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  • World Bank president Jim Yong Kim has surprised observers with a strong hint that he may seek another capital increase while a radical think-tank report calls for a fourfold increase in infrastructure lending to $200bn
  • The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the Inter-American Development Bank are on the cusp of completing new developments that should aid the growth of capital markets in developing countries
  • Mexico’s disappointing growth performance is one of the “great mysteries of Latin America”, according to the World Bank’s chief Latin American economist for the region
  • Stanislas Yassukovich’s Two Lives: A Social and Financial Memoir, in which he recounts his own life, as well as the lives of his father and the Eurobond market (of which he was a progenitor) might be a first of its kind. It is a bond man’s — and bond market’s — Bildungsroman, as well as a polemic against the state of banking and a klaxon sounding the end of capitalism as we know it.
  • International banks are withdrawing their correspondent banking relationships across the Caribbean region as they comply with rigorous anti-money laundering and counter financing terrorism regulation. But without them, the region will be in deep trouble according to Haiti’s central bank governor. Meanwhile, Hurricane Michael could be worse than the 2010 earthquake in Haiti
  • John Roome, senior director for climate change at the World Bank, tells Emerging Markets that banks need to begin to shift the balance of their investment into greener sectors, and that those that do not risk being left behind
  • US based bond investors said that Argentina’s first euro-denominated bond issue for 15 years came too tight for them, as bankers said this was likely to be exactly what the sovereign had been looking for. However, the level also looked tight for yield-hungry European accounts, with the bonds trading down around a point on Thursday.
  • Island nation Bermuda is understood to be targeting Tuesday, October 11 to issue its first bond in three years, according to one investor, after beginning a roadshow earlier this week.
  • The World Bank’s VP for LatAm has told Emerging Markets that the region’s countries should push through reform as the economic slowdown is no temporary phenomenon. The subdued activity might even make it easier to do so, he says
  • Egypt's finance minister Amr El Garhy tells Emerging Markets the country is on the verge of unlocking access to not only an $12bn Extended Fund Facility, but also some $10bn–$15bn of foreign direct investment
  • The Western financial system could learn a thing or two about ensuring transparency in the primary debt markets by studying an approach adopted in China, according to the treasurer of the World Bank — while new technologies like blockchain could also help restore trust in the financial system
  • While many financial specialists would welcome a more proactive fiscal policy by the UK government, most would be alarmed by any suggestion of politicians gaining more influence over monetary policy