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  • Despite quantitative easing measures contributing to persistent shrinking in the size of the European RMBS market, panellists at Global ABS on Wednesday were optimistic that the tapering of central bank funding schemes would see a resurgence of supply, as new non-bank lenders grow market share and banks look to refinance retained deals.
  • Swedbank listed a new programme on the Tokyo Pro-Bond market on Wednesday, as the Swedish bank looks to dip its toes into ever more attractive yen funding.
  • Talk of a ‘21st Century Glass-Steagall’ is swirling around Washington and Wall Street. What this might mean in practice is hazy, but the phrase Glass-Steagall is plainly a powerful political talisman.
  • FIG
    European authorities applied the bank recovery and resolution directive (BRRD) for the first time on Wednesday, placing Spain’s Banco Popular into resolution and approving its sale to Santander. The regulatory process, in which additional tier one (AT1) and tier two bonds were wiped out, has far ranging implications for all market participants working on financial debt.
  • Berlin Hyp (BHH) issued a tightly priced Pfandbrief on Wednesday, drawing strong demand for a rare deal backed by green commercial mortgage assets. At the same time the Mortgage Society of Finland mandated leads for a sub-benchmark transaction.
  • ABS
    Sources close to the Maltese presidency of the European Council have downplayed the importance of the regular reviews of risk retention rules, agreed under the new rules for 'simple, transparent and standardised' securitizations last week.
  • ABS
    Regulatory technical standards (RTS) related to the simple, transparent, standardised (STS) European securitization framework could take as long as 12 months to finalise, which would leave almost no time between RTS finalisation and STS implementation.
  • Corporate bond investors have a bevy of macroeconomic events on their radar screens, with elections and the European Central Bank meeting, but the large piles of cash in their pockets are expected to smooth over any cracks that might appear in the so far solid new issue market.
  • CEE
    Turkey has returned to the market with a euro trade as it looks to re-engage with investors and refresh its “stale” curve.
  • South Africa's Sibanye Gold has mandated banks for a $1bn bond offering which will be used to refinance part of a bridge loan used to acquire Stillwater Mining Company.
  • Public sector borrowers are taking opportunities at the very short end of the euro curve this week, breaking with tradition for much of the year where deals in the currency have focused at the longer end. The trend comes as the European Central Bank also reduced the weighted average maturity of its Bund purchases under the Public Sector Purchase Programme.
  • Chinese developer Fantasia Holdings Group Co wrapped up an unrated short-term note on Tuesday, snapping up $350m for refinancing. Bonds with maturities of less than a year are increasingly being considered by Mainland issuers, given the barriers in getting regulatory approval to go offshore for fundraising.