All major US equity and European equity indices closed lower,
while APAC was mixed. US and most benchmark European government
bonds closed modestly lower. CDX-NA and European iTraxx closed
wider across IG and high yield. Natural gas, oil, gold, silver, and
copper all closed higher, while the US dollar was lower on the
day.
Please note that we are now including a link to the profiles of
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Americas
- All major US equity indices closed lower; DJIA -0.9%, Russell
2000 -1.1%, S&P 500 -1.3%, and Nasdaq -2.1%.
- 10yr US govt bonds closed +2bp/1.48% yield and 30yr bonds
+2bps/2.05% yield.
- CDX-NAIG closed +2bps/54bps and CDX-NAHY +6bps/304bps.
- DXY US dollar index closed -0.3%/93.78.
- Gold closed +0.5%/$1,768 per troy oz, silver +0.5%/$22.64 per
troy oz, and copper +1.2%/$4.24 per pound.
- Crude oil closed +2.3%/$77.62 per barrel to close at the
highest level since November 2014 and natural gas closed
+2.6%/$5.77 per mmbtu.
- US manufacturers' orders rose 1.2% in August, while shipments
rose 0.1% and inventories rose 0.6%. The increase in orders was in
line with the consensus estimate. Orders and shipments of core
capital goods (nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft) were
little revised from the advance estimates, and inventories rose
through August about as we had expected. As a result, we left our
estimate of third-quarter GDP growth unrevised at 2.2%. (IHS Markit
Economists Ben
Herzon and Lawrence Nelson)
- Surging prices in the manufacturing sector continue to boost
nominal measures of orders and shipments.
- Year-to-date (through August), the Producer Price Index (PPI)
for the net output of the manufacturing sector rose 12.0%,
reflecting elevated demand for goods and limitations on supply
(from various supply-chain constraints).
- Over the same period, nominal orders rose 10.1% and nominal
shipments rose 6.9%. That is, after adjusting for price change,
both real orders and shipments are down on the year—this after
both had mounted a full recovery by last fall.
- It is unclear how long supply-chain restrictions will slow
activity. As demand for goods ebbs, and as the spread of COVID-19
slows, we expect restrictions on supply to ease, price gains in
manufacturing to slow, and activity to pick up.
- US light-vehicle sales were impacted more sharply by low
inventory levels in September than in August and y/y sales dropped
26.1%. In the year to date, the sales improvement has been
constrained at 13.2%. Light vehicle sales in September were at the
lowest monthly level since April 2020, during the depths of the
COVID-19 lockdown period of last year. The lack of inventory is
holding down the sales volume despite favorable consumer interest
and buying conditions. This situation is expected to continue
through 2021 and into 2022. IHS Markit has decreased its forecast
for US light-vehicle sales in 2021 to 15.55 million units. This
figure is up from 14.59 million units in 2020, but less than the
over 16 million units in prior forecasts. (IHS Markit
AutoIntelligence's Stephanie
Brinley)

- Electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Tesla has announced its
initial global production and delivery figures for the third
quarter, reporting 241,300 vehicle deliveries and production of
237,823 vehicles. These figures are more than the figures for the
second quarter and bode well for strong results from Tesla in
full-year 2021 in spite of industry supply-chain issues slowing
production for automakers globally. In the company's statement on
the third-quarter figures, Tesla said, "We would like to thank our
customers for their patience as we work through global supply chain
and logistics challenges." Tesla now carries out production of both
the Model 3 and the Model Y in China. In addition, Tesla is now
producing the Model S and Model X after carrying out no production
of the two models in the first quarter as the company was in the
process of installing and testing equipment for a model change.
Production and deliveries of the Model S and Model X reached only
8,941 and 9,275 units, respectively, as a result. Tesla delivered
232,025 Model 3 and Model Y vehicles in the third quarter of 2021
and produced 228,882 units. (IHS Markit AutoIntelligence's Stephanie
Brinley)
- Foxconn and Lordstown Motors have announced an "agreement in
principle" for the two to "work jointly" on Lordstown electric
vehicle (EV) programs at the EV truck startup's Ohio (US)
manufacturing facility. In addition, Foxconn has agreed to buy
USD50 million of Lordstown stock, according to press statements
from both companies. The two companies say the "goal of the
partnership is to present both Lordstown Motors and Foxconn with
increased market opportunities in scalable electric vehicle
production in North America." There are four key elements of the
tentative agreement. First, the two will use "commercially
reasonable best efforts" to negotiate the sale of Lordstown's Ohio
plant to Foxconn for USD230 million. That would, however, exclude
Lordstown Motors' hub motor assembly line, battery module and
packing line assets, as well as other undefined intellectual
property rights and other excluded assets. Second, the two will
negotiate a contract manufacturing agreement under which Foxconn
would manufacture the Lordstown Motors Endurance; this would be a
condition of closing any sale of the plant. Under this condition,
Lordstown would also agree to provide Foxconn with certain rights
to future Lordstown vehicle programs. Third, Lordstown Motors would
issue warrants to Foxconn for 1.7 million shares of common stock at
an exercise price of USD10.50 per share; this would be exercisable
until the third anniversary of the deal's close. Fourth, the two
have agreed to explore licensing arrangements for additional
pick-up truck programs. Fifth, following closing, Lordstown would
enter into a long-term lease for a portion of the facility for its
current Ohio-based employees, and Foxconn would offer employment to
agreed-upon Lordstown operational and manufacturing employees.
Although the deal does have potential for both companies, as
Lordstown has a larger plant than it needs now and the facility
could speed up Foxconn's automotive production aspirations, these
are early negotiations, and it is unclear when or if the talks will
ultimately bear fruit. (IHS Markit AutoIntelligence's Stephanie
Brinley)
- Rivian has filed initial documents as it prepares to offer
publicly traded stock, as per requirements of US regulators, the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which detail pre-orders
for the Rivian retail vehicles as well as information on the Amazon
delivery van deal. Rivian plans to use the stock ticker RIVN, and
trade on the US NASDAQ exchange. The company notes that as of 30
September, it had approximately 43,89 R1T and R1S pre-orders, each
with a fully refundable USD1,000 deposit. In comparison, Ford has
noted more than 150,000 reservations for the F-150 Lightning,
although at USD100 each and for a truck that can serve broader use
cases than the R1T. Regarding the Amazon agreement, which it calls
the EDV agreement, further detail has been provided. The agreement
provides that Rivian will be reimbursed for certain development
costs but does not ultimately impose purchase requirements on
Amazon. It gives Amazon exclusive access to Rivian's electric
delivery vans for the first four years of production and gives
Amazon first right of refusal for two years after that. Once Rivian
executes the IPO, it expects to use the funding for working
capital, to fund growth, and for other general corporate purposes.
Without providing a full roadmap, the company also noted that the
growth plan includes using both the R1 and RCV (truck and
commercial vehicle) platforms and to develop new platforms that
"underpin our diverse portfolio of vehicles". (IHS Markit
AutoIntelligence's Stephanie
Brinley)
- The Bank of Mexico (Banco de México: Banxico) at its meeting on
30 September increased the policy rate from 4.50% to 4.75%. It was
the third 25 basis-point raise in as many meetings. The decision
was split as four of the members voted for the rate hike and one to
keep the rate unchanged. At its previous meeting, the decision to
increase the rate was also divided, with three in favor and two
against a higher rate. (IHS Markit Economist Rafael
Amiel)
- As of mid-September, Mexican headline inflation and core
inflation, which excludes items with volatile prices in the
agriculture and energy categories, amounted to 5.9% and 4.9%,
respectively. The bank targets headline inflation at 3.0% +/- 1
percentage point.
- Banxico assesses that the shocks that have driven high
inflation are temporary. However, it highlights that given the
variety, magnitude, and the extended period in which they have
affected consumer prices, the shocks pose a risk for price
formation and inflationary expectations. This means that there may
be second-round effects or contagion from higher prices of some
items into others; economic agents may believe that high inflation
is here to stay, which usually becomes a self-fulfilled
prophecy.
- The Central Bank of the Argentine Republic (Banco Central de la
República Argentina: BCRA) on 2 October announced that it will be
launching a new credit line to micro, small, and medium-sized
enterprises (MSMEs). The measure forces banks to disburse at least
7.5% their private-sector deposits' stock into working capital or
into machinery of MSMEs focused on agriculture or services. (IHS
Markit Banking Risk's
Alejandro Duran-Carrete)
- The BCRA's measure is likely to continue the slowness of
sector's profitability, which has fallen significantly through 2020
and 2021, reaching a return on average assets (ROAA) of 0.8% in
July, when last reported - significantly below the 3.7% averaged in
the three years prior to March 2020.
- Over the last year and a half, banks have been obliged to pay
minimum interest rates on deposits, increasing their costs.
Moreover, one of their main sources of income, the liquidity notes
(leliqs), has also been contained, reducing significantly banks'
overall income.
- Therefore, a measure that limits 7.5% of their stock of
deposits (roughly 12% of credit outstanding) to a maximum interest
rate of 30% or 35% - well below the BCRA's reference interest rate
of 38% - will decrease the sector's income and stall the sector's
profitability.
Europe/Middle East/Africa
- All major European equity indices closed lower; Spain -0.1%, UK
-0.2%, Italy -0.6%, France -0.6%, and Germany -0.8%.
- Most 10yr European govt bonds closed lower except for France
flat; Germany/Italy/Spain/UK +1bp.
- iTraxx-Europe closed +1bp/51bps and iTraxx-Xover
+5bps/259bps.
- Brent crude closed +2.5%/$81.26 per barrel.
- Brent prices zoomed past $80/bbl this morning as OPEC+
announced an agreement to continue increasing production in
November by 400,000 b/d, in line with recent monthly increases.
Continued production increases were largely a foregone conclusion
given recent price action and shortage fears spreading through
energy markets like wildfire. Despite some rumors over the weekend
of a potential pro-active acceleration of the unwinding to
alleviate market anxiety, the group issued a remarkably swift
decision to stick to schedule, maintaining the reactive and
lead-from-behind posture championed by Saudi Energy Minister
Abdulaziz bin Salman and adopted by the group through much of this
year. While the move will keep the OPEC+ production cursor pointed
higher over the next few months and likely into the winter, it may
fall short of disproving spare capacity naysayers or responding to
what is likely an increasingly loud chorus of consuming countries.
(IHS Markit Energy Advisory's Roger
Diwan, Karim
Fawaz, Ian Stewart, and Sean Karst)
- Communication is key: With prices above $80/bbl, OPEC+ is now
walking a delicate line between what could be described as
pragmatic reactive management and either intentional or
unintentional under-supplying of tightening markets amid a global
energy crisis. Where markets interpret OPEC+ actions along this
spectrum can have dramatically different price implications.
Whereas pragmatic reactive management implies an ability to respond
to market needs if the stability of physical markets is threatened,
undersupplying markets implies either willingly or, more bullish
still, unwillingly, squeezing markets at a time when oil demand is
liable to benefit from the unexpected switching boon from gas.
- A full increase of 400,000 b/d would put more oil into the
system than our current base case, which calls for flatter OPEC+
output as some gulf members step back to make way for more Russian
and Kazakh increases, with other members beginning to reach
production ceilings. In November we forecast a global deficit of
800,000 b/d (with a monthly OPEC+ uplift of 200,000 b/d), which
could be closer to 1 MMb/d as switching from natural gas to fuel
oil and diesel begins to bite in the northern hemisphere. This risk
extends through the winter, with any surprise stock declines
starting to have a bigger impact on price now that the huge
inventory buffer from 2020 is gone in most markets outside of
China.
- A group of environmental lawyers has taken the European
Commission to the EU Court to challenge the secrecy surrounding the
pesticide approvals process in the Standing Committee on Plants,
Animals, Food and Feed (SCoPAFF). (IHS Markit Food and Agricultural
Policy's Sara Lewis)
- ClientEarth is challenging the Commission's refusal to disclose
the positions that national governments take in PAFF discussions
and votes in the EU's General Court, specifically when it comes to
cypermethrin.
- In a September 30 statement on the case, ClientEarth
environmental lawyers explained that member states are collectively
responsible for approving or rejecting the proposals of the
European Commission to allow certain chemicals to be used as
pesticides in the EU, pointing as example to the renewal of the
authorization to use glyphosate until December 2022.
- ClientEarth's lawyers have "condemned the secrecy" of the
SCoPAFF where the 27 agricultural ministries "decide whether to
approve dangerous pesticides behind closed doors," the statement
says.
- ClientEarth is therefore challenging the Commission's refusal
to disclose the positions that member states are defending when it
comes to renewing the authorization of cypermethrin in front of the
General Court.
- Siemens Gamesa has received a firm order from Ørsted and
Eversource to supply wind turbines for two wind farms offshore the
USA with a combined capacity of 847 MW. This contract includes the
supply, delivery, and installation of 77 SG 11.0- 200 DD wind
turbines for the Revolution Wind project off Rhode Island and the
South Fork wind farm off Long Island, New York. Of the total 77
offshore wind turbines, 65 will be installed at the 715 MW
Revolution Wind, and the remaining 12 at the 132 MW South Fork.
Revolution Wind and South Fork are scheduled to be completed in
2024 and 2023, respectively. (IHS Markit Upstream Costs and
Technology's Monish Thakkar)
- Renault Group is set to receive a dividend of around EUR931
million from its RCI Bank and Services consumer financing arm,
reports Bloomberg News. According to the news service, this is due
to the European Central Bank (ECB) lifting restrictions on dividend
payments that were imposed on financial institutions early in the
COVID-19 virus pandemic. The ECB decided in July not to extend
these restrictions beyond September. RCI Bank and Services capital
ratios will return to pre-pandemic levels, helping to bolster the
automaker's financial performance in 2021. (IHS Markit
AutoIntelligence's Ian Fletcher)
- Paris-based investment firm Ardian joined forces with
Zurich-based FiveT Hydrogen on 1 October to create a €1.5-billion
($1.7 billion) fund known as Hy24 that will be dedicated to
accelerating large-scale clean hydrogen projects and
infrastructure. (IHS Markit Net-Zero Business Daily's Amena
Saiyid and Mark Thomas)
- Hydrogen, especially the "green" variety produced from
renewable power sources, is increasingly being viewed as an
alternative to carbon-intensive fossil fuels because in liquid form
it can be transported in existing pipelines, in solid form it can
be used in fuel cells for automobiles, and it can be used to
produce steel and cement, two traditionally carbon-intensive
industrial processes.
- Expected to secure its first closing before the end of 2021,
Hy24 plans to reach its funding goal by drawing on global chemical,
energy, engineering, and construction companies as well as
institutional investors that are already vested in finding clean
hydrogen solutions. The partners say they will be creating "the
industry's largest clean hydrogen infrastructure manager."
- Hy24 already has commitments from two sets of investors: Air
Liquide, TotalEnergies, and construction group Vinci being one,
while New York-based Plug Power, original equipment manufacturer
(OEM) Chart Industries, and Baker Hughes form the other.
- The fund has already secured initial commitments of €800
million ($927.5 million), the backers say. Air Liquide,
TotalEnergies, and Vinci said 1 October they each will invest €100
million ($115 million). Lotte Chemical and financial services group
Axa also have indicated a commitment to participate as anchor
investors, according to Hy24.
- According to the Swiss Federal Statistical Office (SFSO), Swiss
consumer prices stagnated in month-on-month (m/m) terms in
September, broadly in line with the September average of recent
years. Thus, the annual inflation rate remained steady at 0.9%,
which nonetheless is the highest level since November 2018. (IHS
Markit Economist Timo
Klein)
- Remarkably, only three of the 12 main (COICOP) categories of
goods and services posted a decline in their annual rate, while
seven showed an increase and two held steady (for details, see
table below). These three, with a combined weight of 18%, were
food, alcohol/tobacco, and clothing and footwear. They largely
compensated for increases in the housing and utilities, transport,
recreation and culture, and hotels and restaurant categories.
Energy prices, which had declined in August, have rebounded
modestly in September (0.3% m/m). The previous month's dip in
year-on-year (y/y) terms therefore was unwound (up from 10.7% to
11.4%).
- The dampening influence from food and clothing restrained
prices of goods generally, dampening their y/y rate from 1.4% to
1.2%. In contrast, inflation in the service sector increased anew
from 0.5% to 0.8%, reflecting a sub-average seasonal monthly
decline of -0.1% m/m.

- State-owned Uzbekneftegaz (Tashkent, Uzbekistan) has signed
agreements with European banks worth €1.10 billion ($1.28 billion)
for the financing of a previously announced expansion of its
Shurtan gas chemical complex. (IHS Markit Chemical Advisory)
- The agreements were signed with Deutsche Bank, Landesbank
Baden-Wuerttemberg, and Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen Girozentrale,
it says. The agreement with Deutsche Bank is for up to €500
million, while the agreements with the other two banks are each for
up to €300 million, it says.
- The total cost of the Shurtan expansion project is put at about
$1.80 billion, with $600 million to be funded directly by
Uzbekneftegaz, it says.
- The expansion of the Shurtan facilities will include the
addition of 280,000 metric tons/year of bimodal polyethylene (PE)
capacity, 100,000 metric tons/year of polypropylene (PP) capacity,
and 50,000 metric tons/year of pyrolysis distillate, it says.
Uzbekneftegaz will use naphtha as feedstock for the additional
production.
- The Shurtan complex currently produces ethylene and more than
134,000 metric tons/year of PE, as well as 116,000 metric tons/year
of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), 103,000 metric tons/year of gas
condensate, and 4.1 billion cu meters/year of raw gas. In October
last year Lummus Technology was awarded a contract by Enter
Engineering (Tashkent) to design and supply four steam-cracking
furnaces to more than double ethylene production at the facility
located in the Kashkadarya region of southwestern Uzbekistan.
- The Saudi current account surplus reached SAR45 billion (USD12
billion) in the second quarter, according to the Saudi Monetary
Authority (SAMA), the central bank. The surplus compares with an
average of SAR5.5 billion in the first quarter and a deficit of
SAR73 billion in the second quarter of 2020. (IHS Markit Economist
Ralf
Wiegert)
- The deficit in the second quarter 2020 had suffered from the
low oil price and Saudi Arabia's production restraint at that time;
the rebound of the oil price since then, during the first half
2021, meant that a sizable surplus was expected. However, the
surplus in the second quarter 2021 was still higher than expected,
equaling 6.1% of GDP.
- The oil share of goods exports has trended down compared to the
pre-crisis period. At 73%, the oil share was some four percentage
points below the value for 2019 (77%). It should be kept in mind
that oil production was still restricted in the second quarter;
with a higher production rate, oil exports will catch up in the
second half of 2021.
- Foreign direct investment inflows reported a record inflow of
SAR51.9 billion, the highest inflow ever and more than seven times
the size of the previous quarter (SAR6.8 billion). However, the
bulk share of the inflow was connected with the sale of a 49% stake
in Saudi Aramco's pipeline network, which accounted for SAR46.5
billion (USD12.4 billion) alone.

- African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and the AfCFTA
Secretariat announced on 28 September the "operational roll-out" of
the Cairo-based Pan-African Payment and Settlement System
("PAPSS"). (IHS Markit Economist Brian
Lawson)
- PAPSS was initially launched in July 2019 to facilitate
implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement
(AfCFTA).
- The announcement follows a pilot phase in the West Africa
Monetary Zone (WAMZ), with Afreximbank having approved USD500
million to "support… clearing and settlement" in WAMZ countries
including Nigeria and Ghana.
- The statement states that another USD3 billion will now be made
available "to support the system's continent-wide
implementation".
- It notes that Afreximbank provides settlement guarantees and
overdraft facilities for system users.
- It is now holding "advanced discussions" with other national
and regional bodies to extend the system. PAPSS Chair and
Afreximbank President Benedict Oramah highlighted that PAPSS is not
seeking to replace existing systems, but instead seeks their
integration into a common payment network.
Asia-Pacific
- APAC equity markets closed mixed; Australia +1.3%, India +0.9%,
Japan -1.1%, and Hong Kong -2.2%.
- The People's Bank of China and the China Banking and Insurance
Commission at the end of September held a working seminar with
several local government bodies and 24 major banks. The meeting
reiterated the importance of several things: stable real estate
financing to encourage wider financial stability, "stable land
price, stable house price and stable expectations", and the notion
of property for living, not for flipping. In addition, the meeting
also noted the need to protect homeowners' rights and the need to
speed up financing for homes for rent. (IHS Markit Banking Risk's
Angus
Lam)
- Real estate financing has come into focus since the house price
slowdown in China and the issues with Evergrande Group (see China:
27 September 2021: Isolated debt issue at China Evergrande unlikely
to materially affect banking sector, confidence remains at large
banks). The current focus is not surprising since about 29% of
loans issued by Chinese banks are used towards the real estate
sector.
- Chinese authorities have already stepped up their safety net
around Evergrande Group through taking control of the pre-sale
revenues of housing projects to ensure that the funds are used to
develop the projects, therefore allowing their completion. IHS
Markit expects that this will affect Evergrande's ability to repay
its liabilities to debt holders but will reduce the contagion risk
and homebuyers' confidence in terms of property projects that are
yet to be completed. It is currently uncertain whether the move
will become a permanent feature for all property projects from all
developers in China.
- FAW Group's premium vehicle brand, FAW Hongqi, has announced
that it is to commence exports of China-made electric sport utility
vehicles (SUVs) to Norway, reports Reuters. The brand states that
it has received 500 orders for its SUVs in Norway. The automaker
has not revealed details of the models ordered. (IHS Markit
AutoIntelligence's Isha Sharma)
- Chinese electric vehicle (EV) maker NIO has officially opened
its dealership NIO House in Oslo (Norway). The automaker will offer
the ES8 sport utility vehicle (SUV) in 75-kWh and 100-kWh battery
pack variants. The starting price of the NIO ES8 with a standard
battery pack is NOK609,000 (USD69,151), while that of the NIO ES8
with a long-life battery pack starts at NOK679,000 (USD77,099).
Customers can buy the ES8 without the battery and use NIO's Battery
as a Service (BaaS) sales model, in which there is a monthly
subscription for use of the battery and additional services. The
first integrated NIO station, with both battery swapping and
charging stalls, will be launched by the end of next month in
Norway. The EV maker intends to install 20 battery swap stations
covering Norway's five biggest cities and major highways by the end
of 2022, reports Pandaily. (IHS Markit AutoIntelligence's Surabhi
Rajpal)
- LG Uplus, a mobile carrier in South Korea, will provide 5G
connectivity services for a local car-sharing platform HUMAX
Mobility, reports Aju Business Daily. The 5G communication
technology will be used to connect cars, services, and facilities
such as smart car parks and a control tower. LG Uplus will offer
5G-connected smart city technologies, while HUMAX will provide
real-time information about vehicles, charging stations, and
parking facilities. This development will enable LG Uplus to make a
foray into the 5G-connected mobility service market. LG Uplus aims
to deploy 5G infrastructure in major South Korean cities. The
mobile carrier has established 5G mobile communication
infrastructure for South Korea's autonomous vehicle (AV) test-bed,
K-City. (IHS Markit Automotive Mobility's Surabhi Rajpal)
- SK Innovation plans to double the number of researchers to
develop electric vehicle (EV) batteries from the current level by
2023, reports the Yonhap News Agency. The announcement was made by
SK Innovation CEO and president Kim Jun during a global forum in
San Francisco (US). The forum was meant to recruit battery
researchers and expand SK Innovation's network with US universities
and research institutes. The company did not provide any
information about the current status of its researchers. (IHS
Markit AutoIntelligence's Jamal Amir)
- South Korean automakers posted a 20.7% year-on-year (y/y)
plunge in their combined global vehicle sales to 539,236 units in
September, according to data released by five major domestic
manufacturers, as reported by the Yonhap News Agency and compiled
by IHS Markit. The five automakers reported a 33.7% y/y decline in
their combined domestic sales last month to 91,790 units, while
their combined overseas sales went down by 17.3% y/y to 447,446
units. The plunge in South Korean OEMs' combined global sales
during September was mainly due to the global semiconductor
shortage and the prolonged COVID-19 virus pandemic, which continued
to weigh down on vehicle production and sales. South Korea relies
heavily on overseas sources for automotive chips. The current
shortage has disrupted automakers' production in the country and
the issue is expected to continue to have an impact as
manufacturers ramp up production of next-generation EVs. (IHS
Markit AutoIntelligence's Jamal Amir)

Posted 04 October 2021 by Chris Fenske, Head of Capital Markets Research, Global Markets Group, S&P Global Market Intelligence
S&P Global provides industry-leading data, software and technology platforms and managed services to tackle some of the most difficult challenges in financial markets. We help our customers better understand complicated markets, reduce risk, operate more efficiently and comply with financial regulation.
This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.