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  • The European Commission this week sought to establish whether the trading platform MTS has an unfair monopoly in trading government bonds.
  • The Republic of Italy¡¯s Eu1bn 50 year inflation-linked bond, the first ever euro denominated linker at this maturity, sparked many debates and a degree of envy among investment bankers when it became known this week.
  • The Republic of Nigeria has appointed Citigroup as dealer manager on the cash tender offer for its outstanding oil warrants. The tender will be conducted as a modified Dutch auction with holders of the warrants invited to bid the cash price at which they would be prepared to sell them back to Nigeria.
  • Mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners BNP Paribas, Natixis and Standard Chartered Bank have closed senior syndication of Addax Petroleum's $1.5bn five year facility.
  • Rating: B2/B-
  • Rating: Ba3/B+
  • In an already excited market, Orascom Telecom, the Egyptian telecoms company, was run over by a stampede of investors when it priced its debut international bond deal yesterday (Thursday).
  • Dutch chemicals group Akzo Nobel will pursue a Eu3bn Amsterdam listing of pharmaceutical and veterinary business Organon Biosciences after rejecting a handful of private bids for the business, valued at Eu10bn.
  • The $2bn facility for Qatar Telecom (Qtel) was launched into syndication on January 31. Barclays Capital and Royal Bank of Scotland are bookrunners, with Qatar National, Qatar Islamic Bank and DBS as mandated lead arrangers, no books.
  • The iTraxx Crossover Index widened early this week after a period of remorseless rallying, but the softness was short lived. It was quoted as 194bp/195bp yesterday (Thursday) afternoon, exactly in line with levels seen a week ago.
  • By the end of 2006, equity issues in Japan totalled $71bn, up 51% from the $47bn issued in 2005. Of that, convertible issuance rose a healthy $12.5bn, up from the $2.5bn in 2005.
  • For Japanese companies and government agencies, the domestic yen bond market is still nearly always a cheaper option than issuing overseas. But the gap is closing, as foreign perceptions of Japan improve. There was room in 2006 for a few successful offshore financings, especially when issuers wanted super-long funding.