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  • With investors taking fright at Italian politics and volatility returning to the FIG market, finding an opportunity to press on with funding and bank capital raising plans will now be harder for less frequent, smaller issuers in Europe’s periphery countries. Three problem banks of recent times have each indicated plans to raise subordinated debt: Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Carige and Caixa Geral de Depósitos, and market participants will be keen to see what they do next, writes Jasper Cox.
  • Singapore Exchange suffered an unfavourable twist in its Indian futures saga this week, when the Bombay High Court granted an injunction on new derivatives contracts that it had planned to launch next week. But one exchange’s misfortune might be a large asset manager’s opportunity.
  • Redwood Trust on Wednesday announced the latest RMBS transaction from its Sequoia shelf, a $410m offering backed by prime home loans.
  • The spread volatility seen in recent days brings back memories of the 2010-2012 eurozone debt crisis. Whether they are fond recollections or not — many investors are no doubt scarred by the experience — in such febrile times observers from all asset classes reach for the CDS toolbox to try to gauge sovereign credit risk.
  • The recovery of Turkish asset prices this week is less the result of prudent monetary policy — though that certainly helped — and more a lesson in the benefits of the personal touch and that markets are, ultimately, populated by humans.
  • Crédit Ag hires new ABS syndicate head - Presley returns to CS - Nomura raids BBVA for new ESG syndicate role
  • Corporate bonds steadied in trading on Thursday, as better news from Italy produced a bizarrely strong rally in Italian government bonds. Corporate issuance is out of the question this week, but could come next week if markets continue steady.
  • US corporate bond bankers are hoping for a rebound in supply in June, after the high grade new issue market limped to the end of May.
  • Risk retention in securitization, designed to make sure players have ‘skin in the game’, has driven a trade that seems almost the opposite – investment banks profiting by using their market stature to hold risk retentions instead of their clients. Barclays is the most recent player to take advantage, and for the lowest fee yet.
  • The Swiss franc bond market showed this week that it is well insulated from the turmoil affecting the euro market as South Korea’s Hyundai Capital raised Sfr300m from a tightly priced five year bond. With cross-currency basis swaps coming down, and low new issue premiums, Zurich-based bankers are keen to showcase the pricing competitiveness as well as the stability of their market.
  • Telecoms firm Lebara this week pushed back a deadline to avoid breaching reporting covenants of its only bond, a high yield note under Norwegian law, leaving some market participants worried about contagion.
  • The furore over the identity of Italy’s new government has seemingly put at least a temporary stop to its IPO market, with some sellers looking to wait until a semblance of stability returns. Other European markets are operating as normal but bankers remain on alert should volatility worsen, writes Sam Kerr