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  • TD Securities is currently interviewing credit derivatives structurers in London to beef up its operation. A market official said the structurers will focus on client-driven business. Currently most of the firm's activity is centered around its own balance sheet requirements.
  • Global electronic manufacturing titan Toshiba Corp., with over USD46 billion in assets, recently entered an interest-rate swap on the back of a JPY1 billion (USD7.8 million) euro medium-term note it launched via its subsidiary Toshiba Capital (Asia). The note is structured with an embedded option, making it callable after the first year, according to an official at Toshiba in Tokyo. In the interest-rate swap, Toshiba pays floating and receives a fixed rate equal to the 2% coupon on the note. The official declined comment on specific rates. The swap also matches the note's 10-year maturity.
  • Citizens Communications, a Stamford, Conn.-based telecommunications company with over USD2 billion in revenue, has entered an interest-rate swap to convert USD100 million of fixed-rate debt into a synthetic floating-rate liability. It is the telecommunications company's first interest-rate swap since announcing that it is in discussions with several investment banks about entering fixed to floating interest-rate swaps (DW, 10/1), said Don Armour, treasurer and v.p. of finance. Armour said the company is considering entering more interest-rate swaps in the future, but has yet to determine the specific timing of the deals.
  • Wachovia Securities plans to make its first foray into the structured equity derivatives market. The firm has hired Steve Young, an equity derivatives structurer and quantitative researcher at Merrill Lynch in New York, to lead the effort. The firm plans to market the new products, which will include reverse convertibles and possibly equity-linked notes, to retail and high-net-worth customers in the next two months.
  • The Deal Roll-off Chart, provided by Capital DATA Loanware, lists the 50 largest leveraged credit facilities in the U.S. market that are due to mature in the coming month. It is designed to provide a look at potentially available money in the market as credits are renewed or retired.
  • It's summertime and the ... wait, no it isn't. Loan market players seem to have warmer weather on the brain. In characterizing the state of the market last week three different bankers said the market was "smokin' hot," "on fire" and "flaming hot."
  • Schroder Investment Management, which manages £3.3 billion in gilts and £8 billion in total fixed-income assets, will wait until yields on 10-year gilts are in the 5.35-5.4% range before reconsidering its slightly short duration strategy. Last Monday, the yield on the 10-year was 5.14%. Andrew Argyle, associate director responsible for conventional gilt portfolios, says the firm moved short to its benchmark, the All Stocks Gilt index, by one quarter of a year. The benchmark's duration is 6.5-years. Argyle says he made the adjustment because he feels yields are range bound for the moment between 5.10% and 5.40% and the firm has taken the opportunity to go a little short at 5.15%.
  • This chart, provided by Citibank/Salomon Smith Barney Inc., tracks bid-ask prices for par credit facilities that trade in the secondary market. It also tracks facility amounts, ratings, pricing and maturities.
  • As the Treasury curve flattens, Turner Investment Partners will reallocate its exposure to 6% and 6.5% coupon pass-throughs from 65% to 45% (which would represent about $40 million in the core portfolios) by buying five- to 10-year Treasuries. Jim Midanek and John Pak, portfolio managers of $700 million in taxable fixed income, expect the Treasury curve to flatten because they see the Federal Reserve raising interest rates quickly once it begins a tightening cycle, likely bringing the Fed funds rate to 3% by the middle of next year. With 238 basis points of daylight between two- and 30-year Treasuries as of last Monday, Midanek says another 65 basis points of flattening between those poles would trigger the MBS sales.
  • Chris Mahoney, portfolio manager with J. & W. Seligman, will rotate 10% of the firm's portfolio, or $200 million, out of agencies and Treasuries and into corporates. The assumption behind this move is that corporates will outperform as the economy picks up. Mahoney adds that there is no particular indicator, or event that will trigger the move.
  • The Royal Bank of Scotland has hired Thierry Sebton, Mizuho Corporate Bank's second-in-command in its structured finance department, and two of his junior colleagues, whose names could not be ascertained as of press time. They are joining RBS' asset-backed securitization team and will report to Philip Basil, head of ABS. Basil refused to answer any questions about the hires, where they fit into the ABS department's plans or who, if anyone, they replaced. A RBS spokeswoman did not return calls by press time. A spokesman at Mizuho confirmed Sebton's departure to RBS, but declined further comment.