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Roundtable: Japan’s SSAs focus on flexible strategy, short tenor bonds to navigate choppy markets

Japan’s sovereign, supranational and agency (SSA) borrowers continue to be among the most highly regarded issuers in global debt markets, supported by strong credit fundamentals and deep domestic demand. But with a complex geopolitical background, diverging global monetary policies, the Bank of Japan’s policy signals, and recent elections in the country, issuers are operating in an unpredictable environment.
Bank completes more than half its annual funding before first quarter blackout

‘Green’ UK pension funds are financing US fossil fuels

Public pension schemes have sold shares in coal, oil and gas companies but are still funding expansion of the gas industry through infrastructure funds

CDC lands €1bn at single digit spread over OATs

◆ Rival banker had expected attrition but order book grew ◆ Sustainability bond CDC's first euro benchmark of year ◆ New issue premium estimated
Bank completes more than half its annual funding before first quarter blackout
Sub-sections
  • The Bank of International Settlements has indicated that regulators may need to review central counterparty clearing house margin policies after the coronavirus crisis.
  • SSA
    The European Stability Mechanism's (ESM) Pandemic Crisis Support programme may now be in place but what it has really shown up, especially in light of Germany's Federal Constitutional Court verdict on ECB QE last week, is that the eurozone badly needs the European Commission to pull its finger out and agree a recovery fund.
  • The coronavirus pandemic, in terms of the financial markets has had its winners as well as its losers. The loan market, after years of decline as borrowers sought better terms in bond markets, has shown its worth in times of trouble by being able to offer liquidity lifelines to companies left in dire need of the stuff when other markets could not provide it.