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  • FIG
    The European Central Bank will price the third instalment of its Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operations (TLTRO III) more harshly than expected, it revealed on Thursday. This should keep most banks using market funding. Meanwhile, expectations are rising of another round of quantitative easing, something that would boost prices of bank debt, write Tom Brown, Jasper Cox, David Freitas and Bill Thornhill.
  • The US holding company of Spain’s Santander made its first trip to the dollar bond market in almost six months, as issuers made the most of improving conditions.
  • The Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) and the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) this week published their joint discussion paper on central counterparty default management auctions.
  • Christopher Giancarlo, chairman of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, made his final speech at a Futures Industry Association conference this week, with a last attempt to stake out his vision on cross-border clearing supervision.
  • Ask anyone how they feel about the economic outlook, and the answer is likely to be glum. That is certainly the way bond traders and central bankers feel, to judge by the inverted US Treasury yield curve — a traditional harbinger of recession — and dovish gestures by the Fed and European Central Bank.
  • A new section of the Schuldschein market is emerging, thanks to a virtuous circle. Property companies, until recently largely absent from the market, have begun to issue Schuldscheine, and these are attracting insurance companies, which rarely invest in the product because yields are too low.
  • Facebook has announced more details of its planned cryptocurrency payments system, GlobalCoin, and they are not likely to please the crypto community
  • The European Central Bank’s cheap lending programme for European banks will prolong the lives of some, but not cure them.
  • ING puts Kennedy at risk — BofA’s Tannenbaum given levfin role — Barclays hires equities chief
  • DZ Bank launched InGen this week. The new medium term note (MTN) trading platform aims to simplify the reverse inquiry process.
  • Italy’s parliament stunned the capital markets this week when it waved through a radical motion to explore issuing securities that resemble a parallel currency to the euro, in a development that has been met with almost universal derision. Frank Jackman, Lewis McLellan and Mike Turner report.
  • CDP Financial and Swedish Export Credit Corp (SEK) were the only SSA names to brave a volatile dollar market this week, and both deals got across the line.