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Do banks’ right hands know what the left is doing?

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Manage episode 410958043 series 2950782
Content provided by GlobalCapital. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by GlobalCapital or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

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◆ Do investors want unified capital markets coverage?
◆ Corporates fear democracy
◆ Why are FRNs trending?
◆ Second lien mortgages in arrears ― yes please

Banks’ urge to cut costs in debt capital markets, especially syndicate desks, is prompting some to call for the ‘global capital markets’ model: one team for equity and all kinds of debt.

They argue this could heal banks’ disjointed thinking and allay investors’ frustration that they have to say the same thing to five different bankers at every firm. But there are plenty of sceptics...

Few in the corporate bond market expected its rally to last into this year, still less the second quarter. But here we are and it’s still running. A motley bunch crammed into the market this week and found a great reception. As Mike Turner explains, they’re partly packing the funding in to avoid this year’s great big risk event: the US election.

Floating rate notes are the natural product for banks to issue, but normally they don’t much, because most investors prefer fixed rate bonds. So why are investors gagging to buy floaters now, just when everyone agrees interest rates are about to fall? Sarah Ainsworth goes through the ins and outs.

Second lien mortgages are the kind of — shall we say 'challenging' — collateral familiar from the US securitization market, but as George Smith and Victoria Thiele highlight, the UK has produced four deals in the past five months. The latest, from Equifinance, had some pushback in the market, but investors were only joshing and bought it in the end. We ask if lower ranked mortgages are the hot new asset class.

  continue reading

157 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 410958043 series 2950782
Content provided by GlobalCapital. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by GlobalCapital or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Send us a Text Message.

◆ Do investors want unified capital markets coverage?
◆ Corporates fear democracy
◆ Why are FRNs trending?
◆ Second lien mortgages in arrears ― yes please

Banks’ urge to cut costs in debt capital markets, especially syndicate desks, is prompting some to call for the ‘global capital markets’ model: one team for equity and all kinds of debt.

They argue this could heal banks’ disjointed thinking and allay investors’ frustration that they have to say the same thing to five different bankers at every firm. But there are plenty of sceptics...

Few in the corporate bond market expected its rally to last into this year, still less the second quarter. But here we are and it’s still running. A motley bunch crammed into the market this week and found a great reception. As Mike Turner explains, they’re partly packing the funding in to avoid this year’s great big risk event: the US election.

Floating rate notes are the natural product for banks to issue, but normally they don’t much, because most investors prefer fixed rate bonds. So why are investors gagging to buy floaters now, just when everyone agrees interest rates are about to fall? Sarah Ainsworth goes through the ins and outs.

Second lien mortgages are the kind of — shall we say 'challenging' — collateral familiar from the US securitization market, but as George Smith and Victoria Thiele highlight, the UK has produced four deals in the past five months. The latest, from Equifinance, had some pushback in the market, but investors were only joshing and bought it in the end. We ask if lower ranked mortgages are the hot new asset class.

  continue reading

157 episodes

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