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  • Though emerging market loans widened in early trading on the day after Donald Trump’s election, pricing for both IG and EM loans returned to the levels of the day before by midday — as the overriding theme of cheap money in European markets, not the shock result of the US vote, dominated.
  • There was a benign response in the European leveraged loan market on Wednesday to Donald Trump's shock US election victory. How the result affects the post-summer repricing wave is a little more unclear, however, especially given the pipeline of new paper.
  • Donald Trump’s shock US election victory in the early hours of Wednesday caused a shockwave to course through derivative markets overnight. But by midday in London traders said the overall reaction was much more orderly than in the aftermath of the UK vote in June to leave the European Union - and by close of business some markets had made full scale retrenchment.
  • Equities in Europe have reacted with resilience to this morning’s surprise that Donald Trump will be the next US president.
  • The European high yield market on Wednesday proved that it has learned at least one lesson from its Brexit experience: the unexpected does not mean market shutdown. Despite Donald Trump's surprise US presidential election win on Wednesday morning, HY market participants think issuance could resume quickly.
  • The euro corporate bond market sold off on Wednesday morning in reaction to Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election, but spread widening was limited, and bankers are already preparing new issues for Thursday.
  • Natixis’s ‘asset light’ restructuring strategy, called New Frontiers, showed signs of success in Q3 with revenue from new loan production more than doubling and equities jumping 14%.
  • The head of loan syndication and sales for Asia Pacific at Société Générale will become its global head of loan syndicate, assuming some of the responsibilities of the outgoing deputy head of global syndicate in the process.
  • SSA
    Donald Trump may have shocked the world with his US presidential election win in the early hours of Wednesday, but the public sector bond market is already nervously eyeing the next chunk of political risk — particularly given the growing trend for polling companies to make spectacularly wrong predictions.
  • Euro corporate bonds budged little on Wednesday morning as market participants reacted to Donald Trump’s surprise US election victory, with some investors buying on the dip and expectations growing for further central bank intervention in the market.
  • FIG
    The FIG market looked set to shrug off Donald Trump’s surprise victory in the US presidential election on Wednesday, and bankers were optimistic that new issuance could restart in a matter of days.
  • Covered bond spreads held firm as Donald Trump unexpectedly won Tuesday night's US presidential election. But, with many participants anticipating much greater US fiscal stimulus, rates markets could yet be roiled.