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  • Dongfeng Nissan Auto Finance, a joint venture between Japanese carmaker Nissan Motor and Chinese automaker Dongfeng Motor, will return to the Chinese auto loan ABS market on November 5 for its third deal of the year. The Rmb6.5bn ($920m) four-tranche note will be the issuer’s largest outing to date.
  • SRI
    The inertia dragging on financial markets’ response to climate change is brought home by an opinion poll in the UK, published on Wednesday. When asked questions in the survey, about 60% of people say financial institutions and banks should no longer invest in fossil fuels. Yet Shell and BP are still the first and third biggest stocks in the FTSE 100.
  • Asset manager AllianceBernstein has criticized the viability of shorting the CMBX.6 index, nicknamed the “next big short” by proponents of the trade, arguing that the decline of US shopping malls has been greatly exaggerated.
  • ABS
    Fora Financial, a New York-based small business lender, is in the market with its first ever securitization, joining the growing ranks of first time ABS sponsors to tap the capital markets in 2019.
  • Craig Coben, vice-chairman of global capital markets at Bank of America in London, will return to work in November, after the completion of an internal investigation into the accidental disclosure of inside information on social media.
  • Derivatives trading and OTC clearing have boosted Deutsche Börse in the third quarter quarter, with notable activity in its power exchange.
  • The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission is setting up a new subcommittee in a bid to resolve concerns around margin requirements for non-cleared swaps.
  • The Public Works Loans Board has given investment banks and asset managers the Christmas present they have been praying for for years. By hiking the cost of loans to local authorities, it will force them into private capital markets. Big mistake.
  • The Swedish krona MTN market’s bumper year received a further boost as nuclear power plant operator Teollisuuden Voima Oy (TVO) returned to the MTN market for the first time in five years to place a pair of notes in the currency. However, the return may be short lived, as TVO has plenty of access to cash and will take an opportunistic approach to future issuance.
  • The ‘mortgage prisoners’ fiasco has made it easier for MPs to demonise useful financial tools. While thousands of mortgagors cheer at the news they are about to be freed from their loans, the Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) support has come in too late to undo the reputational damage done to useful parts of the capital markets.
  • The Bank of Japan appears to have softened its stance on the country’s banks buying foreign CLOs, reporting that credit risk in the asset class is “subdued on the whole” following a slowdown in investment in the asset class.
  • US pharmaceuticals firm Eli Lilly headed out into the euro market on Tuesday for a €1.6bn dual tranche trade, which will partially finance a tender offer on dollar debt.