointing to firming institutional demand for the physically-settled contracts.
  • Moody’s has warned France’s LVMH that its $16.2bn debt-fuelled acquisition of Tiffany & Co will put its debt metrics near capacity for its A1 rating, as the acquisitive firm lines up $17bn of financing to buy the US jeweller.
  • Pension Insurance Corporation (PIC) published a report on Thursday making the case for institutional investment into UK social housing. The sector has come under pressure from falls in government funding and the increasing costs of developing new homes. Capital from the insurance sector could provide a valve, PIC claims.
  • Private equity firm Silver Lake acquired a 10% stake in City Football Group (CFG), the holding company that owns Manchester City FC, for $500m on Wednesday. The deal has been greeted as a watershed in the way football clubs are financed and is tipped to spark copycat deals.
  • Moody’s has warned France’s LVMH that its $16.2bn debt fuelled acquisition of Tiffany & Co. will put its debt metrics near capacity for its A1 rating, as the acquisitive firm lines up $17bn of financing to buy the US jeweller.
  • Nasdaq has developed a new method for pricing Danish covered bonds, which are typically more difficult to price than fixed-rate euro deals because of prepayment risks of mortgages in the underlying pool and negative convexity associated with callable deals.
  • ABS
    The resumption of European Central Bank purchases in the ABS market has helped some of the largest banks in Europe to issue dual purpose securitizations, locking in cheap funding from the senior tranche and selling down the structure to achieve risk transfer. ABS buying is now forming a greater part of the central bank’s asset purchases than during previous easing rounds.
  • SSA bankers expect dollar issuance from public sector borrowers to be lower than in previous years once the US market returns from the Thanksgiving holiday.
  • UK based mortgage start-up lender, Perenna, aims to revolutionise the UK's mortgage market by introducing a 30 year fixed rate loan that will be financed with the same pass through covered bonds that are widely used in the Denmark.
  • Denmark’s Monjasa has ramped up its bank credit lines by $160m as it prepares for a regulatory upheaval in the global shipping market next year.
  • Saudi Arabia’s listing of its prized asset, oil producer Saudi Aramco, was supposed to lure international investors into the kingdom. On that score, the deal will be a failure as pricing was set so high that only locals were interested. Now it seems global funds will have little reason to buy the shares once they start trading. Sam Kerr reports.