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  • “What were they thinking?” cried the European ABS market this week as the full impact of what originally seemed like an innocuous ban on an already illegal mortgage product became clear.
  • Energy utility company EP Infrastructure (EPIF), part of the Energetický a průmyslový (EP) holding group, has refinanced a €1.75bn loan from last year with a €1.95bn facility with 15 banks making it the first Czech Republic corporate loan of 2017.
  • Investors dumped Ghana's Eurobonds this week after the future of its relationship with the International Monetary Fund was thrown into doubt. The confusion has been unhelpful to a country which has historically had difficult relationships with international markets, though it did point to the over-reliance of some investors on an IMF anchor, writes Virginia Furness.
  • Turkish banks — GoDaddy
  • After S&P Global Ratings dumped two Chilean banks’ double-A ratings, fears have emerged that Swiss investors’ blossoming relationship with Chilean FIG debt will be stalled.
  • Of the near 20 borrowers in the leveraged loan market six are due to close this week, including business information provider Mergermarket’s £450m of sterling and dollar loans.
  • European Central Bank president Mario Draghi seems to have kept low volatility alive for the summer at least, with financials also set to benefit from index changes, writes Gavan Nolan.
  • ABS
    European authorities' last minute change to regulatory proposals for European securitizations has the potential to cripple the supply of MBS backed by legacy mortgages by banning any European transaction that contains what regulators classify as self-certified loans. Sam Kerr reports.
  • The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) on Thursday announced a new cooperation agreement with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), that will secure it information on the ongoing compliance of Indian central counterparties (CCPs) with European Union regulation.
  • After selling a green mortgage-backed covered bond to the International Financial Corporation and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Garanti Bank expects to sell its first publicly syndicated euro benchmark.
  • For months investors have been complaining about how far pricing moves from initial price thoughts to guidance and again in final pricing in the corporate bond market. On Wednesday, Vodafone responded with a new approach to marketing. The response, however, was not what those involved expected, writes Nigel Owen.
  • UK mortgage lender Charter Court Financial Services has priced its latest RMBS deal to strong investor demand and tight spreads.