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Norman Broadbent Appoints Mehr Malik as New Finance Chief

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Norman Broadbent Appoints Mehr Malik as New Finance Chief

By Ian Walker

Norman Broadbent PLC mentioned Tuesday that it has appointed Mehr Malik as chief monetary officer from Jan. 16 January, changing Steve Smith.

The chief search and interim administration firm mentioned that Mr. Smith will stay with the corporate for about 5 weeks after Ms. Malik’s appointment.

Ms. Malik is a professional chartered accountant and has held varied monetary and industrial management roles with a variety of companies, together with worldwide excessive progress administration consulting corporations, the corporate mentioned.

Norman Broadbent mentioned on Aug. 23 that Mr. Smith had resigned from his function to pursue different enterprise alternatives and that he would stay with the corporate to make sure a clean transition.

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“On the again of the appreciable progress Norman Broadbent skilled in 2022 and the trajectory the enterprise is now on, Mehr will work intently with me on a variety of initiatives, together with company growth, as we start to look extra critically at rising M&A alternatives in 2023 and past,” Chief Government Kevin Davidson mentioned.

Write to Ian Walker at ian.walker@wsj.com

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Financial markets are pricing in more inflation under another Trump presidency—and bond yields are surging

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Financial markets are pricing in more inflation under another Trump presidency—and bond yields are surging

Financial giants from Goldman Sachs & Co. to Morgan Stanley and Barclays Plc. are taking a fresh look at how a Donald Trump victory in November could play out in the bond market.

After last week’s debate hurt President Joe Biden’s chances of winning reelection, Wall Street strategists are urging clients to position for sticky inflation and higher long-term bond yields. 

At Morgan Stanley, strategists including Matthew Hornbach and Guneet Dhingra in a weekend note argued that “now is the time” to wager on long-term interest rates rising relative to short-term ones. 

Trump’s rise in the polls since Thursday’s debate means investors have to contemplate economic policies that could lead to more rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, along with a Republican sweep that leads to fiscal expansion and pressures longer-term bond yields higher, Morgan Stanley said. 

Barclays, meanwhile, said that the best response to the rising prospect of a Trump victory is to hedge against inflation. Strategists Michael Pond and Jonathan Hill wrote Friday that the clearest expression is a wager that five-year Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, will outperform standard five-year notes. 

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Buy-side investors like Jack McIntyre, a portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management, are increasingly taking note. 

McIntyre said he “is worried that the bond vigilantes are coming out early in response to the debate fall out.” The odds of a Republican sweep in November will increase from a combination of “Biden’s performance, weaker data, higher oil prices.”

US Treasuries fell on Monday, pushing yields to the highest levels in more than a week, in what traders said was ongoing fallout from last week’s bump in the odds of a second Trump term.

Treasuries extended their losses after the Supreme Court ruled in a case that will limit the chances that Trump will face trial before the November election on charges for attempting to reverse the 2020 election results.

The uptick in Treasury yields was led by the longest maturities, with 30-year bonds up more than eight basis points to 4.65%, the highest level since May 31.

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Not all on Wall Street are convinced that higher long-term Treasury yields and steeper curves are inevitable.

“While a term premia-driven sell-off has been consensus for how US yields should react to a Republican victory, we see arguments for flattening risk,” Goldman Sachs strategists led by George Cole and William Marshall wrote after the debate. They see investor focus shifting away from fiscal spending and towards the risks of higher tariffs, which are likely to weigh on productivity and growth as the election comes into view.

With the makeup of Congress after November unclear, assumptions about how Trump policies will impact markets are on shaky ground, Kathy Jones, chief fixed-income strategist at Charles Schwab said. 

“A shift in the narrative about what policy will be after the election is probably the biggest risk to the Treasury market,” Jones told Bloomberg Television Monday. “I just think it’s too early. Presidential candidates can say a lot of things on the campaign trail, but they have to get those things through Congress.”

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Vinson & Elkins Adds Finance Partner East Berhane in Dallas | News | Vinson & Elkins LLP

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Vinson & Elkins Adds Finance Partner East Berhane in Dallas | News | Vinson & Elkins LLP

Berhane brings significant experience and deep market knowledge advising private equity sponsors and other private and public companies in a wide range of finance transactions

Vinson & Elkins today announced that East Berhane has joined Vinson & Elkins as a Dallas-based partner in the firm’s Finance Practice.

Her practice focuses on debt financings, including acquisition and sponsored leveraged buyout financings, syndicated loan transactions, asset-based lending, debt restructurings and other complex transactions. She advises private equity sponsors, their portfolio companies, and other private and public companies.

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She most recently was a partner at Kirkland & Ellis and, prior to that, served a secondment at KKR & Co, Inc. in New York.

“East’s experience with complicated leveraged acquisitions and other sophisticated financings will prove instantly valuable to our clients,” said Vinson & Elkins Partner David Wicklund, head of the firm’s Global Finance Practice Group. “I expect East to play a central role in the growth of our Finance Practice as we continue to respond to demand from our clients investing in the energy transition and infrastructure assets.”

Russell Oshman, managing partner of Vinson & Elkins’ Dallas Office, added: “East not only bolsters our Finance Practice but perfectly embodies our culture. She is a consummate team player who has a track record of mentoring associates and supporting the growth and development of her colleagues across practice groups. East brings a jolt of energy to our Dallas office, and I know our lawyers and clients will love working with her.”

“I was attracted to Vinson & Elkins because of its platform, people, and dynamism,” Berhane says. “It has a leading reputation in Finance, a strong client base, and ambitious plans to expand its practice in exciting ways.”

Berhane earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California and a Juris Doctor degree from New York University School of Law, where she was an editor on the school’s law review. At Kirkland & Ellis, she served as co-head of the firm’s New York Black Affinity Group and a partner advisor to its Associates Committee.

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UAE's Central Bank Sets New Standards with Open Finance Regulation | The Fintech Times

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UAE's Central Bank Sets New Standards with Open Finance Regulation | The Fintech Times

The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) has issued the Open Finance Regulation, a significant component of its financial infrastructure transformation programme.

This regulation aims to ensure the soundness and efficiency of open finance services, promote innovation, enhance competitiveness and bolster the UAE’s status as a financial technology hub.

The new regulation mandates that all financial institutions supervised by the CBUAE must participate in the open finance framework concerning their products as well as services.

Licensed financial institutions (LFIs), as data holders and service owners, must provide access to customer data and the ability to initiate transactions, contingent on the express consent of users. This provision also aims to align services with consumer needs.

The regulation

The framework is designed to facilitate LFIs in accessing and utilising consumer financial data to create personalised experiences and tailored offerings. This regulation also enables consumers to consolidate their financial information through seamless data sharing across platforms.

The regulation encompasses a trust framework, an application programming interface (API) hub, as well as a common infrastructural services. These elements collectively support the cross-sectoral sharing of data and the initiation of transactions on behalf of users. The open finance platform also includes a consumer consent model for sharing financial data with trusted third parties within an integrated business system.

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H.E. Khaled Mohamed Balama, governor of the CBUAE, said: “The introduction of open finance regulation establishes global standards for open finance and accelerates the adoption of digital financial services. This
initiative enables licensed financial institutions to harness consumer financial data.

“On the other hand, it empowers consumers to obtain the best financial solutions, which will drive competition and innovation. We will continue our efforts to develop the financial services sector in the UAE and support its competitiveness globally.”

The regulation, published in the Official Gazette, will also come into effect in phases, as notified by the CBUAE.

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