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Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) opened books on Tuesday for a dollar tier two offering, taking advantage of the last issuance window before this week’s Federal Reserve meeting. The issuer is replicating the bullet structure used by Bank of China in its 2014 offering, a deal which saw a blowout response.
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Two insurance companies are meeting investors this week for tier two trades as the sector continues to beef up its capital ahead of the implementation of Solvency II in January 2016.
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Industrial and Commercial Bank of China has mandated five banks to work on a US dollar-denominated Basel III tier two trade.
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ABN Amro announced the lead managers for its debut additional tier one (AT1) sale on Wednesday. The deal will be the first AT1 trade the FIG markets have seen since August and, with markets looking healthy, more could be set to follow later this month.
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India’s state banks will shoulder the heaviest burden in the industry’s challenge to raise $140bn of new capital over the next four years to meet Basel III regulations, according to Fitch. Public banks face steep medium-term obstacles such as poor balance sheet assets, falling capital generation capabilities and overdependence on state support, it said.
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has named two banks as systemically important, which will require the pair to meet more stringent capital requirements from April 2016.