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Norton Rose Fulbright and Katten have added to their legal teams
Asset manager wants to offer more products to institutional investors
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UK politicians should prepare for mortgage holidays becoming a political hot potato after borrowers who took payment holidays just-in-case realise that their financial well-being may not be as unscathed as they first anticipated.
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Amigo’s estranged founder wants to return to Britain’s biggest guarantor loans provider, floating the possibility of another shareholder vote, after selling more than 40% of the company, reducing his stake to below 20%.
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A new Brazilian law is set to boost credit card ABS securitizations from non-bank lenders, helping the alternative sector to thrive despite the economic fallout from coronavirus.
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Supply chain finance company Greensill has hired Peter Charles as vice-chairman of distribution and Dolph Habeck as managing director, head of distribution of the Americas, the company told GlobalCapital.
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NatWest Markets has restructured its divisions and given them new leadership. It is also moving some UK corporate-focused bankers over to the ring-fenced bank.
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Real estate investment firm Toorak Capital Partners has hired Kevin Tatro as head of asset management and reporting and Stephen Tyde, Jr, as head of special servicing.
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Deutsche Bank picks pair for healthcare — Rothesay makes moves in US — Barclays announces new ESG positions
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UK mortgage moratorium numbers are being inflated by the timing of the government’s job retention scheme, with data from lenders suggesting payment holiday levels were more in line with continental Europe than they at first appeared, according to investors.
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Many saw the US Federal Reserve’s decision to lend hundreds of billions of dollars to certain central banks at the height of the coronavirus crisis as pivotal in preventing further calamity in global markets. Brad Setser, senior fellow for international economics at the Council of Foreign Relations, gives a great deal of credit to the Fed for its forceful intervention. But if markets begin to see the US central bank as a global lender of last resort, there may be a greater risk of imprudent behaviour and more political tumult in the US.