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  • SSA
    An upset in the US presidential election overnight on Tuesday caught the world and its capital markets off-guard. Just like the Friday morning after the Brexit vote many awoke seemingly unprepared for a perilous open. But Donald Trump’s ascent to the White House, which so few capital markets participants wanted or predicted, has not disrupted market activity as much as might have been feared, for now.
  • This week, those in the capital markets showed it’s not just electorates that can deliver surprises. Investors got one back — by making markets rise on a shock Donald Trump election victory.
  • Equity specialists marvelled again this week at the capacity of markets to surprise, as despite a strongly held consensus that shares would tumble if Donald Trump won the US presidency, the New York stockmarket actually rose.
  • The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has requested more than $38m in monetary sanctions against UK based trader Navinder Singh Sarao over S&P futures 'spoofing' allegations.
  • Credit Suisse has recruited the former head of UK equity capital markets at Nomura as part of plans to beef up its corporate broking business.
  • SSA
    European public sector issuers are gearing up for another year of potential political turbulence, with the trend for pollsters to fail to call results — as seen with the election of US president-elect Donald Trump and Brexit — likely to make issuance planning more difficult. That outlook is likely to force a more dovish approach from the European Central Bank at its last governing council meeting of the year in December, said bankers.
  • Donald Trump may have pledged to “make America great again”, but his election as US president this week could also make 10 year dollar benchmarks trade again.
  • The remarkably rapid recovery of European investment grade corporate credit tripped on Thursday, as sell-offs in rates and equity markets disturbed market sentiment, but the primary market still looks sturdy in the face of volatility.
  • Verizon Communications has returned to the market with a mobile phone contract-backed ABS, after it made headlines in June with the maiden deal for the asset class.
  • Yields on Europe's peripheral government debt rose only a few basis points over Bunds on Wednesday’s news that Donald Trump had won the US presidential election race.
  • FIG
    Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan became the first banks to hit the dollar market after the election of Donald Trump as US president provided an unexpected fillip to credit markets.
  • Bizarre trading dynamics conspired to save over-confident trades backing a Hillary Clinton victory in the US presidential election, with a ‘Trump bounce’ in the aftermath curtailing volatility and sending many short-volatility plays back into the money. But the shock of the Republican victory adds to that of the Brexit vote in June and has jolted market complacency on other political events in the coming months.