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Weeks of currency depreciation, emerging market outflows and violence domestically have taken a toll on Indonesia’s credit and equity markets, despite the central bank making some effort to assuage the volatility. What lies ahead for the country? Morgan Davis finds out.
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A leaked copy of draft EU legislation, seen by GlobalCapital, shows that the Regulatory Scrutiny Board, a committee that makes sure EU laws are well drafted and not too onerous, has made the Commission water down its plans to tighten regulation of green investment benchmarks. But strong rules are coming on investors’ duty to consider environmental, social and governance matters and the shape of the sustainable Taxonomy is emerging.
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Indonesian credits got a quick boost late last week as investor sentiment rose following an interest rate hike. But while the buy-side is again warming up to the country’s bonds, the debate continues over whether the optimism is sustainable.
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The movement to create free investment benchmarks to support the Sustainable Development Goals is gathering pace, with the launch this week of a major survey of corporate human rights performance.
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The European Commission has defended its plans to forge ahead ahead with plans to introduce sovereign bond-backed securities (SBBS), despite market participants’ lack of enthusiasm for the project.
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EU member states will try to reach agreement next Friday on a series of draft reforms unveiled in 2016, which aim to enshrine international standards such as the total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) requirements and the leverage ratio into EU law.