The GlobalCapital Podcast
A weekly podcast from GlobalCapital, the capital markets news service based in London and New York, discussing its most interesting stories from around the world.
Every Friday, listen to lively discussion about the very latest themes, the most innovative and important bond and equity issues and syndicated loans and much more from the capital markets.
This podcast is for anyone working in - or who wants to work in - the capital markets from investment bankers, to funding and treasury officials, investors, lawyers, analysts, NGOs and lobbyists, regulators and policy makers, and analysts.
GlobalCapital has been the "voice of the markets" for over 35 years, covering bond, loan, equity and securitisation markets around the world.
We cover everything from public sector bond issuers, financial institutions, emerging markets and investment grade corporate bonds and loans to securitisation (including CLOs and ABS), regulation and market news as well as industry gossip.
GlobalCapital is written for capital markets professionals but the podcast is of value to anyone with an interest in the industry, whether you have been working in it for as long as we have, or are looking to make your first career move into it.
This podcast is a commute-sized slice of everything that's most interesting from the world's capital markets with the aim of helping you sound smarter in your morning meeting, or making you stand out from the crowd of other hopefuls when kick-starting your career.
And don't forget, you can #AskGC anything you like and we will select the best questions to answer on the show.
Contact us at podcast@globalcapital.com
The GlobalCapital Podcast
Anarchy in the UK and never mind the Buoni
- The way out of UK market disarray
- Italian banks in a better state
- Bring back the bonus cap, say bankers
We analyse the disruption to capital markets this following new UK chancellor of the exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng’s plan to fund tax cuts and energy bill support through extra government bond issuance, which spread across currencies and asset classes and ended — or perhaps just paused — with the Bank of England making an emergency purchase of some of those bonds just as the government was in the market issuing some. Sovereign debt managers often tell us they like their markets to be dull and predictable — this it most certainly was not.
But where does the UK go from here? We asked the market and heard that the way out of this mess was the government’s to navigate and that it could not rely on the Bank of England stepping in to maintain orderly markets as a permanent solution.
Italy is a country that has been more closely associated with volatile politics and markets in recent times. Indeed, an election result last week drove up the spread between Italian government bonds (Buoni del Tesori Poliennali, or BTPs) and German ones — a key indicator that shows investors believe Italy is becoming a more risky investment prospect when it rises.
That in turn affects Italy’s banks, of which there are many and which are big users of the markets to raise funding and capital. But, even as one Italian bank failed to price a deal in the markets this week, we uncovered the reasons why the funding picture for this key group of institutions in the European economy is better than one might think.
And finally, back to the UK where we have gauged reaction in the markets to the removal of the bankers’ bonus cap — another policy from Kwarteng’s mini budget. Spoiler alert: it’s not what you'd expect.
Podcasts we love
Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.