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  • Delphi's Chapter 11 filing could harm the US dollar CDO market, according to research firm CreditSights. "A large number of investors are holding tranches of structured deals that they would be forced to sell if the rating agencies downgraded the CDOs [that include Delphi as a reference entity]," said Louise Purtle, chief credit strategist at CreditSights.
  • The Delphi bankruptcy has pushed to centre stage a potentially damaging fissure in the credit default swap market — whether to cash-settle or physically settle contracts after a credit event.
  • Mandated lead arrangers and bookrunners HSH Nordbank and Lloyds TSB have signed a facility for Spar Nord Bank. The Eu100m loan was increased after an oversubscription to Eu265m. Mandated lead arrangers contributed Eu20.75m each. Lead arranger DnB NOR Bank is lending Eu20m.
  • The Delphi bankruptcy has pushed to centre stage a potentially damaging fissure in the credit default swap market — whether to cash-settle or physically settle contracts after a credit event.
  • Rating: A2/A
  • Just a week after the London Stock Exchange unveiled plans to market AIM across Europe, Germany's Deutsche Börse has announced its own strategy for luring growth companies to its junior market. The Börse has created a new category of listing within the newly renamed Open Market, formerly known as the Regulated Unofficial Market.
  • The triple-A dollar sector bounced back to life this week as Treasury yields continued to rise after last Friday's US payroll data.
  • The triple-A dollar sector bounced back to life this week as Treasury yields continued to rise after last Friday's US payroll data.
  • Drax Group said on Tuesday that it had received a takeover bid of £2.075bn from a consortium comprising Apollo Management, Texas Pacific Group Europe and Towerbrook Capital Partners. The proposal would provide an alternative to the refinancing and listing plans the company is pursuing, Drax said.
  • Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein reshuffled senior bankers in its fixed income business this week naming Ian Platt, deputy global head of debt syndicate, and Pierre Blandin, head of public sector credit origination, as global co-heads of a new primary rates group.
  • The Kingdom of Denmark returned to the EuroCP market this week with two $100m two week tickets. The sovereign had been absent from the debt market since March 2004, when it issued a Eu2.1bn five year bond. Traders reported that the Kingdom of Denmark hoped to come in, do a few short issues and be out by the end of the year, without funding over the year-end. Otherwise, the sovereign market remained quiet, with muted interest from China and Hong Kong.
  • The French government this week answered the question many equity capital markets specialists have been asking for weeks: where is the IPO of Electricité de France? On Tuesday, finance minister Thierry Breton said the government was still committed to listing EDF and raising an unidentified sum — thought to be Eu6bn-Eu9bn — to recapitalise it.