Publication
Government Investigations in Singapore 2025
We have contributed the Singapore chapter of Getting the Deal Through, Government Investigations 2025.
United Kingdom | Publication | February 2024
On February 7, 2024, the Work and Pensions Committee of the House of Commons published a lengthy report submitted by the Regulator on the impact DB schemes of the liability-driven investment (LDI) crisis in autumn 2022. The Committee published a report about the episode in June 2023 and asked the Regulator to produce a detailed account of the impact.
The Regulator’s report concludes that, while the situation in late September and early October 2022 bought into focus the extent of DB schemes' investments in leveraged LDI, the movement in gilt values and yields over 2022 actually led to a significant improvement in scheme funding, as liabilities fell by more than asset values.
However, the precise impact for individual schemes will not be known until completion of the next triennial valuation process. Some individual schemes may have experienced funding deteriorations during September 2022 on account of high levels of hedging, the cost of losing and re-acquiring hedging or following discounted selling of assets to meet collateral requirements. While the report models these impacts, the Regulator has no data on the extent and scope of discounted sales for specific schemes.
Since the LDI episode, the Regulator says it has improved its monitoring of such products, and it now receives weekly data from the five UK fund managers that hold almost 90 per cent of the DB market in leveraged LDI assets.
The Regulator's ongoing work includes:
Publication
We have contributed the Singapore chapter of Getting the Deal Through, Government Investigations 2025.
Publication
The private credit market and direct lending have grown and diversified immensely in the past decade, offering alternative sources and terms of debt compared to those historically provided by the syndicated leveraged loan and public issuance markets. Consequently, they are fast becoming pivotal components in the capital ecosystem, so much so that the Bank of England consider that the private credit market is currently responsible for approximately $1.8 trillion of debt issuance, which is four times its size in 2015. This growth has been particularly pronounced in Europe and the US but there has also been significant activity in Asia.
Publication
The EU’s Artificial Intelligence Regulation, commonly referred to as the AI Act, is expected to come into force during the summer of 2024 (the AI Act). The AI Act will be the first comprehensive legal framework for the use and development of artificial intelligence (AI), and is intended to ensure that AI systems developed and used in the EU are safe, transparent, traceable, non-discriminatory and environmentally friendly.
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