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  • EQT and Investor have decided not to decrease their offer for medical technology company Gambro, despite the company losing its main client, DaVita. DaVita announced the termination of its contract just hours ahead of Wednesday's deadline for investors to accept the offer.
  • Citigroup, Nordea, SEB and Svenska Handelsbanken will sign the Skr11bn debut loan for outdoor products manufacturer Husqvarna next week. The facility is oversubscribed but it is unclear whether the borrower will take an increase. The facility has a five year tenor with two one year extension options. The bookrunners are targeting relationship banks with tickets of Skr700m. The facility will support the company's demerger from home appliances maker Electrolux, which is due next month.
  • Rabobank Nederland introduced a new local currency market this week with the first Israeli shekel public trade, a Ish150m ($33m) three year deal paying a coupon of 6% and led by TD Securities.
  • There was plenty of action on the tables this week. Commerzbank returns to league table one in 20th place. The German bank's deals included a Eu3m 10 year fund-linked note for Irish Life & Permanent and a Eu5m five year commodity-linked note for Banesto Financial Products. RBC Capital Markets and Mizuho moved up one notch each to take 13th and 15th places respectively on table one.
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  • In a land of negligible risk-free returns, Japanese banks are enjoying surging demand from financial institutions seeking structured deposits and other structured investments, such as CPPI. EuroWeek asked Shinsei Bank's experts to explain some key trends and developments.
  • Japan's regional economies have suffered in recent years as Greater Tokyo has sucked money in from the length and breadth of the land. As the economic revival is felt across the country, regional banks are working on ways to improve their products and services, just as the megabanks move in on their territory.
  • The Japanese property market has made a stunning recovery since the dark days of the late 1990s. EuroWeek talks to Shinsei Bank's property finance experts to learn about the part they have played in the market's recovery.
  • Private equity is big business in Japan. US funds, such as those controlled by Ripplewood, Lone Star and Goldman Sachs, have achieved remarkable results. But nowadays home-grown funds are also competing for deals, from pre-IPO financings to the de-listing of public companies through management and leveraged buy-outs.
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