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German bond house adds to growing roster of primary dealerships
◆ AFT's Antoine Deruennes says 'clear message' showed demand for 30 year ◆ Speedy execution before US employment data ◆ Green OAT syndication next
◆15 year a ‘good entry point to the long-end’, says sovereign ◆ Fear of missing out from both old and new investors ◆ Why Italy ran no co-lead pot this time
The sovereign had to move fast to beat the release of US economic data
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Giancarlo Giorgetti, undersecretary to the Italian prime minister, has said that he expects the country to suffer an “attack” in the financial markets by the end of the month.
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The European Central Bank will drop its waiver for Greek bonds to be used as collateral, following the sovereign’s exit from its third bailout programme on August 20.
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Yields on Turkey’s sovereign debt hit 20% this week, stoking fears of a debt crisis. But breaking the purported psychological importance of the 20% ceiling does not add much to the well-established litany of issues facing the country’s economy.
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The Italian banking sector could be hurtling towards another crisis this autumn, with the government’s budget negotiations expected to put pressure on the bond market, worsening funding conditions for banks, write Jasper Cox and Bill Thornhill.
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A pair of US sanctions against Russia could have potentially disastrous consequences for local and international bond investors, especially if a planned ban against the purchase of new sovereign debt takes effect, writes Lewis McLellan.
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Italy’s coalition government is taking investors on a wild ride, with different voices emanating from the populist grouping quickly shifting sentiment among the buy-side. But the juicy spreads the sovereign offers over its peers has helped provide some respite from the sell-offs, said analysts.