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  • www.prager-dreifuss.com
  • Banks, finance and discount houses registered in Nigeria are by law prohibited from providing loans and other forms of finance without the requisite licences issued by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). No CBN licence or authorisation is required of a foreign bank or other financial institution. A foreign bank or financial institution may advance loans to a Nigerian company.
  • US rulemakers have been on a collision course with the loan industry over risk retention rules. The LSTA’s Elliot Ganz explains how a solution was found
  • www.shinkim.com
  • The European Commission’s Jonathan Faull has been the driving force behind its Capital Markets Union (CMU) initiative. Here he discusses the CMU, how to fix securitisation and why regulatory silos aren’t a European problem
  • www.walkersglobal.com
  • Under Moroccan law, lenders must absolutely have a licence that is provided by the national central bank, Bank Al Maghrib. Only banks and financial institutions that have the licence from Bank Al Maghrib can make loans.
  • Sponsored by Latham & Watkins
    James Chesterman, Sam Hamilton and Jane Summers of Latham & Watkins look at the sponsor-friendly terms and structuring issues emerging as US style covenant-lite takes hold in the European leveraged finance market
  • Unitranche facilities have changed the dynamics between first and second lien lenders. Their relationship is set out in a separate agreement, usually not involving the borrower
  • The UK’s regulators have published two sets of consultations on ringfencing transfer schemes, but opposition to the very principles of the changes remains