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  • Royal Bank of Scotland has hired Enrico Cantarelli, a senior official in the Italian Treasury, as head of public sector coverage in its Italian global banking and markets business.
  • 2005 was a difficult year for credit traders, especially those that had bet on credits moving in lock-step with each other. When Ford and General Motors were junked in May, a lot of positions had to be unwound. But the CDO market rubbished the dire predictions of a meltdown and showed its remarkable resilience with a range of new structures.
  • The credit default swap market was largely unaffected by the hurricane of new debt that swept through the market this week, as the great majority of issuers were supranationals and high quality financial institutions that are only peripheral to credit derivatives.
  • Rating: Aaa/AAA/AAA
  • Real estate securitisation conduits are now the must-have accessory for every investment bank's securitisation department, and in 2005 most of them began issuing. There was more than enough demand to soak up the resulting splurge of deals, as well as a few innovative corporate transactions. Chris Dammers reports.
  • A sustainable market evolves after moody's guidance
  • The covered bond market broke new ground in 2005, extending out along the yield curve, reaching new issue sizes, and breaking the 1999 supply record. It did so through the opening of new markets, the arrival of new issuers and the creativity of established names. 2006 promises to be just as exciting. Neil Day reports.
  • Guarantor: Credit Suisse Group
  • HSBC has made two appointments to its credit arbitrage business, specialising in ABS investments. The bank's structured investment vehicle Cullinan Finance, which began issuing in September, now has $8.5bn of assets.
  • Iceland's Íslandsbanki this week completed a Ikr18.6bn (Eu252m) primary offering on its own behalf, increasing its share capital by 7.3% through an institutional private placement. After testing investor interest, Íslandsbanki completed the deal in a day on Monday and priced it on Monday evening, 1.5 times covered, at Ikr18.6.
  • Tradition has expanded its US dollar interest rate swap screen to provide 24 hour live prices. Hitherto, it has been live only in London time, but now, as the day progresses, Tokyo, then London and then New York submit prices in turn. When trading sessions overlap, the best prices from each time zone will be used, explained chief executive Robin Houldsworth. Clients cannot execute trades on the Tradition screen. This must be handled in the traditional manner by voice.