Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena has been sounding out investors to find potential buyers for new debt, bracing itself for the possibility it may need to take the expensive step if ordered to by regulators, the Financial Times reported. Managers at the lender met with investors in London earlier this month, in meetings arranged by JPMorgan, to update them on its progress just over a year after the Italian government rescued the world’s oldest bank.

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Oil service company Solstad Offshore is seeking negotiations with creditors and other stakeholders to boost liquidity ahead of the slow winter season, the company said on Monday, sending its shares down around 20 percent, the International New York Times reported on a Reuters story. Solstad, with more than 4,000 employees, is one of the world's largest suppliers of specialised vessels to the oil and gas industry as well as offshore wind power developers. It has a fleet of 141 vessels.

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The U.K.’s largest active manager is taking up arms against what it sees as an imminent liquidity crunch coming to credit markets, Bloomberg News reported. As bouts of late-cycle volatility prompt fears of an impending race for the exits, Aberdeen Standard Investments has been scooping up securities with greater liquidity relative to cash bonds, like credit default swaps.

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The recent near-death experience of Patisserie Valerie and collapse of Conviviality, the bargain booze business, might make Chancellor Phil Hammond think again about all those rich tax breaks attached to shares on Aim, London’s junior market. Both were Aim darlings until Conviviality found a £30m unpaid tax bill, forcing it into administration in March, and Patisserie Valerie uncovered a similar-sized hole in its accounts this month, the Financial Times reported in a commentary.

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Italian bonds and stocks dropped for a third day after the European Union ramped up criticism of the populist government’s budget draft, Bloomberg News reported. The nation’s 10-year yield spread over Germany, a key barometer for investor risk, touched the highest in more than five years following a letter from the European Commission to Rome that said its spending plans were excessive. The body still needs to give its official verdict on the budget, while S&P Global Ratings and Moody’s Investors Service could choose to cut the nation’s credit ranking before the end of the month.

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The International Monetary Fund on Friday announced it had reached preliminary agreement on a new $3.9bn assistance package for Ukraine, whose government hours earlier took the politically unpopular decision of meeting a key condition of the fund by raising household gas tariffs by 23.5 per cent, the Financial Times reported. The new 14-month programme has yet to be approved by the IMF’s executive board.

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The committee of creditors tasked with the resolution process of Essar Steel Ltd. has picked ArcelorMittal as H1 Resolution Applicant, or preferred bidder, for the insolvent asset, Bloomberg Quint reported. The final bid price will be negotiated over the weeks to come, the Luxembourg-based company said in a statement. This comes two weeks after the Supreme Court directed both Numetal Mauritius and ArcelorMittal to pay up past debts to be eligible to bid for insolvent Essar Steel Ltd. Of the two, only one met the Supreme Court directive—ArcelorMittal.

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For a moment last weekend, hearts were suddenly aflutter that – out of nowhere – a deal to secure the United Kingdom’s orderly exit from the European Union was in the offing, The Irish Times reported. UK Brexit secretary Dominic Raab was said to be “dashing” to Brussels for face-to-face talks with the EU’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier, while EU ambassadors were summoned to a meeting that one report suggested was to get early sight of a deal. But it was just a mirage.

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The leaders of Italy’s populist coalition government said they had no intention of leaving the euro but will stick with spending plans that have triggered both a credit rating downgrade and sharp criticism from Brussels, the Financial Times reported. Both Luigi Di Maio, leader of the anti-establishment Five Star party, and his coalition partner Matteo Salvini, leader of the anti-immigration League party, said they remained committed to Italy staying within the single currency.

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A eurozone government set on a collision course with the EU over budget deficit targets. Borrowing costs rising amid market jitters over plans to overturn austerity. A vulnerable banking sector and one of Europe’s highest public debt burdens. Italy fits the description. But this was Portugal less than three years ago, soon after a minority Socialist government came to power vowing to “turn the page on austerity” with support from hardline communists and the anti-establishment left, the Financial Times reported. Today, the contrasts could hardly be sharper.

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