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  • The International Capital Markets Association’s secondary bond markets liquidity survey shows the sellside is “surprisingly not as despondent as it could be”, as dealers adapt to the new business environment and revise how they charge for balance sheet. Although liquidity has grown far worse since the crisis, bond traders large and small still have strategies to stay in the business and have adapted to some of the challenges of regulation.
  • The Republic of Indonesia has picked the banks that will sit on its bond panel next year, dropping one bank and appointing two new members.
  • HSBC has shifted the public sector DCM coverage it had in New York to London. The move affects Kevin Galligan, who was told of the decision last week, it is understood.
  • Its recent return to the offshore renminbi bond market and its new status as Canada's hub for RMB trade settlement have seen the Province of British Columbia (BC) reinforce its commitment to China and its support for the RMB as a global currency, Michael de Jong, BC’s Minister of Finance, has told GlobalRMB during a visit to Hong Kong.
  • Market participants at the International Capital Markets Association’s primary markets forum on Wednesday questioned the value of technological developments in the syndication process that could remove human contact from the process. But regulatory and cost pressures will make technology all the more important, and arguably the last decade of bond market growth could not have happened with using technology to accelerate the new issue process.
  • Anthony Julies will take over as the South African National Treasury’s head of asset and liability management before the end of the year.