
Jesse Norcross
Articles
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Nov 28, 2024 |
think.ing.com | Jesse Norcross
Rate cuts ease pressure on the real estate sector Rate cuts and a more dovish outlook for interest rates seem to be having a positive impact on Sweden’s embattled commercial real estate sector, one of the hardest hit in Europe since the start of the rate hiking cycle. The sector has been impacted due to its particularly sensitive exposure to interest rates, relatively high leverage and a high share of short-term and/or floating-rate debt.
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Nov 8, 2024 |
think.ing.com | Rebecca Byrne |Timothy Rahill |Suvi Platerink Kosonen |Jesse Norcross
Credit markets reacted positively to the outcome of the US election, with spreads narrowing across the board. But the longer-term implications are more complicated. ING's Global Head of Sector Research Jeroen van den Broek and Credit Strategist Tim Rahill predict a difficult year ahead for credit, with a Trump presidency one of 25 reasons to be cautious in 2025.
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Nov 1, 2024 |
think.ing.com | Timothy Rahill |Suvi Platerink Kosonen |Jesse Norcross
Date: 7 November 2024Time: 10:00 GMT/11:00 CETThe event will last for 45 minutes, with Q&A at the end. Speakers:Jeroen van den Broek, Global Head of Sector ResearchTimothy Rahill, Credit StrategistSuvi Platerink Kosonen, Senior Sector Strategist, FinancialsJesse Norcross, Senior Sector Strategist, Real EstateRebecca Byrne, Senior Editor/Supervisory Analyst (moderator)ING Outlook: Other events in this webinar series (All times CET)13 November (16:30) FX markets after the US election.
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Oct 17, 2024 |
think.ing.com | Jesse Norcross
Five reasons why real estate bond supply will be higher in 2025 Redemptions start to pick up Transaction volumes likely to increase Bond market conditions should improve for more issuers Real estate sector turning the corner? Can’t get enough of the green stuff Real estate bond supply has exceeded our expectations so far in 2024, with total €-denominated real estate issuance at c€19bn as of October 2024.
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Jun 11, 2024 |
think.ing.com | Jesse Norcross
A brief overview The EU Taxonomy took effect in 2020 as part of the EU’s Green Deal to reach climate neutrality by 2050. The EU Taxonomy Regulation introduced a detailed classification system to define environmentally sustainable economic activities with the aim of channelling private and public investments into these activities.
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