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  • Unlike other Latin American countries such as Mexico, Peru, Argentina and most recently Brazil, Colombia has decided not to open up its local debt market to direct foreign investment.
  • Urban Corp is a rapidly growing real estate company that among its other recent achievements has latched on to the latest corporate finance structures to give it fast and flexible funding.
  • With local investors unhappy at the thought of buying lower rated local corporate debt, bankers expect a thriving structured product business to continue for many years in Latin America. Danielle Robinson reports.
  • The stunning success of Sampo's debut covered bond last September has shown the way for Nordic borrowers to issue covered bonds. Norway is thought by many to have the biggest potential, with DnB Nor likely to be the next jumbo covered bond issuer from the region. But Icelandic borrowers are also joining the fray and most of the Swedish banks — despite access to a large, liquid and flourishing domestic mortgage bond market — are doing the preparatory work. Philip Moore reports.
  • The moving strike convertible bond is no more than a means to an end — a temporary debt instrument that should, long before maturity, change into pure equity. This product is the platform on which Japan's privately underwritten equity securities market has been built. Though the product has had some critics, mostly outside the financial markets, these benign corporate funding tools have gained sway across the breadth of mid-market Japan. EuroWeek looks under the bonnet to see what powers the MSCB machine.
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  • In the past 15 months there has been a rapid rise in one subsector of Japan's privately underwritten equity securities market. Moving strike equity warrants have become increasingly prevalent as an alternative to MSCBs, partly because some deals give the issuer control over the timing of stock sales, and partly because the instruments never have to be booked as debt.
  • A managing director in Deutsche Bank's global products group has taken leave and is reportedly set to quit the firm.
  • China to import more, business confidence down in Thailand, higher business taxes in India
  • The challenges facing Luis Alberto Moreno are considerable. Quite apart from grappling with how to run a bureaucracy of some 2,000, the new president of the IDB is squaring up to a more fundamental issue: how to maintain the bank’s relevance