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  • Rating: Aaa/AA- (Moody's/Fitch)
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA
  • The covered bond market stood up well under the weight of Eu12bn of jumbo supply this week, although longer dated issues proved more popular and competitively priced than those at the short end.
  • Rating: Aaa/AA+/AAA
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • One of the most surprising successes of the international bond market in 2005 was the funding highway that developed between Latin American companies and rich Asian retail investors, happy not just to buy their bonds, but to take them in perpetual form. Danielle Robinson looks at the outstanding deals and the prospects for more in 2006.
  • Latin America had an extraordinary bond market year in 2005. For the fourth year in a row emerging market debt outperformed other credit, and Latin companies began to trade inside US peers. With record inflows and record issuance, sovereigns could even attract foreign money in their own currencies. Danielle Robinson reports.
  • Bookrunner Mizuho has launched syndication of Parex banka's Eu100m 364 day loan, which refinances the Eu69.5m facility the borrower signed in February 2005. The deadline for responses is January 27. Lead arrangers can commit $10m for a fee of 27.5bp, arrangers $7.5m for 25bp, co-arrangers $5m for 22.5bp, lead managers $3m for 20bp, and managers $2m for 17.5bp.
  • We fear that one of the boys over at UBS may be working a little too hard these days. Why else would the bank's ECP wheeler-dealer, Stefan Boehm, be trawling the web in search of love?
  • 2005 was a memorable year for leveraged loans in Europe. The buy-out market grew, and extended its reach. The acquisition of Wind in June was double the size of the previous largest European LBO, but by December that record had been beaten. As Tanya Angerer discovers, 2006 will be marked by pressure from private equity funds to push up leverage and ease covenants still more; but also by doubts over whether the biggest deals can clear the market.