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  • BondWeek is the leading news publication for fixed-income professionals, covering new deals, structures, asset-backed securities, industry and market activity.
  • BondWeek is the leading news publication for fixed-income professionals, covering new deals, structures, asset-backed securities, industry and market activity.
  • BondWeek is the leading news publication for fixed-income professionals, covering new deals, structures, asset-backed securities, industry and market activity.
  • Abbey National Financial Products plans to sell embedded knock-in digital puts as part of a high-income product it is offering. The retail product gives investors exposure to the 10 largest FTSE 100 stocks through a reverse convertible, according to Andrew Brogden, senior trader in London.
  • BNP Paribas is setting up equity derivatives flow sales desks in London and Paris. Christian Kwek, head of equity derivatives marketing for Europe in London, said, "We would like to be able to offer a wider product base to our clients." He added, "This will help us to diversify our product portfolio and increase client penetration."
  • BMW Finance is thinking of entering an interest-rate swap to hedge the interest rate risk on a recent 15-year EUR750 million (USD850 million) bond. Elmer Steurer, co-head of capital markets in Munich, said, "We are thinking of converting part or all of the bond into a floating rate [bond]."
  • Banc of America Securities has hired two structured credit sales directors in its New York office. Sean Rice, director in credit structuring and marketing at BNP Paribas in New York, has joined with responsibility for financial institutions and hedge funds, while Justin Dash, who joined from Morgan Stanley, is responsible for sales to asset management firms as well as syndicating newly issued credit transactions, according to Jeff Hershberger, spokesman in Charlotte, N.C.
  • Credit events on synthetic collateralized debt obligations referenced to asset-backed securities are starting to become more standard as rating agency models have gotten more sophisticated. Crédit Agricole Indosuez tweaked the credit triggers on its latest deal, TRIPLAS 2, to fit Moody's Investors Service's methodology, according to a CAI official.
  • Deutsche Bank has hired David Greenberg, a corporate derivatives marketer at JPMorgan in New York, as a director in corporate fixed income derivatives marketing. Greenberg reports to Raj Bhattacharyya, managing director and head of corporate fixed income derivatives marketing for North America, according to Harriet Benson, spokeswoman in New York. Greenberg did not return calls and Bhattacharyya declined comment.
  • Eric Langille, senior managing director and co-head of New York credit derivatives trading at Bear Stearns, has left the firm. It could not be determined whether Langille, who could not be reached, has joined a competitor. Martin St. Pierre, senior managing director and co-head of New York credit derivatives trading alongside Langille, was traveling and could not be reached. Michele Agostinho, spokeswoman at Bear Stearns in New York, declined comment.
  • Credit-default swaps without the restructuring credit event trigger have rocketed in popularity since the 2003 International Swaps and Derivatives Association's credit derivatives definitions came into effect. These contracts, which only pay out if the reference entity fails to pay an obligation or enters bankruptcy, now account for around a third of the volume, according to traders.
  • Credit-default protection on Duke Capital, the intermediate holding company of Duke Energy, widened 25 basis points last Wednesday following market disappointment over the corporate's second quarter earnings announcement. Five-year protection on the name moved out to 166bps, from 145bps where it had traded seven days before, said a New York-based trader. "Duke's earnings only missed its target by a little, but the sentiment was that their earnings call didn't go well," he explained.