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  • Royal Bank of Scotland and SG CIB have closed syndication of the debt backing the buy-out of Pharmacia Diagnostics.
  • This will be our last column for 2005, a year that has produced spectacular financial rewards for investment bankers and investment banking staff, hedge fund managers and traders and the private equity funds. Very rarely have we seen so much money being awarded to individuals, with some partners earning not tens of millions of dollars, but hundreds of millions.
  • Pharmaceuticals company Meda has signed its five year Eu575m facility through sole bookrunner SEB. The company did not take an increase following oversubscription. The deal will refinance existing credit facilities. The loan is separated into a Eu300m term loan, a Eu140m revolver and a Eu135m revolver. DnB NOR Bank and Swedbank committed as mandated lead arrangers before general syndication with Danske Bank later joining as a mandated lead arranger.
  • Citigroup sneaked ahead of long-reigning Deutsche Bank in league table two this week, to take first place as the year neared its close. Two of its deals were a Eu150m two year note for DaimlerChrysler UK Finance at 22.5bp over Euribor and a Eu90m two year Euribor deal for Allied Irish Bank.
  • Quanta International's three and five year fundraising is to be signed on December 19. The loan has been increased to $200m from $100m after an enthusiastic response from banks. Citigroup is the sole mandated arranger.
  • Mandated arranger HSBC launched the $300m dual tranche credit facility for Rayong Refinery into sub-underwriting last Friday.
  • This week produced another example of how quickly things can go wrong for issuers.
  • This week produced another example of how quickly things can go wrong for issuers.