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  • ACE has slashed around one-third of its staff at ACE Guaranty Corp. and ACE Capital Re and exited several businesses to prepare its capital markets subsidiaries for an initial public offering lined up for next quarter.
  • Bear Stearns has split its interest rate and credit derivatives marketing groups as part of a push into the credit derivatives arena.
  • BNP Paribas has set up a proprietary trading desk for credit arbitrage and transferred Stephane Delacote, Asian head of credit derivatives in Tokyo, to spearhead the effort.
  • Diane Garnick, head of U.S. portfolio strategy at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in New York, has left the firm.
  • The fixed income markets triumphed in the face of adversity in 2003. All year it seemed as if there was some potential disaster threatening to shut down the markets, such as war in the Gulf, the July Treasury wobble or the Parmalat debacle. But with investors desperate for yield and borrowers anxious to lock in rock bottom rates before the interest cycle turned, bond issuance proved strong. Sebastian Boyd reports.
  • Unlike in 2002, issuers from Europe, the Middle East and Africa had to compete with their Latin American counterparts for investors' attention in 2003. But rock bottom interest rates meant that investors hungry for yield had more than enough appetite for the region's top borrowers. Danielle Robinson and Kathryn Wells report.
  • Rights issues and convertible bonds saved equity bankers from a dismal year. But, while European issuers contented themselves with restructuring work, Asia Pacific deals led the global new issue market in a stunningly successful year for Chinese IPOs. However, the strength of emerging issuers was not repeated for central and eastern European corporates and governments which struggled to get deals done. Harry Wilson reports.