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Securitization People and Markets

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  • The European Central Bank’s plans to press on with non-performing loan (NPL) reduction may be necessary, but in the wake of the Italian election, they could be the spark to ignite a political firestorm.
  • If 2018 is supposed to be the year of greater awareness of women's obstacles in the workplace, nobody sent the memo to Wall Street, which is still struggling with retaining female talent and has yet to address the gender wage gap meaningfully.
  • Clifden IOM No. 1 revealed its strategy on Monday for the RMAC bonds that were offered into its controversial tender — but the fund’s approach is still fraught with risk, and Paratus AMC was quick to issue another notice trying to sink the tender.
  • SRI
    The European Commission plans to move ahead fast with a wide range of actions to green financial markets, according to a leaked draft of its Action Plan on Sustainable Finance, seen by GlobalCapital.
  • Mayer Brown has brought on Jim Antonopoulos as a partner in the Chicago office, as the firm continues to expand its global banking and finance practice.
  • Covered bond lawyer Jerry Marlatt has moved from Morrison Foerster to Mayer Brown in New York, as part of a team move of capital markets lawyers reported by GlobalCapital on Monday.
  • ABS
    Cuts to trading capital requirements for securitizations would be welcomed by dealers, but are unlikely to result in big boosts to balance sheet commitments, according to securitization pros at SFIG Vegas 2018 on Monday.
  • PGIM’s Ronni Neeman, vice-president, structured products, said that his institution was pushing CLO managers to put firmer terms on replacing Libor in their deal documents, cutting down on manager discretion — which could be used to lock in low fixed interest rates if the benchmark is no longer published after 2021.
  • FIG
    Candidates in Italy’s March 4 election have swerved away from the thorny issue of bank balance sheets. But observers should not be unduly alarmed: whatever happens, Italy’s politicians look set to scrape on by as before — for worse or for better.