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  • Singapore’s UOB has appointed Eric Lim as its chief sustainability officer, a newly created position to support the bank’s focus on ESG, which got a fresh impetus this week with the sale of the lender’s first sustainability bond.
  • Mexico cleaned up a chunk of short-term debt maturities on Tuesday with a $3.26bn 2041 bond. The country’s deputy finance minister told GlobalCapital that the sovereign had decided to act fast to issue amid expectations that US Treasury yields will widen further.
  • Marvell Technology, the Bermuda-registered US chipmaker, jumped into the dollar bond market this week with a $2bn trade linked to a $10bn acquisition, after clinching the deal more quickly than expected.
  • A group of institutional investors owning international bonds issued by Suriname have agreed to grant the South American sovereign a third debt payment standstill after the issuer modified the terms of a consent solicitation.
  • ABS
    Marketplace lenders are breaking into the auto loan industry, continuing to move far beyond the unsecured consumer loan products they began with. The move is driven by fintechs leveraging their technologies and client bases developed through their consumer loan products to open up new channels of income, sources say.
  • Debt markets are awaiting a wave of mergers and acquisition financings in the second quarter and later this year, as the boom in deals sparked by confidence that the economy is recovering from the coronavirus gathers steam. But the eagerness to lend will create tension between loan and bond markets, and deals are likely to get more challenging later in the year, write Mike Turner and Jon Hay.
  • An uneven economic recovery is expected across emerging and developed markets over the next year, the IMF said this week during its spring meetings. Meanwhile, a proposed boost to special drawing rights has split market opinion.
  • ABS
    Long-awaited amendments to European securitization law come into force on Friday, which should make non-performing loans securitization easier at a time when bad debt levels are set to rocket. Tom Brown reports.
  • SSA
    The SSA dollar bond market sprang into life this week with a slew of impressive deals. With swap spreads yawning wider at the short end and a fairly flat curve to five years, borrowers could soon be issuing sub-Libor deals in the belly of the curve.
  • Banks shouldn’t let conceptual considerations stand in the way of them issuing sustainability-linked bonds.
  • The announcement this week that the IMF is on its way to issuing a further $650bn of special drawing rights, providing central banks with extra foreign currency liquidity, should not be criticised for being too little, too late. It marks a much needed return to multilateralism, something that the developing world will benefit from.
  • Esoteric names from the FIG market are expected to fill the post-Easter issuance pipeline to take advantage on the constructive market conditions on offer.