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  • Chelmsford, Mass.-based workforce management company Kronos turned to Citizens Bank of Massachusetts for a revolver to back its $150 million acquisition of UNICRU.
  • Jeremy Vogelmann, Lehman Brothers' loan-only credit default swap trader, left the firm earlier this week.
  • Cindy Ferrara, managing director and head of hedge fund sales at Citigroup in London, has retired. Her last day in the role was July 14. According to an internal memo Ferrara, who could not be reached for comment, has been replaced in the interim by Richard McGuire, who also heads institutional sales.
  • Ritesh Shah has joined Primus Financial Products from Goldman Sachs to head its correlation desk.
  • Two equity volatility traders have left the Greenwich, Conn.-based fund.
  • A London-based hedge fund monolith has hired a credit specialist from JPMorgan.
  • SG Corporate and Investment Banking has reportedly signed up Cedric Lespiau, a correlation trader at IXIS Corporate & Investment Banking in Paris. Calls to Lespiau's line went unanswered and Michelle Gathercole, spokeswoman for SG CIB in London, did not comment by press time. Market buzz has Lespiau starting at SG CIB next month, reporting to Fourad Farah, head of correlation trading, who did not answer phone calls. IXIS press officials declined comment.
  • UBS has added a director to its U.S. equity derivative sales team.
  • AXA Investment Managers Paris is bringing to market a pair of collateralized debt obligations which re-visit the group's established synthetic structures Jazz and Adagio. In the deals, AXA will manage the underlying portfolios using a mix of total-return swaps and long or short credit-default positions to maximize returns. It is also able to go short a name without holding the underlying credit position in the portfolios.
  • Carlyle Group, the US private equity firm, has raised $1.8bn in its second Asian buy-out fund, adding to the $1.9bn it raised earlier this month for similar investments in Japan. Carlyle Asia Partners II will pursue investments in Asia ex-Japan, and brings the amount of capital raised by the private equity group for investment in Asia to $4.8bn over the past 12 months.
  • Affinity Equity Partners, the Asian private equity firm, has offered A$430m ($321m) for control of Colorado Group, an Australian retailer. The unsolicited bid comes after Affinity and its partners began acquiring shares in the company this March. Credit Suisse has committed to underwrite A$310m in debt financing, and will syndicate the deal if the acquisition is successful.
  • PCCW, the Hong Kong telecommunications group, signed its HK$6.45bn four year credit facility on Tuesday, ending speculation that the deal had been derailed by the sale of a stake in the company. PCCW, formerly known as Pacific Century Cyberworks, first approached lenders with plans for a HK$4bn revolving credit in mid-May. Banks reacted enthusiastically to the margin of 46bp over Hibor, but the deal was delayed when the borrower received bids for its telecommunications and media assets.