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  • The Kingdom of Morocco achieved savage price traction on its €1bn 12 year trade on Thursday, bringing in the yield on the trade by 40bp, to 1.6% and extending its curve.
  • While the banking sector has pushed for capital requirements to be tweaked to favour green lending, European Central Bank vice president Luis de Guindos said on Thursday that equity funding might prove more appropriate than this for funding new climate technologies. On the same day, the head of supervision at the ECB said capital relief for green assets must be based on evidence.
  • ING and Rabobank choose markets heads — FIG’s Falth leaves UBS — DZ picks covered bonds boss
  • HSBC and MUFG have executed the first ever AUS/USD cross currency basis swap using SwapAgent, LCH’s non-cleared derivatives service.
  • UK water companies have a tricky December to navigate. The UK opposition Labour Party on Thursday made an election pledge to renationalise them, while they also face regulators' desires to toughen the financial regime under which they operate. Silas Brown reports.
  • Teva, the Israeli-US pharmaceutical company, priced a $2.1bn bond package at the tighter end of the initial price thoughts this week. While it is yet to come to a settlement over its alleged involvement in the US opioid crisis, investors were happy to jump aboard a rare double-B issue yielding up to 7%.
  • The successful IPO of Française des Jeux, the French gaming company that runs the national lottery, this week gave encouragement to government plans to privatise more state assets. Sam Kerr reports.
  • The retirement of Samir Assaf, HSBC’s long-serving head of global banking and markets (GBM), paves the way for a long overdue restructuring of that division. This will test the bank’s new-look management team.
  • Unlike in 2016, investment grade bond buyers reaching for yield after the European Central Bank started buying eurozone corporate bonds have been heading first for longer-dated investment grade and subordinated bonds, rather than dipping down into high yield territory.
  • Retail banking is in vogue at Goldman Sachs: its Dutch ultra-prime mortgage lending programme made around €30m in revenue for the US bank last year alone. These deals include features the bank calls “RMBS 3.0” that could slash the costs of future refinancings.
  • Mercuria scales back lenders in US revolver — EDF to sell US nuclear assets to Exelon — SNCF swaps loan tracks to sustainability-linked — Rewe seeks Schuldschein for acquisition debt — Dechra makes success of debut in PP market — AFC scores $140m Kimchi loan as Asian influence in Africa rockets
  • A slump in revenue growth during an economic downturn could trigger a change in investors’ risk appetite and a “widespread” sell-off of corporate bonds, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development warned on Thursday.