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  • Mexican non-bank lender AlphaCredit has launched a consent solicitation, as it seeks to make amendments to the indenture governing its 2022 notes.
  • The Bank of England may soon tweak its macroprudential policies and introduce a new funding scheme for banks to mitigate the economic impact of the Covid-19 coronavirus epidemic on companies. The measures would help lenders at a time when they could face pressure from lower rates and rising impairments.
  • Bank of Montreal reopened the dollar market for Yankee banks this week, using ‘shadow books’ to quickly wrap up the sale of its floating-rate note.
  • SRI
    Transition bonds, one of the hottest talking points of the past year in the green bond market, made a decisive step forward this week when Cadent Gas, the UK’s largest gas distributor, issued a €500m deal that attracted large orders from environmentally concerned investors, even though some green bond funds shunned it. Jon Hay reports.
  • BNP Paribas has hired Ankush Chowdhury as the head of transportation finance in the Americas, a newly created position focused on driving the bank's strategy for aircraft, shipping and other transportation asset classes.
  • Financial industry lobbyists have told the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) that its proposed revisions to swap dealers’ and major swap participants’ capital requirements will have “a significant negative impact on the US swaps market”.
  • SSA
    Bond issuers returned to the primary market this week showing greater resilience than many expected. The intense gyrations gripping underlying rates and equities mean that deals are likely to be far from easy to do for some time as the effects of the Covid-19 outbreak grip global markets.
  • Banks are going to play an outsized role in softening the economic impact of Covid-19 in the euro area.
  • Green deals from Hypo Vorarlberg and Russian Railways were sold in Swiss francs this week in what were immensely tricky conditions. The market was awash with deals in January and February, but many feel the spread of coronavirus will bring a halt to the momentum moving into March.
  • With the Schuldschein having grown into one of Europe’s foremost private debt markets, Asian and European banks have swarmed to it on the hunt for implied investment grade companies to lend to. But at the corners of the market, new characters are edging into the picture. According to several market sources, hedge funds and US investment banks have started to work their way into a still rare element of the centuries-old German market — distressed debt. Silas Brown investigates.
  • The Federal Reserve cut interest rates two weeks before its regularly scheduled meeting in an attempt to boost confidence of markets severely impacted by Covid-19 fears. Market participants, however, tell GlobalCapital they worry that the bank is spending its ammunition too quickly to remedy a complicated issue that requires a medical solution, not a monetary one.
  • Hopes of supply for senior and subordinated financial institution bonds have crumbled amid spread volatility, washed away by fears of the impact of Covid-19 coronavirus on bank balance sheets.