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  • Rating: Baa1/BBB/BBB+
  • There was both palpable relief and vexation among derivatives market professionals this week as the European Commission approved, albeit with amendments, rules for collecting margin on uncleared derivatives. Although this traversed a key hurdle as Europe seeks to catch up with Canada, Japan and the US, it also brought into question why there had been a delay in the first place.
  • The US CMBS market has been steadily widening since a summer rally pushed spreads on the bonds to the tightest levels of 2016, with new issue benchmark triple-As widening out by over 20bp since then.
  • SSA
    It was all going so well for Italy. Its entry to the 50 year bond club on Tuesday pulled in a monstrous €18.5bn of orders. But almost immediately the bond became tradeable, the market frothed with talk of the European Central Bank tapering QE, sending Eurozone periphery bonds into a tailspin to remind everyone just how much markets are in the grip of central bank policy. Lewis McLellan reports.
  • PepsiCo led a quieter week of supply by opportunistic corporate issuers in the dollar market this week as it looked to issue ahead of an increasingly uncertain backdrop since September’s record monthly issuance volumes.
  • The Republic of Namibia, which has outlined plans to issue around $5bn of loans and bonds over the next 10 years, is to undertake a non-deal roadshow with fixed income investors in the US and UK.
  • Numerous press articles in recent years have predicted the death of single name credit default swaps. Onerous capital requirements, costly changes in market structure and alternative hedging tools have all been cited as factors driving the inexorable decline in the product.
  • Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), a prominent voice on the US Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, pointed to the reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as the last piece of unfinished business left over from the financial crisis in remarks given at IMN's first annual Credit Risk Transfer (CRT) Symposium in New York on Thursday.
  • Mercosur, the Latin American customs union, is threatening to expel Venezuela over violations of human rights in breach of the democratic clause in the club’s agreement
  • Bridgepoint-owned Pret A Manger and Civen-owned Ufinet both allocated dividend recapitalisations on Thursday, while another Bridgepoint-owned firm, Element Materials, released price talk on a proposed repricing of its buyout loans signed only in February.
  • Bookrunners priced a $427.8m consumer ABS deal from SoFi on Thursday, the platform's fourth such offering from its unsecured consumer loan shelf.
  • Credit risk transfer (CRT) market players arrived in droves for IMN’s first ever CRT focused event in New York on Thursday, showcasing growing interest in a sector that is proving to be the only game in town for supply starved RMBS investors.