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  • The Bank of England is working to ensure UK financial markets can cope with further strains in the case of a second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, or a severe economic downturn.
  • The Asian Development Bank sold the first ever Mongolian togrog denominated bond this week, funding a local dairy farm project in the country.
  • Two recent policy changes from the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) spurred a pair of foreign banks to scoop A$3.2bn ($2.2bn) from the bond market this week. An expansion of repo-eligibility and a term funding facility for domestic banks have freed up the funds to drive the bumper deals, according to a banker at one of Australia's big four banks.
  • CBAM Partners is the first manager to price a debut CLO in Europe since the Covid-19 pandemic began but market participants are worried about the lack of new warehouses opening, forecasting a drought ahead after the pre-crisis deals are termed out.
  • The Spanish treasury has invited investors to join a call on Friday to discuss the sovereign’s recently updated funding programme for the year.
  • With less than 10 months to go before the expected implementation of the Settlement Discipline Regime in February 2021, the sell-side’s preparations are well underway. Given the potential impact of SDR on banks and broker-dealers, there is extensive ground to cover ahead of the go live date.
  • The interest cost savings may not be enough to entice some countries to accept the European Stability Mechanism’s pandemic crisis loans, with Portuguese and Cypriot officials expressing doubt.
  • Travelodge has opted to restructure its debts through a CVA rather than using the UK’s new restructuring framework, shortly to become law. That means landlords are likely to be the losers, rather than bondholders.
  • The coronavirus pandemic may have inadvertently solved one of the longest-running complaints about Europe’s equity capital markets: the time it takes to do an IPO. And many in the market hope this is a permanent change, write Sam Kerr and Aidan Gregory.
  • Kensington and Precise Mortgages, two of the most frequent issuers in the UK RMBS market, have signalled a willingness to call their outstanding deals, in a sign that a rallying market is taking extension risk off the table.
  • UniCredit names new syndicate head — UniCredit names new syndicate head — Law firm hires for Libor — ING hires trader Telfer
  • The European Central Bank disappointed corporate bond markets on Thursday, as expectations had been running high for an extension of its purchase programme to include "fallen angel" companies that held investment grade ratings before the coronavirus crisis hit. But the €600bn boost to its overall asset purchases may hold spreads in.