Headlines

Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. has emerged as an unlikely target for a few distressed-debt investors. It wasn’t because of the railroad operator’s creditworthiness, but rather because rising interest rates pummeled the value of some of its bonds in recent months ahead of its roughly $30 billion acquisition of U.S. rival Kansas City Southern, according to a WSJ Pro Bankruptcy commentary. Canadian Pacific sold bonds in December 2021 to finance the acquisition, including $2.4 billion in notes due 2031 and 2041, with coupons of 2.45% and 3%, respectively.
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Canada’s recent moves to impose stricter rules on crypto companies show that US regulators have allies in cracking down on the asset class after last year’s turmoil, Bloomberg News reported. Canadian securities regulators in February gave a 30-day deadline for unregistered crypto trading platforms operating in the country to commit to a so-called pre-registration undertaking. Firms are required to follow tougher regulations on segregating customer assets and prohibited from offering margin or leverage to users in Canada.
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There may need to be limits initially on the use of major stablecoins for payments, and they should also be backed by high quality and liquid assets to protect consumers, Bank of England Deputy Governor Jon Cunliffe said on Monday, Reuters reported. Britain is due to adopt rules for regulating stablecoins, a form of cryptocurrency backed by an asset or fiat currency, which consumers could use to make payments digitally. "Systemic stablecoins will need to be backed with high quality and liquid assets," Cunliffe told a conference held by Innovate Finance, a UK fintech industry body.
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China’s economy rebounded in the first three months of the year after Beijing dismantled its heavy-handed Covid-19 controls, teeing up a revival in growth that is expected to buoy the global economy as the U.S. and European economies slow, the Wall Street Journal reported. China’s economy expanded 4.5% in the first quarter of the year compared with the same three months a year earlier, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said Tuesday.
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Brazil's government is working on additional revenue measures to be announced in the second half of this year, said Revenue Chief Robinson Barreirinhas on Monday, highlighting confidence that this set of actions will improve public accounts, Reuters reported. Speaking at a news conference on the 2024 budget bill, Barreirinhas stated that the measures would be additional to those already announced by Finance Minister Fernando Haddad and that "strategic issues" are involved in the timing of their disclosure.
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Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said on Monday the government is going to announce this week measures to improve credit conditions in the country, including one regarding revolving credit card rates, Reuters reported. Revolving credit card rates are the interest consumers must pay when they cannot pay their credit card bills in full, pushing unpaid amounts into future installments. Talking to reporters ahead of a meeting with the Brazilian banking federation, Haddad said that the ministry will launch 14 measures to improve the credit environment.
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El Salvador has tapped a former International Monetary Fund official as an adviser as it seeks a deal with the multilateral lender, Bloomberg News reported. Alejandro Werner, who retired as head of the Western Hemisphere Department at the IMF in 2021, has been working with the Central American nation’s government this year. President Nayib Bukele’s government has struggled to secure an extended fund facility agreement with the IMF, which has warned repeatedly against the risks of using Bitcoin as legal tender.
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The process that enables creditors to pursue struggling businesses at the Irish High Court has resumed in the north after three years, IrishNews.com reported. The Bankruptcy and Companies Master’s Court in Belfast has reopened to winding up petitions from Monday (April 17). It follows the introduction of the Insolvency (Amendment) Rules (Northern Ireland) 2023 last month, which effectively ended the three-year restriction on creditor winding up petitions.
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SAS will not be using the second tranche of its $700 million debtor-in-possession (DIP) term loan in the second quarter of the year, due to stronger than expected development of the airline's liquidity, the airline said on Monday, Reuters reported. SAS may, depending on the development of its liquidity, continue discussions with Apollo regarding access to the second tranche of the DIP term loan at a later stage of the chapter 11 process.
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Bolivia’s central bank is rebuilding its international reserves as it deals with a “transitory” liquidity problem affecting the country, according to Finance Minister Marcelo Montenegro, Bloomberg News reported. The minister declined to elaborate on what the current level of reserves is, but said it had increased recently. The central bank board can decide to withhold the data to avoid creating “more speculation,” he said. “They’re replenishing them,” Montenegro said in an interview on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund’s spring meetings in Washington.
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