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  • Turkey made a successful return to international markets on Tuesday after six months away. The sovereign paid up for the privilege, but took an important step in returning financing conditions in the country to normal.
  • Supranationals and agencies will have to further diversify their funding away from the big two currencies of euros and dollars next year, investors have warned.
  • The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Wednesday that the financial services industry positively received its plans to automate regulatory reporting requirements in the main.
  • Africa Finance Corp (AFC) has signed a $300m financing package from a Chinese state run bank for the first time, at a time when China’s lending into the continent is coming under increased scrutiny.
  • Secondary spreads in corporate bonds have widened in October, somewhat in line with the sell-off in all global markets. US credit spreads have suffered more than European, but some investors don’t see the move as material, for now.
  • Some traditional investors in European high yield bonds are showing growing interest in lower rated paper. But a closer look at market dynamics suggests that, rather than just newfound risk appetite, the presence of occasional buyers in the market may also be pushing them down the ratings ladder.
  • A long-awaited dollar deal from Mexican state oil giant Pemex gave proof that there was plenty of liquidity in Latin American bond markets as the borrower squeezed pricing on the back of a hefty book after putting out juicy price talk.
  • South American multilateral lender CAF (Corporación Andina del Fomento) is due to price a new five year bond in Australian dollars this week.
  • Transportadora de Gas Internacional (TGI), the Colombian gas pipeline operator, held investor calls on Tuesday as it considers a second attempt to issue internationally this year.
  • Obtaining a mortgage in the US has become a long and difficult process since the 2008 crisis. But can a mix of upstart financial technology firms and industry veterans meet the challenge of adapting mortgages to the digital economy? Participants at this week’s Mortgage Bankers Association conference in Washington DC said the market is certainly headed in that direction.
  • Fitch Ratings said on Tuesday that the increasing ability of leveraged borrowers to add additional debt without investor pushback would adversely affect the recovery rates for lenders in the event of a default.