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Executive is moving to more senior role
Public sector banker departs after 12 years at the firm
Crédit Agricole reorganises loans business amid busy hires and promotions in industry
Funding veteran bows out after four decades at the Canadian agency
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The pain that negative rates in dollars could cause money market funds hangs like an albatross around the US Federal Reserve’s neck. Talk of them has picked up over the last week as US Federal Funds Futures prices started to imply they were on their way, while president Donald Trump pushed the topic on Twitter, even though and Fed chair Jerome Powell appeared to rule them out.
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One of Europe’s leading bond syndicate bankers has decided to leave Citigroup, and probably the capital markets.
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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.
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The coronavirus crisis has severely disrupted the move away from Libor to the new recommended risk-free rates. But market participants will have to press on to meet the original deadline, with no extension on the horizon, according to a senior capital markets lawyer.
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Both the European Commission and the European Court of Justice have put out statements dismissing the verdict of Germany's Federal Constitutional Court (BVG) on the European Central Bank’s Public Sector Purchase Programme, going some way to soothe concerns over the ECB’s future.
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Germany's Federal Constitutional Court (BVG) fired a warning shot at the European Central Bank this week. The court’s threat to stop the Bundesbank from taking part in official asset purchasing could have serious consequences for ECB monetary policy and, by extension, bond markets, just when the markets seem to be relying on the central bank more than ever, write Jasper Cox and Lewis McLellan.