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  • Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, the ailing Italian bank, was offering a double digit yield in return for investment in a new €300m tier two on Tuesday, as it looked to chip away at its €700m shortfall in the asset class.
  • Pension Insurance Corporation has announced plans to issue its first restricted tier one (RT1) instrument as it looks to fund the growth of its business. Analysts at CreditSights suggest the deal could be priced with a coupon of about 7%.
  • Westpac has laid out plans to sell a pair of tier two bonds in the US dollar market, just days after the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (Apra) put the asset class at the heart of its total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC) framework.
  • In the space of just a few weeks, two Greek banks have made their first sales of capital instruments since the financial crisis: Piraeus Bank in June, followed by National Bank of Greece this week. With debt market valuations at all time highs, some market participants say that it is now or never for Europe's weakest financial institutions. David Freitas reports.
  • National Bank of Greece showed market participants on Thursday that investors are still ravenous for higher beta products across peripheral Europe. Marketing a tier two bond, the bank attracted demand worth more than four times the final size of its €400m deal.
  • FinecoBank was more than nine times subscribed for its first ever sale of an additional tier one instrument on Thursday, despite pricing the deal at a level that was lower than what might have been expected for a similar offering from UniCredit, its former parent.