Hints and tips:
...And corporations of all types use longer-term currency swaps to hedge their own foreign currency bond liabilities (McBrady et al (2010), Munro and Wooldridge (2010)). The BIS’s suggestion?...
...If we are right that consumer spending, despite some recent softening on the margin, is still at or above trend, that is another thing for Powell et al to fret over....
...There is for sure a debate to be had about when the Federal Reserve et al should have pivoted their stance more forcefully to tackle inflationary pressures, and what they should and shouldn’t do now....
...“If I think of the amount of pressure I’m under as a deposit taker and the care and attention I have to take when providing unsecured lending to younger people, it is staggering me that Klarna et al are...
...The global community should be looking to rest, adjust or trim the ways things are, on a regular basis otherwise there will be imbalances allowing Trumps et al to garner support to deal with greater accrued...
...Credit spreads, eh. Andrew Garthwaite et al at Credit Suisse has had a fiddle about with the model portfolio, resulting in insurers getting a push....
...And, as lockdown measures are softened, the return of the likes of Gregg's, Starbucks et al to the UK FtG market will increase competition....
...(BBC) Video of the day Are corporations paying enough tax?...
...A tie-up would cement Pekao’s position as Poland’s second-biggest bank by assets behind Bank Polski at a time when banks around Europe are looking for ways to cope with higher regulatory requirements and...
...Sensible sentences from Citi’s Buiter et al on China’s valuation shock (with our emphasis): This decision by the PBOC is a significant event, even if its implications and motivations are not yet fully clear...
...For a company like Rural that is traded on a major exchange, ―[t]urnover measured by average weekly trading of . . . 1% would justify a substantial presumption‖ of market efficiency. 5 Bromberg et al., Bromberg...
...That makes China’s leaders v nervous and restricts policy options....
...from credit....
...And this is where we find an interesting lesson for today’s non-bank buyers of bank energy credits....
...Would it not have been braver to hang on and help the bank weather the credit crunch?...
...Banks tend to focus on larger, established names, using letters of credit, the basic financing product of international trade that harks back as far as ancient Egyptian times....
...Statistical studies (see for example Gadea et al) confirm that there has been no significant break in the behaviour of volatility in the five year period since 2008, compared to that experienced during GM...
...MacGregor, to his credit, disdains any phrase that uses the word “diplomacy” to describe what he does....
...al, and without the stay in place....
...Azevedo et al called it something different — “in the nature of a bribe”....
...Now here he is on a blast from the past… It’s Allied Bank International v Banco Credito Agricola de Cartago et al....
...Kate argues that Verleger’s view of a hypothetical Saudi et al response to lower prices and/or production is compelling, in that it doesn’t follow that more prolific US oil supply will mean lower global...
...Indeed, “whilst all money is credit, not all credit is money: it is the possibility of transfer that makes the difference”....
...‘Buy English-law bonds’ is one possible reading of Assenagon Asset Management SA v Irish Bank Resolution Corporation Ltd....
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