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  • Andrade Gutierrez, the Brazilian construction firm, wrapped up its debt restructuring this week with a well-received bond exchange as Brazilian high yield names keep investors on their toes in the absence of new issuance.
  • Investor concerns over a growing corruption scandal in Argentina brought a new bout of volatility to Latin American bonds this week, with market participants on both the buy-side and sell-side appearing to have written off the prospect of new issuance in September.
  • Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored enterprises at the heart of US housing finance, are less than a year away from launching a common securitization platform that will rebalance the market to make a more level playing field for their respective securities.
  • CEE
    Yields on Turkey’s sovereign debt hit 20% this week, stoking fears of a debt crisis. But breaking the purported psychological importance of the 20% ceiling does not add much to the well-established litany of issues facing the country’s economy.
  • UniCredit’s senior management team had to fend off a barrage of questions about the bank’s exposure to Turkish bank Yapi Kredi this week, as yields spiked on Turkish local currency debt and the lira slid further against the dollar. UniCredit’s equity stake is accounted at €2.5bn, but worth less than €1.2bn in today’s market.
  • The Italian banking sector could be hurtling towards another crisis this autumn, with the government’s budget negotiations expected to put pressure on the bond market, worsening funding conditions for banks, write Jasper Cox and Bill Thornhill.
  • SRI
    The drive launched by California treasurer John Chiang to promote a more vigorous municipal green bond market in the state comes as US local governments’ green bond issuance has dipped after early strong growth.
  • Elon Musk’s sensational claim to have funding in place to take Tesla private stunned the US capital markets this week, but the lack of substantive detail to the plan has largely reversed an initial rally in the firm’s equity and debt instruments, as well as reportedly drawing the attention of the Securities Exchange Commission. Aidan Gregory and David Bell report.
  • A pair of US sanctions against Russia could have potentially disastrous consequences for local and international bond investors, especially if a planned ban against the purchase of new sovereign debt takes effect, writes Lewis McLellan.
  • The European Securities and Markets Authority recently fined a clutch of Nordic banks for breaking credit rating regulations. The decision could have implications for the Schuldschein market — where arranging banks issue similar ratings to investors.
  • UK Prime Minister Theresa May may have rebuked her International trade secretary Liam Fox for his suggestion the chances of no-deal Brexit were now 60-40, but bookmakers Boyle Sports has exactly those odds for those who want to put any money on it. If that is the likely outcome now, what will it mean for the execution of bond deals?