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  • EM bond funds extend inflow record
  • Up to half of the reduction in EM credit spreads since 2000 could be accounted for by low US interest rates and greater risk appetite
  • In the past, CMBS was something of a sensible afterthought for real estate lenders. But the fall in the cost of funds achievable through securitisation and the aggression on the part of conduit lenders that this has allowed means that it is fast becoming a necessity for those wishing to remain competitive.
  • All good things must come to an end, goes the proverb, and in the ABS market that end came in April when the bull run of the previous two years shuddered to a halt. The reversal was particularly felt in the CMBS market. And although investors had expected a decompression of spreads for some time, their strategies on how to operate in the post-bull run era are unexpectedly distinct.
  • European CMBS was put on the map by UK landmark deals such as Canary Wharf and British Land's Broadgate in the late 1990s and hasn't looked back since. While Land Securities has continued the big players' pioneering spirit, the product is winning an ever broader variety of followers among property funds.
  • After almost a decade of steady progress, the European CMBS market has broken into a sprint this year and is set to smash all previous volume records. Driving the market forward are conduit lenders providing cheaper funding than the balance sheet lenders that previously had the market to themselves. But competition between the conduits themselves means that they are already having to adapt to survive.
  • Europe's telecoms companies showed how useful the CMBS market could be to corporates when it helped them reduce their mountains of debt earlier this decade. Since then, corporates have played little direct part in driving the CMBS boom, but the growth in leveraged buy-outs could result in an increase in supply.
  • The robust credit performance of European CMBS has shielded servicers from widespread scrutiny. But those with experience of how much difference a good servicer can make are warning investors to pay greater heed to the role before it is too late. The advent of 'A/B' note structures, meanwhile, has resulted in a pointed debate about the best way to act when things do go wrong.
  • We are delighted to be sponsoring EuroWeek's first Real Estate Securitisation Handbook. 2005 is widely expected to be the year that real estate securitisation in Europe achieves its true and long awaited potential with issuance expected to reach record levels.
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  • The issue was operated at a 4.125% yield – the smallest achieved by any Romanian entity by far
  • IDB chief economist predicts 4.6 percent growth for Latin America and the Caribbean