Latest news
Latest news
Kevin Duignan to retire after 33 years, mainly in structured finance
First European buy now, pay later securitization expected next year
UK credit card provider Jaja hires Belen Bulnes as it plans on entering the public ABS market
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Metro Bank is looking to become a more profitable institution after launching a review of its strategy this week, but the lender still faces the challenge of having to raise a further £500m of debt to meet its capital needs.
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The Bank of England has said it intends to publish compounded Sonia averages and a Sonia index using a ‘shift’ calculation method by the end of July, subject to feedback on a series of questions it has asked sterling market participants. This follows the first deal using that method from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Bank last week.
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Assicurazioni Generali, the Italian insurance company, has launched a framework to show how insurance-linked securities can be structured to contribute towards investments in green assets.
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Remarks delivered by the Securities and Exchange Commission’s director of the office of credit ratings at SFVegas on Monday hinted at the possibility that the regulator could re-evaluate the effectiveness of Rule 17g-5, a post-crisis rule intended to address conflicts in the issuer pay model.
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Some in the market still do not see eye to eye on Libor transition even with the cessation of the benchmark at the end of 2021 fast approaching.
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Bernie Sanders claimed victory in the Nevada Democratic primary election to emerge as the clear party frontrunner last weekend. Financial policy experts speaking on Monday at the SFVegas conference in Las Vegas addressed a crowd nervous over the prospect of a progressive left US president unsympathetic to Wall Street.
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An amendment to the UK Securitization law is set to come into effect at the end of 2020 when the Brexit transition period ends, clearing up confusion around the definition of sponsor in a move that could see the UK and the EU regimes diverge, said Mayor Brown in a notice released Thursday.
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Europe’s capital markets are back in super-demand mode.
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The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development this week became the first borrower to deviate from the standardised coupon calculation method for Sonia-linked floating rates. While investors backed the new structure, with the deal receiving a huge order book from a large number of accounts, there are some market participants who believe the disruption was unnecessary, writes Burhan Khadbai.