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Governance

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Weak or half-hearted response to Greenland threats will leave markets crumbling
Why career dissatisfaction is so common in finance and what to do about it
Politically motivated prosecutions endanger democracy
Over the last week the US president has pushed to make homes and consumer credit more affordable but these policies risk unintended consequences
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  • The first quarter results for UBS’s investment bank looked much like a repeat of rival Credit Suisse’s earnings last week, with strong underlying performance marred by a loss stemming from former prime brokerage client Archegos Capital.
  • A wave of Russian equity capital markets activity has broken this week, taking advantage of a rise in optimism that geopolitical tensions between Russia and the US are decreasing.
  • CEE
    Ukraine entered the bond market on Monday seeking dollar funding at a time when it faces a number of problems from heightened military tensions with Russia to uncertainty over its relationship with the IMF.
  • Harassment allegations at institutions with social and environmental purposes, from schools to public sector banks, are sobering reminders that ethical investment is not only about how borrowers spend investors’ money: ESG investing should catalyse cultural change across the financial industry. But this will be a long and difficult fight.
  • The corporate governance issues surrounding Darktrace, the UK AI cyber security company that confirmed its intention to float on the London Stock Exchange this week, can be generously described as unusual but they are not a shock to the market, and are unlikely to put investors off completely, providing the company seeks a sensible valuation.
  • Russian steelmaker Metalloinvest has secured a $350m credit line from international lenders. Metalloinvest is the second Russian corporate to tap international lenders since fresh sanctions were announced against Russia by the United States.