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  • NiQuan Energy Trinidad Ltd, the owner of a gas-to-liquids plant in Trinidad and Tobago, held its final conference calls on Thursday and appears to represent the Lat Am DCM market’s last hope of primary activity in 2018, with most bankers now looking towards January.
  • Rising hopes that the UK can escape the nightmare of Brexit are misplaced. A second referendum would carry huge risks, and even if the outcome were for the UK to remain in the European Union, it would leave an unstable Britain with a damaged relationship with the rest of the EU.
  • Mexico City Airport Trust (Mexcat) offered an improved deal to bondholders this week as it seeks to make the documentation changes necessary to allow it to cancel its Texcoco airport project, but analysts said the new government has a long way to go before regaining the trust of markets.
  • Lenders across EMEA, particularly in emerging markets have explored new tactics and product lines amid a global decline of loan volumes. League tables show that strategy adjustments and moves in the nascent green lending market have been fruitful for some.
  • France looks set to be in breach of European Union budget rules after president Emmanuel Macron promised a set of concessionary measures in an effort to quell the violent protests of the last few weeks. While, by the absolute letter of the law, France’s breach will not be as bad as Italy’s, such a situation will hardly do much to stem the rise of populism or boost the credibility of the EU.
  • Bondholders were never going to be satisfied with Mexico’s new government after it cancelled the airport project in which they’d invested $6bn. But though the issuer’s tender offer and consent solicitation is unlikely to be the administration’s last squabble with markets, it is still a good sign.
  • EMEA loan volumes fell this year but the league tables showed that emerging market lenders still have much to be pleased about, with CEEMEA activity growing and keeping loans bankers on their toes.
  • SSA
    Lower funding needs and the European Central Bank’s confirmation that reinvestments under its Public Sector Purchase Programme will go on for some time should be supportive for the SSA market in 2019, said funding officials and analysts, even after net buying under PSPP stops at the end of this year.
  • Credit Suisse is giving money back to shareholders in a sign that a three year restructuring, which has featured two rights issues, is now firmly in its rearview mirror. But as the bank has cleaned up its act and refocused on what it does best, the argument that all of its businesses should live under one roof looks increasingly strained.
  • SEC chairman Jay Clayton warned the US Senate Committee on Banking about risks to US capital markets from Brexit, in a hearing conducted on Tuesday.
  • ABS
    Guidelines released by the European Banking Authority (EBA) on Wednesday brought the European ABS market much-needed clarity, as issuers grapple with new rules set to apply in the new year.
  • UK government bonds have been playing their traditional role as a haven trade for sterling investors amid the Brexit turmoil of the last 2.5 years. But some investors warn that this could change if the Labour Party wins a general election, as a ‘Corbyn premium’ will push up Gilt yields.