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Governance

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Primary needs stability, on top of any peace deal
Five months in, Alessandro Melzi is getting started on the plan, but his boss is about to change
Bonds of energy importers have sold off, but investors convinced fundamentals are still strong
Managers pause deals as spreads widen, but swift resolution is still priced in
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  • Finance professionals may be at greater risk of breaching conduct rules in areas like confidentiality and recording phone calls because they are working from home.
  • In this round-up, the Caixin manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rebounded to above 50 following a V-shaped recovery in official PMIs, and US-listed Luckin Coffee saw its share price plunge by 75% after admitting to fabricated sales.
  • The Pre-Emption Group, an assembly of listed companiesm investors and intermediaries that monitors pre-emption rights in the UK, has changed its guidelines to say that the impacts of the Covid-19 coronavirus means investors should support companies selling new shares worth up to 20% of their market capitalisation without giving existing shareholders first refusal.
  • Saudi Aramco’s IPO last year was a historic event for the company and its owner, Saudi Arabia, but despite a record $29.4bn being raised at IPO, international investors stayed away. They had demanded that the shares offered a discount to other listed oil majors, in part because of the political risk associated with the company. The fact it is now a tool in Saudi Arabia’s oil price war with Russia will have vindicated many in their decision to sit out the deal.
  • A former joint head of the IPO vetting team in the Hong Kong Stock Exchange's listings department has been charged with bribery and misconduct while in office.
  • NMC Health’s $360m convertible bonds are trading at mere cents on the dollar, suggesting virtually no recovery value after the scandal-hit UAE hospitals group said on Tuesday it had discovered even more undisclosed debt.